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15 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
1) Multī morte etiam facilī nimis terrentur.
1) Many are excessively terrified by death, even an easy one.
2) Beāta memoria amīcitiārum dulcium numquam dēlēbitur.
2) The happy memory of sweet friendships never will be erased.
3) Illa fēmina caeca omnia genera artium quoque intellēxit et ab amīcīs iūcundīs semper laudābātur.
3) That blind woman also understood all types of arts and was always being praised by agreeable friends.
4) Pater senex vester, ā quō saepe iuvābāmur, multa dē celeribus perīculīs ingentis maris herī dīcere coepit.
4) Your old father, by whom we were often helped, yesterday began to tell many things about the swift dangers of the huge sea.
5) Mentēs nostrae memoriā potentī illōrum duōrum factōrum cito moventur.
5) Our thoughts are quickly aroused by the powerful memory of those two deeds.
6) Cōnsilia rēgīnae illō tertiō bellō longō et difficilī dēlēbantur.
6) The plans of the queen were being wiped out by that long and difficult third war.
7) Itaque māter mortem quartī fīliī exspectābat, quī nōn valēbat et cuius aetās erat brevis.
7) Therefore the mother was expecting the death of the fourth son who was not strong and whose life was brief.
8) Bella difficilia sine cōnsiliō et clēmentiā numquam gerēbāmus.
8) We never waged difficult wars without design and mercy.
9) Tē cum novem ex aliīs miserīs ad Caesarem crās trahent.
9) Tomorrow they will drag you with nine of the other wretched men to Caesar.
10) Rēgem ācrem, quī officia neglēxerat, ex urbe suā ēiēcērunt.
10) They threw the bitter king, who had neglected his duty, from their city.
11) Ille poēta in tertiō li bellō saturārum scrīpsit dē hominibus avārīs quī ad centum terrās aliās nāvigāre cupiunt quod pecūniam nimis dēsīderant.
11) That poet in the third book of satire wrote of the greed of men who were desiring to sail to 100 other lands because they were desiring money excessively.
12) Mercy will be given by them even to the citizens of other cities.
12) Clementia etiam cīvibus aliārum urbium ab eīs dabitur.
13) Many are moved too often by money but not by truth.
13) Multi pecuniā nimis saepe moventur sed non vēritāte.
14) The state will be destroyed by the powerful king, whom they are beginning to fear.
14) Cīvitās ab rēge dēlēbitur, quem timēre eī incipiunt.
15) Those ten women were not frightened by plans of that trivial sort.
15) Illae decem feminae cōnsiliīs illīus generis levis nōn terrebantur.