@noahvox Yes-- I use the term "principal parts" for both nouns and verbs. I was taught it this way actually. PRINCIPAL PARTS can belong to ANYTHING that is inflected. Nouns, adjectives, verbs etc. Thus, it's essentially an umbrella term. I hope you understand!
Thank you so much
JFTerson 2 months ago
Shouldn't it be lectio quartus?
mrvulox 3 months ago
Is it Pulchrum or just Pulcrum?
1DeathWing 8 months ago
@1DeathWing Pulchrum would be the correct form-- sometimes it's hard to catch typos when PowerPoint doesn't recognize Latin as a language.
latinguy2009 8 months ago
You called "puer" a principle part. That's a term used for verbs.
noahvox 1 year ago
@noahvox Yes-- I use the term "principal parts" for both nouns and verbs. I was taught it this way actually. PRINCIPAL PARTS can belong to ANYTHING that is inflected. Nouns, adjectives, verbs etc. Thus, it's essentially an umbrella term. I hope you understand!
latinguy2009 1 year ago 2
Vel quarta.
MaBu888 2 years ago
i think this lesson is new for me, hope i understand :D
Prinzeugene 2 years ago
Nice! Can't wait for the Latin reading!!!!
joels341 2 years ago