Stage 9: About the Language
Boost your Latin skills! Practice pronoun and noun declensions and translation with our interactive worksheet on the case system.
Translate the following sentences: Clēmēns puellae vīnum offerēbat. iuvenis servō pecūniam trādidit. dominus mercātōrī statuam ēmit. Grumiō ancillīs cēnam parāvit. Quīntus amīcīs discum ostendit. servī leōnibus cibum dedērunt. The bold-faced words in the sentence above are in the dative case. Fill in the blanks below. The nominative case is the case of the subject: what the sentence is about.The accusative case is the case of the direct object: what the verb is acting on.The dative case is the case of the indirect object: the person or thing who is benefiting from or receiving the other object. Fill in the blanks with the appropriate form of the first person pronoun (I, to me, me). ego senem salūtō.frāter mihi statuam ostendit.amīcus mē salūtat. Forms of the first person pronoun (I, to me, me) nominative ego dative mihi accusative mē Fill in the blanks with the appropriate form of the second person pronoun (you, to you, you). tū pictūram pingis.pater tibi pecūniam dat.āthlēta tē laudat. Forms of the second person pronoun (you, to you, you) nominative tū dative tibi accusative tē Fill in the forms of the first declension noun (ancilla) First declension Singular Plural nominative ancilla ancillae dative ancillae ancillīs accusative ancillam ancillās Fill in the forms of the second declension noun (servus) Second Declension Singular Plural nominative servus servī dative servō servīs accusative servum servōs Fill in the forms of the third declension noun (leō) Third declension Singular Plural nominative leō leōnēs dative leōnī leōnibus accusative leōnem leōnēs Translate the sentences below. ancilla dominō cibum ostendit. agricola uxōrī ānulam ēmit. servus Metellae togam trādidit. mercātor gladiātōribus pecūniam offerēbat. fēmina ancillīs tunicās quaerēbat.