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Infinitives with Impersonal Verbal Phrase; Gender

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Title: Infinitives with Impersonal Verbal Phrase; Gender


1
Infinitives with Impersonal Verbal Phrase Gender
  • An impersonal verbal phrase is one where you can
    only use the word it as the subject. It must
    use it and can not use he or she.
  • Example
  • It is necessary to work hard.
  • Necesse est means It is necessary.
  • In this sentence the only logical subject is
    It. He or She make no sense in this
    context.

2
  • When an impersonal verb phrase is used, often it
    is an incomplete thought. It needs something
    else to finish it.
  • Here is where a complementary infinitive would
    work nicely.
  • Unlike the strict complementary infinitive
    though, this is called impersonal because of the
    use of It as the subject.
  • No person as the subject makes it an impersonal
    verb phrase.
  • Its really pretty easy.

3
Gender
  • The idea of gender is a bit more complicated than
    the impersonal verbal phrase.
  • It is complicated for native English speakers
    because we do not have gender with our language.
  • But all other modern languages do, so we must
    force ourselves to get used to it.

4
  • If I ask you to think of the word table, you get
    an image in your mind.
  • But does that image feel particularly masculine
    of feminine?
  • Probably not, but in other languages it has a
    gender assigned to it that must be memorized.
    Every noun has a gender assigned to it.
  • The word for table, mensa, happens to be
    feminine. I dont know why it is feminine, I
    just know that it is, and I must remember that at
    all times.

5
How do you know the gender?
  • The gender is part of the information provided in
    the vocabulary listing.
  • Puella f. girl
  • Servus m. slave
  • You must memorize the gender immediately upon
    learning a new word. It should become a part of
    the process for you.
  • You should never think of the word puella without
    automatically calling the other information to
    mind at the same time.

6
Why does it matter?
  • In our language we dont change our adjectives in
    any way.
  • But we have already seen that adjectives in Latin
    must be made plural to agree with the nouns they
    modify.
  • Similarly, we must adjust the gender of our
    adjective so that it matches the gender of our
    noun.

7
Adjectives are like chameleons.They change to
suit their surroundings.
  • We know the adjective laeta.
  • But it is really laetus, laeta.
  • All adjectives have both a masculine and a
    feminine form. The us is masculine, the a is
    feminine. From now on you must learn the
    adjectives in both forms.
  • Happy girl puella laeta
  • Happy boy puer laetus
  • Large pool magna piscina
  • Large branch magnus ramus

8
  • Remember that the rule for agreement is that It
    does not have to look the same.
  • Puer laetus is a great example. Both words are
    nominative and singular and masculine, even
    though they dont look identical.

The adjective must agree with the noun it
modifies in case, number, and gender.
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