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Challenge A ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK Weekly Rules & Chart Practice SEMESTER 1

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Page 1: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

Challenge AALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK

Weekly Rules & Chart PracticeSEMESTER 1

Page 2: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

For each week, there are all the rules typed out (heading in blue) followed by practice pages (heading in purple). There is a 1 page practice page for each day not in community – labeled Day 1, Day 2, Day 3 and Day 4. The rules for that week are practiced at least once, usually twice followed by some review charts from previous weeks. The review charts are labelled with which week they are from so that you can go back and find the original master chart to copy from.

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GRAMMAR -SEMESTER 1 WEEK 1 Grammar No. 31 The First Declension

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative terr-a Land, the (a) land Subject

Singular Genitive terr-ae Of the (a) land Possessive

Singular Dative terr-ae To or for the (a) land Indirect object

Singular Accusative terr-am The (a) land Direct object

Singular Ablative terr-ā By, with, from the (a) land

Object of the Preposition

Plural Nominative terr-ae Lands, the lands Subject

Plural Genitive terr-ārum Of the lands Possessive

Plural Dative terr-īs To or for the lands Indirect object

Plural Accusative terr-ās Lands, the lands Direct object

Plural Ablative terr- īs By, with, from the lands Object of the Preposition

Gender:

32: A) All nouns naming individual male person are masculine. Nauta, ae, a sailor, masculine. (Sailors are usually men.)

33: B) All others are feminine. Terra, ae, land, feminine.

Additional Rules in Reading:

All nouns whose genitive ends in -ae are in the first declension.

Page 4: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 1 DAY 1 Grammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terrae (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Copy the grammar rules for gender of the 1st Declension

# 32 A _____________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________

#33 _________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Review rule found in reading: All nouns whose genitive ends in -ae are in the _________ declension.

Page 5: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 1 DAY 2Grammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terrae (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Page 6: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 1 DAY 3Grammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terrae (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Page 7: henlelatinhelps.files.wordpress.com  · Web viewChallenge A. ALL IN ONE GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK . Weekly Rules & Chart Practice. SEMESTER 1 . For each week, there are all the rules typed

PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 1 DAY 4Grammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terrae (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 2 Accent:

No. 9 A) In words of two syllables, the accent is on the first.

vía; béllum

No. 10 B) In words of more than two syllables, if the second last syllable is long, it is accented; otherwise the accent is on the third last syllable.

vid ē runt (accent on long e); ágmĭne

Quantity of Syllables:

No. 11 A) A syllable is short if it contains a vowel that is short by nature or that is followed by another vowel or diphthong. reg ĕ re; glor ĭ a

No. 12 B) A syllable is long if it contains a vowel that is long by nature or a vowel that is followed by two consonants other than a mute (c, g, p, b, t, d) or f followed by a liquid (r, l).

studēre; regēndus

NOUNS

No. 14Nouns have gender, number, case and declension

No. 25 The Five Declensions. There are five declensions in Latin. They can be distinguished by the endings of the genitive singular

1 2 3 4 5 -ae - ī -is -ū -eī vi-ae serv-ī lēg-is port-ūs r- eī

Gender:

32: A) All nouns naming individual male person are masculine. Nauta, ae, a sailor, masculine. (Sailors are usually men.)

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33: B) All others are feminine. Terra, ae, land, feminine.

Grammar Semester 1 Week 2

Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative serv-us The slave Subject

Singular Genitive serv-ī Of the slave, the slave's Possessive

Singular Dative serv-ō To or for the slave Indirect object

Singular Accusative serv-um The slave Direct object

Singular Ablative serv-ō By, with, from the slave

Plural Nominative serv-ī The slaves Subject

Plural Genitive serv-ōrum Of the slaves, the slaves' Possessive

Plural Dative serv-īs To or for the slaves Indirect object

Plural Accusative serv-ōs the slaves Direct object

Plural Ablative serv-īs By, with, from the slaves

No. 35 Gender – Masucline nouns of 2nd Declension: Generally masculine

Additional Rules found in the Reading:

1. The subject of a finite verb is in the nominative case.

2. A finite verb agrees with its subject in number (and person).

3. The direct object of a transitive verb is in the accusative case.

4. The verb usually stands last in the sentence.

5. Adverbs usually stand immediately before the word they modify.

6. The possessive case and many English -of phrases are translated by the genitive.

7. All nouns whose genitive singular ends in -ī belong to the second declension.

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PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 2 DAY 1

Grammar Rules No. 9 – 12 - Accent and Syllables - Read these grammar rules each day and practice saying the words out loud.

