/ˈkapti/
OriginBorrowed from Latin captō. Doublet of ĉasi.
- transitiveto catch, to capture
“Ili kaptis la predon, sed la glavon de Apolonio prenis Judas. Kaj de tiam li ĉiam batalis per ĝi.” — Then the Israelites seized their spoils. Judas took Apollonius’ sword and used it in battle for the rest of his life.
“Polemarĥo, la filo de Kefalo, vidis nin de malproksime dum ni iradis hejmen kaj li ordonis al sia sklavo kuri al ni kaj ordoni ke ni atendu. La sklavo kaptis la malantaŭan parton de mia vesto kaj diri” — Polemarchus, the son of Cephalus, saw us from afar while we were going home and he ordered his slave to run to us and order us to wait. The slave caught the back part of my clothing and said "Polemarc
Formskaptas(present) · kaptis(past) · kaptos(future) · kaptus(conditional) · kaptu(volitive) · kaptanta(active, participle, present, singular) · kaptantaj(active, participle, plural, present) · kaptinta(active, participle, past, singular) · kaptintaj(active, participle, past, plural) · kaptonta(active, future, participle, singular) · kaptontaj(active, future, participle, plural) · kaptantan(accusative, active, participle, present, singular) · kaptantajn(accusative, active, participle, plural, present) · kaptintan(accusative, active, participle, past, singular) · kaptintajn(accusative, active, participle, past, plural) · kaptontan(accusative, active, future, participle, singular) · kaptontajn(accusative, active, future, participle, plural) · kaptata(participle, passive, present, singular) · kaptataj(participle, passive, plural, present) · kaptita(participle, passive, past, singular)