Home

Reddebamus

Reddebamus is a Latin verb form: the first-person plural imperfect indicative active of reddere, meaning to give back, return, or restore. The form combines the stem redd-, the imperfect marker -ebam- plus the plural ending -us, yielding reddēbāmus in classical spelling (often written as reddebamus without diacritical marks in modern texts). As an imperfect, reddebamus expresses an ongoing or customary past action: “we were giving back” or “we were returning.”

Morphologically, reddebamus is built from the verb reddere, whose basic sense is to return something to its

Usage and interpretation: reddebamus is standard in classical Latin texts when describing past, ongoing actions of

See also: reddere, Latin verb conjugation, imperfect indicative.

owner
or
to
restore
something
to
a
previous
state.
The
prefix
re-
signals
“back,”
while
-dere
forms
the
infinitive.
In
the
imperfect
indicative,
the
ending
-bāmus
marks
1st
person
plural,
yielding
the
translation
appropriate
to
a
past
continuous
action.
The
form
may
appear
with
or
without
macrons
depending
on
typography,
and
it
contrasts
with
related
forms
such
as
reddēbāmus
(with
long
e
in
the
stressed
syllable),
reddēbās
(you
were
returning),
or
reddēbant
(they
were
returning).
returning
or
giving
back.
It
can
appear
in
legal,
narrative,
or
didactic
contexts
where
a
continuous
past
activity
is
being
described.
In
Latin
grammars,
reddebamus
is
illustrated
alongside
other
imperfect
forms
to
demonstrate
tense
and
person
endings
and
to
contrast
with
the
perfect
and
pluperfect
results
of
reddere.