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Latin declension - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latin is an inflected language, and as such has nouns, pronouns, and adjectives that must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is call...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_declension |
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Latin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Nominative; The "subject case": the subject is the word found by asking WHO or WHAT before the verb. ... Explain the ideas of case and declension. ... To Latin Teaching Materials Home...
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Nominative; The "subject case": the subject is the word found by asking WHO or WHAT before the verb. ... Explain the ideas of case and declension. ... To Latin Teaching Materials Home...
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(Fixed!) Marco Cimarosti found one instance where I talked about "person" rather than "declension". (1000 apologies and ... Words by William Whitaker. Web-based computer-aided translation. Highly recommended! This is a wonderful web site for parsing nouns, verbs and adjectives with those troublesome Latin word endings.
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Old Latin had only two patterns of endings. One pattern was shared by the first and second declensions, with a clear similarity to the first and second declensions of Ancient Greek. The other pattern was used by the third declension and was very different from Greek, even for direct cognates.
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The Periodic Table of the Latin Declensions ... Roll over each highlighted ending to see all the cases and declensions where it occurs. ... Hide Latin...
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