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,