miaular
Ido
Etymology
Borrowed from French miauler, Italian miagolare, Spanish maullar.
Verb
miaular (present tense miaulas, past tense miaulis, future tense miaulos, imperative miaulez, conditional miaulus)
- (intransitive) to meow
- Nia kato miaulas omnadie.
- Our cat meows every day.
Conjugation
| present | past | future | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | miaular | miaulir | miaulor | ||||
| tense | miaulas | miaulis | miaulos | ||||
| conditional | miaulus | — | — | ||||
| imperative | miaulez | — | — | ||||
| adjective active participle | miaulanta | miaulinta | miaulonta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | miaulante | miaulinte | miaulonte | ||||
| nominal active participle |
singular | miaulanto | miaulinto | miaulonto | |||
| plural | miaulanti | miaulinti | miaulonti | ||||
Interlingua
Etymology
Borrowed from French miauler, Italian miagolare, and Spanish maullar.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mjɑu̯ˈlɑr/
Verb
miaular
- (intransitive) to meow
- 2012, Erik Enfors and Ingvar Stenström, translators, Le joco seriose by Hjalmar Söderberg:
- Ma in le mesme momento illa se repentiva pensante que il esseva si stupide miaular como un catto e illa non comprendeva perque illa lo habeva facite.
- But in the same moment she repented, thinking that it was so stupid to meow like a cat and she didn't understand why she had done it.
- 2012, Erik Enfors and Ingvar Stenström, translators, Le joco seriose by Hjalmar Söderberg: