1 / 11

First Declension Nouns

First Declension Nouns. 6 September 2006. Case. A characteristic of Latin nouns is case . Case indicates the role of the noun in a sentence. There are five major cases: Nominative Genitive Dative Accusative Ablative. Nominative Case. Used for subjects Used for predicate nominatives.

sakura
Download Presentation

First Declension Nouns

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First Declension Nouns 6 September 2006

  2. Case • A characteristic of Latin nouns is case. • Case indicates the role of the noun in a sentence. • There are five major cases: • Nominative • Genitive • Dative • Accusative • Ablative

  3. Nominative Case • Used for subjects • Used for predicate nominatives

  4. Genitive Case • for possession (the possessor—rather than what is possessed—is in the genitive case • For other grammatical constructs that can be translated with “of,” e.g., “one of you,” “book of Lucy” or “Lucy’s book”

  5. Dative Case • Used chiefly for indirect objects • I sent my friend a letter. • You showed me the book. • She gave the customer a receipt. • He told the students about the author.

  6. Accusative Case • Used for direct objects • Used for the objects of certain prepositions

  7. Ablative Case • Used for the objects of certain prepositions

  8. 1st Declension Nouns sg. plural • N. –a –ae • G. –ae –ārum • D. –ae –īs • Acc. –am –ās • Abl. –ā –īs

  9. Finding the stem • Take the genitive of the noun and subtract the genitive ending. EXAMPLE: PUELLAE-AE=PUELL

  10. Puella, puellae f.-girl

  11. Ex: Fēmina videt stellās et lūnam. Fēmina nom. sg. woman videt 3d sg. videō, vidēre sees stellās acc. pl. stella, stella, f. stars et conj. and lūnam acc. sg. lūna, lūnae, f. moon The woman sees the stars and moon.

More Related