Read The Greek & Latin Roots of English Online
Authors: Tamara M. Green
Tags: #Language Arts & Disciplines, #Linguistics, #General, #Vocabulary, #Etymology
In Latin,
canis
= dog
vir
= man
mordeo
= I bite
If we want to say “The
dog bites the man
, ” we can write:
Can
i
s vir
um
mord
et
, or
Can
is
mord
et
vir
um
, or
Mord
et
vir
um
can
is
, or
Vir
um
can
is
mord
et
.
No matter how we arrange the words, the meaning of the sentence is always the same, because the ending (inflection) of each word determines its function in the sentence. If we want to change the meaning of the sentence, we have to change the endings of the words.
If we want to say, “
The man bites the dog
,” we can write:
Can
em
vi
r
mord
et
, or
Can
em
mordet vi
r
, or
Mord
et
vi
r
can
em
, etc.
What has changed in these different Latin sentences? Can you explain why these changes have occurred?
Inflection
All Indo-European languages (including English) were originally highly inflected, although English has lost most of the distinctive endings. We can see the persistence of inflection in English, however, in such changes in form as
I, my, me; he, his, him; goose, geese; sing, sang, sung; teach, teaches, taught
. What grammatical change does each of these different forms indicate?
LATIN NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES
The changes in the endings of nouns and adjectives are determined by
declension
. Each change of form that occurs is called a
case
. There are six cases in Latin, each one expressing a possible function of a noun, pronoun, or adjective in a sentence, as in the example of
femina
(woman):
femina = woman
Case | Sing. Form | Function | Example | Plural Form |
Nominative | femin a | subject | The woman carries a book. 1 | femin ae |
Genitive | femin ae | possessive | I carry the woman's book. | femin arum |
Dative | femin ae | ind. object | I give a book to the woman. | femin is |
Accusative | femin am | direct object | I see the woman. | femin as |
Ablative | femin ā | means/agent | It was done by the woman. | femin is |
Vocative | femin a | direct address | Woman, look at this! | femin ae |
There are five declensions (that is, five different sets of endings) in Latin; every noun and adjective belongs to one of these five declensions. Each declension is identified by the ending found in the genitive (possessive) case.
femina, femin
ae
= woman, of the woman
porta, port
ae
= door, of the door
nauta, naut
ae
= sailor, of the sailor
vir, vir
i
= man, of the man
amicus, amic
i
= friend, of the friend
bellum, bell
i
= war, of the war
rex, reg
is
= king
mens, ment
is
= mind
urbs, urb
is
= city
manus, man
ūs
= hand, of the hand
cornu, corn
ūs
= horn, of the horn
fides, fid
ei
= faith, of the faith
dies, di
ei
= day, of the day
Marcus Aurelius, last of the “good” Roman emperors (161–180 CE). While on campaign, he composed a work of philosophy,
The Meditations
, that was grounded in Stoic teachings. (Vatican Museum)
There are very few nouns and no adjectives that belong to the fourth and fifth declensions.
FINDING THE STEM OF A LATIN NOUN OR ADJECTIVE
The reason why it is so important to understand how declensions work is that almost all English derivatives from Latin nouns and adjectives are formed from the stem of the word. The stem of a noun or adjective is the genitive case minus the case ending.
Genitive Case | Stem |
feminae | femin- |
nautae | naut- |
portae | port- |
viri | vir- |
belli | bell- |
regis | reg- |
mentis | ment- |
urbis | urb- |
manus, manūs | man- |
fidei | fid- |
LATIN VERBS
Just as nouns and adjectives are inflected, so are verbs. The inflection of verbs is called
conjugation
. The changes in verb endings indicate person (first, second, or third person), tense (time of action), voice (active or passive
2
), and mood (indicative, subjunctive, or imperative
3
).
Almost every Latin verb has four stems (called principal parts), each of which has a different function, and from which are formed all the possible tenses, and voices. For example,
amo-amare-amavi-amatum
= love
amo = I love (first person singular, present tense, active voice)
amamus = we love (first person plural, present tense, active voice)
amavi = I have loved (first person singular, perfect tense, active voice)
amabitur = She (or he or it) will be loved (third person singular, future tense, passive voice)
amata eras = you (fem.) had been loved (second person singular, pluperfect tense, passive voice)
amatē = love! (imperative)
amare = to love (infinitive)
CONJUGATIONS
There are four conjugations, each of which is distinguished by the vowel that appears in the infinitive form:
amo-am
a
re-amavi-amatum = love
porto-port
a
re-portavi-portatum = carry
moneo-monēre-monui-monitum = warn
teneo-tenēre-tenui-tentum = hold
duco-duc
e
re-duxi-ductum = lead
facio-fac
e
re-feci-factum = make
audio-aud
i
re-audivi-auditum = hear
venio-ven
i
re-veni-ventum = come
FINDING THE STEM OF A LATIN VERB
Almost all English derivatives from Latin verbs are formed either from the present infinitive stem (which is the infinitive minus the
-re
ending) or from the perfect passive stem (the fourth principal part minus the
-um
ending.
4
) Very often, when a suffix is added to the present stem of a verb (see next chapter), the distinguishing vowel of the conjugation is also dropped before the suffix is added.
Present Infinitive | Present Stem | Perfect Passive 5 | Perfect Stem |
portare (to carry) | porta- | portatum | portat- |
monēre (to warn) | monē- | monitum | monit- |
tenēre (to hold) | tenē- | tentum | tent- |
ducere (to lead) | duce- | ductum | duct- |
agere (to do) | age- | actum | act- |
facere (to make) | face- | factum | fact- |
venire (to come) | veni- | ventum | vent- |
audire (to hear) | audi- | auditum | audit- |
Deponent Verbs
There is a class of Latin verbs called
deponent
—verbs that are conjugated with the passive endings only, but that have active meanings. The conjugation to which each deponent verb belongs is identified in the infinitive form already noted. The mark of the passive infinitive is a final
-i
.
arbitror-arbitr
a
ri-arbitratum = think
hortor-hort
a
ri-hortatum = urge
fateor-fatēri-fassum = speak
mereor-mer
ē
ri-meritum = deserve
sequor-sequ
i
-secutum = follow
revertor-revert
i
-reversum = return
experior-experir
i
-expertum = try
Examples
Present Infinitive | Present Stem | Perfect Participle | Perfect Stem |
arbitrari (to think) | arbitra- | arbitratum | arbitrat- |
hortari (to urge) | horta- | hortatum | hortat- |
fatēri (to speak) | fatē- | fassum | fass- |
merēri (to deserve) | merē- | meritum | merit- |
sequi (to follow) | seque- 6 | secutum | secut- |
reverti (to return) | reverte- | reversum | revers- |
experiri (to try, attempt) | experi- | expertum | expert- |