Inlinguistics andgrammar,conjugation has two basic meanings.[1] One meaning is the creation of derived forms of averb from basic forms, orprincipal parts.
The second meaning of the wordconjugation is a group of verbs which all have the same pattern of inflections. Thus all those Latin verbs which in the present tense have 1st singular-ō, 2nd singular-ās, and infinitive-āre are said to belong to the 1st conjugation, those with 1st singular-eō, 2nd singular-ēs and infinitive-ēre belong to the 2nd conjugation, and so on. The number of conjugations of regular verbs is usually said to be four.
The word "conjugation" comes from the Latinconiugātiō, acalque of the Greekσυζυγία (syzygia), literally "yoking together (horses into a team)".
For examples of verbs and verb groups for each inflectional class, see theWiktionary appendix pages forfirst conjugation,second conjugation,third conjugation, andfourth conjugation.
Number of conjugations
editThe ancient Romans themselves, beginning withVarro (1st century BC), originally divided their verbs into three conjugations (coniugationes verbis accidunt tres: prima, secunda, tertia "there are three different conjugations for verbs: the first, second, and third" (Donatus), 4th century AD), according to whether the ending of the 2nd person singular had ana, ane or ani in it.[2] However, others, such asSacerdos (3rd century AD),Dositheus (4th century AD) andPriscian[3] (c. 500 AD), recognised four different groups.[4]
In modern times grammarians[5] generally recognise four conjugations according to the ending of the active infinitive: namely-āre,-ēre,-ere, or-īre, for example:(1)amō, amāre "to love",(2)videō, vidēre "to see",(3)regō, regere "to rule" andcapiō, capere "to capture",(4)audiō, audīre "to hear". (3rd conjugation verbs ending in-iō such ascapiō are sometimes known as "mixed conjugation" since they use a mixture of 3rd and 4th conjugation endings.)
In addition to regular verbs, which belong to one or other of the four regular conjugations, there are also a few irregular verbs, which have a different pattern of endings. The most frequent of these is the verbsum, esse "to be" together with its prefixed derivatives.
There also existdeponent Latin verbs, which though active in meaning have endings identical to the passive endings of ordinary verbs. Examples in the different conjugations are:(1)moror, morārī "to delay",(2)polliceor, pollicērī "to promise",(3)sequor, sequī "to follow" andregredior, regredī "to go back",(4)mentior, mentīrī "to lie (tell a lie)". Some verbs are semi-deponent, using passive forms for the perfect tenses only.
Aspect → | Imperfect | Perfect | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voice → | Active | Passive | Active | Passive | ||||||||
Mood ↓ | Indicative | Subjunctive | Imperative | Indicative | Subjunctive | Imperative | Indicative | Subjunctive | Indicative | Subjunctive | ||
Past | amābam * I was loving | amārem * I might love | — | amābar * I was being loved | amārer * I might be loved | — | amāveram * I had loved | amāvissem * I would have loved | amātus eram * I had been loved | amātus essem * I might have been loved | ||
Present | amō * I am loving * I love | amem * I may love | amā * love! | amor * I am being loved * I am loved | amer * I may be loved | amāre * be loved! | amāvī * I have loved * I loved | amāverim * I might have loved | amātus sum * I have been loved | amātus sim * I may have been loved | ||
Future | amābō * I will love | — | amātō * you should love | amābor * I will be loved | — | amātor * you should be loved | amāverō * I will have loved | — | amātus erō * I will have been loved | — |
Principal parts
editA verb's full paradigm relies on multiplestems. The present indicative active and the present infinitive are both based on the present stem.
It is not possible to infer the stems for other tenses from the present stem. This means that, although the infinitive active form normally shows the verb conjugation, knowledge of several different forms is necessary to be able to confidently produce the full range of forms for any particular verb.
In a dictionary, Latin verbs are listed with four "principal parts" (or fewer for deponent and defective verbs), which allow the student to deduce the other conjugated forms of the verbs. These are:
- the first personsingular of thepresent indicative active
- the presentinfinitive active
- the first person singular of theperfect indicative active
- thesupine or, in some grammars, the perfect passive participle, which uses the same stem. (Texts that list the perfect passive participle use the future active participle for intransitive verbs.) Some verbs lack this principal part altogether.
Regular conjugations
editFirst conjugation
editThe first conjugation is characterized by thevowelā and can be recognized by the-āre ending of the present active infinitive form. The infectum tenses conjugate as follows (see alsotheir meaning):
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I love | I will love | I was loving | I may love | I might love | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | amō amās amat amāmus amātis amant | amābō amābis amābit amābimus amābitis amābunt | amābam amābās amābat amābāmus amābātis amābant | amem amēs amet amēmus amētis ament | amārem amārēs amāret amārēmus amārētis amārent | ||
Passive | I am loved | I will be loved | I was being loved | I may be loved | I might be loved | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | amor amāris amātur amāmur amāminī amantur | amābor amāberis/e* amābitur amābimur amābiminī amābuntur | amābar amābāris/e* amābātur amābāmur amābāminī amābantur | amer amēris/e* amētur amēmur amēminī amentur | amārer amārēris/e* amārētur amārēmur amārēminī amārentur |
* The 2nd person singular passiveamāberis, amābāris, amēris, amārēris can be shortened toamābere, amābāre, amēre, amārēre.-re was the regular form in early Latin and (except in the present indicative) in Cicero;-ris was preferred later.[6]
In early Latin (Plautus), the 3rd singular endings-at and-et were pronounced-āt and-ēt with a long vowel.[6]
Other forms:
- Infinitive:amāre "to love"
- Passive infinitive:amārī "to be loved" (in early Latin oftenamārier)[6]
- Imperative:amā! (pl.amāte!) "love!"
- Future imperative:amātō! (pl.amātōte!) "love! (at a future time)"
- Indirect imperative:amātō! (pl.amantō!) "let him love!"
- Passive imperative:amāre! (pl.amāminī!) "be loved!" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Passive future imperative:amātor! (pl.amātōminī!) "be loved! (at a future time)"
- Passive indirect imperative:amātor! (pl.amantor!) "let him be loved!"
- Present participle:amāns (pl.amantēs) "loving"
- Future participle:amātūrus (pl.amātūrī) "going to love"
- Gerundive:amandus (pl.amandī) "needing to be loved"
- Gerund:amandī "of loving",amandō "by/for loving",ad amandum "in order to love"
The principal parts usually adhere to one of the following patterns:
- The perfect has the suffix-āvī. The majority of first-conjugation verbs follow this pattern, which is considered to be "regular", for example:
- amō, amāre, amāvī, amātum, "to love";
- imperō, imperāre, imperāvī, imperātum, "to order";
- laudō, laudāre, laudāvī, laudātum, "to praise";
- negō, negāre, negāvī, negātum, "to deny";
- nūntiō, nūntiāre, nūntiāvī, nūntiātum, "to announce, report";
- ōrō, ōrāre, ōrāvī, ōrātum, "to beg, pray";
- parō, parāre, parāvī, parātum, "to prepare";
- portō, portāre, portāvī, portātum, "to carry";
- pugnō, pugnāre, pugnāvī, pugnātum, "to fight";
- putō, putāre, putāvī, putātum, "to think";
- rogō, rogāre, rogāvī, rogātum, "to ask";
- servō, servāre, servāvī, servātum, "to save";
- vocō, vocāre, vocāvī, vocātum, "to call";
- The perfect has the suffix-uī, for example:
- fricō, fricāre, fricuī, frictum, "to rub";
- secō, secāre, secuī, sectum, "to cut, to divide";
- vetō, vetāre, vetuī, vetitum, "to forbid, to prohibit";
- The perfect has the suffix-ī and vowel lengthening in the stem, for example:
- iuvō, iuvāre, iūvī, iūtum, "to help, to assist";
- lavō, lavāre, lāvī, lautum, "to wash, to bathe";
- The perfect is reduplicated, for example:
- dō, dare, dedī, datum, "to give"
- stō, stāre, stetī, statum, "to stand";
The verbdō "I give" is irregular in that except in the 2nd singulardās and imperativedā, thea is short, e.g.dabō "I will give".
Thea is also short in the supinestatum and its derivatives, but the other parts ofstō "I stand" are regular.
Deponent verbs in this conjugation all follow the pattern below, which is the passive of the first type above:[7]
- arbitror, arbitrārī, arbitrātus sum "to think"
- cōnor, cōnārī, cōnātus sum "to try"
- cūnctor, cūnctārī, cūnctātus sum "to hesitate"
- hortor, hortārī, hortātus sum "to exhort"
- mīror, mīrārī, mīrātus sum "to be surprised, to be amazed at"
- moror, morārī, morātus sum "to delay, stay"
Perfect tenses
editThe threeperfectum tenses of the 1st conjugation go as in the following table:
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Perfect | Future perfect | Pluperfect | Perfect | Pluperfect | |||
Active | I loved | I will have loved | I had loved | I loved | I had loved | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | amāvī amāvistī amāvit amāvimus amāvistis amāvērunt/-ēre* | amāverō amāverīs/is amāverit amāverīmus/-imus amāverītis/-itis amāverint | amāveram amāverās amāverat amāverāmus amāverātis amāverant | amāverim amāverīs amāverit amāverīmus amāverītis amāverint | amā(vi)ssem* amāvissēs amāvisset amāvissēmus amāvissētis amāvissent | ||
Passive | I was loved | I will have been loved | I had been loved | I was loved | I had been loved | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | amātus sum amātus es amātus est amātī sumus amātī estis amātī sunt | amātus erō amātus eris amātus erit amātī erimus amātī eritis amātī erunt | amātus eram amātus erās amātus erat amātī erāmus amātī erātis amātī erant | amātus sim amātus sīs amātus sit amātī sīmus amātī sītis amātī sint | amātus essem amātus essēs amātus esset amātī essēmus amātī essētis amātī essent |
In poetry (and also sometimes in prose, e.g.Livy), the 3rd person plural of the perfect indicative is oftenamāvēre instead ofamāvērunt. Occasionally the formamāverunt is also found.[8]
In early Latin, the future perfect indicative had a shorti inamāveris, amāverimus, amāveritis, but by the time of Cicero these forms were usually pronounced with a longi, in the same way as in the perfect subjunctive.[9] Virgil has a shorti for both tenses; Horace uses both forms for both tenses; Ovid uses both forms for the future perfect, but a longi in the perfect subjunctive.[10]
The-v- of the perfect active tenses sometimes drops out, especially in the pluperfect subjunctive:amāssem foramāvissem. Forms such asamārat andamāstī are also found.
The passive tenses also have feminine and neuter forms, e.g.amāta est "she was loved",nūntiātum est "it was announced".
Forms made withfuī instead ofsum andforem instead ofessem are also found, for exampleamātus fuī,amātus fuerō,amātus forem and so on, but these are not common in classical Latin. SeeLatin tenses.
For other meanings of the perfect and pluperfect subjunctive, seeLatin tenses#Jussive subjunctive.
Other forms:
- Perfect infinitive active:amāvisse (amāsse) "to have loved"
- Perfect infinitive passive:amātus esse (amātum esse) "to have been loved"
- Perfect participle passive:amātus, -a, -um "loved (by someone)"
Second conjugation
editThe second conjugation is characterized by the vowel ē, and can be recognized by the -eō ending of the first person present indicative and the -ēre ending of the present active infinitive form:
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I see | I will see | I was seeing | I may see | I might see | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | videō vidēs videt vidēmus vidētis vident | vidēbō vidēbis vidēbit vidēbimus vidēbitis vidēbunt | vidēbam vidēbās vidēbat vidēbāmus vidēbātis vidēbant | videam videās videat videāmus videātis videant | vidērem vidērēs vidēret vidērēmus vidērētis vidērent | ||
Passive | I am seen | I will be seen | I was being seen | I may be seen | I might be seen | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | videor vidēris vidētur vidēmur vidēminī videntur | vidēbor vidēberis/e vidēbitur vidēbimur vidēbiminī vidēbuntur | vidēbar vidēbāris/e vidēbātur vidēbāmur vidēbāminī vidēbantur | videar videāris/e videātur videāmur videāminī videantur | vidērer vidērēris/e vidērētur vidērēmur vidērēminī vidērentur |
The passivevideor also often means "I seem".
Other forms:
- Infinitive:vidēre "to see"
- Passive infinitive:vidērī "to be seen"
- Imperative:vidē! (pl.vidēte!) "see!"
- Future imperative:vidētō! (pl.vidētōte!) "see! (at a future time)"
- Passive imperative:vidēre! (pl.vidēminī!) "be seen!" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Present participle:vidēns (pl.videntēs) "seeing"
- Future participle:vīsūrus (pl.vīsūrī) "going to see"
- Gerundive:videndus (pl.videndī) "needing to be seen"
- Gerund:videndī "of seeing",videndō "by /for seeing",ad videndum "in order to see"
The principal parts usually adhere to one of the following patterns:
- The perfect has the suffix-uī. Verbs which follow this pattern are considered to be "regular". Examples:
- dēbeō, dēbēre, dēbuī, dēbitum "to owe, be obliged"
- doceō, docēre, docuī, doctum "to teach, to instruct"
- iaceō, iacēre, iacuī, iacitum "to lie (on the ground/bed)"
- mereō, merēre, meruī, meritum "to deserve"
- misceō, miscēre, miscuī, mixtum "to mix"
- moneō, monēre, monuī, monitum "to warn, advise"
- noceō, nocēre, nocuī, nocitum "to be harmful"
- praebeō, praebēre, praebuī, praebitum "to provide, show"
- teneō, tenēre, tenuī, tentum "to hold, to keep"
- terreō, terrēre, terruī, territum "to frighten, to deter"
- timeō, timēre, timuī, – "to fear"
- valeō, valēre, valuī, (valitum) "to be strong"
- The perfect has the suffix–ēvī. Example:
- dēleō, dēlēre, dēlēvī, dēlētum "to destroy"
- fleō, flēre, flēvī, flētum "to weep"
In verbs with perfect in-vī,syncopated (i.e. abbreviated) forms are common, such asdēlēram, dēlēssem, dēlēstī fordēlēveram, dēlēvissem, dēlēvistī.[11]
- The perfect has the suffix–īvī. Example:
- cieō, ciēre, cīvī, citum "to arouse, to stir"
- The perfect has the suffix-sī (which combines with a precedingc org to–xī). Examples:
- ārdeō, ārdēre, ārsī, ārsum "to burn"
- augeō, augēre, auxī, auctum "to increase, to enlarge"
- haereō, haerēre, haesī, haesum "to stick, to adhere, to get stuck"
- iubeō, iubēre, iussī, iussum "to order"
- maneō, manēre, mānsī, mānsum "to remain"
- persuādeō, persuādēre, persuāsī, persuāsum "to persuade"
- rīdeō, rīdēre, rīsī, rīsum "to laugh"
- The perfect is reduplicated with-ī. Examples:
- mordeō, mordēre, momordī, morsum "to bite"
- spondeō, spondēre, spopondī, spōnsum "to vow, to promise"
- The perfect has suffix-ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
- caveō, cavēre, cāvī, cautum "to be cautious"
- faveō, favēre, fāvī, fautum "to favour"
- foveō, fovēre, fōvī, fōtum "to caress, to cherish"
- sedeō, sedēre, sēdī, sessum "to sit"
- videō, vidēre, vīdī, vīsum "to see"
- The perfect has suffix-ī. Examples:
- respondeō, respondēre, respondī, respōnsum "to reply"
- strīdeō, strīdēre, strīdī, – "to hiss, to creak" (alsostrīdō 3rd conj.)
