OriginUltimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂peh₃lH-, a compound of *h₂epó (“off, away”) + *h₃elh₁- (“to fall”). Cognate with Latvian pult (“to fall (obsolete)”), Old Prussian aupallai (“finds”); outside of Baltic, compare Proto-Germanic *fallaną (“to fall”) (whence English fall), Ancient Greek ᾰ̓πόλλῡμῐ (ăpóllūmĭ, “to destroy, ruin”).
- intransitiveto fall
- intransitiveto fall (about accent)
“Kir̃tis púola añt pìrmo žõdžio skiemeñs.” — The accent falls on the first syllable of the word.
- figuratively, intransitiveto be fallen
- figuratively, intransitiveto fall (temperature, price etc.)
- transitiveto attack, to assault (apply violent force to someone or something)
- intransitive, transitiveto attack (about sickness)
- form-of, masculine, nominative, participle, passivenominative masculine plural of pùltas
Formspùlti(canonical) · púola(present, third-person) · púolė(past, third-person) · puolu(error-unrecognized-form) · puoli(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · puola(error-unrecognized-form) · puolame(error-unrecognized-form) · puolam(error-unrecognized-form) · puolate(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · puolat(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · puola(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · puoliau(error-unrecognized-form) · puolei(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · puolė(error-unrecognized-form) · puolėme(error-unrecognized-form) · puolėm(error-unrecognized-form) · puolėte(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · puolėt(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · puolė(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · puldavau(error-unrecognized-form)