The passive infinitives are
The passive imperatives are
i want to be read
To be called is one English equivalent of 'vocari'. To be summoned is another equivalent. The Latin verb is the passive infinitive form of the active infinitive 'vocare'.
passivo pugnax
The present passive in Italian tends to be formed in one of two ways. One is by the use of reflexive verbs. As an example, the infinitive 'chiamarsi' means 'to be called, to call oneself'. So 'mi chiamo' means 'I am called' or 'I call myself'.Another way is by the combination of the infinitive with the past participle of the verb. For example, 'io sono veduta' means 'I am seen'. In the word by word translation, the subject pronoun 'io' means 'I'. The verb 'sono' means '[I] am'. The past participle of the infinitive 'vedere' ['to see'] is 'veduto', which means 'seen' and which is 'veduta' in the feminine form.
Aude scire quod non potest fieri is the Latin equivalent of 'Dare to know the impossible'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'aude' is the imperative form of the infinitive 'audere', and means 'dare'. The infinitive 'scire' means 'to know'. The relative 'quod' is a neuter gender pronoun in the nominative singular as the subject of its own clause, and means 'who, which, that'. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The verb 'potest' is the third person singular form of the present indicative of the infinitive 'posse', and means '[it] can'. The verb 'fieri' is the passive of the infinitive 'facere', and means 'to be done, to be made'.
A terminological note: nouns, adjectives and pronouns have declensions; verbs have conjugations.If you have the infinitive (second principal part) and length markings on your vowels, the task is easy:1st conjugation: infinitive ends in -āre(passive/deponent -ārī)2nd conjugation: infinitive ends in -ēre(passive/deponent -ērī)3rd conjugation: infinitive ends in -ere(passive/deponent -ī)4th conjugation: infinitive ends in -īre(passive/deponent -īrī)If you have the infinitive but no length markings, you can tell the 2nd and 3rd conjugations apart by looking at the first-person singular indicative (the first principal part). If this ends in -eo, it's a 2nd-declension verb; if it ends in -io, (e.g., capio) or just -o (e.g., cano) it's 3rd.If you don't have the infinitive, knowing one or more forms from the present indicative can help:1st conjugation: first person singular ends in -ō, third singular in -at2nd conjugation: first person singular ends in -eō, third singular in -et3rd conjugation: first person singular ends in -ō or -iō, third singular in -it4th conjugation: first person singular ends in -iō, third singular in -itIn the absence of the infinitive, -iō verbs of the 3rd conjugation can be hard to tell from 4th-conjugation verbs. Having vowel markings can help; for example, 4th-declension venīmus"we come" (long ī, accent on the second syllable) versus 3rd-declension capimus "we take" (short i, accent on the first syllable). The imperatives also differ: 4th-declension venī "come!" versus 3rd-declension cape "take!"
To remove is a verb and be removed (after the modal auxiliary can) is the passive infinitive form of the verb.
For a man who has died it would be "peritus sed numquam obliteratus" or "peritus sed semper inobliteratus" swap -us for -a and it applies to a woman In Latin, you can't have a passive of the normal word for "to forget" in the way you want, so that's the best I could do.
The present perfect of pray is have prayed / has prayed.
The word be is a verb. It is an irregular verb.
"Informed" in the sense of "knowledgeable": sciens."Informed" in the sense of "having been told of something": certior factus.The passive infinitive "to be informed" as in "I want to be informed if something happens": certior fieri.
Passive