rappeler

English

Etymology

rappel + -er

Noun

rappeler (plural rappelers)

  1. One who rappels (descends by rope).

French

Etymology

From re- + appeler.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʁa.ple/
  • (file)

Verb

rappeler

  1. to call again; to call back
    Ton père a téléphoné. Peux-tu le rappeler ?
    Your father phoned. Can you call him back?
  2. to remind
    Rappelle-moi mon rôle.
    Remind me of my role.
  3. (reflexive) to recall, remember (use without de is formal and rare; use with de much more common but still proscribed)
    Je ne me le rappelle pas.
    I don't remember that/it.
    Je ne me rappelle pas de ça.
    I don't remember that.
  1. (climbing) to pull through (a rope)

Conjugation

With the exception of appeler, jeter and their derived verbs, all verbs that used to double the consonants can also now be conjugated like amener.

With the exception of appeler, jeter and their derived verbs, all verbs that used to double the consonants can also now be conjugated like amener.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.