laboro
See also: laboró
Catalan
Esperanto
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /laˈboro/
- Hyphenation: la‧bo‧ro
- Rhymes: -oro
Derived terms
Latin
Etymology
From labor.
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /laˈboː.roː/, [ɫaˈboː.roː]
Audio (Classical) (file)
Verb
labōrō (present infinitive labōrāre, perfect active labōrāvī, supine labōrātum); first conjugation, limited passive
Conjugation
1At least one rare poetic syncopated perfect form is attested.
Related terms
Descendants
- Dalmatian: lavorar
- Istriot: lavurà
- Italian: lavorare
- Old Leonese:
- Asturian: llabrar
- Old Occitan: laorar
- Old Portuguese: lavrar
- Old Spanish:
- Spanish: labrar
- Rhaeto-Romance:
- Sicilian: lavurari
- Venetian: łavorar, łaorar, laorar, lavorar
- → Albanian: lëroj
- → Asturian: llaborar
- → Catalan: laborar
- → Galician: laborar
- → Old French: laborer
- Middle French: labourer
- French: labourer
- Norman: labouother
- → Middle English: labouren
- Middle French: labourer
- → Portuguese: laborar
- → Spanish: laborar
References
- laboro in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- laboro in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- laboro in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
- Carl Meissner; Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
- to be tormented by hunger, to be starving: fame laborare, premi
- to have the gout: ex pedibus laborare, pedibus aegrum esse
- to suffer from want of a thing: inopia alicuius rei laborare, premi
- to expend great labour on a thing: operam (laborem, curam) in or ad aliquid impendere
- to work without intermission: laborem non intermittere
- to lose one's labour: inanem laborem suscipere
- to strain every nerve, do one's utmost in a matter: contendere et laborare, ut
- to strain every nerve, do one's utmost in a matter: pro viribus eniti et laborare, ut
- not to trouble oneself about a thing: non laborare de aliqua re
- to have pecuniary difficulties: laborare de pecunia
- (ambiguous) to drain the cup of sorrow: omnes labores exanclare
- (ambiguous) rest after toil is sweet: acti labores iucundi (proverb.)
- to be tormented by hunger, to be starving: fame laborare, premi
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /laˈboɾo/, [laˈβoɾo]
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