Grammar - Week 11 Flashcards

1
Q

Genitve singular of 1st declension nouns

A

All nouns whose genitive ends in -ae are in the 1st declension

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2
Q

Gender of 2nd declension nouns

A

-us - masculine

-um - neuter

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3
Q

Unique characteristic of all neuter (Grammar 39)

A

Nominative and accusative are same, both nouns and adjectives in singular and plural

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4
Q

Indirect object case, or the “to/for” case

A

Dative

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5
Q

Two ways to indicate indirect objects in English

A

(1) “to” and (2) word order
(1) Christ gave God glory.
(2) Christ gave glory to God.

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6
Q

Prepositions take either of what two cases?

A

Ablative, accusative

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7
Q

Give the case for each preposition: propter, post, cum, in

A

propter: accusative, post: accusative, cum: ablative, in: ablative

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8
Q

Predicate nominitave case (Grammar 474)

A

Nominative

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9
Q

Position of forms of sum in a Latin sentence (Grammar 461)

A

Anywhere in sentence

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10
Q

Genetive singular of 3rd declension nouns

A

-is

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11
Q

Natural gender rule applies to ALL declensions (Grammar 46-47)

A

A noun naming a male person is masculine (dux); a noun naming a female person is feminine (māter)

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12
Q

Gender of 1st declension nouns

A

1st declension nouns are feminine unless they name a male like nauta.

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13
Q

3rd declension feminine noun rule (Grammar 50)

A

Nouns ending in -s, -o, -x (SOX) are generally feminine.

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14
Q

3rd declension masculine noun rule (Grammar 49)

A

Nouns ending in -er and -or (ERROR) are generally masculine.

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15
Q

3rd declension neuter noun rule (Grammar 51)

A

Nouns ending in -l, -a, -n, -c, -e, -t (LANCET) are generally neuter.

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16
Q

Appositive

A

A noun or a phrase that is “put beside” another noun to rename or explain it and set off by commas.

17
Q

Agreement rule for appositives (Grammar 473)

A

An appositive agrees with its noun in number and case.

18
Q

There is

There are

A

est (the expletive there)

sunt (the expletive there)

19
Q

Give the nominative and genitive of the 6 neuter nouns of the 3rd declension.

A

agmen, agminis; corpus, corporis; flūmen, flūminis; iter, itineris; nōmen, nōminis; vulnus, vulneris

20
Q

Genetive singular ending of 4th declension nouns

21
Q

Gender of 4th declension nouns

A

usually masculine

22
Q

The preposition in with the acc. and abl.

A

In with the acc. indiates motion; in with ablative indicates position

23
Q

Subject case

A

Nominative

24
Q

Genitive singulr ending of 5th declension nouns

25
Gender of 5th declension nouns
Usually feminine
26
Subject-verb agreement
The verb agrees with its subject in person and number.
27
Direct object case
Accusative
28
Position of verb
The verb usually stands last in the sentence.
29
Position of adverb
The adverb usually stands immediately before hte word it modifies.
30
Case for possessives and "of" phrases
Genitive
31
Genitive singular of 2nd declension nouns
**-i**