blistati
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *blistati.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /blǐstati/
- Hyphenation: bli‧sta‧ti
Verb
blìstati impf (Cyrillic spelling блѝстати)
Conjugation
Conjugation of blistati
| Infinitive: blistati | Present verbal adverb: blìstajūći | Past verbal adverb: — | Verbal noun: blìstānje | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | Singular | Plural | |||||
| Person | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
| Verbal forms | ja | ti | on / ona / ono | mi | vi | oni / one / ona | |
| Present | blistam | blistaš | blista | blistamo | blistate | blistaju | |
| Future | Future I | blistat ću1 blistaću |
blistat ćeš1 blistaćeš |
blistat će1 blistaće |
blistat ćemo1 blistaćemo |
blistat ćete1 blistaćete |
blistat će1 blistaće |
| Future II | bȕdēm blistao2 | bȕdēš blistao2 | bȕdē blistao2 | bȕdēmo blistali2 | bȕdēte blistali2 | bȕdū blistali2 | |
| Past | Perfect | blistao sam2 | blistao si2 | blistao je2 | blistali smo2 | blistali ste2 | blistali su2 |
| Pluperfect3 | bȉo sam blistao2 | bȉo si blistao2 | bȉo je blistao2 | bíli smo blistali2 | bíli ste blistali2 | bíli su blistali2 | |
| Imperfect | blistah | blistaše | blistaše | blistasmo | blistaste | blistahu | |
| Conditional I | blistao bih2 | blistao bi2 | blistao bi2 | blistali bismo2 | blistali biste2 | blistali bi2 | |
| Conditional II4 | bȉo bih blistao2 | bȉo bi blistao2 | bȉo bi blistao2 | bíli bismo blistali2 | bíli biste blistali2 | bíli bi blistali2 | |
| Imperative | — | blistaj | — | blistajmo | blistajte | — | |
| Active past participle | blistao m / blistala f / blistalo n | blistali m / blistale f / blistala n | |||||
| 1 Croatian spelling: others omit the infinitive suffix completely and bind the clitic. 2 For masculine nouns; a feminine or neuter agent would use the feminine and neuter gender forms of the active past participle and auxiliary verb, respectively. 3 Often replaced by the past perfect in colloquial speech, i.e. the auxiliary verb biti (to be) is routinely dropped. 4 Often replaced by the conditional I in colloquial speech, i.e. the auxiliary verb biti (to be) is routinely dropped.
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