Latin to English
Noun grammar rules
Latin Cases
Verbs
English to Latin
100

terra, terrae

What is land, or earth?

100

A noun names this.

What is a person, place, thing, or idea?

100

A noun in the nominative case can be used in a sentence two ways.

What are subject and predicate nominative?

100

To find the subject of a finite verb, we look for a noun in this case.

What is the nominative?

100

We call this the subject case in English.

What is nominative?

200

porta, portae

What is gate or door?

200

All Latin nouns have these four things.

What is gender, number, case, and declension?

200

Nouns in the genitive case show us this.

What is possession, or the possessor?

200

A finite verb agrees with it's subject in this.

What is number? (and also person)

200

We call this the direct object in English.

What is the accusative case?

300

silva, silvae

What is forest, or woods?

300

The three genders in Latin are.

What is masculine, feminine, and neuter?

300

The dative case is used to show us this.

What is the indirect object?

300

Unlike English, Latin verbs include this.

What is a subject pronoun?

300

Translate:

He/she/it sees.

What is "Videt."

400

gloria, gloriae

What is fame or glory?

400

The two numbers of Latin nouns are.

What are singular and plural?

400

The accusative case shows us this.

What is the direct object?

400

Translate: 

Vident.

What is "they see"?

400

Translate:

Slave, servant.

What is "Servus, servi".

500

laudat

What is "he/she/it praises"?

500

When we remove the endings from a Latin noun, we find this.

What is the stem, or root?

500

The ablative case is frequently used to show us this.

What is object of a preposition?

500

Translate:

Orant.

What is "they pray"?

500

Translate:

He does not pray.

What is "Non orat."?