51
CONJUGATION
THE PRESENT, IMPERFECT, AND FUTURE TENSES OF SUM
119. The inflection of a
verb is called its conjugation (cf. § 23).
In English the verb has but few changes in form, the different meanings
being expressed by the use of personal pronouns and auxiliaries, as, I
am carried, we have carried, they shall have carried, etc. In Latin,
on the other hand, instead of using personal pronouns and auxiliary
verbs, the form changes with the meaning. In this way the Romans
expressed differences in tense, mood, voice, person, and number.
120. The Tenses.
The different forms of a verb referring to different times are called
its tenses. The chief distinctions of time are present, past, and
future:
|
1. The present, that is, what is
happening now, or what usually happens, is expressed
by
|
the Present Tense |
|
2. The past, that is, what was
happening, used to happen, happened, has happened, or had
happened, is expressed by
|
the Imperfect, Perfect, and
Pluperfect Tenses |
|
3. The future, that is, what is
going to happen, is expressed by
|
the Future and Future Perfect
Tenses |
121. The Moods.
Verbs have inflection of mood to indicate the manner in which
they express action. The moods of the Latin verb are the indicative,
subjunctive, imperative, and infinitive.
a. A verb is in the indicative mood when
it makes a statement or asks a question about something assumed as a
fact. All the verbs we have used thus far are in the present indicative.
122. The Persons.
There are three persons, as in English. The first person is the person
speaking (I sing); the second person the person spoken to (you
sing); the third person the person spoken of 52
(he sings). Instead of using personal
pronouns for the different persons in the two numbers, singular and
plural, the Latin verb uses the personal endings (cf. § 22 a;
29). We have already learned that -t is the
ending of the third person singular in the active voice and -nt
of the third person plural. The complete list of personal endings of the
active voice is as follows:
|
Singular |
Plural |
| 1st Pers. |
I |
-m or -ō |
we |
-mus |
| 2d Pers. |
thou or you |
-s |
you |
-tis |
| 3d Pers. |
he, she, it |
-t |
they |
-nt |
123. Most verbs form
their moods and tenses after a regular plan and are called regular
verbs. Verbs that depart from this plan are called irregular. The
verb to be is irregular in Latin as in English. The present,
imperfect, and future tenses of the indicative are inflected as follows:
| Present Indicative |
|
SINGULAR |
PLURAL |
| 1st Pers. |
su-m, I am |
su-mus, we are |
| 2d Pers. |
e-s, you1 are |
es-tis, you1 are |
| 3d Pers. |
es-t, he, she, or it is |
su-nt, they are |
| Imperfect Indicative |
| 1st Pers. |
er-a-m, I was |
er-ā´-mus, we were |
| 2d Pers. |
er-ā-s, you were |
er-ā´-tis, you were |
| 3d Pers. |
er-a-t, he, she, or it was |
er-ā-nt, they were |
| Future Indicative |
| 1st Pers. |
er-ō, I shall be |
er´-i-mus, we shall be |
| 2d Pers. |
er-i-s, you will be |
er´-i-tis, you will be |
| 3d Pers. |
er-i-t, he will be |
er-u-nt, they will be |
a. Be careful about vowel quantity and accent in
these forms, and consult §§ 12.2; 14;
15.
53 124.
DIALOGUE
The Boys Sextus and Marcus
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 287.
S. Ubi es, Mārce? Ubi est Quīntus? Ubi estis,
amīcī?
M. Cum Quīntō, Sexte, in silvā sum. Nōn sōlī
sumus; sunt in silvā multī aliī puerī.
S. Nunc laetus es, sed nūper nōn laetus erās. Cūr
miser erās?
M. Miser eram quia amīcī meī erant in aliō vicō
et eram sōlus. Nunc sum apud sociōs meōs. Nunc laetī
sumus et erimus.
S. Erātisne in lūdo hodiē?
M. Hodiē nōn erāmus in lūdō, quod magister erat
aeger.
S. Eritisne mox in lūdō?
M. Amīcī meī ibi erunt, sed ego (I) nōn erō.
S. Cūr nōn ibi eris? Magister, saepe irātus, inopiam tuam
studī dīligentiaeque nōn laudat.
M. Nūper aeger eram et nunc īnfīrmus sum.
125. EXERCISE
1. You are, you were, you will be,
(sing. and plur.). 2. I am, I was, I shall be. 3. He
is, he was, he will be. 4. We are, we were, we shall be. 5. They
are, they were, they will be.
6. Why were you not in school to-day? I was sick. 7. Lately he
was a sailor, now he is a farmer, soon he will be a teacher. 8. To-day
I am happy, but lately I was wretched. 9. The teachers were happy
because of the boys’ industry.

PUERI ROMANI IN LUDO
54
THE FOUR REGULAR CONJUGATIONS · PRESENT ACTIVE
INDICATIVE OF AMŌ AND MONEŌ
126. There are four
conjugations of the regular verbs. These conjugations are distinguished
from each other by the final vowel of the present conjugation-stem.1
This vowel is called the distinguishing vowel, and is best seen
in the present infinitive.
Below is given the present infinitive of a verb of each
conjugation, the present stem, and the distinguishing vowel.
| Conjugation |
Pres. Infin. |
Pres. Stem |
DISTINGUISHING
VOWEL |
| I. |
amā´re, to love |
amā- |
ā |
| II. |
monē´re, to advise |
monē- |
ē |
| III. |
re´gĕre, to rule |
regĕ- |
ĕ |
| IV. |
audī´re, to hear |
audi- |
ī |
a. Note that the present stem of each conjugation
is found by dropping -re, the ending of the present infinitive.
Note. The present
infinitive of sum is esse, and es- is the present
stem.
127. From the present
stem are formed the present, imperfect, and future
tenses.