Copy Rules #14 and # 25 on Nouns

# 14 ______________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________

#25 The Five Declensions: ____________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

1 2 3 4 5

Review rules of 1st Declension Gender

# 32 A. All nouns naming individual male person are _________________ Nauta, ae, a sailor, ______________. (Sailors are usually men.)

# 33 B. All others are __________________. Terra, ae, land, _______________________.

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PRACTICE Semester 1 WEEK 2 DAY 2 Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

Copy Grammar Rule # 35 for Gender : _____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Review: Additional Rules found in the Reading:

1. The subject of a finite verb is in the ________________ case.

2. A finite verb agrees with its subject in ___________ (and _______________).

3. The direct object of a transitive verb is in the ____________________ case.

4. The verb usually stands _____________ in the sentence.

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5. Adverbs usually stand _______________ ___________ the word they modify.

6. The possessive case and many English -of phrases are translated by the ________________.

7. All nouns whose genitive singular ends in -ī belong to the _______________ declension.

PRACTICE Semester 1 WEEK 2 DAY 3Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

Copy Grammar Rule # 35 for Gender : _____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

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PRACTICE Semester 1 WEEK 2 DAY 4Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

Copy Grammar Rule # 35 for Gender : _____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 3

Grammar No. 25 The Five Declensions. There are five declensions in Latin. They can be distinguished by the endings of the genitive singular

1 2 3 4 5 -ae - ī -is -ū -eī vi-ae serv-ī lēg-is port-ūs r- eī

No. 26. How to decline a Noun. The nominative, genitive and gender of a noun determine which model it follows. Add the endings of that model to the stem.

No. 27 Note: a. The stem is that part of the word which remains the same in spelling throughout the declension. It gives the meaning of the word. The endings show what the word does in the sentence, whether ir is the subject, direct object, indirect object, etc.

No. 29 c. The accusative of the neuter noums and adjectives is always like the nominative.

No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative serv-us The slave Subject

Singular Genitive serv-ī Of the slave, the slave's Possessive

Singular Dative serv-ō To or for the slave Indirect object

Singular Accusative serv-um The slave Direct object

Singular Ablative serv-ō By, with, from the slave

Plural Nominative serv-ī The slaves Subject

Plural Genitive serv-ōrum Of the slaves, the slaves' Possessive

Plural Dative serv-īs To or for the slaves Indirect object

Plural Accusative serv-ōs the slaves Direct object

Plural Ablative serv-īs By, with, from the slaves

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No. 35 Gender – Masucline nouns of 2nd Declension: Generally masculine

No. 36 Note: Proper names in -ius and fīlius, son, form their vocative singular in – ī.

Vergilius, Vergilī; fīlius, fīlī.

Grammar Semester 1 Week 3

No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative bell-um The war Subject

Singular Genitive bell-ī Of the war Possessive

Singular Dative bell-ō To or for the war Indirect object

Singular Accusative bell-um The war Direct object

Singular Ablative bell-ō By, with, from the war Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative bell-ā The wars Subject

Plural Genitive bell-ōrum Of the wars Possessive

Plural Dative bell-īs To or for the wars Indirect object

Plural Accusative bell-a the wars Direct object

Plural Ablative bell-īs By, with, from the wars Obj of Prep

No. 38 Gender – Neuter Nouns of 2nd Declension: All neuter.

No. 39 Note: The accusative is like the nominative in all neuter nouns and adjectives. Thus, singular nominative bellum, accusative bellum; plural nominative bella, accusative bella. (Cf. Flumen, No 64, gravis, -e, No. 78, etc, )

Additional Rules found in the Reading:

1. All words of the second declension whose nominative ends in -um are neuter and are declined like BELLUM.

2. HINT: In all neuter nouns and adjectives the accusative is always like the nominative.

3. The indirect object is put in the DATIVE case.

4. In Latin some prepositions are followed by the ablative case, some by the accusative case.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 3 DAY 1

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 2)

No. 25 The ___________ Declensions: There are _______ declensions in Latin. They can be

distinguished by the endings of the _____________________________.

1 2 3 4 5

Copy Grammar Rules

No. 26. How to decline a noun: __________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

No. 27 Note: a. _______________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

No. 29 c. _____________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 3 DAY 2REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 2)

No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Add the endings to serv and the complete the translation.

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative serv- The Subject

Singular Genitive serv- Of the Possessive

Singular Dative serv- To or for the Indirect object

Singular Accusative serv- The Direct object

Singular Ablative serv- By, with, from the

Plural Nominative serv- The Subject

Plural Genitive serv- Of the Possessive

Plural Dative serv- To or for the Indirect object

Plural Accusative serv- the Direct object

Plural Ablative serv- By, with, from the

No. 35 Gender – Masucline nouns of 2nd Declension: Generally ______________________.

