Chapter 20_Grammar Flashcards
What tenses do the Latin participle appear in?
present, future, perfect
What is the fourth principal part that you have been memorizing for almost every verb?
Perfect Passive Participle
How do you form a Perfect Passive Participle?
Participial Stem from 4th principal part + -us, -a, um endings
How does the Perfect Passive Participle decline?
Just like the first and second declension adjectives
What is the perfect passive participle paradigm for āctus, -a, -um in the singular?
āctus ācta āctum āctī āctae āctī āctō āctae āctō āctum āctam āctum āctō āctā āctō ācte ācta āctum
What is the perfect passive participle paradigm for āctus, -a, -um in the plural?
āctī āctae ācta āctōrum āctārum āctōrum āctīs āctīs āctīs āctōs āctās ācta āctīs āctīs āctīs āctī āctae ācta
The perfect participle demonstrates action that has happened when?
before that of the main verb
How should you typically translate the perfect passive participle?
- ”—ed” or (example: Uxor amāta… “The loved wife…”)
2. “having been —ed” (example: Currus āctus… “The chariot, having been driven…”)
How will you often want to translate a participial phrase?
As a dependent clause
(Example: Liber scriptus prōferētur. 1. A book that has been written will be brought forth. 2. A written book will be brought forth. 3. A book having been written will be brought forth.)
What is the ablative absolute
- Frequently occurring
2. Noun/pronoun + participle (both in the ablative)
How do you translate the perfect passive participle in the ablative absolute?
- Translate as a time prior to the main verb
2. You can use “when,” “since,” “ and “although” to begin the clause
How do you translate the perfect passive participle in the ablative absolute, when the main verb is a past tense?
- “had been —ed”
How do you translate the perfect passive participle in the ablative absolute, when the main verb is a future tense?
- “has been —ed”
When the ablative absolute appears with a present active participle, what is the best way to translate it?
begin with either “with,” or “if”
Note: it is easy to get confused with the forms of the participle; memorize the following derivatives from the model verb “agere” to help remember them?
- agent (present active participle) a person “doing something”
- actuary (future active participle) a person who computes things “about to happen”
- act (perfect passive participle) something already “done”
- agenda (future passive participle) “things to be done”