 
 
 
 
a. Verbs expressing the operations of nature and the time of day: -
| vesperáscit (inceptive, § 263. 1), it grows late. | ningit, it snows. | 
| lúcíscit hóc, it is getting light. | fulgurat, it lightens. | 
| grandinat, it hails. | tonat, it thunders. | 
| pluit, it rains. | rórat, the dew falls | 
b. Verbs of feeling, where the person who is the proper subject becomes the object, as being himself affected by the feeling expressed in the verb (§ 354. b): -
| miseret, it grieves. | paenitet (poenitet), it repents. | 
| piget, it disgusts. | pudet, it shames. | 
| taedet, it wearies. | |
| miseret mé, I pity (it distresses me); pudet mé, I am ashamed. | 
c. Verbs which have a phrase or clause as their subject (cf. §§ 454, 569. 2): -
| accidit, contingit, évenit, obtingit, obvenit, fit, it happens. | libet, it pleases. | 
| licet, it is permitted. | oportet, it is fitting, ought. | 
| certum est, it is resolved. | necesse est, it is needful. | 
| cónstat, it is clear. | praestat, it is better. | 
| placet, it seems good (pleases). | interest, réfert, it concerns. | 
| vidétur, it seems, seems good. | vacat, there is leisure. | 
| decet, it is becoming. | restat, superest, it remains. | 
d. The passive of intransitive verbs is very often used impersonally (see synopsis in § 207): -
NOTE: The impersonal use of the passive proceeds from its original reflexive (or middle) meaning, the action being regarded as accomplishing itself (compare the French cela se fait).
 
 
 
