ciar
Latin
Scottish Gaelic
Etymology
From Old Irish cíar (“dark”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱēy(w)-, *ḱyē(w)- (“grey, dark”). Further cognates are Old Novgorodian хѣрь (xěrĭ, “gray cloth”) and Old English hār (“grey-haired”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kʰiaɾ/
Spanish
Verb
ciar (first-person singular present cío, first-person singular preterite cie, past participle ciado)
- to back water
Conjugation
- Rule: stressed í in certain conjugations; monosyllabic infinitives receive no written accent in certain conjugations. This change was put into effect in the 2010 spelling reforms by the RAE, so some other forms are still commonly seen.
infinitive | ciar | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gerund | ciando | ||||||
past participle | masculine | feminine | |||||
singular | ciado | ciada | |||||
plural | ciados | ciadas | |||||
singular | plural | ||||||
1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | 1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | ||
indicative | yo | tú vos |
él/ella/ello usted |
nosotros nosotras |
vosotros vosotras |
ellos/ellas ustedes | |
present | cío | cíastú cias, ciásvos |
cía | ciamos | ciais, ciáis | cían | |
imperfect | ciaba | ciabas | ciaba | ciábamos | ciabais | ciaban | |
preterite | cie, cié | ciaste | cio, ció | ciamos | ciasteis | ciaron | |
future | ciaré | ciarás | ciará | ciaremos | ciaréis | ciarán | |
conditional | ciaría | ciarías | ciaría | ciaríamos | ciaríais | ciarían | |
subjunctive | yo | tú vos |
él/ella/ello usted |
nosotros nosotras |
vosotros vosotras |
ellos/ellas ustedes | |
present | cíe | cíestú ciéis, cieisvos2 |
cíe | ciemos | cieis | cíen | |
imperfect (ra) |
ciara | ciaras | ciara | ciáramos | ciarais | ciaran | |
imperfect (se) |
ciase | ciases | ciase | ciásemos | ciaseis | ciasen | |
future1 | ciare | ciares | ciare | ciáremos | ciareis | ciaren | |
imperative | — | tú vos |
usted | nosotros nosotras |
vosotros vosotras |
ustedes | |
affirmative | cíatú ciá, ciavos |
cíe | ciemos | ciad | cíen | ||
negative | no cíes | no cíe | no ciemos | no cieis | no cíen |
- 1 Mostly obsolete form, now mainly used in legal jargon.
- 2 Argentine and Uruguayan voseo prefers the tú form for the present subjunctive.
► <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Spanish_verbs_ending_in_-ar_(conjugation_i-%C3%AD)' title='Category:Spanish verbs ending in -ar (conjugation i-í)'>Spanish verbs ending in -ar (conjugation i-í)</a>
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