Copy:

No. 36 Note: _________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 3 DAY 3No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Add the form and meaning for bellum, bellī (war)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

No. 38 Gender – Neuter Nouns of 2nd Declension: __________________________________________

Read and Review following note:

No. 39 Note: The accusative is like the nominative in all neuter nouns and adjectives. Thus, singular nominative bellum, accusative bellum; plural nominative bella, accusative bella. (Cf. Flumen, No 64, gravis, -e, No. 78, etc, )

Fill in the blanks:

The accusative is like the________________ in all neuter _______________ and _____________. Thus, singular nominative bellum, accusative bellum; plural nominative bella, accusative bella. (Cf. Flumen, No 64, gravis, -e, No. 78, etc, )

Review: Additional Rules found in the Reading:

1. All words of the second declension whose nominative ends in -um are neuter and are declined like _____________.

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2. HINT: In all neuter nouns and adjectives the accusative is always like the ___________________.

3. The indirect object is put in the __________________ case.

4. In Latin some prepositions are followed by the ________________ case, some by the _____________ case.

Practice Semester 1 Week 3 DAY 4No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Add the form and meaning for bellum, bellī (war)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

No. 38 Gender – Neuter Nouns of 2nd Declension: __________________________________________

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 4 Grammar: Review

Additional Rules found in the reading;

1. After a linking verb, the predicate noun is put in the same case as the subject.

2. Forms of the verb SUM may stand anywhere in the sentence.

Practice conjugating verb I am – sum

Singular - sum – I am es – you are est – he, she, it, is

Plural - sumus - we are estis – you are sunt – they are

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Practice Semester 1 Week 4 DAY 1

Conjugate Sum:

Form Meaning

Singular 1st person

Singular 2nd Person

Singular 3rd Person

Plural 1st Person

Plural 2nd Person

Plural 3rd Person

Review additional rules from reading:

1. After a linking verb, the predicate noun is put in the same case as the ___________________.

2. Forms of the verb SUM may stand ________________ in the sentence.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 4 DAY 2

Conjugate Sum:

Form Meaning

Singular 1st person

Singular 2nd Person

Singular 3rd Person

Plural 1st Person

Plural 2nd Person

Plural 3rd Person

Review additional rules from reading:

1. After a linking verb, the predicate noun is put in the same case as the ___________________.

2. Forms of the verb SUM may stand ________________ in the sentence.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 4 DAY 3 REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 2)

Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 4 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 3)

No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Add the form and meaning for bellum, bellī (war)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 5No. 45 The Third Declension. The nominative singular of the third declension has no model ending. Thus lēx, law, pars, part, flūmen, river, hostis, enemy, are all nouns of the third declension. The genitive ending (for the third declension, always -is) shows the declension and gives the stem.

No 46: Nouns naming individual male persons are masculine: mīles, mīlitis, m., soldier

No. 47: Nouns naming individual female persons are feminine: māter, mātris, f., mother.

No 48: Note: These two rules (Nos. 46, 47) should always be applied before Nos. 49 toThus mīles would be feminine by the SOX rule (No. 50), but rule No. 46 is applied first, hence mīles is masculine.

No. 49: Nouns ending in -er, -or (ERROR) are masculine.

No. 50: Nouns ending in -s, -o, -x (SOX) are feminine.

No. 51: Nouns ending in -l, -a, -n, -c, -e, -t (LANCET) are neuter.

No. 52 Note: But masculīnī generisare words in -os, -nis, -guis, and -cis,in -es (itis) and -ex (icis);as neuter mark the -us (with -ris).

*Rule No. 52 is a “poem” (written in hybrid of English and Latin) describing the exceptions to 3rd declension’s SOX rule (Rule #50): Normally nouns that end in -s, -o, or -x are feminine. Exceptions to this rule are described below: Masculine: ~nouns ending in -os, -nis, -guis, and -cis in the nominative singular ~nouns whose nom/gen sing endings are -es (-itis) and -ex (-icis)Neuter: ~ nouns whose nom./gen. sing endings are -us, (-ris)

No. 53: Declension. First find the gender of the noun. Then find the stem from the genitive.

No. 54: For masculine and feminine nouns, add the endings of lēx or pars according to the rules in Nos. 59-63.

No. 55: For neuter nouns add the endings of flūmen. (For the few exceptions, see footnote on

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No 64)

No. 56: The vocative is always like the nominative.

