FIRST CONJUGATION ĀRE = 2nd principal part/infinitive INDICATIVE MOOD (used to express a fact) ACTIVE VOICE (the subject is the doer of the action) Person PRESENT IMPERFECT FUTURE 1 I portō portābam portābō 2 you portās portābās portābis 3 s/he, it portat portābat portābit 1 we portāmus portābāmus portābimus 2 you portātis portābātis portābitis 3 they portant portābant portābunt am ... ing is ... ing are ... ing do/does ... ... (s) was ... ing were ... ing used to ... kept on ... ing ... ed will ... shall ... e.g. portō portāre portāvī portātum carry PERFECT portāvī portāvistī portāvit portāvimus portāvistis portāvērunt PLUPERFECT portāveram portāverās portāverat portāverāmus portāverātis portāverant FUTURE PERFECT portāverō portāveris portāverit portāverimus portāveritis portāverint have ... ed has ... ed did ... ... ed had ... ed will have ... ed shall have ... ed IMPERATIVE MOOD (used for commands) singular portā carry! plural portāte carry! INFINITIVE MOOD (to + the verb) It is the 2nd principal part of the verb. N.B. 1. Verbs whose 2nd principal part (the 2nd form in the dictionary listing) ends in –āre belong to the FIRST CONJUGATION. portāre= to carry Conjugation means a group of verbs with similar forms. 2. The 2nd principal part used alone is called the infinitive. E.g. portāre is the 2nd principal part of the verb portō. Portāre means “to carry” 3. Verbs have tense (indicating the time the action of the verb takes place); person (I, you, she, he, it, we, you, or they) as well as voice and mood which you will learn later. 4. The personal endings added to the end of the verb to indicate which person is doing the action of the verb are: -ō = I [1st person singular] -mus = we [1st person plural] -s = you [2nd person singular] -tis = you [2nd person plural] rd -t = he or she or it [3 person singular] -nt= they [3rd person plural 5. Verb tenses are built on stems, i.e. you add the endings for the tense onto a stem to form the verb tense in the person you need. 6. The PRESENT Stem (red) is formed by dropping the -re from the 2nd principal part/infinitive. lt is used to form the present, imperfect, and future tenses - and the imperative mood. 7. The PERFECT Stem (blue) is formed by dropping the -ī from the 3rd principal part. It is used to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses. Latin verbs have special tense indicators that come before the personal endings and after the stem to indicate the tense of the verb. Each tense has a chant you will learn to help remember the tense forms. Present Tense – no tense indicator – just the personal endings Imperfect Tense – bā plus the personal endings Future Tense – bi [bō bi bu, depending on the person] plus the personal endings Perfect Tense – this verb tense has Special Perfect Endings as the combined tense indicator/personal endings – ī, istī, it, imus, istis, ērunt Pluperfect Tense – erā plus the personal endings Future Perfect Tense – eri [ero, eri, eru, depending on the person] plus the personal endings 8. The 6 tenses and their Engish helping verbs are listed here. Remember to put the verb into the blank for the full translation e.g. I am carrying These 3 tenses use the Present stem to build their forms. Present Tense = am ____ing is _____ing, are _____ing, do _____, does _____, _____(s) Imperfect Tense = was _____ing, were _____ing, used to ____, kept on _____ing, _______ed Future Tense = will _____, shall _____ These 3 Tenses use the Perfect stem to build their forms. Perfect Tense = have ____ed, has _____ed, did _____, _____ed Pluperfect Tense = had _____ed Future Perfect Tense = will have _____ed, shall have _____ed Remember that some English word will be a little different from these translation rules.. E.g. “shown”, not “showed”, “saw”, not “seed” 9. Verb forms in Latin work backward from English because they can have the subject pronoun person built into the ending on the verb. They also have the English helping verbs built into the Latin word. e.g. portat = “she carries,” “she does carry”, or “she is carrying.” [the “she” is built into the personal ending -t, the words “is” and “does” are built into the present tense form. But puella portat means “the girl carries,” “the girl does carry”, or “the girl is carrying.” [the word “girl” replaces the built-in “she”] 3A* SECOND CONJUGATION ĒRE = 