omittis
Omittis is the second person singular present indicative active form of the Latin verb omittere. The root verb omittere carries senses of omitting, neglecting, sending away, or discarding. In standard Latin, omittere is a third-conjugation verb, and omittis appears in the present tense to indicate that "you omit" or "you neglect" in the here and now. The full present indicative paradigm for omittere is: omitto (I omit), omittis (you omit), omittit (he/she/it omits), omittimus (we omit), omittitis (you all omit), omittunt (they omit).
Omittis is typically used without an explicit subject, since the ending signals the second person singular.
- Tu rem omittis. You omit the thing.
Related forms include the other person and tenses of omittere, such as omitto (I omit), omittit (he
- Latin verb conjugation, especially the third conjugation
- Latin present indicative forms and subject-verb agreement
Omittis thus stands as a common, concrete example of a Latin present tense form used to express