2001 Translation

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Name of God’s Son

DIK, dik

Sounds Like: DEE-koh

Translations: I say, I speak, I tell, I declare, I name, I call

From the root: DICO

Part of Speech: Verb

Explanation: DIK is not a standard Latin word form. It appears to be a truncated or misspelled form of 'DICO', which means 'to say' or 'to speak'. In Latin, verbs are highly inflected, and 'dico' is a very common verb used to express communication or declaration.

Inflection: First Person Singular, Present Active Indicative (truncated/misspelled)

Unknown: Yes


Instances

None found.


From the same root

Below are all other words in our texts that we've cataloged as being from the same root, DICO.

These could represent different words with related meanings, or different forms of the same word to fit different grammatical cases, numbers, or genders. This list may include spelling variants and even misspellings in the original manuscripts! Even more words from the same root may exist in other ancient texts that aren't in our database.

  • DIC — say!, speak!, tell!
  • DICENDA — things to be said, matters to be spoken, things that must be said, things to be told
  • DICENS — saying, speaking, telling
  • DICERET — he might say, he would say, he was saying, he should say, he used to say
  • DICES — you will say, you will speak, you will tell
  • DICI — to be said, to be spoken, to be called
  • DICIMUS — we say, we speak, we tell, we call
  • DICIT — he says, she says, it says, he speaks, she speaks, it speaks, he tells, she tells, it tells
  • DICO — say, speak, tell, declare, state, call, name
  • DICTA — words, sayings, things said, spoken things, a word, a saying
  • DICUNT — they say, they speak, they tell
  • DIKAS — you may say, you might say, you would say, you could say, you should say
  • DIXI — I said, I have said, I spoke, I have spoken
  • DIXISSE — to have said, to have spoken, to have told
  • DIXIT — he said, she said, it said, he has said, she has said, it has said

This concordance database is in beta

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