Gerundive: Difference between revisions

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''There is no [[gerundive]] in English; the closest you get is a [[passive]] [[infinitive]] like “books to be read”, combining a [[transitive verb]] and its object with a sense of obligation. But wouldn’t you just use the [[active]] infinitive and avoid that ugly passive: "books to read".''
''There is no [[gerundive]] in English; the closest you get is a [[passive]] [[infinitive]] like “books to be read”, combining a [[transitive verb]] and its object with a sense of obligation. But wouldn’t you just use the [[active]] infinitive and avoid that ugly passive: "books to read".''


==={{t|Latin}} examples ===
===[[Latin]] 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 13:29, 14 August 2024

Towards more picturesque speech

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A gerundive is a form of a Latin verb, having the (declinable) ending -ndus which functions as an adjective meaning “that should or must be done”.

There is no gerundive in English; the closest you get is a passive infinitive like “books to be read”, combining a transitive verb and its object with a sense of obligation. But wouldn’t you just use the active infinitive and avoid that ugly passive: "books to read".

Latin examples

See also gerund, which is capable of social snobbery.