Caesar’s English Lesson 13.

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Presentation transcript:

Caesar’s English Lesson 13

stem meaning examples Bene good benefit, benediction, benefactor Son sound sonorous, dissonance, sonnet Nov new novice, nova, innovation Sangui blood sanguine, sanguinary, consanguinity Cogn know cognizance, incognito, cognoscenti

BENE means good A benefit is a good thing to receive, a benediction is a blessing, and a benefactor is a person who does a good thing!

SON means sound Sonorous describes a full, loud sound; dissonance is a clashing, harsh sound, and a sonnet is a beautiful-sounding fourteen-line poem!

NOV means new. A novice is a beginner, a nova is a new star, and an innovation is a new idea!

SANGUI means blood. Sanguine means cheerful, (with rosy, blood-filled cheeks!), sanguinary means bloody, and consanguinity means realated by blood.

COGN means know. Cognizance is knowing, incognito means in disguise so unknown, and the cognoscenti are the people who are said to know best!

Caesar’s Analogy NOVICE : PERSON :: nova : star beginner : expert new : old child : adult

Caesar’s Analogy NOVICE : PERSON :: nova : star beginner : expert new : old child : adult

Cognizance The word cognizance, (cog-nih-zance), from the Latin cognoscere, is a noun and contains the Latin stem cogn (know). It refers to the condition of awareness, of knowing. It can also be in the adjective form, cognizant. Martin Luther King once wrote: “I am cognizant of the interrelatedness of all communities and states.”

Caesar’s Spanish Stem meaning English/Spanish bene good benediction/bendicion son sound sonorous/sonoro Nov new novice/novicio sangui blood sangine/sanguineo cogn know cognizance/cognicion