plaire

Etymology
, from, from , from. The original infinitive now became a noun, and the infinitive ending was changed to -aire by analogy with the future and conditional forms in plair-. The future stem came from Latin pluperfect stem placuer- (,, ...); some other verbs also use the pluperfect stem for their future stems (but not in the case of pluperfect forms containing -s- or -x-), for example , (if using the infinitive form, it results on expected *tenirai <  ), see also Appendix:French verbs.

Verb

 * 1)  to please, to appeal to (usually translated into English as like with exchange of subject and object)
 * 2)  to enjoy (oneself)
 * 1)  to enjoy (oneself)
 * 1)  to enjoy (oneself)

Derived terms

 * s’il te plaît
 * s’il vous plaît
 * s’il te plaît
 * s’il vous plaît
 * s’il vous plaît

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1) to please

Etymology
From a variant of (probably reformed by analogy from conjugated forms; compare French  vs., and Catalan  vs. ), from.

Verb

 * 1) to please

Dialectal variants

 * (Gascony)
 * (Gascony)
 * (Gascony)