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1 st and 2 nd person pronouns
1 st and 2 nd person pronouns

... the six passive personal endings used in the present system the six personal endings used in the perfect tense for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person in the singular and plural what an infinitive is, and how they are formed in the active and passive voices what the each tense is and how it is formed and trans ...
Latin 1 Final Exam Study Guide
Latin 1 Final Exam Study Guide

... Among 3rd declension nouns, there is a select group called "i-stems" which have a different gen pl ending: -ium. We often translate nouns differently depending on what case they are in. The following are the common uses and translations of the six different cases which you have seen so far: Nominat ...
Part of Speech Tagging and Lemmatisation for the Spoken Dutch
Part of Speech Tagging and Lemmatisation for the Spoken Dutch

... The basic CASE distinction is the one between ‘standard’ and ‘special’, corresponding resp. to forms without and with case suffix. The former can be further partitioned in nominative and oblique, and the latter in genitive and dative, but whether these finer-grained distinctions apply depends on the ...
Shelmerdine Chapter 5
Shelmerdine Chapter 5

... The aorist tense refers to a single past action. Think of it as action in the past that you see as a snapshot in your head. Recall that the imperfect tense refers to ongoing or repeated past action. Think of it as action in the past that you see as a moving video in your head. ...
Old English: 500
Old English: 500

... 17th c. map of the Heptarchy by Joan Bleau ...
sample
sample

... with possessive noun forms that end in -s that it is easy to mistakenly extend the apostrophe to possessive pronouns that also end in -s. For example: I found John’s books. X Did you find your’s? Our friends’ reservation is for Tuesday. X When is their’s for? Distinguishing between its and it’s One ...
LATIN TO ENGLISH
LATIN TO ENGLISH

... audible, audibly, audience, audit, auditory ...
Part of Speech Tagging and Lemmatisation for the Spoken Dutch
Part of Speech Tagging and Lemmatisation for the Spoken Dutch

... The basic CASE distinction is the one between ‘standard’ and ‘special’, corresponding resp. to forms without and with case suffix. The former can be further partitioned in nominative and oblique, and the latter in genitive and dative, but whether these finer-grained distinctions apply depends on the ...
Collective nouns - Studentportalen
Collective nouns - Studentportalen

... Perhaps the increasing use of singular in British English has been influenced by the usage in American English. Since American English has more speakers and it is the version of the language that the world is the most exposed to, e.g. through TV series, films and songs, it would not seem strange if ...
Catullus 51 - WhippleHill
Catullus 51 - WhippleHill

... a. nominative, singular, masculine b. genitive, singular, feminine c. nominative, plural, masculine d. accusative, plural, masculine 7. What is the best meaning of dēmānat in line 10? a. to stay down from b. to succumb to c. to demand from d. to flow down from 8. What literary device can be seen in ...
CHAPTER 2 | Nouns and Verbs
CHAPTER 2 | Nouns and Verbs

... Nouns of the same gender share the same definite article, but not the same endings. It would be reasonable then to use this short word as a safe way to recognize a noun’s gender. This is what most dictionaries do, and this is what I am going to do from now on. Dictionaries give information not only ...
Latin 1 - WordPress.com
Latin 1 - WordPress.com

... fines finium finibus fines finibus ...
Collective nouns
Collective nouns

... Initially we chose to do our searches in LOB (British English, 1961), FLOB (British English, 1991), BROWN (American English, 1961), FROWN (American English, 1991), COCA (American English, 1990-2011) and BNC (British English, 1980s-1993). After having done the searches, we decided to disregard the re ...
Pronoun Usage Notes - Garnet Valley School
Pronoun Usage Notes - Garnet Valley School

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Roman Housing Project - KET Distance Learning
Roman Housing Project - KET Distance Learning

...  It must contain at least five adjectives formed to agree with their nouns in case,  number,  and  gender.  (Please  note  that  domus,  ‐ūs  is  a  4th  declension  feminine  noun.)   You may use positive, comparative, or superlative forms of adjectives.   Use  descriptive  adjectives  to  make  ...
seminar paper - Maturski Radovi
seminar paper - Maturski Radovi

... e.g. a drawing/drawing, a painting/painting, a reading/reading. -ing form are generally uncountable, but a few can refer to a specific thing or event. countable (specific) ...
NLE Grammar Review
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... First, think of what a direct statement is: Puer librum portat. The boy carries a book. This is a simple and direct comment. When one introduces the direct statement with a clause - such as Caesar dixit, Marcus scit, Cornelius putat or Aurelia vidit - the phrase . . . that the boy carries a book is ...
Neuter dobré dobré
Neuter dobré dobré

... The rule to remember: Only the masculine animate paradigms PÁN, MUŽ, UČITEL and feminine paradigms ŽENA and RŮŽE have different ending in the ACCUSATIVE. For all other paradigms, the ACCUSATIVE equals the NOMINATIVE. All hard adjectives which modify a Masculine Animate nous take the ending –ého (mám ...
Chapter 11: Pronouns  īdem
Chapter 11: Pronouns īdem

... Chapter 11 covers the following: the personal pronouns in Latin; the formation of īdem, eadem, idem, meaning “the same”; and as usual at the end of the lesson we’ll review the vocabulary which you should memorize in this chapter. But before we begin, a brief warning: this chapter requires a great de ...
Dative Case
Dative Case

... Quintus servo pecuniam dedit. dat. acc. Quintus gave money to the slave. servo is in the dative case. pecuniam, in the accusative, receives the action directly and is closer to the verb. servo receives the action indirectly and is farther away from the verb. ...
18 The definite article
18 The definite article

... 17.4 Nouns denoting persons or animals ................................................................................. 9 17.5 Nouns denoting things ..................................................................................................... 9 17.6 Nouns denoting time ..................... ...
nouns - University of Maryland, Baltimore
nouns - University of Maryland, Baltimore

... Note: “Poor” is technically an adjective, but in this sentence it acts as a noun and stands in for “poor people.” Example: The meek shall inherit the earth. Note: “Meek” is technically an adjective, but in this sentence it acts as a noun and stands in for “meek ...
Nominative & Objective Cases
Nominative & Objective Cases

... nominative case pronouns! A predicate nominative is a word in the predicate that renames the subject (follows a linking verb). When a nominative pronoun is used as a predicate nominative, it is called a predicate pronoun. It was they who stood up and cheered. ...
Review of the Einführung
Review of the Einführung

... Weil es heute regnet, nehme ich einen Regenschirm. (Because it’s raining today, I am taking an umbrella) Dative Case: some verbs require the dative case for nouns which they govern, e.g., gehören and gefallen As with the accusative case, nouns in the dative case are marked by articles, der-words and ...
A Summary of the Principles of the Latin Noun
A Summary of the Principles of the Latin Noun

... § The sentence is most likely to include a complement when its main verb is a form of the verb to be. § If more than one noun occurs in the nominative case, you must determine for each noun whether it is a subject or a complement. • In order to make this determination, you may have to experiment b ...
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Archaic Dutch declension

The Dutch language in its modern form does not have grammatical cases, and nouns only have singular and plural forms. Many remnants of former case declinations remain in the Dutch language, but none of them are productive. One exception is the genitive case, which retains a certain productivity in the language.[1]. Although in the spoken language the case system was probably in state of collapse as early as the 16th century, cases were still prescribed in the written standard up to 1946/1947. This article describes the system in use until then. For a full description of modern Dutch grammar, see Dutch grammar. See also History of Dutch orthography.
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