Grammar Semester 1 Week 5

Masculine and Feminine Nouns of the 3rd Declension

No. 57: Masculine

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative lēx The law Subject

Singular Genitive lēg-is Of the law Possessive

Singular Dative lēg-ī To or for the law Indirect object

Singular Accusative lēg-em The law Direct object

Singular Ablative lēg-e By, with, from the law

Plural Nominative lēg-ēs The laws Subject

Plural Genitive lēg-um Of the laws Possessive

Plural Dative lēg-ibus To or for the laws Indirect object

Plural Accusative lēg-ēs the laws Direct object

Plural Ablative lēg-ibus By, with, from the laws

No. 64: Feminine

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative pars The part Subject

Singular Genitive part-is Of the part Possessive

Singular Dative part-ī To or for the part Indirect object

Singular Accusative part-em The part Direct object

Singular Ablative part-e By, with, from the part

Plural Nominative part-ēs The parts Subject

Plural Genitive part-ium Of the parts Possessive

Plural Dative part-ibus To or for the parts Indirect object

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Plural Accusative part-ēs the parts Direct object

Plural Ablative part-ibus By, with, from the parts

Grammar Semester 1 Week 5

3rd Declension Nouns

No. 59: Note: All masculine and feminine nouns of the 3rd declension are declined like lēx except the following nouns which have -ium in the genitive plural like part-ium:

No. 60: 1. Nouns that have the same number of syllables in the genitive singular as in the nominative singular: as hostis, hostis (host-ium), enemy.

No. 61: 2. Nouns whose stem ends in two consonants, as: gens, gentis, tribe, stem, gent-, hence gentium.

Exceptions:

No. 62: a. With -um instead of -ium: senum, patrum, mēnsum, mātrum, canum, juvenum, and frātrum (of old men, fathers, months and mothers of dogs and youths and brothers).

No. 63: b. With -ium instead of -um: vīrium, lītium, faucium, Penātium, imbrium, and nivium, Samnītium, optimātium. (of strength and quarrels, of jaws and

household gods, of rains and snows, of Samnites and aristocrats.)

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. All nouns whose genitive singular ends in -IS belong to the third declension.

2. An appositive agrees with its noun in number and case.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 5 DAY 1 Copy:

No. 45 The Third Declension. ____________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

No 46: _______________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

No. 47: _____________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

Read and Review following note:

No 48: Note: These two rules (Nos. 46, 47) should always be applied before Nos. 49 toThus mīles would be feminine by the SOX rule (No. 50), but rule No. 46 is applied first, hence mīles is masculine.

No. 49: ______________________________________________________________________

No. 50: ______________________________________________________________________

No. 51: ______________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 5 DAY 2

Read and Review following rule:

No. 52 Note: But masculīnī generisare words in -os, -nis, -guis, and -cis,in -es (itis) and -ex (icis);as neuter mark the -us (with -ris).

*Rule No. 52 is a “poem” (written in hybrid of English and Latin) describing the exceptions to 3rd declension’s SOX rule (Rule #50): Normally nouns that end in -s, -o, or -x are feminine. Exceptions to this rule are described below: Masculine: ~nouns ending in -os, -nis, -guis, and -cis in the nominative singular ~nouns whose nom/gen sing endings are -es (-itis) and -ex (-icis)Neuter: ~ nouns whose nom./gen. sing endings are -us, (-ris)

No. 53: Declension. __________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

Read and Review the following grammar rules:

No. 54: For masculine and feminine nouns, add the endings of lēx or pars according to the rules in Nos. 59-63.

No. 55: For neuter nouns add the endings of flūmen. (For the few exceptions, see footnote on No 64)

No. 56: _____________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 5 DAY 3

Masculine and Feminine Nouns of the 3rd Declension

No. 57: Masculine

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

No. 58: Feminine

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

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Plural Ablative

Practice Semester 1 Week 5 DAY 4

Copy following grammar rules:

3rd Declension Nouns

No. 59: Note: _________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

No. 60: 1. _________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

No. 61: 2. ________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

Read and Review the following exceptions: Exceptions:

No. 62: a. With -um instead of -ium: senum, patrum, mēnsum, mātrum, canum, juvenum, and frātrum (of old men, fathers, months and mothers of dogs and youths and brothers).

No. 63: b. With -ium instead of -um: vīrium, lītium, faucium, Penātium, imbrium, and nivium, Samnītium, optimātium. (of strength and quarrels, of jaws and household

gods, of rains and snows, of Samnites and aristocrats.)

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. All nouns whose genitive singular ends in -IS belong to the _______________declension.

2. An appositive agrees with its noun in ________________ and ________________.

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 6GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative flūmen The river Subject

Singular Genitive flūmin-is Of the river Possessive

Singular Dative flūmin-ī To or for the river Indirect object

Singular Accusative flūmen The river Direct object

Singular Ablative flūmin-e By, with, from the river

Plural Nominative flūmin-a The rivers Subject

Plural Genitive flūmin-um Of the rivers Possessive

Plural Dative flūmin-ibus To or for the rivers Indirect object

Plural Accusative flūmin-a the rivers Direct object

Plural Ablative flūmin-ibus By, with, from the rivers

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Practice Semester 1 Week 6 DAY 1

GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Add the form and meaning for flūmen, flūminis (river)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

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Practice Semester 1 Week 6 DAY 2

GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Add the form and meaning for flūmen, flūminis (river)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

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Practice Semester 1 Week 6 DAY 3 REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 5)

Masculine and Feminine Nouns of the 3rd Declension

No. 57: Masculine

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for lēx, lēgis (law)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 6 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 5)

No. 58: FemininePut the form and meaning in the following chart for pars, partis (part)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 7

No. 65. The Fourth Declension

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative port-us The harbor Subject

Singular Genitive port-ūs Of the harbor Possessive

Singular Dative port-uī To or for the harbor Indirect object

Singular Accusative port-um The harbor Direct object

Singular Ablative port-ū By, with, from the harbor

Plural Nominative port-ūs The harbors Subject

Plural Genitive port-uum Of the harbors Possessive

Plural Dative port-ibus To or for the harbors Indirect object

Plural Accusative port-ūs the harbors Direct object

Plural Ablative port-ibus By, with, from the harbors

No. 66: Gender: All masculine except manus, -ūs, f. hand, domus, ūs, f. house, cornū, ūs, n. horn, genū, ūs, n., knee, and a few others.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 7 DAY 1

No. 65. The Fourth Declension

Add the form and meaning for portus, portūs (harbor)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

Copy Grammar Rule:

No. 66: Gender: ______________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 7 DAY 2

No. 65. The Fourth Declension

Add the form and meaning for portus, portūs (harbor)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

Copy Grammar Rule:

No. 66: Gender: ______________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

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PRACTICE Semester 1 Week 1 DAY 3REVIEWGrammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terra (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Copy the grammar rules for gender of the 1st Declension

# 32 A _____________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________________________________

#33 _________________________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________________________

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Practice Semester 1 Week 7 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 6)

GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Add the form and meaning for flūmen, flūminis (river)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 8No. 66: Gender (4th Declension): All masculine except manus, -ūs, f. hand, domus, ūs, f. house, cornū, ūs, n. horn, genū, ūs, n., knee, and a few others.

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative rēs The thing Subject

Singular Genitive r-eī Of the thing Possessive

Singular Dative r-eī To or for thing Indirect object

Singular Accusative r-em The thing Direct object

Singular Ablative r-ē By, with, from the thing

Plural Nominative r-ēs The things Subject

Plural Genitive r-ērum Of the things Possessive

Plural Dative r-ēbus To or for the things Indirect object

Plural Accusative r-ēs the things Direct object

Plural Ablative r-ēbus By, with, from the things

No. 70: Gender: All feminine except diēs, diēī which is generally masculine. In the singular, however, when it means a set date or a “period of time” even diēs is often feminine. Certain nouns, such as fidēs, f., faith, have no plural forms.

No. 71: Note: The genitive and dative singular ending of the fifth declension is ēī instead of eī when the stem ends in a vowel, as diēs, stem di, therefore di-ēī .

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 8

No. 73: How to decline an Adjective:

1. Learn the nominative and genitive1 from the vocabularies

2. These show what model the adjective follows

3. Add the endings of this model to the stem.

Week 8

Additional Rules from the Reading:

IN with the Accusative:

The preposition in may take either the accusative or the ablative case.

1. Whenever there is MOVEMENT or MOTION expressed by the in, the ACCUSATIVE is used.2. When there is no idea of movement or motion, the ABLATIVE is used.

1 The genitive of adjectives is not given in vocabularies when it is clean from the nominative, as magnus, a, um (stem: magn-)

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Practice Semester 1 Week 8 DAY 1

Read and Review gender rule for 4th Declension nouns:

No. 66: Gender (4th Declension): All masculine except manus, -ūs, f. hand, domus, ūs, f. house, cornū, ūs, n. horn, genū, ūs, n., knee, and a few others.

