[ˈtɛrɛm]
OriginBorrowed from a Slavic language. Compare Bulgarian трем (trem, “hall”), Ukrainian те́рем (térem, “hall”).
- hall, chamber, (spacious) room
- classroom, exhibition room, concert hall etc.
- indoor ……
- first-person singular single-possession possessive of tér
“Ez a kedvenc terem.” — This is my favorite square.
- transitiveto yield, to produce, to bring forth, to bear (fruit or crops)
- ergative, intransitiveto grow, to be borne or produced
- figuratively, intransitive, pastto be cut out for (a task, -ra/-re; literally, “to be made” for a purpose)
- intransitiveto appear, to turn up instantly or suddenly
“Demerzel mindig azonnal ott termett Cleon hívására.” — Demerzel always appeared at once when Cleon called.
Formstermek(plural) · terem(nominative, singular) · termek(nominative, plural) · termet(accusative, singular) · termeket(accusative, plural) · teremnek(dative, singular) · termeknek(dative, plural) · teremmel(instrumental, singular) · termekkel(instrumental, plural) · teremért(causal-final, singular) · termekért(causal-final, plural) · teremmé(singular, translative) · termekké(plural, translative) · teremig(singular, terminative) · termekig(plural, terminative) · teremként(essive-formal, singular) · termekként(essive-formal, plural) · -(essive-modal, singular) · -(essive-modal, plural) · teremben(inessive, singular)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0