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Portuguese: what do these captions mean?

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outcast
Bilingual Heptaglot
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 Message 1 of 6
18 February 2013 at 3:02am | IP Logged 
I've found this dictionary in Portuguese that has an excellent layout and is very
nicely detailed. I'm wondering what the following symbols mean:

|ê|

http://www.priberam.pt/dlpo/default.aspx?pal=eleger

I see it with -er conjugation verbs. I've also seen this one:

|ò...ê|
http://www.priberam.pt/dlpo/default.aspx?pal=absorver

thanks!


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Serpent
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 Message 2 of 6
18 February 2013 at 3:22am | IP Logged 
It indicates whether the o and e are open or closed.
in the second example, if you apply the ò...ê to absorver, it'll turn into absòrvêr. of course that just shows the pronunciation.
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Bilingual Heptaglot
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 Message 3 of 6
18 February 2013 at 3:27am | IP Logged 
Oh ok, on the infinitive only, now it makes sense because the other conjugation verbs
have not such captions.

Thanks, sorry for the dumb question.
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Serpent
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 Message 4 of 6
18 February 2013 at 3:37am | IP Logged 
nothing dumb :)
it appears in other cases too: http://www.priberam.pt/dlpo/default.aspx?pal=come%C3%A7o
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Expugnator
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 Message 5 of 6
18 February 2013 at 6:15pm | IP Logged 
Eu absorvo = closed o , hence the notation ô

Ele absorve = open o, hence the notation ò.

This alternation is pretty much common in the present.

Eu corro = ô

Ele corre = ò
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Bilingual Heptaglot
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 Message 6 of 6
18 February 2013 at 7:39pm | IP Logged 
That's what I thought originally Expugnator, but you see no such caption if you go to
"correr", or any of the other alternating radical verbs that I know ("descer, mexer,
converter, the "-ecer" verbs, etc).

That is why I asked partly if the caption is just limited to describing the infinitive
pronunciation or if it indicated more than that.


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