The verbs ending with -er and -ir are having similar conjugations, so you need to emphasize this to your students. For the verbs ending with -ar you need to add some endings such as yo bromeo, tú bromeas, él/ ella/ usted bromea, nosotros/ nosotras bromeamos, vosotros/ vosotras ...
He had designed a chart for the paradigms and was trying to insert English translations for all the forms. This might be a good exercise for other Latin students. In my explanation below I mostly use the 1st person singular (the "I"). In English, generally there is a difference between ...
future and imperfect), the passive endings are formed by a combination of the suffix -r with the active endings, except for the 2nd person plural ending which is taken from an obsolete passive present participle: ACTIVE PASSIVE ō/m - or/r s - ris t - tur mus - mur tis - minī nt ...
The object-verb/verb-object (OV/VO) difference with respect to noun/verb ratios also reveals itself in SVO languages; some languages, Chinese and Latin among them, show a strongly OV ratio, whereas others, such as Romance or Bantu, are VO-like in their noun/verb ratios. The proportion ...