1 / 13

Latin II Review (part I)

Latin II Review (part I). Cambridge Unit I & II Fall 2012 Magistra Chadwell. Nouns . Nouns are separated into declensions. A declension is a group of nouns w/the same endings. Nouns have case, number and gender Case indicates the nouns function. Number refers to singular or plural.

fordon
Download Presentation

Latin II Review (part I)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Latin II Review (part I) Cambridge Unit I & II Fall 2012 Magistra Chadwell

  2. Nouns • Nouns are separated into declensions. • A declension is a group of nouns w/the same endings. • Nouns have case, number and gender • Case indicates the nouns function. • Number refers to singular or plural. • Gender often has no bearing on the noun. • The dictionary entry of a noun gives you the important information: puella, puellae, f. girl

  3. Nouns (con’t) • The second word is the genitive singular form. This gives you the stem and declension • 1st declension: ancilla, ancillae (ancill—) • 2nd declension: ager, agrī(agr—) • 3rd declension: mater, matris (matr—) • 4th declension: portus, portūs (port—) • 5th declension: rēs, reī (r—) • Let’s look at the orange graphic organizer

  4. Nouns (con’t) • Nominative Case—used for the subject and predicate • Materest in tablino. • Coquusestiratus. • Genitive Case—used for possession (of, ‘s, s’) • Quīntuscanempuerīvīdit. • Dative Case—used for indirect object (to/for) and with intransitive verbs • Mater puellaelibrum dat. • Mihiplacet. (mihi licet….?)

  5. Nouns (con’t) • Accusative—used for the direct object and some prepositions (ad, in, per, prope, apud) • Mater puellaelibrum dat. • Ablative—used for prepositions (a/ab, cum, de, e/ex, in, pro, sine, sub). If no preposition is present, may be translated with from, with, by, in, on (as needed) • Grumiōcum servīslaborābat.

  6. Identify the case and number • canibus (3rd) • agrī (2nd) • iter (3rd) • vōce (3rd) • rērum (5th) • manūs (4th) • puellīs (1st) • templa (2nd)

  7. Nouns and Adjectives • Adjectives fall into two categories. • 1st/2nd declension: laetus, laeta, laetum pulcher, pulchra,pulchrum • 3rd declension: fortis, fortis, forte • Nouns and adjectives must agree in case, # and gender. • That does not mean that they will have the same endings.

  8. Noun and Adjectives • bonus servus same declension, nom, s, m • bona mater diff. declension, nom s, f. • fortis mater same decl., diff. endings • bonōrumcanum diff. declension, gen, m, pl • bonārumcanum diff. declension, gen, f, pl • brevī tempore neuter, abl sing, same decl In most instances, if noun and adj are same declension, then endings are the same. There are a few exceptions, mainly in 3rd declension.

  9. Verbs • Verbs are broken down into conjugations based on their infinitive • Verbs have 5 characteristics • Person (perspective of the subject) • Number (singular or plural) • Tense (time frame of the action) • Voice (later this year) • Mood (later this year) • You’ve learned 3 of the 6 tenses (present, imperfect and perfect)

  10. Verbs (con’t) • Present tense is used for an action happening now. • Can be translated 3 different ways. • Laborat works, is working, does work • Imperfect tense is used for a repeated or incomplete past action • Can be translated several ways and recognized by –ba. • Laborabat was working, used to work, began to work

  11. Verbs (con’t) • Perfect tense is used for a single, completed past action. • Has its own set of endings • Uses a different stem from present and imperfect (-v, -u, -x, -s, vowel change, long mark, extra syllable, sometimes no change) • Can be translate three different ways • Laboravit worked, did work, has worked • You did learn an important irregular verb (sum)

  12. Miscellaneous Information • Latin doesn’t use articles (a/an, the) • Pronouns—ego, tu, nos, and vos

  13. Miscellaneous Information • Question words • -ne (added to first word) • num (expects a no answer) • quid, quis, cur, ubi • Comparative and Superlative adjectives • Laetus, laetior, laetissium happy, happier, happiest • Pulcher, pulchrior, pulcherrimuspretty, prettier, very pretty

More Related