aller
French
verb
Definitions
- (intransitive) to go
- (when followed by an infinitive verb) to be going (to); will soon;
- to be (feeling)
- to go well with (clothes, colors, etc.)
- to attend (school, church regularly)
Etymology
Inherited from Latin vādō (go, I go, rush, walk) inherited from Middle French aller inherited from Old French aler (go) inherited from Latin *alō (wander) derived from Gaulish *aliu.
Origin
Gaulish
*aliu
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- alure English
- *alare Latin
- *alō Latin
- *amblāre Latin
- *amnāre Latin
- *and(i)tāre Latin
- *and(it)āre Latin
- Allia Latin
- alare Latin
- alāre Latin
- ambulo Latin
- ambulāre Latin
- ambulō Latin
- invado Latin
- transvado Latin
- vadō Latin
- vādō Latin
- Aller German
- Allüre German
- ambiare Italian
- allure Dutch, Flemish
- allable French
- allure French
- аллюр Russian
- amblar Spanish, Castilian
- andadera Spanish, Castilian
- andador Spanish, Castilian
- andadora Spanish, Castilian
- andadura Spanish, Castilian
- andante Spanish, Castilian
- andanza Spanish, Castilian
- andar Spanish, Castilian
- andariego Spanish, Castilian
- andarríos Spanish, Castilian
- Ἀλίας Ancient Greek
- andadura Portuguese
- andamento Portuguese
- andar Portuguese
- alure Middle English
- الدُرَّا, درا Arabic
- aler Old French
- ambler Old French
- mesaler Old French
- poraler Old French
- raler Old French
- amblar Catalan, Valencian
- anar Catalan, Valencian
- umbla Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- umblet Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- Alara Old High German
- allaer Norman
- allaïr Norman
- aller Norman
- andar Tagalog
- aller Middle French
- andar Old Portuguese
- anar Occitan
- lâ Friulian
- amblar Old Occitan
- vis Dalmatian
- al Haitian, Haitian Creole
- ale Haitian, Haitian Creole
- anda Kabuverdianu
- ale Mauritian Creole
- aler Walloon
- *aliu Gaulish
- allé Louisiana Creole French
- ianda Guinea-Bissau Creole
- alar Franco-Provençal