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Portare

Portare is a Latin verb of the first conjugation meaning "to carry" or "to bear," and by extension "to bring." It is one of the most common verbs in classical Latin and appears in a wide range of genres, from narrative to legal and rhetorical texts. The principal parts are porto, portare, portavi, portatum, from which all the other forms are derived.

As a regular first-conjugation verb, portare forms its tenses with standard endings. In the present active indicative

Usage notes include the direct object in the accusative for the thing carried and, depending on meaning,

the
forms
are
porto,
portas,
portat,
portamus,
portatis,
portant;
the
imperfect
is
portabam,
portabas,
portabat,
portabamus,
portabatis,
portabant;
the
future
is
portabo,
portabis,
portabit,
portabimus,
portabitis,
portabunt.
The
perfect
active
(portavi,
portavisti,
portavit,
portavimus,
portavistis,
portaverunt)
is
followed
by
the
pluperfect
(portaveram,
portaveras,
portaverat,
portaveramus,
portaveratis,
portaverant).
The
passive
voice
yields
forms
such
as
portor,
portaris,
portatur,
portamur,
portamini,
portantur,
with
corresponding
tenses
(portabar,
portabaris,
etc.;
portabor,
portaberis,
etc.).
The
present
and
past
subjunctive
forms
and
the
imperative
(porta,
portate)
complete
the
standard
paradigm.
a
dative
or
prepositional
phrase
to
indicate
the
recipient,
destination,
or
beneficiary.
In
modern
Romance
languages
the
root
survives
in
Italian
portare,
Spanish
portar,
and
French
porter.
Etymologically,
portare
derives
from
Latin
portāre
and
is
related
to
English
derivatives
such
as
portable,
transport,
and
port.