aullar

Spanish

Etymology

From Old Spanish, from an older *ullar, from Vulgar Latin *ūl(ŭ)lāre, from Latin ululāre, present active infinitive of ululō, ultimately from a reduplicated Proto-Indo-European imitative root. Doublet of the borrowed ulular[1]. Cognate with English ululate.

Pronunciation

  • (Castilian) IPA(key): /auˈʎaɾ/, [au̯ˈʎaɾ]
  • (Latin America) IPA(key): /auˈɟ͡ʝaɾ/, [au̯ˈʝaɾ]

Verb

aullar (first-person singular present aúllo, first-person singular preterite aullé, past participle aullado)

  1. to howl, bay

Conjugation

  • Rule: stressed ú in certain conjugations

    References

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