OrigineInherited from Late Latin cocere, from Latin coquere, coquō, from Proto-Italic *kʷekʷō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *pekʷ- (“to cook, become ripe”).
- transitiveto bake (to cook in an oven)
- reflexiveto ripen
Formea coace 3rd conjugation(canonical) · coace(present, singular, third-person) · copt(participle, past) · coacă(subjunctive, third-person) · a coace(infinitive) · cocând(gerund) · coc(first-person, indicative, present, singular) · coci(indicative, present, second-person, singular) · coace(indicative, present, singular, third-person) · coacem(first-person, indicative, plural, present) · coaceți(indicative, plural, present, second-person) · coc(indicative, plural, present, third-person) · coceam(first-person, imperfect, indicative, singular) · coceai(imperfect, indicative, second-person, singular) · cocea(imperfect, indicative, singular, third-person) · coceam(first-person, imperfect, indicative, plural) · coceați(imperfect, indicative, plural, second-person) · coceau(imperfect, indicative, plural, third-person) · copsei(first-person, indicative, perfect, singular) · copseși(indicative, perfect, second-person, singular)