| 11. | However, most of them have lost this meaning so historically speaking they are like deponent verbs.
|
| 12. | When the party came into town, deponent ran with her children to a lighter to save them.
|
| 13. | "There is no special treatment here given to the deponent because he's Bernard Cardinal Law.
|
| 14. | William Baker, a third deponent, attributed the loss of a quantity of beer to Rachel by supernatural means.
|
| 15. | The synthetic verbs also have periphrastic forms, for use in perfects and in simple tenses in which they are deponent.
|
| 16. | In answer to an earlier question on this page, Gareth Hughes gives a link to the article on deponent verbs.
|
| 17. | Whereas it would be very difficult to prove the confidence of the deponent if there was no video record to prove it.
|
| 18. | Out of curiosity I followed the link and came across a reference in the article to semi-deponent verbs in Latin.
|
| 19. | :: : : : Some of them are reflexive in French though, and some of them are deponent in Latin.
|
| 20. | The synthetic verbs also have these forms, for use in perfect tenses and in simple tenses in which they are deponent.
|