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Latin Homework Again -. .-

Latin Homework help please!?

general - dux, imperator (I would not use "imperator" because that implies "emperor")
"Washinton erat dux Americanus/Americani" (It does not matter whether the adjective or the genitive is used, but for an ongoing action like his being a general, you have to use the imperfect, not the perfect tense.)
"... quia vicit (third person singular perfect active) hostes (in Latin you have to use the plural for "enemy)". "Vincerunt" does not exist
"...quibuscum bellum gessit" - with whom he fought a/the war, or as a question "who did he fight the war with?

After that it gets murky
"cernebantur" means "they were separated/ determined/ distinguished/ resolved/ seen", and only context can tell which one is correct.
I suppose your Latin phrase is supposed to read "cernebantur eius milites ab hostibus" - the soldiers of his were seen by (or "distinguished from" if there is a description of a piece of outfit or uniform) the enemy
Washington vicit (perfect tense) Germanos. Again, no such word as "vincerat". And are you sure you are talking about the right war here? As far as I know the enemy were British troups, bolstered by some poor Hessian or Hanoverian conscripts on loan from their prince or king. The English would be "Angli" or "Anglos" in the accusative.

LATIN HOMEWORK HELP!!!!!!!!!!?

Compare and Contrast the following case endings for First and Second Declensions. What are the similarities?
Genitive Plural
Accusative Singular
Accusative Plural
Ablative Singular

Latin 1 Homework Help?

In water
in + abl

a viis
from the road
a + acc

Out of Italy
ex + abl

in casam
In the cottage
in + acc

de insulis
away from the island
de + acc

These are really quite simple. I'll give you a few tricks.
Per, Ad, Prope, In are prepositions that will ALWAYS take the accusative case. (Meaning the noun after will be accusative) I like to remember it as "Accusing PAPI" These represent motion.
Sub, In, De, Sine, Pro, Ab, C*m, Ex are prepositions that will again, ALWAYS takes the ablative case. I like to remember it as SID SPACE the ablative astronaut. These represent a place.

Latin homework!!!!??? easy 10 points?

Where is the problem???
Marcus has to be a third person. He is talked about. (the first person is the one talking, the 2nd the one talked to) He is one person, so the verb is a 3rd person singular, and the ending for that in the present tense is "-t".
It can't be "ambulo", since that's a first person, "ambulant" is a 3rd person, but a plural, and "ambulare" is the infinitive form.

Tip for future inquiries: It is quite rude to use txtspk when you want a serious answer.

Who invented homework, and why was it invented?

This is an abstract from article about teacher, who invented homework :“Roberto Nevilis, a strict teacher from Italy, started the history of this educational system innovation in 1095 in Venice. Nevilis was disappointed with the performance of his students. Hours spent in school had no positive impact on the knowledge & skills of his children; he decided to invent a way to punish them without involving physical violence, which was against the law.In the question, “who invented homework and why” the part explaining the reasons is the most important. Formal school system was invented. The need to improve teaching methods became obvious. Wealthy people could afford to pay for education, and their children were not ready to take high responsibilities without a special motivation. Nevilis involved several hours of work after classes to embrace the accurate meaning of his lessons.”

Latin homework help please?

1. How would you express "to the story" in Latin?
a. fabularum
b. fabulis
c. fabulae
d. fabulas

2. How would you express "of the countries" in Latin?
a. patriae
b. patriis
c. patrias
d. patriarum

3. How would you express "you (singular) give" in Latin?
a. dat
b. do
c. damus
d. das

4. How would you express "we entrust" in Latin"
a. mandamus
b. mando
c. mandat
d. mandatis

5. How would you express "you (plural) build" in Latin?
a. aedificamus
b. aedificatis
c. aedificant
d. aedifico

6. What is the Latin personal ending added to the end of a verb to indicate the pronoun "you (plural)"?
a. MUS
b. TIS
c. NT
d. S

7. What is the Latin personal ending added to the end of a verb to indicate the pronoun "it"?
a. S
b. TIS
c. T
d. NT

8. What is the Latin personal ending added to the end of a verb to indicate the pronoun "I"?
a. MUS
b. NT
c. O
d. T

9. What person is "amat"?
a. First
b. Second
c. Third
d. Not applicable

10. What person is "amant"?
a. First
b. Second
c. Third
d. Not applicable

11. Which is a derivative of the Latin word for watch, look at?
a. watchman
b. observe
c. space
d. circumspect

12. A pugnacious boy likes to ____________.
a. fight
b. sing
c. eat
d. dance

13. Based on Latin, what should one do in a laboratory?
a. work
b. live
c. experiment
d. report

14. A pugilist would like to _________?
a. trust
b. fight
c. love
d. praise

How much time do you spend helping your kid with homework?

It depends.  My 12 yr old goes to an academically rigorous charter school and has 1-2 hours of homework each night.  She struggles with math (they have Pre-algebra in 6th grade) so I guide her to think through the problems and discover the answer herself.  Sometimes this entails going over notes or getting on Khan Academy for more instruction, occasionally we have to go through the lesson again. With the exception of math, I only ensure that she has completed it.  She excels at Latin, which is good, because I wouldn't be able to help her if I wanted to.  We will help her with drills if she is trying to memorize something.  Overall, I would say I spend about 15-30 minutes per night, mostly on math.

Can someone help on Latin homework?

I know this is really low and the homework is probably pretty easy to you but I can t do Latin what so ever and have very little comprehension on the subject. This hopefully is a one time thing because I doubt I ll be this tired and this over flowed with homework again. But anyways if you could translate and give the proper declension of the word you would help me so much ! Also I ve already tried to translate some so if it s wrong and you can correct it that would be great but once I post this I m starting my English writing assignment then maybe I ll get to my ap geometry

---------------------------------------...
1. Epistula Terentiae a Cicerone ____.(ablative) teneo(tenere right?)
( Cicero holds Terentaiae s letter?)
2. Cicero est _____ et Terentia est ___. (Miser)
(I have no idea what est means so here I leave the work to y all hopefully)
3. Bona consilia a bonis viris ____. (Paro)
(I have a general idea about this one something about planing to reward men but I have no idea on the translation)
4. Epistulae longae a Cicerone (ablative)_____.(exspecto)
(Cicero expects far letters?)
(Side note if you can t tell by now I truly regret taking Latin as it is not for me and I truly am this bad at Latin and cannot comprehend very much of it so if you would help me I cannot express how greatful I am as a wornout high school student)
5. Terentia in animo ciceronis(genetive) ____.(video)
(Cicero sees Terentia in his mind)?)

Please read!!!!!......Latin help again please !!!!!!!!?

A great site that's quick and easy.... and especially good for single words (sentences can get kinda messed up)

On the right side of the page...
there's a few options
example English to Spanish you'll wanna change to
Spanish to English

Here's the link!
http://www.freetranslation.com/

How would I say the phrase "rise again" in Latin?

“resurge” — “rise again!” (command to a single person)“resurgite” — “rise again!” (command to multiple people)“resurgo” — “I rise again”“resurgam” — “I shall rise again”“resurgimus” — “we rise again”“resurgemus” — “we shall rise again”.Hopefully one of these suits your needs.

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