This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.
frequentative
[ fri-kwen-tuh-tiv ]
/ frɪˈkwɛn tə tɪv /
Save This Word!
This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.
adjective
noting or pertaining to a verb aspect expressing repetition of an action.
noun
the frequentative aspect.
a verb in the frequentative aspect, as wrestle from wrest.
QUIZ
CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?
There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?
Question 1 of 7
Which sentence is correct?
Origin of frequentative
grammar notes for frequentative
Frequentative in linguistics and grammar refers to a verb expressing repeated, frequent action. Frequentative verbs in English end in -er and -le (as bobble from bob, curdle from curd, dazzle from daze, slither from slide, sparkle from spark, and trample from tramp ). English frequentative verbs are a closed set, and English no longer produces frequentative verbs with these suffixes. Instead, in contemporary English the frequentative aspect is usually expressed by the plain present tense of the verb, e.g., “I walk to work (usually),” which describes a habitual action, as opposed the present progressive “I am walking to work (right now).”
In Latin, however, frequentative verbs are common in all periods because they make the language livelier, more intimate and colloquial. Frequentatives occur very frequently in the comedies of Plautus and Terence, in Cicero’s letters, and in the Satyricon of Petronius. Latin frequentative verbs often do not differ in meaning from simple verbs, and they often replace the original simple verbs in Romance (languages descended from Latin) because the frequentatives are perfectly regular whereas the simple verbs may be somewhat or very irregular.
In Latin, frequentatives are formed from the suffixes -tāre, -itāre, -sāre added to the past participle of the simple verb. For instance, the simple verb canō, canere, cecinī, cantus “I sing, to sing, I have sung, sung” would be a regular verb of the third conjugation (whose present infinitive is marked by -ere ) except for the third principal part, cecinī (from an unattested kekanai, a reduplicated perfect inherited from Proto-Indo-European). To the inflectional stem cant- of the past participle cantus, Latin adds the suffix -tāre (reduced to -āre after the preceding t ) resulting in the absolutely regular first conjugation verb canto, cantāre, cantāvī, cantātus (compare Italian canto, cantare, cantai, cantato ). Cantāre becomes cantare in Italian, cantar in Spanish and Portuguese, and chanter in French.
In Latin, however, frequentative verbs are common in all periods because they make the language livelier, more intimate and colloquial. Frequentatives occur very frequently in the comedies of Plautus and Terence, in Cicero’s letters, and in the Satyricon of Petronius. Latin frequentative verbs often do not differ in meaning from simple verbs, and they often replace the original simple verbs in Romance (languages descended from Latin) because the frequentatives are perfectly regular whereas the simple verbs may be somewhat or very irregular.
In Latin, frequentatives are formed from the suffixes -tāre, -itāre, -sāre added to the past participle of the simple verb. For instance, the simple verb canō, canere, cecinī, cantus “I sing, to sing, I have sung, sung” would be a regular verb of the third conjugation (whose present infinitive is marked by -ere ) except for the third principal part, cecinī (from an unattested kekanai, a reduplicated perfect inherited from Proto-Indo-European). To the inflectional stem cant- of the past participle cantus, Latin adds the suffix -tāre (reduced to -āre after the preceding t ) resulting in the absolutely regular first conjugation verb canto, cantāre, cantāvī, cantātus (compare Italian canto, cantare, cantai, cantato ). Cantāre becomes cantare in Italian, cantar in Spanish and Portuguese, and chanter in French.
OTHER WORDS FROM frequentative
un·fre·quen·ta·tive, adjectiveWords nearby frequentative
frequency modulation, frequency polygon, frequency response, frequent, frequentation, frequentative, frequent flier, frequently, frère, fresco, Frescobaldi
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
How to use frequentative in a sentence
British Dictionary definitions for frequentative
frequentative
/ (frɪˈkwɛntətɪv) grammar /
adjective
denoting an aspect of verbs in some languages used to express repeated or habitual action
(in English) denoting a verb or an affix having meaning that involves repeated or habitual action, such as the verb wrestle, from wrest
noun
- a frequentative verb or affix
- the frequentative aspect of verbs
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012