Monere
Monere is a Latin verb meaning to warn, advise, or remind. It belongs to the second conjugation and appears frequently in classical Latin as a verb of communication and admonition. The principal parts are moneo, monere, monui, monitum, from which all other forms are derived. In the present system, the active forms include moneo, mones, monet, monemus, monetis, monent; the imperfect uses monebam, monebas, monebat, and so on; the future uses monebo, monebis, monebit, etc. The perfect system gives monui, monuisti, monuit, monuimus, monuistis, monuerunt, with the supine form monitum. The passive voice has moneor, moneris, monetur, monemur, monemini, monentur. Participles include monens (present active), monitus (perfect passive), and the future passive participle monendus (to be warned).
In usage, monere covers warning, admonition, and reminder in a broad sense. It can express giving prudent
Etymology and influence: monere is a core Latin verb, the source of related terms in Romance languages