This ending is used to make verbs interrogative.
-ne
Pecūnia, Pecūniae (F)
Money
Terrēbat
He / She / It was terrifying
A position of executive authority in the government of the ancient Roman Republic, there were two of these, who "checked" each other's power.
Consul
Often held only by Romans of nobility, this type of name signified the extended part or "branch" of one's family
Cognomen
The verb Cēnō, Cēnāre belongs to which conjugation?
First Conjugation
Igitur
Therefore
Iuvātis
You all assist
In 202 BC, Hannibal's army was defeated by the Romans near Carthage during this battle of the Second Punic War
Battle of Zama
Pulcher, Pulchra, Pulchrum
Fine, beautiful, handsome
This ending is used for singular, imperative verbs (that is, to command just one person.)
Trick question! Singular imperative verbs do not use a particular ending; simply use the stem of the verb!
Culpō, Culpāre
To blame
Habebō
I will have (hold, possess)
Lucius Cornelius Sulla favored this group or class of Romans in political power
Patricians
This landmark of Roman geography is often connected with the forcible overthrow of power, or of crossing the "point of no return"
Rubicon River
This ending replaces "et" in a list or series of nouns when it is added to the last noun in the series
-que
Verbum, Verbī (N)
Word
Satiabāmus
We were satisfying
DAILY DOUBLE: Julius Caesar was assassinated in this year
44 BC
Crassus died while fighting which foreign enemy of the Roman Republic?
The noun dea, deae (F), meaning goddess, uses this ending in the dative and ablative plural
-ābus
Possum, Posse
To be able, can
Manēbisne
Will you remain?
What does "Punic" mean?
(HINT: This word refers to another ancient civilization!)
Phoenician
EVERYBODY WRITES! Translate the following English sentence into Latin:
Will the destruction of Rome terrify the men and women while they are in danger, and will the be strong?
Terrēbitne exitium Rōmae virōrum et fēminam dum in perīculō sunt, et valebuntne?