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predika

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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Icelandic

Alternative forms

  • prédika

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Latin praedicō (proclaim, declare, preach), ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European roots *preh₂- and *deyḱ-.

Pronunciation

Verb

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1=weak
2=predikaði
3=predikað
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.

predika

  1. to preach, give a sermon

Conjugation

More information infinitive nafnháttur, supine sagnbót ...
1 Spoken form, usually not written; in writing, the unappended plural form (optionally followed by the full pronoun) is preferred.
More information infinitive nafnháttur, supine sagnbót ...
1 Spoken form, usually not written; in writing, the unappended plural form (optionally followed by the full pronoun) is preferred.
More information strong declension (sterk beyging), singular (eintala) ...

Derived terms

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Serbo-Croatian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Italian predica.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /prêdika/
  • Hyphenation: pre‧di‧ka

Noun

prȅdika f (Cyrillic spelling пре̏дика)

  1. lecture
  2. homily

References

  • predika”, in Hrvatski jezični portal [Croatian language portal] (in Serbo-Croatian), 2006–2025

Swedish

Etymology

From Old Swedish predika, from Latin praedicare (to proclaim).

Verb

predika (present predikar, preterite predikade, supine predikat, imperative predika)

  1. to preach

Conjugation

More information active, passive ...

1 Archaic. 2 Dated. See the appendix on Swedish verbs.

References

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