Chapter 8_Grammar Flashcards
Latin adjectives in their positive, comparative, and superlative forms follow what pattern?
They follow the pattern of Almus, almior, almissimus (kind, kinder, kindest)
What adjectives do not follow the rules?
review, don’t bother trying to memorize
bonus ("good") bene ("well") malus ("bad") magnus ("big") parvus ("small") multus ("many, much") superus ("upper")
The ablative of respect is a frequent use of the ablative case: how is it formed? And what does it mean?
- The ablative case without a preposition
2. In what way something is true
Translate the following sentence:
Vir erat nōmine dux, sed nōn factō
The man was a leader in name, but not in deed.
(“in name” and “in deed” are the ablative of respect; it is explaining in what way the man was a leader; he may have been the appointed leader, but he was not really leading)
Translate the following sentence:
Celerior linguā quam mente.
Quicker in tongue than in thought.
“in tongue” and “in thought” describes they was that someone is quicker. They speak faster than they think
Translate the following sentence:
Dominus est dignus omnī honōre et laude
The Lord is worthy of all honor and of all praise
“of all honor” and “of all praise” describes in what way the Lord is worthy