/feˈðeɾ/
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese feder, from Latin fetēre. Cognate with Portuguese feder, Spanish heder, and Sicilian fètiri.
- to stink, reek
“nẽgũa cousa do mũdo que viuese, nẽ viua fosse, nẽ peyxe, nẽ ave, nẽ al, nõse cria, nẽse pode aly criar, et esto por duas rrazões: aprimeyra por la terra quee queymada et morta, asegunda por la agoa qu” — nothing in the world that is or was alive, fish, bird, nothing, grow or can be raised there [Dead Sea]; and this is because of two reasons: the first, because the earth is burnt and dead, and the seco
Formsfeder feder(canonical) · fedo(first-person, present, singular) · fedín(first-person, preterite, singular) · fedido(participle, past) · fedim(first-person, preterite, singular) · fedi(first-person, preterite, singular) · feder(impersonal, infinitive) · feder(first-person, infinitive, singular) · federes(infinitive, second-person, singular) · feder(error-unrecognized-form, infinitive, personal, singular) · federmos(first-person, infinitive, plural) · federdes(infinitive, plural, second-person) · federen(error-unrecognized-form, infinitive, personal, plural) · fedendo(gerund) · fedido(error-unrecognized-form, masculine, participle, past, singular) · fedido(first-person, masculine, participle, past, singular) · fedido(masculine, participle, past, second-person, singular) · fedidos(error-unrecognized-form, masculine, participle, past, plural) · fedidos(first-person, masculine, participle, past, plural, second-person) · fedida(error-unrecognized-form, feminine, participle, past, singular)