Romanus/Romana/Romanum
Roman
video
I see/I am seeing/I do see
The nominative case refers to this in a sentence.
the subject
This language is the mother of Spanish, Italian, Romanian, French, and Portuguese.
Latin
This English word meaning 'a person on foot' comes from the Latin word pes, pedis.
pedestrian
agricola
farmer
amare
to love
I am a person, place, thing, or idea.
noun
In addition to Latin, upper-class Romans were often fluent in this ancient language.
Greek
'Corporeal', which means 'bodily' or 'having a body', comes from this Latin word.
corpus
et
and
sum
I am/I exist
In a sentence, the Latin verb often goes here.
the end
Spanish, Italian, Romanian, French, and Portuguese are all called ________ languages.
Romance
'Visual' and 'visible' come from this Latin verb.
video, videre, vidi, visus
moneo, monere
to warn, advise, remind
You think/You are thinking/You do think
cogitas
You can translate this case with either 'of' or an apostrophe (with or without an 's').
genitive
This is the parent language of English, Latin, Greek, Spanish, Sanskrit, and many others.
Indo-European
'Pater' is etymologically related to this English word. (I.e, it is not a derivative, but the same word, just spelled and pronounced differently.)
father
The gender of agricola
masculine
Be quiet! (plural)
Tacete
A verbal command in Latin is called an __________.
imperative
English is very closely related to this modern European language.
German
'Tzar' and 'Czar', which are titles of certain leaders, came from this famous Roman's last name.
Caesar