The Beginner's Latin Exercises. Fourth Conjugation Active, Conjunctive Mood. Interrogative Pronouns.
TODO
- Exercise A shows what has to be learnt and written in preparation for the next exercises (and future lessons).
- Exercise B contains viva voce Exercises.
- Exercise C (from Latin) and Exercise D (from English) contain the sentences to be translated, either orally or in writing.
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REQUIREMENTS
Vocabulary 44. Fourth Conjugation.
- erudio, -is, -ivi, -itum, ire, v.tr., to train, instruct.
- impedio, -is, -ivi, -itum, ire, v.tr., to hinder, check.
- curo, -as, -avi, -atum, -are, v.tr., to take care.
- mortuus, -a, -u, adj., dead.
- sacerdos, -otis, m. and f., priest, priestess.
Obs. — There are two forms of the Interrogative Pronoun:
- When used with a Substantive;
- without a Substantive.
- is in form the same as the Relative Pronoun;
- is also the same as the Relative in the Plural, but in the Singular takes quis for qui, and quid for quod.
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EXERCISES
Exercise A
- Learn Vocabularies 43 and 44, and the Conjunctive of audio.
- Write out and learn the endings of audio in the Conjunctive.
- Conjugate punio in the Conjunctive.
- Write out the two forms of the Interrogative Pronoun in full.
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Exercise B
1. Read off the English, naming Mood and Tense, of:
- audiat; audires; audiremus; audiretis; audies.
- audiatis; audiveris; audiverimus; audiverim; audietis.
- audiret; audivisset; audiamus; audivissem; audiam.
2. Change Number
- say off the plural of: cui, quo, quid, qua, cujus, quia, qui, quod, quern.
- say off the singular of: quorum, quae, quibus, quarum, quos, qui, quae (neut.).
Exercise C: read and translate from Latin.
- Caesar venit ut castra muniat.
- Caesar venit ut castra muniret.
- Sacerdos veniet ut templi portas aperiat.
- Barbari Caesarem oraverunt ut mortuos suos sepelirent.
- Judicem rogemus ut improbos servos puniat.
- Sapientes parentes curabunt ut liberos suos bene erudiant.
- Equitatus hostium venit ut iter militum nostrorum impediret.
- Quis filium meum erudiet?
- Qui magister filiam meam docebo?
- Cujus equum ibi habes?
- Cui puero librum dedisti?
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Exercise D: read and translate from English.
- To whom did you give the book?
- What did you write?
- Of whom have you written?
- What (things) did you hear?
- Whom did you see?
- What did you see?
- What animal did you see?
- The slave comes to open the gate.
- I will ask the priest (ut) to open the gates of the temple.
- Let us entreat the king (ut) to finish the war.
- I will ask your father to punish you.
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CREDITS
C.Sherwill Dawe, The Beginner's Latin Exercises Book, 1880, Rivington, Waterloo Place, London; read the book on archive.org.
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