pedir

Galician

Etymology

From Old Portuguese pedir, from Latin petere, present active infinitive of petō

Verb

pedir (first-person singular present pido, first-person singular preterite pedín, past participle pedido)

  1. to ask for; to request; to order

Conjugation


Portuguese

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old Portuguese pedir, from Latin petere, present active infinitive of petō, from Proto-Indo-European *peth₂-.

Pronunciation

  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /pɨˈðiɾ/
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /peˈd͡ʒi(ʁ)/, /piˈd͡ʒi(ʁ)/

Verb

pedir (first-person singular present indicative peço, past participle pedido)

  1. (transitive with por or with no preposition) to ask for; to request (to express the need or desire for something)
    Nenhum de vocês precisa pedir permissão para ninguém.
    Neither of you has to ask anyone for permission.
    Peço que vocês parem de fazer barulho.
    I ask you to stop making noise.
    Se está com dificuldade, peça por ajuda.
    If you are having difficulties, ask for help.
  2. (transitive) to order (to request a product or service)
    pedir uma pizzato order a pizza
  3. (transitive with por or with no preposition) to ask for; to invite (to be in obvious need of)
    Essas janelas estão pedindo uma limpeza!
    These windows are asking for a cleaning!
  4. (ditransitive, with the indirect object taking por) to charge (to assign a given price to something)
    O vendedor pediu dez mil pelo carro.
    The salesman charged ten thousand for the car.
    Synonym: cobrar

Conjugation

Derived terms

Descendants


Spanish

Etymology

From Latin petere, present active infinitive of petō, from Proto-Indo-European *peth₂-.

Verb

pedir (first-person singular present pido, first-person singular preterite pedí, past participle pedido)

  1. to ask for something
    Él le pidió agua al mesero.
    He asked the waiter for water.
  2. to request someone else to do something
    Pido que ustedes estén ahí a la una.
    I ask that you be there at one o'clock.
  3. to order something

Conjugation

  • Rule: e weakens to i in certain conjugations.
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