Czech
Etymology
Inherited from Old Czech obúti, from Proto-Slavic *obuti (“to put on (footwear)”), from Proto-Balto-Slavic *outei, from Proto-Indo-European *h₃ew-. Cognate with Latin induere.
Pronunciation
Verb
obout pf (imperfective obouvat)
- to put on (a shoe)
- Antonym: zout
Conjugation
Conjugation of obout
| infinitive
|
obout, obouti
|
active adjective
|
obuvší
|
| verbal noun
|
—
|
passive adjective
|
—
|
| present forms |
indicative |
imperative
|
|
singular |
plural |
singular |
plural
|
| 1st person
|
obuji, obuju (coll.) |
obujeme |
— |
obujme
|
| 2nd person
|
obuješ |
obujete |
obuj |
obujte
|
| 3rd person
|
obuje |
obují, obujou (coll.) |
— |
—
|
The verb obout does not have present tense and the present forms are used to express future only.
| transgressives
|
present
|
past
|
| masculine singular
|
— |
obuv
|
| feminine + neuter singular
|
— |
obuvši
|
| plural
|
— |
obuvše
|
|
Further reading