Conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a
verb from basic forms or
principal parts. It may be affected by
person,
number,
gender,
tense,
mood,
voice or other language-specific factors. When, for example, we use a verb to function as the action done by a subject, most
languages require conjugating the verb to reflect that meaning. (For more information on conjugation in general, see the article on
grammatical conjugation.)
In Latin, there are four main patterns of conjugation composed of groups of verbs that are conjugated following similar patterns. As in other languages, Latin verbs have an active voice and a passive voice. Furthermore, there exist deponent and semi-deponent Latin verbs (verbs with a passive form but active meaning), as well as defective verbs (verbs with a perfect form but present meaning). Sometimes the verbs of the third conjugation with a present stem on -ǐ are regarded as a separate pattern of conjugation, and are called the fifth conjugation.
In a dictionary, Latin verbs are always listed with four principal parts which allow the reader to deduce the other conjugated forms of the verbs. These are:
# the first person singular of the present indicative active
# the present active infinitive
# the first person singular of the perfect indicative active
# the supine or, in some texts, the perfect passive participle, which is nearly always identical. Texts that commonly list the perfect passive participle use the future active participle for intransitive verbs. Some verbs lack this principal part altogether.
For simple verb paradigms, see the appendix pages for , , , and .
Properties
Latin verbs have the following properties:
three persons: first person, second person, third person
two numbers: singular, plural
two aspects: perfective (finished) and imperfective (unfinished)
six tenses: Present, Imperfect, Future, Perfect, Pluperfect, Future Perfect
three finite moods: indicative mood, subjunctive mood, imperative mood
four non-finite forms: infinitive, gerund, participle, supine
two voices: active voice and passive voice
Conjugations
There are four conjugations in Latin which define patterns of verb inflection. However the grouping in conjugations is based solely on the behaviour of the verb in the present system, and the stems for other forms cannot be inferred from the present stem, so several forms of the verb are necessary to be able to produce the full range of Latin verbal forms. Most Latin verbs belong to one of the four verb conjugations, though some, like
esse (to be), do not.
First conjugation
The first conjugation is characterized by the
vowel ā and can be recognized by the
-āre ending of the present active infinitive form. The principal parts usually adhere to one of the following patterns:
perfect has the suffix –vī. The vast majority of first-conjugation verbs adhere to this pattern, which is considered to be "regular". Examples:
* portō, portāre, portāvī, portātus (to carry, to bring)
* amō, amāre, amāvī, amātus (to love, to be fond of)
perfect has the suffix –uī. Examples:
* secō, secāre, secuī, sectus (to cut, to divide)
* fricō, fricāre, fricuī, frictus (to rub)
* vetō, vetāre, vetuī, vetitus (to forbid, to prohibit)
perfect has the suffix –ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
* lavō, lavāre, lāvī, lautus (to wash, to bathe)
* iuvō, iuvāre, iūvī, iūtus (to help, to assist)
perfect is reduplicated. Examples:
* stō, stāre, stetī, status (to stand)
* dō, dare, dedī, datus (to give, to bestow; this verb is irregular)
Second conjugation
The 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. The principal parts usually adhere to one of the following patterns:
