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Gerundive

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In linguistics, a gerundive is a verbal adjective used to indicate that a noun needs or deserves to be the object of an action. For example, if feed-ando were a gerundive form of the verb to feed, then the sentence "The cat is feed-ando" would mean roughly, "The cat needs to be fed." Not all languages have gerundives; Latin and Esperanto are two that do. In English, a passive infinitive (e.g., to be fed) can sometimes be used with the sense of a gerundive, e.g. "The cat is to be fed."

The term gerundive is also used — perhaps due to confusion — to denote the French gérondif and the Spanish gerundio, which are verbal adverbs used to indicate that one action caused or happened at the same time as another. For example, the French adage "C'est en forgeant qu'on devient forgeron" translates to English as "It is by blacksmithing that one becomes a blacksmith."

In Esperanto

Esperanto has two separate gerundive forms, one (-enda) meaning must be done and one (-inda) meaning deserving to be done. For example, io farinda means something worth doing, a good thing to do, while io farenda means something that absolutely needs to be done.

There is also (-ota), the future passive participle, meaning will be done or to be done depending on context, for example: domo konstruota means a house which will be built, a house to be built (i.e. planned).

In Latin

See also Latin grammar.

 


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