Wheelock Ch 01 Grammar Flashcards
Verbs: What are the five characteristics exhibited by verbs?
1.) Person, 2.) Number, 3.) Tense (aka time) 4.) Mood (manner of speech), and 5.) Voice
Verbs: What is meant by person?
Who takes the action of the verb: the 1st person, 2nd person, or 3rd person.
Verbs: What is number?
How many subjects, whether singular or plural.
Verbs: How many tenses (time of speech) are there in Latin? Name them.
There are six: 1.) Present, 2.) Future, 3.) Imperfect, 4.) Perfect, 5.) Future Perfect, and 6.) Pluperfect.
Verbs: How many Moods of verbs are there in Latin? Name them.
The mood covers the manner of indicating the action or state of being of the verb. There are three: 1.) Indicative, 2.) Imperative, and 3.) Subjunctive.
Verbs: What does voice express? How many voices are there? Name them.
Voice gives an indication (with transitive verbs, or those that can take direct objects), of whether the subject performs the action (ACTIVE) or receives it (PASSIVE). There are two voices noted above.
What does one do to a verb when listing all its forms in regard to person, number, tense, mood, and voice?
One “Conjugates” a verb. This is done with finite verbs (ones that express those five characteristics listed) as opposed to infinitives which do not.
How do Latin verbs signal person, number, and voice within the word itself (where English uses pronouns)?
Latin uses PERSONAL ENDINGS.
What are the Latin “Personal Endings” for active voice verbs? (Give both singular and plural)
Singular Plural
1st Person -o or -m (I) -mus (we)
2nd Person -s (you) -tis (you)
3rd Person -t (he, she, it) -nt (they)
What identifies an infinitive as belonging to the 1st Conjugation of verbs?
The -āre ending, with its -ā- STEM VOWEL.
What identifies an infinitive as belonging to the 2nd Conjugation of verbs?
The -ēre ending, with its -ē- STEM VOWEL.
How many Conjugation groups exist in Latin?
There are four Conjugation groups.
How do you create the present stem of a verb?
Drop the -re ending from the infinitive. Verb stems in 1st Conjugation end in ā and 2nd Conjugation stems end in ē.
When can a vowel that is normally long be shortened? (Recall: macrons indicate long vowels; hence this rule explains when a macron disappears).
There are three common examples: 1.) when it appears before another vowel, 2.) before -m, -r, or -t at the end of a word, or 3.) before -nt or nd in any position.
What happens to the 1st Conjugation -ā- stem vowel when paired with the first person singular personal ending -ō?
The -ā- is not only shortened (macron disappears) but the -a- itself is contracted away and disappears leaving only the -ō ending.