Page:Latin for beginners (1911).djvu/15

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CONTENTS
ix
lesson page
XXIII. Present Active Indicative of regō and audiōCornelia and her Jewels (Concluded) 61-63
XXIV. Imperfect Active Indicative of regō and audiōThe Dative with Special Intransitive Verbs 63-65
XXV. Future Active Indicative of of regō and audiō 65-66
XXVI. Verbs in - — Present, Imperfect, and Future Active Indicative of capiōThe Imperative 66-68
XXVII. Passive Voice — Present, Imperfect, and Future Indicative of amō and moneōPerseus and Andromeda 68-72
XXVIII. Present, Imperfect, and Future Indicative Passive of regō and audiōPerseus and Andromeda (Continued) 72-73
XXIX. Present, Imperfect, and Future Indicative Passive of -iō Verbs — Present Passive Infinitive and Imperative 73-75
XXX. Synopses in the Four Conjugations — The Ablative denoting FromPlace from Which, Separation , Personal Agent 75-78
XXXI. Perfect, Pluperfect, and Future Perfect of sumDialogue 79-81
XXXII. Perfect Active Indicative of the Four Regular ConjugationsMeaning of the PerfectPerseus and Andromeda (Continued) 81-83
XXXIII. Pluperfect and Future Perfect Active Indicative — Perfect Active Infinitive 84-85
XXXIV. Review of the Active Voice — Perseus and Andromeda (Concluded) 86-87
XXXV. Passive Perfects of the Indicative — Perfect Passive and Future Active Infinitive 88-90
XXXVI. Review of Principal PartsPrepositions, Yes-or-No Questions 90-93
XXXVII. Conjugation of possumThe Infinitive used as in English — Accusative Subject of an InfinitiveThe Faithless Tarpeia 93-96
XXXVIII. The Relative Pronoun and the Interrogative PronounAgreement of the relativeThe Faithless Tarpeia (Concluded) 97-101
XXXIX-XLI. The Third Declension — Consonant Stems 101-106
XLII. Review Lesson — Terror Cimbricus 107
XLIII. Third DeclensionI-Stems 108-110