128. The inflection of
the Present Active Indicative of the first and of the second conjugation
is as follows:
|
a´mō, amā´re (love) |
mo´neō, monē´re (advise) |
|
|
Pres. Stem amā- |
Pres. Stem monē- |
PERSONAL
ENDINGS |
| Sing. |
1. a´mō, I love |
mo´neō, I advise |
-ō |
| 2. a´mās, you love |
mo´nēs, you advise |
-s |
| 3. a´mat, he (she, it) loves |
mo´net, he (she, it) advises |
-t |
| Plur. |
1. amā´mus, we love |
monē´mus, we advise |
-mus |
| 2. amā´tis, you love |
monē´tis, you advise |
-tis |
| 3. a´mant, they love |
mo´nent, they advise |
-nt |
55 1. The present
tense is inflected by adding the personal endings to the present stem,
and its first person uses -o and not -m. The form amō
is for amā-ō, the two vowels ā-ō
contracting to ō. In moneō there is no
contraction. Nearly all regular verbs ending in -eo belong to
the second conjugation.
2. Note that the long final vowel of the stem is shortened before
another vowel (monē-ō = mo´nĕō), and
before final -t (amăt, monĕt) and -nt
(amănt, monĕnt). Compare § 12. 2.
129. Like amō
and moneō inflect the present active indicative of the
following verbs2:
| Indicative Present |
Infinitive Present |
| a´rō, I plow |
arā´re, to plow |
| cū´rō, I care for |
cūrā´re, to care for |
| *dē´leō, I destroy |
dēlē´re, to destroy |
| dēsī´derō, I long for |
dēsīderā´re, to long for |
| dō,3 I give |
da´re, to give |
| *ha´beō, I have |
habē´re, to have |
| ha´bitō, I live, I dwell |
habitā´re, to live, to dwell |
| *iu´beō, I order |
iubē´re, to order |
| labō´rō, I labor |
labōrā´re, to labor |
| lau´dō, I praise |
laudā´re, to praise |
| mātū´rō, I hasten |
mātūrā´re, to hasten |
| *mo´veō, I move |
movē´re, to move |
| nār´rō, I tell |
nārrā´re, to tell |
| ne´cō, I kill |
necā´re, to kill |
| nūn´tiō, I announce |
nūntiā´re, to announce |
| pa´rō, I prepare |
parā´re, to prepare |
| por´tō, I carry |
portā´re, to carry |
| pro´perō, I hasten |
properā´re, to hasten |
| pug´nō, I fight |
pugnā´re, to fight |
| *vi´deō, I see |
vidē´re, to see |
| vo´cō, I call |
vocā´re, to call |
130. The Translation
of the Present. In English there are three ways of expressing
present action. We may say, for example, I live, I am living, or I
do live. In Latin the one expression habitō covers all
three of these expressions.
56 131.
EXERCISES
Give the voice, mood, tense, person, and number
of each form.
I. 1. Vocāmus, properātis, iubent. 2. Movētis, laudās,
vidēs. 3. Dēlētis, habētis, dant. 4. Mātūrās,
dēsīderat, vidēmus. 5. Iubet, movent, necat. 6. Nārrāmus,
movēs, vident. 7. Labōrātis, properant, portās,
parant. 8. Dēlet, habētis, iubēmus, dās.
N.B. Observe that the personal ending is of prime
importance in translating a Latin verb form. Give that your first
attention.
II. 1. We plow, we are plowing, we do plow. 2. They care for,
they are caring for, they do care for. 3. You give, you are having,
you do have (sing.). 4. We destroy, I do long for, they are
living. 5. He calls, they see, we are telling. 6. We do fight,
we order, he is moving, he prepares. 7. They are laboring, we kill,
you announce.
IMPERFECT ACTIVE INDICATIVE OF AMŌ AND MONEŌ
132. Tense Signs.
Instead of using auxiliary verbs to express differences in tense, like was,
shall, will, etc., Latin adds to the verb stem certain
elements that have the force of auxiliary verbs. These are called tense
signs.
133. Formation and
Inflection of the Imperfect. The tense sign of the imperfect is -bā-,
which is added to the present stem. The imperfect consists, therefore,
of three parts:
| Present Stem |
Tense Sign |
PERSONAL
ENDING |
| amā- |
ba- |
m |
| loving |
was |
I |
The inflection is as follows:
| Conjugation I |
Conjugation II |
|
| SINGULAR |
PERSONAL
ENDINGS |
| 1. amā´bam, I was loving |
monē´bam, I was advising |
-m |
| 2. amā´bās, you were loving |
monē´bās, you were advising |
-s |
| 3. amā´bat, he was loving |
monē´bat, he was advising |
-t |
| PLURAL |
57 |
| 1. amābā´mus, we were loving |
monēbā´mus, we were advising |
-mus |
| 2. amābā´tis, you were loving |
monēbā´tis, you were advising |
-tis |
| 3. amā´bant, they were loving |
monē´bant, they were advising |
-nt |
a. Note that the ā of the tense sign -bā-
is shortened before -nt, and before m and t when
final. (Cf. § 12. 2.)
In a similar manner inflect the verbs given in § 129.
134. Meaning of the
Imperfect. The Latin imperfect describes an act as going on
or progressing in past time, like the English past-progressive
tense (as, I was walking). It is the regular tense used to
describe a past situation or condition of affairs.
135. EXERCISES
I. 1. Vidēbāmus, dēsīderābat, mātūrābās.
2. Dabant, vocābātis, dēlēbāmus. 3. Pugnant,
laudābās, movēbātis. 4. Iubēbant, properābātis,
portābāmus. 5. Dabās, nārrābant, labōrābātis.
6. Vidēbant, movēbās, nūntiābāmus. 7. Necābat,
movēbam, habēbat, parābātis.
II. 1. You were having (sing. and plur.), we were killing,
they were laboring. 2. He was moving, we were ordering, we were
fighting. 3. We were telling, they were seeing, he was calling. 4. They
were living, I was longing for, we were destroying. 5. You were
giving, you were moving, you were announcing, (sing. and plur.).
6. They were caring for, he was plowing, we were praising.
136. Ni´obe
and her Children
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 287.
Niobē, rēgina Thēbānōrum, erat pulchra fēmina
sed superba. Erat superba nōn sōlum fōrmā1
suā marītīque potentiā1 sed
etiam magnō līberōrum numerō.1
Nam habēbat2 septem fīliōs et
septem fīliās. Sed ea superbia erat rēgīnae3
causa magnae trīstitiae et līberīs3
causa dūrae poenae.
