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on plural. _28._ RULE. Agreement of Verb. _A finite verb must always be in the same person and number as its subject._ _29._ RULE. _In the conjugation of the Latin verb the third person singular active ends in -t, the third person plural in -nt. The endings which show the person and number of the verb are called /personal endings\._ _30._ Learn the following verbs and write the plural of each. The personal pronouns _he_, _she_, _it_, etc., which are necessary in the inflection of the English verb, are not needed in the Latin, because the personal endings take their place. Of course, if the verb's subject is expressed we do not translate the personal ending by a pronoun; thus /nauta pugnat\ is translated _the sailor fights_, not _the sailor he fights_. ama-t _he (she, it) loves, is loving, does love_ (amity, amiable) labo:'ra-t " " " _labors, is laboring, does labor_ nu:ntia-t[2] " " " _announces, is announcing, does announce_ porta-t " " " _carries, is carrying, does carry_ (porter) pugna-t " " " _fights, is fighting, does fight_ (pugnacious) [Footnote 2: The _u_ in /nu:ntio:\ is long by exception. (Cf. Sec. 12.2.)] _31._ EXERCISES I. 1. The daughter loves, the daughters love. 2. The sailor is carrying, the sailors carry. 3. The farmer does labor, the farmers labor. 4. The girl is announcing, the girls do announce. 5. The ladies are carrying, the lady carries. II. 1. Nauta pugnat, nautae pugnant. 2. Puella amat, puellae amant. 3. Agricola portat, agricolae portant. 4. Filia laborat, filiae laborant. 5. Nauta nuntiat, nautae nuntiant. 6. Dominae amant, domina amat. [Illustration: DOMINA] LESSON III FIRST PRINCIPLES (_Continued_) _32._ Declension of Nouns. We learned above (Secs. 19, 20) the difference between the subject and object, and that in English they may be distinguished by the order of the words. Sometimes, however, the order is such that we are left in doubt. For example, the sentence _The lady her daughter loves_ might mean either that the lady loves her daughter, or that the daughter loves the lady. 1. If the sentence were in Latin, no doubt could arise, because the subject and the object are distinguished, not by the order of the words, but by the endings of the words themselves. Compare the following sentences: Domina filiam amat Filiam domina amat Amat filiam domina Domina amat filiam _The lady loves her daughter_ Filia do
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