alzar

Asturian

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *altiāre, present active infinitive of *altiō, from Latin altus (high).

Verb

alzar (first-person singular indicative present alzo, past participle alzáu)

  1. to lift, raise
  2. to rise, go up
  3. to be above
  4. to be (a certain height)
  5. to make off with, to seize
  6. to run off, leave
  7. (reflexive) to stand up (to), to rebel

Conjugation


Spanish

Etymology

From Medieval Latin altiāre, present active infinitive of altiō, from Latin altus (high). Compare Aromanian analtsu, Catalan alçar, Dalmatian alzur, French hausser, Friulian alçâ, Italian alzare, Occitan auçar, Portuguese alçar, Romani auzar, Romanian înălța, Romansch auzar, Sardinian altsare.

Pronunciation

  • (Castilian) IPA(key): /alˈθaɾ/, [al̟ˈθaɾ]
  • (Latin America) IPA(key): /alˈsaɾ/

Verb

alzar (first-person singular present alzo, first-person singular preterite alcé, past participle alzado)

  1. (transitive) to lift, raise
  2. (transitive) to remove; to steal
  3. (transitive) to hide
  4. (reflexive) to rise up, revolt
  5. (reflexive, with preposition con) to achieve, obtain
  6. (reflexive, law) to appeal

Conjugation

  • Rule: z becomes a c before e.

    Derived terms

    Further reading

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