- Faber. Archives, The National. "The
National Archives -
Lesson 11 -
Gerunds and
gerundives". Latin.
Retrieved 2022-04-18. Palmer, L.R. , 1954, The
Latin Language...
-
adjectival gerundives; the
gerund has no
plural form. For
details of the
formation and
usage of the
Latin gerundive, see
Latin conjugation §
Gerundive and Latin...
- clause. Non-finite verb
forms in some
other languages include converbs,
gerundives and supines. The
categories of mood, tense, and or
voice may be absent...
- that are
alternatively regarded as
converbs (see
Sirenik below),
gerunds,
gerundives, transgressives, and
nominalised verbs in
complement clauses. As...
- word
operandi is a
gerund in the
genitive case, "of operating";
gerunds can
never be
pluralised in Latin, as
opposed to
gerundives. When a noun with an...
- gerunds,
gerundives, supines, and
nominal forms of infinitives. In
English however,
verbal noun has most
frequently been
treated as a
synonym for
gerund. Aside...
- non-finite
forms of
verbs are participles, infinitives, supines,
gerunds and
gerundives. The
verbs used are: 1st conjugation: laudō, laudāre, laudāvī, laudātum...
-
advisory (functioning like a large-scale
opinion poll). 'Referendum' is the
gerundive form of the
Latin verb referre,
literally "to
carry back" (from the verb...
- of
English verbs. This verb form is used as a
present participle, as a
gerund, and
sometimes as an
independent noun or adjective. The
suffix is also found...
- Like
other non-finite verb
forms (like participles, converbs,
gerunds and
gerundives),
infinitives do not
generally have an
expressed subject; thus an...