What is Patior?
Verb. patior (present infinitive patī, perfect active passus sum); third conjugation iō-variant, deponent. I suffer, endure, tolerate. quotations ▼ I allow, acquiesce, permit, submit.
What does Latin word Visum mean?
something seen
Etymology. 18th century as visa, from French visa, from Latin visa, plural of visum (“something seen”).
What conjugation is Vinco?
Inflection
Conjugation of vinco (third conjugation) | ||
---|---|---|
indicative | singular | |
active | present | vincit |
imperfect | vincēbat | |
future | vincet |
Is Patior a deponent verb?
This is a deponent verb. It gave up (“deponere”) its active forms (even though they still exist). Such verbs occur in passive voice but are translated in active voice. For example: “loquor” (Form analysis: 1.
What conjugation is Patior?
Conjugation
Conjugation of patior (third conjugation iō-variant, deponent) | ||
---|---|---|
indicative | singular | |
active | future | patiēris, patiēre |
perfect | passus + present active indicative of sum | |
pluperfect | passus + imperfect active indicative of sum |
What is a perfect participle in Latin?
A perfect participle refers to action prior to that of the main verb. A future participle refers to action subsequent to that of the main verb. The proper understanding of Latin participles must always bear in the mind their tense and voice. Present Active Participle: contemporaneous action, active voice.
Why are deponents deponents?
There is a group of verbs in Latin which have passive forms but active meanings. They are called deponent verbs because they have “laid aside” (dëpönö, -ere) their passive meanings but have retained their passive forms. They are translated only in the active voice.