Reconstruction:Latin/volvitare

Etymology
From, with early loss of unstressed /ĭ/. The form would represent a 'vulgar' past participle for Latin.

Alternatively a direct phonetic development from the Classical frequentative (> *vol(ŭ)tāre). It would be somewhat unusual, as this type of unstressed vowel reduction in the second syllable of tetrasyllabic paroxytones is generally counteracted in verbs due to analogy with proparoxytonic inflections (e.g. Latin 'he rolls').

Verb

 * 1) roll, turn

Descendants

 * Italo-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * North Italian:
 * Gallo-Italic:
 * Old
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Gallo-Italic:
 * Old
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance: