tragar

Oznaczający (Angielski)

  1. to inhale smoke from a cigarette
  2. (literary) to gulp down, to swallow
  3. (uncommon) to quaff (drink with vigour, in large draughts)
  4. (uncommon) to devour; to engulf (to surround or cover)
  5. (uncommon) to stand; to withstand (to resist or endure something successfully)

Koncepcje

łykać

połknąć

połykać

zaciągać

Wymawiane jako (IPA)
/tɾaˈɡa(ʁ)/
Etymologia (Angielski)

In summary

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 Spanish tragar.

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes