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Cambridge Latin Course Book 1 Stage 10 Statuae Translation 〈99% EXCLUSIVE〉

"Ecce!" clamavit Marcus. "Fur in fossam pulsat; statua percussa est et corruit." Homines ad urbem currebant ut magistratum convocarent.

However assuming "videmus" is translated as we see and "statuas" to be the object Puellae vident statuas The girls see the statues

better than (e.g., nos Græci sumus meliores quam Romani — we Greeks are better than the Romans). 3. Superlative Adjectives

A very specific request!

A: That's for you to decide! Quintus doesn't "win" the argument, but he acts as a peacemaker between Alexander's brothers, showing that practical resolution ( pietas ) is as valuable as theoretical cleverness. cambridge latin course book 1 stage 10 statuae translation

Here's the Latin text from Stage 10, followed by my translation:

"We are more clever than you."

From stultus (foolish). It translates to "very foolish" or "foolishest." 2. Irregular Verbs: fero and volo

"haec statua est cara," respondet Syphax. "centum denarios cupio." Quintus doesn't "win" the argument, but he acts

Here is the line-by-line English translation of the Latin text found in Stage 10:

Puerī, Thrasymachus et Diodōrus, ad forum festīnāvērunt.

"salve, Syphax!" inquit Postumus. "salve, Postume!" respondet Syphax. "tu es mercator probus. ego statuam quaero."

If you had a sentence like: "Statuae in foro sunt." If you share with third parties

This stage focuses on the present tense of the 1st person plural ("we") and 2nd person plural ("you all").

statuas is accusative plural (direct object of spectat ). 15. "statuae sunt bonae," inquit caecilius. Translation: "The statues are good," says Caecilius. Grammar Breakdown for Stage 10 statuae

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