Deponent verbs in this conjugation are few. They mostly go like the passive ofterreō, butfateor andconfiteor have a perfect participle withss:[12]
- fateor, fatērī, fassus sum "to confess"
- mereor, merērī, meritus sum "to deserve"
- polliceor, pollicērī, pollicitus sum "to promise"
The following are semi-deponent, that is, they are deponent only in the three perfect tenses:[13]
- audeō, audēre, ausus sum "to dare"
- gaudeō, gaudēre, gāvīsus sum "to rejoice, to be glad"
- soleō, solēre, solitus sum "to be accustomed"
Third conjugation
editThe third conjugation has a variable short stem vowel, which may be e, i, or u in different environments. Verbs of this conjugation end in -ere in the present active infinitive. Deponent verbs have the infinitive -ī.
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I lead | I will lead | I was leading | I may lead | I might lead | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | dūcō dūcis dūcit dūcimus dūcitis dūcunt | dūcam dūcēs dūcet dūcēmus dūcētis dūcent | dūcēbam dūcēbās dūcēbat dūcēbāmus dūcēbātis dūcēbant | dūcam dūcās dūcat dūcāmus dūcātis dūcant | dūcerem dūcerēs dūceret dūcerēmus dūcerētis dūcerent | ||
Passive | I am led | I will be led | I was being led | I may be led | I might be led | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | dūcor dūceris dūcitur dūcimur dūciminī dūcuntur | dūcar dūcēris/re dūcētur dūcēmur dūcēminī dūcentur | dūcēbar dūcēbāris/re dūcēbātur dūcēbāmur dūcēbāminī dūcēbantur | dūcar dūcāris/re dūcātur dūcāmur dūcāminī dūcantur | dūcerer dūcerēris/re dūcerētur dūcerēmur dūcerēminī dūcerentur |
The future tense in the 3rd and 4th conjugation (-am, -ēs, -et etc.) differs from that in the 1st and 2nd conjugation (-bō, -bis, -bit etc.).
Other forms:
- Infinitive:dūcere "to lead"
- Passive infinitive:dūcī "to be led" (the 3rd conjugation has nor)
- Imperative:dūc! (pl.dūcite!) "lead!"
- Future imperative:dūcitō! (pl.dūcitōte!) "lead! (at a future time)"
- Passive imperative:dūcere! (pl.dūciminī!) "be led!" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Present participle:dūcēns (pl.dūcentēs) "leading"
- Future participle:ductūrus (pl.ductūrī) "going to lead"
- Gerundive:dūcendus (pl.dūcendī) "needing to be led"
- Gerund:dūcendī "of leading",dūcendō "by /for leading",ad dūcendum "in order to lead"
Four 3rd conjugation verbs usually have no ending in the imperative singular:dūc! "lead!",dīc! "say!",fer! "bring!",fac! "do!".
Others, likecurre "run!", have the ending-e.[6]
There is no regular rule for constructing the perfect stem of third-conjugation verbs, but the following patterns are used:
- The perfect has suffix-sī (-xī whenc,g, orh comes at the end of the root). Examples:
- carpō, carpere, carpsī, carptum "to pluck, to select"
- cēdō, cēdere, cessī, cessum "to yield, depart"
- claudō, claudere, clausī, clausum "to close"
- contemnō, contemnere, contempsī, contemptum "to despise, disdain, treat with contempt"
- dīcō, dīcere, dīxī, dictum "to say"
- dīvidō, dīvidere, dīvīsī, dīvīsum "to divide"
- dūcō, dūcere, dūxī, ductum "to lead"
- flectō, flectere, flexī, flexum "to bend, to twist"
- gerō, gerere, gessī, gestum "to wear, to bear; wage (war)"
- mittō, mittere, mīsī, missum "to send"
- regō, regere, rēxī, rēctum "to rule"
- scrībō, scrībere, scrīpsī, scrīptum "to write"
- tegō, tegere, tēxī, tēctum "to cover, conceal"
- trahō, trahere, trāxī, trāctum "to drag, to pull"
- vīvō, vīvere, vīxī, vīctum "to live"
- The perfect is reduplicated with suffix–ī. Examples:
- cadō, cadere, cecidī, cāsum "to fall"
- caedō, caedere, cecīdī, caesum "to kill, to slay"
- currō, currere, cucurrī, cursum "to run, to race"
- discō, discere, didicī, – "to learn"
- fallō, fallere, fefellī, falsum "to cheat"
- pēdō, pēdere, pepēdī, pēditum "to fart"
- pellō, pellere, pepulī, pulsum "to beat, to drive away"
- pōscō, pōscere, popōscī, – "to claim, request"
- tangō, tangere, tetigī, tāctum "to touch, to hit"
- tendō, tendere, tetendī, tentum/tēnsum "to stretch"
Althoughdō, dare, dedī, datum "to give" is 1st conjugation, its compounds are 3rd conjugation and have internal reduplication:
- condō, condere, condidī, conditum "to found"
- crēdō, crēdere, crēdidī, crēditum "to entrust, believe"
- dēdō, dēdere, dēdidī, dēditum "to surrender"
- perdō, perdere, perdidī, perditum "to destroy, lose"
- reddō, reddere, reddidī, redditum "to give back"
- trādō, trādere, trādidī, trāditum "to hand over"
Likewise the compounds ofsistō have internal reduplication. Althoughsistō is transitive, its compounds are intransitive:[14]
- sistō, sistere, (stitī), statum "to cause to stand"
- cōnsistō, cōnsistere, cōnstitī, cōnstitum "to come to a halt"
- dēsistō, dēsistere, dēstitī, dēstitum "to stand off"
- resistō, resistere, restitī, restitum "to resist"
- The perfect has suffix-vī. Examples:
- linō, linere, lēvī (līvī), litum "to smear, to daub" (also 4th conj.liniō, linīre, līvī, lītum)
- petō, petere, petīvī, petītum "to seek, to attack"
- quaerō, quaerere, quaesīvī, quaesītum "to look for, ask"
- serō, serere, sēvī, satum "to sow, to plant"
- sternō, sternere, strāvī, strātum "to spread, to stretch out"
- terō, terere, trīvī, trītum "to rub, to wear out"
- The perfect has suffix-ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. If the present stem has ann infix, as infundō, relinquō andvincō, the infix disappears in the perfect. In some cases, the long vowel in the perfect is thought to be derived from an earlier reduplicated form, e.g.*e-agī > ēgī, *e-emī > ēmī.[15] Examples:
- agō, agere, ēgī, āctum "to do, to drive"
- cōgō, cōgere, coēgī, coāctum "to compel, gather together"
- emō, emere, ēmī, ēmptum "to buy"
- fundō, fundere, fūdī, fūsum "to pour"
- legō, legere, lēgī, lēctum "to collect, to read"
- relinquō, relinquere, relīquī, relictum "to leave behind"
- rumpō, rumpere, rūpī, ruptum "to burst"
- vincō, vincere, vīcī, victum "to conquer, to defeat"
- The perfect has suffix-ī only. Examples:
- ascendō, ascendere, ascendī, ascēnsum "to climb, to go up"
- cōnstituō, cōnstituere, cōnstituī, cōnstitūtum "to establish, decide, cause to stand"
- dēfendō, dēfendere, dēfendī, dēfēnsum "to defend"
- expellō, expellere, expulī, expulsum "to drive out, expel"
- īcō, īcere, īcī, ictum "to strike"
- metuō, metuere, metuī, metūtum "to fear, be apprehensive"
- occīdō, occīdere, occīdī, occīsum "to kill"
- ostendō, ostendere, ostendī, ostentum (ostensum) "to show"
- tollō, tollere, sustulī, sublātum "to lift, raise, remove"
- vertō, vertere, vertī, versum "to turn"
- vīsō, vīsere, vīsī, vīsum "to visit"
- The perfect has suffix–uī. Examples:
- colō, colere, coluī, cultum "to cultivate, to till"
- cōnsulō, cōnsulere, cōnsuluī, cōnsultum "to consult, act in the interests of"
- gignō, gignere, genuī, genitum "to beget, to cause"
- molō, molere, moluī, molitum "to grind"
- pōnō, pōnere, posuī, positum "to place"
- texō, texere, texuī, textum "to weave, to plait"
- vomō, vomere, vomuī, vomitum "to vomit"
- The present tense indicative first person singular form has suffix–scō. Examples:
- adolēscō, adolēscere, adolēvī, adultum "to grow up, to mature"
- nōscō, nōscere, nōvī, nōtum "to get to know, to learn"
- pāscō, pāscere, pāvī, pāstum "to feed upon, to feed (an animal)"
- quiēscō, quiēscere, quiēvī, quiētum "to rest, keep quiet"
Deponent verbs in the 3rd conjugation include the following:
- complector, complectī, complexus sum "to embrace"
- fruor, fruī, frūctus sum "to enjoy" (fruitus is occasionally found)
