Terreo, terrēre, terruī, territus 1. terres ….. to scare 2. terreo ….. they have scared 3. terre ….. scare (plur) 4. terrent ….. you scared (plur) 5. terrebant.

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terreo, terrēre, terruī, territus 1. terres ….. to scare 2. terreo ….. they have scared 3. terre ….. scare (plur) 4. terrent ….. you scared (plur) 5. terrebant ….. he/she/it scares 6. terrebat ….. they were scaring 7. terret ….. you scared (sing) 8. terruisti ….. they scare 9. terrebatis ….. he/she/it was scaring 10. terruistis ….. you scare (sing) 11. terruerunt …... scare (sing) 12. terrete ….. I scare 13. terrēre …. ______ you were scaring

ponō, ponere, posuī, positus/a/um: 1. ponite_____ you did put (sing.) 2. pone_____ put! (pl.) 3. ponebatis_____ he/she/it did put 4. ponimus_____ I put 5. posuit_____ y’all did put 6. posuerunt_____ you put 7. ponit_____ y’all were putting 8. pono_____ he/she/it puts 9. ponebant_____ they were putting 10. posuistis_____ we put 11. ponis_____ put! (sing.) 12. posuisti_____ they did put

Audio, audire, audivi, auditus/a/um 1) audivito hear 2) audiebas hear! (pl) 3) audio he/she it hears 4) audire you(sing) heard 5) audite he/she/it has heard 6) audit hear! (sing) 7) audi I hear 8) audiebat we used to hear 9) audimushe/she/it heard 10) audiebamuswe hear 11) audivistiyou kept hearing 12) audivitI have heard

capio, capere, cepi, captus 1. capitwe take 2. capio y’all were taking/ seizing 3. capimus they have taken/ seized 4. capiebant he/she it has taken 5. capiebastake! (pl.) 6. capiebatis he/she it takes 7. cepisti they used to take/ were taking 8. ceperunt you have taken 9. cepit I take 10. capere to take 11. capite take! (sing) 12. cape you used to take/ were taking

Hodie est IDVS Septembres, 2764 AUC Homework: Meta: To Agenda Hodierna: 1.”

Avārus miseriae causa est suae. Publius Syrus, Sententiae Colossal Head of Marcus Licinius Crassus, one of the so called members of the first triumvirate. Louvre, Paris.

dūcō, dūcere, dūxī, ductus/a/um = to lead, guide; take, bring

dum = while

eō, īre, iī [īvī], itus/a/um = to go

estō = All right! OK! Let it be so!

fābula, fābulae = (f.) story, tale; myth

habeō, habēre, habuī, habitus/a/um = to have, hold, possess; deliver (a speech)

prō certō habēre = to be sure (that)

heri = yesterday Monday Tuesday Wednesday TodayTomorrow

ille, illa, illud = (1) that, (2) that famous, (3)he,she, it, (4) the former Ahhh! What is ________?

in hanc cauponam = into this inn

lavō, lavāre, lāvī, lautus/a/um = to wash

licet, licēre, licuit = it is allowed, permitted (+ dative + infinitive)

anteā = before, previously

audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītus/a/um = to hear, listen to

dēvoro, dēvorāre, dēvorāvī, dēvorātus/a/um = eat up, consume quickly

dīcō, dīcere, dīxī, dictus/a/um = to say, tell

maneō, manēre, mānsī, mānsus/a/um = to stay, remain

medius, media, medium = mid-, middle of

media nox = midnight

mīles, mīlitis = (m.) soldier

mittō, mittere, mīsī, missus/a/um = to send, shoot, let go

nārrātus, nārrāta, nārrātum = told

nārrō, nārrāre, nārrāvī, nārrātus/a/um = to tell, tell a story A Reading from Homer, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, 1885, Philadelphia Museum of Art

necō, necāre, necāvī, necātus/a/um = to kill; murder

numquam = never

optimus/a/um = best, very good

optimē = very well, exceedingly

parō, parāre, parāvī, parātus/a/um = to get ready; prepare

paulisper = for a short time

post = (prep. + acc.) after

postquam = after

sum, esse, fuī, futūrus/a/um = to be, to exist

vir optime = sir, mister

vir, virī = (m.) man, husband; hero

volō, velle, voluī, = to want, be willing

enim = for, indeed

Miles Romanus ad cauponam advenit. Cornelius puerique militem audiunt.

