Ma'am if the stem is nomin why did you use nomen? i cant understand that part. Really nice teaching all things considered, I've learned so much in few weeks
Thank you for this video! I have a question. How do I know a word is a mixed or pure I-stem? Can I see it by just looking at the nominative and genitive that are given in my vocabulary list? Sorry if you’ve already answered this.
It's probably way too late for this but anyway: you are pronouncing all three-syllable forms of miles in a manner that seems to go against what I have read, namely that you stress the penult only of it is long, which here it is not, so the stress should be on the antepenult (which also happens to be long). So you are saying mi LI tis, mi LI tem, but should it not be MI litis, MI litem?
1:55 Night and voice are feminine nouns.
great lesson really learned a lot.
Very useful thanks!!
thank you^^ I learnt so much :)
at 1:12 I think you meant to say: "SECOND declension Latin nouns are either masculine or neuter"
Ma'am if the stem is nomin why did you use nomen? i cant understand that part. Really nice teaching all things considered, I've learned so much in few weeks
Thank you for this video!
I have a question. How do I know a word is a mixed or pure I-stem? Can I see it by just looking at the nominative and genitive that are given in my vocabulary list? Sorry if you’ve already answered this.
It's probably way too late for this but anyway: you are pronouncing all three-syllable forms of miles in a manner that seems to go against what I have read, namely that you stress the penult only of it is long, which here it is not, so the stress should be on the antepenult (which also happens to be long). So you are saying mi LI tis, mi LI tem, but should it not be MI litis, MI litem?
There's no similarity between the third accusative and second and first declensions !!!!!
I don't understand