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Add form and meaning for rēs, reī (thing)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

No. 70: Gender: ______________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________

Read and Review this note:

No. 71: Note: The genitive and dative singular ending of the fifth declension is ēī instead of eī when the stem ends in a vowel, as diēs, stem di, therefore di-ēī.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 8 DAY 2

Copy steps on how to decline an adjective below:

No. 73: How to decline an Adjective:

1. ________________________________________________________________________

2. _________________________________________________________________________

3. __________________________________________________________________________

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

IN with the Accusative:

The preposition in may take either the accusative or the ablative case.

1. Whenever there is MOVEMENT or MOTION expressed by the in, the __________________ is used.2. When there is no idea of movement or motion, the _____________________ is used.

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Add form and meaning for rēs, reī (thing)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 8 DAY 3

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Add form and meaning for rēs, reī (thing)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 8 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 7)

No. 65. The Fourth Declension

Add the form and meaning for portus, portūs (harbor)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

Copy Grammar Rule:

No. 66: Gender: ______________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 9

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative magn-us magn-a magn-um

Singular Genitive magn-ī magn-ae magn-ī

Singular Dative magn-ō magn-ae magn-ō

Singular Accusative magn-um magn-am magn-um

Singular Ablative magn-ō magn-ā magn-ō

Plural Nominative magn-ī magn-ae magn-a

Plural Genitive magn-ōrum magn-ārum magn-ōrum

Plural Dative magn-īs magn-īs magn-īs

Plural Accusative magn-ōs magn-ās magn-ā

Plural Ablative magn-īs magn-īs magn-īs

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Practice Semester 1 Week 9 DAY 1

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 9 DAY 2

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 9 DAY 3

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 9 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 8)

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Add form and meaning for rēs, reī (thing)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 10

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. Adjectives agree with their nouns in gender, number and case.

2. Adjectives of QUANTITY generally precede their nouns.

3. Adjectives of QUALITY generally follow their nouns.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 10 DAY 1

Review above rules:

1. Adjectives agree with their nouns in _______________, ______________ and ___________________.

2. Adjectives of QUANTITY generally ________________ their nouns.

3. Adjectives of QUALITY generally _________________ their nouns.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 9)

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 10 DAY 2

Review above rules:

1. Adjectives agree with their nouns in _______________, ______________ and ___________________.

2. Adjectives of QUANTITY generally ________________ their nouns.

3. Adjectives of QUALITY generally _________________ their nouns.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 2)

Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 10 DAY 3

Review above rules:

1. Adjectives agree with their nouns in _______________, ______________ and ___________________.

2. Adjectives of QUANTITY generally ________________ their nouns.

3. Adjectives of QUALITY generally _________________ their nouns.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 2)

Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 10 DAY 4

Review above rules:

1. Adjectives agree with their nouns in _______________, ______________ and ___________________.

2. Adjectives of QUANTITY generally ________________ their nouns.

3. Adjectives of QUALITY generally _________________ their nouns.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 3)

No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Add the form and meaning for bellum, bellī (war)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 11

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. Adjectives may also be linked to their noun by means of a linking verb like sum, I am. These adjectives are called predicate adjectives.

2. The rule of agreement is the SAME for attributive and predicate adjectives.

3. The preposition prō ALWAYS takes the ABLATIVE. In expressions of PLACE, prō means in front of.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 11 DAY 1

Review the above rules:

1. Adjectives may also be linked to their noun by means of a linking verb like sum, I am. These adjectives are called __________________ _____________________.

2. The rule of agreement is the ___________ for attributive and predicate adjectives.

3. The preposition prō ALWAYS takes the ________________. In expressions of PLACE, prō means ___ ____________ _______.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 4)

Conjugate Sum:

Form Meaning

Singular 1st person

Singular 2nd Person

Singular 3rd Person

Plural 1st Person

Plural 2nd Person

Plural 3rd Person

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Practice Semester 1 Week 11 DAY 2

Review the above rules:

1. Adjectives may also be linked to their noun by means of a linking verb like sum, I am. These adjectives are called __________________ _____________________.

2. The rule of agreement is the ___________ for attributive and predicate adjectives.

3. The preposition prō ALWAYS takes the ________________. In expressions of PLACE, prō means ___ ____________ _______.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 5)

No. 57: Masculine

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for lēx, lēgis (law)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 11 DAY 3

Review the above rules:

1. Adjectives may also be linked to their noun by means of a linking verb like sum, I am. These adjectives are called __________________ _____________________.

