Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

suflar

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from French souffler, German soufflieren, Italian soffiare, Russian суфли́ровать (suflírovatʹ), Spanish soplar.

Pronunciation

Verb

suflar (present suflas, past suflis, future suflos, conditional suflus, imperative suflez)

  1. (intransitive) to blow (wind, etc.)
  2. (transitive) to blow: force wind or breathe upon
  3. (transitive, theater and television) to prompt (a speaker, actor)
  4. (intransitive, chess, checkers) to huff

Conjugation

More information present, past ...

Derived terms

  • bento-sufleto (a breath of wind)
  • eksuflar (to blow out)
  • forjo-suflilo (blacksmith's bellows)
  • suflado (blow, blowing, puffing, breath, breathing)
  • suflajo ((the air) puff, gust, blast, whiff)
  • suflego ((the air) puff, gust, blast, whiff)
  • suflero (prompter)
  • sufleto ((the air) puff, gust, blast, whiff)
  • suflisto (prompter)
  • suflo (blow, blowing, puffing, breath, breathing)

See also

Remove ads

Ladino

Etymology

From Latin sufflō.

Verb

suflar

  1. (intransitive) to blow

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads