soleo

Noun

 * 1) sole (flatfish)

Noun

 * 1) sole (flatfish)

Etymology
.
 * Based on semantic similarity to and, Walde-Hoffmann (1954) and Pokorny (1959) opt for *sodeō, from , from earlier *sweðējō, from Proto-Indo-European *swé-dʰh₁-eh₂-, from  expanded through the reflexive pronoun  + , thus the original sense to "set as one's own", as in the later formed.
 * De Vaan (2008) rejects this etymology on the grounds that a following front vowel ē should have blocked the *swe- > so- shift. Instead he derives it from, via the iterative *sol-eye- "to occupy habitually, inhabit" or directly from 🇨🇬 - cf. the similar semantic relationship between and.

Verb

 * 1) to be accustomed, used to, in the habit of

Conjugation

 * Unlike most semi-deponent verbs, soleō has no future tense.