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Latin I: (INTRODUCTION) INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGE: ca. 3,000 B.C. 1. Shows relationships by endings called Inflections. Inflections are defined as the changes in the endings of words based on their function in a sentence/clause. Nouns, adjectives, pronouns: 5 Declensions (Decline!) Verbs: 4 Conjugations (Conjugate!) 2. Cases: a. Nominative: subject or predicate. ex. Susan enjoys music. (Susan is the subject of the verb enjoy.) ex. John is an athlete. (Athlete is a predicate nominative renaming John.) b. Genitive: possession or qualifying another noun. ex. Jennifer’s father has many cars. (Jennifer is the possessor of her father.) ex. The general was a man of great courage. (Of great courage qualifies man. It tells us what kind of man the general is.) LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, I c. Dative: indirect object. ex. Mr. Jones gave his daughter many gifts. Mr. Jones gave many gifts to his daughter. (The daughter is the person to whom the gifts were given.) d. Accusative: direct object. ex. Tim saw his sister at the store. (Sister is the direct object of the verb to see. Sister directly receives the action of seeing.) e. Ablative: object of a preposition (use will vary). ex. The farmer is working in the fields. (Fields is the object of the preposition (in), and it would be in the ablative case in Latin.) f. Vocative: direct address. ex. Mr. Smith, may John and I go to the store with you? (Mr. Smith expresses direct address. He is the person to whom the question was directed.) 3. Gender: * Masculine, Feminine, Neuter LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, II PRONUNCIATION 1. The Latin (Roman) Alphabet is the English Alphabet EXCEPT: there is no W or J in Latin. 2. Vowels: a, e, i, o, u Long ā - father: nāvigō Long Short a - idea: parō Short ē - they: parēs e - get: terra ī - machine: fīlia i - sit: via ō - note: prōvincia o - omit: prope ū - rule: pictūra u - put: puella 4. Diphthongs: two vowels that make one sound. a. ae - aye: praemium b. au - ow - now: laudō c. ei - neighbor: deinde d. eu - ay-oo: neuter e. oe - oy in joy: proelium f. ui - uee in queen: huic LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, III 5. Consonants - like English except: a. bs like ps: urbs b. bt like pt: obtineo c. c like c in came: camera - Caesar d. g like g in get: genus e. ch - character: pulcher f. ph - philosophy: phalanx g. th - think: theatrum h. s - set: servus i. i - y - youth: iubeo j. v - w- wall: via Britannus fēmina copiae Germania pictūra puella rēgīna murus amāmus laudātis tenent cotidiē LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, IV PARTS OF SPEECH: Nouns Adverbs Pronouns Prepositions Adjectives Conjunctions Verbs Interjections 1. Nouns: cases (ie. persons, places, things, states, or qualities). 2. Pronouns: (used in place of a noun) * personal, demonstrative, interrogative, relative, reflexive, emphatic. 3. Adjectives: (used as a modifier or qualifier of a noun). * Relation to a noun or pronoun. (comparison) * Possessive Adjectives. * Articles: definite and indefinite (there are none in Latin). LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, V 4. Verbs: (usually used to express action or a state of being). a. Transitive: a verb that can take a direct object (i.e. elect, rectify, deny). Intransitive: a verb that indicates a complete action without being accompanied by a direct object (i.e. sit, lie, think, am/are/is). Linking: a verb used to join or unite a subject with a predicate (i.e. am/are/is) b. Qualities (or Characteristics): person, number, tense, voice, and mood. c. Infinitives as opposed to a finite verb: Participles: a verbal adjective. 5. Adverbs: modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. 6. Prepositions: joins a noun or pronoun to some other word. 7. Conjunctions: connect words or groups of words (i.e. clauses). 8. Interjections: used to express strong or sudden feelings. LATIN I INTRODUCTION PAGINA, VI