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Tres Columnae Vocabulary Bridge Story 1: Adverbs, Conjunctions, Interjections, Prepositions, Pronouns

AB
cotīdiēdaily, every day
daily, every daynot at all
haudquāquamnot at all, not in any way (much stronger than nōn or haud)
nonne?question word that indicates an expectation of the answer "yes"
num?question word that indicates an expectation of the answer "no"
ōlimonce
quoquealso
enimuntranslatable sound that connects two sentences when the first one happened because of the second one, or the second sentence caused the first one. It’s a bit like “because” or “you know.”
igituruntranslatable sound that connects two sentences when the second sentence happened because of the first one, or the first sentence caused the second one . It’s a bit like “therefore” or “so.”
quodbecause
tamenuntranslatable sound that connects two sentences when the second one is the opposite of the first one. It’s something like “however” or "nevertheless"
heuoh dear! (sad, whiny, untranslatable sound)
minimēno!
vaeoh no! (sad, whiny, untranslatable sound)
ā / abby, from (with ablātīvus)
adto (with an accūsātīvus)
ante (with accūsātīvus)before
cumwith (with ablātīvus
ē / exout of, from (with an ablātīvus). Romans usually used ē before a consonant and ex before a vowel, just like we do with "a" and "an"
inin or on (with an ablātīvus), into (with an accūsātīvus)
inter (with accūsātīvus)between, among
prope (with accūsātīvus)near
ille, illa, illudthat (the Romans used it sort of like a “the” sometimes, and they also used it with someone’s name if they wanted to show respect for a person they’re referring to)
cuius?whose?
quandō?when?
quem?who(m)? (answer is accūsātīvus)
quid?what?
quis?who?
ubi?where?, when?


Latin Teacher

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