hartar

Spanish

Etymology

From Latin farcīre, present active infinitive of farciō; and harto.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aɾˈtaɾ/ [aɾˈt̪aɾ]
  • Rhymes: -aɾ
  • Syllabification: har‧tar

Verb

hartar (first-person singular present harto, first-person singular preterite harté, past participle hartado)

  1. (informal) to bore, tire, to make fed up
    Ya nos hartaste con tu actitud.
    You've already tired us with your attitude.
    Synonyms: aburrir, hastiar
  2. (dated) to satisfy
    Synonym: satisfacer
  3. (vulgar, reflexive, transitive, El Salvador) to eat
    Hartate ya la comida, que ya se va a poner fría.
    Eat your food now, because it's gonna get cold soon.
    • 2008-07-18, commenter under the name "Ricardo", ElPeriodico.com.gt
      Así como los salvadoreños nos hartamos su pollo campero, así ustedes vuelen por TACA, y estamos a mano.
      Just as we, Salvadorans, eat your Campero chicken, you [Guatemalans] should fly with TACA, and we'll be even.
    Synonym: comer

Conjugation

Further reading

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