- fungor, fungī, fūnctus sum "to perform, discharge, busy oneself with"
- lābor, lābī, lāpsus sum "to glide, slip"
- loquor, loquī, locūtus sum "to speak"
- nītor, nītī, nīxus sum "to lean on; to strive" (nīsus is occasionally found)
- queror, querī, questus sum "to complain"
- sequor, sequī, secūtus sum "to follow"
- ūtor, ūtī, ūsus sum "to use"
- vehor, vehī, vectus sum "to ride"
There are also a number of 3rd conjugation deponents with the ending-scor:
- adipīscor, adipīscī, adeptus sum "to obtain"
- īrāscor, īrāscī, īrātus sum "to get angry"
- nancīscor, nancīscī, nactus sum "to obtain"
- nāscor, nāscī, nātus sum "to be born"
- oblīvīscor, oblīvīscī, oblītus sum "to forget"
- proficīscor, proficīscī, profectus sum "to set out"
- ulcīscor, ulcīscī, ultus sum "to avenge, take vengeance on"
Deponent in some tenses only is the following:[13]
- fīdō, fīdere, fīsus sum "to trust"
The following is deponent only in the infectum tenses:
- revertor, revertī, revertī "to turn back"
Third conjugation -iō verbs
editIntermediate between the third and fourth conjugation are the third-conjugation verbs with suffix –iō. These resemble the fourth conjugation in some forms.
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I capture | I will capture | I was capturing | I may capture | I might capture | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | capiō capis capit capimus capitis capiunt | capiam capiēs capiet capiēmus capiētis capient | capiēbam capiēbās capiēbat capiēbāmus capiēbātis capiēbant | capiam capiās capiat capiāmus capiātis capiant | caperem caperēs caperet caperēmus caperētis caperent | ||
Passive | I am captured | I will be captured | I was being captured | I may be captured | I might be captured | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | capior caperis capitur capimur capiminī capiuntur | capiar capiēris/re capiētur capiēmur capiēminī capientur | capiēbar capiēbāris/re capiēbātur capiēbāmur capiēbāminī capiēbantur | capiar capiāris/re capiātur capiāmur capiāminī capiantur | caperer caperēris/re caperētur caperēmur caperēminī caperentur |
Other forms:
- Infinitive:capere "to capture, to take"
- Passive infinitive:capī "to be captured" (the 3rd conjugation has nor)
- Imperative:cape! (pl.capite!) "capture!"
- Future imperative:capitō! (pl.capitōte!) "capture! (at a future time)"
- Passive imperative:capere! (pl.capiminī!) "be captured!" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Future passive imperative:capitor! (pl.capitōminī!) "be captured! (at a future time)" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Present participle:capiēns (pl.capientēs) "capturing"
- Future participle:captūrus (pl.captūrī) "going to capture"
- Gerundive:capiendus (pl.capiendī) "needing to be captured" (capiundus is also sometimes found)
- Gerund:capiendī "of capturing",capiendō "by /for capturing",ad capiendum "in order to capture"
Some examples are:
- accipiō, accipere, accēpī, acceptum "to receive, accept"
- capiō, capere, cēpī, captum "to take, capture"
- cōnspiciō, cōnspicere, cōnspexī, cōnspectum "to watch, examine"
- cupiō, cupere, cupīvī, cupītum "to desire, long for"
- faciō, facere, fēcī, factum "to do, to make"
- fugiō, fugere, fūgī, fugitum "to flee"
- iaciō, iacere, iēcī, iactum "to throw"
- interficiō, interficere, interfēcī, interfectum "to kill"
- rapiō, rapere, rapuī, raptum "to plunder, seize"
- respiciō, respicere, respexī, respectum "to look back"
Deponent verbs in this group include:
- aggredior, aggredī, aggressus sum "to attack"
- ēgredior, ēgredī, ēgressus sum "to go out"
- morior, morī, mortuus sum "to die"
- patior, patī, passus sum "to suffer, to allow"
- prōgredior, prōgredī, prōgressus sum "to attack"
- regredior, regredī, regressus sum "to go back"
Fourth conjugation
editThe fourth conjugation is characterized by the vowel ī and can be recognized by the -īre ending of the present active infinitive. Deponent verbs have the infinitive -īrī:
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I hear | I will hear | I was hearing | I may hear | I might hear | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | audiō audīs audit audīmus audītis audiunt | audiam audiēs audiet audiēmus audiētis audient | audiēbam audiēbās audiēbat audiēbāmus audiēbātis audiēbant | audiam audiās audiat audiāmus audiātis audiant | audīrem audīrēs audīret audīrēmus audīrētis audīrent | ||
Passive | I am heard | I will be heard | I was being heard | I may be heard | I might be heard | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | audior audīris audītur audīmur audīminī audiuntur | audiar audiēris/re audiētur audiēmur audiēminī audientur | audiēbar audiēbāris/re audiēbātur audiēbāmur audiēbāminī audiēbantur | audiar audiāris/re audiātur audiāmur audiāminī audiantur | audīrer audīrēris/re audīrētur audīrēmur audīrēminī audīrentur |
Other forms:
- Infinitive:audīre "to hear"
- Passive infinitive:audīrī "to be heard"
- Imperative:audī! (pl.audīte!) "hear!"
- Future imperative:audītō! (pl.audītōte!) "hear! (at a future time)"
- Passive imperative:audīre! (pl.audīminī!) "be heard!" (usually only found in deponent verbs)
- Present participle:audiēns (pl.audientēs) "hearing"
- Future participle:audītūrus (pl.audītūrī) "going to hear"
- Gerundive:audiendus (pl.audiendī) "needing to be heard"
- Gerund:audiendī "of hearing",audiendō "by /for hearing",ad audiendum "in order to hear"
Principal parts of verbs in the fourth conjugation generally adhere to the following patterns:
- The perfect has suffix-vī. Verbs which adhere to this pattern are considered to be "regular". Examples:
- audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītum "to hear, listen (to)"
- custōdiō, custōdīre, custōdīvī, custōdītum "to guard"
- dormiō, dormīre, dormīvī (dormiī), dormītum "to sleep"
- impediō, impedīre, impedīvī, impedītum "to hinder, impede"
- mūniō, mūnīre, mūnīvī, mūnītum "to fortify, to build"
- pūniō, pūnīre, pūnīvī, pūnītum "to punish"
- sciō, scīre, scīvī, scītum "to know"
- The perfect has suffix-uī. Examples:
- aperiō, aperīre, aperuī, apertum "to open, to uncover"
- The perfect has suffix-sī (-xī whenc comes at the end of the root). Examples:
- saepiō, saepīre, saepsī, saeptum "to surround, to enclose"
- sanciō, sancīre, sānxī, sānctum "to confirm, to ratify"
- sentiō, sentīre, sēnsī, sēnsum "to feel, to perceive"
- vinciō, vincīre, vīnxī, vīnctum "to bind"
- The perfect has suffix-ī and reduplication. Examples:
- reperiō, reperīre, repperī, repertum "to find, discover"
- The perfect has suffix-ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
- veniō, venīre, vēnī, ventum "to come, to arrive"
- inveniō, invenīre, invēnī, inventum "to find"
Deponent verbs in the 4th conjugation include the following:[16]
- assentior, assentīrī, assēnsus sum "to assent"
- experior, experīrī, expertus sum "to experience, test"
- largior, largīrī, largītus sum "to bestow"
- mentior, mentīrī, mentītus sum "to tell a lie"
- mētior, mētīrī, mēnsus sum "to measure"
- mōlior, mōlīrī, mōlītus sum "to exert oneself, set in motion, build"
- potior, potīrī, potītus sum "to obtain, gain possession of"
- sortior, sortīrī, sortītus sum "to cast lots"
The verborior, orīrī, ortus sum "to arise" is also regarded as 4th conjugation, although some parts, such as the 3rd singular present tenseoritur and imperfect subjunctiveorerer, have a short vowel like the 3rd conjugation. But its compoundadorior "to rise up, attack" is entirely 4th conjugation.
