deixar

(Αγγλικός)

  1. (transitive) to leave; to exit (to go out of or away from a place)
  2. (transitive) to leave (to refrain from taking)
  3. (transitive) to leave, to leave behind (to cause to exist after its occurrence)
  4. (ditransitive) to leave (to cause to be in a state)
  5. (transitive) to leave (to end one’s connection, affiliation or relationship with)
  6. (catenative) to quit (to stop doing something habitually)
  7. (catenative) not to (do something); to refrain from
  8. (catenative, ditransitive) to let; to allow to (to give permission to)
  9. (catenative, ditransitive) to let; to allow to (to give possibility to)
  10. (transitive) to postpone; to put off (to reschedule or avoid doing something until a later time)
  11. (transitive) to leave; to bequeath (to give something to someone after dying or leaving)
  12. (transitive) to leave off; to omit (not to include)
  13. (transitive) to leave alone (to not bother)
  14. (transitive) to make someone feel a certain way

Συχνότητα

A1
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/de(j)ˈʃa(ʁ)/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese leixar, from Latin laxāre (“to extend; to lighten; to relax; to release”), from laxus (“loose”). Doublet of the borrowed laxar. Compare Galician deixar, Asturian dexar, and Spanish dejar, all also undergoing the shift of initial -l- to -d-. It may have been influenced by the preposition de or come from contraction of a Late Latin *dēlaxāre.

Related words

αφήνω

παύω

σταματώ

επιτρέπω

τελειώνω

γυρίζω

επιστρέφω

σπάω

δεν πειράζει

παραχωρώ

συγκατατίθεμαι

χορηγώ

αφήνω πίσω

συναινώ

a’fino

epi’trepo

δίνω

κάνω

παρέχω

βγαίνω

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