Latin edit

Etymology edit

cōnsequor ("I ensue") +‎ -īvus.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

cōnsecūtīvus (feminine cōnsecūtīva, neuter cōnsecūtīvum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. (Medieval Latin) consequent, consequential

Declension edit

First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative cōnsecūtīvus cōnsecūtīva cōnsecūtīvum cōnsecūtīvī cōnsecūtīvae cōnsecūtīva
Genitive cōnsecūtīvī cōnsecūtīvae cōnsecūtīvī cōnsecūtīvōrum cōnsecūtīvārum cōnsecūtīvōrum
Dative cōnsecūtīvō cōnsecūtīvō cōnsecūtīvīs
Accusative cōnsecūtīvum cōnsecūtīvam cōnsecūtīvum cōnsecūtīvōs cōnsecūtīvās cōnsecūtīva
Ablative cōnsecūtīvō cōnsecūtīvā cōnsecūtīvō cōnsecūtīvīs
Vocative cōnsecūtīve cōnsecūtīva cōnsecūtīvum cōnsecūtīvī cōnsecūtīvae cōnsecūtīva

Descendants edit

  • English: consecutive (learned)
  • German: konsekutiv (learned)
  • French: consécutif (learned)
  • Italian: consecutivo (learned)
  • Spanish: consecutivo (learned)
  • Portuguese: consecutivo (learned)

References edit