270 likes | 465 Views
Latin 3 HW: Finish translating “De mure urbano et mure rustico ” or “The Country Mouse and the City Mouse” . Have you emailed me your monuments info? . Latin 2. HW: Cap. 12 Review (you need your book) Bring your book and exercise book to class t omorrow.
E N D
Latin 3 HW: Finish translating “De mureurbano et murerustico” or “The Country Mouse and the City Mouse” Have you emailed me your monuments info?
Latin 2 • HW: Cap. 12 Review (you need your book) • Bring your book and exercise book to class tomorrow. • If we still have Gladiator left, we’ll finish it Wed. (but we’re not watching it tomorrow)
Latin 2: Please take out your HW • HW: Ex. 12 • Quiz Friday: 4th Declension + other noun declensions • Latin Club Thursday You need your notebook and book. We will watch Gladiator tomorrow.
“Ac/atque” Atque before vowels, ac before consonants Marcus ac Quintus suntpueri Romani. IuliusatqueAemiliasunthomines Romani.
Barbarus, a, um Germani, non Romani, sunthominesbarbari.
Incolere=in terra habitare, “inhabit” • Romani Romamincolunt. • GermaniGermaniamincolunt. • GalliGalliamincolunt. • HispaniiHispaniamincolunt, etc.
Pars, partis, f. • Gallia est pars imperii Romani. Gallia estprovinciaRomana. • Germania non est pars imperii Romani; Gallia non estprovinciaRomana. • Partitive Genitive Used when you have a “part” of a “whole.”
Partitive Genitive (GenetivusPartitivus) • Cruraestbracchiasuntpartescorpor____ human___. • Atrium et ostiumsuntpartesvill____. • Praenomenest pars nomin___ Romani. • Gallia pars Europ___ est. is i ae is ae
dividere MurusBerlinemdividit.
Finis, finis, m. “border” FlumenRhenusest finis imperii Romani.
Patria, ae. Italia est patria Romanorum. America est patria nostra. Gallia est patria Gallorum.
Contra + acc. against Romani contra GermanospugnantquiaGermani ac Romani inimicisunt!
Hostis, is, m. [=inimicus] • Romani Germaniquesunthostes.
oppugnare Felisfelemoppugnat. Carchidonhominesoppugnant. Militesurbemoppugnant.
Exercitus,us, m. • New declension! 4th declension • -us -us • -um -us • -us -uum • -ui -ibus • -u -ibus • Milites in exercitusunt.
Dux, ducis Dux exercitusmilitesducit. Dux=imperator
Parere (obey), imperare (command) + Dativus These are special verbs that have a dative as a direct object where you would expect the accusative Ducesmilitibusimperant. Militesducibus parent.
HW: 4th Declension Endings Practice Sheet • In class today… • Check Ex. 12 • Watch Gladiator Thursday: Latin Club Friday : Quiz on 1st-4th declensions (endings only)
Ex. 12 • Milites Romani/Eipugnant. • Romani gladiispilisquepugnat. • Equesest miles qui equovehitur/qui ex equopugnat. • Aemilius non esteques, pedesautem est. • Pilumeiusest sex pedeslongum. • Gladiuseius non estlongus, sedbrevis. • Minime, non Graeci, sedGermanihominesbarbarisunt.
Ex. 12 8) Germania non estprovinciaRomana. 9) Provincaest pars imperii. 10) GalliGalliamincolunt. 11) FlumenRhenusGermaniam a Gallia dividit. 12) Fines suntRhenus et Danuvius. 13) Germania est patria Germanorum. 14) Romani contra GermanospugnantquiaGermaniRomanis non parent. 15) ExercitusRomanusduciparet.
Forms of the 4th declension • Dux exercit___ (sing) imperat. • Multi barbari in exercit___ Romano sunt. • Dux estvir qui exercit___ ducit. • Romani multosexercit___ habent.
Turn to p. 87 and look at line 53 • “Gladiusequitislongior et….”