2nd principal part/infinitive INDICATIVE MOOD (used to express a fact) ACTIVE VOICE (the subject is the doer of the action) Person PRESENT IMPERFECT FUTURE 1 I moneō monēbam monēbō 2 you monēs monēbās monēbis 3 s/he, it monet monēbat monēbit 1 we monēmus monēbāmus monēbimus 2 you monētis monēbātis monēbitis 3 they monent monēbant monēbunt am ... ing is ... ing are ... ing do/does ... ... (s) was ... ing were ... ing used to ... kept on ... ing ... ed will ... shall ... e.g. moneō monēre monuī monitum warn PERFECT monuī monuistī monuit monuimus monuistis monuērunt PLUPERFECT monueram monuerās monuerat monuerāmus monuerātis monuerant FUTURE PERFECT monuerō monueris monuerit monuerimus monueritis monuerint have ... ed has ... ed did ... ... ed had ... ed will have ... ed shall have ... ed IMPERATIVE MOOD (used for commands) singular monē warn! plural monēte warn! INFINITIVE MOOD (to + verb) It is the 2nd principal part of the verb. N.B. 1. Verbs whose 2nd principal part (the 2nd form in the dictionary listing) ends in –ēre belong to the SECOND CONJUGATION. monēre= to warn Conjugation means a group of verbs with similar forms. 2. The 2nd principal part used alone is called the infinitive. E.g. monēre is the 2nd principal part of the verb moneō. Monēre means “to warn” 3. Verbs have tense (indicating the time the action of the verb takes place); person (I, you, she, he, it, we, you, or they) as well as voice and mood which you will learn later. 4. The personal endings added to the end of the verb to indicate which person is doing the action of the verb are: -ō = I [1st person singular] -mus = we [1st person plural] nd -s = you [2 person singular] -tis = you [2nd person plural] -t = he or she or it [3rd person singular] -nt= they [3rd person plural 5. Verb tenses are built on stems, i.e. you add the endings for the tense onto a stem to form the verb tense in the person you need. 6. The PRESENT Stem (red) is formed by dropping the -re from the 2nd principal part/infinitive. lt is used to form the present, imperfect, and future tenses - and the imperative mood. 7. The PERFECT Stem (blue) is formed by dropping the -ī from the 3rd principal part. It is used to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses. Latin verbs have special tense indicators that come before the personal endings and after the stem to indicate the tense of the verb. Each tense has a chant you will learn to help remember the tense forms. Present Tense – no tense indicator – just the personal endings Imperfect Tense – bā plus the personal endings Future Tense – bi [bō bi bu, depending on the person] plus the personal endings Perfect Tense – this verb tense has Special Perfect Endings as the combined tense indicator/personal endings – ī, istī, it, imus, istis, ērunt Pluperfect Tense – erā plus the personal endings Future Perfect Tense – eri [ero, eri, eru, depending on the person] plus the personal endings 8. The 6 tenses and their Engish helping verbs are listed here. Remember to put the verb into the blank for the full translation e.g. I am warning These 3 tenses use the Present stem to build their forms. Present Tense = am ____ing is _____ing, are _____ing, do _____, does _____, _____(s) Imperfect Tense = was _____ing, were _____ing, used to ____, kept on _____ing, _______ed Future Tense = will _____, shall _____ These 3 Tenses use the Perfect stem to build their forms. Perfect Tense = have ____ed, has _____ed, did _____, _____ed Pluperfect Tense = had _____ed Future Perfect Tense = will have _____ed, shall have _____ed Remember that some English word will be a little different from these translation rules.. E.g. “shown”, not “showed”, “saw”, not “seed” 9. Verb forms in Latin work backward from English because they can have the subject pronoun person built into the ending on the verb. They also have the English helping verbs built into the Latin word. e.g. monet = “she warns,” “she does warn”, or “she is warning.” [the “she” is built into the personal ending -t, the words “is” and “does” are built into the present tense form. But puella monet means “the girl warns,” “the girl does warn”, or “the girl is warning.” [the word “girl” replaces the built-in “she”] 4A* THIRD CONJUGATION (regular) INDICATIVE MOOD (used to express a fact) ACTIVE VOICE (the subject is the doer of the action) Person