perfect has the suffix –uī. Verbs which adhere to this pattern are considered to be "regular". Examples:
* terreō, terrēre, terruī, territus (to frighten, to deter)
* doceō, docēre, docuī, doctus (to teach, to instruct)
* teneō, tenēre, tenuī, tentus (to hold, to keep)
perfect has the suffix –vī. Examples:
* dēleō, dēlēre, dēlēvī, dēlētus (to destroy, to efface)
* cieō, ciēre, cīvī, citus (to arouse, to stir)
perfect has the suffix –sī or –xī. Examples:
* augeō, augēre, auxī, auctus (to increase, to enlarge)
* iubeō, iubēre, iussī, iussus (to order, to bid)
perfect is reduplicated with –ī. Examples:
* mordeō, mordēre, momordī, morsus (to bite, to nip)
* spondeō, spondēre, spopondī, spōnsus (to vow, to promise)
perfect has suffix –ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
* videō, vidēre, vīdī, vīsus (to see, to notice)
* foveō, fovēre, fōvī, fōtus (to caress, to cherish)
perfect has suffix –ī and no perfect passive participle. Examples:
* strīdeō, strīdere, strīdī (to hiss, to creak)
* ferveō, fervēre, fervī (sometimes fervuī) (to boil, to seethe)
Third conjugation
The third conjugation is characterized by a short thematic vowel, which alternates between
e,
i, and
u in different environments. Verbs of this conjugation end in an
–ere in the present active infinitive. There is no regular rule for constructing the perfect stem of third-conjugation verbs, but the following patterns are used:
perfect has suffix –sī or –xī. Examples:
* carpō, carpere, carpsī, carptus (to pluck, to select)
* trahō, trahere, trāxī, trāctus (to drag, to draw)
* gerō, gerere, gessī, gestus (to wear, to bear)
* flectō, flectere, flexī, flexus (to bend, to twist)
perfect is reduplicated with suffix –ī. Examples:
* currō, currere, cucurrī, cursus (to run, to race)
* caedō, caedere, cecīdī, caesus (to kill, to slay)
* tangō, tangere, tetigī, tāctus (to touch, to hit)
* pellō, pellere, pepulī, pulsus (to beat, to drive away)
perfect has suffix -vī. Examples:
* petō, petere, petīvī, petītus (to seek, to attack)
* linō, linere, līvī, lītus (to smear, to befoul)
* serō, serere, sēvī, satus (to sow, to plant)
* terō, terere, trīvī, trītus (to rub, to wear out)
* sternō, sternere, strāvī, strātus (to spread, to stretch out)
perfect has suffix –ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
* agō, agere, ēgī, āctus (to do, to drive)
* legō, legere, lēgī, lēctus (to collect, to read)
* emō, emere, ēmī, ēmptus (to buy, to purchase)
* vincō, vincere, vīcī, victus (to conquer, to master)
* fundō, fundere, fūdī, fūsus (to pour, to utter)
perfect has suffix –ī only. Examples:
* īcō, īcere, īcī, īctus (to strike, to smite)
* vertō, vertere, vertī, versus (to turn, to alter)
* vīsō, vīsere, vīsī, vīsus (to visit)
perfect has suffix –uī. Examples:
* metō, metere, messuī, messus (to reap, to harvest)
* vomō, vomere, vomuī, vomitus (to vomit)
* colō, colere, coluī, cultus (to cultivate, to till)
* texō, texere, texuī, textus (to weave, to plait)
* gignō, gignere, genuī, genitus (to beget, to cause)
present tense stem has suffix –u. Examples:
* minuō, minuere, minuī, minūtus (to lessen, to diminish)
* ruō, ruere, ruī, rutus (to collapse, to hurl down)
* struō, struere, strūxī, strūctus (to build, to erect)
Present tense indicative first person singular form has suffix with –scō. Examples:
* nōscō, nōscere, nōvī, nōtus (to investigate, to learn)
* adolēscō, adolēscere, adolēvī (to grow up, to mature)
* flōrēscō, flōrēscere, flōruī (to begin to flourish, to blossom)
* haerēscō, haerēscere, haesī, haesus (to adhere, to stick)
* pāscō, pāscere, pāvī, pāstus (to feed, to nourish)
Intermediate between the third and fourth conjugation are the third-conjugation verbs with suffix –iō.
.
