naskar
Ido
    
    Etymology
    
Borrowed from Italian nascere, Spanish nacer. (Compare Esperanto naski (“to give birth to”)).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /nasˈkar/
Verb
    
naskar (present tense naskas, past tense naskis, future tense naskos, imperative naskez, conditional naskus)
- (intransitive) to be born
Conjugation
    
    Conjugation of naskar
|  | present | past | future | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | naskar | naskir | naskor | ||||
| tense | naskas | naskis | naskos | ||||
| conditional | naskus | ||||||
| imperative | naskez | ||||||
| adjective active participle | naskanta | naskinta | naskonta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | naskante | naskinte | naskonte | ||||
| nominal active participle | singular | naskanto | naskinto | naskonto | |||
| plural | naskanti | naskinti | naskonti | ||||
Derived terms
    
- ennaskinto (“a native”)
- kunnaskinto (“congenital”)
- naskala yuro, naskoyuro (“birthright”)
- naskala (“natal”)
- naskanta (“nascent”)
- naskigar (“to give birth to”)
- naskinta nove (“newborn”)
- naskinto unesma (“firstborn child”)
- nasko, naskepoko (“birth, nativity”)
- naskolando (“land of birth, fatherland”)
- naskoloko (“birthplace”)
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.