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STUDY GUIDE FOR LATIN 1 NATIONAL LATIN EXAM

Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

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Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam. Nouns: . 1st 2nd Mas 2nd N 3rd M/F 3rdN Nom ( subj ) a us/r um --- --- - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

STUDY GUIDE FOR LATIN 1 NATIONAL LATIN EXAM

Page 2: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Nouns:

1st 2nd Mas 2nd N 3rd M/F 3rdN

Nom (subj) a us/r um --- ---

Gen (Poss ae ī ī is is Dat (I.Ob) ae ō ō ī ī Acc (D.Ob) am um um em ---- Abl (O/prep) ā ō ō e e

Page 3: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

PLURAL FORMS 1st 2nd Mas 2nd N 3rd M/F 3rdN

Nom (subj) ae i a es a Gen (Poss arum orum orum um

um Dat (I.Ob) is is is ībus ibus Acc (D.Ob) as os a es a Abl (O/prep) is is is ibus

ibus

Page 4: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

1 Nominative:

subject and predicate nominative

Page 5: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

2 Genitive:

possession (of, ‘s, s’)

Page 6: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

3 Dative:

indirect object (to/for) with verbs of giving, saying, showing, telling, entrusting

Page 7: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

4 Accusative: direct object and object of the

following prepositions: ad –to, toward, near ante –before, in front of circum -around In –into, onto per -through post –after, behind contra -against inter-between, among prope –near trans –across

Page 8: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

5 Ablative: ablative of means (no Latin preposition= by means of, with, by)

object of the following prepositions (SID SPACE) Sub -under Sine –without In –in, on Prō- on behalf of, for Dē- about, down from Ab/ā – away, from

Cum- with Ex/ē –out of, out from

Page 9: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

6 Vocative:

direct address –used in questions and commands; often punctuated with “ ”, ! or ?

Page 10: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

PRONOUNS:

Page 11: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-personal: ego, tū, nōs, vōs (nominative, dative, accusative and

ablative) I/me you we/us you

Nom ego tū nōs vōs Gen meī tuī nōstrum

vestrum Dat mihi tibi nōbīs vōbīs Acc mē tē nōs vōs Abl mē tē nōbīs vōbīs

Page 12: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-interrogative: quis, quid, quī (nominative and accusative

only) (uses ? mark) Who? Who? What? Nom S quis quis quid Acc S quem quem quid Who (pl)? Who (pl)? What

(pl)? Nom pl quī quae quae Acc pl quōs quās quae

Page 13: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Adjectives: Declensions 1st and 2nd (masculine, feminine and neuter) see noun chart above

-noun and adjective agreement = number, gender and case -interrogative: quot =how many

Page 14: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Numbers:

Cardinal numbers 1-10; unus, duo, tres/tria, quattuor, quinque, sex, septem, octo, novem, decem

100 –centum and 1000- milleRoman numerals 1-100:

I (1), V(5), X(10), L(50), C(100), D(500), M(1000)

Page 15: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Adverbs: positive forms made from from first

and second declension adjectives (usually ly in English)

-formation: pulcher, pulchrA, pulchrum=beautiful:

remove the ‘A’ from feminine, replace with ē = pulchrē = beautifully

-interrogatives: cur, (why?) ubi (where?) quomodo (how?)

-irregulars: bene (well), male (badly)

Page 16: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Conjunctions:

aut, (or) et (and)

quod (because) sed (but) ubi (when) neque, (and not/neither/nor)et...et, (both… and) neque...neque (neither…nor)

Page 17: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Enclitic:

-ne (indicates a question –do not use with question word like how, when, who, etc)

-que (attach on the second of the 2 words/phrases; translate before the second of the 2 words e.g. peanut butter and jelly = peanut butter jellyQUE

Page 18: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Verbs: Translations of 4 tenses: Present, Imperfect, Future,

Perfect:

