yes you could use it like
We conquered them!
or
Italy was conquered!
The verb of conquest is conquer.Other verbs are conquers, conquering and conquered, depending on the tense that you need.Some example sentences with those are:"We will conquer our enemies""The British Empire successfully conquers the kingdom of tyranny"."We are conquering them"."They were conquered".
The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.The Romans considered their conquered territories provinces.
When the Romans conquered territories, they often allowed conquered people to __________.
SPAIN conquered most of Central America in the 1500s.
Licinius
Conquered is a verb (past tense of conquer) and an adjective (conquered fears).
The verb of conquest is conquer.Other verbs are conquers, conquering and conquered, depending on the tense that you need.Some example sentences with those are:"We will conquer our enemies""The British Empire successfully conquers the kingdom of tyranny"."We are conquering them"."They were conquered".
No, the word conquer is a verb (conquer, conquers, conquering, conquered). The noun form of the verb to conquer is conqueror, one who conquers. Another abstract noun is a conquest.
No, although its antonym "vanquished" is a past tense or past participle form of the base verb "vanquish." The is, however, no standard English verb "unvanquish", so that "unvanquished" is best described simply as an adjective.
The verb of invasion is invade.Other verbs are invades, invading and invaded.Some example sentences are:"We will invade Panem today"."Britain invades Panem"."Sir, the British are invading us"."Panem was invaded and conquered by the British".
I fish therefore i am translated into Latin is ego expiscárí itaque ego esse The one above looks like some garbage from an on-line translator. It means 'I to fish for and so I to be.' Piscor ergo sum = I fish therefore I am.
No, it is a verb. It means to defeat, overcome, or seize by force. Both the present and past participles are used as adjectives: conquering and conquered.
The adjectives for the noun conquest are based on the verb "to conquer." They are the participles conquering/conquered and the derivative adjective conquerable.
It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.It was conquered by the Ottoman Turks.
Vobis vincere is a phrase: to be conquered by you all.Vobis is both the dative and ablative form of the 2rd person plural form of the personal pronoun tu (you) and means both to/ for you all and by/with you all.Vincere, is the active and passive infinitive form of the verb, vinco and means both to conquer and to be conquered. so you can see how putting them together is not a full sentence.It would be better to to use the nominative plural form of the verb tu, vos which gives us vos vincere and translates: you all are to be conquered. Or you could say nos vincere vobis and you'd be saying, we are to be conquered by you all. Or you just could write Nos vicimus! which says: We conquer! which looks good as a sports motto.
Assyria conquered Israel, then Babylon conquered Assyria and Judah, then Persia conquered Babylon, then the Seuclid Empire conquered Judah, then the Judeans revolted, then Rome conquered Judah, then the Islamic Caliphate conquered the Byzantine Empire (the remains of the Roman Empire). The Ottoman Empire conquered Judah from the Cusaders who had conquered it from its Islamic rulers. Then the British Empire took it from the Ottomans.
Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.Claudius "conquered" Britain in 43 AD.