Note. The words Niobē,
Thēbānōrum, and marītī will be
found in the general vocabulary. Translate the selection without looking
up any other words.
58
FUTURE ACTIVE INDICATIVE OF AMŌ AND MONEŌ
137. The tense sign of
the Future Indicative in the first and second conjugations is -bi-.
This is joined to the present stem of the verb and followed by the
personal ending, as follows:
| Present Stem |
Tense Sign |
PERSONAL
ENDING |
| amā- |
bi- |
s |
| love |
will |
you |
138. The Future Active
Indicative is inflected as follows.
| Conjugation I |
Conjugation II |
| SINGULAR |
| 1. amā´bō, I shall love |
monē´bō, I shall advise |
| 2. amā´bis, you will love |
monē´bis, you will advise |
| 3. amā´bit, he will love |
monē´bit, he will advise |
| PLURAL |
| 1. amā´bimus, we shall love |
monē´bimus, we shall advise |
| 2. amā´bitis will love |
monē´bitis, you will advise |
| 3. amā´bunt, they will love |
monē´bunt, they will advise |
a. The personal endings are as in the present.
The ending -bō in the first person singular is contracted
from -bi-ō. The -bi- appears as -bu- in the
third person plural. Note that the inflection is like that of erō,
the future of sum. Pay especial attention to the accent.
In a similar manner inflect the verbs given in § 129.
139. EXERCISES
I. 1. Movēbitis, laudābis, arābō. 2. Dēlēbitis,
vocābitis, dabunt. 3. Mātūrābis, dēsīderābit,
vidēbimus. 4. Habēbit, movēbunt, necābit. 5. Nārrābimus,
monēbis, vidēbunt. 6. Labōrābitis, cūrābunt,
dabis. 7. Habitābimus, properābitis, iubēbunt, parābit.
8. Nūntiābō, portābimus, iubēbō.
II. 1. We shall announce, we shall see, I shall hasten. 2. I
shall carry, he will plow, they will care for. 3. You will
announce, you will 59 move,
you will give, (sing. and plur.). 4. We shall fight, we
shall destroy, I shall long for. 5. He will call, they will see,
you will tell (plur.). 6. They will dwell, we shall order,
he will praise. 7. They will labor, we shall kill, you will have (sing.
and plur.), he will destroy.
140. Niobe
and her Children (Concluded)
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 288.
Apollō et Diāna erant līberī Lātōnae. Iīs
Thēbānī sacra crēbra parābant.1
Oppidānī amābant Lātōnam et līberōs
eius. Id superbae rēgīnae erat molestum. “Cūr,”
inquit, “Lātōnae et līberīs sacra parātis? Duōs
līberōs habet Lātōna; quattuordecim habeō ego.
Ubi sunt mea sacra?” Lātōna iīs verbīs2
īrāta līberōs suōs vocat. Ad eam volant Apollō
Diānaque et sagittīs3 suīs miserōs
līberōs rēgīnae superbae dēlent. Niobē, nūper
laeta, nunc misera, sedet apud līberōs interfectōs et cum
perpetuīs lacrimīs4 eōs dēsīderat.
Note. Consult the general
vocabulary for Apollō, inquit, duōs, and quattuordecim.
Try to remember the meaning of all the other words.
REVIEW OF VERBS · THE DATIVE WITH ADJECTIVES
141. Review the present,
imperfect, and future active indicative, both orally and in writing, of sum
and the verbs in § 129.
142. We learned in § 43
for what sort of expressions we may expect the dative, and in § 44
that one of its commonest uses is with verbs to express the
indirect object. It is also very common with adjectives to
express the object toward which the quality denoted by the adjective is
directed. We have already had a number of cases 60
where grātus, agreeable to, was
so followed by a dative; and in the last lesson we had molestus, annoying
to, followed by that case. The usage may be more explicitly stated
by the following rule:
143. Rule.
Dative with Adjectives. The dative is used with adjectives to
denote the object toward which the given quality is directed. Such are,
especially, those meaning near, also fit, friendly,
pleasing, like, and their opposites.
144. Among such
adjectives memorize the following:
|
idōneus, -a, -um, fit,
suitable (for)
amīcus, -a, -um, friendly
(to)
inimicus, -a, -um, hostile (to)
grātus, -a, -um, pleasing
(to), agreeable (to)
molestus, -a, -um, annoying
(to), troublesome (to)
fīnitimus, -a, -um, neighboring
(to)
proximus, -a, -um, nearest, next
(to)
|
145. EXERCISES
I. 1. Rōmānī terram idōneam agrī cultūrae
habent. 2. Gallī cōpiīs Rōmānīs inimīcī
erant. 3. Cui dea Lātōna amīca non erat? 4. Dea
Lātōna superbae rēgīnae amīca nōn erat. 5. Cibus
noster, Mārce, erit armātīs virīs grātus. 6. Quid
erat molestum populīs Italiae? 7. Bella longa cum Gallīs
erant molesta populīs Italiae. 8. Agrī Germānōrum
fluviō Rhēnō fīnitimī erant. 9. Rōmānī
ad silvam oppidō proximam castra movēbant. 10. Nōn sōlum
fōrma sed etiam superbia rēgīnae erat magna. 11. Mox
rēgīna pulchra erit aegra trīstitiā. 12. Cūr
erat Niobē, rēgīna Thēbānōrum, laeta?
Laeta erat Niobē multīs fīliīs et fīliābus.
II. 1. The sacrifices of the people will be annoying to the haughty
queen. 2. The sacrifices were pleasing not only to Latona but also
to Diana. 3. Diana will destroy those hostile to Latona. 4. The
punishment of the haughty queen was pleasing to the goddess Diana. 5. The
Romans will move their forces to a large field1
suitable for a camp. 6. Some of the allies were friendly to the
Romans, others to the Gauls.
61
146. Cornelia
and her Jewels
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 288.
