precativus

Latin

Etymology

From precor.

Adjective

precātīvus (feminine precātīva, neuter precātīvum); first/second declension

  1. (Late Latin) prayed for, requested by means of a prayer or request
  2. (New Latin, grammar, masculine substantive) precative
    • 1829, Franciscus Bopp, Grammatica critica linguae sanscritae, Berlin, p.141, §.295:
      Quinque sunt modi: Indicativus, Potentialis, Imperativus, Precativus et Conditionalis.

Declension

First/second declension.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative precātīvus precātīva precātīvum precātīvī precātīvae precātīva
Genitive precātīvī precātīvae precātīvī precātīvōrum precātīvārum precātīvōrum
Dative precātīvō precātīvae precātīvō precātīvīs precātīvīs precātīvīs
Accusative precātīvum precātīvam precātīvum precātīvōs precātīvās precātīva
Ablative precātīvō precātīvā precātīvō precātīvīs precātīvīs precātīvīs
Vocative precātīve precātīva precātīvum precātīvī precātīvae precātīva

Descendants

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.