Vocabulary
Translate the Verb
Grammar
Linguistic History
Derivatives
100

Romanus/Romana/Romanum

Roman

100

video

I see/I am seeing/I do see

100

The nominative case refers to this in a sentence.

the subject

100

This language is the mother of Spanish, Italian, Romanian, French, and Portuguese. 

Latin

100

This English word meaning 'a person on foot' comes from the Latin word pes, pedis.

pedestrian

200

agricola

farmer

200

amare

to love

200

I am a person, place, thing, or idea.

noun

200

In addition to Latin, upper-class Romans were often fluent in this ancient language. 

Greek

200

'Corporeal', which means 'bodily' or 'having a body', comes from this Latin word. 

corpus

300

et

and

300

sum

I am/I exist

300

In a sentence, the Latin verb often goes here. 

the end

300

Spanish, Italian, Romanian, French, and Portuguese are all called ________ languages. 

Romance

300

'Visual' and 'visible' come from this Latin verb. 

video, videre, vidi, visus

400

moneo, monere

to warn, advise, remind

400

You think/You are thinking/You do think

cogitas

400

You can translate this case with either 'of' or an apostrophe (with or without an 's').

genitive

400

This is the parent language of English, Latin, Greek, Spanish, Sanskrit, and many others.

Indo-European

400

'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

500

The gender of agricola

masculine

500

Be quiet! (plural)

Tacete

500

A verbal command in Latin is called an __________.

imperative

500

English is very closely related to this modern European language.

German

500

'Tzar' and 'Czar', which are titles of certain leaders, came from this famous Roman's last name.

Caesar