peniti

Indonesian

Etymology

From Portuguese alfinete (safety pin), from Andalusian Arabic اَلْخِلَال (al-ḵilāl), from Arabic خِلَال (ḵilāl, pin, peg).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [pəˈnit̪i]
  • Hyphenation: pê‧ni‧ti

Noun

peniti (plural peniti-peniti)

  1. safety pin

Further reading

Javanese

Romanization

peniti

  1. romanization of ꦥꦼꦤꦶꦠꦶ

Latin

Adjective

penitī

  1. inflection of penitus:
    1. nominative/vocative masculine plural
    2. genitive masculine/neuter singular

References

Serbo-Croatian

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pêniti/
  • Hyphenation: pe‧ni‧ti

Verb

pȅniti impf (Cyrillic spelling пе̏нити)

  1. (reflexive) to foam

Conjugation

Conjugation of peniti
infinitive peniti
present verbal adverb pȅnēći
past verbal adverb
verbal noun pȅnēnje
singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
present penim peniš peni penimo penite pene
future future I penit ću1
peniću
penit ćeš1
penićeš
penit će1
peniće
penit ćemo1
penićemo
penit ćete1
penićete
penit ćē1
peniće
future II bȕdēm penio2 bȕdēš penio2 bȕdē penio2 bȕdēmo penili2 bȕdēte penili2 bȕdū penili2
past perfect penio sam2 penio si2 penio je2 penili smo2 penili ste2 penili su2
pluperfect3 bȉo sam penio2 bȉo si penio2 bȉo je penio2 bíli smo penili2 bíli ste penili2 bíli su penili2
imperfect penjah penjaše penjaše penjasmo penjaste penjahu
conditional conditional I penio bih2 penio bi2 penio bi2 penili bismo2 penili biste2 penili bi2
conditional II4 bȉo bih penio2 bȉo bi penio2 bȉo bi penio2 bíli bismo penili2 bíli biste penili2 bíli bi penili2
imperative peni penimo penite
active past participle penio m / penila f / penilo n penili m / penile f / penila 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.