In the perfect tenses, shortened forms without-v- are common, for example,audīstī, audiērunt, audierat, audīsset foraudīvistī, audīvērunt, audīverat, audīvisset. Cicero, however, prefers the full formsaudīvī, audīvit toaudiī, audiit.[11]
Irregular verb
editSum andpossum
editThe verbsum, esse, fuī "to be" is the most common verb in Latin. It is conjugated as follows:[17]
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I am | I will be | I was | I may be | I might be | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | sum es est sumus estis sunt | erō eris erit erimus eritis erunt | eram erās erat erāmus erātis erant | sim sīs sit sīmus sītis sint | essem essēs esset essēmus essētis essent | ||
Active | I am able | I will be able | I was able | I may be able | I might be able | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | possum potes potest possumus potestis possunt | poterō poteris poterit poterimus poteritis poterunt | poteram poterās poterat poterāmus poterātis poterant | possim possīs possit possīmus possītis possint | possem possēs posset possēmus possētis possent |
In early Latin (e.g.Plautus),siem, siēs, siet can be found for the present subjunctivesim, sīs, sit. In poetry the subjunctivefuam, fuās, fuat also sometimes occurs.[18]
An alternative imperfect subjunctive is sometimes made usingforem, forēs, foret etc. See further:Latin tenses#Foret.
Other forms:
- Infinitive:esse "to be",posse "to be able"
- Perfect infinitive:fuisse "to have been",potuisse "to have been able"
- Future infinitive:fore "to be going to be" (alsofutūrus esse)
- Imperative:es! (pl.este!) "be!"
- Future imperative:estō! (pl.estōte!) "be! (at a future time)"
- Future participle:futūrus (pl.futūrī) "going to be" (Possum has no future participle or future infinitive.)
The present participle is found only in the compoundsabsēns "absent" andpraesēns "present".[18]
InPlautus andLucretius, an infinitivepotesse is sometimes found forposse "to be able".
The principal parts of these verbs are as follows:
- sum, esse, fuī "to be"
- absum, abesse, āfuī "to be away"
- adsum, adesse, adfuī "to be present"
- dēsum, dēesse, dēfuī "to be wanting"
- possum, posse, potuī "to be able"
- prōsum, prōdesse, prōfuī "to be for, to profit" (addsd before a vowel)[18]
The perfect tenses conjugate in the regular way.
For the difference in meaning betweeneram andfuī, seeLatin tenses#Difference between eram and fuī
Volō,nōlō, andmālō
editThe verbvolō and its derivativesnōlō andmālō (short formagis volō) resemble a 3rd conjugation verb, but the present subjunctive ending in-im is different:
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I want | I will want | I was wanting | I may want | I might want | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | volō vīs vult volumus vultis volunt | volam volēs volet volēmus volētis volent | volēbam volēbās volēbat volēbāmus volēbātis volēbant | velim velīs velit velīmus velītis velint | vellem vellēs vellet vellēmus vellētis vellent | ||
Active | I am unwilling | I will be unwilling | I was unwilling | I may be unwilling | I might be unwilling | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | nōlō nōn vīs nōn vult nōlumus nōn vultis nōlunt | nōlam nōlēs nōlet nōlēmus nōlētis nōlent | nōlēbam nōlēbās nōlēbat nōlēbāmus nōlēbātis nōlēbant | nōlim nōlīs nōlit nōlīmus nōlītis nōlint | nōllem nōllēs nōllet nōllēmus nōllētis nōllent | ||
Active | I prefer | I will prefer | I was preferring | I may prefer | I might prefer | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | mālō māvīs māvult mālumus māvultis mālunt | mālam mālēs mālet mālēmus mālētis mālent | mālēbam mālēbās mālēbat mālēbāmus mālēbātis mālēbant | mālim mālīs mālit mālīmus mālītis mālint | māllem māllēs māllet māllēmus māllētis māllent |
The spellingsvolt andvoltis were used up until the time of Cicero forvult andvultis.[19]
These verbs are not used in the passive.
Other forms:
- Infinitive:velle "to want",nōlle "to be unwilling",mālle "to prefer"
- Present participle:volēns "willing",nōlēns "unwilling"
- Imperative:nōlī, pl.nōlīte (used in expressions such asnōlī mīrārī "don't be surprised!")
Principal parts:
- volō, velle, voluī "to want"
- nōlō, nōlle, nōluī "not to want, to be unwilling"
- mālō, mālle, māluī "to prefer"
The perfect tenses are formed regularly.
Eō and compounds
editThe verbeō "I go" is an irregular 4th conjugation verb, in which thei of the stem sometimes becomese. Like 1st and 2nd conjugation verbs, it uses the future-bō, -bis, -bit:[20]
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I go | I will go | I was going | I may go | I might go | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | eō īs it īmus ītis eunt | ībō ībis ībit ībimus ībitis ībunt | ībam ībās ībat ībāmus ībātis ībant | eam eās eat eāmus eātis eant | īrem īrēs īret īrēmus īrētis īrent |
Other forms:
- Infinitive:īre "to go"
- Passive infinitive:īrī "to go" (used impersonally, e.g.quō īrī dēbēret ignōrantēs "not knowing which way to go")
- Imperative:ī! (pl.īte!) "go!"
- Future imperative:ītō! (pl.ītōte!) "go! (at a future time)" (rare)
- Present participle:iēns (pl.euntēs) "going"
- Future participle:itūrus (pl.itūrī) "going to go"
- Gerundive:eundum "necessary to go" (used impersonally only)
- Gerund:eundī "of going",eundō "by / for going",ad eundum "in order to go"
The impersonal passive formsītur "they go",itum est "they went" are sometimes found.[21]
The principal parts of some verbs which conjugate likeeō are the following:
- eō, īre, iī/(īvī), itum "to go"
- abeō, abīre, abiī, abitum "to go away"
- adeō, adīre, adiī, aditum "to go up to"
- coeō, coīre, coiī, coitum "to meet, assemble"
- exeō, exīre, exiī/(exīvī), exitum "to go out"
- ineō, inīre, iniī, initum "to enter"
- intereō, interīre, interiī, interitum "to perish"
- introeō, introīre, introiī, introitum "to enter"
- pereō, perīre, periī, peritum "to die, to perish"
- praetereō, praeterīre, praeteriī, praeteritum "to pass by"
- redeō, redīre, rediī, reditum "to return, to go back"
- subeō, subīre, subiī, subitum "to go under, to approach stealthily, to undergo"
- vēneō, vēnīre, vēniī, vēnitum "to be sold"
In the perfect tenses of these verbs, the-v- is almost always omitted, especially in the compounds,[22] although the formexīvit is common in the Vulgate Bible translation.
