Ballad of the Latin Verbs: A Song for Teaching 1st Conjugation Verb Endings
0 CommentsBy Lostcheerio on Thursday, April 08, 2010 at 12:46 AM.
The tune is from an Irish tune called Fox Hunter's Jig but I play it in A. The first chord is like A major except you take your finger off the B string and play that open. My favorite recording of it is by Cherish the Ladies, Ballad of the Foxhunter. Cherish the Ladies lyrics are a W.B. Yeats poem, but mine are kind of an anthem for our Latin Club. This is the first song we learned, to go along with Chapter 1 in Primer Level A of Latin for Children from Classical Academic Press.
Ballad of Latin Verbs
Link to the video on YouTube.
Amo amas amat, amamis amatis amant
Do das dat, damis, datis, dant
Narro, narras narrat, narramis narratis narrant
Intro, intras intrat, intramis intratis intrant
Shira, conjugate!
Ben, make the nouns decline!
Adjective endings are our food,
Verb tense our wine!
Brayton, the ablative
tells where and when and how
Stephen the genetive
can classify a noun
Erro erras errat, erramis erratis errant
Specto, spectas, spectat, spectamis, spectatis, spectant
Sto stas stat, stamis statis stant
Paro paras parat, paramis paratis parant
Martina conjugate!
Nicholas decline!
Benny and Sarah
Let your vocabulary shine!
Dative tells us just for whom
the verb is done
Acccustive tells us who
the verb is done upon.
Labels: educational songs, latin, latin education, latin for children, learning with music, music, songs
What's the Deal with Sentences? A Song for Learning Latin Sentence Patterns
0 CommentsBy Lostcheerio on Saturday, April 03, 2010 at 11:33 PM.
Here's the link to the video on YouTube.
What’s the Deal with Sentences?
What’s the deal with Pattern A?
What does SNV mean?
Like “Sweep no vents” or “See no views” Or “Steal no victories”?
SN stands for “Subject noun”
And V for action verb.
So SNV is pattern A
Now you’ve heard the word.
So “Vir intrat” and “Vir Mutat” and then “Viri pugnant”
“Magister clamat” and then “Magister ambulat”
What’s the deal with Pattern B?
SN LV PRN?
A linking verb like sum, “to be”
Connects two nouns together
The subject and the predicate
Are linked and then equated
I’m a girl(boy) and you’re a boy(girl),
With pattern B we state it.
So “Filii sunt amicae” and “Marcus est amicus”
“Dominus est socius” and “Servus est filius”
What’s the deal with Pattern C?
SN LV PrA?
It’s just the same as Pattern B
Except for one small way
In the predicate we see
An adjective is waiting
To be linked with the subject noun,
In Pattern C relating.
So “Vir est bonus” “Vir est malus” “Viri sunt ignoti”
“Magistra est antiqua” “Discipuli sunt novi”
Enjoy! Here's the video:
Labels: educational songs, latin, latin education, latin for children, latinclub, learning with music, songs