Apud antīquās dominās, Cornēlia, Āfricānī
fīlia, erat2 maximē clāra. Fīliī
eius erant Tiberius Gracchus et Gāius Gracchus. Iī puerī
cum Cornēliā in oppidō Rōmā, clārō
Italiae oppidō, habitābant. Ibi eōs cūrābat
Cornēlia et ibi magnō cum studiō eōs docēbat.
Bona fēmina erat Cornēlia et bonam disciplīnam maximē
amābat.
Note. Can you translate
the paragraph above? There are no new words.
PRESENT ACTIVE INDICATIVE OF REGŌ AND AUDIŌ
147. As we learned in § 126,
the present stem of the third conjugation ends in -ĕ, and of
the fourth in -ī. The inflection of the Present Indicative
is as follows:
| Conjugation III |
Conjugation IV |
| re´gō, re´gere (rule) |
au´dio, audī´re (hear) |
| Pres. Stem regĕ- |
Pres. Stem audī- |
| SINGULAR |
| 1. re´gō, I rule |
au´diō, I hear |
| 2. re´gis, you rule |
au´dīs, you hear |
| 3. re´git, he (she, it) rules |
au´dit, he (she, it) hears |
| PLURAL |
| 1. re´gimus, we rule |
audī´mus, we hear |
| 2. re´gitis, you rule |
audī´tis, you hear |
| 3. re´gunt, they rule |
au´diunt, they hear |
1. The personal endings are the same as before.
2. The final short -e- of the stem regĕ- combines
with the -ō in the first person, becomes -u- in the
third person plural, and becomes -ĭ- elsewhere. The
inflection is like that of erō, the future of sum.
62 3. In audiō
the personal endings are added regularly to the stem audī-.
In the third person plural -u- is inserted between the stem and
the personal ending, as audi-u-nt. Note that the long vowel of
the stem is shortened before final -t just as in amō
and moneō. (Cf. § 12. 2.)
Note that -i- is always short in the third conjugation and
long in the fourth, excepting where long vowels are regularly shortened.
(Cf. § 12. 1, 2.)
148. Like regō
and audiō inflect the present active indicative of the
following verbs:
| Indicative Present |
Infinitive Present |
| agō, I drive |
agere, to drive |
| dīcō, I say |
dīcere, to say |
| dūcō, I lead |
dūcere, to lead |
| mittō, I send |
mittere, to send |
| mūniō, I fortify |
mūnīre, to fortify |
| reperiō, I find |
reperīre, to find |
| veniō, I come |
venīre, to come |
149. EXERCISES
I. 1. Quis agit? Cūr venit? Quem mittit? Quem dūcis? 2. Quid
mittunt? Ad quem veniunt? Cuius castra mūniunt? 3. Quem agunt?
Venīmus. Quid puer reperit? 4. Quem mittimus? Cuius equum dūcitis?
Quid dīcunt? 5. Mūnīmus, venītis, dīcit.
6. Agimus, reperītis, mūnīs. 7. Reperis,
ducitis, dīcis. 8. Agitis, audimus, regimus.
II. 1. What do they find? Whom do they hear? Why does he come? 2. Whose
camp are we fortifying? To whom does he say? What are we saying? 3. I
am driving, you are leading, they are hearing. 4. You send, he
says, you fortify (sing. and plur.). 5. I am coming, we
find, they send. 6. They lead, you drive, he does fortify. 7. You
lead, you find, you rule, (all plur.).
150. Cornelia
and her Jewels (Concluded)
Proximum domicīliō Cornēliae erat pulchrae Campānae
domicilium. Campāna erat superba nōn sōlum fōrmā
suā sed maximē ōrnāmentīs suīs. Ea1
laudābat semper. “Habēsne tū ūlla ornāmenta,
Cornēlia?” 63 inquit.
“Ubi sunt tua ōrnāmenta?” Deinde Cornēlia fīliōs
suōs Tiberium et Gāium vocat. “Puerī meī,”
inquit, “sunt mea ōrnāmenta. Nam bonī līberī
sunt semper bonae fēminae ōrnāmenta maximē clāra.”
Note. The only new words
here are Campāna, semper, and tū.

“PUERI MEI SUNT MEA ORNAMENTA”
IMPERFECT ACTIVE INDICATIVE OF REGŌ AND AUDIŌ
· THE DATIVE WITH SPECIAL INTRANSITIVE VERBS
151. PARADIGMS
| Conjugation III |
Conjugation IV |
| SINGULAR |
| 1. regē´bam, I was ruling |
audiē´bam, I was hearing |
| 2. regē´bās, you were riding |
audiē´bās, you were hearing |
| 3. regē´bat, he was ruling |
audiē´bat, he was hearing |
| PLURAL |
| 1. regēbā´mus, we were
ruling |
audiēbā´mus, we were hearing |
| 2. regēbā´tis, you were ruling |
audiēbā´tis, you were hearing |
| 3. regē´bant, they were ruling |
audiē´bant, they were hearing |
64 1. The tense
sign is -bā-, as in the first two conjugations.
2. Observe that the final -ĕ- of the stem is lengthened
before the tense sign -bā-. This makes the imperfect of the
third conjugation just like the imperfect of the second (cf. monēbam
and regēbam).
3. In the fourth conjugation -ē- is inserted between the
stem and the tense sign -bā- (audi-ē-ba-m).
4. In a similar manner inflect the verbs given in § 148.
152. EXERCISES
I. 1. Agēbat, veniēbat, mittēbat, dūcēbant.
2. Agēbant, mittēbant, dūcēbas, mūniēbant.
3. Mittēbāmus, dūcēbātis, dīcēbant.
4. Mūniēbāmus, veniēbātis, dīcēbās.
5. Mittēbās, veniēbāmus, reperiēbat. 6. Reperiēbās,
veniēbās, audiēbātis. 7. Agēbāmus,
reperiēbātis, mūniēbat. 8. Agēbātis,
dīcēbam, mūniēbam.
II. 1. They were leading, you were driving (sing. and plur.),
he was fortifying. 2. They were sending, we were finding, I was
coming. 3. You were sending, you were fortifying, (sing. and
plur.), he was saying. 4. They were hearing, you were leading (sing.
and plur.), I was driving. 5. We were saying, he was sending, I
was fortifying. 6. They were coming, he was hearing, I was finding.
