Latin=Adjectives=
EditOverview of Adjectives
An adjective is simply any word that describes a noun, such as an object or subject in a sentence. Of course, whole phrases may be used to describe nouns, but adjectives are individual words. In English, for example:
The
red dog attacked the
crazy fox.
An adjective can also be used in a sentence opposite a form of "to be."
The boy is
good.
In Latin, the same is true.
EditAdjectives in Latin
Like nouns, adjectives in Latin are declined. The vast majority take either the first and second declension (
antiquus -a -um) or the third declension (
ferox, ferocis). All such adjectives must agree with the nouns they describe in gender, number, and case.
Most third declension adjectives do not have separate masculine and feminine forms. (Neuter adjectives follow the third declension neuter pattern.)
First and second declension adjectives have three distinct genders. Feminine adjectives require the first declension, masculine the second (masculine pattern), and neuter the second (neuter pattern).
These words will look like the adjective
antiquus (old, ancient):
antiquus (masculine), antiqua (feminine), antiquum (neuter).
Third declension adjectives typically look more like
ferox,
ferocis (wild, bold).
Adjectives often come
after the word they describe. (But since word order is not central to the meaning of a Latin sentence, the adjective may appear anywhere within the sentence. In poetry, for example, several words often separate an adjective from the noun it modifies.)
For example:
| Explanation- The good boy loves the wild dog. |
| Latin: | puer | bonus | amat(1) | canem(2) (acc) | ferocem(3) (acc). |
| English: | The boy | good | he loves | the dog | wild. |
- (1) amare, to love. amat, he loves.
- (2) canis, dog (masc.)
- (3) ferox, ferocis, wild. ferocem (acc.)
Bonus, a first and second declension adjective, is masculine, nominative, and singular to agree with
puer, the word it is describing.
Ferocem, a third declension adjective, is masculine, accusative, and singular to agree with
canem.
Canem is accusative because it is the object of
amat.
Here is an example of plural adjectives:
| Explanation- The good boys love the wild dogs. |
| Latin: | Pueri (plur) | boni (plur)|| amant (plur) | canes (plur, acc) | feroces (plur, acc). |
| English: | The boys | good | they love | the dogs | wild. |
The words
bonus and
ferocem become
boni and
feroces to agree with the plurals
pueri and
canes.
However, if a girl (puella) happened to love that boy:
| Explanation- The good girl loves the good boy. |
| Latin: | Puella | bona|| amat | puerum (acc) | bonum (acc). |
| English: | The girl|| good | she loves | the boy|| good. |
Bonus must become
bona in order to modify
puella, which is feminine.
Finally, if the girl isn't good, but rather wild:
| Explanation- The wild girl loves the good boy. |
| Latin: | Puella | ferox|| amat | puerum (acc) | bonum (acc). |
| English: | The girl|| wild | she loves | the boy|| good. |
Even though
puella is first declension,
ferox remains third declension. In the same way, a good lion would be
bonus leo.
Adjectives must agree in gender, number, and case, but not necessarily in declension.
EditExercise
Latin/Exercise|Translate|
- est bonus. • sum ferox. • estis boni. • sunt bonae.
|
- He is good. • I am wild. • You (pl.) are good. • They are good.
For learning Latin | Category Uncategorized | Level Unspecified |
Second language English | Created Aug 01, 2008 14:54 | Views 1722 |
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