carminandum

Latin

Etymology 1

From carminō ("I make verses")

Pronunciation 1

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /kar.miˈnan.dum/, [kar.mɪˈnan.dũ]

Gerund

carminandum n (accusative, gerundive carminandus)

  1. making verses

Inflection

Second declension, defective.

Number Singular
nominative
genitive carminandī
dative carminandō
accusative carminandum
ablative carminandō
vocative

There is no nominative form. The present active infinitive of the parent verb is used in situations that require a nominative form.
The accusative may also be substituted by the infinitive in this way.

Etymology 2

From carminō ("I card, produce by carding")

Pronunciation 2

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /kar.miˈnan.dum/, [kar.mɪˈnan.dũ]

Gerund

carminandum n (accusative, gerundive carminandus)

  1. carding
  2. producing by carding

Inflection

Second declension, defective.

Number Singular
nominative
genitive carminandī
dative carminandō
accusative carminandum
ablative carminandō
vocative

There is no nominative form. The present active infinitive of the parent verb is used in situations that require a nominative form.
The accusative may also be substituted by the infinitive in this way.

Participle

carminandum

  1. nominative neuter singular of carminandus
  2. accusative masculine singular of carminandus
  3. accusative neuter singular of carminandus
  4. vocative neuter singular of carminandus
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.