juriti

Portuguese

Etymology

From Old Tupi îuriti.[1]

Pronunciation

  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /ʒu.ɾiˈt͡ʃi/

Noun

juriti m (plural juritis)

  1. a bird of the genus Leptotila

References

  1. ^ NAVARRO, E. A. Dicionário de tupi antigo: a língua indígena clássica do Brasil. São Paulo. Global. 2013.

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *juriti, from a Turkic language; compare Turkish yürümek.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /jǔːriti/
  • Hyphenation: ju‧ri‧ti

Verb

júriti impf (Cyrillic spelling ју́рити)

  1. (intransitive) to run at full/top speed, rush, race
  2. (transitive) to chase, pursue sb

Conjugation

Conjugation of juriti
infinitive juriti
present verbal adverb júrēći
past verbal adverb
verbal noun júrēnje
singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
present jurim juriš juri jurimo jurite jure
future future I jurit ću1
juriću
jurit ćeš1
jurićeš
jurit će1
juriće
jurit ćemo1
jurićemo
jurit ćete1
jurićete
jurit ćē1
juriće
future II bȕdēm jurio2 bȕdēš jurio2 bȕdē jurio2 bȕdēmo jurili2 bȕdēte jurili2 bȕdū jurili2
past perfect jurio sam2 jurio si2 jurio je2 jurili smo2 jurili ste2 jurili su2
pluperfect3 bȉo sam jurio2 bȉo si jurio2 bȉo je jurio2 bíli smo jurili2 bíli ste jurili2 bíli su jurili2
imperfect jurah juraše juraše jurasmo juraste jurahu
conditional conditional I jurio bih2 jurio bi2 jurio bi2 jurili bismo2 jurili biste2 jurili bi2
conditional II4 bȉo bih jurio2 bȉo bi jurio2 bȉo bi jurio2 bíli bismo jurili2 bíli biste jurili2 bíli bi jurili2
imperative juri jurimo jurite
active past participle jurio m / jurila f / jurilo n jurili m / jurile f / jurila n

1   Croatian spelling: others omit the infinitive suffix completely and bind the clitic.
2   For masculine nouns; a feminine or neuter agent would use the feminine and neuter gender forms of the active past participle and auxiliary verb, respectively.
3   Often replaced by the past perfect in colloquial speech, i.e. the auxiliary verb biti (to be) is routinely dropped.
4   Often replaced by the conditional I in colloquial speech, i.e. the auxiliary verb biti (to be) is routinely dropped.
  *Note: The aorist and imperfect were not present in, or have nowadays fallen into disuse in, many dialects and therefore they are routinely replaced by the past perfect in both formal and colloquial speech.

Derived terms