LESSON 5 (adverbs, conjunctions)

 

Noun 1: regula, gloria, fortuna, scholae, vitae

Noun 2: mundi, aurum, principia,

Noun 3: exceptione, cor, mortem, cogitationes, mortis

Noun 4:

Noun 5: rerum

Personal Pronoun: te

 

Adjective 1,2: nulla, mea, parva, inquietum, nostrum

Adjective 3: audentes, omnia, omnium, omne, quod

 

Verb 1 : juvat, porto

Verb 2 : timemus

Verb 3 : nitet, discimus, requiescat

Verb 4:

Irregular verb : sunt, est, transit

 

Preposition: sine, mecum, in

Adverb: sic, potius, sero, quam, numquam, non

Conjunction: sed, donec

 

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Maxim 31-40 (simple verb)

 

Nulla regula sine exceptione.

No rule without exception.

(N/A)

 

Sic transit gloria mundi.

Thus departs the glory of the world.

(Words said when a newly elected pope entered St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.)

 

Audentes fortuna iuvat.

Fortune favours the brave.

(Vergil, Aenis)

 

Omnia mea mecum porto.

All that is mine, I carry with me.

(Cicero, Paradoxa)

 

Omnium rerum principia parva sunt.

Everything has a small beginning.

(Cicero, De finibus)

 

Potius sero quam numquam.

It's better late than never.

(Livy, Ab urbe condita)

 

Non omne quod nitet aurum est.

Not all that glitters is gold.

(N/A)

 

Non scholae sed vitae discimus.

We do not learn for school, but for life.

(Seneca, Epistulae)

 

Inquietum est cor nostrum, donec requiescat in te.

Our heart is anxious until it finds peace in you.

(St. Augustine, Confessiones)

 

Non mortem timemus, sed cogitationem mortis.

We do not fear death, but the thought of death.

(Seneca, Epistulae)