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Ferre

Ferre is a Latin verb meaning to bear, carry, or bring. In classical usage it covers both physical carrying and broader senses such as bearing a burden, bringing forth, or enduring. It also appears in various figurative and idiomatic expressions and serves as the basis for a large family of compound verbs formed with prefixes.

Grammatical notes: Ferre is highly irregular. The standard principal parts are fero, ferri, tuli, latum. This

Compound usage: A distinctive feature of ferre is its productivity with prefixes to create many related verbs.

See also: Latin grammar, irregular verbs, compound verbs with ferre, Latin etymology.

allows
the
verb
to
supply
its
irregular
stems
for
all
tenses.
Common
present-indicative
forms
include
fero,
fers,
fert,
ferimus,
fertis,
ferunt;
imperfect
forms
include
ferebam,
ferebas,
ferebat,
ferebamus,
ferebatis,
ferebant;
the
perfect
is
tuli,
tulistī,
tulit,
tulimus,
tulistis,
tulerunt;
and
the
future
forms
include
feram,
ferēs,
feret,
ferēmus,
ferētis,
ferent.
Some
well-known
examples
are
referre
(to
bring
back,
report),
conferre
(to
bring
together,
confer),
offerre
(to
present,
offer),
efferre
(to
carry
out,
bring
forth),
inferre
(to
bring
in,
import),
proferre
(to
bring
forth,
reveal),
perferre
(to
bear
through),
differre
(to
carry
away
or
delay).
These
compounds
retain
much
of
the
sense
of
the
base
verb
while
adding
directional
or
modal
nuances.