faliar
Ido
Etymology
Borrowed from English fail, French faillir, Italian fallire, Spanish fallar. The -i- from the French and Italian infinitives were kept to distinguish the word from falar (“to fall”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /faˈli̯ar/
Verb
faliar (present falias, past faliis, future falios, conditional falius, imperative faliez)
- (transitive, intransitive) to fail, miscarry, miss (an aim), not to succeed
- (intransitive, commercial) to fail, to become insolvent without implication of disgrace
Conjugation
| present | past | future | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | faliar | faliir | falior | ||||
| tense | falias | faliis | falios | ||||
| conditional | falius | — | — | ||||
| imperative | faliez | — | — | ||||
| adjective active participle | falianta | faliinta | falionta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | faliante | faliinte | falionte | ||||
| nominal active participle |
singular | falianto | faliinto | falionto | |||
| plural | falianti | faliinti | falionti | ||||
| adjective passive participle | faliata | faliita | faliota | ||||
| adverbial passive participle | faliate | faliite | faliote | ||||
| nominal passive participle |
singular | faliato | faliito | falioto | |||
| plural | faliati | faliiti | falioti | ||||
Derived terms
- faliego (“debacle, break up, downfall”)
- faliigar (“to cause to miss, to fail; to frustrate”)
- faliinto (“insolvent person”)
- falio (“failure, insolvency”)
- nefaliiva (“unfailing, unerring, infallible”)
- senfalio (“without fail, unfailingly”)
See also
- (2): bankrotar (“to be bankrupt, become bankrupt”)