ukrasiti

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *ukrasiti.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ukrǎːsiti/
  • Hyphenation: u‧kra‧si‧ti

Verb

ukrásiti pf (Cyrillic spelling укра́сити)

  1. (transitive) to decorate, adorn

Conjugation

Conjugation of ukrasiti
infinitive ukrasiti
present verbal adverb
past verbal adverb ukrásīvši
verbal noun
singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
present ukrasim ukrasiš ukrasi ukrasimo ukrasite ukrase
future future I ukrasit ću1
ukrasiću
ukrasit ćeš1
ukrasićeš
ukrasit će1
ukrasiće
ukrasit ćemo1
ukrasićemo
ukrasit ćete1
ukrasićete
ukrasit ćē1
ukrasiće
future II bȕdēm ukrasio2 bȕdēš ukrasio2 bȕdē ukrasio2 bȕdēmo ukrasili2 bȕdēte ukrasili2 bȕdū ukrasili2
past perfect ukrasio sam2 ukrasio si2 ukrasio je2 ukrasili smo2 ukrasili ste2 ukrasili su2
pluperfect3 bȉo sam ukrasio2 bȉo si ukrasio2 bȉo je ukrasio2 bíli smo ukrasili2 bíli ste ukrasili2 bíli su ukrasili2
aorist ukrasih ukrasi ukrasi ukrasismo ukrasiste ukrasiše
conditional conditional I ukrasio bih2 ukrasio bi2 ukrasio bi2 ukrasili bismo2 ukrasili biste2 ukrasili bi2
conditional II4 bȉo bih ukrasio2 bȉo bi ukrasio2 bȉo bi ukrasio2 bíli bismo ukrasili2 bíli biste ukrasili2 bíli bi ukrasili2
imperative ukrasi ukrasimo ukrasite
active past participle ukrasio m / ukrasila f / ukrasilo n ukrasili m / ukrasile f / ukrasila n
passive past participle ukrašen m / ukrašena f / ukrašeno n ukrašeni m / ukrašene f / ukrašena 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.