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Summary OCR A-Level latin grammar and prose composition notes

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Notes on OCR A-Level Latin grammar and prose composition. A* worthy. Doesn’t have everything but a good basis of structures.

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Uploaded on
June 9, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Summary

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Adjectives
2-1-2 adjectives agree in case, number and gender with the noun they are describing.

E.g. The happy boy walked - puer laetus ambulavit
Boy - nominative, masculine, 2nd declension
Therefore:
Happy - nominative, masculine, 2nd declension

Placement: They go after the noun (except adjectives of size, quantity and demonstratives)

Plural Adjectives used as Nouns
In Latin, plural adjectives can be used as nouns:
multi many men
multae many women
omnes all men, all people, everyone

To translate an adjective + things (e.g. many things) Latin uses the neuter plural of the
adjective on its own in the nominative and the accusative.

Many things scare the boy
multa (nominative) puerum terrent

He knows everything (=all things) omnia (accusative) scit

If you need to use a case other than nominative or accusative to express adjective + things,
Latin used the word res (f) with a feminine adjective agreeing with it:

He found out about everything (=all things)
de omnibus rebus cognovit

,Adverbs
Adverbs may be formed from adjectives:

happy laetus happily laete
brave fortis bravely fortiter

The following adverbs are irregular:

good bonus well bene
easy facilis easily facile

The comparative adverb is the same as the comparative adjective neuter singular:

more quickly celerius

The superlative adverb is the same as the superlative adjective with -e instead of -us:

very quickly celerrime

But note the irregular:

very much plurimum

as…as possible is expressed by quam + superlative adjective/adverb

as quickly as possible quam celerrime

Placement: the adverb goes before the verb

Comparatives
Comparative adjectives agree with nouns in gender, case and number. If two persons or
things are being directly compared, the comparative adjective will agree with the first of the
pair.

Often followed by than which can be expressed in 2 ways:
- quam - followed by the same case that preceded it e.g. nominative subject,
comparative, verb, quam, nominative object
- ablative of comparison - if two persons or things are directly compared e.g.
nominative subject, ablative object, comparative, verb

In the singular, ‘plus’ is a noun. In the nominative and accusative case it is followed by a
genitive. In the plural ‘plus’ is an adjective.

Superlatives
Superlative adjectives agree with nouns in gender, case and number.

, Deponents
Passive verbs with an active meaning

E.g. I encouraged the boy - puerum hortatus sum

hortatus sum looks passive but is actually active

Participles:
present active:
stem + dominant vowel + -ns OR -nt
-ns is for nominative singular
-nt is for any other case

IF -nt is used, + 3rd declension noun endings

e.g. amans - loving

future active:
fourth principal part stem + -ur- + first/second-declension endings

e.g. amaturus - about to love

perfect passive:
fourth principal part stem + first/second-declension endings

e.g. amatus - (having been) loved

Ablative absolutes
used to add style to small clauses e.g. ‘with the letter having been read/with I had read the
letter’

PPP in the abl + abl subject
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A-level resources: Latin (OCR): Prose composition, Pro Caelio, Aeneid book 2 French (AQA) History (AQA): Tudors 1C, American Dream 2Q

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