Fourth conjugation
The fourth conjugation is characterized by the vowel
ī and can be recognized by the
–īre ending of the present active infinitive. Principal parts of verbs in the fourth conjugation generally adhere to the following patterns:
perfect has suffix –vī. Verbs which adhere to this pattern are considered to be "regular". Examples:
* audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītus (to hear, listen (to))
* muniō, munīre, munīvī, munītus (to fortify, to build)
perfect has suffix –uī. Examples:
* aperiō, aperīre, aperuī, apertus (to open, to uncover)
perfect has suffix –sī or –xī. Examples:
* saepiō, saepīre, saepsī, saeptus (to surround, to enclose)
* sanciō, sancīre, sānxī, sānctus (to confirm, to ratify)
* sentiō, sentīre, sēnsī, sēnsus (to feel, to perceive)
perfect has suffix –ī and vowel lengthening in the stem. Examples:
* veniō, venīre, vēnī, ventus (to come, to arrive)
Personal endings
Personal endings are used in all tenses. The present, imperfect, future, pluperfect and future perfect use the same personal endings in the active voice. However, the perfect, pluperfect and future perfect do not have personal endings in the passive voice as these are formed by a participle and part of
esse. The perfect uses its own personal endings in the active voice.
Tenses of the imperfective aspect
The tenses of the imperfective aspect are present tense, imperfect, and future tense. Verbs in one of these forms express an action that has (or had) not been completed. Consider for concreteness the following verbs:
the first conjugation verb portō, portāre, portāvī, portātum (to carry, to bring)
the second conjugation verb terreō, terrēre, terruī, territum (to frighten, to deter)
the third conjugation verb petō, petere, petīvī, petītum (to seek, to attack)
the fourth conjugation verb audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītum (to hear, to listen (to))
In all the conjugations except for the third conjugation, the –re is removed from the second principal part (for example, portāre without the suffix –re becomes portā–) to form the present stem, which is used for all of the tenses in the imperfective aspect. In the third conjugation, the –ō ending of the present indicative is dropped in order to form the present stem (for example, the present indicative form of regere is regō, and without the -ō it is the present stem, reg–). Occasionally, the terminating vowel of the stem is lengthened and/or shortened, and sometimes completely changed. This is often true both in the third conjugation and in the subjunctive mood of all conjugations.
Present tense
The present tense (Latin
tempus praesēns) is used to show an uncompleted action that happens in the current time. The present tense does not have a tense sign. Instead, the personal endings are added to the bare present stem. However, in this tense the thematical vowel, most notably the
ě in the third conjugation, changes the most frequently.
Indicative mood
The indicative present expresses general truths, facts, demands and desires. Most commonly, a verb like
portō can be translated as "I carry," "I do carry," or "I am carrying". In all but the third conjugation, only the thematical vowel of the stem is used. In the third conjugation, the
e is only used in the second person singular in the passive for a less difficult pronunciation. Otherwise, it becomes either an
i or
u. The first person singular of the indicative active present is the first principal part. All end in
–ō.
Add the passive endings to form the passive voice. The passive portor can be translated as "I am carried," or "I am being carried".
Notice that in the second person singular of petere, the thematic vowel is e (peteris, not petiris).
Subjunctive present
The subjunctive present may be used to assert many things. In general, in independent sentences, it is translated
hortatorily (only in the third person plural),
jussively and
optatively.
Portem can be translated as "Let me carry." or "May I carry."
Portēmus can be "Let us carry".
Some alterations have occurred in the vowels from the indicative and subjunctive.
The first conjugation now uses an e and an ē.
The second conjugation uses ea and eā.
The third conjugation uses a or ā.
The fourth conjugation uses ia or iā.
"We read an encyclopedia", "Defeat all liars", or "She wears a diamond" are helpful mnemonics for remembering this. First conjugation verbs have an "e" in their stem (we), second conjugation verbs have an "-ea" (eat), third conjugation verbs have an "a" (caviar), and fourths have an "ia" (caviar). Other acceptable mnemonics include she reads a diary, he beats a liar, everybody eats apple iambics, let’s steal a fiat, he cheats a friar, or Clem eats clams in Siam.
Like the indicative, active personal endings may be replaced by passive personal endings. Porter can be translated as "Let me be carried" or "May I be carried." Hortatorily, Portēmur can be "Let us be carried".
Imperative present
The imperative in the present conveys commands, pleas and recommendations.
Portā can be translated as "(You) Carry" or simply, "Carry". The imperative present occurs only in the second person.
The second person singular in the active voice uses only the bare stem, and does not add an imperative ending.
