Fromdonation +-o .
dono (plural donos )
( slang ) Adonation .dono
first-person singular present indicative ofdonar IPA (key ) : [ˈdono] Hyphenation:do‧no dono
vocative singular ofdona Inherited fromOld Galician-Portuguese dono , fromLate Latin domnus , fromLatin dominus ( “ lord ” ) . Cognates includePortuguese dono ,Spanish dueño , andItalian donno .
dono m (plural donos ,feminine dona ,feminine plural donas )
owner Synonyms: amo ,propietario FromLatin dōnum ( “ gift ” ) .
dono m (plural doni )
gift Synonyms: presente ,regalo dono
first-person singular present indicative ofdonare dono
Rōmaji transcription ofどの Perhaps fromProto-Italic *dōnāō . Equivalent todōnum ( “ gift ” ) +-ō ( denominative suffix ) . Italic cognates inOscan 𐌃𐌖𐌍𐌀𐌕 ( dunat ) andVenetic [script needed] ( donasto ) point to a Proto-Italic etymology, although De Vaan suggests that it remains possible that these merely represented the same development occuring separately in different languages.
dōnō (present infinitive dōnāre ,perfect active dōnāvī ,supine dōnātum ) ;first conjugation
togive (withdative of theindirect object andaccusative of theobject (thing presented))Synonyms: condōnō ,largior ,praebeō ,offerō ,prōferō ,sufferō ,afferō ,polliceor ,obiciō ,moveō Vergilius :
Juvenem praestanti muneredonat Hepresents the youth with a noble gift ( often in passive constructions ) topresent (someone with something) [with ablative ]46 BC ,Caesar ,Commentarii de Bello Civili , volume3.53 :Quem Caesar, ut erat de se meritus et de re publica,donatum milibus CC collaudatumque ab octavis ordinibus ad primipilum se traducere pronuntiavit [...] Whom (Scaeva, a Roman centurion of Caesar) Caesar, as he had been up to his expectations and the republique's as well, declared himself to promote from the eighth order to the rank of primipilus, besideshaving been presented with 200 000 sesterces and acclaimed by soldiers all [...] ( withcīvitāte (ablative singular ofcīvitās ) ) tonaturalize donare aliquem civitate ―to naturalize someone (especially: to bestow the Roman citizenship on someone) tobestow ,grant Synonyms: largior ,moveō toforgive ,pardon Synonyms: ignōscō ,parcō ,remittō ,āmittō ,dīmittō ,perdōnō ,condōnō indicative singular plural first second third first second third active present dōnō dōnās dōnat dōnāmus dōnātis dōnant imperfect dōnābam dōnābās dōnābat dōnābāmus dōnābātis dōnābant future dōnābō dōnābis dōnābit dōnābimus dōnābitis dōnābunt perfect dōnāvī dōnāvistī ,dōnāstī 1 dōnāvit ,dōnāt 1 dōnāvimus ,dōnāmus 1 dōnāvistis ,dōnāstis 1 dōnāvērunt ,dōnārunt ,dōnāvēre 1 pluperfect dōnāveram ,dōnāram 1 dōnāverās ,dōnārās 1 dōnāverat ,dōnārat 1 dōnāverāmus ,dōnārāmus 1 dōnāverātis ,dōnārātis 1 dōnāverant ,dōnārant 1 future perfect dōnāverō ,dōnārō 1 dōnāveris ,dōnāris 1 dōnāverit ,dōnārit 1 dōnāverimus ,dōnārimus 1 dōnāveritis ,dōnāritis 1 dōnāverint ,dōnārint 1 passive present dōnor dōnāris ,dōnāre dōnātur dōnāmur dōnāminī dōnantur imperfect dōnābar dōnābāris ,dōnābāre dōnābātur dōnābāmur dōnābāminī dōnābantur future dōnābor dōnāberis ,dōnābere dōnābitur dōnābimur dōnābiminī dōnābuntur perfect dōnātus + present active indicative ofsum pluperfect dōnātus + imperfect active indicative ofsum future perfect dōnātus + future active