Latino sine flexione, lectio prima

Some sentences in Latin, Latino Sine Flexione, and English

I will be publishing a series of articles on Latin without inflections (Latino sine Flexione). If you are not interested in the topic, you can see when to skip my post in the title. The title will be Latino Sine Flexione, Lectio prima, Lectio Secunda,  Lectio Tertia, etc.

You can read more about Latino Sine Flexionen here



Latin
Latino Sine Flexione
English
Ars longa vita brevis. Arte longo vita breve. Art is long; life is short.
Versiculi poetae immortales sunt. Vericulos de poeta immortale es. The verses of the poet are
immortal.
Caballi herbam comedunt. Caballos comede herba. Horses eat grass.
Vox populi, vox Dei Voce de populo, voce de Deo. The voice of the people is the
voice of God.
Candela in mensa ardet Candela in mensa arde. The candle burns on the table.
Cogito, ergo sum. Mi cogita, mi ergo es. I think, therefore, I am.
Carmen cantas. Tu carmine canta. You (thou) sing a song.
Casa mea alba est et casa tua
viridis est.
Casa meo es albo et casa tuo es
viridi.
My cottage is white, and your
(thine) cottage is green.

2023-01-27 Latin-Sine Flexione-Englisn -table

How to Derivate the Noun from the Latin Language

The noun in Latino sine flexione is derived from the singular ablative in Latin. Mentioned is the method of how the Latin flower (flos) becomes flore in the Sine Flexion. The plural is formed by adding the letter s to the end of the word. If the word ends in a consonant, add the suffix es.

The Table from the Wikipedia

2023-01-27 Flore


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Kategoria(t): Demokratia, In English, Kielet, Kielten tutkimista, Kirjallisuus, Kuvataide, Latina, Latino Sine Flexione, Literature, Luonto, Poetry, Runous, Tietotekniikka, Uskonto, Visual Arts, Yhteiskunta, Yleinen Avainsana(t): , , , . Lisää kestolinkki kirjanmerkkeihisi.