Easy Latin Lesson #5 | Learn Latin Fast with Easy Lessons | Latin Lessons for Beginners | Latin 101
35,828
Published 2020-11-07
Paperback version: www.amazon.com/dp/B095NMLM1R
Kindle version: www.amazon.com/dp/B096FW6TNT
Buy Me A Coffee: ko-fi.com/easylatin
Learn Latin with easy lessons on Youtube and through simple stories.
The most effective way to learn a language is in context, because not only is it easier to learn new words this way, but you will also acquire grammar organically. And it's much more fun and interesting to learn this way than to memorize grammar tables. In these videos, we will be learning directly from simple sentences in Latin and you may be surprised how easily and quickly you will acquire this beautiful language.
How Latin Became the Romance Languages: • How Latin Became the Romance Languages
Lesson #1: • Easy Latin Lesson #1 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #2: • Easy Latin Lesson #2 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #3: • Easy Latin Lesson #3 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #4: • Easy Latin Lesson #4 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #5: • Easy Latin Lesson #5 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #6: • Easy Latin Lesson #6 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #7: • Easy Latin Lesson #7 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #8: • Learn the Lord's Prayer in Latin - Pa...
Lesson #9: • Easy Latin Lesson #9 | Learn Latin Fa...
Lesson #10: • Video
Lesson #11: • Easy Latin Lesson #11 | Learn Latin F...
Lesson #12: • Easy Latin Lesson #12 | Learn Latin F...
Corrections: 11:34 "Now I want to write."
Easy Latin Lesson 5 to Learn Latin Fast with Easy Latin Lessons for Beginners. Beginner Latin 101 Learn Latin online through basic Latin words & grammar. Educational classics instruction. Latin tutorial.
All Comments (21)
-
CORRECTION: "Discipulo amicae librum do." The translation should be "I give a book to the female friend's student." Discipulō is dative, so the student is the one receiving the book. Sorry about that.
-
Tu es optimus magister!
-
You teaches Latin better than my teacher in university :) Thank you for your lessons
-
amazing video,thanks for imparting your knowledge.
-
you never disappoint!! thanks.
-
Clear explanations of the grammar, along with cognates and derivatives, make your lessens very easy and helpful.
-
You have a gift of teaching! Thank you for making this available to us.
-
Thanks!
-
Currently working on memorizing my verb/noun/adjectives using the dowling method. I also use Duolingo, it's good for muscle memory. I'm not a huge proponent of it however. I watched your videos early on in my Latin Journey. They really help me connect the dots on all the memorization I've accomplished. You have a really unpretentious mellow style and I just relax and give my fingers a rest from all the typing. Love the content! Can't wait to read Lingua Latina and actually comprehend it as I read. Hoping to reach some level of fluency within a couple years. Studying about an hour to 2 hours a day at least. No days off.
-
Brilliant.
-
I have been going through rosetta stone latin, which is good but not any explination on how vocab works, and tenses. These help out alot thank!!! I am relearning latin, as i started watching a youtube channel called “tasting history” which he makes Roman recipies from an ancient latin cook book. So i decided to brush up on my latin too! 😊
-
for anybody you watches VĒRITĀSIUM on YouTube; this channel's name is latin for truth as I learnt in this video VĒRITĀS = (english) Truth.
-
YES
-
11:15 it does have a direct English connection "To Will" as in your last will and testament. Both come from proto-indo-european "wehl", it became proto-italic "welō" and finally "volō", In Old English it became "Willan" then "Will".
-
11:34, you mean now I want to write? Otherwise great video
-
11:31 CORRECTION: "Nunc scribere volô should be" I want to write now" or "Now I want to write" instead of Now I want to read. P.S. What a man of Extraordinary (outside ordinary) teaching ability he is.
-
Could you please explain the difference between examples like 'in Olympō habitat' and 'Romae habitō'? I understand they both mean 'living in a place', but why not just say 'In Romā habitō'? Thank you so much for these lessons. You are such a gifted teacher.
-
In "Here be dragons" you've put "hīc sunt dracones", you've explained previously that order is a finicky thing but would the meaning of "here be" change much if I were to say "Hic Dracones sunt" ?
-
I'm kinda late to this, but i think a related word to Volō is volition. Also, really appreciate your lessons, sir, it's so enjoyable and yet still i learn a lot from it!
-
why not "Now in silvam bibimus", but "in silva"??? Thank you so much, your lectures are my hero for tomorrow's final exam...