The imperative present of the passive voice is rarely used, except in the case of deponent verbs, whose passive forms carry active meaning. Portāminī can be translated as "(You) Be carried". The deponent sequīminī, on the other hand, means "(You) Follow!".
The singular uses the alternate form of the present passive indicative (which looks like the present active infinitive) and the plural uses the present passive indicative form of the second person plural.
Imperfect
The imperfect (Latin
tempus imperfectum) indicates a perpetual, but incomplete action in the past. It is recognized by the tense signs
bǎ and
bā in the indicative, and
re and
rē in the subjunctive.
Indicative imperfect
In the indicative mood, the imperfect simply express an action in the past that was not completed.
Portābam can be translated to mean, "I was carrying," "I carried," or "I used to carry".
In the indicative, the imperfect employs its tense signs ba and bā before personal endings are added.
As with the present tense, active personal endings are taken off, and passive personal endings are put in their place. Portābar can be translated as "I was being carried," "I kept being carried," or "I used to be carried".
Subjunctive imperfect
In the subjunctive, the imperfect is quite important, especially in subordinate clauses. Independently, it is largely translated conditionally.
Portārem can mean, "I should carry," or "I would carry".
Unlike the indicative, the subjunctive does not modify the thematic vowel. The third conjugation's thematical remains short as an e, and the fourth conjugation does not use an iē before the imperfect signs. It keeps its ī.
In the subjunctive, the imperfect employs its tense signs re and rē before personal endings.
The verb esse (to be) has two subjunctive imperfect: one using the present infinitive (essem, esses, esset, essemus, essetis, essent) and one using the future infinitive (forem, fores, foret, foremus, foretis, forent).
As with the indicative subjunctive, active endings are removed, and passive endings are added. Portārer may be translated as "I should be carried," or "I would be carried."
Future tense
The future tense (Latin
tempus futūrum simplex) expresses an uncompleted action in the future. It is recognized by its tense signs
bō,
bi,
bu,
a and
ē in the indicative and the vowel
ō in the imperative mood.
Indicative future
The future tense always refers to an incomplete action. In addition, the future tense is stricter in usage temporally in Latin than it is in English. Standing alone,
portābō can mean, "I shall carry," or "I will carry."
The first and second conjugations use bō, bi and bu as signs for the future indicative.
The third and fourth conjugations replace their thematicals with a, ě and ē. The fourth conjugation inserts an ǐ before the a, e and ē.
As with all imperfective system tenses, active personal endings are removed, and passive personal endings are put on. Portābor translates as, "I shall be carried."
Notice that the penultimate vowel in the second person singular of portāre and terrēre is e, not i (portāberis and terrēberis, instead of the expected portābiris and terrēbiris).
Imperative future
The so-called future imperative was an archaic and formal form of the imperative; by the classical period, it was chiefly used in legal documents and the like. A few irregular or defective verbs (
esse 'be',
meminisse 'remember') used this form as their only imperative.
Portātō can be translated as "You shall carry".
As mentioned previously, the vowel ō is used as a sign of the future imperative.
The letter R is used to designate the passive voice in the future imperative. The second person plural is absent here. Portātor translates as "You shall be carried."
Perfective aspect tenses
The tenses of the perfective aspect, which are the
perfect,
pluperfect and
future perfect tenses, are used to express actions that have been, had been, or will have been completed. The verbs used for explanation are:
:1st Conjugation: portō, portāre, portāvī, portātum — to carry, bring
:2nd Conjugation: terreō, terrēre, terruī, territum — to frighten, deter
:3rd Conjugation: petō, petere, petīvī, petītum — to seek, attack
:4th Conjugation: audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītum – to hear, listen (to)
For all conjugations, the –ī is removed from the third principal part. For example, from portāvī, portāv is formed. This is the perfect stem, and it is used for all of the tenses in the perfective aspect. The perfective aspect verbs also use the perfect passive participle in the passive voice. See below to see how it is formed. Along with these participles, the verb esse, which means, "to be", is used.
