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87 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Paper Map

Charta

Europa the Maiden, Europe the Continent

Europa

Story




Stories

Fabula




Fabulae

Insula




Insulae

Island




Islands

Paeninsula




Paeninsulae

Peninsula




Peninsulas

Puella




Puellae

Girl, Maiden




Girls, Maidens

Regina




Reginae

Queen




Queens

Terra




Terrae





Land, Country, Earth




Lands, Countries, Earths

Est

Is

Lives

Habitat

Rules

Regnat

Spectate

Look At [A Command]

Are

Sunt

And

Et

Here

Hic

(With abl. case) in, on

In

Ita

Yes, Thus So

First word in a sentence indicates asking a question

-Ne

Paene

Almost

But

Sed

Ubi

Where

Friend [Fem]




Amica

Friend [Masc]

Amicus

Deus

God

Daughter




Daughters

Filia




Filae

Iuppiter

Jupiter

Ovid [The Poet]

Ovidius

Poet




Poets

Poeta




Poetae

King

Rex

Bull

Taurus

Tyre

Tyrus

Loves, Likes

Amat

Desiderat

Desires

Flees

Fugitat

Plays

Ludit

Tells

Narrats

Carries

Portat

Watches, Looks At

Spectat

Strange, New

Novus

Timid, Shy

Timidus

Phoenician or of Phoneicia

Phoenicius

Tyrian or of Tyre

Tyrius

To, Toward, Near

Ad

With

Cum

De

About, Concerning, Down From

Diu

For a long time, For a long while, Long

Nunc

Now

Once, Once Upon A Time

Olim

Quis?

Who?

Himself, Herself, Itself, Themselves

Se

Sea

Mari

They Love, Are Loving, Do Love

Amant

They Carry, are Carrying, Do Carry

Portant

They Rule, are Ruling, Do Rule

Regnant

Sunt

They Are

Ludent

They Play, Are Playing, Do Play

-t

Pronoun = He, She, It

-nt

Pronoun = They

-a to -ae

Nominative Case: Nouns Singular -a to Nouns Plural -ae

Tergo

On His Back

Appeliata

Is Called

Europa est puella pulchra.

Europa is a beautiful maiden

Nominative Case = Singular -a and Plural -ae




Terra Est Magna




Terrae sunt Magnae

Nominative Case




The land is Large




The lands are Large

Accusative Case = Singular -am Plural -as




Spectate Terram




Spectate Terras

Accusative Case




Look at the Land




Look at the Lands

Ablative Case = Singular -a Plural -is




Roma est in Italia




Puellae pulchrae sunt in Insulis

Ablative Case




Rome is in Italy




The beautiful girls are on the Islands

Predictive Case




Insulae sunt Tarrae

Predictive Case




The lands are countries





Nominative Case Singular = -a Plural = -ae




The Land is Large.




The Lands are Large

Terra est magna. [singular]




Terrae sunt magnae. [plural]

Accusative Singular and Plural




Accusative Case Singular = -am Plural = -as




Look at the Land.




Look at the Lands.

Spectate terram.




Spectate terras.

Ablative Case Singular = -a Plural = -as




Rome is in Italy.




The beautiful girls are in Italy.

Roma est in Italia




Puellae pulchras sunt in Italia

-am -as

Accusative Case Nouns Singular to Plural




Puellam = Girl




Puellis = Girls

-a -is

Ablative Case Nouns Singular to Plural




Puella = Girl




Puellis = Girls

Minerva est dea.
Minerva is a goddess.
Est dea sapientiae.
(She) is the goddess of wisdom.
Est dea lānae quoque.
(She) is also the goddess of spinning.
Arachnē est puella.
Arachne is a maiden.
Est puella perīta in lānā.
(She) is a girl skilled in spinning.
Pictūrās pulchrās in textilī format
(She) fashions beautiful pictures in tapestries.
Minerva cum deīs in Olympō habitat.
Minerva lives with the gods on Olympus.
Arachnē in casā parvā in Lydiā habitat.
Arachne lives in a small house in Lydia.
Arachnē est superba quod pictūrās pulchrās fōrmat.
Arachne is proud because she fashions beautiful pictures.
Saepe nymphae silvae spectant dum puella perīta lānam glomerat et pictūrās in textilī fōrmat.
Often the nymphs of the forest watch while the skillful girl winds wool and fashions pictures on a tapestry.
Picturae sunt pulchrae.
The pictures are beautiful.
Pictūrae fābulās dē vītā agricolārum et dē vitā incolārum Lydiae nārrant.
The pictures tell stories about the of farmers and the life of the inhabitants of Lydia.
Nymphae pictūrās puellae amant et puellam laudant.
The nymphs love the girl's pictures and they praise the girl.

-ae -arum

Genitive Case Singular and Plural




Puellae = Girl




Puellarum = Girls

-ae -is

Dative Case Singular and Plural




Puellae = Girl




Puellis = Girls

Dea

Goddess