Etymology of the Latin word implicare
the Latin word
implicare ( be intimately associated, connected, related; entwine, enfold, envelop; implicate; involve, engage; interweave, interlace, intertwine; perplex, confuse, confound)
using the Latin prefix
in- (suffix for no)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*ne (not)
derived from the Late Latin word
plicare (to fold; fold , bend, flex; multiply by X , X-tuple; add together)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*plek-using the Latin prefix
im-derived from the Latin prefix
in- (suffix for no)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*ne (not)
Derivations in Latin
implicatusDerivations in other languages
French
emploier, French
emplier, French
impliquer, French
employer, Italian
impiegare, Italian
implicare, Portuguese
empregar, Portuguese
implicar, Spanish
implicarCognates
Dutch
impliceren, English
implicate, French
impliquer, German
implizieren, Italian
implicare, Norwegian
implisere, Spanish
implicar, Swedish
implicera