In Latin, the present infinitive is the verb form translated "To ----". So amare is "to love"
esse is "to be". Cogitare is "to think".
"A gathering" in Latin is convenio, literally "a coming together"present active conveniō,present infinitive convenire,perfect active conveni,supine conventum.
If the word somnio is 3rd, it should have an -ere ending. Infinitives with -are are going to be your 1st conj. So if anything the present infinitive for somnio would be somnere.
The infinitive "to be," in latin is esse.
The present infinitive of "stand" is "to stand."
The present infinitive of "speak" is "to speak."
The present infinitive for "burn" is "to burn."
The present infinitive for "speak" is "to speak."
The present infinitive of "sweep" is "to sweep."
One Latin equivalent of 'losing' is the verbal noun perdere. The Latin word is the infinitive form of the verb used as a noun. Another Latin equivalent is perdens, which is the present participle form of the verb.
To say is the English equivalent of the Latin root syllable 'dic-'. That syllable is the source for the Latin infinitive 'dicere', which means 'to say'. Both the Latin root and the Latin infinitive, by way of its older first person present indicative form 'deico', are related to the original Greek 'deiknymi'.
The present infinitive of burn is "to burn" (burned; burnt).
"To see say" conversationally and "to say (what is) true" legally are English equivalents of the French phrase voir dire.Specifically, the present infinitive voir means "to see." The present infinitive diremeans "to say, to tell." In the first instance mentioned above, the word voir comes from the Latin present infinitive vidēre for "to see" whereas in the second, the derivation is by way of the Old French form of the Latin neuter adjective verum for "(that which is) true."