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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Take-Home Test Chapter 13

Practice and Review
1. The counsels joined neither with you nor with those others.
2. The entire Roman population has let go of its liberty.
3. The bad king has never been able to capture me myself.
4. At that time, you fled to their father and mother through that place
5. The gods create souls and send them into the bodies of men from the sky
6. They themselves have recently conquered him in Asia by themselves.
7. On the way, Cicero saw her doctor, not his own.
8. No one was able to love the bitter duaghter of the consul himself for long.
9. These men joined Cicero with themselves, for they had always loved him.
10. The woman had sent her letter before that time.
11. That man had a good old age, for he had lived well.
12. The mother understood her son well, and the young man thanked her for her patience.
13. Illi autem adulescentes ad Caesarem ipsum heri venerunt.
14. Cicero igitur nomen eius cum suo numquam iunget.
15. Cicero se semper dilexit et tu etiam te diligis
16. Cicero suos laudabat libros et nunclaudo libros meos.
17. Consul Cicero ipse numquam librum eius viderat.

Sententiae Antiquae
1. He himself was hastening to them and sent he horseman ahead of himself.
2. They could do nothing by themselves without him.
3. He recognized his own seal and his own letter from the beginning.
4. Each loves himself, because each is precious to himself by himself.
5. Out of the fault of another, a wise man corrects his own faults.
6. Withdraw into your very self.
7. The very spirit nourishes itself.
8. A laerned man always has riches in himself.

Honor Pledge-Adam Kuester
On my honor, I have neither given nor received unauthorized aid on this graded academic work

Latin Help-Two sentences and Verbs

All of Gaul is divided into 3 parts, one of which the Belgae inhabit, the Aquitani another, those who in their own language are called Celts, in our third Gaul. All these differ from each other in law, customs, and language.

Incolunt-to be at home
Differunt-to carry apart
Dividit-to divide
Sunt-to be
Pertinent-to stretch out
Gerunt- to bear about
Prohibeo-to hold before
Contendunt-to stretch
Vergit-to bend
Capit-to take in hand