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Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search. |
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Tres Columnae Vocabulary Bridge Story 1: Adverbs, Conjunctions, Interjections, Prepositions, Pronouns
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| A | B |
| cotīdiē | daily, every day |
| daily, every day | not at all |
| haudquāquam | not 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" |
| ōlim | once |
| quoque | also |
| enim | untranslatable 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.” |
| igitur | untranslatable 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.” |
| quod | because |
| tamen | untranslatable sound that connects two sentences when the second one is the opposite of the first one. It’s something like “however” or "nevertheless" |
| heu | oh dear! (sad, whiny, untranslatable sound) |
| minimē | no! |
| vae | oh no! (sad, whiny, untranslatable sound) |
| ā / ab | by, from (with ablātīvus) |
| ad | to (with an accūsātīvus) |
| ante (with accūsātīvus) | before |
| cum | with (with ablātīvus |
| ē / ex | out 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" |
| in | in or on (with an ablātīvus), into (with an accūsātīvus) |
| inter (with accūsātīvus) | between, among |
| prope (with accūsātīvus) | near |
| ille, illa, illud | that (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? |
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