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Perfect Active Participles
Stage 22 Perfect Active Participles
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Perfect Active Participles
Some verbs in Latin cannot have PPP (perfect passive participles). In stead they have Perfect Active Participles.
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Deponent Verbs Verbs that have PAPs are deponent verbs because they “Put aside” the normal forms.
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Memorize the List To learn PAPs, you simply learn the list and learn the translation formula.
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Translation formula is
Having ________ed. Having is active (no been) “____ed” shows it happened in the past (perfect)
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CLAP-G Conspicatus-a-um (having caught sight of)
Locutus-a-um (having spoken) Adeptus-a-um (having received) Precatus-a-um(having prayed) --gressus-a-um compounds (having stepped)
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Modestus, multa verba locutus, exit.
Practice Modestus, multa verba locutus, exit. Modestus, having spoken many words, left.
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Ancilla, aquam adepta, ad villam redit.
The slave girl, having obtained the water, returned to the house.
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Senex, ad deam precatus, laetus erat.
The old man, having prayed to the goddess was happy.
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Modestus, having caught sight of the girl, walked to the forum.
Modestus, puellam conspicatus, ad forum ambulavit/ambulabat.
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Flavia, having prayed in the atrium, was happy.
Flavia, in atrio precata, laeta erat.
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Make a Small Chart Write PERFECT ACTIVE PARTICIPLES at the top.
Write C on the left side of your paper. L A P G Write out the participle nominative forms Illustrate the meaning
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