Chapter 1 Grammar
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Transcript Chapter 1 Grammar
Chapter 1 Grammar
Using Nouns in Latin
Nouns in Latin show case,
number, gender, and
declension
What Do You Know About Nouns?
BRAINSTORM on board
Did
we answer these questions?
Nouns
represent what ‘things’ in a
sentence?
Does there have to be a noun in
every sentence?
What is the part of speech which
stands in for nouns sometimes?
What I Need to Know by the End of
This Lesson
What
is a noun
What is the subject of a sentence
What a verb shows
What is the predicate of a sentence
How does Latin use endings to tell
what a noun’s ‘role’ is in a sentence
How Latin uses endings to tell us
case, number and gender.
Nouns - Gender
Gender – masculine, feminine, or neuter
Most English words use ‘natural’ gender.
Example: words for male people or
animals are masculine words and words
for female people or animals are feminine.
Latin nouns have a specific gender that
needs to be learned with the word.
Nouns - Number
Number means either singular (one) or
plural (more than one).
The ending of the noun shows if it is
singular or plural.
Example: insula = 1 island
insulae = more than 1 island
silva = forest
silvae = forests
Any charts in your book need to go in your
notes!!
Nouns - Case
In English, we use WORD ORDER to know
how a word ‘works’ within a sentence.
Compare - The girl likes the horse. The
horse likes the girl. Do these mean the
same thing?
In Latin, word order doesn’t matter.
ENDINGS show how a word is used in a
sentence. These endings tell which CASE
the word fits into in the sentence. (Puella
amat equum. Equum amat puella.)
CASE tells how a noun is used in a
sentence.
Sentences
Subject – The noun doing the action in
the sentence or the ‘star’ of the
sentence. The subject is always in the
nominative case.
Predicate – The verb and everything else
in the sentence, except the subject.
The ‘to be’ verbs tell us what something
IS. (ex., I am a teacher, you are a
student). After a ‘to be’ (or linking) verb,
a noun or adjective used in the predicate
is also in the nominative case. This is
called a PREDICATE NOMINATIVE
(another noun or an adjective in the
predicate that ‘equals’ the subject.
Example: Ali is a dog. What nouns will be
Noun - Declension
Declension – a group of nouns using
the same pattern of endings.
1st Declension - Nouns in the first
declension all end with -a (singular)
and –ae (plural) in the nominative
case (used for subject of the
sentence).
Most 1st Declension nouns are
feminine. There is only 1 group of
exceptions.
1st Declension Endings
1st declension nouns are feminine EXCEPT
nouns that tell a person’s occupation.
Case
Singular
Plural
NOTE: include the – (called a macron) over vowels as shown in book.
Nominative
Genitive
Dative
Accusative
Ablative
-a
-ae
-ae
-am
-a
-ae
-arum
-is
-as
-is
*If someone asks you to DECLINE a noun, that person wants
you to write a noun in this pattern with all 10 case endings.
Declining a 1st Declension Noun
(How to add the endings to a word)
Case
Singular
Nominative
Genitive
Dative
Accusative
Ablative
silva
silvae
silvae
silvam
silva
Plural
silvae
silvarum
silvis
silvas
silvis
Your Latin Notebook
Write
the vocabulary words just like
they are written in the book. Include
ALL information as shown in book.
Read through the grammar section
and remember what we learned in
class today. In your own words,
write a summary of the grammar
section. Include ALL charts shown in
the grammar section.
Do I Know These Things?
What
is a noun
What is the subject of a sentence
What a verb shows
What is the predicate of a sentence
How does Latin use endings to tell
what a noun’s ‘role’ is in a sentence
How Latin uses endings to tell us
case, number and gender.