LATIN 2 HHS - September 13, 2011 Hodie est IDVS Septembres, 2764 AUC Homework: Due TOMORROW, 09/15: Activity 20B / Study for 1 st Quiz Thursday Friday, 09/16: No Homework! Meta: To begin Chapter 20 / Discuss Vocab. Cards and Vocab. Quiz Agenda Hodierna: 1.Facite Nunc! Activity 20B 2.PictoPowerPoint (English to Latin) 3.Chapter 20 Story “Chance Encounter” 4.Musca Fugax

dūcō, dūcere, dūxī, ductus/a/um to lead, guide; take, bring

dum while

eō, īre, iī [īvī], itus/a/um to go

estō All right! OK! Let it be so!

fābula, fābulae (f.) story, tale; myth

habeō, habēre, habuī, habitus/a/um to have, hold, possess; deliver (a speech)

prō certō habēre to be sure (that)

heri yesterday Monday Tuesday Wednesday TodayTomorrow

ille, illa, illud (1) that, (2) that famous, (3)he,she, it, (4) the former Ahhh! What is ________?

in hanc cauponam into this inn

lavō, lavāre, lāvī, lautus/a/um to wash

licet, licēre, licuit it is allowed, permitted (+ dative + infinitive)

anteā before, previously

audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītus/a/um to hear, listen to

dēvoro, dēvorāre, dēvorāvī, dēvorātus/a/um eat up, consume quickly

dīcō, dīcere, dīxī, dictus/a/um to say, tell

maneō, manēre, mānsī, mānsus/a/um to stay, remain

medius, media, medium mid-, middle of

media nox midnight

mīles, mīlitis (m.) soldier

mittō, mittere, mīsī, missus/a/um to send, shoot, let go

nārrātus, nārrāta, nārrātum = told

nārrō, nārrāre, nārrāvī, nārrātus/a/um = to tell, tell a story A Reading from Homer, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, 1885, Philadelphia Museum of Art

necō, necāre, necāvī, necātus/a/um to kill; murder

numquam never

optimus/a/um best, very good

optimē very well, exceedingly

parō, parāre, parāvī, parātus/a/um to get ready; prepare

paulisper for a short time

post (prep. + acc.) after

postquam after

sum, esse, fuī, futūrus/a/um to be, to exist

vir optime sir, mister

volō, velle, voluī, to want, be willing

vir, virī (m.) man, husband; hero

enim for, indeed

Ego dux__________ Tu dux__________ Puella dux__________ Nos dux_____________ Vos dux____________ Pueri dux_____________ “De Apollodoro quid audivisti?” “De Apollodoro nihil audivi.” Cur vos in hanc cauponam intravistis? “Numquam antea in caupon ā pernoctavimus.” Marcus et Sextus cum Cornelio manserunt. Tum Cornelius cauponem iussit cibum parare. isti i istis imus erunt it

Perfect Tense Song (to the tune of Three Blind Mice) -i, -isti, -it, -i-,isti, -it. -imus, -istis, -erunt, -imus, -istis, -erunt. Take the 3 rd principal part, Cut off the –i, just leaving the stem, And then you add -i,isti and –it, -imus, -istis, -erunt.

Perfect Endings and their translations duxi duxisti duxit duximus duxistis duxerunt I have led, I did lead, I led you have led, etc. he/she/it has led, etc. we have led y’all have led they have led

Can you translate these verb forms? arripuimus cenavisti intravistis iussi fuisti voluimus noluit tulerunt we snatched, have snatched, did snatch you ate dinner, have eaten, did eat y’all entered, have entered, did enter I ordered, have ordered, did order you were, have been we wanted, have wanted, did want he didn’t want, hasn’t wanted they brought, have brought, did bring

Write the following short sentences in Latin on your whiteboard. All sentences are simple subject-object-verb or subject- verb-preposition sentences. All sentences use the perfect tense and the Chapter 20 verb vocabulary 1.The soldier told a story. 2.We heard voices 3.You said nothing. 4.The innkeeper killed a guest. 5.Y’all prepared food. 6.I went to an inn. 7.We came to an inn. 8.The Cornelii stayed in an inn.

Practice Your Perfect Tense All of these sentences are simple subject / object / verb OR subject / prepositional phrase / verb. 1.The soldier told a story. 2.I told a story 3.The boys heard voices 4.We said nothing. 5.You said nothing. 6.The innkeeper killed a guest. 7.Y’all prepared food. 8.The Cornelii went to an inn. 9.The Cornelii came to an inn. 10.The Cornelii stayed in an inn. 1.Miles fabulam narravit. 2.[Ego] fabulam narravi. 3.Pueri voces audiverunt. 4.[Nos] nihil diximus. 5.[Tu] nihil dixisti. 6.Caupo hospitem necavit. 7.[Vos] cibum paravistis. 8.Cornelli ad cauponam ierunt / iverunt. 9.Cornelii ad cauponam venerunt. 10.Cornelii in caupon ā manserunt.