In Latin, infinitives take this ending
-re
Nothing
Nihil
Cogitātis
You all think
In Latin, this punctuation mark is used to elongate vowels
Macron
Finite verbs are "limited" by all of the following: person, number, tense, ________, and mood.
Voice
Quid
What
Terrēs
You frighten, terrify
Verbs whose stems end in -ā belong to which conjugation?
First Conjugation
Verbs of the Second Conjugation are identified by stems that end in...
-ē
To give, offer
Dō, Dare
Vidēte!
Watch! (Said to several)
Moneō, Monēre
To remind, advise, warn
DAILY DOUBLE: This ending is used for singular verbs in the imperative mood
There is no ending! Just use the verb's stem!
Valeō, Valēre
To be strong
I praise
Laudō
The language from which Germanic is directly derived
Indo-European
The First Person plural ending for verbs in the present tense, active voice, and indicative mood:
-mus
Salvēte!
Hello! (Said to several)
Amant
They love
TRANSLATION TIME: Translate the following English sentence into Latin...
"If I often think, then I do not make a mistake."
Sī cogitō saepe nōn errō.