/ˈsenti/
OriginFrom French sentir and Italian sentire, from Latin sentiō.
- transitiveto feel, perceive
“Ŝi sentis malbone hieraŭ, sed ŝi sentas pli bone hodiaŭ.” — She was feeling badly yesterday, but she is feeling better today.
Formssentas(present) · sentis(past) · sentos(future) · sentus(conditional) · sentu(volitive) · sentanta(active, participle, present, singular) · sentantaj(active, participle, plural, present) · sentinta(active, participle, past, singular) · sentintaj(active, participle, past, plural) · sentonta(active, future, participle, singular) · sentontaj(active, future, participle, plural) · sentantan(accusative, active, participle, present, singular) · sentantajn(accusative, active, participle, plural, present) · sentintan(accusative, active, participle, past, singular) · sentintajn(accusative, active, participle, past, plural) · sentontan(accusative, active, future, participle, singular) · sentontajn(accusative, active, future, participle, plural) · sentata(participle, passive, present, singular) · sentataj(participle, passive, plural, present) · sentita(participle, passive, past, singular)