In AP Latin, tense is the property of a verb that marks time (past, present, future) and aspect (ongoing vs. completed action). Latin has six tenses (present, imperfect, future, perfect, pluperfect, future perfect), and translating each one precisely is required on the exam's literal translation questions.
Tense is one of the five things every finite Latin verb tells you. Per the CED's essential knowledge for LOs 1.1.C, 1.2.C, and 1.3.C, Latin verbs indicate person, number, tense, voice, and mood. Tense specifically answers two questions at once: when does the action happen, and is it ongoing or finished?
Latin has six tenses. Three are built on the present stem (present, imperfect, future) and describe action as ongoing or repeated. Three are built on the perfect stem (perfect, pluperfect, future perfect) and describe action as completed. That split is the part English speakers underestimate. The imperfect amabat means "he was loving / kept loving," while the perfect amavit means "he loved," a done deal. Both are "past" in English, but Latin treats them as different claims about the action, and AP graders expect you to show the difference in translation.
Tense lives inside Unit 1's core skill of describing how grammar creates meaning in context (LOs 1.1.C, 1.2.C, 1.3.C, all of which state that Latin verbs indicate person, number, tense, voice, and mood). In the Catullus syllabus poems, tense isn't just grammar homework. It's how the poetry works. Catullus 5 hinges on a tense argument. Suns can set and return (possunt, present, a repeatable cycle), but for us one perpetual night must be slept (dormienda, a gerundive pointing at unavoidable future necessity). Catullus 8 builds its grief on the same axis. Amata (perfect participle, "having been loved") sits against amabitur (future, "will be loved"), compressing a whole lost relationship and an empty future into two verb forms. If you can name the tenses and say what each one does, you can write the kind of analysis the free-response section rewards.
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Perfect Tense (Unit 1)
The perfect is the tense AP Latin leans on hardest, and it shows up in shortened poetic forms like fulsere for fulserunt ("they shone") in Catullus 8. Recognizing that fulsere is perfect, not present, is the difference between "the suns once shone for you" and a mistranslation that wrecks the poem's nostalgia.
Pluperfect Tense (Unit 1)
The pluperfect is tense layered on tense, action completed before another past action ("had loved"). It only makes sense relative to a perfect or imperfect nearby, so it forces you to track the timeline of a whole passage, not one verb at a time.
Participle (Unit 1)
Participles carry relative tense rather than absolute time. A perfect participle like amata means "having been loved," before the main verb, whenever that is. In Catullus 8, amata next to future amabitur turns a grammar contrast into the poem's emotional argument.
Imperative Mood (Unit 1)
Tense and mood are separate dials on the same verb. A practice question on Catullus 8 stacks subjunctive desinas, imperative-force ducas, and perfect fulsere in one stretch, and untangling it means reading both dials at once.
Tense gets tested two ways. First, the literal translation free-response questions (like the 2017 SAQ asking you to translate a Caesar passage "as literally as possible") grade tense as part of the rubric. Translating an imperfect as a simple past, or a perfect as a present, costs you the segment even if you got the vocabulary right. Second, analysis questions ask what tense does in a passage. Fiveable practice questions on Catullus ask how the contrast between soles occidere et redire possunt and nobis nox est perpetua una dormienda drives the argument of Catullus 5, and how amata... amabitur in Catullus 8 intensifies the speaker's sense of irreplaceable loss. In both cases the answer runs through tense, the repeatable present of nature versus the looming future necessity of death, the completed past of love versus a future where no one will be loved as much. Your move on the exam is always the same: name the tense correctly, then state what time relationship or aspect it creates in context.
Tense tells you when and whether the action is complete; mood tells you how the speaker frames it (statement, command, possibility). The CED lists them as separate properties of the verb, and one form carries both. Fulsere is perfect tense, indicative mood (a past fact); desinas is present tense, subjunctive mood (an urged action). If a question asks about tense and you answer about the subjunctive, you've answered the wrong question.
Tense is one of five properties every Latin verb shows, alongside person, number, voice, and mood (LOs 1.1.C, 1.2.C, 1.3.C).
Latin's six tenses split into a present system (present, imperfect, future) for ongoing action and a perfect system (perfect, pluperfect, future perfect) for completed action.
Imperfect and perfect are both "past" in English, but they make different claims, so translate the imperfect as "was doing / kept doing" and the perfect as a simple completed "did."
Poetic short forms like fulsere (= fulserunt) are still perfect tense, and misreading them as present changes the meaning of the line.
Catullus uses tense contrast as an argument, like amata (perfect) against amabitur (future) in Carmen 8, so naming the tense is the first step of literary analysis.
On translation FRQs, tense accuracy is graded segment by segment, so a correct verb with the wrong tense still loses credit.
Tense is the verb property that marks time (past, present, future) and aspect (ongoing vs. completed). Latin has six tenses: present, imperfect, future, perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect, and the CED requires you to describe how each contributes to meaning in context.
Tense tells you when the action happens and whether it's complete; mood tells you how it's framed (indicative for facts, subjunctive for possibilities, imperative for commands). Every finite verb has both, so desinas in Catullus 8 is present tense but subjunctive mood.
No, and treating them the same is one of the most common translation errors. The imperfect describes ongoing or repeated past action ("was loving, kept loving") while the perfect describes a completed action ("loved"), and AP translation rubrics expect you to show that difference in English.
Yes. The translation FRQs ask you to translate "as literally as possible" and grade by segments, so rendering a perfect verb as a present (or an imperfect as a simple past) typically costs the whole segment even if the vocabulary is right.
Because Catullus builds arguments out of tense contrasts. In Carmen 5, the present possunt (suns can set and return) clashes with the future necessity of dormienda (one perpetual night must be slept), and in Carmen 8, perfect amata against future amabitur turns grammar into grief. Naming those tenses is exactly the move analysis questions reward.