[ˈwɪ.ti.oː], [ˈvit.t͡si.o]
OriginFrom vitium (“fault, vice”) + -ō.
- conjugation-1to vitiate, make faulty, spoil, taint, corrupt, damage
- conjugation-1to violate sexually
- conjugation-1to falsify, corrupt (tamper with)
- ablative, dative, form-of, singulardative/ablative singular of vitium
Formsvitiō(canonical) · vitiāre(infinitive, present) · vitiāvī(active, perfect) · vitiātum(supine) · vitiō(active, first-person, indicative, present, singular) · vitiās(active, indicative, present, second-person, singular) · vitiat(active, indicative, present, singular, third-person) · vitiāmus(active, first-person, indicative, plural, present) · vitiātis(active, indicative, plural, present, second-person) · vitiant(active, indicative, plural, present, third-person) · vitiābam(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, singular) · vitiābās(active, imperfect, indicative, second-person, singular) · vitiābat(active, imperfect, indicative, singular, third-person) · vitiābāmus(active, first-person, imperfect, indicative, plural) · vitiābātis(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, second-person) · vitiābant(active, imperfect, indicative, plural, third-person) · vitiābō(active, first-person, future, indicative, singular) · vitiābis(active, future, indicative, second-person, singular) · vitiābit(active, future, indicative, singular, third-person) · vitiābimus(active, first-person, future, indicative, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0