Exercitia auditionis Colloquii iii. De pellicula "Colloquium III" a Portal Iris representata. Monstra verum responsum. FAMILIA ROMANA: Capitulum tertium
The same three words as before, but with their forms now indicating a different function.
Before, using the nominative case, we just said "this IS an island/river/town." Now with the genitive we're saying "so-and-so is this master OF the island/river/town."
* Note that there's no Latin word here for "of". That idea of "belonging" is all in the ending!
Note also that our book doesn't introduce genitive forms for words of the "oppidum" type, but this is a convenient place for us to do so.
The three men we've picked here to be "domini" are the poets Ovid, Horace and Virgil (of which the greatest is Ovid).
For more on the genitive, see here:
http://www.slideshare.net/Saxonides/plural-nominative-and-genitive-singular-latin-english
and here:
http://www.slideshare.net/Saxonides/llpsi-cap-2-exercitium-de-casu-genetivo-aliud
Exercitatio de præpositionibus in capitulis quinto et sexto.
Præpositiones nonnullæ atque casus quibus junguntur.
(Erratum typographicum jam correctum'st.)
Map & Grammar, 1st Day of Grammar Boot Camp.
Four Types of English Nouns: vertebra, nucleus, bacterium, hypothesis.
Three Linguistic Terms: phonética, vocális, consonans.
Five Major Countries: Britannia, Gallia, Germania, Hispania, Italia.
Not much new here except the masculine singular personal pronouns _is_ (nom.) and _ejus_ (gen.).
But make sure you've got not only those, down, but everything else!
If you haven't got these forms at your fingertips, you'll be crippled, while if you do have them, you'll know what's going on, will be able to understand and also to express yourself, and you'll get pleasure, enjoyment and satisfaction from the undertaking.
Exercitia auditionis Colloquii iii. De pellicula "Colloquium III" a Portal Iris representata. Monstra verum responsum. FAMILIA ROMANA: Capitulum tertium
The same three words as before, but with their forms now indicating a different function.
Before, using the nominative case, we just said "this IS an island/river/town." Now with the genitive we're saying "so-and-so is this master OF the island/river/town."
* Note that there's no Latin word here for "of". That idea of "belonging" is all in the ending!
Note also that our book doesn't introduce genitive forms for words of the "oppidum" type, but this is a convenient place for us to do so.
The three men we've picked here to be "domini" are the poets Ovid, Horace and Virgil (of which the greatest is Ovid).
For more on the genitive, see here:
http://www.slideshare.net/Saxonides/plural-nominative-and-genitive-singular-latin-english
and here:
http://www.slideshare.net/Saxonides/llpsi-cap-2-exercitium-de-casu-genetivo-aliud
Exercitatio de præpositionibus in capitulis quinto et sexto.
Præpositiones nonnullæ atque casus quibus junguntur.
(Erratum typographicum jam correctum'st.)
Map & Grammar, 1st Day of Grammar Boot Camp.
Four Types of English Nouns: vertebra, nucleus, bacterium, hypothesis.
Three Linguistic Terms: phonética, vocális, consonans.
Five Major Countries: Britannia, Gallia, Germania, Hispania, Italia.
Not much new here except the masculine singular personal pronouns _is_ (nom.) and _ejus_ (gen.).
But make sure you've got not only those, down, but everything else!
If you haven't got these forms at your fingertips, you'll be crippled, while if you do have them, you'll know what's going on, will be able to understand and also to express yourself, and you'll get pleasure, enjoyment and satisfaction from the undertaking.
Texto de repaso del tema presente de indicativo de la voz activa, las 5 declinaciones y los adjetivos en grado positivo. Para analizar y traducir. Con vocabulario