disciplinar

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by WingerBot (talk | contribs) as of 10:28, 4 September 2022.
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from Esperanto disciplini, Spanish disciplinar, German disziplinieren, English discipline, Italian disciplinare, French discipliner and Russian дисциплини́ровать (disciplinírovatʹ).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dis.t͡si.pliˈnar/

Verb

disciplinar (present tense disciplinas, past tense disciplinis, future tense disciplinos, imperative disciplinez, conditional disciplinus)

  1. (transitive) to discipline, to punish

Conjugation


Portuguese

Verb

Lua error in Module:parameters at line 828: Parameter 2 is not used by this template.

  1. (transitive) to discipline (train someone by instruction and practice)
  2. (transitive) to discipline (teach someone to obey authority)
  3. (transitive) to discipline (punish someone in order to (re)gain control)
  4. Template:pt-verb-form-of

Conjugation

Lua error in Module:parameters at line 828: Parameter 2 is not used by this template.


Romanian

Etymology

From French disciplinaire.

Adjective

disciplinar m or n (feminine singular disciplinară, masculine plural disciplinari, feminine and neuter plural disciplinare)

  1. disciplinarian

Declension


Spanish

Etymology

From disciplina +‎ -ar.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): (Spain) /disθipliˈnaɾ/ [d̪is.θi.pliˈnaɾ]
  • IPA(key): (Latin America, Philippines) /disipliˈnaɾ/ [d̪i.si.pliˈnaɾ]

Verb

disciplinar (first-person singular present disciplino, first-person singular preterite discipliné, past participle disciplinado)

  1. (transitive) to discipline

Conjugation

Derived terms

Further reading