This list may not be exhaustive. Ancient Greek Ancient Greek has middle-voice deponents (some of which are very common) and some passive-voice deponents. An example in classical Greek is (, 'I come' or 'I go'), middle/passive in form but translated into English using the active voice. Some 'active' verbs will take middle-form futures, such as how (, 'I hear') becomes (, 'I will hear'), rather than the regular adding of a sigma (like (, 'I stop') becoming (, 'I will stop')). These are still translated into English as active. For these verbs, there is no future middle, but the future passive is unaffected.
Koine Greek has a few verbs which have very different meanings in the active and middle/passive forms. For example, () means "I set fire to", whereas its middle form () means "I touch". Because is much more common in usage, beginners often learn this form first and are tempted to assume that it is a deponent. In recent years, there has been a sustained challenge to the notion of deponency by scholars of ancient Greek. They argue that the "middle-preference" verbs in Greek should be translated within the middle voice, and as a consequence that our understanding of the middle voice should be shaped by these verbs. In other words the "deponent" verbs take only the middle endings because the
semantic domain of these verbs communicates a middle idea.
Latin Latin deponent verbs can belong to any conjugation. Their form (except in the present and future participle) is that of a passive verb, but the meaning is active. Usually a deponent verb has no corresponding active form, although there are a few, such as 'I turn (transitive)' and 'I turn (intransitive)' which have both active and deponent forms. Examples are ('to exhort'), ('to fear'), ('to speak'), ('to flatter'), and many more. The forms regularly follow those of the passive of normal verbs: Deponents have all the participles normal verbs do, although those of the perfect carry an active meaning, rather than a passive meaning as in the case of normal verbs. Some deponent verbs, such as , use the corresponding forms of other verbs to express a genuine passive meaning. Additionally, four Latin verbs ( , , , and ) are called
semi-deponent, because though they look passive in their perfect forms, they are semantically active in all forms. Conversely, Latin also has some verbs that are active in form but passive in meaning. was used as the passive of . In the perfect forms (perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect), this was a compound verb just like the passive voice of regular verbs ( ).
Old Irish Old Irish has a substantial number of deponent verbs, some of them very common, such as and . The -Vr ending was the regular passive or impersonal ending. The pattern was not continued into the modern languages and all such verbforms were ultimately replaced by 'normal' forms. The -Vr ending still is the regular passive or impersonal ending in the later language, as in the eg Modern
Scottish Gaelic passive/impersonal . The verb has its origin in the deponent Old Irish .
Sanskrit Sanskrit has active, middle and passive voices. As the passive is a secondary formation (based on a different stem with middle endings), all deponent verbs take middle-voice forms, such as . Traditional grammar distinguishes three classes of verbs: , and . Thus, might be considered deponent verbs.
Swedish Swedish has a few passive-voice deponents, although its closely related neighbour languages
Danish and
Norwegian mostly use active corresponding forms. Indeed, Norwegian shows the opposite trend: as in English, active verbs are sometimes used with a passive or middle sense, such as in . is the normal passive ending in the Scandinavian languages. • (cf. Danish and Norwegian Bokmål (non-deponent)) • (cf. Danish , Norwegian Bokmål (non-deponent)) • • • • • • , as in A handful of Swedish deponent verbs are specifically used for reciprocal or continuous meanings. These verbs typically have non-deponent counterparts. • • •
Norwegian Norwegian has several common deponents which use the passive ending in the active voice, instead of the usual active ending (and retains the in the infinitive, where most verbs end solely in ): • • • • The past tense is indicated by or , e.g. .
Danish Modern
Danish has 54 unique deponent verbs which work basically like in the other Scandinavian languages; the most common ones are: • • • Some other verbs do have an active form but also a deponent one with a different meaning or usage, e.g.: • (in the active form, ) • (in the active form, ) • (in the active form ). Finally, some verbs are passive in Danish, but would be translated with active verbs in most other languages, e.g.: • (literally ), == Deponency and tense ==