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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

implicatus

Derivations in other languages

French emploier, French emplier, French impliquer, French employer, Italian impiegare, Italian implicare, Portuguese empregar, Portuguese implicar, Spanish implicar

Cognates

Dutch impliceren, English implicate, French impliquer, German implizieren, Italian implicare, Norwegian implisere, Spanish implicar, Swedish implicera



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