fumar

See also: fümar

Asturian

Etymology

From Latin fūmāre, present active indicative of fūmō.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fu.ˈmaɾ/

Verb

fumar (first-person singular indicative present fumo, past participle fumáu)

  1. to smoke

Conjugation


Catalan

Etymology

From Latin fūmāre, present active indicative of fūmō.

Pronunciation

Verb

fumar (first-person singular present fumo, past participle fumat)

  1. to smoke

Conjugation


Galician

Etymology

From Latin fūmāre, present active indicative of fūmō.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fu.ˈmaɾ/

Verb

fumar (first-person singular present fumo, first-person singular preterite fumei, past participle fumado)

  1. to smoke
  2. first-person and third-person singular future subjunctive of fumar
  3. first-person and third-person singular personal infinitive of fumar

Conjugation


Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from Esperanto fumi, English fume, French fumer, Italian fumare, Spanish fumar.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fuˈmar/

Verb

fumar (present fumas, past fumis, future fumos, conditional fumus, imperative fumez)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) to smoke
    Mea charioto anciena ankore fumis mem pos la repari.
    My old truck was still smoking, even after the repairs.‎
    Lu prizas fumar dum la dejuno-tempo.
    He/she likes to smoke during the lunch breaks.

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • drinko-fumeyo (taproom)
  • fumagar (to fumigate; to smoke out (someone))
  • fumagilo (fumigating apparatus)
  • fumanto (smoker)
  • fumero (smoker)
  • fumifanta (smoky; smoke-producing)
  • fumifar (to produce smoke)
  • fumizado (smoke drying)
  • fumizar (to cover with smoke; to smoke dry)
  • fumizita (smoked (food))
  • fumo (smoke)
  • fumo-fenduro (smoke fissure)
  • fumo-karbono (smoking coal, smoky bit of charcoal)
  • fumo-nigro (lampblack)
  • fumoza (smoky; smoke-producing)
  • fumuro (smoke)

Portuguese

Etymology

From Latin fūmāre, present active indicative of fūmō.

Pronunciation

Verb

fumar (first-person singular present indicative fumo, past participle fumado)

  1. (intransitive) to smoke, to deliberately inhale smoke
  2. (transitive) to smoke, to deliberately inhale smoke

Conjugation


Romanian

Etymology

fum + -ar, or from Latin fumārium, from fūmus (smoke).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fuˈmar/

Noun

fumar n (plural fumare)

  1. chimney

Declension

Synonyms


Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

From Italian fumaiolo.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fǔmaːr/
  • Hyphenation: fu‧mar

Noun

fùmār m (Cyrillic spelling фу̀ма̄р)

  1. (regional) chimney

Synonyms

References

  • fumar” in Hrvatski jezični portal

Spanish

Etymology

Probably borrowed from French fumer[1], from Latin fūmāre, present active indicative of fūmō. Doublet of humar, which was inherited.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [fuˈmaɾ]

Verb

fumar (first-person singular present fumo, first-person singular preterite fumé, past participle fumado)

  1. to smoke (a cigarette, etc. Not food.)
    Dejar de fumar beneficia la salud. Stopping smoking benefits one's health.

Conjugation

      References

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