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consequebantur

Consequebantur is a Latin verb form that appears in classical texts. It is the imperfect indicative, third-person plural, of the deponent verb consequor, consequi, consecutus sum. Although it uses passive morphology, the meaning is active, roughly “they were pursuing,” “they were following after,” or “they were overtaking.”

Etymology and meaning: The root comes from con- (“together, with”) and sequor (“to follow”). In usage, consequor

Morphology and usage: Consequebantur is part of a deponent verb, which uses passive endings with active meaning.

Example: Milites consequebantur hostes. This translates to “The soldiers were pursuing the enemies.” The form is

See also: Latin deponent verbs, the verb consequor family, and Latin verb morphology.

can
denote
physical
following,
pursuit
of
an
enemy,
or
the
attainment
of
a
goal,
among
other
senses.
The
imperfect
form
consequebantur
marks
ongoing
action
in
the
past.
The
form
contributes
to
indicating
an
ongoing
past
action,
as
in
“they
were
pursuing.”
The
present
indicative
forms
of
consequor
would
be
consector-like
in
appearance
(consequor,
consequeris,
consequitur,
consequimur,
consequimini,
consequuntur),
while
the
imperfect
shows
ongoing
past
action,
as
in
consequebantur.
common
in
narrative
and
descriptive
prose,
illustrating
how
deponent
verbs
convey
aspect
and
tense
without
using
active
endings.