careo

Etymology
From, possibly from.

De Vaan rejects the etymology from, finding it too semantically difficult to reconcile the stative ending -ēre, 'to lack, be lacking', and a stative Indo-European 'to be cutting something'. He mentions a 2000 paper by George Dunkel linking the derived to Sanskrit, but rejects this too as other words in the word family seem to stem from 'be lacking, pure'.

Noteworthy is the same development in the Portuguese use of (in passive meaning equivalent to, from this careō), derived from , from Latin.

Verb

 * 1) to lack, be without. (usually with ablative), to be deprived of
 * 2) to be separated from
 * 1) to be separated from
 * 1) to be separated from
 * 1) to be separated from
 * 1) to be separated from
 * 1) to be separated from

Usage notes

 * Always used with the ablative of separation.

Etymology 1
.

Noun

 * 1) face-to-face meeting