2. The rule of agreement is the ___________ for attributive and predicate adjectives.

3. The preposition prō ALWAYS takes the ________________. In expressions of PLACE, prō means ___ ____________ _______.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 5)

No. 58: FemininePut the form and meaning in the following chart for pars, partis (part)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 11 DAY 4

Review the above rules:

1. Adjectives may also be linked to their noun by means of a linking verb like sum, I am. These adjectives are called __________________ _____________________.

2. The rule of agreement is the ___________ for attributive and predicate adjectives.

3. The preposition prō ALWAYS takes the ________________. In expressions of PLACE, prō means ___ ____________ _______.

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 6)

GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Add the form and meaning for flūmen, flūminis (river)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 12

Grammar No. 78:

Gravis, e, - heavy, severe, serious is declined thus:

Masculine Feminine Neuter

Singular Nominative grav-is grav-is grav-e

Singular Genitive grav-is grav-is grav-is

Singular Dative grav-ī grav-ī grav-ī

Singular Accusative grav-em grav-em grav-e

Singular Ablative grav-ī grav-ī grav-ī

Plural Nominative grav-ēs grav-ēs grav-iaPlural Genitive grav-ium grav-ium grav-iumPlural Dative grav-ibus grav-ibus grav-ibus

Plural Accusative grav-ēs grav-ēs grav-iaPlural Ablative grav-ibus grav-ibus grav-ibus

Additional Rules from the Reading.

1. All adjectives with -IS, -E in the nominative singular are declined like gravis, e.

2 Prepositional phrases which modify adjectives are often translated into Latin by the genitive or dative or ablative WITHOUT A PREPOSITION. THE PROPER CASE TO BE USED IS DETERMINED BY THE ADJECTIVE.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 12 DAY 1

Grammar No. 78:

Decline gravis, e, - heavy, severe, serious

Masculine Feminine Neuter

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading.

1. All adjectives with -IS, -E in the nominative singular are declined like _____________________.

2 Prepositional phrases which modify adjectives are often translated into Latin by the genitive or dative or ablative WITHOUT A __________________. THE PROPER CASE TO BE USED IS DETERMINED BY THE ____________________.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 12 DAY 2

Grammar No. 78:

Decline gravis, e, - heavy, severe, serious

Masculine Feminine Neuter

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading.

1. All adjectives with -IS, -E in the nominative singular are declined like _____________________.

2 Prepositional phrases which modify adjectives are often translated into Latin by the genitive or dative or ablative WITHOUT A __________________. THE PROPER CASE TO BE USED IS DETERMINED BY THE ____________________.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 12 DAY 3 REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 9)

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 12 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 9)

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 13

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Form MeaningSingular 1st P laud-ō I praise, I am praising, I do praiseSingular 2nd P laud-ās you praise, you are praising, you do praiseSingular 3rd P laud-at he, she, it praises; he, she, it are praising; he, she it does

praise

Plural 1st P laud-āmus we praise, we are praising, we do praisePlural 2nd P laud-ātis you praise, you are praising, you do praisePlural 3rd P laud-ant they praise, they are praising, they do praise

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. In both English and Latin, verbs change their form to express tense, person, and number.

2. All verbs whose present infinitive active ends in - ĀRE belong to the first conjugation.

3. First conjugation final personal signs.

Singular Plural

1 (I) …. (we) -mus2 (you) -s (you) -tis

3 (he, she, it) -t (they) -nt

(Generally, ō or m is a sign of the first person singular, I.)

4. : A finite verb agrees with its subject in PERSON and NUMBER.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 13 DAY 1

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Give form and meaning for laudō, 1. tr., praise

Form MeaningSingular 1st PSingular 2nd PSingular 3rd P

Plural 1st PPlural 2nd PPlural 3rd P

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. In both English and Latin, verbs change their form to express __________, __________, and ____________.

2. All verbs whose present infinitive active ends in - ĀRE belong to the _____________ conjugation.

3. First conjugation final personal signs.

Fill in the final personal signs below:

Singular Plural

1 (I) …. (we) -

2 (you) - (you) -

3 (he, she, it) -___ (they) -

(Generally, ō or m is a sign of the first person singular, I.)

4. : A finite verb agrees with its subject in _______________ and _________________.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 13 DAY 2

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Give form and meaning for laudō, 1. tr., praise

Form MeaningSingular 1st PSingular 2nd PSingular 3rd P

Plural 1st PPlural 2nd PPlural 3rd P

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. In both English and Latin, verbs change their form to express __________, __________, and ____________.

