Latin Grammar
Vocabulary
Verb Conjugations
Fun Box
100

In Latin, infinitives take this ending

-re

100

Nothing

Nihil

100

Cogitātis

You all think

100

In Latin, this punctuation mark is used to elongate vowels

Macron

200

Finite verbs are "limited" by all of the following: person, number, tense, ________, and mood.

Voice

200

Quid

What

200

Terrēs

You frighten, terrify

200

Verbs whose stems end in belong to which conjugation?

First Conjugation

300

Verbs of the Second Conjugation are identified by stems that end in...

300

To give, offer

Dō, Dare

300

Vidēte!

Watch! (Said to several)

300

Moneō, Monēre

To remind, advise, warn

400

DAILY DOUBLE: This ending is used for singular verbs in the imperative mood

There is no ending! Just use the verb's stem!

400

Valeō, Valēre

To be strong

400

I praise

Laudō

400

The language from which Germanic is directly derived

Indo-European

500

The First Person plural ending for verbs in the present tense, active voice, and indicative mood:

-mus

500

Salvēte!

Hello! (Said to several)

500

Amant

They love

500

TRANSLATION TIME: Translate the following English sentence into Latin...

"If I often think, then I do not make a mistake."

Sī cogitō saepe nōn errō.