Pronouns
Nouns
Passive Verbs
Participles
Roman History
100

A pronoun refers back to this noun, called its...

Antecedent

100
How many declensions are there?

5

100

What tense is this verb? "Amabatur"

Imperfect

100

A participle is part verb and part...

Adjective

100

Rome was famously built on how many hills?

7
200

This kind of pronoun describes the noun it refers to.

Relative Pronouns

200

In Latin, this case refers to subjects.

Nominative

200

The passive voice sees the action being done to the...

Subject

200
The fourth principal part is always the...

The perfect passive participle

200

This type of government has elements of a democracy, monarchy, and aristocracy.

A republic

300

This kind of pronoun refers to objects close to the speaker.

The near demonstrative pronoun. 

300

In Latin, this case refers to direct objects.

Accusative

300

What tense is this verb? "Amatus erat"

Pluperfect

300

A present active participle uses endings from this declension

The third declension

300

This temple is dedicated to "all the gods" and is located in Rome.

Pantheon

400

What case, number, and gender is this pronoun? "Id"

Accusative or nominative, singular, and neuter

400

What case, number, and gender is "patrum"?

Genitive, plural, and masculine

400
This verb is referring to an action done by... "Amatae erant"

A group (plural) of feminine nouns (i.e., girls)

400

A perfect passive participle is typically translated with these auxiliary helping verbs.

Having been, as in "having been loved

400

This figure ended Rome's civil wars, defeating his rivals at the battle of Actium.

Augustus / Octavian

500

A relative pronoun has to agree with its antecedent in...

Number and gender
500

A noun typically changes its stem in this case.

The genitive singular case

500

What are the four principal parts of this verb? itus sum

Eo, ire, ivi, itus - to go

500

What letters do we add to the verb to translate a present active participle?

- ing, as in "walking" or "talking"

500

Rome was founded in...

753 BC