/tʲɛ(h)/
OriginFrom Old Irish teichid (Manx çhea, Scottish Gaelic teich), from Proto-Celtic *tekʷeti (“to run, flee”) (Welsh techu), from Proto-Indo-European *tekʷ- (“to flow, run”) (Sanskrit तक्ति (takti, “hurries”), Old Church Slavonic тещи (tešti, “to run”), Lithuanian tekė́ti (“to flow”), Albanian ndjek (“to follow”).
- to flee, run away, fly, abscond with ó ‘from’/with roimh ‘from’
- to run off (leave or depart quickly)
- to retreat (withdraw military forces)
- to shun, avoid
Formsteitheann(analytic, present) · teithfidh(analytic, future) · teitheadh(noun-from-verb) · teite(participle, past) · teithim(first-person, indicative, present, singular) · teitheann tú(indicative, present, second-person, singular) · teithir(indicative, present, second-person, singular) · teitheann sé(indicative, present, singular, third-person) · sí(indicative, present, singular, third-person) · teithimid(first-person, indicative, plural, present) · teitheann muid(first-person, indicative, plural, present) · teitheann sibh(indicative, plural, present, second-person) · teitheann siad(indicative, plural, present, third-person) · teithid(indicative, plural, present, third-person) · a theitheann(error-unrecognized-form, present) · a theitheas(error-unrecognized-form, present) · teitear(autonomous, present) · theith mé(first-person, indicative, past, singular) · theitheas(first-person, indicative, past, singular) · theith tú(indicative, past, second-person, singular)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0