colpare

colpare
col·pà·re
v.tr. e intr.
1. v.tr. OB LE incolpare: colpa de la quale non deggio essere colpato (Dante)
2. v.intr. (avere) OB avere colpa, essere colpevole
\
DATA: av. 1294.
ETIMO: dal lat. culpāre, v. anche colpa.

Dizionario Italiano.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • coppice — I. noun Etymology: Middle English copies cutover area overgrown with brush, from Middle French copeis, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *colpaticium, from *colpare to cut, from Late Latin colpus blow more at cope Date: 1534 1. a thicket, grove …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • coppice — coppiced, adj. /kop is/, n. copse. [1375 1425; late ME copies < MF copeis, OF copeiz < VL *colpaticium cutover area, equiv. to *colpat(us) ptp. of *colpare to cut (see COUP1) + icium ICE] * * * ▪ ecology also called  Copse, or Thicket,         a… …   Universalium

  • coppice — [14] The notion underlying coppice is of ‘cutting’. Its ultimate source is the Greek noun kólaphos ‘blow’, which passed via Latin colaphus into medieval Latin as colpus (source of English cope and coup). From colpus was derived a verb colpāre… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • coppice — cop•pice [[t]ˈkɒp ɪs[/t]] n. copse • Etymology: 1375–1425; late ME copies < MF copeis, OF copeiz < VL *colpātīcium cutover area =*colpāt(us), ptp. of *colpāre to cut (see coup) + īcium ice cop′piced, adj …   From formal English to slang

  • coppice — [14] The notion underlying coppice is of ‘cutting’. Its ultimate source is the Greek noun kólaphos ‘blow’, which passed via Latin colaphus into medieval Latin as colpus (source of English cope and coup). From colpus was derived a verb colpāre… …   Word origins

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