Latin for Beginners by Benjamin Leonard D'Ooge
page 39 of 649 (06%)
page 39 of 649 (06%)
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| U | Whose? | Possessive-- | «domin-Ä´rum» | Genitive-- | | R | | case of the | _the ladiesâ_ | case of the | | A | | possessor | _of the ladies_ | possessor | | L | | | | | | | Whom? | Objective-- | «domin-Äs» | Accusative-- | | | | case of the | _the ladies_ | case of the | | | | object | | direct object | +---+-------------+--------------+------------------+----------------+ When the nominative singular of a noun ends in «-a», observe that _a._ The nominative plural ends in «-ae». _b._ The genitive singular ends in «-ae» and the genitive plural in «-Ärum». _c._ The accusative singular ends in «-am» and the accusative plural in «-Äs». _d._ The genitive singular and the nominative plural have the same ending. «34.» EXERCISE Pronounce the following words and give their general meaning. Then give the number and case, and the use of each form. Where the same form stands for more than one case, give all the possible cases and uses. 1. Silva, silvÄs, silvam. 2. Fugam, fugae, fuga. 3. TerrÄrum, |
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