Discover the exciting intellectual challenge of Latin in this course that uses works by Cicero, Virgil, Caesar, and others to teach you the rules and form of this great language.
Overview
Syllabus
- By This Professor
- 01: Pronouncing Classical Latin
- 02: Introduction to Third-Conjugation Verbs
- 03: Introduction to the Subjunctive Mood
- 04: The Irregular Verbs Sum and Possum
- 05: Introduction to Third-Declension Nouns
- 06: Third-Declension Neuter Nouns
- 07: First- and Second-Declension Adjectives
- 08: First- and Second-Declension Nouns
- 09: Introduction to the Passive Voice
- 10: Third -io and Fourth-Conjugation Verbs
- 11: First- and Second-Conjugation Verbs
- 12: Reading a Famous Latin Love Poem
- 13: The Present Passive of All Conjugations
- 14: Third-Declension Adjectives
- 15: Third-Declension I-Stem Nouns
- 16: The Relative Pronoun
- 17: The Imperfect and Future Tenses
- 18: Building Translation Skills
- 19: Using the Subjunctive Mood
- 20: Demonstrative Adjectives and Pronouns
- 21: The Perfect Tense Active System
- 22: Forming and Using Participles
- 23: Using the Infinitive
- 24: Reading a Passage from Caesar
- 25: The Perfect Tense Passive System
- 26: Deponent Verbs
- 27: Conditional Sentences
- 28: Cum Clauses and Stipulations
- 29: Reading Excerpts from Roman Law
- 30: Interrogative Adjectives and Pronouns
- 31: Fourth- and Fifth-Declension Nouns
- 32: Gerunds and Gerundives
- 33: Counting in Latin
- 34: More on Irregular Verbs
- 35: Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
- 36: Next Steps in Reading Latin
Taught by
Hans-Friedrich Mueller