affogare
Italian
Etymology
Inherited from Vulgar Latin *affōcāre, alteration of Latin offōcāre.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /af.foˈɡa.re/
- Rhymes: -are
- Hyphenation: af‧fo‧gà‧re
Verb
affogàre (first-person singular present affógo or affògo[1], first-person singular past historic affogài, past participle affogàto, auxiliary (transitive) avére or (intransitive) èssere)
- (transitive) to drown (to kill by suffocating in a liquid)
- Lo affogarono nel lago. ― They drowned him in the lake.
- (transitive, literary) to extinguish, to put out
- 1901, Gabriele D'Annunzio, “Atto II [Act 2]”, in Francesca da Rimini, Milan: Fratelli Treves, published 1904, scena II, page 87:
- Morde e divora / ogni genìa di cose vive e morte; / e solo con la sabbia / si affoga e con l’aceto / si stempera.
- It [Greek fire] bites and devours things of all kinds, alive or dead; and it is only extinguished with sand, and weakened with vinegar.
- (transitive, literary, figurative) to oppress, to overbear, to overwhelm
- 1818–1836, Giacomo Leopardi, “III — Ad Angelo Mai quand'ebbe trovato i libri di Cicerone della Repubblica”, in Canti, lines 70–72; republished as Alessandro Donati, editor, Bari: publ. Laterza, 1917:
- E pur men grava e morde / il mal che n’addolora / del tedio che n’affoga.
- And yet the paining harm weighs and bites less than the oppressing boredom.
- (transitive, cooking) to smother
- affogato nella crema ― smothered in cream
- (intransitive) to drown (to die by suffocating in a liquid) [auxiliary essere]
- Quasi affogò nel fiume. ― He almost drowned in the river.
- (intransitive, figurative) to be oppressed or overwhelmed [auxiliary essere]
Conjugation
1Transitive.
2Intransitive.
Derived terms
Related terms
References
- affogo in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
Sardinian
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian affogare or Catalan afogar; either way from Vulgar Latin *affōcāre, alteration of Latin offōcāre.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /affoˈɡare/
References
- Wagner, Max Leopold (1960–1964) “affoꞡare”, in Dizionario etimologico sardo, Heidelberg
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