Gerundive: Difference between revisions
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Examples: | Examples: | ||
*[[quod erat demonstrandum]] — ''because that is the very thing one seeks to prove | *[[quod erat demonstrandum]] — ''because that is the very thing one seeks to prove''; | ||
*[[mutatis mutandis]] — ''changed in ways that must be changed''. | *[[mutatis mutandis]] — ''changed in ways that must be changed''. | ||
Revision as of 15:36, 21 October 2016
A form of a Latin verb, having the (declinable) ending -ndus which functions as an adjective meaning “that should or must be done”.
Examples:
- quod erat demonstrandum — because that is the very thing one seeks to prove;
- mutatis mutandis — changed in ways that must be changed.
See also gerund, which is capable of social snobbery.