Ch 7 Grammar Flashcards
Where can a Latin adjective show up in a sentence?
Anywhere
(It can be before the noun it is modifying, after the noun, or even on the far side of the sentence)
Where does the Latin adjective USUALLY show up when it is modifying a noun?
It usually comes after the noun it is modifying
What does it mean for an adjective to agree with its noun?
It must have the same case, number, and gender
How do you find the stem of the adjective?
Remove the -a ending from the feminine adjective (the second one in the list in your vocabulary)
When will it look like an adjective has different endings than the noun it is modifying?
When masculine nouns are 1st declension, because most are feminine (remember the P.A.IN. acronym)
Give the present tense conjugation for esse
sum sumus
es estis
est sunt
Give the imperfect tense conjugation for esse
eram erāmus
erās erātis
erat erant
Give the future tense conjugation for esse
erō erimus
eris eritis
erit erunt
What is a predicate nominative?
- It renames the subject
(it tells you something about the subject; example: God is love; love is the predicate nominative that tells you about the character of God.)
What case is the predicate nominative in?
The nominative case
Note: Review the following Latin Paradigm
Ch 7_Adjective (magnus) Paradigm
Ch 2, 3, 7_Latin Verb Forms_First Conjugation