# Oxford Latin Course, Part 1 - Chapter 14 # by Maurice Balme and James Morwood, ISBN 978-0-19-521550-2 # Version 1.0 # by Paul Denisowski (paul@denisowski.org) lavō, -āre : I wash exerceō, -ēre : I exercise, train canō, -ere : I sing contendō, -ere : I walk, march, hasten gerō, -ere : I carry; I wear eō : (to) there, thither hodiē : today posteā : afterwards is, ea, id : he, she, it; that quīdam, quaedam, quoddam : a ceratin, a familia, -ae, f. : family, household glōria, -ae, f. : glory locus, -ī, m. : place populus, -ī, m. : people carmen, carminis, n. : song centuriō, centuriōnis, m. : centurion flōs, flōris, m. : flower imperātor, imperātōris, m. : general iuvenis, iuvenis, m. : young man legiō, legiōnis, f. : legion mīles, mīlitis, m. : soldier parēns, parentis, c. : parent senex, senis, m. : old man cotidiē : every day larārium : shrine to the Lares fundit : pours supplicat : beseeches pecora : the flocks diēs fēstus : holy day celebrāmus : we are celebrating sacrum : sacred in quō : in which carpunt : pick corōnās : garlands sacerdōs : priest alma : kindly agnās : the lambs morbōs acrē : keep off diseases epulās : feast acervōs : heaps stipulae : of straw trānsilunt : jump over plaudnunt : clap immemor : forgetful of palūdāmentum purpurem : a purple cloak candidō : white vectus : riding on exercitum : army equitant : ride lēgātī : legionary commanders gregāriī : ordinary, common pūtidus : rotten nisi : except augēre : to increase sine dubiō : without doubt īnspuit : he spits onto novissimī : the last praetereunt : are passing by plūra : more (things) manum : hand lēgātīs : legionary commanders opera : works sōlis occāsum : sunset vīncīnō : neighboring obscūra : dark ubi fuistī? : where have you been? vexās : you worry cubitum : to bed # end