| |
amor, amoris, m. | love (amorous) |
corium, corii, n. | skin, hide (excoriate) |
fatum, i, n. | fate (fatal) |
frater, fratris, m. | brother (fraternal) |
linum, i, n. | line, rope; thread (linear) |
princeps, principis, m. | prince, leader (principate) |
soror, sororis, f. | sister (sorority) |
ego | I |
is, ea, id | he, she, it |
nos, nostri/ nostrum | we |
tu | you |
adamo, are, avi, atum | to fall in love with |
circumscribo, -scribere, -scripsi, -scriptum | to draw a line around (circumscribe) |
condo, condere, condidi, conditum | to found, establish |
credo, credere, credidi, creditum (+dat. of person, +acc. of thing) | to believe, trust (creed) |
effugio, effugere, effugi | to turn away, escape |
relinqui, relinquere, relinqui, relinctum | to leave behind (relinquish) |
crudelis, crudele | hard-hearted, cruel (crudelity) |
miser, misera, miserum | unhappy, wretched, miserable (miser) |
contra, prep. +acc. | against (contrary) |
post, prep. +acc. | after |
Personal pronouns are those pronouns that specifically refer to a person or thing from _________ point of view | speaker's |
Does 1st and 2nd person require the concept of gender?
Yes or No | No |
Personal pronouns work with preposition, specifically _____, to form ____-word prepositional phrase | cum; one |