tragar

(Angielski)

  1. (transitive) to swallow (to cause to pass from the mouth into the stomach)
  2. (transitive) to swallow, consume, absorb (take (something) in so that it disappears)
  3. (transitive) to gulp, swallow, devour (eat quickly and eagerly)
  4. (pronominal, transitive) to buy into, fall for (easily believe something without questioning)
  5. (pronominal, transitive) to stand, tolerate
  6. (colloquial, proscribed) to eat

Częstotliwość

C2
Łączone jako
tra‧gar
Wymawiane jako (IPA)
/tɾaˈɡaɾ/
Etymologia (Angielski)

In summary

Inherited from Vulgar Latin *tragāre, possibly from Doric Greek τράγω (trágō), in which case cognate with Attic Greek τρώγω (trṓgō, “to eat, to swallow”). Alternatively, Coromines suggests an origin ultimately in dracō (“dragon”), via an attested tracō (“underground cavern”), in the sense of "that which swallows [things] up". Cognate with Catalan dragar, Aragonese, Galician, and Portuguese tragar.

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