Page:Latin for beginners (1911).djvu/95

PASSIVE INDICATIVE OF CAPIO -73 dicetur. II.
 * 1) Mittiminī, mittitis, mittēris, mitteris, agēbāminī.
 * 2) Dīcitur, dīcit, mūniuntur, reperient, audientur.
 * 1) I was being driven, I was driving, we were leading, we were being led, he says, it is said.
 * 2) I shall send, I shall be sent, you will find, you will be found, they lead, they are led.
 * 3) I am found, we are led, they are driven, you were being led {sing, and plur.).
 * 4) We shall drive, we shall be driven, he leads, he is being led, they will come, they will be fortified.
 * 5) They were ruling, they were being ruled, you will send, you will be sent, you are sent, (sing, and plur.).
 * 6) He was being led, he will come, you are said (sing, and plur.).

171. First learn the special vocabulary, p. 288.

Tum ōrāculum ita respondet: “Mala est fortūna tua. Neptūnus, magnus aquārum deus, terrae Aethiopiae inimīcus, eās poenās mittit. Sed parā īrātō deō sacrum idōneum et mōnstrum saevum ex patriā tuā agētur. Andromeda fīlia tua est mōnstrō grāta. Dā eam mōnstrō. Servā cāram patriam et vītam populī tuī.” Andromeda autem erat puella pulchra. Eam amābat Cēpheus maximē.

LESSON XXIX PRESENT, IMPERFECT, AND FUTURE INDICATIVE PASSIVE OF -IŌ VERBS • PRESENT PASSIVE INFINITIVE AND IMPERATIVE 172. Review the active voice of capiō, present, imperfect, and future, and learn the passive of the same tenses (§ 492),
 * a. The present forms capior and capiuntur are like audior, audiuntur, and the rest of the tense is like regor.
 * b. In like manner inflect the passive of iaciō and rapiō.

173. The Infinitive. The infinitive mood gives the general meaning of the verb without person or number ; as, amāre, to love. Infinitive means unlimited. The forms of the other moods, being limited by person and number, arc called the finite, or limited, verb forms.