biedēt
التعريفات والمعاني
== Latvian ==
=== Etymology ===
From Proto-Baltic *beyd-, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeyd-, the e grade of *bʰey-, *bʰī- “to hit, to pierce” (from whose o grade *bʰoy- the etymologically parallel form baidīt was created; q.v.).
Cognates include Gothic 𐌱𐌴𐌹𐍄𐌰𐌽 (beitan) “to bite” (< “to split” < “to hit”), Icelandic bīta, German beissen, English bite.
=== Pronunciation ===
=== Verb ===
biedēt (transitive, 2nd conjugation, present biedēju, biedē, biedē, past biedēju)
to scare, to frighten (to cause, to inspire fear)
biedējoša tumsa ― frightening darkness
tumsa biedēja bērnus ― the darkness frightened the children
šāvieni biedē putnus ― the shots scare the birds
biedēt bērnu ar bubuli ― to figthen the child with the boogeyman
puišeļu kņada, pūļa smiekli un klaigāšana biedēja zirgus, tie zviegdami kāpās atpakaļ un slējās pakaļkājās ― the children's uproar, laughter and shouting frightened the horses, who went back, neighing and standing on their hind legs
to warn, usually in a threatening, menacing way
biedēt ar izrēķināšanos ― to threaten with revenge
vēlāk visus memoranda parakstītājus biedēja ar represijām ― later all signatories of the memorandum were threatened with repression
==== Conjugation ====
==== Derived terms ====
prefixed verbs:
other derived terms:
biedēklis
biedināt
==== Related terms ====
=== References ===