Chapter 18b. English to Latin Flashcards
- Many (people) are too frightened of even an easy death.
- Multī morte etiam facilī nimis terrentur.
- The happy memory of sweet friendships will never be destroyed.
- Beāta memoria amīcitiārum dulcium numquam dēlēbitur.
3a. That blind women also understood all the kinds of arts …
3a. Illa fēmina caeca omnia genera artium quoque intellēxit …
3b. and was always praised by (her) pleasant friends.
3b. et ab amīcīs iūcundīs semper laudābātur.
4a. Your [pl.] aged father, by whom we were often being assisted,
4a Pater senex vester, ā quō saepe iuvābāmur,
4b. began yesterday to say much [lit. “many things”] about the swift dangers of the enormous sea.
4b. multa dē celeribus perīculīs ingentis maris heri dīcere coepit.
- Our minds are swiftly moved by the powerful memory of those two deeds.
- Mentēs nostrae memoriā potentī illōrum duōrum factōrum cito moventur.
- The plans of the enemy [lit. “enemies”] were destroyed in that third long and difficult war.
- Cōnsilia hostium illō tertiō bellō longō et difficilī dēlēbantur.
7a. And so the mother was awaiting the death of (her) fourth son,
7a. Itaque māter mortem quārtī fīliī exspectābat,
7b. who was not faring well and whose life was short.
7b. quī nōn valēbat et cuius aetās erat brevis.
- We would never conduct difficult wars without planning and clemency.
- Bella difficilia sine cōnsiliō et clēmentiā numquam gerēbamus.
- They will drag you [sg.] with nine of the other sad (people) to Caesar.
- Tē cum novem ex aliīs miserīs ad Caesarem crās trahent.
- They expelled from their (own) city the harsh king, who had begun to neglect (his) duties.
- Rēgem ācrem, quī officia neglegere incēperat, ex urbe suā ēiēcērunt.
11a. That poet, in the third book of satires, wrote about greedy people ….
11a. Ille poēta in tertiō libellō saturārum scrīpsit dē hominibus avārīs …
11b. who wish to sail to a hundred other lands …
11b. quī ad centum terrās alias nāvigāre cupiunt …
11c. because they desire money too much.
11c. quod pecūniam nimis dēsīderant.
- Clēmentia ab eīs dabitur etiam cīvibus aliārum urbium quās regunt.
- Mercy will be given by them even to the citizens of other cities which they rule.
- Multī nimis saepe moventur pecūniā sed nōn vēritāte.
- Many are moved too often by money but not by truth.
14a. Cīvitās dēlēbitur ā rēge potentī,
14a. The state will be destroyed by the powerful king,