/ɡiˈaɾ/
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese guiar (13th century, Cantigas de Santa Maria) either from Old French guier, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *wītaną (“to go forth”); or directly from Gothic *𐍅𐌹𐌳𐌰𐌽 (*widan, “to join”).
- transitiveto guide, to lead
- pronominalto obey, to follow
“este rey dõ Afonso mãteue muy bem seu reyno, per consello dos sabios per que sse el guiaua” — this king, Don Afonso, kept very ably his realm, because of the advice of the sages whom he followed
Formsguío(first-person, present, singular) · guiei(first-person, preterite, singular) · guiado(participle, past) · guio(first-person, present, singular) · guiar(impersonal, infinitive) · guiar(first-person, infinitive, singular) · guiares(infinitive, second-person, singular) · guiar(error-unrecognized-form, infinitive, personal, singular) · guiarmos(first-person, infinitive, plural) · guiardes(infinitive, plural, second-person) · guiaren(error-unrecognized-form, infinitive, personal, plural) · guiando(gerund) · guiado(error-unrecognized-form, masculine, participle, past, singular) · guiado(first-person, masculine, participle, past, singular) · guiado(masculine, participle, past, second-person, singular) · guiados(error-unrecognized-form, masculine, participle, past, plural) · guiados(first-person, masculine, participle, past, plural, second-person) · guiada(error-unrecognized-form, feminine, participle, past, singular) · guiada(feminine, first-person, participle, past, singular) · guiada(feminine, participle, past, second-person, singular)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0