mariajar
Ido
Etymology
Borrowed from English marriage, French mariage.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mari̯aˈʒar/, /mari̯aˈd͡ʒar/
Verb
mariajar (present mariajas, past mariajis, future mariajos, conditional mariajus, imperative mariajez)
- (transitive) to marry; legally unite in wedlock (by an official, priest, minister)
Conjugation
| present | past | future | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | mariajar | mariajir | mariajor | ||||
| tense | mariajas | mariajis | mariajos | ||||
| conditional | mariajus | — | — | ||||
| imperative | mariajez | — | — | ||||
| adjective active participle | mariajanta | mariajinta | mariajonta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | mariajante | mariajinte | mariajonte | ||||
| nominal active participle |
singular | mariajanto | mariajinto | mariajonto | |||
| plural | mariajanti | mariajinti | mariajonti | ||||
| adjective passive participle | mariajata | mariajita | mariajota | ||||
| adverbial passive participle | mariajate | mariajite | mariajote | ||||
| nominal passive participle |
singular | mariajato | mariajito | mariajoto | |||
| plural | mariajati | mariajiti | mariajoti | ||||
Derived terms
- mariaj-anunco (“banns”)
- mariajanto (“person officiating at a marriage, match maker;”)
- mariajar su (“to get married”)
- mariajatulo (“married man, bridegroom”)
- mariajebla (“marriageable”)
- mariajero (“person officiating at a marriage, match maker;”)
- mariajeso (“marriage, matrimony, wedlock”)
- mariajo (“marriage”)
- mariajo legala (“civil marriage”)
- mariajo-festanti (“wedding party, wedding guests”)
- mariajo-festo (“wedding, nuptials”)
- mariajo-festo-gesti (“wedding party, wedding guests”)