dar
Sentences
Meaning
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive, transitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- (ditransitive) to give
- to yield; to produce; to generate
- (impersonal) to be possible, can
- (transitive) to throw (to organise an event)
- (transitive) to report (to publish or broadcast news)
- (impersonal) to be reported (to be published or broadcasted, of news)
- (intransitive, transitive) to result in, to lead to
- (intransitive) to get into (to cause to behave uncharacteristically)
- (auxiliary, impersonal, intransitive) to suffice, to be enough
- (transitive) to make (to tend or be able to become)
- (transitive) to consider (assign some quality)
- (colloquial) to defeat by a given score
- (intransitive) to come across, to bump into (to find someone or something accidentally or in an unexpected condition)
- (Brazil, slang, vulgar) to put out, to allow to be sexually penetrated
Concepts
purvey
Opposite of
receber, ganhar
Synonyms
fazer doação de
fazer passar
dar de presente
submeter-se
trespassar
traspassar
jogar água benta
Frequency
Pronounced as (IPA)
/ˈda(ʁ)/
Etymology
In summary
Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese dar (“to give”), from Latin dare, from Proto-Italic *didō, from Proto-Indo-European *dédeh₃ti, from the root *deh₃- (“give”).
Notes
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