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Agere

Agere is a Latin verb meaning to do, act, drive, or lead; it underlies numerous Latin expressions and many English derivatives such as act, action, active, and agency. The standard lexical entry is given by the four principal parts: ago, agere, egi, actum. The infinitive agere denotes the action itself, while actum is the supine used in certain constructions.

It is a third-conjugation verb. The present active indicative forms are: ago, agis, agit, agimus, agitis, agunt.

Usage: agere expresses action, execution, or conduct. It takes direct objects to denote performing something (agere

Derivatives and related forms: The verb yields numerous English derivatives: act, action, active, actor, agency, agenda.

Significance: As a fundamental Latin verb, agere is central to the vocabulary of Roman literature, rhetoric,

The
imperfect
is
agebam,
agebas,
agebat,
agebamus,
agebatis,
agebant;
the
future
is
agam,
ages,
aget,
agemus,
agetis,
agent.
The
perfect
active
forms
are
egi,
egisti,
egit,
egimus,
egistis,
egērunt.
The
present
passive
is
agor,
ageris,
agitur,
agimur,
agimini,
aguntur.
The
supine
is
actum
and
the
perfect
passive
participle
is
actus;
the
present
participle
is
agens.
aliquid)
and
appears
in
many
idioms
describing
the
management
of
affairs,
the
conduct
of
business,
or
executing
tasks.
In
philosophical
and
legal
Latin,
agere
is
often
used
with
phrases
meaning
to
act
or
to
conduct
oneself.
In
Latin,
the
gerundive
form
agendum
gave
the
noun
agenda
in
Medieval
Latin,
meaning
things
to
be
done
and
later
the
English
term
agenda.
law,
and
philosophy,
and
it
provides
a
common
root
for
many
words
describing
action
and
agency
in
Romance
and
English.