fatisco

Latin

Etymology

From some unattested *fatis (weariness). Connected with famēs, affatim, fatīgō, fessus.

Pronunciation

Verb

fatīscō (present infinitive fatīscere); third conjugation, no passive, no perfect or supine stem

  1. to gape, yawn, crack, split open
    • 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Virgil, Aeneid 1.122–123:
      [...] laxīs laterum compāgibus, omnēs
      accipiunt inimīcum imbrem, rīmīsque fatīscunt.
      With the seams of their sides having been loosened, all [the ships] let in lethal stormwater, and with cracks split open.
      (The storm at sea destroys the Trojan fleet.)
  2. to droop (grow weak)

Conjugation

   Conjugation of fatīscō (third conjugation, no supine stem, no perfect stem, active only)
indicative singular plural
first second third first second third
active present fatīscō fatīscis fatīscit fatīscimus fatīscitis fatīscunt
imperfect fatīscēbam fatīscēbās fatīscēbat fatīscēbāmus fatīscēbātis fatīscēbant
future fatīscam fatīscēs fatīscet fatīscēmus fatīscētis fatīscent
subjunctive singular plural
first second third first second third
active present fatīscam fatīscās fatīscat fatīscāmus fatīscātis fatīscant
imperfect fatīscerem fatīscerēs fatīsceret fatīscerēmus fatīscerētis fatīscerent
imperative singular plural
first second third first second third
active present fatīsce fatīscite
future fatīscitō fatīscitō fatīscitōte fatīscuntō
non-finite forms active passive
present perfect future present perfect future
infinitives fatīscere
participles fatīscēns
verbal nouns gerund supine
genitive dative accusative ablative accusative ablative
fatīscendī fatīscendō fatīscendum fatīscendō

References

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