PRIMER A - AEDILE

AEDILE SONGS

Chariot 1
Chariot 2
Chariot 3
Chariot 4
Chariot 5
Chariot 6
Chariot 7
Chariot 8


AEDILE VOCABULARY

Chariot 1
Chariot 2
Chariot 3
Chariot 4
Chariot 5
Chariot 6
Chariot 7
Chariot 8


AEDILE CHANTS (NOUNS)

Chariot 1. Case Functions
The nominative gives... the accusative... of the genitive... to the dative... in the ablative.
The nominatives give... the accusatives... of the genitives... to the datives... in the ablatives.

Chariot 2. Case Examples
Fluvius dat (the nominative gives)... aquam dat (the accusative)... provinciae (of the genitive)... oppidō (to the dative)... in Itāliā (in the ablative)... ecce Sexte (is the vocative).

Chariot 3. First Declension
īnsula, īnsulam, īnsulae, īnsulae, īnsulā... īnsulae, īnsulās, īnsulārum, īnsulīs, īnsulīs

Chariot 4. Second Declension
equus, equum, equī, equō, equō... equī, equōs, equōrum, equīs, equīs
liber, librum, librī, librō, librō... librī, librōs, librōrum, librīs, librīs
verbum, verbum, verbī, verbō, verbō... verba, verba, verbōrum, verbīs, verbīs

Chariot 5. Third Declension
leō, leōnem, leōnis, leōnī, leōne… leōnēs, leōnēs, leōnum, leōnibus, leōnibus
corpus, corpus, corporis, corporī, corpore… corpora, corpora, corporum, corporibus, corporibus
mōns, montem, montis, montī, monte… montēs, montēs, montium, montibus, montibus
animal, animal, animālis, animālī, animālī… animālia, animālia, animālium, animālibus, animālibus

Chariot 6. Fourth Declension
portus, portum, portūs, portuī, portū... portūs, portūs, portuum, portibus, portibus
cornū, cornū, cornūs, cornū, cornū... cornua, cornua, cornuum, cornibus, cornibus

Chariot 7. Fifth Declension
rēs, rem, reī, reī, rē... rēs, rēs, rērum, rēbus, rēbus
diēs, diem, diēī, diēī, diē... diēs, diēs, diērum, diēbus, diēbus

Chariot 8. Gender
First declension is mostly feminine, but PACAPAINS are an exception: Pīrāta, agricola, collēga, aurīga, poēta, āthlēta, incola, nauta, scrība.

Second declension is mostly masculine,  but HARP and trees are exceptions: Humus, Aegyptus, Rhodus, papyrus, quercus, laurus, alnus, and cedrus.

Third Declension: -er/-or is masculine... -s/-o/-x is feminine, -l/-a/-n/-c/-e/-t/-us/-ar/-ur is neuter
(Sol (m), leō (m), mōns (m), piscis (m) are exceptions.)

Fourth Declension: -us is masculine, but manus is an exception... -ū (cornū) is neuter, as are genū, gelū, and pecū.

Fifth declension: Mostly feminine, like rēs, faciēs, and glaciēs, but diēs is an exceptionn (it's mostly masculine, but sometimes feminine.)

1 comment: