[ˈkʊ.ni.oː], [ˈkuː.ni.o]
OriginFrom Proto-Indo-European *ḱʷeyn- (“to soil; mud; filth”). Cognate with Latin inquinō (“I pollute”), obscēnus (“filthy”), caenum (“mud”) and English whin.
- conjugation-4, no-perfectto defecate
Formscuniō(canonical) · supine stems(canonical) · cunīre(infinitive, present) · cuniō(active, first-person, indicative, present, singular) · cunīs(active, indicative, present, second-person, singular) · cunit(active, indicative, present, singular, third-person) · cunīmus(active, first-person, indicative, plural, present) · cunītis(active, indicative, plural, present, second-person) · cuniunt(active, indicative, plural, present, third-person) · cuniēbam(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, singular) · cuniēbās(active, imperfect, indicative, second-person, singular) · cuniēbat(active, imperfect, indicative, singular, third-person) · cuniēbāmus(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, plural) · cuniēbātis(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, second-person) · cuniēbant(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, third-person) · cuniam(active, first-person, future, indicative, singular) · cuniēs(active, future, indicative, second-person, singular) · cuniet(active, future, indicative, singular, third-person) · cuniēmus(active, first-person, future, indicative, plural) · cuniētis(active, future, indicative, plural, second-person)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0