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Condere

Condere is a Latin verb of the third conjugation meaning to found, establish, or build, with further senses such as to put together, to form, or to lay up and store. Its core use is to create something durable or foundational, whether a city, a state, an institution, laws, or treaties. In classical prose it can also convey the sense of placing or setting something up for use or posterity.

Principal parts and basic morphology

The principal parts are condo, condere, condidi, conditum. As a regular third-conjugation verb, it follows the

Common constructions and meanings

Condere takes a direct object in the accusative for its core senses, often with a destination or

Derivative and related use

From condere derive terms related to foundation and formation, and the verb appears in various idioms and

Notes

Condere is distinct from verbs meaning to bury or to convict; its central focus is the act

standard
-o,
-is,
-it,
-imus,
-itis,
-unt
pattern
in
the
present
active
indicative
(condo,
condis,
condit,
conditimus,
condititis,
condunt).
Other
active
tenses
and
the
passive
are
formed
with
the
usual
endings,
and
the
perfect
passive
participle
is
conditus,
with
the
supine
often
given
as
conditum.
object
of
establishment:
condere
urbem
(to
found
a
city),
condere
leges
(to
enact
or
establish
laws),
condere
foedera
(to
conclude
treaties),
condere
consilia
(to
form
plans
or
schemes).
The
phraseology
frequently
emphasizes
initial
creation,
founding,
or
instituting
something
new
or
lasting.
The
passive
participle
conditus
can
be
used
adjectivally
to
mean
“founded”
or
“established.”
historical
texts
describing
the
founding
of
cities,
institutions,
and
formal
agreements.
While
primarily
about
creation,
it
can
also
extend
metaphorically
to
forming
or
composing
things
like
plans,
compositions,
or
even
traditions.
of
founding,
establishing,
or
putting
together
something
intended
to
endure.