Unlike the imperfective aspect, inflection does not deviate from conjugation to conjugation.
Perfect
The perfect (Latin
tempus perfectum) refers to an action completed in the past. Tense signs are only used in this tense with the indicative. The tense signs of the subjunctive are
eri and
erī.
Indicative perfect
The indicative perfect expresses a finished action in the past. If the action were not finished, but still lies in the past, one would use the imperfect.
Portāvī is translated as "I carried," "I did carry," or "I have carried."
As aforementioned, the indicative perfect in the active voice has its special personal endings.
In the passive voice, the perfect passive participle is used with the auxiliary verb esse. It uses the indicative present form of esse. Portātus sum translates as "I was carried," or "I have been carried."
Subjunctive perfect
Like the subjunctive imperfect, the subjunctive perfect is largely used in subordinate clauses. Independently, it is usually translated as the potential subjunctive. By itself,
portāverim translates as "I may have carried."
The tense signs eri and erī are used before the personal endings are added.
The passive voice uses the perfect passive participle with the subjunctive present forms of esse. Portātus sim means, "I may have been carried."
Pluperfect
The pluperfect (Latin
tempus plūs quam perfectum) expresses an action which was completed before another completed action. It is recognized by the tense signs
era and
erā in the indicative and
isse and
issē in the subjunctive.
Indicative pluperfect
As with English, in Latin, the indicative pluperfect is used to assert an action that was completed before another (perfect).
Portāveram translates as "I had carried."
The tense sign erā is employed before adding the personal endings, with the long ā following the usual rules for shortening before final -m, -t, and -nt.
In the passive voice, the perfect passive participle is utilized with esse in the indicative imperfect. Portātus eram is translated as "I had been carried."
Subjunctive pluperfect
The subjunctive pluperfect is to the subjunctive perfect as the subjunctive imperfect is to the subjunctive present. Simply put, it is used with the subjunctive perfect in subordinate clauses. Like the subjunctive imperfect, it is translated conditionally independently.
Portāvissem is translated as "I should have carried," or "I would have carried."
The tense signs isse and issē are used before the personal endings.
As always, the passive voice uses the perfect passive participle. The subjunctive imperfect of esse is used here. Portātus essem may mean "I should have been carried," or "I could have been carried," in the conditional sense.
Future perfect
The least used of all the tenses, the future perfect (Latin
tempus futūrum exāctum) conveys an action that will have been completed before another action. It is signified by the tense signs
erō and
eri. The future perfect is the only tense that occurs in a single mood.
Indicative future perfect
As said, the future perfect is used to mention an action that will have been completed in futurity before another action. It is often used with the future tense. In simple translation,
portāverō means, "I will have carried," or "I shall have carried."
The tense signs erō and eri are used before the personal endings.
As with all perfective aspect tenses, the perfect passive participle is used in the passive voice. However, the future perfect uses the indicative future of esse as the auxiliary verb. Portātus erō is "I will have been carried," or "I shall have been carried."
Non-finite forms
The non-finite forms of verbs are participles, infinitives, supines, gerunds and gerundives. The verbs used are:
:1st Conjugation: portō, portāre, portāvī, portātum — to carry, bring
:2nd Conjugation: terreō, terrēre. terruī, territum — to frighten, deter
:3rd Conjugation: petō, petere, petīvī, petītum — to seek, attack
:4th Conjugation: audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītum – to hear, listen (to)
Participles
There are three participles: present active, perfect passive and future active.
The present active participle is declined like a third declension adjective with one ending.
*In the first and second conjugations, the present active is formed by taking the present stem and adding an –ns. The genitive singular form adds an –ntis, and the thematicals ā and ē are shortened.
*In the third conjugation, the e of the present stem is lengthened. In the genitive, the ē is short again.
*In the fourth conjugation, the ī is shortened, and an ē is placed. Of course, this ē is short in the genitive.
*Puer portāns translates into "carrying boy."
The perfect passive participle is declined like a first and second declension adjective.
*In all conjugations, the perfect participle is formed by taking the –um from the supine, and adding a –us (masculine nominative singular).
