Talk:pregar
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- (Portuguese) rfv-sense: to pray (communicate with a god)
I was wondering if any native Portuguese speakers could verify or attest the sense of "to pray" for pregar? The native Portuguese speakers I've talked to said they weren't even aware of this meaning for the word, and just the other ones of "to preach" and "to nail". The standard Portuguese dictionaries don't seem to list it either. Though I have seen an etymological site that once mentions it as a descendant of Latin 'precari', which is interesting, considering the debate about this meaning of "pray"; I'm not sure if this is completely accurate though. I've also seen it listed under an old Italian etymological dictionary when listing cognates of 'pregare', but the Spanish 'pregar' (which does not have the sense of preach or pray) is conspicuously absent while Portuguese is included. Could it just be an archaic or uncommon sense? And could it, if it does legitimately exist, have derived from that of "to preach" or is it an originally independent verb derived from precari, meaning it should go under a separate "Etymology 3"? Word dewd544 (talk) 01:10, 4 April 2014 (UTC)
- Speedied as created in error. I found nothing on this, not even mentions. I guess it is a regionalism limited to my area.
- One of my dictionaries mentions a sense of pregar derived from precari: to beg for something, which it marks as archaic. — Ungoliant (falai) 06:26, 4 April 2014 (UTC)
- RFV failed; no citations are available anywhere of this sense, whether in this discussion, at pregar, or at Citations:pregar; speedied in diff. --Dan Polansky (talk) 17:47, 20 June 2014 (UTC)