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Latin I U Lesson 6/7 Translate
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rroussel
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  • Slide 1
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    Latin I U Lesson 6/7 Translate

    Text
  • Slide 2
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    Translation tips

    Nominatives - must agree with the verb to be the subject; usually come first in a sentence

    e.g., Fortuna puelleae est magna.
    (Does puellae agree with est?)

    e.g., Puella pecuniam conservat.
    (Does puella agree with est?)

  • Slide 3
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    Translation tip

    Genitives - a genitive noun describes other nouns and come IMMEDIATELY after the noun being describes; genitives therefore cannot come first in a clause


    e.g., Puellae pecuniam conservant.
    (Can puellae be genitive? What word would it describe?)

    e.g., Philosophia puellae est bona.
    (Can puellae be genitive? What word would it describe?)

  • Slide 4
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    Translation tip

    Datives- almost always require a giving, showing, or telling verb (in order to transfer the direct object to an indirect object)


    Compare:

    Pecuniam puellae damus.

    Vita puellae est bona.

  • Slide 5
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    Translation tip

    Accusatives- can and DO come first in the sentence when there is no stated subject


    e.g. Pecuniam amamus.
    (Is pecuniam the subject?)

    Pecunia nihil est.
    (Is pecunia the subject?)

  • Slide 6
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    Translation tip

    Ablatives- if there's a preposition in Latin, translate it! Otherwise, supply the word "with" or "by" in English


    e.g., Vita sine fortunā non est bona.
    (should you supply "with/by" here or not?)

    e.g., Ignem aquā extinguimus. 
    (should you supply "with/by" here or not?)

  • Slide 7
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    Fortuna puellae est magna.

    Subtitle
  • Question 8
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What case is patriae IN THIS SENTENCE: Puella fortunam patriae tuae laudat.

    no correct answer

    nominative

    genitive

    dative

  • Question 9
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    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What case is puellae IN THIS SENTENCE: Multae puellae pecuniam amant.

    no correct answer

    nominative

    genitive

    dative

  • Question 10
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What case is puellae IN THIS SENTENCE: Puellae nihil datis.

    no correct answer

    nominative

    genitive

    dative

  • Question 11
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    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What case is puellae IN THIS SENTENCE: Pecuniam puellae videt.

    no correct answer

    nominative

    genitive

    dative

  • Question 12
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What case is puellae IN THIS SENTENCE: Fortuna puellae est magna.

    no correct answer

    nominative

    genitive

    dative

  • Question 13
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What is the subject of this sentence: Pecuniam puellae laudat.

    no correct answer

    money

    girls

    he/she/it

  • Question 14
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What is the subject of this sentence: Puellae conservare pecuniam debent.

    no correct answer

    girls

    money

    they

  • Question 15
    Ungraded
    30 seconds
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    Q.

    What is the subject of this sentence: Vitam sine pecuniā non amatis.

    no correct answer

    life

    money

    y'all

  • Question 16
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    180 seconds
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    Q.

    Translate:


    1... Fortuna puellae est magna.

    .

    .


    2... Puellae fortunam patriae tuae laudat.

    .

    .


    3... Multae puellae pecuniam amant.

    .

    .

  • Question 17
    Ungraded
    180 seconds
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    Q.

    Translate:


    1... Puellae nihil datis.

    .

    .


    2... Pecuniam puellae videt.

    .

    .


    3... Pecuniam puellarum non vides.

    .

    .

  • Question 18
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    180 seconds
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    Q.

    Translate:


    1... Fama est nihil sine fortunā.

    .

    .


    2... Vitam sine pecuniā non amatis.

    .

    .


    3... Vitam sine poenis amamus.

    .

    .

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