sekar

See also: Sekar

Brooke's Point Palawano

Noun

sekar

  1. sugar

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from English intersect, French disséquer, German Sekante, Italian dissecare, Russian косе́канс (kosékans), Spanish intersecar.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /seˈkar/

Verb

sekar (present sekas, past sekis, future sekos, conditional sekus, imperative sekez)

  1. (transitive, surgery) to make a surface cut in
  2. (transitive) to cut partially through
  3. (transitive, geometry) to divide into sections

Derived terms

  • bisekar (to bisect)
  • dissekar (to dissect)
  • intersekar (to intersect)
  • interseko (intersection)
  • intersekuro (intersection)
  • kosekanto (cosecant)
  • nesekebla (indivisible)
  • sekanta (secant)
  • sekanto (secant)
  • sekilo (surgical instrument)
  • seko (cut, cutting, section)
  • sekuro (section, cut)
  • sekvundar (to slash)
  • sekvunduro (gash, cut, slash)
  • vivdissekar (to vivisect)
  • vivdisseko (vivisection)

See also

Indonesian

Etymology

From Javanese ꦱꦼꦏꦂ (sekar, flower), from Old Javanese sĕkar (flower, blooming). Cognate of Indonesian mekar (blooming).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [səˈkar]
  • Hyphenation: sê‧kar

Noun

sekar (first-person possessive sekarku, second-person possessive sekarmu, third-person possessive sekarnya)

  1. (archaic) flower
    Synonyms: bunga, kembang
  2. (dialect) song
    Synonym: tembang

Derived terms

  • menyekar
  • sekar kedaton
  • sekar mayang
  • sekar sapada
  • sekar suhun

Further reading

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