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Valebant

Valebant is a Latin verb form, the imperfect indicative active of valeo, valere, meaning “they were well,” “they were strong,” or “they were worth,” depending on context. The verb valeo denotes health, strength, usefulness, or value, and its imperfect forms describe past states or conditions.

Morphology and meaning: The full imperfect active paradigm of valeo is valēbam, valēbas, valēbat, valēbamus, valēbatis,

Usage: In classical Latin, valere is used for physical health or vigor, often in descriptions of people

Examples:

- Valebant bene. (They were well / They were in good health.)

- Haec res multo valebant. (These things were worth a lot.)

Notes: Valebant attests to the broader lexical field of valeo and appears in a variety of Latin

valēbant.
In
plain
text,
valebant
is
the
third-person
plural
form.
In
Latin,
the
sense
of
valere
can
cover
being
healthy
or
being
of
value;
thus
valebant
may
refer
to
the
people’s
health,
their
strength,
or
the
worth
of
things
in
past
tense.
or
groups.
It
can
also
express
value
or
worth
in
economic
or
evaluative
contexts,
though
the
valuation
sense
is
commonly
expressed
with
other
forms
or
with
additional
qualifying
words
(for
example,
multo
valebat
“it
was
worth
a
lot”).
The
imperfect
valebant
therefore
signals
a
past
state:
“they
were
well/strong,”
or
“they
were
worth,”
as
the
situation
described.
authors
to
describe
health,
strength,
or
value
in
the
past
tense.
Its
meaning
is
determined
by
context
and
accompanying
terms.