In some perfect forms, the vowelsii- are contracted toī-: second person singular perfectīstī, second person plural perfectīstis; pluperfect subjunctiveīssem, īssēs, ..., īssent; perfect infinitiveīsse (the formiisse is also attested).
The verbqueō, quīre, quiī/quīvī, quitum "to be able" has forms similar toeō.
Ferō and compounds
editThe verbferō, ferre, tulī, lātum "to bring, to bear, to carry" is 3rd conjugation, but irregular in that the vowel following the rootfer- is sometimes omitted. The perfect tensetulī and supine stemlātum are also irregularly formed.[23]
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I bring | I will bring | I was bringing | I may bring | I might bring | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | ferō fers fert ferimus fertis ferunt | feram ferēs feret ferēmus ferētis ferent | ferēbam ferēbās ferēbat ferēbāmus ferēbātis ferēbant | feram ferās ferat ferāmus ferātis ferant | ferrem ferrēs ferret ferrēmus ferrētis ferrent | ||
Passive | I am brought | I will be brought | I was being brought | I may be brought | I might be brought | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | feror ferris fertur ferimur feriminī feruntur | ferar ferēris/re ferētur ferēmur ferēminī ferentur | ferēbar ferēbāris/re ferēbātur ferēbāmur ferēbāminī ferēbantur | ferar ferāris/re ferātur ferāmur ferāminī ferantur | ferrer ferrēris/re ferrētur ferrēmur ferrēminī ferrentur |
The future tense in the 3rd and 4th conjugation (-am, -ēs, -et etc.) differs from that in the 1st and 2nd conjugation (-bō, -bis, -bit etc.).
Other forms:
- Infinitive:ferre "to bring"
- Passive infinitive:ferrī "to be brought"
- Imperative:fer! (pl.ferte!) "bring!"
- Passive imperative:ferre! (pl.feriminī!) "be carried!" (rare)
- Present participle:ferēns (pl.ferentēs) "bringing"
- Future participle:lātūrus (pl.lātūrī) "going to bring"
- Gerundive:ferendus (pl.ferendī) "needing to be brought"
- Gerund:ferendī "of bringing",ferendō "by /for bringing",ad ferendum "in order to bring"
Compounds offerō include the following:[24]The principal parts of some verbs which conjugate likeferō are the following:
- afferō, afferre, attulī, allātum "to bring (to)"
- auferō, auferre, abstulī, ablātum "to carry away, to steal"
- cōnferō, cōnferre, contulī, collātum "to collect"
- differō, differre, distulī, dīlātum "to put off"
- efferō, efferre, extulī, ēlātum "to carry out"
- offerō, offerre, obtulī, oblātum "to offer"
- referō, referre, rettulī, relātum "to refer"
The perfect tensesustulī, however, belongs to the verbtollō:
- tollō, tollere, sustulī, sublātum "to raise, to remove"
Fīō
editThe irregular verbfīō, fierī, factus sum "to become, to happen, to be done, to be made" as well as being a verb in its own right serves as the passive offaciō, facere, fēcī, factum "to do, to make".[25] The perfect tenses are identical with the perfect passive tenses offaciō.
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I become | I will become | I was becoming | I may become | I might become | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | fīō fīs fit (fīmus) (fītis) fīunt | fīam fīēs fīet fīēmus fīētis fīent | fīēbam fīēbās fīēbat fīēbāmus fīēbātis fīēbant | fīam fīās fīat fīāmus fīātis fīant | fierem fierēs fieret fierēmus fierētis fierent |
The 1st and 2nd plural forms are almost never found.
Other forms:
- Infinitive:fierī "to become, to be done, to happen"
- Imperative:fī! (pl.fīte!) "become!"
Edō
editThe verbedō, edere/ēsse, ēdī, ēsum "to eat" has regular 3rd conjugation forms appearing alongside irregular ones:[26]
Indicative | Subjunctive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Future | Imperfect | Present | Imperfect | |||
Active | I eat | I will eat | I was eating | I may eat | I might eat | ||
I you sg. he, she, it we you pl. they | edō edis, ēs edit, ēst edimus editis, ēstis edunt | edam edēs edet edēmus edētis edent | edēbam edēbās edēbat edēbāmus edēbātis edēbant | edam, edim edās, edīs edat, edit edāmus, edīmus edātis, edītis edant, edint | ederem, ēssem ederēs, ēssēs ederet, ēsset ederēmus, ēssēmus ederētis, ēssētis ederent, ēssent |
Other forms:
- Infinitive:edere/ēsse "to eat"
- Passive infinitive:edī "to be eaten"
- Imperative:ede!/ēs! (pl.edite!/ēste) "eat!"
- Present participle:edēns (pl.edentēs) "eating"
- Future participle:ēsūrus (pl.ēsūrī) "going to eat"
- Gerundive:edendus (pl.edendī) "needing to be eaten"
- Gerund:edendī "of eating",edendō "by /for eating",ad edendum "in order to eat" / "for eating"
The passive formēstur "it is eaten" is also found.
The present subjunctiveedim, edīs, edit etc. is found mostly in early Latin.
In writing, there is a possibility of confusion between the forms of this verb and those ofsum "I am" andēdō "I give out, put forth"; for example,ēsse "to eat" vs.esse "to be";edit "he eats" vs.ēdit "he gives out".
The compound verbcomedō, comedere/comēsse, comēdī, comēsum "to eat up, consume" is similar.
Non-finite forms
editThe non-finite forms of verbs are participles, infinitives, supines, gerunds and gerundives. The verbs used are:
- 1st conjugation:laudō, laudāre, laudāvī, laudātum – to praise
- 2nd conjugation:terreō, terrēre, terruī, territum – to frighten, deter
- 3rd conjugation:petō, petere, petīvī, petītum – to seek, attack
- 3rd conjugation (-i stem):capiō, capere, cēpī, captum – to take, capture
- 4th conjugation:audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītum – to hear, listen (to)
Participles
editThere are four participles: present active, perfect passive, future active, and future passive (= the gerundive).
- Thepresent active participle is declined as a3rd declension adjective. The ablative singular is-e, but the plural follows the i-stem declension with genitive-ium and neuter plural-ia.
- Theperfect passive participle is declined like a1st and 2nd declension adjective.
- In all conjugations, the perfect participle is formed by removing the–um from the supine, and adding a–us (masculine nominative singular).
- Thefuture active participle is declined like a1st and 2nd declension adjective.
- In all conjugations the-um is removed from the supine, and an-ūrus (masculine nominative singular) is added.
- Thefuture passive participle, more usually called thegerundive, is formed by taking the present stem, adding "-nd-", and the usual first and second declension endings. Thuslaudare formslaudandus. The usual meaning is "needing to be praised", expressing a sense of obligation.
Participles | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre | ||||||
Present active | laudāns, -antis | terrēns, -entis | petēns, -entis | capiēns, -entis | audiēns, -entis | |||||
Perfect passive | laudātus, -a, -um | territus, -a, -um | petītus, -a, -um | captus, -a, -um | audītus, -a, -um | |||||
Future active | laudātūrus, -a, -um | territūrus, -a, -um | petītūrus, -a, -um | captūrus, -a, -um | audītūrus, -a, -um | |||||
Gerundive | laudandus, -a, -um | terrendus, -a, -um | petendus, -a, -um | capiendus, -a, -um | audiēndus, -a, -um |
Infinitives
editThere are seven main infinitives. They are in the present active, present passive, perfect active, perfect passive, future active, future passive, and potential active. Further infinitives can be made using the gerundive.
- Thepresent active infinitive is the second principal part (in regular verbs). It plays an important role in the syntactic construction ofAccusative and infinitive, for instance.
- laudāre means, "to praise."
- Thepresent passive infinitive is formed by adding a–rī to the present stem. This is only so for the first, second and fourth conjugations. In the third conjugation, the thematical vowel,e, is taken from the present stem, and an–ī is added.
- laudārī translates as "to be praised."