PRESENT IMPERFECT FUTURE 1 I regō regēbam regam 2 you regis regēbās regēs 3 s/he, it regit regēbat reget 1 we regimus regēbāmus regēmus 2 you regitis regēbātis regētis 3 they regunt regēbant regent am ... ing is ... ing are ... ing do/does ... ... (s) was ... ing were ... ing used to ... kept on ... ing ... ed will ... shall ... ERE = 2nd principal part/infinitive e.g. regō regere rexī rectum rule PERFECT rexī rexistī rexit reximus rexistis rexērunt PLUPERFECT rexeram rexerās rexerat rexerāmus rexerātis rexerant FUTURE PERFECT rexerō rexeris rexerit rexerimus rexeritis rexerint have ... ed has ... ed did ... ... ed had ... ed will have ... ed shall have ... ed IMPERATIVE MOOD (used for commands) singular rege rule! plural regite rule! INFINITIVE MOOD (to + the verb) It is the 2nd principal part of the verb. N.B. regere= to rule 1. Verbs whose 2nd principal part (the 2nd form in the dictionary listing) ends in –ere belong to the THIRD CONJUGATION. This page is called 3rd Declension Regular because the first principal part of these verbs is –ō. You will see Third Declension –iō verbs on page 6A. 2. The 2nd principal part used alone is called the infinitive. E.g. regere is the 2nd principal part of the verb regō. regere means “to rule” 3. Verbs have tense (indicating the time the action of the verb takes place); person (I, you, she, he, it, we, you, or they) as well as voice and mood which you will learn later. 4. The personal endings added to the end of the verb to indicate which person is doing the action of the verb are: -ō = I [1st person singular] -mus = we [1st person plural] -s = you [2nd person singular] -tis = you [2nd person plural] -t = he or she or it [3rd person singular] -nt= they [3rd person plural 5. Verb tenses are built on stems, i.e. you add the endings for the tense onto a stem to form the verb tense in the person you need. 6. The PRESENT Stem (red) is formed by dropping the -re from the 2nd principal part/infinitive. lt is used to form the present, imperfect, and future tenses - and the imperative mood. 7. The PERFECT Stem (blue) is formed by dropping the -ī from the 3rd principal part. It is used to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses. Latin verbs have special tense indicators that come before the personal endings and after the stem to indicate the tense of the verb. Each tense has a chant you will learn to help remember the tense forms. Present Tense – change the present stem to –I -ō, or –u, depending on the person, then add the personal endings Imperfect Tense – bā plus the personal endings Future Tense –a, -e [a in 1st person singular, -e in all the others] plus the personal endings Perfect Tense – this verb tense has Special Perfect Endings as the combined tense indicator/personal endings – ī, istī, it, imus, istis, ērunt Pluperfect Tense – erā plus the personal endings Future Perfect Tense – eri [ero, eri, eru, depending on the person] plus the personal endings 8. The 6 tenses and their Engish helping verbs are listed here. Remember to put the verb into the blank for the full translation e.g. I am ruling These 3 tenses use the Present stem to build their forms. Present Tense = am ____ing is _____ing, are _____ing, do _____, does _____, _____(s) Imperfect Tense = was _____ing, were _____ing, used to ____, kept on _____ing, _______ed Future Tense = will _____, shall _____ These 3 Tenses use the Perfect stem to build their forms. Perfect Tense = have ____ed, has _____ed, did _____, _____ed Pluperfect Tense = had _____ed Future Perfect Tense = will have _____ed, shall have _____ed Remember that some English word will be a little different from these translation rules.. E.g. “shown”, not “showed”, “saw”, not “seed” 9. Verb forms in Latin work backward from English because they can have the subject pronoun person built into the ending on the verb. They also have the English helping verbs built into the Latin word. e.g. regit = “she rules,” “she does rule”, or “she is ruling.” [the “she” is built into the personal ending -t, the words “is” and “does” are built into the present tense form. But puella regit means “the girl rules,” “the girl does rule”, or “the girl is ruling.” [the word “girl” replaces the built-in “she”] 5A* THIRD CONJUGATION (iō) INDICATIVE MOOD (used to express a fact) ACTIVE VOICE (the subject is the doer