this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2025
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Latin

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

I've noticed a lot of people struggling to get when they should use the supine I or the present infinitive, but it's easy to tell apart with the following questions:

  • Infinitive - "what do you [head verb]?"
  • Supine - "why do you [head verb]?"

So for example, "I want to sleep":

  • What do you want? To sleep. - OK, infinitive: dormire uolo.
  • ~~Why do you want?~~ - this sound like rubbish so no supine here.

Doing the same with "I go to sleep":

  • ~~What do you go?~~ - this sounds like rubbish, so the infinitive doesn't work here.
  • Why do you go? - to sleep - OK, supine time: dormitum eo.

The key here is that the infinitive - unlike the supine - is simply filling as the direct object of another verb. You could replace it with a noun in the accusative, and the other verb would be happy; in the meantime the supine is doing something else, as the text says it's all about "purpose".

Romance speakers: be warned that Classical Latin barely used verbs of movement as auxiliaries, that's mostly an innovation from Late Latin. That's why we spam infinitives where Classical would use the supine instead.