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Tangere

Tangere is a Latin verb meaning to touch, touch gently, or make contact. It is a high-frequency verb in classical Latin and serves as the parent term for many compounds and derivative words. As a third-conjugation verb, its infinitive is tangere and its meanings extend from literal touch to figurative influence or contact.

In grammar, tangere forms standard Latin paradigms. Present active indicative includes tangō, tangis, tangit, tangimus, tangitis,

Tangere has given rise to many derivatives in English and other languages. The noun tangent, in geometry,

In summary, tangere is a foundational Latin verb whose grammatical forms and semantic reach have influenced

tangunt.
The
perfect
active
is
tetigī,
with
the
supine
tactum.
The
present
passive
includes
tangor,
tangēris,
tangitur,
tangimur,
tangiminī,
tanguntur.
The
present
active
participle
is
tangēns,
and
the
perfect
passive
participle
is
tactus.
The
future
active
forms
tangam,
tanges,
tangent,
tangēmus,
tangētis,
tangent.
These
forms
support
a
wide
range
of
uses
in
classical
poetry,
prose,
and
scholastic
Latin.
is
derived
from
the
Latin
participle
tangens
meaning
“touching,”
referring
to
a
line
that
touches
a
curve
at
a
point.
Tangible
and
tangible
derivatives
come
from
Latin
tangibilis,
reflecting
the
sense
of
touchable
or
graspable.
The
term
tangential
also
derives
from
tangens.
The
phrase
noli
me
tangere,
meaning
“do
not
touch
me,”
is
a
famous
biblical
Latin
usage
illustrating
the
verb’s
literal
and
figurative
range.
many
related
terms
in
science,
philosophy,
and
everyday
language.