Grammar
Declining
Vocabulary
Noun-Adjective Pairs
Random
100

How many declensions are there? Name them:

5

1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th

100

Give the third declension masculine/feminine case endings:

~        -es

-is       -um

-i         -ibus

-em     -es

-e         -ibus

100

Give the full dictionary form: sun

sol solis m.

100

Give the Latin: new voice

vox nova

nova vox

100

Give the Latin Saying and its meaning:

Pax Romana The Roman Peace

200

Give the 5 case names IN ORDER:

Nominative

Genitive

Dative

Accusative

Ablative

200

Fully decline lex legis:

lex      leges

legis    legum

legi      legibus

legem   leges

lege      legibus

200

Give the full dictionary form: dog

canis canis m/f

200

Give the Latin: first custom

primus mos

mos primus

200

Nouns that name male or female persons have _____ gender.

Natural

300

How to find the stem of a 3rd declension noun:

Drop the -is ending from the genitive

300

Fully decline canis canis:

canis     canes

canis     canum

cani      canibus

canem   canes

cane      canibus

300

Give the full dictionary form: voice

vox vocis f.

300

Give the Latin: many dogs

multi/multae canes


300

In Latin all nouns have either natural or _____ gender.

Grammatical

400

The third declension has all three genders, but the _____ and _____ have identical case endings.

Masculine and feminine

400

Fully decline pes pedis:

pes        pedes

pedis     pedum

pedi       pedibus

pedem   pedes

pede      pedibus

400

Give the full dictionary form: law

lex legis f.

400

Give the Latin: small feet

parvi pedes

400

Adjectives agree with the noun they modify in _____, _____, and _____, but not ______.

case, number, gender

declension

500

The ____ case form identifies the declension of a noun and gives its stem.

Genitive

500

Fully decline mos moris:

mos       mores

moris     morum

mori      moribus

morem   mores

more      moribus

500

Give the full dictionary form: custom

mos moris m.

500

Give the Latin: great voice

magna vox

500

Give an example of an English word that retains its Latin plural ending:

synopsis/synopses
appendix/appendices
crisis/crises
matrix/matrices
index/indices
axis/axes

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