*Puer portātus translates into "carried boy."
The future active participle is declined like a first and second declension adjective.
*In all conjugations the –um is removed from the supine, and an –ūrus (masculine nominative singular) is added.
*Puer portātūrus translates into "boy going to carry," or "boy who is going to carry."
Infinitives
There are six infinitives. They are in the present active, present passive, perfect active, perfect passive, future active and future passive.
The present active infinitive is the second principal part (in regular verbs). It plays an important role in the syntactic construction of Accusativus cum infinitivo, for instance.
*Portāre means, "to carry."
The present 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.
*Portārī translates into "to be carried."
The perfect active infinitive is formed by adding an –isse onto the perfect stem.
*Portāvisse translates into "to have carried."
The perfect passive infinitive uses the perfect passive participle along with the auxiliary verb esse. The perfect passive infinitive must agree with what it is describing in number and gender.
*Portātus esse means, "to have been carried."
The future active infinitive uses the future active participle with the auxiliary verb esse.
*Portātūrus esse means, "to be going to carry." The future active infinitive must agree with what it is describing in number and gender.
*Esse has two future infinitives: futurus esse and fore (fore is mostly used in a substitute expression for the Future Passive Infinitive)
The future passive infinitive uses the supine with the auxiliary verb īrī.
*Portātum īrī is translated as "to be going to be carried." This is normally used in indirect speech. For example: Omnēs senātōres dīxērunt templum conditum īrī. "All of the senators said that a temple would be built."
The Future Passive Infinitive was actually not very commonly used (Wheelock's Latin mentions it exists but makes it a point to avoid using it in any practice examples). In practice, the Romans themselves often used an alternate expression, "fore ut" followed by a subjunctive clause.
Supine
The supine is the fourth principal part. It resembles a masculine noun of the fourth 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 the purpose. Thus, it is only used with verbs like cedere, venīre, etc. The accusative form of a supine can also take an object if needed.
*Pater vēnit portātum līberōs suōs. — The father came to carry his children.
The ablative, which ends in a –ū, is used with the Ablative of Specification.
*Arma haec facillima portātū erant. — These arms were the easiest to carry.
Gerund
The gerund is formed similarly to the present active participle. However, the –ns becomes an –ndus, and the preceding ā or ē is shortened. Gerunds are neuter nouns of the second 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 form portandī can mean "of carrying", the dative form portandō can mean "to carrying", the accusative form portandum can mean "carrying", and the ablative form portandō can mean "by carrying", "in respect to carrying", etc.
One common use of the gerund is with the preposition ad 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 construction paratus ad hostes oppugnandos is preferred over paratus ad hostes oppugnandum.
Gerundive
The gerundive is the passive equivalent of the gerund, and much more common in Latin. It is a first and second declension adjective, and means, “(the verb) being done”. Often, the gerundive is used with an implicit esse, to show obligation.
Puer portandus “The boy to be carried”
Oratio laudanda est means, “The speech is to be praised.” In such constructions a substantive in dative may be used to name the agent of the obligation (dativus auctoris), like in Oratio nobis laudanda est meaning “The speech is to be praised by us” or “We must praise the speech”.
Periphrastic conjugations
There are two
periphrastic conjugations. One is active, and the other is passive.
Active
The first periphrastic conjugation uses the future participle. It is combined with the forms of
esse. It is translated as "I am going to carry," "I was going to carry", etc.
{|
| || Conjugation || Translation
|-
| Pres. Ind.
| portātūrus sum || I am going to carry
|-
| Imp. Ind.
| portātūrus eram || I was going to carry
|-
| Fut. Ind.
| portātūrus erō || I shall be going to carry
|-
| Perf. Ind.
| portātūrus fuī || I have been going to carry
|-
| Plup. Ind.
| portātūrus fueram || I had been going to carry
|-
| Fut. Perf. Ind.
| portātūrus fuerō || I shall have been going to carry
|-
| Pres. Subj.
| portātūrus sim || I may be going to carry
|-
| Imp. Subj.
| portātūrus essem || I should be going to carry
|-
| Perf. Subj.
| portātūrus fuerim || I may have been going to carry
|-
| Plup. Subj.
| portātūrus fuissem || I should have been going to carry
|}
Passive
The second periphrastic conjugation uses the gerundive. It is combined with the forms of
esse and expresses necessity. It is translated as "I am to be carried," "I was to be carried", etc., or as "I have to (must) be carried," "I had to be carried," etc.
