incideris

Latin

Etymology 1

Form of the verb incidō ([I] fall upon).

Verb

incideris

  1. second-person singular future perfect active indicative of incidō
    1. "you will have fallen upon"
  2. second-person singular present passive indicative of incidō
    1. "you are fallen upon"

inciderīs

  1. second-person singular perfect active subjunctive of incidō
    1. "you may have fallen upon"

incidēris

  1. second-person singular future passive indicative of incidō
    1. "you will be fallen upon"

Etymology 2

Form of the verb incīdō ([I] cut up; dissect; carve).

Verb

incīderis

  1. second-person singular future perfect active indicative of incīdō
    1. "you will have cut up, you will have hewn open; you will have dissected"
    2. "you will have made by cutting"
    3. "you will have carved, you will have engraved"
  2. second-person singular present passive indicative of incīdō
    1. "you are cut up, you are hewn open; you are dissected"
    2. "you are made by cutting"
    3. "you are carved, you are engraved"

incīderīs

  1. second-person singular perfect active subjunctive of incīdō
    1. "you may have cut up, you may have hewn open; you may have dissected"
    2. "you may have made by cutting"
    3. "you may have carved, you may have engraved"

incīdēris

  1. second-person singular future passive indicative of incīdō
    1. "you will be cut up, you will be hewn open; you will be dissected"
    2. "you will be made by cutting"
    3. "you will be carved, you will be engraved"
↑Jump back a section

Read in another language

This page is available in 1 language

Last modified on 27 December 2012, at 07:38