repentir

French

Etymology

From Middle French repentir, from Old French repentir, from a change of conjugation from Vulgar Latin *repoenitere, from re- + Latin paenitēre, present active infinitive of paeniteō.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʁə.pɑ̃.tiʁ/
  • (file)

Noun

repentir m (plural repentirs)

  1. repentance

Verb

repentir

  1. (takes a reflexive pronoun) to repent

Conjugation

This is one of a fairly large group of irregular -ir verbs that are all conjugated the same way. Other members of this group include sortir and dormir. The most significant difference between these verbs' conjugation and that of the regular -ir verbs is that these verbs' conjugation does not use the infix -iss-. Further, this conjugation has the forms (je, tu) repens and (il) repent in the present indicative and imperative, whereas a regular -ir verb would have *repentis and *repentit (as in the past historic).

  • In the passé composé the past participle should agree with the subject in gender and number: "Et je lui ai donné du temps, afin qu'elle se repentît de sa prostitution; mais elle ne s'est point repentie." (Revelation 2:21, Martin translation)

Further reading

Anagrams


Middle French

Etymology

From Old French repentir.

Verb

repentir

  1. to repent

Descendants


Old French

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *repoenitere (with a change of conjugation), from re- + Latin paenitēre, present active infinitive of paeniteō.

Verb

repentir

  1. to repent

Descendants

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