Stage 8 Notes
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Transcript Stage 8 Notes
Stage 2 Notes
mercator
The
Metellam salutat.
merchant greets Metella.
Metella
Metella
culinam intrat.
enters the kitchen.
-
a noun is a word that is a person, place, or a
thing, or idea
Examples:
puella, toga, Caecilius, canis, Metella
in
the sentences above there are two different
forms of the same noun:
Metella-
Metellam
these
different forms are known as the nominative
case and the accusative case
Nominative
= subject
Accusative
= direct object, translated after verb
The
endings a noun uses for the nominative
and accusative forms depends on the
declension that the noun belongs to.
Declension
are categories or families of nouns
that share the same endings in their nominative
and accusative forms.
You
can identify the declension of the noun by
the genitive case. CLC unit I does not list the
genitive, so we will refer to the accusative.
1st Declension Nouns
Declension nouns end in –am in the
accusative singular form of the CLC Unit I
dictionary entry.
First
Examples:
fuga, fugam
ira, iram
barba, barbam
gloria, gloriam
Dictionary
Entry:
Nominative
Form,
Subject
of sentence
bruma, brumam
2nd Declension Nouns
Second
Declension nouns end in - um in
the second form of the CLC Unit I
dictionary entry.
Examples:
somnus, somnum
vesper, vesperum
locus, locum
puer, puerum
Dictionary
Entry:
Nominative
Form,
Subject
of sentence
oculus, oculum
3rd Declension Nouns
Third
Declension nouns end in - em in
the second form of the dictionary entry.
Examples:
tempus, temporem
rex, regem
doctor, doctorem
nomen, nominem
mater, matrem
Dictionary
Entry:
Nominative
Form,
Subject
of sentence
fons, fontem
Nom
Acc
Metella Quintus
Metellam Quintum
Caecilius
mercator
Caecilium mercatorem
if
the merchant does something the nominative
mercator is used.
Mercator
For
is the subject.
example: mercator amicum salutat.
The merchant greets the friend.
if
someone else does something to the merchant
the accusative form mercatorem is used in the
sentence.
Ask
Whom or What after the verb.
Quintus
Quintus
mercatorem salutat.
greets whom/ what? Answer: mercatorem
mercatorem
is the direct object of the sentence.
Take notice of the different word order in
these sentences:
Clemens culinam intrat.
1st
3rd
2nd
Clemens enters the kitchen.
N.B. In a Latin sentence, the verb is last.
coquus
1st
The
vinum portat.
3rd
2nd
cook carries the wine. (carries what? wine = acc)
When
you are translating always follow this order:
Subject + Verb + Direct Object / Prep Phrase
Nom
-t
Acc
m
in tablino= in the study
in triclinio= in the dining room
Declining 1ST Declension Noun
1st
declension. Ex: girl = puella
Case endings are in RED
Singular
Plural
Nominative
puellA
puellAE
Accusative
puellAM
puellAS
Declining a 2nd Declension Noun
2nd
declension. Ex. : slave= servus
Case endings are in RED
Singular
Plural
Nominative
servUS
servI
Accusative
servUM
servOS
Declining a 3rd Declension Noun
* We didn’t study this one closely,
so don’t panic!
3rd declension. Example: dog = canis
Case endings are in RED
Singular
Plural
Nominative
canis
canES
Accusative
canEM
canES
CONJUGATIONS
A
conjugation is a group of verbs
that have the same infinitive ending.
There are 4 conjugation infinitives:
1st
- āre
2nd - ēre
3rd - ere
4th - īre
All infnitives end in –re. The vowel
before the –re tells what conjugation
VERBS
Verbs
have person and number.
Number = singular or plural
Verbs
agree with the subject
Is there one person or more than one
Person
1st
= 1st, 2nd, or 3rd person.
= I/we
2nd = you/all of you
3rd = he, she, it/ they
Person Indicators
Singular
Plural
1
O or M
MUS
2
S
TIS
3
T
NT
Singular
Person indicators show
WHO is doing the action
Plural
1
I
we
2
you
all of you
3
he,she, it
they
Person indicators
coincide with English
subject pronouns
Singular
2nd conjugation
Plural
1
O or M
MUS
2
S
TIS
3
T
NT
videO
videS
videT
To conjugate a verb, take the
infinitive and drop the -re
vidēre
videMUS
videTIS
videNT
videO
videS
videT
vidēre
videMUS
videTIS
videNT
I see, I am seeing, I do see
You see, you are seeing, you
do see
He sees, he is seeing, he
does see.
Present
Present progressive
Emphatic
We see, we are seeing, we
do see
You all see, you are all
seeing, you all do see
They see, they are seeing,
they do see
1st conjugation
Singular
Plural
1
O or M
MUS
2
S
TIS
3
T
NT
1st person
singular – drop
the a before the
-re
To conjugate a verb, take the
infinitive and drop the -re
amāre
amO
amaMUS
amaS
amaTIS
amaT
amaNT
amāre
amO
amaMUS
amaS
amaTIS
amaT
amaNT
I like, I am liking, I do like
You like, you are liking, you
do like
He, she, it likes, he is liking,
he does like
Present
Present progressive
Emphatic
We like, we are liking, we do
like
You all like, you all are
liking, you all do like
They like, they are liking,
they do like