What do these sentences have in common?

Post on 03-Jan-2016

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What do these sentences have in common?. Familia ē casā ambulavit. ambulo, ambulare = walk. Puella ab vaccīs ambulāvit. Elephantus ē silvā movet. Ab īnsulā navigāmus. Vir et canis dē monte movent. Ablative of Place From Which. Shows motion away from something or someone - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What do these sentences have in common?

What do these sentences have in common?

Familia ē casā ambulavit.

ambulo, ambulare = walk

Puella ab vaccīs ambulāvit.

Elephantus ē silvā movet.

Ab īnsulā navigāmus.

Vir et canis dē monte movent.

Ablative of Place From Which

Shows motion away from something or someone

Uses these prepositions, followed by ablative case: a/ab, de, e/ex

Review

Ablative of Place Where: answers question “Where” with “in” or “sub”Ablative of Place from Which: uses these prepositions, followed by ablative case: a/ab, de, e/ex. From which place are you going? Accusative of Place to Which: motion toward something with “ad” or “in” (into, onto)

Carrus in viā est.

Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?

Carrus in viā est.

Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?

Vir ex viā movet. Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?

Vir ex viā movet. Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?

Rana in aquam movet. Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?

Rana in aquam movet. Which one is it: abl. of place where? abl. of place from which? acc. of place to which?