Home

Adornabamus

Adornabamus is the Latin imperfect active indicative form of the verb adornare, meaning to adorn or decorate. This form expresses ongoing or repeated past action and translates as “we were adorning” or “we used to adorn.”

Form and grammar: adornabamus is the first person plural, imperfect tense, active voice, of the 1st conjugation

Usage: The imperfect form commonly appears in classical Latin prose and poetry to set scenes or describe

Examples:

- Nos adornabamus ornamenta in atrio. Translation: We were adorning the ornaments in the atrium.

- Antequam spectaculum inciperet, adornabamus vestes et alia ornamenta. Translation: Before the show began, we were adorning

Notes: adornabamus is a standard example of how Latin marks aspect and time through verb endings rather

verb
adornare.
The
imperfect
endings
for
the
1st
conjugation
are
-bam,
-bas,
-bat,
-bamus,
-batis,
-bant,
attached
to
the
present
stem
adorn-.
In
standard
Latin
spelling,
vowel
length
is
often
indicated
with
macrons
in
scholarly
editions.
background
actions,
such
as
decoration,
preparations,
or
repeated
past
activities.
It
conveys
a
sense
of
continuous
or
habitual
past
activity
rather
than
a
single
completed
event.
robes
and
other
adornments.
than
separate
adverbs.
It
is
derived
from
adornare
(to
adorn),
the
infinitive
form,
with
the
normal
imperfect
endings
applied
to
the
present
stem.