sekar
See also: Sekar
Brooke's Point Palawano
Noun
sekar
- 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)
- (transitive, surgery) to make a surface cut in
- (transitive) to cut partially through
- (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”)
Related terms
- seciono
- segar
See also
- tranchar
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)
- (archaic) flower
- Synonyms: bunga, kembang
- (dialect) song
- Synonym: tembang
Derived terms
- menyekar
- sekar kedaton
- sekar mayang
- sekar sapada
- sekar suhun
Related terms
- anggana sekar
Further reading
- “sekar” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Language Development and Fostering Agency — Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic Indonesia, 2016.