< Latin IV

Latin IV/Perfect Subjunctive passive forms

Salvēte omnēs! Welcome back to Latin for Wikiversity. Today we'll learn how to form and use the passive perfect subjunctive. Like other passive forms in Latin, this uses compound forms with the verb "sum".

New Grammar

The passive perfect subjunctive uses the perfect passive participle (the fourth principal part) plus the present subjunctive of sum. The participle must agree with the subject in gender, number, and case. Here's an example with amātus (loved):

PersonMasculineFeminineNeuter
1st sgamātus simamāta simamātum sim
2nd sgamātus sīsamāta sīsamātum sīs
3rd sgamātus sitamāta sitamātum sit
1st plamātī sīmusamātae sīmusamāta sīmus
2nd plamātī sītisamātae sītisamāta sītis
3rd plamātī sintamātae sintamāta sint

Verbs in This Lesson

Latin English Notes
amōloveamātus sim = may I have been loved
doceōteachdoctus sim = may I have been taught
mittōsendmissus sim = may I have been sent

New Words

Latin English Audio (Classical) Notes
forteby chanceUsed with subjunctive
nesciō anperhapsIntroduces uncertain statement

New Sentences

Latin English Notes
Forte amātus sim.Perhaps I have been loved.Masculine singular
Nesciō an amāta sīs.Perhaps you have been loved.Feminine singular
Fortasse ā magistrō doctus sit.Perhaps he has been taught by the teacher.With agent
Timeō nē epistula missa sit.I fear that the letter has been sent.Neuter subject
Forte ā parentibus amātī sīmus.Perhaps we have been loved by our parents.Masculine plural
Nesciō an doctae sītis.I don't know whether you (pl.) have been taught.Feminine plural
Fortasse librī missī sint.Perhaps the books have been sent.Masculine plural object
Forte verba audīta sint.Perhaps the words have been heard.Neuter plural

Practice

Practice and learn the words and phrases in this lesson
Step oneFirst learn the words using this lesson:
Step twoNext try learning and writing the sentences using this:
Note that the Memrise stage covers the content for all lessons in each stage.
If you are skipping previous stages you may need to manually "ignore" the words in previous levels (use the 'select all' function)

In our next lesson, we'll begin learning about how to use all these subjunctive forms in more complex sentences. Until then, valēte!

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