pugnō
fight
Mīlitēs fortēs laudās.
You praise brave soldiers.
When no interrogative adverb or pronoun is used, questions may be asked by putting the most emphatic word first in the sentence and adding what ending to that word?
-ne
Build a Verb!
Laudō
future indicative active, 1st person, singular
laudābo
hear
audīo
quid
what?
He is warning me.
Mē monet.
Which principal part do we use to determine to which conjugation a verb belongs?
2nd principal part (infinitive)
Translate the verb:
dēfendunt
they defend, are defending, do defend
fear
timeō, timēre, timuī
moneō
warn, advise
She prays for herself.
Prō sē ōrat.
Give the English translation to the Latin irregular verbs.
sum summus
es estis
est sunt
I am we are
you are you are
he, she, it is they are
What are the 4 principal parts?
present indicative active
present infinitive active
perfect indicative active
perfect participle passive
where?
ubi
collocō
place, station
Spīritus Deī eum dūcit.
The Spirit of God leads him.
Name the appropriate Latin reflexive pronoun that coordinates with each English reflexive pronoun:
Genitive: of himself, herself, itself, themselves
Dative: to himself, herself, itself, themselves
Accusative: himself, herself, itself, themselves
Ablative: (by, etc.) himself, herself, itself, themselves
Genitive: suī
Dative: sibi
Accusative: sē
Ablative: sē
What is the formula for conjugating a Latin Verb?
_____ + conjugating vowel + _____ + _____ = Latin Verb
Stem + conjugating vowel + Tense Indicator + Person/Number Ending = Latin Verb
often
saepe
suī
himself, herself, itself, themselves
Deus ā nōbīs nōn longē abest.
God is not far from us.
Translate the Personal Pronouns of the First Person
Singular: Plural:
Nominative: ego nōs
Genitive: meī nostrī,
nostrum
Dative: mihi nōbis
Accusative: mē nōs
Ablative: mē nōbīs
Nominative: I we
Genitive: of me of us
Dative: to me to us
Accusative: me us
Ablative: (by, etc.) me (by, etc.) us
Tell me everything you know about Latin verbs.
Awesome job!
always
semper