Nouns
Verb Forms
Relative Pronouns
Ablatives
Prepositions
Intensifiers and Reflexive pronouns
Noun-adjective agreement
100

This is the genitive plural of urbs-urbis, f.

urbium

100

This is the 3rd p. s. pluperfect form of possum-posse-potui

potuerat

100

This is the dative feminine singular relative pronoun 

cui

100

This is an example of this type of ablative usage:

I see with my eyes

Ablative of means

100

This is the preposition which, when followed by an accusative, means "into" or "against"

in

100

This is how one would say "himself" in the sentence

He himself sees these things. 

ipse
100

This is what "in the great city" is in Latin:

urbs-urbis f

magnus-a-um

in

in magnā urbe

200

This is the ablative singular or mare-maris n. 

mari

200

This is the 3rd person plural perfect form of sum-esse-fui-futurus

fuerunt

200

This is the genitive singular masculine relative pronoun

cuius

200

This is an example of this type of ablative usage:

I had dinner with my friends

Ablative of accompaniment

200

This preposition, followed by the ablative, has the temporal and spatial meaning of "before"

pro

200

This is how one would say "himself" in the sentence

He sees himself.

se

200

This is what "for the whole land" looks like in Latin:

omnis-omne

terra-ae f.

omni terrae

300

This is the accusative plural of corpus-corporis, n.

corpora

300

This is the 1st s. future active of ago-agere-egi-actum

agam

300

This is the pronoun you'd use to represent the word "whom" in this sentence: The man whom you see is my father.

quem

300

This is an example of this type of ablative usage:

I will arrive with all haste

Ablative of manner

300

This prepostition, followed by the accusative, has the temporal and spatial meaning of "before"

ante

300

This is how one would say "himself" in the sentence

He considers the problem with himself.

se

300

This is what "of all animals" looks like in Latin

animal-animalis n.

omnis-e

omnium animalium

400
This is the ablative singular of civis-civis, m. 

cive

400

This is how you would say "make!" to one person, using the verb facio-facere-feci-factum

fac!

400

This is the relative pronoun you would use to represent the word whom in the following sentence: The women with whom I went to school are nice.

quibus

400

This is an example of this type of ablative usage:

I saw ten of the dogs

Ablative following the preposition "ex" after a number

400

This preposition, followed by the accusative, means "through"

per

400

This is how one would say "himself" in the sentence

He considers the problem with that other man himself.

ipso

400

This is what "of the swift girl" looks like in Latin

celer-celeris-celere

puella-ae f.

celeris puellae

500

This is the dative singular of agricola-agricolae, f

agricolae

500

This is how you would say "They will have loved" using amo-amare-amavi-amatum

amaverint

500

This is the relative pronoun you'd use to represent the word "which" in the following sentence: The body (neuter) which you see here is still alive. 

quod

500

This is an example of this type of ablative usage:

I will arrive within the hour.

Ablative of time within which.

500

This preposition, followed by the ablative, means "away from"

a/ab

500

This is how one would say "himself" in the sentence

He gave a gift to himself.

sibi

500

This is what "all bodies" looks like in Latin in the accusative:

omnis-e

corpus-corporis n.

omnia corpora

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