< Latin

Salvēte omnēs! Welcome back to Latin for Wikiversity. Here you can peruse a new lesson in Latin, in a simple format. If you would like to catch up, you can find a directory of lessons, a classified vocabulary list, and Memrise courses at the links on the right.

Here is a second lesson for those of you interested. Latin has no article adjectives. Enjoy!

New vocabulary

Latin English Audio (Classical) Notes
mālum, iapple  
is, ea, idhe, she, itas subject pronoun
yousingular, as subject pronoun)
edithe eats/ she eats
esyou are
esthe is/ she is/ it is

Review vocabulary

Latin English Audio (Classical) Notes
puella, aegirl
 puer, ī boy
 fēmina, aewoman
virman
homō, hominisman
sumI am

Sentences


Latin English Audio (Classical) Notes
All sentences together
 Mālumapple/ an apple/ the apple
Puer est.He is a boy.
Edit.He eats./ She eats.
 Is puer est.He is a boy.notā bene - Subject pronouns are infrequently used in Latin, since every verb contains an ending that indicates person and number. But it's probably useful to introduce them at this point as an optional part of a sentence, especially when used with nouns that are gender-specific.
Is edit.He eats.
Puella est.She is a girl.
Puella edit.The girl eats.
Ea est puella.She is a girl.
 Fēmina es.You are a woman.
 Tū es fēmina/ Tū fēmina es.You are a woman.
Es vir.You are a man.
Est vir.He is a man.
 Ea fēmina est.She is a woman.
Is est vir.He is a man.
 Vir mālum edit.The man eats an apple.notā bene - This is our first sentence with a direct object, but we dodge the difficulty of inflecting nouns into the accusative case for now, since neuter nouns like mālum are the same in both nominative and accusative case. Also note that conventional Latin word order is SOV, with the verb at the end, but this is by no means a rule of syntax and is frequently ignored. The real trick is to learn to pay close attention to the endings of nouns and verbs.
 Fēmina mālum edit.The woman eats the apple.
 Homō est.He is a man.remember there are two commonly used nouns for man.
Puella es.You are a girl.
 Puella edit mālum.The girl eats an apple.
 Mālum est.It is an apple."Malum est" means "It is bad," and "Mālum malum est." means "It is a bad apple," but let's wait for a future lesson for that!

Practice

Practice and learn the words and phrases in this lesson
Step oneFirst learn the words using this lesson:
Step twoNext try learning and writing the sentencing using this:
Note that the Memrise stage covers the content for the first three lessons

We hope you've enjoyed this basic Latin lesson. Gratiās vōbīs agō!

This article is issued from Wikiversity. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.