The AI-generated cat pictures thread
Boost Pope
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Join Date: Sep 2005
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I swear, I think you're throwing pickles at a keyboard sometimes...
poscat
posco
Latin
Verb
1. third-person singular present active subjunctive of poscō
posco
Latin
Etymology
From Proto-Italic *porskō, from a *-sḱe- present *pr̥sḱé-, from Proto-Indo-European *preḱ- (“to ask, ask for”). Cognates include Sanskrit पृच्छति (pṛccháti), Old Armenian հարց (harcʿ), Old Church Slavonic просити (prositi) and Old English friġnan (English frayne, freyne). Confer precor (“to beg, to implore”), procus (“a wooer, a gigolo, a suitor”) and procax (“pushing, frivolous”).
Verbpōscō (present infinitive pōscere, perfect active popōscī); third conjugation, no passive
1. I beg, I demand, I request, I desire.
3. I call someone.
Poscor aliquid. ― Something is asked of me.
Poscor meum Laelapa. ― They demand of me my Laelaps.
2. I demand for punishment, I ask the surrender of.Poscor meum Laelapa. ― They demand of me my Laelaps.
3. I call someone.
Ego poscor Olympo! ― It is I that Olympus summons!
Ad te confugio et supplex tua numina posco. ― To you I have recourse and, as a suppliant, I call on your divine power.
4. I ask in marriage, I demand one's hand.Ad te confugio et supplex tua numina posco. ― To you I have recourse and, as a suppliant, I call on your divine power.
Filiam tuam mihi uxorem posco. ― I demand your daughters hand in marriage.
Last edited by Joe Perez; 09-24-2015 at 07:00 PM. Reason: Missed a carriage-return.