approbabat
Approbabat is a Latin verb form. It represents the third person singular imperfect active indicative of the verb approbare, meaning to approve, approve of, or approve of as a judgment. In Latin, the imperfect tense expresses ongoing or past habitual action, so approbabat translates roughly as “he/she/it was approving” or, in narrative contexts, “he approved” depending on the surrounding tense and aspect.
The verb approbare is formed from the prefix ad- and the root probare, related to proving or
Approbat and approbabat appear in classical and late antique Latin literature, especially in legal, political, and
- Senatus decreta approbabat. The senate was approving the decrees.
- Caesar consilium approbabat. Caesar was approving the plan.
The noun form approbatio means the act of approving. English inherits related terms such as approbation, which
In summary, approbabat is a standard Latin verb form signaling past, ongoing approval by a singular