pedo
Contents |
[edit] English
[edit] Noun
pedo (plural pedos)
- Alternative spelling of paedo.
[edit] Anagrams
[edit] Ido
[edit] Etymology
Compare Catalan peu, Esperanto piedo, French pied, Interlingua pede, Italian piede, Latin pes, Latvian pēda, Lithuanian pėdės, Portuguese pé, Sardinian pei, Spanish pie.
[edit] Noun
pedo (plural pedi)
[edit] Latin
[edit] Etymology 1
From pēs (“foot”).
[edit] Verb
present active pedō, present infinitive pedāre, perfect active pedāvī, supine pedātum.
[edit] Inflection
[edit] Derived terms
[edit] Related terms
[edit] Etymology 2
Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *perd- (“to fart”), probably of imitative origin. Cognates include Greek πέρδομαι, Lithuanian persti, Czech prdět, Macedonian прди, Polish pierdzieć, Russian пердеть, Slovak prdieť, Urdu پاد (pād), English fart.
[edit] Verb
present active pēdō, present infinitive pēdere, perfect active pepēdī, supine pēditum.
- (intransitive) I break wind, fart.
[edit] Inflection
[edit] Derived terms
[edit] Descendants
[edit] Norwegian
[edit] Etymology
Abbreviation of pedofil
[edit] Noun
pedo m. (definite singular pedoen; indefinite plural pedoer; definite plural pedoene)
- (pejorative, colloquial) pedophile
- Din jævla pedo!
- You fucking pedophile!
- 2008 Verdens Gang, "Lynsjestemning i fengselet – Skjellsord haglet fra cellevinduene", January 14
- Din jævla pedo!
[edit] Romani
[edit] Noun
pedo m. (plural peda)
[edit] Spanish
[edit] Etymology
From Latin peditum (“fart”).
[edit] Adjective
pedo m. and f. (plural pedos)
- (slang, vulgar) drunk, high, intoxicated
[edit] Noun
pedo m. (plural pedos)
[edit] Derived terms
[edit] Verb
pedo m. (feminine peda, masculine plural pedos, feminine plural pedas, infinitive peer)
- Past participle of peer
- English nouns
- English alternative forms
- Ido nouns
- Latin verbs
- Latin first conjugation verbs
- Latin terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Latin third conjugation verbs
- Norwegian nouns
- Norwegian pejoratives
- Norwegian colloquialisms
- Romani nouns
- rom:Animals
- Spanish terms derived from Latin
- Spanish adjectives
- Spanish slang
- Spanish vulgarities
- Spanish nouns
- Mexican Spanish
- Spanish past participles