An Easy Method for Beginners in LatinAmerican Book Company, 1890 - 348 pages |
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Accusative acria adjectives advised agricolae agris agrōs amant amat amātus ambulat āre ātum āvī beautiful boys brave Caesar Carolus castra Cicero cīvēs conj CONJUGATION Dative daughter declension declined delighted dominus eōs epistula erat Examine the following filia following sentences fuit Gauls Genitive GERUND Graecia habent hodie homines hostium INDICATIVE MOOD Indirect Object īre Italy Iulia laudantur laudat LESSON libera Marcus medicus militēs monitus multae multi NEUT neuter Nominative nōn Nōn-ne nouns oppida oppidum ōris PARTICIPLE patria Perf PLUPERFECT plur PLURAL poet poēta poëtae praise preposition Pres puellae puer pueri pulchra quam queen Quid Quis rēgīna render Roman Rōmānī rule saepe Scipio Africanus semper SINGULAR soldiers stem Subjunctive syllables temple templum thou Titus Translate into English Translate into Latin Translate the following Tullia Ubi sunt unquam urbe VERBS VOCABULARY vowel
Popular passages
Page 8 - The Latin, like the English, has three persons and two numbers. The first person denotes the speaker; the second, the person spoken to; the third, the person spoken of. The singular number denotes one; the plural, more than one.