1 / 10

Genitive Case (+ Word Study) Lesson 5

Genitive Case (+ Word Study) Lesson 5. Oct. 8-10 , 2013. Identifying 1 st and 2 nd Declension Nouns. All nouns belong to one of the five declensions. That declension is their “family.”

kyrene
Download Presentation

Genitive Case (+ Word Study) Lesson 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genitive Case(+ Word Study)Lesson 5 Oct. 8-10, 2013

  2. Identifying 1st and 2nd Declension Nouns • All nouns belong to one of the five declensions. • That declension is their “family.” • The noun will always use the endings of their declension---and only their declension. • Nouns will not change declension.

  3. How to tell??? • 1st declension nouns have –AE in their genitive singular. • 2nd declension nouns have –I in their genitive singular. • Genitive singular: the second part of the dictionary entry. • aqua, aquae (f.)---water • carrus, carri (m.)---cart

  4. Practice! • insula, insulae • carrus, carri • ancilla, ancillae • amicus, amici • templum, templi • luna, lunae • agricola, agricolae • vir, viri • FIRST • SECOND • FIRST • SECOND • SECOND • FIRST • FIRST • SECOND

  5. This is the house Of jen. This is jen. Aka, jen’s house.

  6. Going to Gen’s House: Genitive Case! • The genitive case ending is used to show possession. • Genitives can be translated with ‘s, s’, or the word OF. • IF YOU TRANSLATE GENITIVES WITH “OF” YOU WILL ALWAYS GET THE RIGHT ANSWER. • REPEAT: IF YOU TRANSLATE GENITIVES WITH “OF” YOU WILL ALWAYS GET THE RIGHT ANSWER!!!

  7. Gen’s House, cont’d! • equuspuellae (the horse of the girl; OR, the girl’s horse) • aqua agricolarum(the water of the farmers, OR, the farmers’ water) Case Singular Plural Nominative (subject) a ae Genitive (“of”) ae arum Dative ae is Accusative (direct obj.) am as Ablative a is

  8. Gen’s House, cont’d! • aqua equi(the water of the horse, OR, the horse’s water) • cibusequorum (the food of the horses, OR, the horses’ food) Case Sg. Pl. Nom. (subject) us i Gen. (“of”) iorum Dat. o is Acc. (direct obj.) um os Abl. o is

  9. Let’s practice! • the mother of the girls (the girls’ mother) • the girl’s book (the book of the girl) • the wheels of the carts (the carts’ wheels) • the driver of the cart (the cart’s driver) • puellarum • puellae • carrorum • carri Case Sg. Pl. Gen. (“of”) ae arum Gen. (“of”) iorum

  10. Word Study:Latin phrases and abbreviations used in English • i.e. (id est) • e.g. (exempli gratia) • etc. (et cetera) • cf. (confer) • magna cum laude • in loco parentis • carpe diem • Magna Carta • that is… • for example • and the rest, and so forth • compare • with great praise, honor • in place of a parent • seize the day (i.e., enjoy the moment) • The Great Paper, the document signed in 1215 that is one of the cornerstones of English civil liberties

More Related