7. You were ruling (sing. and plur.), we were coming, they
were ruling.
153. The Dative with
Special Intransitive Verbs. We learned above (§ 20. a)
that a verb which does not admit of a direct object is called an intransitive
verb. Many such verbs, however, are of such meaning that they can govern
an indirect object, which will, of course, be in the dative case (§ 45).
Learn the following list of intransitive verbs with their meanings. In
each case the dative indirect object is the person or thing to which a
benefit, injury, or feeling is directed. (Cf. § 43.)
|
crēdō, crēdere, believe
(give belief to)
faveō, favēre, favor
(show favor to)
noceō, nocēre, injure
(do harm to)
pāreō, pārēre, obey
(give obedience to)
persuādeō, persuādēre,
persuade (offer persuasion to)
resistō, resistere, resist
(offer resistance to)
studeō, studēre, be eager
for (give attention to)
|
65 154.
Rule. Dative with Intransitive Verbs.
The dative of the indirect object is used with the intransitive verbs
crēdō, faveō, noceō, pāreō,
persuādeō, resistō, studeō, and
others of like meaning.
155. EXERCISE
1. Crēdisne verbīs sociōrum? Multī verbīs eōrum
nōn crēdunt. 2. Meī fīnitimī cōnsiliō
tuō nōn favēbunt, quod bellō student. 3. Tiberius
et Gāius disciplīnae dūrae nōn resistēbant et
Cornēliae pārēbant. 4. Dea erat inimīca septem
fīliābus rēgīnae. 5. Dūra poena et
perpetua trīstitia rēgīnae nōn persuādēbunt.
6. Nūper ea resistēbat et nunc resistit potentiae Lātōnae.
7. Mox sagittae volābunt et līberīs miserīs nocēbunt.
FUTURE ACTIVE INDICATIVE OF REGŌ AND AUDIŌ
156. In the future tense
of the third and fourth conjugations we meet with a new tense sign.
Instead of using -bi-, as in the first and second conjugations,
we use -ā-1 in the first person
singular and -ē- in the rest of the tense. In the third
conjugation the final -ĕ- of the stem is dropped before this
tense sign; in the fourth conjugation the final -ī- of the
stem is retained.2
157. PARADIGMS
| Conjugation III |
Conjugation IV |
| SINGULAR |
| 1. re´gam, I shall rule |
au´diam, I shall hear |
| 2. re´gēs, you will rule |
au´diēs, you will hear |
| 3. re´get, he will rule |
au´diet, he will hear |
| PLURAL |
| 1. regē´mus, we shall rule |
audiē´mus, we shall hear |
| 2. regē´tis, you will rule |
audiē´tis, you will hear |
| 3. re´gent, they will rule |
au´dient, they will hear |
66
1. Observe that the future of the third conjugation is like the
present of the second, excepting in the first person singular.
2. In the same manner inflect the verbs given in § 148.
158. EXERCISES
I. 1. Dīcet, dūcētis, mūniēmus. 2. Dīcent,
dīcētis, mittēmus. 3. Mūnient, venient,
mittent, agent. 4. Dūcet, mittēs, veniet, aget. 5. Mūniet,
reperiētis, agēmus. 6. Mittam, veniēmus, regent. 7. Audiētis,
veniēs, reperiēs. 8. Reperiet, agam, dūcēmus,
mittet. 9. Vidēbitis, sedēbō, vocābimus.
II. 1. I shall find, he will hear, they will come. 2. I shall
fortify, he will send, we shall say. 3. I shall drive, you will
lead, they will hear. 4. You will send, you will fortify, (sing.
and plur.), he will say. 5. I shall come, we shall find, they
will send.
6. Who3 will believe the story? I4
shall believe the story. 7. Whose friends do you favor? We favor
our friends. 8. Who will resist our weapons? Sextus will resist
your weapons. 9. Who will persuade him? They will persuade him. 10. Why
were you injuring my horse? I was not injuring your horse. 11. Whom
does a good slave obey? A good slave obeys his master. 12. Our men
were eager for another battle.
VERBS IN -IŌ OF THE THIRD CONJUGATION ·
THE IMPERATIVE MOOD
159. There are a few
common verbs ending in -iō which do not belong to the fourth
conjugation, as you might infer, but to the third. The fact that they
belong to the third conjugation is shown by the ending of the
infinitive. (Cf. § 126.) Compare
|
audiō, audī´re (hear),
fourth conjugation
capiō, ca´pere (take),
third conjugation
|
67 160.
The present, imperfect, and future active indicative of capiō
are inflected as follows:
| capiō, capere, take |
| Pres. Stem
cape- |
| Present |
Imperfect |
Future |
| SINGULAR |
| 1. ca´piō |
capiē´bam |
ca´piam |
| 2. ca´pis |
capiē´bās |
ca´piēs |
| 3. ca´pit |
capiē´bat |
ca´piet |
| PLURAL |
| 1. ca´pimus |
capiēbā´mus |
capiē´mus |
| 2. ca´pitis |
capiēbā´tis |
capiē´tis |
| 3. ca´piunt |
capiē´bant |
ca´pient |
1. Observe that capiō and the other -iō verbs
follow the fourth conjugation wherever in the fourth conjugation two
vowels occur in succession. (Cf. capiō, audiō; capiunt,
audiunt; and all the imperfect and future.) All other forms are like the
third conjugation. (Cf. capis, regis; capit, regit; etc.)
2. Like capiō, inflect
|
faciō, facere, make, do
fugiō, fugere, flee
iaciō, iacere, hurl
rapiō, rapere, seize
|
161. The Imperative
Mood. The imperative mood expresses a command; as, come! send!
