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ADJECTIVE. TWO GROUPS OF ADJECTIVES

In this lesson you will:

· Become familiar with the characteristics of Latin adjectives.

· Learn morphological categories of Latin adjectives.

· Learn how to find the stem and the declension of adjectives.

· Learn how to make grammatical agreement of adjectives with nouns.

 

This lesson is divided into the following sections:

I. Introduction.

II. The 1st group of adjectives.

III. The 2nd group of adjectives.

IV. Adjectives of one form for all genders.

V. Agreement of adjectives and nouns.

VI. Exercises.

VII. Vocabulary

 

 

I. INTRODUCTION

 

Adjective is a word expressing a quality of a thing: major (large), longus (long), frontālis (frontal).

In all Latin terms the position of adjectives is after the noun with which it has grammatical agreement.

According to their endings all Latin adjectives can be divided into two groups: the first and the second group.

 

 

II. The 1st group of adjectives

The adjectives of the 1st group have different forms for every gender:

 

  Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative longus longa longum
Genitive longi longae longi

These adjectives are declined on the pattern of the 1st and 2nd declensions. They have identical Nominative and Genitive forms with nouns: masculine –us (-i), feminine –a (-ae), neuter –um (-i).

Their dictionary form consists of three components:

1. adjective in the masculine form;

2. the feminine ending;

3. the neuter ending.

E.g.: transversus, a, um (transverse); internus, a, um (internal); profundus, a, um (profound).

The stem of the 1st group adjectives is obtained from the Nominative form by removing the gender ending:

· longus stem: long-
· transversum stem: transvers-
· externa stem: extern-

 

The adjectives ending in –er fall also into this adjective group. In the anatomical terminology only some of them are used:

 

Masculine Feminine Neuter Dictionary Form English
dexter dextra dextrum dexter, tra, trum right
sinister sinistra sinistrum sinister, tra, trum left
liber libĕra libĕrum liber, ĕra, ĕrum free
ruber rubra rubrum ruber, bra, brum red

 

As for the stem of adjectives with the ending - er in masculine it is obtained from the Nominative form by removing the feminine ending.

 

Dictionary Form Feminine Stem
dexter, tra, trum dextra dextr-
sinister, tra, trum sinistra sinistr-
ruber, bra, brum rubra rubr-
liber, ĕra, ĕrum libĕra liber-

 

III. The 2nd group of adjectives

 

Into this group fall adjectives of the 3rd declension. The adjectives of the 2nd group are the adjectives of the frontālis type:

 

  Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative frontālis frontālis frontāle
Genitive frontālis

 



As indicated in the table the adjectives of this group have identical Nominative masculine and feminine forms ending in –is and the neuter ending –e. The Genitive form is identical for all genders.

Their dictionary form consists of two components:

1. the common masculine and feminine Nominative form;

2. the neuter ending –e.

E.g.: frontālis, e (frontal); cervicālis, e (cervical).

The stem of the 2nd group adjectives is obtained from the Nominative form by removing the gender ending:

· vertebrālis stem: vertebrāl-
· temporālis stem: temporāl-

 

IV. The 2nd group adjectives of one form for all genders

In the anatomical terminology some adjectives of one form for all genders are used. In the dictionary form of such adjectives the Nominative form (common for all genders) is first indicated, and then the Genitive ending with the stem part.

Remember these adjectives:

· simplex, ĭcis simple
· multĭplex, ĭcis multiple
· teres, ětis round

 

The stem of such adjectives is obtained from the Genitive form singular by removing the ending.

Dictionary form Gen. Singular Stem
simplex, ĭcis simplĭcis simplĭc-
multĭplex, ĭcis multiplĭcis multiplĭc-
teres, ětis terětis terět-

 

 


Date: 2016-03-03; view: 1638


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