iudaizo

Latin

Alternative forms

  • iudaeizo, iudeizo, iudayzo (variant orthography)
  • judaizo, judaeizo, judaeizo, judayzo (variant letter-shape)
  • Iudaizo, Judaizo (variant letter-case)

Etymology

Late Latin borrowing from Ancient Greek ἰουδαΐζω (ioudaḯzō, to side with or imitate the Jews),[1] equivalent to iūdaeus (Jewish, Jew) +‎ -izō.

Pronunciation

Verb

iūdaizō (present infinitive iūdaizāre, perfect active iūdaizāvī, supine iūdaizātum); first conjugation

  1. (Late Latin) to adopt Jewish customs or speech; to live according to the laws of Judaism; to Judaize

Conjugation

Descendants

  • Catalan: judaïtzar
  • Galician: xudaizar
  • Portuguese: judaizar
  • Spanish: judaizar

References

  1. ^ Glossed in Middle Liddell, but not apparently in LSJ. See Galatians 2.14 for usage example.