[ˈpʊ.de.oː], [ˈpuː.de.o]
OriginFrom Proto-Italic *pudēō, from Proto-Indo-European *paw- (“to strike”).
Cognates
From Proto-Indo-European: Latin paveō, Latin paviō, Latin repudium, (possibly) Latin tripudium.
- conjugation-2, impersonal, transitive, usuallyto cause shame
“mē pudet ― I am ashamed” — [with accusative ‘person who is ashamed’ and genitive ‘thing/person causing shame’]
“160 BCE, Publius Terentius Afer, Adelphoe 754:” — Don’t these things shame you?
- conjugation-2, intransitive, rareto be ashamed
“dum dea fūrtīvōs timidē profitētur amōrēs,
caelestemque hominī concubuisse pudet
While the goddess timidly confesses her secret desires and – a divine being [with love] for a mortal! – she is ashamed ”
Formspudeō(canonical) · optionally semi-deponent(canonical) · pudēre(infinitive, present) · puduī(active, perfect) · puditus sum(active, perfect) · puditum(supine) · pudeō(active, first-person, indicative, present, singular) · pudēs(active, indicative, present, second-person, singular) · pudet(active, indicative, present, singular, third-person) · pudēmus(active, first-person, indicative, plural, present) · pudētis(active, indicative, plural, present, second-person) · pudent(active, indicative, plural, present, third-person) · pudēbam(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, singular) · pudēbās(active, imperfect, indicative, second-person, singular) · pudēbat(active, imperfect, indicative, singular, third-person) · pudēbāmus(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, plural) · pudēbātis(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, second-person) · pudēbant(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, third-person) · pudēbō(active, first-person, future, indicative, singular) · pudēbis(active, future, indicative, second-person, singular)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0