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Topic: Latin conjugation


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In the News (Mon 9 Nov 09)

  
  Latin
Latin is a member of the family of Italic languages, and its alphabet, the Latin alphabet, is based on the Old Italic alphabet, which is in turn derived from the Greek alphabet.
Latin was first brought to the Italian peninsula in the 9th or 8th century BC by migrants from the north, who settled in the Latium region, specifically around the River Tiber, where the Roman civilization first developed.
Latin translations of modern literature such as Paddington Bear, Winnie the Pooh, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Le Petit Prince, Max und Moritz, Walter the Farting Dog, and The Cat in the Hat are intended to bolster interest in the language.
articles.gourt.com /en/Latin   (2190 words)

  
 conjugation, active, passive, voice, Wiktionary, wiktionary, participle, forms, first, portāvÄ, future, contracted, ...
Conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from one basic form.
In a dictionary, Latin verbs are always listed with four principal parts which allow the reader to deduce the other conjugated forms of the verbs.
Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Latin conjugation aus der freien Enzyklo.
www.alphasearch.org /Latin-conjugation.html   (448 words)

  
 [No title]
LATIN ENGLISH 1st video I see 2nd vides you see 3rd videt he/she/it sees 1st videmus we see 2nd videtis you see 3rd vident they see As I told you before, Latin conjugates its verbs by attaching endings to the root of the verb itself, and here you can see it happening.
Latin, however, is an inflected language, because it relies almost entirely on changes in the words themselves to indicate their grammatical function in a sentence.
In Latin, the word for "girl" would be in the dative case, and so would have the dative case ending of the declension to which the word "girl" belongs.
www.ewtn.com /library/HOMELIBR/LATIN.TXT   (18058 words)

  
 Latin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Latin is also still used (drawing heavily on Greek roots) to furnish the names used in the scientific classification of living things.
Latin is a synthetic or inflectional language: affixes are attached to fixed stems to express gender, number, and case in adjectives, nouns, and pronouns, which is called declension; and person, number, tense, voice, mood, and aspect in verbs, which is called conjugation.
Latin was once taught in most of the schools in Britain with academic leanings - perhaps 25% of the total [1].
www.abcworld.net /Latin.html   (1491 words)

  
 Wikinfo | Latin
Latin was the language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium.
Moreover, Latin was a lingua franca, the learned language for scientific and political affairs, for more than a thousand years, being eventually replaced by French in the 18th century and English in the late 19th.
Inflection of nouns and adjectives is termed "declension", that of verbs, "conjugation".
www.wikinfo.org /wiki.php?title=Latin_language   (528 words)

  
 Michael McLarnon - Latin
It will conjugate any regular verb into any of the six tenses of the indicative mood, and into either active or passive voice.
Tell the applet which conjugation the verb belongs to.
The Latin Grammar Page at Notre Dame was kind enough to put a link to here on their site.
www.angelfire.com /pa/mmclar/Latin.html   (168 words)

  
 Latin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
I have decided to post it here on my website so it can be seen by anybody wants to know a little bit about Latin (if you do, there's something wrong with you) or needs help in understanding the langugage.
Technically, you pronounce the second conjugation and the third conjugation, second principle parts differently but not everybody does that.
In Latin (like most languages), sometimes there are patterns and sometimes there aren't.
www.finifter.com /brian/latin.htm   (596 words)

  
 Latin Verb Conjugation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Take a look first at these four charts, which contain all the basic endings in Latin and the person and number indicator to assist you with correct translation.
Forms as listed in the book are indicated in the footnotes at the bottom.
Memorize the irregular 1st Conjugation forms indicated by all capital letters.
www.abney.homestead.com /conjugation1.html   (407 words)

  
 Latin Verb Conjugation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Take a look first at these four charts, which contain all the basic endings in Latin and the person and number indicator to assist you with correct translation.
Forms as listed in the book are indicated in the footnotes at the bottom.
Memorize the irregular 1st Conjugation forms indicated by all capital letters.
abney.homestead.com /conjugation1.html   (407 words)

  
 Verbix -- Romance languages: conjugate Latin verbs   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
The Latin language was the language of the Roman Empire.
Following map shows the extension of the Latin and Greek in the Roman Empire AD 117.
In addition languages surviving in the Roman Empire are marked.On most areas marked in red, nowadays Romance languages are spoken.
www.verbix.com /languages/latin.shtml   (84 words)

  
 [No title]
Latin Textbook (Based on Wheelock's Latin) STUDY GUIDE TO WHEELOCK LATIN by Dale A Grote UNC Charlotte [This copy FTP'd from milton.u.washington.edu, 19-Jan-93] From FFL00DAG@UNCCVM.UNCC.EDU Tue Jan 19 18:15:19 1993 Date: Tue, 19 Jan 93 21:08:32 EST From: FFL00DAG@UNCCVM.UNCC.EDU Subject: Re: Latin Textbook To: Thomas Dell
Thomas, I call the guides "Study Guide to Wheelock," and have made them available for free use to anyone who'd like use them.
Dale A. Grote FFL00DAG@UNCCVM.BITNET Department of Foreign Languages UNC Charlotte Charlotte, NC 28223 704-547-4242 --- 12/30/92 PREFACE TO MY COLLEAGUES Wheelock's Latin is now, and probably will be for sometime in the future, the most widely used introductory Latin book used in American colleges and universities.
www.mtsu.edu /~rbombard/RB/Spinoza/latin.stu   (18051 words)

  
 Internet Workbook for the OLC: Chapter 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
GENERAL: Latin Dictionary and Grammar Aid, by Kevin Cawley, University of Notre Dame Archives.
For a taste of contemporary Latin, read the Transcriptio Nuntiorum Hebdomadalis, a series of short notices summarizing this week's news, then read it again as the reporters announce it on Recitatio radiophonia [you need RealPlayer to hear it].
These materials are for educational use only and may not be reproduced or distributed in another form or for profit without permission.
artemis.austincollege.edu /acad/cml/rcape/latin/01index.html   (175 words)

  
 Untitled Document
The author summarizes his approach: "This Project has two purposes: a) To deliver an "architectonic view" of the Latin linguistic system, with a sense of what the parts mean and where they fit into a working linguistic whole.
Latin Language site, which is an excellent resource and should be the first place you visit when seeking information on grammar, morphology, etymology, and other related items.
Lingua Latina is a free program which drills users on the basics of Latin grammar.
www.ccsd.edu /south/language/latin   (852 words)

  
 Latin Grammar: Verb conjugation and noun declension
If you think the four (or five or six) regular verb conjugations are different, you might want to take a look at how similar they are.
One more is needed to hire the research assistant needed to count the number of academic types required, and yet another is needed to ponder the underlying combinatorial paradox.
I have made the appropriate changes to the verb conjugation paradigms and added a few words of explanation that I hope will help those of us who speak English to understand the basic distinction between Imperfect and Perfect.
www.math.osu.edu /~econrad/lang/latin.html   (1220 words)

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