Latin Verbs: Personal Endings, Active

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Latin Verbs: Personal Endings, Active
A Latin verb often has an ending that indicates something about its subject. The ending indicates which type of person goes
with the verb as its subject, so it is called a personal ending.
Here the word person is a grammatical term indicating whether the subject is equivalent to I / we; you (singular) /
you (plural); or he, she, it / they.
If the subject is the speaker or speakers, then the statement is made in the first person: I see, we speak. The typical Latin
active endings for the first person are -m or -ô for the singular and -mus for the plural.
côgitô = I think
côgitâbam = I used to think
habêmus = We have
amâmus = We love
If the subject is a person or persons spoken to, then the statement is made in the second person: you see, you (pl.) speak. The
typical Latin active endings for the second person are -s for the singular and -tis for the plural.
côgitâs = you think
amâs = you love
habêtis = you (plural) have
amâtis = you (plural) love
If the subject is someone else, a "third party," then the statement is made in the third person: he / she / it sees, they speak.
The typical Latin active endings for the third person are -t for the singular and -nt for the plural.
côgitat = he / she / it thinks
amat = he / she / it loves
habent = they have
amant = they love
Therefore, if a verb
The subject
ends in:
must be:
-m / -ô
I
-s
you
-t
he / she / it
-mus
we
you (pl.)
-tis
-nt
they
But notice: The subject can be merely embedded in the form of the verb (Côgitô = "I think.") or it can be expressed, that is,
explicit, in a separate word in the sentence (Tempus fugit. = Time escapes.). If the subject is explicit and the verb is in the
third person, the pronoun is usually omitted and the expressed subject is used with the verb.
currunt
They are running. [Embedded subject, in the -nt ending]
puerî currunt
The children are running. [Explicit subject, children]
mê monet.
He / she / it is reminding me. [Embedded subject, in the -t ending]
mê monet Julia.
Julia is reminding me. [Explicit subject, Julia]
In the two other persons, pronouns and the expressed subject are both used in the translation:
videô
I see.
senex videô
I, an old man, see. As an old man, I see.
timêtis
You (plural) fear.
Rômânî timêtis.
You Romans fear.
Below is a typical way of showing the active personal verb-endings in a table, with the first column containing the singular
forms and the second one the plural ones. The rows designate the three different persons.
Singular Number
Plural Number
1st person
-m/-ô
-mus
2d person
-s
-tis
3d person
-t
-nt
Latin Verbs, Personal Endings, Active

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