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reddidistis

Reddidistis is a Latin verb form. It is the second-person plural perfect active indicative of reddere, meaning to return, give back, or restore. In classical Latin, the perfect tense expresses a completed action in the past, so reddidistis translates as “you returned” or “you have returned” (plural you).

Morphology and conjugation: reddidistis comes from the third conjugation verb reddere. Its principal parts are reddo,

Usage: reddidistis is used when a group is described as having completed the act of returning something.

Related forms and notes: the corresponding perfect singular form is reddidisti (“you returned”), and the pluperfect

Translation considerations: English renders reddidistis as “you returned” or “you have returned,” with the exact sense

reddere,
reddidi,
redditum.
The
perfect
stem
is
reddid-,
and
the
ending
-istis
marks
the
second-person
plural
in
the
perfect
active.
Thus
reddidistis
is
the
match
for
“you
all
returned.”
The
direct
object
typically
indicates
what
is
returned
(for
example,
libros
reddidistis
“you
returned
the
books”).
The
action
may
also
be
rendered
with
nuance
as
having
been
completed
in
the
past,
depending
on
context.
is
reddidistis
in
a
different
tense
form.
The
passive
participle
redditus
means
“returned”
or
“yielded”
and
can
function
as
an
adjective
or
noun
in
other
contexts.
influenced
by
context
and
time
reference.
It
is
common
in
narrative,
dialogue,
or
reported
speech
where
a
past
action
by
“you”
(plural)
is
described.