Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

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Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24 Future Tense of 3 rd , 3 rd –io, and 4 th conjugation verbs

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Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24. Future Tense of 3 rd , 3 rd – io , and 4 th conjugation verbs. Remember Future Tense?. A long time ago, in happy Latin Land, we learned some FUTURE TENSE endings. They were super cool-looking: -BO(I will…)-BIMUS (we will…) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Page 1: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Lessons XXII and XXIV

Lessons 22 and 24

Future Tense of 3rd, 3rd –io, and 4th conjugation

verbs

Page 2: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Remember Future Tense?

• A long time ago, in happy Latin Land, we learned some FUTURE TENSE endings. • They were super cool-looking:

• -BO (I will…) -BIMUS (we will…)• -BIS (you will…) -BITIS (you will…)• -BIT (h/s/it will) -BUNT (they will…)

• Problem: THEY ARE ONLY USED FOR 1st and 2nd CONJUGATION VERBS.• THAT’S THE –O, -ARE and –EO, -ERE VERBS.

Page 3: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

What about 3rd, 3rd –io, and 4th conjugation verbs???

Sadly, 3rd, 3rd –io, and 4th conjugation verbs do NOT use those super cool-looking endings (-bo, -bis, -bit, etc.).

So we’ll move on to the new future endings…

What?! You’ve forgotten what 3rd, 3rd –io, and 4th verbs look like over the 3-day weekend?!?! Well, let’s review…

Page 4: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Reviewing Verb Conjugations

3rd conjugation verbs have –o, -ere as their dictionary endings like pono, ponere.

3rd –io verbs have –io, -ere as their dictionary endings like capio, capere.

4th conjugation verbs have –io, -ire as their dictionary endings like audio, audire.

Page 5: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Present Tense (Review!):

pono ponimusponis ponitisponit ponunt

capio capimuscapis capitiscapit capiunt

audio audimusaudis auditisaudit audiunt

Remember that the “e” changes to “i” or “u”

Remember that this has “i” in its stem

Page 6: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Making FUTURE Tense

FUTURE TENSE for these verbs (3rd, 3rd –io, and 4th) looks very similar to PRESENT TENSE.

The only difference is the vowels you use before the personal endings.

Do NOT use the bo, bis, bit endings like we did earlier in the year.

Page 7: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Future Tense (“will….”)(Please copy the entire chart)

ponam ponemuspones ponetisponet ponent

capiam capiemuscapies capietiscapiet capient

audiam audiemusaudies audietisaudiet audient

3rd –io has an ‘i’ in

every form!

4th already has ‘i’ in its

stem!

Page 8: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

·Present Tense

·pono ponimus·ponis ponitis·ponit ponunt

·Future Tense

·ponam ponemus·pones ponetis·ponet ponent

Page 9: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

So…what does it mean???

• Cibum in carrum ponimus.• We place the food into the cart.

• Cibum in carrum ponemus.• We will place the food into the cart.

• You know ponemus is future because you know that pono, ponere is 3rd conjugation and 3rd conjugation verbs use “E” in their future tense endings.

Page 10: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Every “E” Is Not Future Tense

• 2nd conjugation verbs have “e” that occurs naturally in their PRESENT tense.

• 2nd conjugation verbs: -eo, -ere

• doceo, docere: teach

• Present Tense Future Tense• doceo docemus docebo docebimus• doces docetis docebis docebitis• docet docent docebit docebunt

Page 11: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Things To Take Away With You!• If a verb ends in bo, bis, bit, bimus, bitis,

bunt, it’s DEFINITELY future tense.• If a verb ends in –am it’s DEFINITELY future

tense (1st person, “I will…”)• If a verb ends in –es, -et, -emus, -etis, -ent it’s

either PRESENT or FUTURE. Check its conjugation to see:• 1st/2nd conjugation: PRESENT• 3rd/4th conjugation: FUTURE• If a verb ending has a combination of –ie-, it’s

always future tense.

Page 12: Lessons XXII and XXIV Lessons 22 and 24

Practice! You may work with a partner.

Turn in to the basket when done.

• Puellae equos agunt.• Puellae equos agent.• Caesar oppidum capit.• Caesar oppidum capiet.• Captivi ab oppido in silvam fugiunt.• Litteras ad Marcum, amicum meum, mittam.• Servus ab casa fugiet.• Viri puellas defendent.• I will lead the horses.• We will send a messenger to town.