Things to know:



Things to know:

Vocabulary

Relatives

Participles

Passive Verbs

Ablative Absolute

Passive Periphrastic

Infinitives and indirect statement

Comparative/Superlative Adjectives (regular and irregular)

Don’t forget:

3rd Declension and I-stem 3rd Declension

Fourth Declension

Fifth Declension

Uses of the Ablative, Dative and Genitive

Numbers

Be able to:

Decline

Conjugate

Identify constructions, noun and verb uses

Change constructions around (make active passive, make two separate sentences one using a relative clause etc)

I. Verbs

Conjugate/Decline each of the following verbs in the following forms:

Forms

Active: Present, Imperfect, Future, Perfect, Pluperfect, Future Perfect

Passive: Present, Imperfect, Future, Perfect, Pluperfect, Future Perfect

Infinitives: Active Present, Future, Perfect

Passive: Present, Perfect (remember Future)

Participles: Active Present, Future

Passive Perfect, Future

Verbs

Laudo Moneo Lego Facio Audio

II. Nouns

A. Fully decline the following noun-adjective pairs:

Bonus amicus maior fides

gracilis femina more difficult deed

harshest right loving mother

B. If needed, translate into Latin and then Change the positive to comparative, comparative to superlative or superlative to positive making sure to maintain the case, number and gender.

smallest virtue in Singular worse language in Plural

parvum cornū in Plural primus poeta in Singular

III.

A. Practice Sentences:

Nam illī miserī tempestātem eo tempore timēbant.

Propter facta eius, nēmō in Italiā`satis iurum tenuit.

You were entrusting part of the city to the two consuls.

They found strength in the pleasant woman’s courage.

Quattuor ex urbibus ā cōpiīs ācribus delebatur.

We will not be helped by that type of knowledge.

By what name were you called at that time?

At neque frūctibus pācis neque metūs bellī caruistī.

Illī versūs laudis causā scribentur.

Ignis spīritūs hūmānī fidē alitur.

Signum ducis videns, mīlitēs as lītus īnsulae navigāvērunt.

The soldiers (having been) praised by the great-hearted leader were happy.

Fābulae narratae erant.

Militibus sōlacium acceptīs, urbs aliīs defendenda est.

Putō eam rīsūram esse.

Scīmus mīlitēs pulsōs esse.

Negat sē hastam iēcisse.

Nothing was sadder than that very faithful slave’s death.

B. Take each sentence and reconstruct it in the opposite voice (if active, make it passive)

Modī virīs petendī sunt.

We had many memories of a difficult life.

C. Translate into Latin and then transform the two sentences into one using a relative clause.

The tyrant is evil. We fear the tyrant.

Translation:

Transformation:

D. Translate into English. Then, in Latin, transform the sentence into two sentences without the relative clause.

Tyrannus cīvitātem regēbat ad quam navigāre coeperās.

Translation:

Transformation:

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