What are the five jobs of a noun?
Subject
Possessive
Indirect Object
Direct Object
Object of the Preposition
True or false. Masculine and feminine gender accusative nouns (direct object) are spelled stem+em
True
possumus
we are able
Johnny and his friend Jake ate cake at the restaurant.
Johnny and his friend Jake
1st person, singular is what English pronoun that equals "o or m" in Latin?
I
What Latin case corresponds with the object of the preposition?
Ablative
true
poterunt
they will be able
He has a good time at his friend's house.
He
1st person plural is what English pronoun that equals "mus" in Latin?
we
What Latin case corresponds with the Subject Noun?
Nominative
Dative and Ablative Plural masculine, feminine and neuter nouns use what ending on the stem?
-ibus
erat
he, she, it was
They don't know how to surf.
They
2nd person, singular "s" ending in Latin is what English pronoun?
you
What noun job corresponds with the Accusative case?
direct object
All i-stem nouns have an -ium in the genitive plural.
True. The following words are plural i-stem
eramus
we were
The sailors and the captain are men
Second person plural "tis" ending in Latin is what English pronoun?
you (plural)
Feminine nouns end usually in s-o-x. True or false?
True.
Third declension i-stem neuter nouns, (mare, maris) use stem +ia in the nominative plural and stem + ium in the genitive plural. True or false?
True. The five plural forms are:
maria, marium, maribus, maria, maribus
potero
I will be able
Many miraculous mentors make more methodical methods.
mentors (or many miraculous mentors)
What are the English pronouns for
3rd person, singular and plural
singular: he, she, it
plural: they