dejar

Signification (Anglais)

  1. (transitive) to leave (to place)
  2. (transitive) to leave, to keep (to allow to continue)
  3. (transitive) to leave (to cause, result in)
  4. (transitive) to let, allow
  5. (transitive) to let go, put down (to release from one's grasp)
  6. (transitive) to drop off
  7. (transitive) to leave, to abandon, to dump
  8. (transitive) to give up, to lay off, to kick (colloquial)
  9. (transitive) to set, to put, to make (in certain phrases)
  10. (Spain,colloquial,transitive) to cut out (stop)
  11. (intransitive) to leave off
  12. (intransitive) to cease, stop
  13. (reflexive) to be left
  14. (reflexive) to let (oneself), to let oneself go (to cease to care about one's appearance)

Concepts

laisser

quitter

abandonner

permettre

donner

partir

cesser

oublier

prêter

arrêter

livrer

partir de

enlever

ôter

autoriser

léguer

laisser tomber

larguer

finir

désert

poser

conserver

fournir

s'arrêter

emprunter

se déshabiller

passer

accorder

débarrasser

laisser tranquille

distraire

retrancher

éliminer

délaisser

jeter l’éponge

abstenir

désister

refrain

coup de pied

décharger

déposer

mettre

s’en aller

sortir

continuer

rester

tenir

transmettre

charger

confier

démissionner

lever

renoncer

déserter

aboutir

amener

causer

conduire

diriger

plomb

résulter

fromage

casser

admettre

pourvoir

plaquer

conclure

sauver

économiser

épargner

Fréquence

A1
Coupé comme
de‧jar
Prononcé comme (IPA)
/deˈxaɾ/
Étymologie (Anglais)

Inherited from Old Spanish dexar, from Early Old Spanish lexar, from Latin laxāre, whence also laxar (a borrowed doublet). Also compare Portuguese and Galician deixar, Asturian dexar, Aragonese deixar, Catalan deixar, Occitan daissar, laissar, Sicilian dassari and both French laisser and délaisser. Early Old Spanish generally has l-, forms appearing with d- towards 1200. The change of the initial l- to d- in many (especially Iberian) Romance languages has been explained in various ways: most likely, it is due to the influence of the preposition de, often used in constructions with this verb, or from an influence of, or contraction of, Late Latin dēlaxāre (also attested in Old Spanish as delexar), due to rapid pronunciation (as is common in quasi-auxiliary verbs). Less likely explanations include influence from the verb dar (“to give”), or derivation from Latin dēsinere, the latter proving difficult on phonetic grounds. Compare English lease (sense 5), lax, and laxative.

Ajoutez ceci à vos favoris

espagnol

Commencez à apprendre espagnol avec learnfeliz .

Entraînez-vous à parler et à mémoriser « dejar » et de nombreux autres mots et phrases dans espagnol .

Accédez à notre page de cours espagnol

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes

Questions