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tripar - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Attested since 1807. From a Germanic language; compare English trip.

tripar (first-person singular present tripo, first-person singular preterite tripei, past participle tripado)

  1. (transitive) to trample, to tread
    • 1807, anonymous author, Segundo diálogo dos esterqueiros:

      Vos conocès pouca xente:
      ben se ve que non tripastes
      os palacios que eu tripèi,

      You don't know many people:
      it's obvious that you did not tread
      the palaces I trod
  2. (transitive) to trip (on an object)
    • 1853, Juan Manuel Pintos, A Gaita Gallega:

      Corría por aquel monte tripando toxos, carrascos, e levantaba panascos que lexos guindaba atrás

      He ran around that hill treading gorses, heathers, and drawing turves that he tossed far back
    • c. 1885, Jenaro Mariñas, A Moda:

      Pois señor, eu paso pola calle e vou de présa: tripo unha cola dunha señorita; eu caio, ela cai; o pai que vai con ela, dáme de paus co bastón; un meu compañeiro, que tampouco pode ver esas modas, sai na miña defensa; eu levántome e axúdolle; a nena dá gritos; os serenos acoden; nós non lle facemos caso; a xente vén correndo a ve-lo que pasa, repítese entre ela o que a min xa me pasou; caien uns enriba doutros, e hai confusión, e aies, e berros, e paresce que toda aquela calle está chea de demos que andan arrincando as lousas pra irse pró inferno. Resultado: un escadrón de caballería sai a despexar a calle, e nos vamos direitos á prevención.

      Well, then I'm walking down the street in a hurry: I trip on a young lady's train; I fall, she falls; her father, which is by her side, strikes me some blows with his canes; a companion of mine, who also can't stand these fashions, comes to defend me; I stand up and help him; the girl shouts; the guards come; we don't acknowledge them; people come at the run to see what's going, and they repeat what we did; they fall ones on top of the others, and there is confusion and laments and shouts, and it seems that the street is full with demons who are pulling out the flagstones to get to hell. Result: a cavalry squadron comes to clear the street, and we go direct to jail.
  3. to step
Singular Plural
First-person
(eu)
Second-person
(ti / tu)
Third-person
(ele / ela / você)
First-person
(nós)
Second-person
(vós)
Third-person
(eles / elas / vocês)
Infinitive
Impersonal tripar
Personal tripar tripares tripar triparmos tripardes triparem
Gerund
tripando
Past participle
Masculine tripado tripados
Feminine tripada tripadas
Indicative
Present tripo tripas tripa tripamos tripades, tripais tripam
Imperfect tripava tripavas tripava tripávamos tripávades, tripáveis, tripávais1 tripavam
Preterite tripei tripaste, tripache1 tripou tripamos tripastes tripárom, triparam
Pluperfect tripara triparas tripara tripáramos tripárades, tripáreis, tripárais1 triparam
Future triparei triparás tripará triparemos triparedes, tripareis triparám, triparão
Conditional triparia triparias triparia triparíamos triparíades, triparíeis, triparíais1 tripariam
Subjunctive
Present tripe tripes tripe tripemos tripedes, tripeis tripem
Imperfect tripasse tripasses tripasse tripássemos tripássedes, tripásseis tripassem
Future tripar tripares tripar triparmos tripardes triparem
Imperative
Affirmative tripa tripe tripemos tripade, tripai tripem
Negative (nom) nom tripes nom tripe nom tripemos nom tripedes, nom tripeis nom tripem

From English trip +‎ -ar.[1][2]

  • Hyphenation: tri‧par

tripar (first-person singular present tripo, first-person singular preterite tripei, past participle tripado)

  1. (Portugal, colloquial) to trip (to experience a state of reverie or to hallucinate, due to consuming psychoactive drugs)
  2. (Portugal, colloquial) to lose one's temper, to trip (to become unreasonably upset, especially over something unimportant; to cause a scene or a disruption)
    Synonym: flipar
  1. ^ tripar”, in Dicionário infopédia da Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese), Porto: Porto Editora, 20032025
  2. ^ tripar”, in Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese), Lisbon: Priberam, 20082025