ocidar

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin occīdere. Decision no. 155, Progreso III.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ot͡siˈdar/

Verb

ocidar (present ocidas, past ocidis, future ocidos, conditional ocidus, imperative ocidez)

  1. (transitive) to slay, murder: kill with violence
    La kavaliero ocidis la drako.
    The knight slew the dragon.

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • bakteri-ocidivo (bactericide)
  • famili-ocido (familicide)
  • fili-ocido (filicide)
  • fratin-ocido (sororicide)
  • frat-ocido (fratricide, sororicide)
  • fratul-ocido (fratricide)
  • gent-ocido (genocide)
  • hom-ocidanta (homicidal)
  • hom-ocidar (to murder)
  • hom-ocidema (homicidal)
  • hom-ocidiva (homicidal)
  • hom-ocido (homicide)
  • infant-ocido (infanticide)
  • insekt-ocidilo (insecticide)
  • insekt-ocidivo (insecticide)
  • matr-ocido (matricide)
  • ocidanta (murderous)
  • ocidanto (murderer)
  • ocidar su (to commit suicide)
  • ocidema (murderous)
  • ocidero (murderer)
  • parent-ocido (parricide)
  • patrin-ocido (matricide)
  • patr-ocido (parricide)
  • patrul-ocido (patricide)
  • rej-ocidanta (regicidal)
  • rej-ocidanto (regicide)
  • rej-ocido (regicide)
  • spozin-ocido (uxoricide)
  • spoz-ocido (mariticide)
  • spozul-ocido (mariticide)
  • su-ocidar (to commit suicide)

See also

References

  • Progreso III (in Ido), 1910–1911, pages 161, 209, 530, 697
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.