pulsen
Dutch
Etymology
It is derived from the name of a moving company Abraham Puls & Sons, employed by the Nazi-led Dutch police to pillage and empty the homes of the 140,000 Jews of the Netherlands during the Holocaust.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Verb
pulsen
- (slang) to violently dispossess, to loot, to destroy property and environment, of Jews in particular.
Inflection
| Inflection of pulsen (weak) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | pulsen | |||
| past singular | pulste | |||
| past participle | gepulst | |||
| infinitive | pulsen | |||
| gerund | pulsen n | |||
| present tense | past tense | |||
| 1st person singular | puls | pulste | ||
| 2nd person sing. (jij) | pulst | pulste | ||
| 2nd person sing. (u) | pulst | pulste | ||
| 2nd person sing. (gij) | pulst | pulste | ||
| 3rd person singular | pulst | pulste | ||
| plural | pulsen | pulsten | ||
| subjunctive sing.1 | pulse | pulste | ||
| subjunctive plur.1 | pulsen | pulsten | ||
| imperative sing. | puls | |||
| imperative plur.1 | pulst | |||
| participles | pulsend | gepulst | ||
| 1) Archaic. | ||||
Norwegian Bokmål
Norwegian Nynorsk
Spanish
Verb
pulsen
- inflection of pulsar:
- third-person plural present subjunctive
- third-person plural imperative
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