angarie

See also: angarié

French

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Late Latin angaria (forced service) from Ancient Greek ἀγγαρεία (angareía, the office of a courier or messenger), from ἄγγαρος (ángaros, courier), from Old Persian *𐎠𐎥𐎼𐎠 (*a-g-r-a /*angarā/, missive, letter), from Aramaic *𐡀𐡍‬𐡂𐡓‬𐡀 (*ʾn‬gr‬ʾ /*ʾengarā/), form of *𐡀𐡍‬𐡂𐡓‬𐡕𐡀 (*ʾn‬gr‬tʾ /*ʾengartā/), variant of 𐡀𐡂𐡓‬𐡕𐡀 (ʾgr‬tʾ /ʾiggartā/), 𐡀𐡍‬𐡂𐡓𐡕‬𐡀 (ʾn‬grt‬ʾ /ʾengirtā/, missive, letter; contract), from Akkadian 𒂊𒄈𒌅 (egirtu, inscribed tablet; oracle of fate, ambiguous wording; contract, bound deal), from 𒄃 (egēru, to be difficult, to be twisted or locked together; to have a twisted tongue, to be unable to speak against an order). See also Classical Syriac ܐܓܪܬܐ (ʾeggarṯā, letter, document).

Noun

angarie f (plural angaries)

  1. angary (the right of a belligerent to seize property belonging to other nations or to take over ships during a war)
Descendants
  • English: angary

Etymology 2

Verb form.

Verb

angarie

  1. inflection of angarier:
    1. first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person singular imperative

Portuguese

Verb

angarie

  1. inflection of angariar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative

Romanian

Noun

angarie f (plural angarii)

  1. Alternative form of angara

Declension

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