Wheelock's FAQ chapter 14

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Wheelock's FAQ chapter 14: Questions

Questions are listed at the top of the page and are divided into several categories. Click on the links at left and you will be taken to the question and corresponding answer below.
Category: General
GEN
What does Wheelock's mean by "objective complement"?
Category: Vocabulary
VOCos,ius
Are "Os, Oris" & "iUs, iUris" (both neuter) ordinary 3rd decl. nouns?
Category: Practice/Repetition sentences (PR's)
PR7
How can part of the citizen's riches have taken anything and rushed to the sea?
Category: Sententia Antiquae (SA's)
SA7
Why is an accusative "this" at the beginning of the sentence?
SA8
I know artium and malArum are both genitive plural, but what are they modifying? I'm coming up with: His soul was ignorant of?????? I thought the genitive was supposed to be modifying a noun!
SA10
I'm not sure I understand what "Graeca" is doing. It looks like a nominative, but....
SA12
Why is there a dative "that" at the beginning of the sentence?

Wheelock's FAQ chapter 14: Answers

Category: General
GEN:
What does Wheelock's mean by "objective complement"?
A:

Some verbs which take a direct object need another noun, or an adjective, to explain exactly what happened. That noun or adjective is called a "complement" because it "completes" the action of the verb -- that is, it explains it fully. In this case, "appello" means "to name". "Deus appellavit aquas" tells us that God named the waters, but we still need to know what name He gave them.

Category: Vocabulary
VOCos,ius:
Are "Os, Oris" & "iUs, iUris" (both neuter) ordinary 3rd decl. nouns?
A:
Yes.
Category: Practice/Repetition sentences (PR's)
PR7:
How can part of the citizen's riches have taken anything and rushed to the sea?
A:

Kirk's answer:

You're so very close: "part of the citizens took the riches...."

pars is nominative singular: it is your subject. divitias is accusative plural: it is what got taken. civium is genitive plural and is modifying the subject, pars. There's some fancy name for this use of the genitive, but how to translate it is pretty obvious.

Category: Sententia Antiquae (SA's)
SA7:
Why is an accusative "this" at the beginning of the sentence?
A:

It's at the beginning of the sentence for emphasis. It's in the sentence at all because it's the direct object.

SA8:
I know artium and malArum are both genitive plural, but what are they modifying? I'm coming up with: His soul was ignorant of?????? I thought the genitive was supposed to be modifying a noun!
A:

Not necessarily. The genitive can be used with nouns, adjectives, and verbs.

With nouns, to quote Bennett's Latin Grammar, it further defines the meaning of the noun it modifies. That's the usage you're familiar with.

With adjectives, it does essentially the same thing. That's what's happening here. The genitives further define the meaning of "ignarus", explaining what, exactly, his soul was ignorant of.

With verbs it can sometimes be used as an object or an indirect object. Don't worry about that yet.

SA10:
I'm not sure I understand what "Graeca" is doing. It looks like a nominative, but....
A:

It's a three-termination adjective, Graecus, -a, -um. Therefore there are other possibilities.

SA12:
Why is there a dative "that" at the beginning of the sentence?
A:
Easy. There isn't. There's another possibility for "IstI".

Last updated Thu Nov 13 17:11:22 GMT 2003

FAQ ©2003 by its creator Gary Bisaga and Meredith Minter Dixon. Copyright to FAQ answers is retained by their authors.