- Theperfect active infinitive is formed by adding an–isse onto the perfect stem.
- laudāvisse/laudāsse translates as "to have praised."
- Theperfect passive infinitive uses the perfect passive participle along with the auxiliary verbesse. The perfect passive infinitive must agree with what it is describing in number, gender, and case (nominative or accusative).
- laudātus esse means, "to have been praised."
- Thefuture active infinitive uses the future active participle with the auxiliary verbesse.
- laudātūrus esse means, "to be going to praise." The future active infinitive must agree with what it is describing in number, gender, and case (nominative or accusative).
- Esse has two future infinitives:futurus esse andfore
- Thefuture passive infinitive uses the supine with the auxiliary verbīrī. Because the first part is a supine, the ending-um does not change for gender or number.
- laudātum īrī is translated as "to be going to be praised." This is normally used in indirect speech. For example:Spērat sē absolūtum īrī.[27] "He hopes that he will be acquitted."
- Thepotential infinitive uses the future active participle with the auxiliary verbfuisse.
- laudātūrus fuisse is used only in indirect statements to represent a potential imperfect or pluperfect subjunctive of direct speech. It is translated with "would" or "would have". For example:nōn vidēturmentītūrus fuisse, nisī dēspērāsset (Quintilian)[28] 'it seems unlikely that he would have told a lie, if he had not been desperate'
laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present active | laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre |
Present passive | laudārī | terrērī | petī | capī | audīrī |
Perfect active | laudāvisse | terruisse | petīvisse | cēpisse | audīvisse |
Perfect passive | laudātus esse | territus esse | petītus esse | captus esse | audītus esse |
Future active | laudātūrus esse | territūrus esse | petītūrus esse | captūrus esse | audītūrus esse |
Future passive | laudātum īrī | territum īrī | petītum īrī | captum īrī | audītum īrī |
Potential | laudātūrus fuisse | territūrus fuisse | petītūrus fuisse | captūrus fuisse | audītūrus fuisse |
The future passive infinitive was not very commonly used. The Romans themselves often used an alternate expression,fore ut followed by a subjunctive clause.
Supine
editThe supine is the fourth principal part of the verb, as given in Latin dictionaries. It resembles a masculine noun of thefourth declension. Supines only occur in the accusative and ablative cases.
- The accusative form ends in a–um, and is used with a verb of motion in order to show purpose. Thus it is only used with verbs likeīre "to go",venīre "to come", etc. The accusative form of a supine can also take an object if needed.
- Pater līberōs suōslaudātum vēnit. – The father came to praise his children.
- The ablative, which ends in a–ū, is used with the Ablative of Specification.
- Arma haec facillimalaudātū erant. – These arms were the easiest to praise.
Supine | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre | |
Accusative | laudātum | territum | petītum | captum | audītum |
Ablative | laudātū | territū | petītū | captū | audītū |
Gerund
editThe gerund is formed similarly to the present active participle. However, the-ns becomes an-ndus, and the precedingā orē is shortened. Gerunds are neuter nouns of thesecond declension, but the nominative case is not present. The gerund is a noun, meaning "the act of doing (the verb)", and forms a suppletive paradigm to the infinitive, which cannot be declined. For example, the genitive formlaudandī can mean "of praising", the dative formlaudandō can mean "for praising", the accusative formlaudandum can mean "praising", and the ablative formlaudandō can mean "by praising", "in respect to praising", etc.
Gerund | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre | ||
Accusative | laudandum | terrendum | petendum | capiendum | audiendum | |
Genitive | laudandī | terrendī | petendī | capiendī | audiendī | |
Dative | laudandō | terrendō | petendō | capiendō | audiendō | |
Ablative |
One common use of the gerund is with the prepositionad to indicate purpose. For example,paratus ad oppugnandum could be translated as "ready to attack". However the gerund was avoided when an object was introduced, and a passive construction with the gerundive was preferred. For example, for "ready to attack the enemy" the constructionparatus ad hostes oppugnandos is preferred overparatus ad hostes oppugnandum.[29]
Gerundive
editThegerundive has a form similar to that of the gerund, but it is afirst and second declension adjective, and functions as a future passive participle (see§ Participles above). It means "(which is) to be ...ed". Often, the gerundive is used with part of the verbesse, to show obligation.
- Puer laudandus est "The boy needs to be praised"
- Oratio laudanda est means "The speech is to be praised". In such constructions a substantive in dative may be used to identify the agent of the obligation (dativus auctoris), as inOrationobis laudanda est meaning "The speech is to be praisedby us" or "We must praise the speech".
Gerundive | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
laudāre | terrēre | petere | capere | audīre |
laudandus, -a, -um | terrendus, -a, -um | petendus, -a, -um | capiendus, -a, -um | audiendus, -a, -um |
An older form of the 3rd and 4th conjugation gerundive ends in-undum, e.g. (faciundum forfaciendum).[6] This ending is also found with the gerundive ofeō 'I go':eundum est 'it is necessary to go'.
For some examples of uses of Latin gerundives, see theGerundive article.
Periphrastic conjugations
editThere are twoperiphrastic conjugations. One is active, and the other is passive.
Active
editThe first periphrastic conjugation uses the future participle. It is combined with the forms ofesse. It is translated as "I am going to praise," "I was going to praise", etc.
Conjugation | Translation | |
---|---|---|
Pres. ind. | laudātūrus sum | I am going to praise |
Imp. ind. | laudātūrus eram | I was going to praise |
Fut. ind. | laudātūrus erō | I shall be going to praise |
Perf. ind. | laudātūrus fuī | I have been going to praise |
Plup. ind. | laudātūrus fueram | I had been going to praise |
Fut. perf. ind. | laudātūrus fuerō | I shall have been going to praise |
Pres. subj. | laudātūrus sim | I may be going to praise |
Imp. subj. | laudātūrus essem | I should be going to praise |
Perf. subj. | laudātūrus fuerim | I may have been going to praise |
Plup. subj. | laudātūrus fuissem | I should have been going to praise |
Passive
editThe second periphrastic conjugation uses the gerundive. It is combined with the forms ofesse and expresses necessity. It is translated as "I am needing to be praised", "I was needing to be praised", etc., or as "I have to (i.e., must) be praised", "I had to be praised," etc. It may also be translated in English word by word, as in "You are to be (i.e., must be) praised."[30]
Conjugation | Translation | |
---|---|---|
Pres. ind. | laudandus sum | I am needing to be praised |
Imp. ind. | laudandus eram | I was needing to be praised |
Fut. ind. | laudandus erō | I will be needing to be praised |
Perf. ind. | laudandus fuī | I was needing to be praised |
Plup. ind. | laudandus fueram | I had been needing to be praised |
Fut. perf. ind. | laudandus fuerō | I will have been needing to be praised |
Pres. subj. | laudandus sim | I may be needing to be praised |
Imp. subj. | laudandus essem | I should be needing to be praised |
Perf. subj. | laudandus fuerim | I may have been needing to be praised |
Plup. subj. | laudandus fuissem | I should have been needing to be praised |
Pres. inf. | laudandus esse | To be needing to be praised |
Perf. inf. | laudandus fuisse | To have been needing to be praised |
Peculiarities
editDeponent and semi-deponent verbs
editDeponent verbs are verbs that are passive in form (that is, conjugated as though in thepassive voice) but active in meaning. These verbs have only three principal parts, since the perfect of ordinary passives is formedperiphrastically with the perfect participle, which is formed on the same stem as the supine. Some examples coming from all conjugations are:
- 1st conjugation:mīror,mīrārī, mīrātus sum – to admire, wonder
- 2nd conjugation:polliceor,pollicērī, pollicitus sum – to promise, offer
- 3rd conjugation:loquor,loquī, locūtus sum – to speak, say
- 4th conjugation: mentior, mentīrī, mentītus sum – to tell a lie
Deponent verbs use active conjugations for tenses that do not exist in the passive: thegerund, thesupine, the present andfuture participles and the future infinitive. They cannot be used in the passive themselves (except the gerundive), and their analogues with "active" form do not in fact exist: one cannot directly translate "The word is said" with any form ofloquī, and there are no forms likeloquō,loquis,loquit, etc.
