L2 Final Exams!!!! Woo hoo!!! :-)

On the day of your final exam…

PLEASE bring the following to class the day of your final exam

bring a #2 or mechanical pencil
bring all the Latin books originally assigned to you.
If you lost your book(s), bring a check or money order in the amount of $68 for each book lost AND the replacement copy if I gave you one.

ABOUT the Final Exam

Classes that meet between 9:09 to 12:00 during finals week
Expect to STUDY quietly with your immediate neighbors only

About the Final Itself – Latin 2
Please remember that this is a comprehensive exam and any of the material we covered this year is fair game.
You will need to put some effort into this in order to receive a good grade, but I know that all of you can do this. This exam is 25 percent of your Term 4 grade (it will be listed under the Responsibility Category).

Section I: Vocab – Multiple Choice
ab – ad – ago – arbitror – cogo – conor – cum (as a conjunction) – de – divido – duco – et…et – ex – exsequor – facio – finis – fio – flumen – habeo – hic – homo – in – inter – is – morior – munio – omnis – orior – pars – persuadeo – pertineo – porto – possum – proficiscor – qui – res – sui – sum – suus – ut – venio

Section 2A: De Bello Gallico’s Book One Chapter One – Multiple Choice
Grammar, Analysis, Syntax, Translation
Section 2B: De Bello Gallico’s Book One Chapter Four – Multiple Choice
Grammar, Analysis, Syntax, Translation
Section 3: Grammar/Syntax – Multiple Choice
(contains 10 sentences with 2 grammar/syntax questions relating to each.)
Subjunctive Uses
Hortatory Subjunctive (Present Subjunctive = “let me/him/her/it/us/them”
Purpose Clauses (ut/ne)
Result Clauses (ut/ ut non)
Cum Clauses (cum as “when/since/although”)
Indirect Question
Indirect Command
Relative Clause of Purpose (Subjunctive)
Indirect Statement
Accusative Subject + Infinitive Verb after VMA)
Ablative Absolute
(PPP + noun OR ADJ + noun OR noun + noun —> all in the ABLATIVE case “with the noun (having been) blanked”
Relative Clause
Uses of the Gerundive
ad + accusative gerundive = purpose
genitive gerundive + causa/gratia = purpose;
gerundive + form of sum = passive periphrastic to express necessity
Section 4: Sight Passage with Glossary
Comprehension questions
Translation of underlined selection

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