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Videbamus

Videbamus is the first-person plural imperfect indicative active form of the Latin verb videre, meaning "to see." It translates roughly as "we were seeing" or "we used to see." The imperfect tense in Latin expresses ongoing or repeated action in the past. Videbamus belongs to the 2nd conjugation (vidēre) and is formed from the stem vide- plus the imperfect marker ba- and the personal ending -mus. The principal parts of videre are video, videre, vidi, visum, from which videbamus is derived. In full form the 1st person plural imperfect is often written as videbāmus (the macron marks a long vowel); in unaccented text it appears as videbamus.

The imperfect forms for the other persons are videbam, videbās, videbat, videbātis, videbant, illustrating a regular

Usage and nuance: videbamus is commonly found in classical Latin prose and poetry to set scenes or

-ba-
pattern
across
the
paradigm:
videbam,
videbās,
videbat,
videbāmus,
videbātis,
videbant.
This
pattern
is
characteristic
of
the
imperfect
of
2nd-conjugation
verbs
in
Latin.
The
sense
remains
the
same:
ongoing
or
habitual
past
action.
describe
past
observations
in
progress.
Translations
into
English
typically
render
it
as
"we
were
seeing"
or
"we
used
to
see,"
depending
on
context.
Example:
Dum
in
silvā
ambulābāmus,
aves
videbāmus.
("While
we
were
walking
in
the
forest,
we
could
see
birds.")