Semi-deponent verbs form their imperfective aspect tenses in the manner of ordinary active verbs; but their perfect tenses are built periphrastically like deponents and ordinary passives; thus, semi-deponent verbs have a perfect active participle instead of a perfect passive participle. An example:
- audeō, audēre, ausus sum – to dare, venture
Unlike the proper passive of active verbs, which is always intransitive, some deponent verbs aretransitive, which means that they can take anobject. For example:
- hostes sequitur. – he follows the enemy.
Note: In theRomance languages, which lack deponent or passive verb forms, the Classical Latin deponent verbs either disappeared (being replaced with non-deponent verbs of a similar meaning) or changed to a non-deponent form. For example, in Spanish and Italian,mīrārī changed tomirar(e) by changing all the verb forms to the previously nonexistent "active form", andaudeō changed toosar(e) by taking the participleausus and making an-ar(e) verb out of it (note thatau went too).
Defective verbs
editDefective verbs are verbs that are conjugated in only some instances.
- Some verbs are conjugated only in the perfective aspect's tenses, yet have the imperfective aspect's tenses' meanings. As such, the perfect becomes the present, the pluperfect becomes the imperfect, and the future perfect becomes the future. Therefore, the defective verbōdī means, "I hate." These defective verbs' principal parts are given in vocabulary with the indicative perfect in the first person and the perfect active infinitive. Some examples are:
- ōdī, ōdisse (future participleōsūrus) – to hate
- meminī, meminisse (imperativemementō, mementōte) – to remember
- coepī, coeptum, coepisse – to have begun
- A few verbs, the meanings of which usually have to do with speech, appear only in certain occurrences.
- Cedo (plur.cette), which means "Hand it over" is only in the imperative mood, and only is used in the second person.
The following are conjugated irregularly:
Aio
editConjugation ofaiō | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indicative present | Indicative imperfect | Subjunctive present | Imperative present | |||||
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | ||
First person | aiō | — | aiēbam | aiēbāmus | — | — | — | |
Second person | ais | aiēbās | aiēbātis | aiās | ai | |||
Third person | ait | aiunt | aiēbat | aiēbant | aiat | aiant | — |
- Present Active Participle: –aiēns, aientis
Inquam
editConjugation ofinquam | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present indicative | Future indicative | Perfect indicative | Imperfect indicative | |||||
Singular | Plural | Singular | Singular | Singular | ||||
First person | inquam | inquimus | — | inquiī | — | |||
Second person | inquis | inquitis | inquiēs | inquistī | ||||
Third person | inquit | inquiunt | inquiet | inquit | inquiēbat |
For
editConjugation offor | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present indicative | Future indicative | Perfect indicative | Pluperfect indicative | Present imperative | ||||||
Singular | Plural | Singular | Singular | Singular | Singular | Plural | ||||
First person | for | — | fābor | fātus sum | fātus eram | — | — | |||
Second person | — | — | — | — | fāre | fāminī | ||||
Third person | fātur | fantur | fābitur | — | — |
- Present Active Participle –fāns, fantis
- Present Active Infinitive –fārī (variant:fārier)
- Supine – (acc.)fātum, (abl.)fātū
- Gerund – (gen.)fandī, (dat. and abl.)fandō, no accusative
- Gerundive –fandus, –a, –um
The Romance languages lost many of these verbs, but others (such asōdī) survived but became regular fully conjugated verbs (in Italian,odiare).
Impersonal verbs
editImpersonal verbs are those lacking a person. In English impersonal verbs are usually used with the neuter pronoun "it" (as in "It seems," or "it is raining"). Latin uses the third person singular. These verbs lack a fourth principal part. A few examples are:
- pluit, pluere, plūvit/pluit – to rain (it rains)
- ningit, ningere, ninxit – to snow (it snows)
- oportet, oportēre, oportuit – to be proper (it is proper, one should/ought to)
- licet, licēre, licuit – to be permitted [to] (it is allowed [to])
Irregular future active participles
editThe future active participle is normally formed by removing the–um from the supine, and adding a–ūrus. However, some deviations occur.
Present active infinitive | Supine | Future active participle | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
iuvāre | iūtum | iuvātūrus | going to help |
lavāre/lavere | lavātum (but PPPlautus) | lavātūrus | going to wash |
parere | partum | paritūrus | going to produce |
ruere | rutum | ruitūrus | going to fall |
secāre | sectum | secātūrus | going to cut |
fruī | frūctum/fruitum | fruitūrus | going to enjoy |
nāscī | nātum | nātūrus/nascitūrus | going to be born |
morī | mortuum | moritūrus | going to die |
orīrī | ortum | oritūrus | going to rise |
Alternative verb forms
editSeveral verb forms may occur in alternative forms (in some authors these forms are fairly common, if not more common than the canonical ones):
- The ending–ris in the passive voice may be–re as in:
- laudābāris →laudābāre
- The ending–ērunt in the perfect may be–ēre (primarily in poetry) as in:
- laudāvērunt →laudāvēre
- The ending–ī in the passive infinitive may be–ier as in:
- laudārī →laudārier,dicī →dicier
Syncopated verb forms
editLike in most Romance languages, syncopated forms andcontractions are present in Latin. They may occur in the following instances:
- Perfect stems that end in a–v may be contracted when inflected.
- laudāvisse →laudāsse
- laudāvistī →laudāstī
- laudāverant →laudārant
- laudāvisset →laudāsset
- The compounds ofnōscere (to learn) andmovēre (to move, dislodge) can also be contracted.
- nōvistī →nōstī
- nōvistis →nōstis
- commōveram →commōram
- commōverās →commōrās
See also
editBibliography
edit- Bennett, Charles Edwin (1918).New Latin Grammar.
- Gildersleeve, B.L. & Gonzalez Lodge (1895).Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar. 3rd Edition. (Macmillan)
- J.B. Greenough; G.L. Kittredge; A.A. Howard; Benj. L. D'Ooge, eds. (1903).Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar for Schools and College. Ginn and Company.
References
edit- ^Merriam-Webster online dictionary"Conjugation".
- ^Donatus [Ars Maior], 10.16.
- ^Priscian,Liber octauus de uerbo (Corpus Grammaticorum Latinorum)
- ^Daniel J. Taylor"Latin declensions and conjugations: from Varro to Priscian"Historie Épistémologie Langage 13.2 (1991), pp. 85–93.
- ^e.g. Gildersleeve and Lodge, 3rd edition (1895), §120.
- ^abcdeGildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 89.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge, Latin Grammar (1895), §163.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 91.
- ^C.J. Fordyce (1961),Catullus, note on Catullus 5.10.
- ^Wackernagel (2009)Lectures on Syntax, p. 305, note 7.
- ^abGildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 90.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge, Latin Grammar (1895), §164.
- ^abGildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 114.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 105.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 107.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge Latin Grammar (1985), §166.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 66–68.
- ^abcGildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 68.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 121.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 115–6.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 116.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 116, 90.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 117–8.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 118.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 119.
- ^Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 118–119.
- ^Cicero,Sull. 21.
- ^Quintilian, 5.12.3.
- ^Eitrem, S. (2006).Latinsk grammatikk (3 ed.). Oslo: Aschehoug. p. 111.
- ^Keller, Andrew; Russell, Stephanie (2015-01-01).Learn to Read Latin. Yale University Press. p. 252.ISBN 978-0-300-19494-4.
External links
edit- Verbix automatically conjugates verbs in Latin.
- Latin Verb Synopsis Drill tests a user on his ability to conjugate verbs correctly.
- Arbuckle Latin Conjugator automatically conjugates and translates verbs in Latin.