[ˈdr̩ska]
OriginDerived from Proto-Slavic *dristati (“to have diarrhea”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰreyd-.
- colloquial, intransitiveto have diarrhea
- feminine, form-of, singularfeminine singular of дрзок (drzok)
Formsдрска third-singular present or(canonical, imperfective) · drska(romanization) · дрскал(imperfect, masculine) · -(aorist, masculine) · дрскан(adjectival, aorist, participle) · дрскала(feminine, imperfect) · -(aorist, feminine) · дрскајќи(adverbial, aorist, participle) · дрскало(imperfect, neuter) · -(aorist, neuter) · дрскање(aorist, noun-from-verb) · дрскале(imperfect, plural) · -(aorist, plural) · дрскано(aorist, participle, perfect) · дрскам(first-person, present, singular) · дрскав(first-person, imperfect, singular) · -(aorist, first-person, singular) · -(aorist, first-person, imperative, singular) · дрскаш(present, second-person, singular) · дрскаше(imperfect, second-person, singular)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0