{|
| ||
Conjugation ||
Translation
|-
|
Pres. Ind.
|
portandus sum || I am to be carried
|-
|
Imp. Ind.
|
portandus eram || I was to be carried
|-
|
Fut. Ind.
|
portandus erō || I will deserve to be carried
|-
|
Perf. Ind.
|
portandus fuī || I was to be carried
|-
|
Plup. Ind.
|
portandus fueram || I had deserved to be carried
|-
|
Fut. Perf. Ind.
|
portandus fuerō || I will have deserved to be carried
|-
|
Pres. Subj.
|
portandus sim || I may deserve to be carried
|-
|
Imp. Subj.
|
portandus essem || I should deserve to be carried
|-
|
Perf. Subj.
|
portandus fuerim || I may have deserved to be carried
|-
|
Plup. Subj.
|
portandus fuissem || I should have deserved to be carried
|-
|
Pres. Inf.
|
portandus esse || To deserve to be carried
|-
|
Perf. Inf.
|
portandus fuisse || To have deserved to be carried
|}
Peculiarities
===Irregular verbs===
There are a few irregular verbs in Latin that are not grouped into a particular conjugation (such as
esse and
posse), or deviate slightly from a conjugation (such as
ferre, īre, and
dare). It consists of the following list and their compounds (such as
conferre). Many irregular verbs lack a fourth principal part.
:sum, , fuī, futūrum — to be, exist
:possum, , potuī — to be able, can
:eō, , īvī / īī, ītum — to go
:volō, , voluī — to wish, want
:nōlō, , nōluī — to not want, refuse
:mālō, , māluī — to prefer
:ferō, , tulī, lātum — to bear, endure, carry, bring
:fīō, , factus sum — to become, happen, be made
:edō, , ēdī, ēsum – to eat, waste
:dō, , datum — to give, bestow
Deponent and semi-deponent verbs
Deponent verbs are verbs that are passive in form (that is, conjugated as though in the
passive voice) but active in meaning. These verbs have only three principal parts, since the perfect of ordinary passives are formed
periphrastically with the perfect participle, which is formed on the same stem as the supine. Some example coming from all conjugations are:
:1st Conjugation: mīror, , mīrātus sum — to admire, wonder
:2nd Conjugation: polliceor, , pollicitus sum — to promise, offer
:3rd Conjugation: loquor, , locūtus sum — to speak, say
:4th Conjugation: orior, , ortus sum – to rise, spring up
Deponent verbs use active conjugations for tenses that do not exist in the passive: the gerund, the supine, the present and future participles and the future infinitive. They cannot be used in the passive themselves, and their analogues with "active" form do not in fact exist: one cannot directly translate "The word is said" with any form of loquī, and there are no forms like loquō, loquis, loquit, etc.
Semi-deponent verbs form their imperfective aspect tenses in the manner of ordinary active verbs; but their perfect are built periphrastically like deponents and ordinary passives; thus semideponent verbs have a perfect active participle instead of a perfect passive participle. An example:
:audeō, audēre, ausus sum — to dare, venture
Note: In the Romance 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 to mirar(e) by changing all the verb forms to the previously nonexistent "active form", and audeō changed to osar(e) by taking the participle ausus and making an -ar(e) verb out of it (note that au went to o).