The present tense of the imperative is used only in the second person,
singular and plural. The singular in the active voice is regularly
the same in form as the present stem. The plural is formed by adding -te
to the singular.
| Conjugation |
Singular |
Plural |
| I. |
|
amā, love thou |
amā´te, love ye |
| II. |
|
monē, advise thou |
monē´te, advise ye |
| III. |
(a) |
rege, rule thou |
re´gite, rule ye |
|
(b) |
cape, take thou |
ca´pite, take ye |
| IV. |
|
audī, hear thou |
audī´te, hear ye |
| sum (irregular) |
es, be thou |
este, be ye |
1. In the third conjugation the final -ĕ- of the stem becomes -ĭ-
in the plural.
68 2. The verbs dīcō,
say; dūcō, lead; and faciō, make,
have the irregular forms dīc, dūc, and fac
in the singular.
3. Give the present active imperative, singular and plural, of veniō,
dūcō, vocō, doceō, laudō,
dīcō, sedeō, agō, faciō,
mūniō, mittō, rapiō.
162. EXERCISES
I. 1. Fugient, faciunt, iaciēbat. 2. Dēlē, nūntiāte,
fugiunt. 3. Venīte, dīc, faciētis. 4. Dūcite,
iaciam, fugiēbant. 5. Fac, iaciēbāmus, fugimus,
rapite. 6. Sedēte, reperī, docēte. 7. Fugiēmus,
iacient, rapiēs. 8. Reperient, rapiēbātis, nocent.
9. Favēte, resistē, pārēbitis.
10. Volā ad multās terrās et dā auxilium. 11. Ego
tēla mea capiam et multās ferās dēlēbō.
12. Quis fābulae tuae crēdet? 13. Este bonī,
puerī, et audīte verba grāta magistrī.
II. 1. The goddess will seize her arms and will hurl her weapons. 2. With
her weapons she will destroy many beasts. 3. She will give aid to
the weak.1 4. She will fly to many lands
and the beasts will flee. 5. Romans, tell2
the famous story to your children.
THE PASSIVE VOICE · PRESENT, IMPERFECT, AND FUTURE
INDICATIVE OF AMŌ AND MONEŌ
163. The Voices.
Thus far the verb forms have been in the active voice; that is,
they have represented the subject as performing an action; as,
The lion——> killed——> the hunter
A verb is said to be in the passive voice when it represents
its subject as receiving an action; as,
The lion <—— was killed <—— by
the hunter
Note the direction of the arrows.
69 164.
Passive Personal Endings. In the passive voice we use a different
set of personal endings. They are as follows:
| Sing. |
1. -r, I |
Plur. |
1. -mur, we |
| 2. -ris, -re, you |
2. -minī, you |
| 3. -tur, he, she, it |
3. -ntur, they |
a. Observe that the letter -r appears
somewhere in all but one of the endings. This is sometimes called the passive
sign.
165. PARADIGMS
|
amō, amāre |
monēo, monēre |
|
|
Pres. Stem amā- |
Pres. Stem monē- |
|
|
Present Indicative |
PERSONAL
ENDINGS |
| Sing. |
a´mor, I am loved
|
mo´neor, I am advised
|
-or1 |
|
amā´ris or amā´re, you
are loved
|
monē´ris or monē´re,
you are advised
|
-ris or -re |
|
amā´tur, he is loved
|
monē´tur, he is advised
|
-tur |
| Plur. |
amā´mur, we are loved
|
monē´mur, we are advised
|
-mur |
|
amā´minī, you are loved
|
monē´minī, you are
advised
|
-mini |
|
aman´tur, they are loved
|
monen´tur, they are advised
|
-ntur |
| |
|
Imperfect
Indicative (Tense Sign -bā-) |
|
| Sing. |
amā´bar, I was being loved
|
monē´bar, I was being advised
|
-r |
|
amābā´ris or amābā´re,
you were being loved
|
monēbā´ris or monēbā´re,
you were being advised
|
-ris or -re |
|
amābā´tur, he was being
loved
|
monēbā´tur, he was being
advised
|
-tur |
| Plur. |
amābā´mur, we were being
loved
|
monēbā´mur, we were
being advised
|
-mur |
|
amābā´minī, you
were being loved
|
monēbā´minī, you
were being advised
|
-minī |
|
amāban´tur, they were being
loved
|
monēban´tur, they were being
advised
|
-ntur |
| |
| 70 |
Future
(Tense Sign -bi-) |
|
| Sing. |
amā´bor, I shall be loved
|
monē´bor, I shall be advised
|
-r |
|
amā´beris or amā´bere,
you will be loved
|
monē´beris or monē´bere,
you will be advised
|
-ris or -re
|
|
amā´bitur, he will be loved
|
monē´bitur, he will be
advised
|
-tur |
| Plur. |
amā´bimur, we shall be loved
|
monē´bimur, we shall be
advised
|
-mur |
|
amābi´minī, you will be
loved
|
monēbi´minī, you will be
advised
|
-minī |
|
amābun´tur, they will be
loved
|
monēbun´tur, they will be
advised
|
-ntur |
1. The tense sign and the personal endings are added as in the
active.
2. In the future the tense sign -bi- appears as -bo- in
the first person, -be- in the second, singular number, and as -bu-
in the third person plural.
3. Inflect laudō, necō, portō, moveō,
dēleō, iubeō, in the present, imperfect,
and future indicative, active and passive.
166. Intransitive verbs,
such as mātūrō, I hasten; habitō,
I dwell, do not have a passive voice with a personal subject.
167. EXERCISES
I. 1. Laudāris or laudāre, laudās, datur, dat.
2. Dabitur, dabit, vidēminī, vidētis. 3. Vocābat,
vocābātur, dēlēbitis, dēlēbiminī. 4. Parābātur,
parābat, cūrās, cūrāris or cūrāre.
5. Portābantur, portābant, vidēbimur, vidēbimus.
6. Iubēris or iubēre, iubēs, laudābāris
or laudābāre, laudābās. 7. Movēberis
or movēbere, movēbis, dabantur, dabant. 8. Dēlentur,
dēlent, parābāmur, parābāmus.
II. 1. We prepare, we are prepared, I shall be called, I shall call,
you were carrying, you were being carried. 2. I see, I am seen, it
was being announced, he was announcing, they will order, they will be
ordered. 3. You will be killed, you will kill, you move, you are
moved, we are praising, we are being praised. 4. I am called, I
call, 71 you will
have, you are cared for. 5. They are seen, they see, we were teaching,
we were being taught, they will move, they will be moved.