indicative ofsum subjunctive singular plural first second third first second third active present dōnem dōnēs dōnet dōnēmus dōnētis dōnent imperfect dōnārem dōnārēs dōnāret dōnārēmus dōnārētis dōnārent perfect dōnāverim ,dōnārim 1 dōnāverīs ,dōnārīs 1 dōnāverit ,dōnārit 1 dōnāverīmus ,dōnārīmus 1 dōnāverītis ,dōnārītis 1 dōnāverint ,dōnārint 1 pluperfect dōnāvissem ,dōnāssem 1 dōnāvissēs ,dōnāssēs 1 dōnāvisset ,dōnāsset 1 dōnāvissēmus ,dōnāssēmus 1 dōnāvissētis ,dōnāssētis 1 dōnāvissent ,dōnāssent 1 passive present dōner dōnēris ,dōnēre dōnētur dōnēmur dōnēminī dōnentur imperfect dōnārer dōnārēris ,dōnārēre dōnārētur dōnārēmur dōnārēminī dōnārentur perfect dōnātus + present active subjunctive ofsum pluperfect dōnātus + imperfect active subjunctive ofsum imperative singular plural first second third first second third active present — dōnā — — dōnāte — future — dōnātō dōnātō — dōnātōte dōnantō passive present — dōnāre — — dōnāminī — future — dōnātor dōnātor — — dōnantor non-finite forms infinitive participle active passive active passive present dōnāre dōnārī dōnāns — future dōnātūrum esse dōnātum īrī dōnātūrus dōnandus perfect dōnāvisse ,dōnāsse 1 dōnātum esse — dōnātus future perfect — dōnātum fore — — perfect potential dōnātūrum fuisse — — — verbal nouns gerund supine genitive dative accusative ablative accusative ablative dōnandī dōnandō dōnandum dōnandō dōnātum dōnātū
1 At least one rare poetic syncopated perfect form is attested.
Italo-Romance: Gallo-Romance:Catalan:donar Franco-Provençal:donar Old French:doner (see there for further descendants ) Old Occitan:donar Ibero-Romance: Borrowings: dōnō
dative / ablative singular ofdōnum “dono ”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 ),A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press “dono ”, inCharlton T. Lewis (1891 ),An Elementary Latin Dictionary , New York: Harper & Brothers “dono ”, inGaffiot, Félix (1934 ),Dictionnaire illustré latin-français , Hachette. Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894 ),Latin Phrase-Book [1] , London:Macmillan and Co. to make a man a citizen:civitate donare aliquem (Balb. 3. 7) De Vaan, Michiel (2008 ),Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN Fromdo +no ; compareGerman danach .
IPA (key ) : /doˈno/ ,[doˈnoː] ,/ˈdoːno/ dono
thereafter ,after ,later Old Galician-Portuguese [ edit ] Inherited fromLate Latin domnus , fromLatin dominus ( “ lord ” ) , fromdomus ( “ house ” ) .
dono m (plural donos )
owner Inherited fromOld Galician-Portuguese dono , fromLate Latin domnus , fromLatin dominus ( “ lord ” ) , fromdomus ( “ house ” ) , ultimately fromProto-Indo-European *dṓm ( “ house ” ) , from*dem- ( “ to build ” ) . CompareGalician dono andSpanish dueño .Doublet ofdominó .
dono m (plural donos ,feminine dona ,feminine plural donas ,metaphonic )
owner Sou odono deste livro. I am theowner of this book. patriarch ;head of a home or family( form of address ) master ( used by a slave to address his owner ) For quotations using this term, seeCitations:dono .
dono
first-person singular present indicative ofdonar CompareTernate dun ,Sahu dunungu .
dono
mother-in-law daughter-in-law James Collins (1982 ),Further Notes Towards a West Makian Vocabulary [2] , Pacific linguistics