sabla
Esperanto
French
Ido
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsa.bla/
Occitan
Etymology
From Old Occitan, from Vulgar Latin *sabla, from Latin sabula, from the plural of sabulum, variant of sabulō. Compare French sable, Italian sabbia.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈsaβlo]
Swedish
Etymology
Adjective attested since 1889. A combination of the expletives satan (literary "Satan") and djävla ("devil") and associated with sabel ("sabre"). The literal meaning of the verb is attested since 1610 and the figurative meaning since 1957.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɑːbˌla/
Adjective
sabla
Verb
sabla (present sablar, preterite sablade, supine sablat, imperative sabla)
- (archaic) To saber.
- Kavalleristerna sablade de flyende bönderna.
- "The cavalry soldiers sabred the fleeing peasants."
- Used with the particle ned ("down"), especially in the meaning "to criticize mercilessly"; to pan.
- Den nya pjäsen blev nedsablad av en enad kritikerkår.
- "The new play was unanimously panned by the critics."
Conjugation
Conjugation of sabla (weak)
Conjugation of sabla ned
Active | Passive | |
---|---|---|
Infinitive | sabla ned | - |
Present tense | sablar ned | - |
Past tense | sablade ned | - |
Supine | sablat ned | - |
Imperative | sabla ned | - |
Present participle | nedsablande | |
Past participle | nedsablad |
Synonyms
- sabla ner (variant spelling)
Related terms
- nedsabla
- nedsabling
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