http://www.dl.ket.org/latin1/review/home.htm  Latin I Grammar FAQ (very

clear explanations)

 

http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/latin/wheelock.htm  Some of Wheelock's

Sententiae, plus quizzes (by chapter)

 

http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/G/Laura.K.Gibbs-1/latin/quia.html  Wheelock

vocabulary cards and games

 

http://cheiron.humanities.mcmaster.ca/~barrette/latin/source.html 

Wheelock vocabulary, drills, principle parts, verb forms, etc. 

 

http://members.fnol.net/%7epaullyb8/FlashCards/main4.htm#  Wheelock flash

vocabulary cards

 

http://mpranger.web.wesleyan.edu/latin_101/links.html  Wheelock

vocabulary charts

 

http://eleaston.com/ln-spls.html  Latin pronunciation 

 

http://eleaston.com/ln-spls.html  Latin games 

 

http://www.vis-ed.com/catalog/scan/fi=products/st=db/co=yes/sf=category/s

e=blank%20cards/va=banner_image%3d/va=banner_text%3d.html?id=PFmwi3tu  to

purchase blank flash cards

 

http://www.newsinform.com/ilc-MUAV.html  to purchase blank flash cards  

 

http://members.aol.com/stlmetros/latin.html  Church pronunciation

 

http://www.quia.com/pages/wh2001gold.html  Wheelock vocabulary and many

Wheelock links

 

http://www.freelang.net/dictionary/latin.html  Download Latin-English

Dictionary






 
I'm finding Dale Grote's "Comprehensive Guide..." very helpful.

He simplifies things (sometimes to a fault, but that's NOT a

complaint!), and writes with wit and a conversational tone. 

Expensive, but worth every cent!



In addition to the links in 

http://www.ravendays.org/latin/wheelock/resources.html , 

here are a few websites I've found useful:



Dale Grote's website with excellent links:

http://www3.uncc.edu/classics/Wheelock



Dale Grote's study guide to Wheelock's 4e. (we're using 6e.):

http://www.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/Lexis/Wheelock-Latin



Latin I Grammar FAQ (very clear explanations):

http://www.dl.ket.org/latin1/review/home.htm



Some of Wheelock's Sententiae, plus quizzes (by chapter):

http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/latin/wheelock.htm



Cheers,

Diana



the chapters in Wheelock, and give detailed grammatical explanations 

and audio for a few of the "sententiae" from each chapter:



Hello Fellow Greekers,

I found a web site with, among other things, Greek verb charts -

[ http://humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/classics/People/Faculty/helmadik/ ]

 and wrote to the author to say "Thank you" for the effort. I got this reply

and thought it might interest the rest of you. I've omitted the name of the





seems nobody likes H&Q. 



http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/latin/wheelock.htm



Diana
As for students who may want to cheat, all they have to do is head to Textkit. The "answers" are all there to start with. There also available  as part of a classroom curiculum... http://classics.uc.edu/fitzsimons/iowa/LAT101-1/calendar.htm The text and translation and comments are at: <http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/editing/origo.php> The text I chose was the 4th century Origo Gentis Romanae, a short text in 23 sections, for which no English translation exists. I'm sorry if this has been listed before: http://fll.smu.edu/languages/latin/latinreading/index.html They're mostly from the Aeneid, and there's one from Caesar Liber Book I. (Hey, that's how they listed it!) back up on another site. It's now the Hofstra website: <http://people.hofstra.edu/faculty/Ilaria_Marchesi/text/list_exercises.htm> I've found this particular set of exercises very helpful and often run back through the vocabulary and other exercises. There are a (very) few http://www.classicsunveiled.com/romel/html/romedead.html errors, but you get to know them <g>. Diana
abbreviations i.e. and e.g. [DS]
he folowing from a useful web site listing

current Greek events in the UK



http://apokrisi.net/



June Samaras
 

-------- Original Message --------
Subject:  Wheelock-related quiz & practice links
Date:  Mon, 16 Feb 2004 16:31:44 EST
From:  Amaranth56@aol.com
To:  latinstudy@vlists.net

 

Thanks for that one, Yvonne!  Here's a list of quizzes, tests and 

practices based on Wheelock.  Some are linked to Raven Days' 

FAQ page or may have been listed before . . .



Excellent!  Especially for declension practice:

http://cheiron.humanities.mcmaster.ca/latin/



These are HARD but worth the effort:

http://www.hfac.uh.edu/mcl/faculty/armstrong/home/latn1301/default.html#drills





Scroll down to choose chapter #.  Another toughie:

http://www.classics.uiuc.edu/Latin/quizpage.htm



http://web.uvic.ca/hrd/latin/wheelock/unit04/index.htm



http://www.quia.com/dir/latin/

(choose Wheelock from pull-down menu)



You have to register for this now, but it's worth it!:

http://conjuguemos.com/latin/index.html



This is meant for one teacher's students, and not all the worksheets

have working links.  Still, it's good practice:

http://lilt.ilstu.edu/drjclassics/ISUclassics/Latin/drills/grammar_worksheets.

shtm



http://people.hofstra.edu/faculty/Ilaria_Marchesi/text/list_exercises_101.htm



Valete,

Diana



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Yvonne wrote:



I found this site with some self-tests based on Wheelock.  The tests are

geared toward highlighting some of the issues people have had questions on.

(There were, for example, several questions that hinged on being able to

recognize substantives.)  The answers come with a fair amount of explanation

as well.



http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/latin/wheelock.htm



how to pronounce ecclesiastical Latin.



http://www.math.nyu.edu/~wendlc/pronunciation/Latin.html

http://www.siue.edu/MUSIC/CHOIR/LatinPronunciation.pdf

http://www.scchoralsociety.org/carmina_pronunciation.html



I've also read (but cannot now put my finger on it)

that pronunciations vary by native language of the

speaker, which is probably to be expected.
xperience of a simple priest who regularly offers Mass in Latin using Roman

Pron.)  For those with Vulgate interests, the same people have put the New

Testament on audio cassette and are well on with the Old, too.



http://www.hieronymus.us/



Finally, I don't think that Roman pronunciation ever did become universal in

the Church as there exists a system called the 'Spanish Jesuit system' which

is used in the Henle Latin books (can anyone verify that for sure?).  Also, I

wa
 8:24 PM -0500 28/02/04, David Clapper wrote:

>Has a Latin word been coined or appropriated for the English term

>film/movie?  Thanks!



pellicula cinematigraphica, or simply pellicula.  Some use taenia.



For Neo-Latin, may I suggest the online lexicon maintained by Florus:



http://users.adelphia.net/~florusc/neo-lexicon.htm





Pax,

MMe
The University of Wales has some decent sound files here!!

 

http://www.lamp.ac.uk/classics/mathos/cont.htm

 

Kat
http://rosetta.reltech.org/Ebind/docs/TC/
Religion & Technology Center Ebind Index
Religion and Technology Center, Inc.
Biblical Manuscripts Project