What is the Latin nominative plural for “Verbum, n. Word”?
Verba
To which conjugation does the verb “videō, vidēre” belong?
Second Conjugation
What does the following adjective mean? laetus, laeta, laetum
Happy
In prīncipiō erat verbum,
In the beginning was the word.
Name one of the towns that Mt. Vesuvius covered.
Pompeii, Herculaneum, Stabiae
Which case contains “by, with, from” nouns?
The Ablative
How do you find the stem for the present tense system?
What part of speech does Latin not have that is very common in English?
Articles (The, a)
Ego sum via et veritas et vita.
I am the way and the truth and the life.
Name one Roman poet or writer from which we have read this year.
Horace, Vergil, Tertullian, Pliny the Younger, Aurelius, Juvenal, Suetoniu, Seneca, Tacitus, Ovid, Paterculus, Vegetius
In which declension does “ūsus, ūsūs, m. use” belong?
Fourth Declension
Conjugate the following verb into the 3/s/present: frangō, frangere, frēgī, frāctum- to break
Frangit
Name the Naughty Nine Adjectives.
UNUS NAUTA
Femina multōs liberōs habet.
The woman has many children.
What was one erroneous belief about the early Christians.
Answers Vary.
pg. 139
What is the Latin word in the accusative/plural/m for “dolor, dolōris, m. pain/suffering”
Dolōrēs
What does the following verb translate as?
Accipietūrus
Name an irregular positive, comparative, or superlative adjective and the translation that we have learned this year.
Answers Vary pg. 68
Ē plūribus ūnum.
Out of many, one.
The first five emperors of Rome were named this…
Julio-Claudian
How do you find the stem for any Latin noun?
You remove the inflected ending from the genitive singular to find the stem.
Name an irregular verb strand and the translation that we learned this year.
Answers vary.
How do you form an adverb from an adjective?
Go to the feminine ending, remove the -a, and add a long e. Parcus, parca, parcum= parc/a, parcē (modestly)
Vir, quī stat in vīa, clāmat.
The man, who stands in the street, yells.
The Colloseum was completed during which emperor’s reign.
Titus