flamma, -ae
What is flame?
sedeo
What is I sit?
For Ellery: Chant the 3rd declension noun endings, masculine and feminine (both singular and plural.)
What is: Singular
-x, -is, -i, -em, -e
Plural
-es, -(i,) -um, -ibus -es, -ibus
This is a word that takes the place of a noun.
What is a pronoun?
The name of your favorite online Latin teacher at Classical Academic Press.
Who is Dr. Perrin?
forma, -ae
What is shape/beauty?
civitas, civitatis
What is citizenship, state commonwealth?
Hey 2A: Chant 3rd person singular personal pronouns (masculine, feminine and neuter.)
What is masculine:
is, eius, ei, eum, eo
Feminine
ea, eius, ei, eam, ea
Neuter
id, eius, ei, id, eo
This is a characteristic of a verb but is also shared with Latin personal pronouns.
What is person?
These are English derivatives of rex.
What are (any of these are correct) regale, regal, regalia.
lacrima, -ae
What is tear?
navis
What is ship?
For anyone: Chant the 1st and 2nd person personal pronouns (both singular and plural.)
1st person
Singular- ego, mei, mihi, me, me
Plural- nos, nostrum, nostri, nobis, nos, nobis
2nd person
Singular- tu, tui, tibi, te, te
Plural- vos, vestram/vestri, vobis, vos, vobis
These are the three ways that adjectives must agree with the nouns they modify.
What are in case, number and gender?
Hic and hi are Latin words that represent these demonstrative pronouns.
What are this and these?
iuvo
What is I help?
lux, lucis
What is light?
For anyone: chant the 3rd person plural personal pronoun chart (masculine, feminine and neuter.)
Masculine- ei (they) eorum (their,) eis (to/for them,) eos (them,) and eis (by/with/from them.)
Feminine- eae, earum, eis, eas, eis
Neuter- ea, eorum, eis, ea, and eis
This is the reason why we would sometimes want to use Latin subject pronouns in a sentence.
What is Latin subject pronouns are used for emphasis in sentences.
This is how someone would greet many people in Latin AND say goodbye to many people in Latin.
What is Salvete! (hello!) and Valete! (goodbye!)
proelium, i
What is battle?
volo
What is I fly?
These are the 4 uses of the genitive case. (Bonus 500 points for being able to NAME and DEFINE) each one.
Genitive of possession
Genitive of origin
Genitive of material
Partitive Genitive
These words, I, me, we and us, are this type of pronoun.
What is first person?
Civitatibus magnus (dat.) is translated to this in English.
What is "to the large states?"