Artificial intelligent assistant

preteritive

preteritive, a.
  (prɪˈtɛrɪtɪv)
  [f. L. præterit-, ppl. stem of præterīre: cf. preterite and -ive.]
  1. Theol. Of or pertaining to preterition or non-election. rare—1.

1836 G. S. Faber Prim. Doctr. Election i. ix. 139 Augustine's logically correlative doctrine of Absolute Preteritive Reprobation to eternal death.

  2. Gram. Used only in the preterite tenses: said of a verb. (Webster 1847.)

Mod. The Latin memini is called a preteritive verb.

  b. preteritive present (adj. and n.) = preterite-present (verb or tense).

1885 A. S. Cook tr. Sievers' O. Eng. Gram. §417 The Germanic preteritive presents [die verba praeteritopresentia des germanischen] have sprung from strong verbs whose preterits have assumed a present meaning (like Lat. memini, novi, coepi, Gr. οἶδα), while the original presents have disappeared. 1899 W. J. Sedgefield K. ælfred's Boeth. 207 Verbs with preteritive presents..e.g. mæg, deah.

Oxford English Dictionary

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