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trahis

Trahis is a Latin term best known as the second-person singular present indicative form of the verb trahere, meaning "you drag" or "you pull." The verb trahere belongs to the third conjugation, and its present stem is trah-. Trahis is formed by adding the second-person singular ending -is to the present stem.

In Latin, trahis may appear in sentences such as Tu aquam trahis, "You drag water." The full

Beyond literal dragging, trahis can be found in metaphorical uses depending on context, such as drawing out

Outside linguistic contexts, "trahis" is not established as a standalone concept. It may appear in discussions

present
indicative
paradigm
for
trahere
in
the
active
voice
is:
traho,
trahis,
trahit,
trahimus,
trahitis,
trahunt.
The
form
trahis
is
used
when
addressing
a
single
person
in
the
present
tense.
time,
drawing
attention,
or
pulling
along
companions.
Like
many
Latin
verbs,
trahere
also
has
imperfect,
perfect,
and
other
tenses
that
change
endings
to
indicate
time
and
aspect.
of
Latin
grammar
or
in
quoted
or
stylized
texts
that
imitate
Latin,
but
it
is
not
used
as
a
common
English
word
or
recognized
term
in
other
disciplines.
It
is
primarily
of
interest
to
students
and
scholars
of
Latin
morphology.