Year 7
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Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will learn about Latin plurals in the accusative case.
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
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6 Questions
Q1.
1. Which of the following are singular?
cives, simii, primae
Q2.
2. Which TWO of the following nouns are accusative?
amica
amicae
civis
Q3.
3. What does 'iuvenis civem salutant' mean?
The young men greet the citizen.
Q4.
4. What does 'cives amicum salutant' mean?
The citizen greets the friend.
Q5.
5. Which of these Latin sentences means 'The king greets the first citizen'?
primus rex civem salutat.
Q6.
6. (Optional) What is the moral of the fable of the monkey king?
It doesn't matter what you say to people in power.
Never lie to people in power.
8 Questions
Q1.
Singular or plural: amicum?
Plural
Q2.
Singular or plural: amicos?
Singular
Q3.
Singular or plural: feminas?
Singular
Q4.
Nominative or accusative: canem?
Both
Nominative
Q5.
Nominative or accusative: filii?
Accusative
Both
Q6.
Nominative or accusative: canes?
Accusative
Nominative
Q7.
Tick the THREE correct boxes for puellas.
Nominative
Singular
Translation: girl
Q8.
What does the following Latin sentence mean: filiae amicam salutant.
The daughters greet the friends.