espelir

Galician

Alternative forms

  • espilir

Etymology

From Latin expellere (to expel; remove). Doublet of expeler.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /espeˈliɾ/

Verb

espelir (first-person singular present espelo, first-person singular preterite espelín, past participle espelido)

  1. (transitive) to shake off, to expel
    Synonym: sacudir
  2. (transitive) to winnow; to select or separate straw and grass, etc.
    Synonyms: espallar, separar
  3. (transitive) to fluff (flax, wool, etc.)
    Synonyms: cardar, carpir, escarmear
  4. (intransitive) to fluff, to puff up (of dough)
  5. (takes a reflexive pronoun) to wake up
    • 1858, Juan Manuel Pintos, Contos da aldea que parecen historias da vila e historias da vila que parecen contos da aldea, page 119:
      No muíño de Pinchapava nunha fiada de inverno estando mozas e mozos xa cansados de bureo, para espelirse do sono todos eles propuxeron de poñerse a contar contos
      In Pinchapava's mill, during a winter evening, being the girls and boys tired of merrymaking, for waking up of their sleep, they proposed to tell tales
  6. (figuratively, takes a reflexive pronoun) to wake up; to wise up
    • 1858, Juan Manuel Pintos, Contos da aldea que parecen historias da vila e historias da vila que parecen contos da aldea, page 150:
      ¿Vosté sabe cómo agora se espilen polos liceos as mozas, que asta recursos botan e ganan os preitos?
      Do you know how now the young ladies wise up around the lyceums? they even present appeals and win lawsuits!

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • espelido (ready, fast, intelligent)

References

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