/ˈɡvati/
OriginBorrowed from Italian guatare and French guetter, from Latin wacta, from Frankish *wahta (“guard duty, watchtower”), ultimately from Proto-Germanic *wahtwō (“watch, vigil”). Compare Catalan guaita.
Formsgvatas(present) · gvatis(past) · gvatos(future) · gvatus(conditional) · gvatu(volitive) · gvatanta(active, participle, present, singular) · gvatantaj(active, participle, plural, present) · gvatinta(active, participle, past, singular) · gvatintaj(active, participle, past, plural) · gvatonta(active, future, participle, singular) · gvatontaj(active, future, participle, plural) · gvatantan(accusative, active, participle, present, singular) · gvatantajn(accusative, active, participle, plural, present) · gvatintan(accusative, active, participle, past, singular) · gvatintajn(accusative, active, participle, past, plural) · gvatontan(accusative, active, future, participle, singular) · gvatontajn(accusative, active, future, participle, plural) · gvatata(participle, passive, present, singular) · gvatataj(participle, passive, plural, present) · gvatita(participle, passive, past, singular)
Source: Wiktionary