2. All verbs whose present infinitive active ends in - ĀRE belong to the _____________ conjugation.

3. First conjugation final personal signs.

Fill in the final personal signs below:

Singular Plural

1 (I) …. (we) -

2 (you) - (you) -

3 (he, she, it) -___ (they) -

(Generally, ō or m is a sign of the first person singular, I.)

4. : A finite verb agrees with its subject in _______________ and _________________.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 13 DAY 3

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Give form and meaning for laudō, 1. tr., praise

Form MeaningSingular 1st PSingular 2nd PSingular 3rd P

Plural 1st PPlural 2nd PPlural 3rd P

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. In both English and Latin, verbs change their form to express __________, __________, and ____________.

2. All verbs whose present infinitive active ends in - ĀRE belong to the _____________ conjugation.

3. First conjugation final personal signs.

Fill in the final personal signs below:

Singular Plural

1 (I) …. (we) -

2 (you) - (you) -

3 (he, she, it) -___ (they) -

(Generally, ō or m is a sign of the first person singular, I.)

4. : A finite verb agrees with its subject in _______________ and _________________.

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Practice Semester 1 Week 13 DAY 4

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Give form and meaning for laudō, 1. tr., praise

Form MeaningSingular 1st PSingular 2nd PSingular 3rd P

Plural 1st PPlural 2nd PPlural 3rd P

Review:

Additional Rules from the Reading:

1. In both English and Latin, verbs change their form to express __________, __________, and ____________.

2. All verbs whose present infinitive active ends in - ĀRE belong to the _____________ conjugation.

3. First conjugation final personal signs.

Fill in the final personal signs below:

Singular Plural

1 (I) …. (we) -

2 (you) - (you) -

3 (he, she, it) -___ (they) -

(Generally, ō or m is a sign of the first person singular, I.)

4. : A finite verb agrees with its subject in _______________ and _________________.

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Grammar Semester 1 Week 14

NO NEW RULES THIS WEEK

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Practice Semester 1 Week 14 DAY 1REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 1 and 2)

Grammar No. 31 The First Declension Put the form, meaning, use in the following chart for terra, terra (land)

Form Meaning Use

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

Grammar No. 34: Masculine Nouns of the Second Declension

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for servus, servī (slave)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 14 DAY 2REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 3)No. 37 Neuter Nouns of the 2nd Declension

Add the form and meaning for bellum, bellī (war)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 4)

Conjugate Sum:

Form Meaning

Singular 1st person

Singular 2nd Person

Singular 3rd Person

Plural 1st Person

Plural 2nd Person

Plural 3rd Person

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Practice Semester 1 Week 14 DAY 3 REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 5)

Masculine and Feminine Nouns of the 3rd Declension

No. 57: Masculine

Put the form and meaning in the following chart for lēx, lēgis (law)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

No. 58: FemininePut the form and meaning in the following chart for pars, partis (part)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 14 DAY 4 REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 6)

GRAMMAR No. 64: Neuter Nouns of the 3rd Declension

Add the form and meaning for flūmen, flūminis (river)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of PrepREVIEW (Semester 1 Week 7)

No. 65. The Fourth DeclensionAdd the form and meaning for portus, portūs (harbor)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative Obj of Prep

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

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Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative Obj of Prep

Grammar Semester 1 Week 15

NO NEW RULES THIS WEEK

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Practice Semester 1 Week 15 DAY 1REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 8)

No. 69: The Fifth Declension

Add form and meaning for rēs, reī (thing)

Form Meaning UseSingular Nominative Subject

Singular Genitive Possessive

Singular Dative Indirect object

Singular Accusative Direct object

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative Subject

Plural Genitive Possessive

Plural Dative Indirect object

Plural Accusative Direct object

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 15 DAY 2REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 9)

Grammar No. 72: Adjectives in -us of the First and Second Declensions

Practice declining adjectives in the first and second declension using magnus (masc), magna (fem), magnum (neut)

Masculinelike servus

Femininelike porta

Neuterlike bellum

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 15 DAY 3REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 12)

Grammar No. 78:

Decline gravis, e, - heavy, severe, serious

Masculine Feminine Neuter

Singular Nominative

Singular Genitive

Singular Dative

Singular Accusative

Singular Ablative

Plural Nominative

Plural Genitive

Plural Dative

Plural Accusative

Plural Ablative

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Practice Semester 1 Week 15 DAY 4REVIEW (Semester 1 Week 13)

No 162: Present Tense (present stem)

Give form and meaning for laudō, 1. tr., praise

Form MeaningSingular 1st PSingular 2nd PSingular 3rd P

Plural 1st PPlural 2nd PPlural 3rd P