Transcript OLHUnit1
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OLH Unit 1
Introduction
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Words to Master
antīqua, adj., ancient, old (antique)
et, conj., and; et…et, both…and
lāta, adj., broad, wide (latitude)
lingua, -ae, f., tongue, language (linguist)
māgna, adj., large, great (magnitude)
multa, adj., much; pl., many (multitude)
nōn, adv., not (nonentity)
puella, -ae, f., “girl”
pulchra, adj., pretty, beautiful (pulchritude)
sed, conj., but
via, -ae, f., road, street, way (viaduct)
villa, -ae, f., farmhouse, country house, farm (villa)
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Sentence Patterns
Via est (is) via Rōmāna (Roman).
Via Rōmāna nōn est lāta.
Via Rōmāna nōn est lāta sed est pulchra.
Viae Rōmānae sunt (are) pulchrae sed sunt antīquae.
Multae villae Rōmānae sunt magnae et pulchrae.
Lingua Rōmāna est antīqua et pulchra.
Viae et villae et puellae Rōmānae sunt pulchrae.
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The farmhouse is a Roman farmhouse.
The Roman farmhouse is large and beautiful.
Many farmhouses are broad and large.
The Roman language is ancient, but it is (est) beautiful.
The streets are not wide, but they are pretty.
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The Genitive Case
The possessive case
In English, possession or ownership is indicated by the letter
-s, used as either as –’s or –s’
the farmer’s cottage/the cottage of the farmer (singular)
the farmers’ cottage/the cottage of the farmers (plural)
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Possessive Adjectives
mea: my
tua: your (sing.)
nostra: our
vestra: your (pl.)
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Person, Number, and Gender
Person
1st Person: I, we
2nd Person: you
3rd Person: he, she, it, they
Number
Singular (1)
Plural (more than 1)
Gender
Masculine
Feminine
Neuter
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Words to Master
domina, -ae, f. “mistress, lady”
fēmina, -ae, f. “woman” (feminine)
incola, -ae, m. & f. “inhabitant” (colony)
īnsula, -ae, f. “island” (insulate)
lībera, adj. “free” (liberate)
paene, adv. “almost”;
paenīnsula, -ae, f. “peninsula”
parva, adj., “small, little”
patria, -ae, f., “fatherland, country, native land” (repatriate)
-que, conj. “and”
rēgīna, -ae, f. “queen”
serva, -ae, f., “female slave, handmaid” (servile)
terra, -ae, f. “earth, land, country” (territory)
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Sentence Patterns
Amērica, patria nostra, est terra lībera māgnaque.
Hibernia, terra lībera, est īnsula parva sed pulchra.
Īnsula tua, Ō Rēgīna, est pulchra et lībera!
Domina est incola Ītaliae; māgnae paenīnsulae.
Patria mea est paenīnsula; patria tua nōn est paenīnsula.
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Homework: Translate into Latin
The inhabitants of America are free.
Beautiful Italy is almost an island.
Greece, a country of Europe, is a small peninsula.
The women of our native land are beautiful.
O Lady, your slaves are small; my slaves are large.
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Verbs
A verb is the MOST IMPORTANT word of a Latin sentence
Linking Verbs
Do not express feeling or action
Verbs that LINK the subject with a noun or adjective in the
predicate
*Nouns or adjectives that follow linking verbs are ALWAYS
nominative and agree with the subject
Action Verbs
It tells what the subject does or what is done to the subject
Express action
Agreement
A verb must agree with its subject in person (1st/2nd/3rd) and
number (singular/plural)
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Personal Endings
Singular
Plural
1st Person
-ō or -m (I)
-mus (we)
2nd Person
-s (you-s)
-tis (you-pl)
3rd Person
-t (he/she/it)
-nt (they)
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Conjugation of the verb SUM “to
be”
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SUM facts about SUM
Any form of the verb sum may be used to link the predicate
noun or adjective with the subject
The predicate nominative agrees with the subject in case, and
usually in gender and number
The predicate adjective agrees with the subject in gender,
number, and case
E.g., Italia est paeninsula. Italy is a peninsula.
E.g., Europa et America sunt magnae. Europe and America are
large.
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Practice
Hibernia et Britannia sunt insul__.
Patria nostr__ est terr__ liber__.
Vit__ mea in silv__ magnā est libera.
Non sum puell__ parv__.
Estis amicae nostr__.
Sum fili__ laeta agricol__.
Es quoque amic__ naut__.
In cas__ sunt multae serv__.