3. DESIDERATIVES. These denote a desire to do something. They are formed from the Participial Stem, and end in -uriō; as,—
| ēsuriō, | desire to eat, am hungry | (edō); |
| parturiō, | want to bring forth, am in labor | (pariō). |
2. Verbs derived from Nouns and Adjectives (Denominatives).
[156]. Denominatives of the First Conjugation are mostly transitive; those of the Second exclusively intransitive. Those of the Third and Fourth Conjugations are partly transitive, partly intransitive. Examples are—
a) From Nouns:—
| fraudō, | defraud | (fraus); |
| vestiō, | clothe | (vestis); |
| flōreō, | bloom | (flōs). |
b) From Adjectives:—
| līberō, | free | (līber); |
| saeviō, | be fierce | (saevus). |
D. ADVERBS.