prestar

Etymology
From, present active infinitive of.

Verb

 * 1) to be pleasing, to be liked, to be good

Etymology
, from.

Verb

 * 1)  to loan; to lend

Etymology
From (13th century, ), from, present active infinitive of.

Verb

 * 1)  to loan, to lend
 * 2) * 1362, María del Carmen Sánchez Carrera (ed.), El Bajo Miño en el siglo XV. El espacio y los hombres. A Coruña: Fundación Barrié de la Maza, page 359:
 * "gl"

- que non posades vender nen sopenorar nen aforar nen alear nen prestar por tenpo ne por tenpos a dita casa


 * 1)  to render, provide, offer
 * 2)  to pay
 * 3)  to be useful, suitable, or enjoyable
 * 4)  to be suitable, or enjoyable; to feel good
 * 1)  to be suitable, or enjoyable; to feel good
 * 1)  to be suitable, or enjoyable; to feel good

Verb

 * 1) to lend

Verb

 * 1)  to lend,  to borrow

Etymology
From, present active infinitive of.

Verb

 * 1) to lend
 * 2) to be useful, of distinction
 * 3) to give, donate (for example, money)
 * 1) to give, donate (for example, money)
 * 1) to give, donate (for example, money)
 * 1) to give, donate (for example, money)

Etymology
From, from.

Verb

 * 1)  to be useful; to be suitable; to be good
 * 2)  to render, to provide, to offer
 * 3)  to pay (attention, respect etc.)
 * 4)  to be suitable
 * 1)  to pay (attention, respect etc.)
 * 2)  to be suitable
 * 1)  to be suitable
 * 1)  to be suitable

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) too old

Etymology
, from.

Coromines and Pascual mention an old attestation of Latin praestō meaning "to lend" in a legal document of 438, the Interpretationes Theodosianae, where is switched for praestō. This meaning is also attested in the Reichenau Glosses. They also mention that the meaning "to borrow", generally considered non-standard, is already attested in the 16th-century work El patrañuelo.

Verb

 * 1)  to lend
 * 2)  to give, pay
 * 3)  to have a natural inclination, a natural tendency
 * 4)  to take
 * 5)  to borrow
 * 1)  to take
 * 2)  to borrow
 * 1)  to borrow
 * 1)  to borrow