Third conjugation –iō verbs
There is a rather prolific subset of important verbs within the third conjugation. They have an
–iō present in the first principal part (
–ior for deponents), and resemble the fourth conjugation in some forms. Otherwise, they are still conjugated as normal, third conjugation verbs. Thus, these verbs are called
third conjugation –iō verbs or
third conjugation i-stems. Some examples are:
:capiō, capere, cēpī, captum — to take, seize, understand
:cupiō, cupere, cupīvī, cupītum — to desire, long for
:faciō, facere, fēcī, factum - to do, make
:morior, morī, mortuus sum (dep.) — to die, decay
:patior, patī, passus sum (dep.) — to suffer, undergo, endure
:rapiō, rapere, rapuī, raptum - to plunder, take up, seize, snatch, carry away
They resemble the fourth conjugation in the following instances.
:Indicative present (first person singular, third person plural) — capiō, capiunt, etc.
:Indicative imperfect — capiēbam, capiēbāmus, etc.
:Indicative future — capiam, capiēmus, etc.
:Subjunctive present — capiam, capiāmus, etc.
:Imperative future (third person plural) — capiuntō, etc.
:Present Active Participle — capiēns, –entis
:Gerund — capiendī, capiendum, etc.
:Gerundive — capiendus, –a, –um
Defective verbs
Defective 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 verb ōdī 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 — to hate
::meminī, meminisse — to remember
::coepī, 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" or "Out with it" is only in the imperative mood, and only is used in the second person.
The following are conjugated irregularly:
Aio
:
:Present Active Participle: — āiēns, –entis
* Some sources do not list these parts.
Inquam
:
Fari
:
:'Imperative - fare''
:Present Active Participle — fāns, fantis
:Present Active Infinitive — fārī
:Present Passive Infinitive - farier
: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 as ōdī and the imperative cedo) survived but became regular fully conjugated verbs (in Italian, odiare, cedere).
Impersonal verbs
Impersonal verbs are those lacking a person. In English impersonal verbs are usually used with the neuter pronoun "it" (as in "It seems," or "It storms"). Latin uses the third person singular. These verbs lack a fourth principal part. A few examples are:
:pluit, pluere, pluvit — 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])
The third person forms of esse may also be seen as impersonal when seen from the perspective of English:
:Nox aestīva calida fuit. — It was a hot, summer night.
:Est eī quī terram colunt. — It is they who till the land.
Irregular future active participles
As stated, the future active participle is normally formed by removing the
–um from the supine, and adding a
–ūrus. However, some deviations occur.
{| cellpadding="1" style="text-align:center"
| presentactiveinfinitive || supine || futureactiveparticiple
|-
| iuvāre || iūtum || iuvātūrus
|-
| lavāre || lautum || lavātūrus
|-
| parere || partum || paritūrus
|-
| ruere || rutum || ruitūrus
|-
| secāre || sectum || secātūrus
|-
| fruī || fructum || fruitūrus
|-
| morī || mortuum || moritūrus
|-
| orīrī || ortum || oritūrus
|}
Alternative verb forms
Several 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:
::
portābāris →
portābāre
The ending –ērunt in the perfect may be –ēre (primarily in poetry) as in:
::
portāvērunt →
portāvēre
Syncopated verb forms
Like most Romance languages, syncopated forms and
contractions are present in Latin. They may occur in the following instances:
Perfect stems that end in a –v may be contracted when inflected.
::
portāvisse →
portāsse
::
portāvistī →
portāstī
::
portāverant →
portārant
::
portāvisset →
portāsset
The compounds of noscere (to learn) and movēre (to move, dislodge) can also be contracted.
::
novistī →
nostī
::
novistis →
nostis
::
commoveram →
commoram
::
commoverās →
commorās
Summary of forms
The four conjugations in the present active indicative mood
Notes
Futūrus esse is sometimes contracted as
fore as seen in
Caesar's
De Bello Gallico.
The archaic uncontracted form
potesse occurs frequently in
Lucretius.
Form
moriri,
Ovid,
Metamorphoses (poem) 14.215
Used by
Cicero frequently.
Used personally by
Lucretius (2.627):
ningunt
See also
Grammatical conjugation
Latin declension
Latin mnemonics
Romance copula
William Whitaker's Words
References
External links
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.
Category:Latin language
Category:Verbs by language