PERSEUS ANDROMEDAM SERVAT
168. Per´seus
and Androm´eda
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 288.
Perseus fīlius erat Iovis,2 maximī3
deōrum. Dē eō multās fabulās nārrant poētae.
Eī favent deī, eī magica arma et ālās dant. Eīs
tēlīs armātus et ālīs frētus ad multās
terrās volābat et mōnstra saeva dēlēbat et
miserīs īnfīrmīsque auxilium dabat. 72
Aethiopia est terra Āfricae. Eam terram Cēpheus5
regēbat. Eī6 Neptūnus, maximus
aquārum deus, erat īrātus et mittit7
mōnstrum saevum ad Aethiopiam. Ibi mōnstrum nōn sōlum
lātīs pulchrīsque Aethiopiae agrīs nocēbat sed
etiam domicilia agricolārum dēlēbat, et multōs virōs,
fēminās, līberōsque necābat. Populus ex agrīs
fugiēbat et oppida mūrīs validīs mūniēbat.
Tum Cēpheus magnā trīstitiā commōtus ad Iovis
ōrāculum properat et ita dīcit: “Amīcī meī
necantur; agrī meī vāstantur. Audī verba mea,
Iuppiter. Dā miserīs auxilium. Age mōnstrum saevum ex
patriā.”
PRESENT, IMPERFECT, AND FUTURE INDICATIVE PASSIVE OF REGŌ
AND AUDIŌ
169. Review the present,
imperfect, and future indicative active of regō and audiō,
and learn the passive of the same tenses (§§ 490,
491).
a. Observe that the tense signs of the imperfect
and future are the same as in the active voice, and that the passive
personal endings (§ 164) are added instead
of the active ones.
b. Note the slight irregularity in the second
person singular present of the third conjugation. There the final -e-
of the stem is not changed to -i-, as it is in the active. We
therefore have re´geris or re´gere, not re´giris,
re´gire.
c. Inflect agō, dīcō,
dūcō, mūniō, reperiō, in
the present, imperfect, and future indicative, active and passive.
170. EXERCISES
I. 1. Agēbat, agēbātur, mittēbat, mittēbātur,
dūcēbat. 2. Agunt, aguntur, mittuntur, mittunt, mūniunt.
3. Mittor, mittar, mittam, dūcēre, dūcere. 4. Dīcēmur,
dīcimus, dīcēmus, dīcimur, mūniēbaminī.
5. Dūcitur, dūciminī, reperīmur, reperiar,
agitur. 6. Agēbāmus, agēbāmur, reperīris,
reperiēminī. 7. Mūnīminī, veniēbam, dūcēbar,
73 dīcētur.
8. Mittiminī, mittitis, mittēris, mitteris, agēbāminī.
9. Dīcitur, dīcit, mūniuntur, reperient, audientur.
II. 1. I was being driven, I was driving, we were leading, we were
being led, he says, it is said. 2. I shall send, I shall be sent,
you will find, you will be found, they lead, they are led. 3. I am
found, we are led, they are driven, you were being led (sing. and
plur.). 4. We shall drive, we shall be driven, he leads, he is
being led, they will come, they will be fortified. 5. They were
ruling, they were being ruled, you will send, you will be sent, you are
sent, (sing. and plur.). 6. He was being led, he will come,
you are said (sing. and plur.).
171. Perseus
and Andromeda (Continued)
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 288.
Tum ōrāculum ita respondet: “Mala est fortūna tua.
Neptūnus, magnus aquārum deus, terrae Aethiopiae inimīcus,
eās poenās mittit. Sed parā īrātō deō
sacrum idōneum et mōnstrum saevum ex patriā tuā agētur.
Andromeda fīlia tua est mōnstrō grāta. Dā eam mōnstrō.
Servā cāram patriam et vītam populī tuī.”
Andromeda autem erat puella pulchra. Eam amābat Cēpheus maximē.
PRESENT, IMPERFECT, AND FUTURE INDICATIVE PASSIVE OF -IŌ
VERBS · PRESENT PASSIVE INFINITIVE AND IMPERATIVE
172. Review the active
voice of capiō, present, imperfect, and future, and learn
the passive of the same tenses (§ 492).
a. The present forms capior and capiuntur
are like audior, audiuntur, and the rest of the tense is like regor.
b. In like manner inflect the passive of iaciō
and rapiō.
173. The Infinitive.
The infinitive mood gives the general meaning of the verb without person
or number; as, amāre, to love. Infinitive means unlimited.
The forms of the other moods, being limited by person and number, are
called the finite, or limited, verb forms.
74 174.
The forms of the Present Infinitive, active and passive, are as follows:
| Conj. |
Pres. Stem |
Pres. Infinitive Active |
Pres. Infinitive Passive |
| I. |
amā- |
amā´re, to love |
amā´rī, to be loved |
| II. |
monē- |
monē´re, to advise |
monē´rī, to be advised |
| III. |
rege- |
re´gere, to rule |
re´gī, to be ruled |
|
cape- |
ca´pere, to take |
ca´pī, to be taken |
| IV. |
audī- |
audī´re, to hear |
audīrī, to be heard |
1. Observe that to form the present active infinitive we add -re
to the present stem.
a. The present infinitive of sum is esse.
There is no passive.
2. Observe that the present passive infinitive is formed from the
active by changing final -e to -ī, except in the
third conjugation, which changes final -ere to -ī.
3. Give the active and passive present infinitives of doceō,
sedeō, volō, cūrō, mittō,
dūcō, mūniō, reperiō, iaciō,
rapiō.
175. The forms of the
Present Imperative, active and passive, are as follows:
|
Active1 |
Passive |
| CONJ. |
SING. |
PLUR. |
SING. |
PLUR. |
| I. |
a´mā |
amā´te |
amā´re, be thou loved |
amā´minī, be ye loved |
| II. |
mo´nē |
monē´te |
monē´re, be thou advised |
monē´minī, be ye advised |
| III. |
re´ge |
re´gite |
re´gere, be thou ruled |
regi´minī, be ye ruled |
|
ca´pe |
ca´pite |
ca´pere, be thou taken |
capi´minī, be ye taken |
| IV. |
au´dī |
audī´te |
audī´re, be thou heard |
audī´minī, be ye heard |
1. Observe that the second person singular of the present passive
imperative is like the present active infinitive, and that both singular
and plural are like the second person singular2
and plural, respectively, of the present passive indicative.
