ebantur
Ebantur is a Latin verb form used as the third-person plural imperfect passive indicative ending for many verbs. In this function, it marks ongoing or customary past action in the passive voice, corresponding to English “they were being …” or “they were …ed.” The form occurs with stems that create an e-grade or with verbs whose present stem commonly yields an ei or ē before the -bantur ending, as in monēbantur (they were being warned) or legēbantur (they were being read or selected, depending on context).
The imperfect passive in Latin is built from a present or imperfect-stem plus the standard passive endings;
Ebantur forms are common in classical Latin narrative and legal or religious texts, where continuous past actions
Ebantur is the plural third-person ending of the imperfect passive. Other persons and numbers use corresponding