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interrumpit

Interrumpit is a Latin verb form meaning "he interrupts" or "it interrupts," and it is the third-person singular present indicative active of interrumpere.

Interrumpere is formed from the prefix inter- "between" and rumpere "to break." The form interrumpit is a

Usage in Latin texts is primarily to describe interrupting a speech, action, or process. Examples include: "Senator

Notes: Interrumpit is Latin, and while it resembles forms in other Romance languages, it is distinct from

third-conjugation
verb
in
the
present
tense,
active
voice,
third
person
singular,
with
the
stem
interrump-.
In
Latin,
third-conjugation
endings
attach
to
the
stem
to
yield
forms
such
as
interrumpit,
interrumpunt,
and
so
on.
orationem
interrumpit"
(The
senator
interrupts
the
speech)
and
"Discipulus
magistrum
interrumpit"
(The
student
interrupts
the
teacher).
Other
tenses
exist
for
the
same
verb:
imperfect
interrumpēbat,
future
interinterrupt?
or
interrumpet,
and
perfect
interrūpit,
illustrating
standard
conjugation
patterns
for
the
verb.
Spanish
interrumpe
or
other
modern
equivalents.
The
spelling
with
an
initial
inter-
prefix
and
a
double
r
arises
from
the
combination
of
inter-
and
rumpere,
which
can
affect
pronunciation
and
transliteration
in
Latin
texts.
See
also
interrumpere,
the
infinitive,
and
other
related
forms
in
Latin
verb
conjugation.