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Stage 22. Perfect Active Participles. Perfect Active Participles. Some verbs in Latin cannot have PPP (perfect passive participles). In stead they have Perfect Active Participles. Deponent Verbs. Verbs that have PAPs are deponent verbs because they “Put aside” the normal forms.
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Stage 22 Perfect Active Participles
Perfect Active Participles • Some verbs in Latin cannot have PPP (perfect passive participles). In stead they have Perfect Active Participles.
Deponent Verbs • Verbs that have PAPs are deponent verbs because they “Put aside” the normal forms.
Memorize the List • To learn PAPs, you simply learn the list and learn the translation formula.
Translation formula is • Having ________ed. • Having is active (no been) • “____ed” shows it happened in the past (perfect)
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)
Practice • Modestus, multa verbalocutus, exit. • Modestus, having spoken many words, left.
Ancilla, aquamadepta, ad villam redit. • The slave girl, having obtained the water, returned to the house.
Senex, ad deamprecatus, laetus erat. • The old man, having prayed to the goddess was happy.
Modestus, having caught sight of the girl, walked to the forum. • Modestus, puellamconspicatus, ad forum ambulavit/ambulabat.
Flavia, having prayed in the atrium, was happy. • Flavia, in atrioprecata, laeta erat.
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