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62 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
The girl has been (or was) praised.
Puella laudata est.
The girls had been praised.
Puellae laudatae erant.
The girls will have been praised.
Puellae laudatae erunt.
The girls will have been praised.
Puellae laudatae erunt.
The boys have been (were) warned.
Pueri moniti sunt.
The danger had not been seen.
Periculum non visum erat.
The dangers were not seen.
Pericula non visa sunt.
The letter will have been written.
Litterae scriptae erunt.
who has a plan?
quis consilium habet? ---- In the singular the INTERROGATIVE PRONOUN quis, quid follows the pattern of the relative with two exceptions: (1) the masculine and the feminine have the same forms, (2) the nominative forms are quis, quid (and quid is also, of course, the n. acc. form).
what do you see?
quid vides? ---- In the singular the INTERROGATIVE PRONOUN quis, quid follows the pattern of the relative with two exceptions: (1) the masculine and the feminine have the same forms, (2) the nominative forms are quis, quid (and quid is also, of course, the n. acc. form).
what sign do you see?
quod signum vides? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
which woman has a plan?
quae femina consilium habet? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing.
in what kind of city are we living?
in qua urbe vivimus? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
what terrible morals those men have!
quos mores malos isti habent! The word sometimes has exclamatory force. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
what are you reading?
quid legis? The interrogative pronoun asks a question about the identity of a person or thing, has no antecedent, and often introduces a sentence with a question mark at the end (an exception is the "indirect question," introduced in Capvt XXX)
which book are you reading?
quem librum legis? The interrogative adjective asks for more specific identification of a person or thing and both precedes and agrees in gender, number, and case with the noun it is asking about.
Who gave the book to you?
Quis librum tibi dedit?
The man who gave you the book praised you.
Vir qui librum tibi dedit te laudavit.
Which book did he give you?
Quem librum tibi dedit?
Whose book did Cicero give to you?
Cuius librum Cicero tibi dedit?
Of which book was Cicero the author?
Cuius libri fuit Cicero auctor?
The man whose book Cicero gave to you praised you.
Vir cuius librum Cicero tibi dedit te laudavit.
To which friend did you give the book?
Cui amico librum dedisti?
To whom did Cicero give the book?
Cui librum Cicero dedit?
The man to whom Cicero gave the book praised you.
Vir cui Cicero librum dedit te laudavit.
What did he give?
Quid dedit?
What reward did he give? (praemium, -il.)
Quod praemium dedit?
The reward which he gave was large.
Praemium quod dedit erat magnum.
By whom was the reward given?
A quo praemium datum est?
The man by whom the reward was given praised you.
Vir a quo praemium datum est te laudavit.
By which reward was that man motivated?
Quo praemio ille motus est?
The girl has been (or was) praised.
Puella laudata est.
The girls had been praised.
Puellae laudatae erant.
The girls will have been praised.
Puellae laudatae erunt.
The girls will have been praised.
Puellae laudatae erunt.
The boys have been (were) warned.
Pueri moniti sunt.
The danger had not been seen.
Periculum non visum erat.
The dangers were not seen.
Pericula non visa sunt.
The letter will have been written.
Litterae scriptae erunt.
who has a plan?
quis consilium habet? ---- In the singular the INTERROGATIVE PRONOUN quis, quid follows the pattern of the relative with two exceptions: (1) the masculine and the feminine have the same forms, (2) the nominative forms are quis, quid (and quid is also, of course, the n. acc. form).
what do you see?
quid vides? ---- In the singular the INTERROGATIVE PRONOUN quis, quid follows the pattern of the relative with two exceptions: (1) the masculine and the feminine have the same forms, (2) the nominative forms are quis, quid (and quid is also, of course, the n. acc. form).
what sign do you see?
quod signum vides? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
which woman has a plan?
quae femina consilium habet? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing.
in what kind of city are we living?
in qua urbe vivimus? Like the English interrogative adjective ("which... ?" "what... ?" what kind of... ?"), the Latin INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE qui, quae, quod asks for more specific identification of a person or thing. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
what terrible morals those men have!
quos mores malos isti habent! The word sometimes has exclamatory force. The forms of the interrogative adjective are identical to those of the relative pronoun, in both the singular and the plural.
what are you reading?
quid legis? The interrogative pronoun asks a question about the identity of a person or thing, has no antecedent, and often introduces a sentence with a question mark at the end (an exception is the "indirect question," introduced in Capvt XXX)
which book are you reading?
quem librum legis? The interrogative adjective asks for more specific identification of a person or thing and both precedes and agrees in gender, number, and case with the noun it is asking about.
Who gave the book to you?
Quis librum tibi dedit?
The man who gave you the book praised you.
Vir qui librum tibi dedit te laudavit.
Which book did he give you?
Quem librum tibi dedit?
Whose book did Cicero give to you?
Cuius librum Cicero tibi dedit?
Of which book was Cicero the author?
Cuius libri fuit Cicero auctor?
The man whose book Cicero gave to you praised you.
Vir cuius librum Cicero tibi dedit te laudavit.
To which friend did you give the book?
Cui amico librum dedisti?
To whom did Cicero give the book?
Cui librum Cicero dedit?
The man to whom Cicero gave the book praised you.
Vir cui Cicero librum dedit te laudavit.
What did he give?
Quid dedit?
What reward did he give? (praemium, -il.)
Quod praemium dedit?
The reward which he gave was large.
Praemium quod dedit erat magnum.
By whom was the reward given?
A quo praemium datum est?
The man by whom the reward was given praised you.
Vir a quo praemium datum est te laudavit.
By which reward was that man motivated?
Quo praemio ille motus est?