sentiō , sentīre , sēnsī , sēnsum = to feel, perceive, think
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Sentiō , sentīre , sēnsī , sēnsum = to feel, perceive, think Mittō , mittere , mīsī , mīssum = to send Intellegō , intellegere , intellēxī , intellēctum = to understand Etiam = even Autem = however ; moreover Bene = well, satisfactorily, quite - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
1. Sentiō, sentīre, sēnsī, sēnsum = to feel, perceive, think
2. Mittō, mittere, mīsī, mīssum = to send3. Intellegō, intellegere, intellēxī, intellēctum = to
understand4. Etiam = even5. Autem = however; moreover6. Bene = well, satisfactorily, quite7. Neque, nec = and not, nor8. Neque…neque, nec…nec = neither…nor9. Quod = because10. Cārus, -a, -um = dear11. Amīcus, -a, -um = friendly12. Īdem, eadem, idem = the same
13. Caput, capitis (n) = head; leader; beginning; chapter14. Cōnsul, cōnsulis (m) = consul15. Nēmō, nēminem, nullīus (m/f) = nobody, no one16. Ego, meī = I17. Tū, tuī = you18. Is, ea, id = he, she, it
{Personal Pronouns
This time… it’s personal.
Singular PluralNom. ego I nos weGen. meī my nostri ourDat. mihi To/for
menobis To us
Acc. me me nos usAbl. me By/w/
menobis By us
1st Person Genitive plural may also appear as nostrum.
Singular PluralNom
.tu you vōs you
Gen. tuī your vestrum
your
Dat. tibi For you vōbīs To you
Acc. tē you vōs youAbl. tē With
youvōbīs By
you2nd Person Genitive plural
may also appear as vestrī
Singular PluralNom. is he Eī, iī theyGen. eius his eōru
mtheir
Dat. eī To him eīs For them
Acc. eum him eōs themAbl. eō By
himeīs By
them3rd person, masculine
Singular PluralNom. ea she eae theyGen. eius her eāru
mtheir
Dat. eī To her eīs To them
Acc. eam her eās themAbl. eā By her eīs By
them3rd Person, feminine
Singular PluralNom. id it ea theyGen. eius its eōru
mtheir
Dat. eī To it eīs To them
Acc. id it ea themAbl. eō By it eīs By
them3rd person, neuter
Idem means the same
Nominative
Singular
īdem eadem idem
Accusative
Singular
eundem eandem idem
GenitivePlural
eorundem earundem eorundem
Usually the pronoun +dem
Idem = the same thing Īdem = the same man Eīdem = to the same
man/woman/thing Eōsdem = the same them
(probably say “the same people”)
Examples
Ego amō.versus
Amō.
Nominative forms for emphasis.
1. Vōbīs2. Nōbīs3. Nōs4. Vōs5. Tuī6. Meī7. Mihi8. Tibi
1 To/for you all2 By/with/from us3 We (us)4 You all5 Of you/your6 My7 To/for me8 To/for you
Translate according to case and number.
His Their (masc.) Its To him By/w./fr. Her They (fem) To/for it
Translate into Latin.
Hī tibi id dabunt. Bene est mihi quod tibi bene est. Omnēs idem sentiunt. Nec tēcum possum vīvere nec sine tē.
Translate.
1.Dona nōbīs pacem. (Donare = to give)
2.Id sōlum est cārum mihi.3.Nōn omnēs eadem amant.4.Et nōs, bonī virī, nihil facimus!5.Fuge, Catilīna, et dūc tēcum amīcōs
tuōs.6.Magna Europa est patria nostra.7.Quid hī dē tē sentiunt?8.Amor idem omnibus est.S.A. 1-8
A B1. nēmō 5. mittō,
mittere2. bene 6. tu, tuī3. etiam 7. sentiō,
sentīre4. autem 8. consul
9. Define intelligible:A. highly modern B. clear to the mindC. hard-working D. a cargo ship10. Define capitulate:A. foot-like B. opportunisticC. pomiferous D. To draw up in chapters; enumerate
1. Decline and translate the first person personal pronoun (ego).
2. Decline the 3rd person masculine personal pronoun (is).
3. Translate:a. Quid hī dē tē sentiunt?b. Nec tēcum possum vīvere nec sine tē.c. Amor īdem omnibus est. (omnibus =
for all)d. Da id mihi.e. Tū eam amās.
1. What is “two” in Latin?2. What is “six” in Latin?3. Quot sunt quattuor et quīnque?4. What do you call a grammatical
construct in which two nouns are placed side-by-side with one noun serving as an explanatory equivalent to the other?
Bonus