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monuisti

Monuisti is a Latin verb form: the second person singular perfect active indicative of the verb monere, meaning to warn, admonish, or advise. It translates most directly as “you warned” or, in a context where the perfect is rendered with present relevance, “you have warned.”

Morphology and construction: The verb’s principal parts are moneo, monere, monui, monitum. The perfect stem is

Usage and meaning: Monuisti is used in both narrative and dialogue to indicate a completed act of

Related forms and derivatives: The verb appears in derivatives such as admonere (to warn, advise) and the

In Latin pedagogy, monuisti serves as a standard example of the 2nd conjugation’s perfect active endings and

monu-,
and
the
second-person
singular
ending
is
-isti,
producing
monuisti.
This
form:
monuisti,
is
specific
to
the
2nd
person
singular
in
the
perfect
active
of
the
2nd
conjugation.
The
corresponding
forms
include
monuit
(he
warned)
and
monuistis
(you
all
warned).
The
passive
participle
is
monitus,
meaning
“warned”
or
“having
been
warned.”
warning
carried
out
by
the
subject.
The
subject
is
frequently
implied
(you),
and
the
warning
may
concern
a
specific
danger,
obligation,
or
instruction.
Latin
distinguishes
monuisti
from
other
related
forms,
such
as
monuit
(3rd
person
singular)
and
the
perfect
passive
participle
monitus.
noun
admonitio
(admonition,
warning).
English
cognates
include
monitor
and
admonition,
both
ultimately
tracing
back
to
the
same
Latin
root
monere.
The
perfect
forms
for
other
persons
are
monuisti
(2nd
person
singular),
monuistis
(2nd
person
plural),
and
monuerunt
(alternative
historical
spelling
for
some
verbs)
in
related
constructions.
illustrates
how
completed
actions
are
expressed
in
the
past
with
a
direct
impact
on
discourse.