When you look up a verb in a Latin dictionary, it will almost always give three or four words. These are the principal parts. For example, the principal parts of 'to love/like' are amo, amare, amavi, amatus.
The first part is the singular, 1st person, present, active, indicative form of the verb. In the case of 'to like', this is amo, which means 'I like'.
The second part is the present, active infintive. amare = 'to like'.
The third part is the 1st person, singular, perfect, active, indicative form. amavi = 'I liked/I have liked'.
The final part, which not all verbs have, is the masculine singular perfect passive participle. amatus = 'having been liked'. Usually, this can be translated into more natural-sounding English when in a sentence. Intransitive verbs (ones without a direct object, such as 'to walk' or 'to run', have no fourth part. (Some dictionaries give a different form, the supine, as the fourth principal part. This is a distinction without much of a difference, since the supine is identical to the participle except that it ends in -um instead of -us.)
In deponent verbs (verbs which are always formed in the passive voice, but which have an active meaning, such as conor, conari, conatus sum, 'to try', only ever have three parts, which are the same as the first three parts of a normal verb. by removing sum from the third part, we can find the perfect active participle (only deponent verbs have perfect active participles instead of perfect passive participles); in this case, conatus, 'having tried'.
Latin. It is from fractum, the fourth principal part (past participle/supine) of the verb frangere, "to break into pieces."
aperire it the third principal part of the verb aperio. It means to open.
Translate is a verb.
there is no verb
The four principal parts of the Latin verb "nego" are: nego, negare, negavi, negatus.
Factory is a derivative of the fourth principal part of the verb facio, facere, feci, factum= to make or to do
The principal part of the verb "dig" in sentence 4 would be "dug," which is the past tense form of the verb.
The second principal part of a verb in the third conjugation will end in -ēre.
they sprinkled, they scattered - from the verb "spargo, spargere"
The second principal part of verbs in Latin is the infinitive, usually translated into English as "to ___" (for example, the second principal part of amo, amare, amavi, amatus is amare, to love). The infinitive has many uses in Latin grammar, including indirect statements (puella canem ladrare videt = the girl sees that the dog barks) or with complementary verbs (canere possum = I am able to sing). Latin students often also use the infinitive and add/drop endings to conjugate other verb forms.
verb Here shopping is an auxuliary verb to the principal verb went.
Verb