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Monday

Monday. Calescite! 1)How are Present Active Participles formed? (Principal Part? Drop/Add? Declension?) 2) How are they translated? 3) Find two sentences

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Monday

Calescite!

1) How are Present Active Participles formed? (Principal Part? Drop/Add? Declension?)

2) How are they translated?

3) Find two sentences in lingua Latina (in tuis libris) which contain this type of participle.

Model Sentences

• pg. 3 - 5

• Translate with a partner

• 10 minutes!

“fons sacer”

• Translate every OTHER paragraph (beginning with the 1st)

• Finish story for praescriptum domesticum

4 When spring was approaching, Cogidubnus fell into a grave illness. many doctors, having been summoned to the palace, searched for a remedy for the illness.

10 “Where is that damned fountain?” asked Quintus.They are in Britain, after all…

18 “You are a wise man,” that man (i.e. Salvius) responded. “It is better for you to make a will.”

Tuesday

Calescite!

Take out “fons sacer” and (on the same sheet) write one sentence about each character. (Quintus, C-Dub, Salvius)

Turn to pg. 6 and (on the same sheet) list all of the Perfect Passive Participles and translate.

Ex: Line 2 – invitatus – having been invited Line 5 - Line 13 - Line 14 -

“Lucius Marcius Memor”

• Translate “Lucius Marcius Memor” through line 14 and answer Questions 1 - 5 (pg. 9)

• Checkpoint: TEN MINUTES before class ends

Q & A

1. Quod oppidum erat parvum.

2. Notissimus obesusque ignavusque. (Ebrius?) Very well known, fat, lazy…drunk!

3. Erat tertia hora. Cephalus excitare Memorem temptabat.

4. Rursus = again. Memor saepe ebrius erat.

5. “Fer plus vini” et “ABI!” … “Administra ipse rem!”

Wednesday

Calescite!Turn to pg. 7 - 8

Find the Perfect Passive Participles in lines:

10

19

35

Finish “LMM” and Questions

• Finish 6 – 13

• Turn in questions, NOT translation

• Questions about Perfect Passive Participles? Check out pg. 11…we’ll get into specifics Cras!

Thursday

Calescite!*Turn in LMM Questions*

Write & Translate:

1) Cephalus multitūdinem aegrōtōrum clāmantium fabrōrumque vituperantium invenit.

2) Cephalus, ā dominō īrātō territus, invīus exiit.

Participles (Verbal Adjectives)

• Perfect Passive– translated as having been called, having been praised, having

been held…

• Use 4th Principal Part (NEW PRINCIPAL PART!)– laborātum

• Use 1st or 2nd declension endings based on gender– laborātus, -a, -um laborātī, -ae, -a– laborātī, -ae, -ī laborātōrum, -ārum, -ōrum– …….

singular plural

Nom. laudatus, laudata, laudatum laudatī, -ae, -a

Gen. laudatī, -ae, -ī laudatōrum, -ārum, -ōrum

Dat. laudatō, -ae, -ō laudatīs, -īs, īs

Acc. laudatum, -am, -um laudatōs, -ās, -a

Abl. laudatō, -ā, -ō laudatīs, -īs, īs

Domina Gaga ambulāvitex ovō apertō.

Iustinīanus Bīberus, laudatus ab Ūsherō, non vīcit. (eheu?)

Rihanna, impeta ā latrīnā papyrā, longam stolam gerit.

Ablative of Agent

• a.k.a. “Secret” Agent

• ā/ab _________ (noun in ablative)– translated as “by ___________”

– Ex: “missus ab architectō”

– Ex: “laudata ā Magistrā”

Friday

CalesciteNone!!!! Whaaaaa??? Huuuuh????

“senator advenit”pg. 10

Take out a piece of paper and a pen/cil

We’ll translate together