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latintutorial | Rule 58: Time with the Ablative and Accusative @latintutorial | Uploaded September 2020 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
How did the Romans tell time? One way to answer this is with a sundial, but a different way is with the accusative and ablative cases. This video explores what each case illustrates with respect to time words. And you can think of time as a function of space, so the accusative shows movement through time, while the ablative shows a moment in time.
Rule 58: Time with the Ablative and AccusativeAeneid Book 1.23-33: Such a Great BurdenFuture Passive Participles (Gerundives)Rule 8: Case, Number, and Gender of the Relative PronounRule 25: The Dative of Indirect ObjectRule 35: The Cognate AccusativeColōrēs Latīnē (Colors in Latin)Introduction to the Latin AdjectiveDeponent VerbsRule 69: The Infinitive in Indirect StatementTwo Sayings by Augustus on VegetablesRule 78: Relative Clauses of Characteristic

Rule 58: Time with the Ablative and Accusative @latintutorial

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