Present: I verb I do verb I am verbing

Imperfect: I was verbing I used to verb I kept verbing

Future: I shall/will verb

Perfect: I have verbed I verbed I did verb

Page 19: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

Conjugations 1st – 4th -are: -ēre: -ere: -ire Subj. Present Imperfect Fut 1st/2nd Fut 3rd/4th Perfect

I -ō -bam -bō -am -ī

You -s -bās -bis -ēs -istī

He, she, it -t -bat -bit -et -it

We -mus -bāmus -bimus -ēmus -imus

You plural -tis -bātis -bitis -ētis -istis

They -nt -bant -bunt -ent -ērunt

Page 20: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-present active imperative singular and plural

= verb! 1st 2nd 3rd 4th ā āte ē ēte ĕ ĭte ī īte

Page 21: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-present active infinitive= to verb 1st 2nd 3rd 4th

-āre -ēre ere -īre

Page 22: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-negative imperativenoli, nolite + infinitive = don’t verb! e.g. nōlī amāre = don’t love! Nolite amare = ya’ll don’t love!

Page 23: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-irregular verb sum, esse, fuī, futūrus (to be): (4 tenses) present,

imperfect, future, perfect

Present Imperfect Future Perfect sum eram erō fuī

es erās eris fuistī est erat erit fuit sumus erāmus erimus fuimus estis erātis eritis fuistis sunt erant erunt fuērunt

Page 24: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

II. CULTURE AND CIVILIZATION

Page 25: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Geography: Roman world, e.g., Roma, Italia,

Graecia, Britannia, Hispania, Mare Nostrum, Tiber River

Important Italian locations, e.g., Ostia, Pompeii, Mt. Vesuvius, Brundisium, Apennine Mts

Provinces and major cities, e.g., Africa, Athens, Gallia, Carthage, Asia Minor, Troy

Page 26: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Mythology: Olympians (Greek/Roman names)

symbols, duties; founding of Rome, Romulus and Remus

Olympians and associated myths, e.g., Daphne and Apollo, Arachne and Minerva;

Major heroes and monsters, e.g., Hercules, Aeneas, Medusa, Cyclops

Trojan war, e.g., Achilles, Hector, Ulysses, Helen

Page 27: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Roman life: city of Rome, e.g.,

Forum, Circus Maximus, Colosseum; Palatine Hill, Via Appia, Curia

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-Daily Life villa,

E.g. atrium, triclinium, insulae -clothing,

e.g., toga, tunica, stola; Roman household,

e.g., pater, mater, servus, filius, filia -meals,

e.g., ientaculum, prandium, cena, culina -architectural structures and their functions:

e.g., aqueduct, thermae, circus, amphitheater, curia, basilica

Page 29: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

HISTORY:

Page 30: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Basic historical divisions:Monarchy- 753BC-509 BC – kings are highest ruling officials

Republic – 509 BC-27BC – consuls are highest officials

Empire – 27 BC -476 – emperors are highest ruling officials

Page 31: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Kings of Rome: 1. Romulus, 2. Numa Pompilius, 3.

Tullus Hostilius, 4. Ancus Martius, 5. Tarquinius Priscus, 6. Servius Tullius, 7. Tarquinius Superbus

2. -Early Roman heroes-Horatius, Cincinnatus, Mucius Scaevola

Page 32: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

III. LATIN IN USE -Basic spoken phrases:

e.g., Salve, salvete hello Quid agis? How are you? / What are you doing? Quid est nomen tibi? What’s your name? Vale, valete goodbye Ita vero, Yes! Minime, no! Quid est? What is it? Quis est? Who is it? Gratias tibi ago, Thank you Sol lucet, The sun is shining Quota hora est? What time is it? Adsum, I am present Quid novi? What’s new?

Page 33: Study Guide for Latin 1 National Latin Exam

-Derivatives: English words based on Latin roots, prefixes and suffixes e.g., agriculture, aquarium, portable, lunar, octet ; sedentary, sorority, puerile, quadruped