τρέμω

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *trem-, extended form of Proto-Indo-European *ter-. The extended form Proto-Indo-European *tres- also yielded τρέω (tréō, to dread, to terrify). Cognate with Latin tremō, Avestan 𐬌𐬙𐬌𐬀𐬯𐬆𐬭𐬆𐬭𐬙 (trərəsaiti), Ancient Greek τρέω (tréō), Old Irish tarrach, Lithuanian trišu, Latvian trisēt, Old Church Slavonic трѧсѫ (tręsǫ) and Sanskrit त्रसति (trasati).
Also see τρόμος (trómos), τρομέω (troméō).

Pronunciation

 

Verb

τρέμω (trémō)

  1. To “tremble” or fear; to be afraid, trembling.

Inflection

This entry needs an inflection-table template.

Descendants

References


Greek

Etymology

From Ancient Greek τρέμω (trémō).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtremo/
  • Hyphenation: τρέ‧μω

Verb

τρέμω (trémo) (imperfect έτρεμα) found only in the imperfective tenses

  1. tremble, shake, shiver
  2. (figuratively) I fear, shake from fear
    Synonyms: φοβάμαι (fovámai), τρομάζω (tromázo)

Conjugation

  • τρεμάμενος (tremámenos)
  • τρέμολο n (trémolo, tremolo) (music)
  • τρεμοπαίζω (tremopaízo)
  • τρεμοσβήνω (tremosvíno)
  • τρεμόσβηστος (tremósvistos)
  • τρεμούλα f (tremoúla)
  • τρεμουλιάζω (tremouliázo)
  • τρεμουλιάρης (tremouliáris)
  • τρεμουλιάρικος (tremouliárikos)
  • τρεμούλιασμα n (tremoúliasma)
  • τρεμουλιαστός (tremouliastós)
  • τρέμουλο (trémoulo)
  • τρεμοφέγγισμα n (tremoféngisma)
  • τρεμοφέγγω (tremoféngo)
  • τρέμω σαν το ψάρι (trémo san to psári, shake like a leaf -lit:like a fish-)
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