favellare
Appearance
Italian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Late Latin fābellārī, a verb based on Latin fābella, the diminutive of fābula (“narrative; story”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]favellàre (first-person singular present favèllo, first-person singular past historic favellài, past participle favellàto, auxiliary avére)
- (intransitive, literary) to speak, to talk [auxiliary avere]
- Synonym: parlare
- 1321, Dante Alighieri, La divina commedia: Inferno [The Divine Comedy: Hell], 12th edition (paperback), Le Monnier, published 1994, Canto XXXIII, lines 4–6:
- Poi cominciò: «Tu vuo' ch'io rinovelli ¶ disperato dolor che 'l cor mi preme ¶ già pur pensando, pria ch'io ne favelli. […] »
- Then he began: "Thou wilt that I renew the desperate grief, which wrings my heart already to think of only, ere I speak of it"
- (transitive, literary, rare, poetic) to bespeak (to speak about; to tell of)
- Donde ei venga, infelici, il sapete, e sperate che gioia favelli?
- Whence he comes from, o wretches, you know, yet you hope that he bespeaks joy?
Conjugation
[edit] Conjugation of favellàre (-are) (See Appendix:Italian verbs)
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Noun
[edit]favellare m (plural favellari)
- (archaic) parlance (way of talking)
- le lingue mescolate e bastarde, che non hanno parole, nè favellari proprii, non sono lingue
- the mixed, bastard tongues without their own words and parlances are not languages
Anagrams
[edit]Categories:
- Italian terms inherited from Late Latin
- Italian terms derived from Late Latin
- Italian terms derived from Latin
- Italian 4-syllable words
- Italian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Italian/are
- Rhymes:Italian/are/4 syllables
- Italian lemmas
- Italian verbs
- Italian verbs ending in -are
- Italian verbs taking avere as auxiliary
- Italian intransitive verbs
- Italian literary terms
- Italian terms with quotations
- Italian transitive verbs
- Italian terms with rare senses
- Italian poetic terms
- Italian nouns
- Italian countable nouns
- Italian masculine nouns
- Italian terms with archaic senses