2. Give the present imperative, both active and passive, of the verbs
in § 174. 3.
75 176.
EXERCISES
First learn the special
vocabulary, p. 289.
I. 1. Tum Perseus ālīs ad terrās multās volabit.
2. Mōnstrum saevum per aquās properat et mox agrōs nostrōs
vāstābit. 3. Sī autem Cēpheus ad ōrāculum
properābit, ōrāculum ita respondēbit. 4. Quis tēlīs
Perseī superābitur? Multa mōnstra tēlīs eius
superābuntur. 5. Cum cūrīs magnīs et lacrimīs
multīs agricolae ex domiciliīs cārīs aguntur. 6. Multa
loca vāstābantur et multa oppida dēlēbantur. 7. Mōnstrum
est validum, tamen superābitur. 8. Crēdēsne semper
verbīs ōrāculī? Ego iīs non semper crēdam.
9. Pārēbitne Cēpheus ōrāculō? Verba
ōrāculī eī persuādēbunt. 10. Si nōn
fugiēmus, oppidum capiētur et oppidānī necābuntur.
11. Vocāte puerōs et nārrāte fābulam clāram
dē mōnstrō saevō.
II. 1. Fly thou, to be cared for, be ye sent, lead thou. 2. To
lead, to be led, be ye seized, fortify thou. 3. To be hurled, to
fly, send thou, to be found. 4. To be sent, be ye led, to hurl, to
be taken. 5. Find thou, hear ye, be ye ruled, to be fortified.
SYNOPSES IN THE FOUR CONJUGATIONS · THE ABLATIVE
DENOTING FROM
177. You should learn to
give rapidly synopses of the verbs you have had, as follows:1
|
Conjugation I |
Conjugation II |
|
Indicative |
|
ACTIVE |
PASSIVE |
ACTIVE |
PASSIVE |
| Pres. |
a´mō |
a´mor |
mo´neō |
mo´neor |
| Imperf. |
amā´bam |
amā´bar |
monē´bam |
monē´bar |
| Fut. |
amā´bo |
amā´bor |
monē´bo |
monē´bor |
| 76 |
Imperative |
| Pres. |
a´mā |
amā´re |
mo´nē |
monē´re |
|
Infinitive |
| Pres. |
amā´re |
amā´rī |
monē´re |
monē´rī |
| |
|
Conjugation III |
Conjugation
III
(-iō verbs) |
|
Indicative |
|
ACTIVE |
PASSIVE |
ACTIVE |
PASSIVE |
| Pres. |
re´gō |
re´gor |
ca´piō |
ca´pior |
| Imperf. |
regē´bam |
regē´bar |
capiē´bam |
capiē´bar |
| Fut. |
re´gam |
re´gar |
ca´piam |
ca´piar |
|
Imperative |
| Pres. |
re´ge |
re´gere |
ca´pe |
ca´pere |
|
Infinitive |
| Pres. |
re´gere |
re´gī |
ca´pere |
ca´pī |
| |
|
Conjugation IV |
|
Indicative |
|
ACTIVE |
PASSIVE |
| Pres. |
au´diō |
au´dior |
| Imperf. |
audiē´bam |
audiē´bar |
| Fut. |
au´diam |
au´diar |
|
Imperative |
| Pres. |
au´dī |
audī´re |
|
Infinitive |
| Pres. |
audī´re |
audī´rī |
1. Give the synopsis of rapiō, mūniō, reperiō,
doceō, videō, dīcō, agō,
laudō, portō, and vary the person and number.
178. We learned in § 50
that one of the three relations covered by the ablative case is
expressed in English by the preposition from. This is sometimes
called the separative ablative, and it has a number of special
uses. You have already grown familiar with the first mentioned below.
77 179.
Rule. Ablative of the Place From. The
place from which is expressed by the ablative with the prepositions ā
or ab, dē, ē or ex.
Agricolae ex agrīs veniunt, the farmers
come from the fields
a. ā or ab denotes from
near a place; ē or ex, out from it; and dē,
down from it. This may be represented graphically as follows:

180. Rule.
Ablative of Separation. Words expressing separation or
deprivation require an ablative to complete their meaning.
a. If the separation is actual and literal
of one material thing from another, the preposition ā or ab,
ē or ex, or dē is generally used. If no
actual motion takes place of one thing from another, no preposition is
necessary.
| (a) |
Perseus terram ā mōnstrīs līberat
Perseus frees the land from monsters
(literal separation— actual motion is expressed)
|
| (b) |
Perseus terram trīstitiā līberat
Perseus frees the land from sorrow
(figurative separation— no actual motion is expressed)
|
181. Rule.
Ablative of the Personal Agent. The word expressing the person
from whom an action starts, when not the subject, is put in the ablative
with the preposition ā or ab.
a. In this construction the English translation
of ā, ab is by rather than from. This
ablative is regularly used with passive verbs to indicate the person
by whom the act was performed.
Mōnstrum ā Perseō necātur, the
monster is being slain by (lit. from) Perseus
78 b.
Note that the active form of the above sentence would be Perseus
monstrum necat, Perseus is slaying the monster. In the
passive the object of the active verb becomes the subject,
and the subject of the active verb becomes the ablative of the
personal agent, with ā or ab.
c. Distinguish carefully between the ablative of
means and the ablative of the personal agent. Both are often translated
into English by the preposition by. (Cf. § 100.
b.) Means is a thing; the agent or actor is a person.
The ablative of means has no preposition. The ablative of the personal
agent has ā or ab. Compare
|
Fera sagittā necātur, the
wild beast is killed by an arrow
Fera ā Diānā necātur,
the wild beast is killed by Diana
|
Sagittā, in the first sente |