anulir

Indonesian

Etymology

From Dutch annuleer annuleren, from Middle Dutch annuleren, from Middle French annuler, from Old French anuller, from Latin annullō (annihilate, annul).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈanulɪr]
  • Hyphenation: anu‧lir

Verb

anulir (base/imperative anulir, active menganulir, ordinary passive dianulir, adversative passive teranulir)

  1. to annul; to cancel
    Synonym: batal

Conjugation

Conjugation of anulir (meng-, transitive)
root anulir
active passive basic
imperative
emphatic
jussive
reflective1 ordinary
ordinary
nominative menganulir teranulir dianulir anulir anulirlah
accusative / dative / locative
perfective causative / applicative2
causative
nominative
accusative / dative / locative
perfective causative / applicative2

1 There is another form of reflective passive verb with affixation of ke- -an which is not included in the table. This form is only attested in active voice without causative affixation of per-.
2 The -kan row is either causative or applicative. With transitive roots it mostly has applicative meaning.
Some of these forms do not normally exist or are rarely used in standard Indonesian. Some forms may also change meaning.

Further reading