Part 72 (1/2)

_Singular_ _Plural_

1 I may be loved, 1 We may be loved, 2 Thou mayst be loved, 2 You may be loved, 3 He may be loved; 3 They ular_ _Plural_

1 I htst be loved, 2 You ht be loved

PERFECT TENSE

_Singular_ _Plural_

1 I may have been loved, 1 We may have been loved, 2 Thou mayst have been loved, 2 You may have been loved, 3 He may have been loved; 3 They ular_ _Plural_

1 I ht have been loved, 2 Thou ht have been loved, 3 He ht have been loved

SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD

PRESENT TENSE

_Singular_ _Plural_

1 If I be loved, 1 If we be loved, 2 If thou be loved, 2 If you be loved, 3 If he be loved; 3 If they be loved

IMPERFECT TENSE

_Singular_ _Plural_

1 If I were loved, 1 If ere loved, 2 If thou were loved, 2 If you were loved, 3 If he were loved; 3 If they were loved

IMPERATIVE MOOD

PRESENT TENSE

_Singular_ 2 Be [thou] loved, _or_ Do thou be loved; _Plural_ 2 Be [ye or you] loved, _or_ Do you be loved

PARTICIPLES

1 _The I loved Loved Having been loved

FAMILIAR FORM WITH 'THOU' NOTE--In the faular of this verb, is usually and more properly formed thus: IND Thou art loved, Thou was loved, Thou hast been loved, Thou had been loved, Thou shall or will be loved, Thou shall or will have been loved POT Thou ht, could, would, _or_ should be loved; Thou ht, could, would, _or_ should have been loved SUBJ If thou be loved, If thou were loved IMP Be [thou] loved, or Do thou be loved

OBSERVATIONS

OBS 1--A few active-intransitive verbs, that signify e of condition, nification;not _passive_ but _neuter_ verbs, which express nothing e: as, ”_I aone_”--”He _is risen_”--”They _are fallen_” These are what Dr Johnson and some others call ”_neuter_ passives;” a name which never was very proper, and for which we have no frequent use

OBS 2--Most neuter verbs of the passive forrown, art become, is lain, are flown, are vanished, are departed, was sat, were arrived_,” ation, or perhaps of syntax In the verb, _to be ht to be particularly noticed When applied to _persons_, this verb is conifies, _to be in error, to be wrong_; as, ”I _am mistaken_, thou _art s_, it is a proper passive verb, and signifies, _to be _; as, ”The sense of the passage _is htly understood” See _Webster's Dict, w

Mistaken_ ”I have known a shadow across a brook _to be e”

OBS 3--Passive verbs uished froent or instrument, common to the former class, but not to the latter This frequently is, and always may be, expressed after _passive_ verbs; but never is, and never can be, expressed after _neuter_ verbs: as, ”The thief has been caught _by the officer_”-- ”Pens are made _with a knife_” Here the verbs are passive; but, ”_I am not yet ascended_,” (John, xx, 17,) is not passive, because it does not convey the idea of being ascended _by_ soency