Reikšmė (Anglų k.)

levar

  1. (transitive) to take (to move something to a destination)
  2. (transitive) to take (to move something to a destination)
  3. (transitive) to take (to move something to a destination)
  4. (transitive) to take (to move something to a destination)
  5. (figuratively, transitive) to take (to move something to a destination)
  6. (transitive) to take (to remove something from its rightful place or owner)
  7. (transitive) to take (to remove something from its rightful place or owner)
  8. (transitive) to take (to remove something from its rightful place or owner)
  9. (euphemistic, transitive) to take (to remove something from its rightful place or owner)
  10. (transitive) to take (to be the object of an interaction, especially a violent one)
  11. (informal, intransitive, transitive) to take (to be the object of an interaction, especially a violent one)
  12. (transitive) to take (to require a given amount of time)
  13. (transitive) to contain; to take (to have as an ingredient)
  14. (transitive) to take (to have capacity for)
  15. (transitive) to carry (to have in one’s immediate possession)
  16. (intransitive) to lead to (to have as its destination)
  17. (figuratively, transitive) to lead (someone) (to produce or tend to produce a given result)
  18. (pronominal) to let oneself be overwhelmed

Dažnis

B1
Tariamas kaip (IPA)
/ˈlɛ.vi/
Etimologija (Anglų k.)

In summary

From Old Galician-Portuguese leve, from Latin levis, from Proto-Italic *leɣʷis, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁lengʷʰ- (“light”). Doublet of léu.

Related words

Notes

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