Contionary:fre: Difference between revisions
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==[[Europic]]== | |||
[[Category: Europic words]] | |||
[[Category: Europic verbs]] | |||
[[Category: Europic short-form verbs]] | |||
{{Template: Europic Pronuncation|fre}} | |||
===Verb=== | |||
'''fre''' | |||
# to fare, to be doing | |||
#: Has long-form variant ''[[Contionary: frate#Europic|frate]]''. | |||
====Synonyms==== | |||
* ''[[Contionary: frate#Europic|frate]]'' ‘to fare’ | |||
==Indevroplu== | ==Indevroplu== | ||
Latest revision as of 16:38, 18 March 2026
Europic
Pronunciation
- Europic Phonology: /fre/
Verb
fre
- to fare, to be doing
- Has long-form variant frate.
Synonyms
- frate ‘to fare’
Indevroplu
Etymology
Loaned from German früh (“early”)
Pronunciation
Preposition
fre (фрэ)
- before
- megėjpekuruz fsja nuta utu fre mehmonju etgėjėrėz?
- Did you cook all the required food before the guests came?
Inflection
adverb
- fri (“early”)
adjective
- fra (“early, prior”)
Derived terms
- frėfelisir (“to look forward to”)
- frėnamoju (“premiere”)
- frėzamonu (“past”)
- frėásėlutu (“appetizer”)
- lišfra (“too early”)
- nėfre (“after”)