Borrowed from Middle French urgent (“pressing, impelling”), from Latin urgēns, from urgēre (“to press”), from Proto-Indo-European *werǵʰ- (“bind, squeeze”). Related to German würgen (“to strangle”), Lithuanian ver̃žti (“to string, tighten, constrict”), Russian (poetic) отверза́ть (otverzátʹ, “to open”, literally “to untie”), Polish otwierać (“to open”)) and English worry, wring, wreak, wreck.
urgent (comparative more urgent, superlative most urgent)
The primary meaning of urgent is as a description of a pressing need. Especially in journalistic contexts, it is sometimes used by transference to describe the thing needed, or to mean "happening very soon", which some deem erroneous.
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urgent m or f (masculine and feminine plural urgents)
Borrowed from Late Latin urgentem, present participle of urgeō.
urgent (feminine urgente, masculine plural urgents, feminine plural urgentes)
urgent
urgent
Borrowed from French urgent, from Latin urgens.
urgent m or n (feminine singular urgentă, masculine plural urgenți, feminine and neuter plural urgente)
singular | plural | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | neuter | feminine | masculine | neuter | feminine | |||
nominative- accusative |
indefinite | urgent | urgentă | urgenți | urgente | |||
definite | urgentul | urgenta | urgenții | urgentele | ||||
genitive- dative |
indefinite | urgent | urgente | urgenți | urgente | |||
definite | urgentului | urgentei | urgenților | urgentelor |