FORTUNE IS SOMETHING DIFFICULT TO FINDFind the subject.......
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FORTUNE IS SOMETHING DIFFICULT TO subject
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NOMINATIVE-ATTRIBUTE
Richness is FORTUNEWhich is the ATTRIBUTE?
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Richness is FORTUNE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE is the natural complement of the verb TO BE, usually an ADJECTIVE
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ACCUSATIVE-DIRECT COMPLEMENT
Everybody wants to have fortuneWhich is the DIRECT COMPLEMENT?
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GENITIVE- NOUN COMPLEMENT (POSSESSIVE CASE)
The Roman Godess of FORTUNE is FORTUNAWhere is the POSSESSIVE CASE (or NOUN COMPLEMENT)?
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The Roman goddess OF FORTUNE is fortuna. ANSWER: OF FORTUNE (Spanish: "DE LA FORTUNA"
)
: possessive case has always the preposition "OF" TO EXPRESS POSSESSION.
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In the sentence: Romans made sacrifices to the Goddess Fortuna
Which is the INDIRECT COMPLEMENT?
DATIVE: INDIRECT COMPLEMENT
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Romans made sacrifices to the Goddess Fortuna
DATIVE: INDIRECT COMPLEMENT
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ABLATIVE: ADVERBIAL COMPLEMENT (c.c.) OF time, place, manner and degree
UNDERLINE THE ADVERBIAL COMPLEMENTGoddes Fortuna has an altar in her temple.
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ABLATIVE: ADVERBIAL COMPLEMENT (c.c.) OF time, place, manner and degree
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The Romans made sacrifices to the Goddess Fortuna in her temple. Los romanos realizaban sacrificios a la diosa Fortuna en su templo.Romani sacrificia Fortunae deae in templo suo faciebant.
Which main differences do yo see between LATIN and modern languages?
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DIFFERENCES
ROMANI SACRIFICIA FORTUNAE DEAE IN TEMPLO SUO FACIEBANT1. LATIN HAS NO ARTICLES2. THE INDIRECT COMPLEMENT HAS NO PREPOSITION3. THE VERB IS PLACED AT THE END OF THE SENTENCE
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SIMILARITIES
ROMANI SACRIFICIA FORTUNAE DEAE IN TEMPLO SUO FACIEBANT- ADVERBIAL COMPLEMENTS HAVE PREPOSITIONS BOTH IN LATIN AND THE MODERN LANGUAGES (IN SOME CASES)IN TEMPLO SUO: IN HER TEMPLEPER MULTOS ANNOS: FOR MANY YEARSAD VILLAM: TOWARDS THE TOWNINTER PARES: BETWEEN SIMILAR PEOPLE
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THE LATIN CASES
ROMANI: NOMINATIVE (PLURAL)SACRIFICIA: ACCUSATIVE (PLURAL)DEAE FORTUNAE: DATIVE (SINGULAR)TEMPLO SUO: ABLATIVE (SINGULAR)CASES ARE THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF THE SAME WORD DEPENDING ON THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTION THEY HAVE IN THE SENTENCECOMPARE: ROMANI: "THE ROMANS"; if the same word is the DIRECT COMPLEMENT, other ending is used: DEA FORTUNA ROMANOS AMABATROMANI: SUBJECT (SINGULAR); ROMANOS: DIRECT COMPLEMENT (PLURAL). ROMAN-I; ROMAN-OS : -I and -OS are called ENDINGS.