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Deponent saith not what words came from the crowd.
However, most of them have lost this meaning so historically speaking they are like deponent verbs.
I believe that our own era has been a very short one and a deponent one."
Some verbs, called deponent verbs, have a middle form but active meaning.
Special deponent verbs in Latin sometimes use the ablative of means idiomatically.
Compare deponent verbs, which are passive in form and active in meaning.
A deponent verb has no active forms.
The deponent sequīminī, on the other hand, means "(You) Follow!"
In deponent verbs.
The imperative present of the passive voice is rarely used, except in the case of deponent verbs, whose passive forms carry active meaning.
Latin has a few semi-deponent verbs, which behave normally in the imperfect system, but are deponent in the perfect.
Many deponent verbs in Latin are survivals of the Proto-Indo-European middle voice.
The synthetic verbs also have periphrastic forms, for use in perfects and in simple tenses in which they are deponent.
Some deponent verbs, such as sequī (to follow) use the corresponding forms of other verbs to express a genuine passive meaning.
In 1629 he was deponent for the testament of the composer Domenico Allegri, brother of Gregorio.
The infinitive suffix -i may derive from Latin deponent verbs, such as loqui (to speak).
Pseudo-argument affixes in Iwaidja and Ilgar: a case of deponent subject and object agreement.
In linguistics, a deponent verb is a verb that is active in meaning but takes its form from a different voice, most commonly the middle or passive.
Deponent verbs are verbs that are passive in form (that is, conjugated as though in the passive voice) but active in meaning.
It comes from the words "non" meaning not, and the deponent verb sequor, sequi, secutus sum, as in "sequence", meaning to follow.
The poem mixes medieval and classical Latin imitations and parts of it are written in a curious, difficult style featuring obscure verb forms such as deponent imperatives.
Wherefore this deponent unpinned all their clothes, and left not so much as one pin upon them, but sewed all the clothes they wore instead of pinning them.
Deponent verbs use active conjugations for tenses that do not exist in the passive: the gerund, the supine, the present and future participles and the future infinitive.
Eloquence derives from the Latin roots: ē (a shortened form of the preposition ex), meaning "out (of)," and loqui, a deponent verb meaning "to speak."