The two parts usually needed for an ablative absolute
What is noun and a participle
The Latin word often translated as "that" when introducing a subjunctive clause
What is ut
something that carries you (veho)
What is vehicle
Translation of this verb: portamur
we are carried
Io runs into this famous person chained up in the Caucasus Mountains during her wanderings as a cow
Who is Prometheus
What kind of subjunctive clause is this? Lucilius et servus per vias procedebant ut locum invenirent.
What is a purpose clause
The tense of the passive verb in this sentence: Sabina ā libertīs salutabatur.
imperfect
The type of tree that Daphne turns into
What is a Laurel
What kind of subjunctive clause is this? tu mihi imperavisti ne puerum interficerem.
What is an indirect command
something that falls before (ante)
What is antecedent
Translation of the following sentence: meī amicī ab imperatore necatī sunt.
My friends have been killed by the emperor.
The type of animal whose bloody jaws cause a serious misunderstanding between Pyramus and Thisbe (be specific!)
What is a lioness
Put this into Latin: with the soldiers having been seen
What is militibus visīs
What kind of subjunctive clause is this? artificēs diligenter laboraverunt ne Nero servos vituperaret.
What is a purpose clause
supporting or biased towards one side or cause (pars)
What is partisan
Conjugate this verb into the present, imperfect, and future passive, 3rd person singular form: volvo, volvere, volvi, volutus
volvitur, volvēbātur, volvētur
Something that clarifies an origin, particularly how an object or custom came into existence
What is etiological
Translate this full sentence: duce captō, militēs ad castra rediit.
What is "With the leader having been captured, the soldiers returned to the camp."
What kind of subjunctive clause is this? nōs scīmus in quā prōvinciā illa relinquātur.
What is an indirect question
unplanned before that time (tempus)
What is extemporaneous
Translate this sentence into Latin: The cow had been heard by the children.
vacca ā liberīs audita erat.
Medusa's two sisters, the other Gorgons
Who are Sthenno and Euryale