22nd Sydney Latin Summer School

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22nd Sydney Latin Summer School University of Sydney, January 18-22, 2016 Level 1 A

from Susan C. Shelmerdine, Introduction to Latin (2 nd ed.)

Welcome to Latin! There will be handouts provided every day this is the material for the first day. MORPHOLOGY Latin is an inflected language. That means that the forms of Latin words will change to reflect different grammatical functions or altered meaning. The English language does this sometimes too: I give gifts to the gods, but the poet gives them nothing. I gave gifts to the gods. The frog has a long tongue. The frog s tongue is long. If these sentences were translated into Latin, the highlighted words would change form (I give = do; he gives = dat; I gave = dedi; frog = rana; frog s = ranae). Many of the nonhighlighted words would change too, because Latin is a much more highly inflected language than English. The frog has a long tongue. rana linguam longam habet. The frog s tongue is long. lingua ranae est longa. One of the important things you will be learning this week is morphology, the ways in which forms (and particularly the ends) of words alter as their meaning or function changes. Question: SYNTAX What other differences can you see between the English and the Latin sentences? The syntax of a word is its grammatical function in the sentence. If you can identify the syntax of a word in an English sentence, you can translate it into Latin. Conversely, the morphology of a word in a Latin sentence will help you to identify its syntax, and enable you to understand the sentence. To talk about syntax, you need some terminology: noun pronoun verb subject object indirect object Exercise: the word for a person, place, thing, idea, action, quality a word that stands in for a noun describes an action or state of being the noun that performs the action (or state of being) of the verb the noun that receives the action of the verb the noun indirectly acted upon by the verb used with verbs of giving, telling, showing, saying, and promising English clue: noun x does noun y to noun z Identify the syntax of the nouns and pronouns in the following sentences: I think therefore I am. Did you see the queen? The poet told a story to his daughter. The girl gave her mother a flower.

NOUNS Every Latin noun has a particular gender. Nouns also have number and case, determined by their syntax (i.e. grammatical function in the sentence). Latin nouns are: masculine (m.), feminine (f.) or neuter (n.). Gender is not always intuitive: words denoting males are masculine: nauta (sailor), agricola (farmer), poeta (poet). words denoting females are feminine: regina (queen), filia (daughter), dea (goddess), femina (woman). words denoting inanimate and non-human things can be either masculine, feminine or neuter: aquila (eagle) is feminine, like rana (frog), notwithstanding the sex of the animal concerned. Nouns in Latin are: singular or plural. The number of a noun in Latin will always, as sometimes in English, change the ending: The dog sticks out his tongue. Cerberus sticks out his tongues. canis prodit linguam. Cerberus prodit linguas. The case of a noun is determined by its syntax (grammatical function). There are SIX cases in Latin, and the form (morphology) of a noun changes accordingly. The cases are: NOMINATIVE, VOCATIVE, ACCUSATIVE, GENITIVE, DATIVE, ABLATIVE. The nominative case is used for the SUBJECT of a verb (the person or thing performing the action of the verb): The queen told her daughter a story. The frog exists. It is also used for the PREDICATE NOMINATIVE (aka complement ) of a verb, if the verb is copulative. Copulative verbs connect or associate two nouns (the subject and the predicate nominative). These are verbs like to be, to become, to seem The sailor is a pirate. It is I! The accusative case is used for the DIRECT OBJECT of a verb (the person or thing to whom the action of the verb happens): The queen showed her daughter an eagle. The frog loves the sailor. Not every verb takes a direct object (those that do are transitive, those that don t are intransitive ): The eagle flies. The dative case is used to denote the person or thing with a special interest in or affected by the action. Often it is best translated with to or for. The dative of INDIRECT OBJECT is common: The queen told her daughter a story. The sailor gave gifts to the goddesses.

THE FIRST DECLENSION We will learn how to use the other three cases later: now it is time to learn the endings for nouns in the first declension. There are five declensions in Latin, and these are just groups of nouns which share a given morphology (in other words, they have the same endings). CASE Singular Plural VOCABULARY Nominative -a -ae agricola, -ae farmer aquila, -ae eagle Vocative -a -ae nauta, -ae sailor dea, -ae goddess Accusative -am -ās pīrāta, -ae pirate fēmina, -ae woman Genitive -ae -ārum poeta, -ae poet fīlia, -ae daughter Dative -ae -īs lingua, -ae tongue Ablative -ā -īs rāna, -ae frog rēgīna, -ae queen NOUN FORMATION To form a noun in a particular case and number in the first declension, you need to add these endings to the stem. You find the stem simply by dropping the a from the nominative singular, which is always the first entry given for a noun in the dictionary (the second entry is always the genitive singular, or as above the genitive singular ending). You can always identify the declension of a noun from its genitive singular ending. Exercises 1. Identify the case and number of the following nouns (note that sometimes there will be several options): agricolam, nautis, feminarum, filia, linguae, ranas 2. Provide the Latin form indicated for the following nouns: poet (nom. pl.), eagle (dat. sg.), queen (gen. sg.), goddess (abl. sg.), woman (voc. sg.) CASES cont.... The genitive case is often best translated into English with of..., and you will see the POSSESSIVE GENITIVE frequently. This type of genitive denotes the person or thing to whom/which another noun belongs. The genitive is a case which qualifies another noun: The pirate ate the queen s sandwich. The sailor stole the poet s lyre. The vocative case is the case used for direct address, and is often seen with the interjection o. Its syntactical function in the sentence depends neither on the verb, or on its qualification of another noun. The convention usually is to separate the vocative with commas: o regina, pirata aquilam poetae dat. O queen, the pirate gives an eagle to the poet. The ablative case can often be translated with by, with, from or in. It is an adverbial case (it modifies the action of the verb). It is often seen with prepositions, including these: in in; on ā / ab (away) from dē (down) from ē / ex (out) from PREPOSITIONS A preposition is a short word, which does not change its form (much). It is usually placed in front of the noun and it expresses the function of a noun in a sentence. In Latin, the preposition will govern (i.e. determine) the case of the noun.