banir

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Galician

Etymology

From Old Galician-Portuguese banir (att. 1371), from Old French banir, from Late Latin bannīre, from Frankish.

Pronunciation

Verb

banir (first-person singular present bano, first-person singular preterite banín, past participle banido)
banir (first-person singular present bano, first-person singular preterite banim or bani, past participle banido, reintegrationist norm)

  1. (literary) to banish
    • 1371, A. López Ferreiro, editor, Fueros municipales de Santiago y de su tierra, Madrid: Ediciones Castilla, page 434:
      por quanto estaua a dita iglesia e cidade interdicta, por quanto os do Concello da dita cidade se alçaran con el Rey de Portugal et con dom Fernando de Castro et banyron dende a o arcibispo dom Rodrigo, e se le alçaran con o señorio da dita cidade;
      because this city and cathedral was interdicted, because the people of the council of this city rose up with the king of Portugal and with Don Fernando de Castro and banished hence the bishop Don Rodrigo, and they acquired the lordship of the city

Conjugation

References


Middle French

Etymology

From Old French banir.

Verb

banir

  1. to proclaim
  2. to summon by ban (mil.), to raise (an army)
  3. to banish, exclude

Old French

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Late Latin bannīre, from Frankish.

Verb

banir

  1. proclaim
  2. summon
  3. banish

Conjugation

This verb conjugates as a second-group verb (ending in -ir, with an -iss- infix). Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.

Descendants

References

Portuguese

Etymology

From Old Galician-Portuguese banir (att. 1371), from Old French banir, from Late Latin bannīre, from Frankish.

Pronunciation

 
 

  • Hyphenation: ba‧nir

Verb

banir (first-person singular present bano, first-person singular preterite bani, past participle banido)

  1. to ban, proscribe
  2. to banish, exile

Conjugation

Further reading