нудить

Russian

Etymology 1

Inherited from Old East Slavic нꙋдити (nuditi), from Proto-Slavic *nuditi. Cognate with Ukrainian нуди́ти (nudýty), Belarusian нудзі́ць (nudzícʹ), Old Church Slavonic ноудити (nuditi, to force, to compel) and нѫдити (nǫditi) (per Vasmer, with secondary nasalization), Bulgarian ну́дя (núdja, to force, to compel), Serbo-Croatian ну̏дити (to offer, to obtain) (1sg. ну̏дӣм), Slovene núditi (to force) (1sg. nȗdim), Czech nudit (to bore), Slovak nudiť (to bore), Polish nudzić (to bore, to annoy).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈnudʲɪtʲ]

Verb

ну́дить • (núditʹimpf (perfective прину́дить)

  1. (dated or low colloquial) to force, to compel
  2. (dated or low colloquial) to tire, to exhaust
Conjugation
Derived terms
verbs

Etymology 2

Apparently related to ну́дить (núditʹ, to compel).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [nʊˈdʲitʲ]

Verb

нуди́ть • (nudítʹimpf

  1. (colloquial) to talk annoyingly or monotonously
  2. (colloquial) to annoy, to bother
  3. (colloquial) to cause melancholy, to bore
  4. (colloquial) to persistently beg, to pester (у (u))
Conjugation