ruptar
Ido
Etymology
Ultimately from Latin ruptūra (“breaking or breaking off of a limb; fracture, breach, rupture”), from the participle stem of rumpō (“I break, burst, tear, rend, rupture; break asunder, force open”).
Verb
ruptar (present tense ruptas, past tense ruptis, future tense ruptos, imperative ruptez, conditional ruptus)
Conjugation
Conjugation of ruptar
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present | past | future | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | ruptar | ruptir | ruptor | ||||
| tense | ruptas | ruptis | ruptos | ||||
| conditional | ruptus | ||||||
| imperative | ruptez | ||||||
| adjective active participle | ruptanta | ruptinta | ruptonta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | ruptante | ruptinte | ruptonte | ||||
| nominal active participle | singular | ruptanto | ruptinto | ruptonto | |||
| plural | ruptanti | ruptinti | ruptonti | ||||
| adjective passive participle | ruptata | ruptita | ruptota | ||||
| adverbial passive participle | ruptate | ruptite | ruptote | ||||
| nominal passive participle | singular | ruptato | ruptito | ruptoto | |||
| plural | ruptati | ruptiti | ruptoti | ||||
Derived terms
- interruptar (“to interrupt”)
- rupteskar (“to begin to break, break up, break down”)
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