of the action) Person PRESENT IMPERFECT FUTURE 1 I capiō capiēbam capiam 2 you capis capiēbās capiēs 3 s/he, it capit capiēbat capiet 1 we capimus capiēbāmus capiēmus 2 you capitis capiēbātis capiētis 3 they capiunt capiēbant capient am ... ing is ... ing are ... ing do/does ... ... (s) was ... ing were ... ing used to ... kept on ... ing ... ed will ... shall ... ERE = 2nd principal part/infinitive e.g. capiō capere cepī captum take PERFECT cepī cepistī cepit cepimus cepistis cepērunt PLUPERFECT ceperam ceperās ceperat ceperāmus ceperātis ceperant have ... ed has ... ed did ... ... ed had ... ed FUTURE PERFECT ceperō IMPERATIVE MOOD ceperis (used for commands) ceperit ceperimus singular cape ceperitis take! ceperint plural capite will have ... ed shall have ... ed INFINITIVE MOOD (to + the verb) It is the 2nd principal part of the verb. N.B. 1. Verbs whose 2nd principal part (the 2nd form in the dictionary listing) ends in –ere belong to the THIRD CONJUGATION. This page is called 3rd Declension –iō because the first principal part of these verbs is –iō and not plain –ō as you see with Third Declension Regular verbs on page 5A. 2. The 2nd principal part used alone is called the infinitive. E.g. capere is the 2nd principal part of the verb capiō. Capere means “to take” 3. Verbs have tense (indicating the time the action of the verb takes place); person (I, you, she, he, it, we, you, or they) as well as voice and mood which you will learn later.capere= to take 4. The personal endings added to the end of the verb to indicate which person is doing the action of the verb are: -ō = I [1st person singular] -mus = we [1st person plural] -s = you [2nd person singular] -tis = you [2nd person plural] -t = he or she or it [3rd person singular] -nt= they [3rd person plural 5. Verb tenses are built on stems, i.e. you add the endings for the tense onto a stem to form the verb tense in the person you need. 6. The PRESENT Stem (red) is formed by dropping the -re from the 2nd principal part/infinitive. lt is used to form the present, imperfect, and future tenses - and the imperative mood. 7. The PERFECT Stem (blue) is formed by dropping the -ī from the 3rd principal part. It is used to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses. Latin verbs have special tense indicators that come before the personal endings and after the stem to indicate the tense of the verb. Each tense has a chant you will learn to help remember the tense forms. Present Tense – change the present stem to –I -ō, or –iu, depending on the person, then add the personal endings Imperfect Tense – change present stem to –iē then add the tense indicator –bā plus the personal endings Future Tense –a, -e [a in 1st person singular, -e in all the others] plus the personal endings Perfect Tense – this verb tense has Special Perfect Endings as the combined tense indicator/personal endings – ī, istī, it, imus, istis, ērunt Pluperfect Tense – erā plus the personal endings Future Perfect Tense – eri [ero, eri, eru, depending on the person] plus the personal endings 8. The 6 tenses and their Engish helping verbs are listed here. Remember to put the verb into the blank for the full translation e.g. I am taking These 3 tenses use the Present stem to build their forms. Present Tense = am ____ing is _____ing, are _____ing, do _____, does _____, _____(s) Imperfect Tense = was _____ing, were _____ing, used to ____, kept on _____ing, _______ed Future Tense = will _____, shall _____ These 3 Tenses use the Perfect stem to build their forms. Perfect Tense = have ____ed, has _____ed, did _____, _____ed Pluperfect Tense = had _____ed Future Perfect Tense = will have _____ed, shall have _____ed Remember that some English word will be a little different from these translation rules.. E.g. “shown”, not “showed”, “saw”, not “see 9. Verb forms in Latin work backward from English because they can have the subject pronoun person built into the ending on the verb. They also have the English helping verbs built into the Latin word. e.g. capit = “she takes,” “she does take”, or “she is taking.” [the “she” is built into the personal ending -t, the words “is” and “does” are built into the present tense form. But puella capit means “the girl takes,” “the girl does take”, or “the girl is taking.” [the word “girl” replaces the built-in “she”] 6A* FOURTH CONJUGATION ĪRE = 2nd principal part/infinitive INDICATIVE MOOD (used to express a fact) ACTIVE VOICE (the subject is the doer of the action) Person PRESENT IMPERFECT FUTURE 1 I audiō audiēbam audiam 2 you audīs audiēbās audiēs 3 s/he, it audit audiēbat audiet 1 we audīmus audiēbāmus audiēmus 2 you audītis audiēbātis audiētis 3 they audiunt audiēbant audient am ... ing is ... ing are ... ing do/does ... ... (s) was ... ing were ... ing used to ... kept on ... ing ... ed will ... shall ... e.g. audiō audīre audivī audītum hear PERFECT audivī audivistī audivit audivimus audivistis audivērunt PLUPERFECT audiveram audiverās audiverat audiverāmus audiverātis audiverant FUTURE PERFECT audiverō audiveris IMPERATIVE MOOD audiverit (used for commands) audiverimus singular audī audiveritis hear! audiverint plural audīte have ... ed has ... ed did ... ... ed had ... ed will have ... ed shall have ... ed hear! INFINITIVE MOOD (to + the verb) It is the 2nd principal part of the verb. N.B. 1. Verbs whose 2nd principal part (the 2nd form in the dictionary listing) ends in –īre belong to the FOURTH CONJUGATION. 2. The 2nd principal part used alone is called the infinitive. E.g. audīre is the 2nd principal part of the verb audiō. audīre means “to hear” 3. Verbs have tense (indicating the time the action of the verb takes place) and person (I, you, she, he, it, we, you, or they) as well as voice and mood audīre= to hear which you will learn later. 4. The personal endings added to the end of the verb to indicate which person is doing the action of the verb are: -ō = I [1st person singular] -mus = we [1st person plural] -s = you [2nd person singular] -tis = you [2nd person plural] rd -t = he or she or it [3 person singular] -nt= they [3rd person plural 5. Verb tenses are built on stems, i.e. you add the endings for the tense onto a stem to form the verb tense in the person you need. 6. The PRESENT Stem (red) is formed by dropping the -re from the 2nd principal part/infinitive. lt is used to form the present, imperfect, and future tenses - and the imperative mood. 7. The PERFECT Stem (blue) is formed by dropping the -ī from the 3rd principal part. It is used to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses. Latin verbs have special tense indicators that come before the personal endings and after the stem to indicate the tense of the verb. Each tense has a chant you will learn to help remember the tense forms. Present Tense - present stem -ī [-io, -iu depending on the person] plus the personal endings Imperfect Tense change present stem to –iē then add the tense indicator –bā plus the personal endings. Future Tense –a, -e [a in 1st person singular, -e in all the others] plus the personal endings Perfect Tense – this verb tense has Special Perfect Endings as the combined tense indicator/personal endings – ī, istī, it, imus, istis, ērunt Pluperfect Tense – erā plus the personal endings Future Perfect Tense – eri [ero, eri, eru, depending on the person] plus the personal endings 8. The 6 tenses and their Engish helping verbs are listed here. Remember to put the verb into the blank for the full translation e.g. I am hearing These 3 tenses use the Present stem to build their forms. Present Tense = am ____ing is _____ing, are _____ing, do _____, does _____, _____(s) Imperfect Tense = was _____ing, were _____ing, used to ____, kept on _____ing, _______ed Future Tense = will _____, shall _____ These 3 Tenses use the Perfect stem to build their forms. Perfect Tense = have ____ed, has _____ed, did _____, _____ed Pluperfect Tense = had _____ed Future Perfect Tense = will have _____ed, shall have _____ed Remember that some English verbs are irregular and will be a little different from these translation rules.. E.g. “shown”, not “showed”, “saw”, not “seed” 9. Verb forms in Latin work backward from English because they can have the subject pronoun person built into the ending on the verb. They also have the English helping verbs built into the Latin word. e.g. audit = “she hears,” “she does hear”, or “she is hearing.” [the “she” is built into the personal ending -t, the words “is” and “does” are built into the present tense form. But puella audit means “the girl hears,” “the girl does hear”, or “the girl is hearing.” [the word “girl” replaces the built-in “she”] 7A* 7A*