abeo

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1) to depart, go away, go off, exit
 * 2) * 353 – 431 , Paulinus of Nola, Poems 13.1 in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (volume 30), Wilhelm von Hartel (editor), Vienna 1866, page 67:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 353 – 431 , Paulinus of Nola, Poems 13.1 in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (volume 30), Wilhelm von Hartel (editor), Vienna 1866, page 67:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 353 – 431 , Paulinus of Nola, Poems 13.1 in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (volume 30), Wilhelm von Hartel (editor), Vienna 1866, page 67:
 * "la"

- Tempora temporibus subeunt, abit et venit aetās.


 * 1)  to pass away
 * 2) to retire from office
 * 3)  to set
 * 4) * 4 , Germanicus (translator), Phaenomena 667-668 (original author: Aratus):
 * Illa abit Ōceanō, tōtīus serta Corōnae in caelum redeunt,
 * She (Cassiopeia) sets in the Ocean, the wreaths of the entire Corona return to the heavens,
 * 1)  to change one's nature
 * 2)  to be transformed, metamorphosed
 * 3) * c. 250 , Commodian, Carmen Apologeticum 1053–1055 in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (volume 15), Bernhard Dombard (editor), Vienna 1887, page 187:
 * Et sī nōn crēdiderint, in umbrā mortis abībunt.
 * And should they not believe, they shall walk in the shadow of death.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Psalms 1:1:
 * "la"
 * 1) * c. 250 , Commodian, Carmen Apologeticum 1053–1055 in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (volume 15), Bernhard Dombard (editor), Vienna 1887, page 187:
 * Et sī nōn crēdiderint, in umbrā mortis abībunt.
 * And should they not believe, they shall walk in the shadow of death.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Psalms 1:1:
 * "la"

- Beātus vir quī nōn abiit in cōnsiliō impiōrum, et in viā peccātōrum nōn stetit, et in cathedrā pestilentiae nōn sēdit.

Conjugation
Irregular conjugation, but similar to fourth conjugation. The third principal part is, unlike other derivates of, never found as **abīvī. In forms where the letter I appears consecutively, the syllable is often contracted to a long Ī in every period of the Latin language.