| 1. | Thematic, with zero-grade root and accent on the thematic vowel.
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| 2. | The first conjugation class is characterized by an absence of the thematic vowel in infinitive, present as well as past.
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| 3. | The thematic vowel technically belongs to the suffix and not the ending, as each suffix is inherently either thematic or athematic.
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| 4. | The Homeric form comes from the same case ending, with the first-declension pseudo-thematic vowel " ".
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| 5. | The classification depends on whether the verb stem has a thematic vowel, and if so, whether it is retained in present tense.
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| 6. | The thematic vowel ( or ) counts as neither stem nor ending, but alternates between the two depending on which accent is considered.
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| 7. | The thematic vowel ablauts to only in word-final position in the vocative singular, and before in the neuter nominative and accusative plural.
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| 8. | Thematic verbs form present active infinitives by adding to the stem the thematic vowel and the infinitive ending, and contracts to, e . g ..
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| 9. | A clear difference with nominals is that verbs derived directly from roots, with no suffix ( or only a thematic vowel ), were very common.
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| 10. | The formation seemed to have zero-grade of the root and accent on the thematic vowel, like the " " tudati " " type.
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