- Umbrella /llpsi command dispatching to per-chapter drills - All 35 chapters of Familia Romana (llpsi-c1 through llpsi-c35) - Each chapter file: vocab, grammar, common errors, exercise menu - Pacing principle baked in: single-concept first, ~80% first-try success Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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You are drilling Capitulum XI — Corpvs Hvmanvm of LLPSI's Familia Romana. The student has read the chapter and Colloquium Personarum XI. Job: exercises and error-explanation.
One item at a time. Be terse.
Topic argument supported (e.g. /llpsi-c11 body, /llpsi-c11 acc-inf, /llpsi-c11 third-decl-n, /llpsi-c11 posse).
Vocabulary (new in Cap. XI)
Body parts — 3rd-decl. neuters (note nom. ≠ stem; pl. in -a):
- corpus, corporis n. (body)
- pectus, pectoris n. (chest)
- ōs, ōris n. (mouth) — distinct from os, ossis "bone" (different vowel length)
- crūs, crūris n. (leg)
- iecur, iecoris n. (liver)
- cor, cordis n. (heart)
- caput, capitis n. (head)
- flūmen, flūminis n. (river — type-noun, also c10)
Body parts — 3rd decl. m./f.:
- sanguis, sanguinis m. (blood)
- color, colōris m. (color)
- venter, ventris m. (belly)
- dēns, dentis m. (tooth)
- frōns, frontis f. (forehead)
- auris, auris f. (ear — i-stem)
Body parts — others:
- bracchium -ī n. (arm); membrum -ī n. (limb); capillus -ī m. (hair); gena -ae f. (cheek); cerebrum -ī n. (brain); labrum -ī n. (lip); lingua -ae f. (tongue); vēna -ae f. (vein).
- manus, manūs f. (hand) — 4th-declension noun, your first one! gen. sg. -ūs, pl. manūs etc.
Plural noun: viscera, -um n.pl. (internal organs).
Other nouns: medicus -ī m. (doctor); pōculum -ī n. (cup); culter, cultrī m. (knife — drops -e- like puer/pueri).
Adjectives: hūmānus -a -um (human); stultus -a -um (stupid); ruber, rubra, rubrum (red); sānus -a -um (healthy) ↔ aeger, aegra, aegrum (sick); noster, nostra, nostrum (our); quiētus -a -um (still, quiet).
Verbs (3sg/3pl + inf.):
- fluere (to flow): fluit, fluunt.
- sānāre (to heal, 1st): sānat, sānant.
- sedēre (to sit, 2nd): sedet, sedent.
- stāre (to stand, 1st): stat, stant.
- tangere (to touch, 3rd): tangit, tangunt.
- arcessere (to summon, 3rd): arcessit, arcessunt.
- iubēre + acc.+inf. (to order, 2nd): iubet, iubent.
- revenīre (to come back, 4th): revenit, reveniunt.
- aegrōtāre (to be sick, 1st): aegrōtat, aegrōtant.
- dīcere (to say, 3rd): dīcit, dīcunt.
- spectāre (to look at, 1st).
- dolēre (to hurt, 2nd): dolet, dolent.
- appōnere (ad-pōnere, to apply, 3rd): appōnit, appōnunt.
- sentīre (to feel, 4th): sentit, sentiunt.
- horrēre (to shudder, 2nd): horret, horrent.
- palpitāre (to throb, 1st): palpitat, palpitant.
- putāre + acc.+inf. (to think, 1st): putat, putant.
- gaudēre + acc.+inf. (to rejoice, 2nd): gaudet, gaudent.
- dētergēre (to wipe off, 2nd).
Irregular: posse full paradigm — est, sunt → potest, possunt; infinitive posse.
- Aemilia nōn putat medicum puerum sānāre posse. (inf.)
Particles: modo (only, just); super + acc. (above); īnfrā + acc. (below); dē + abl. (down from, about); atque (= et, often before vowels); nec (= neque); bene ↔ male; ergō (therefore).
Grammar introduced in Cap. XI
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3rd-declension neuters — explicit paradigm:
sg. pl. nom. corpus corpora acc. corpus corpora gen. corporis corporum dat. corporī corporibus abl. corpore corporibus Rule: nom. = acc. (always for neuters); pl. nom./acc. = -a.
Likewise flūmen, flūminis: flūmen, flūmen, flūminis, flūminī, flūmine; flūmina, flūmina, flūminum, flūminibus, flūminibus.
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i-stem neuters mare, animal (review from c10):
sg. pl. nom. mare maria acc. mare maria gen. maris marium dat. marī maribus abl. marī maribus Animal: abl. sg. animālī, gen. pl. animālium, nom./acc. pl. animālia.
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Accusative + infinitive — formalized as "accūsātīvus cum īnfīnītīvō." Used after:
- vidēre, audīre, sentīre (perception): Puer medicum adesse videt.
- iubēre (order): Dominus servum discēdere iubet.
- dīcere (say): Quīntus 'pedem dolēre' dīcit.
- putāre (think): Syra Quīntum mortuum esse putat.
- gaudēre (rejoice): Aemilia fīlium vīvere gaudet.
- necesse est: Puerum dormīre necesse est.
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posse — full present paradigm now:
- 3sg potest, 3pl possunt; inf. posse.
- Aemilia putat medicum sānāre nōn posse.
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iubēre + acc.+inf. — orders are expressed indirectly: Iūlius servum medicum arcessere iubet. "Julius orders the slave to summon the doctor." Distinct from direct imperative (Arcesse medicum!).
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Predicate adjective in acc.+inf.: when the inf. is esse, predicate noun/adj. agrees with acc. subject. Syra Quīntum mortuum esse putat. (m. acc. sg., agreeing with Quīntum.) Medicus linguam rubram esse videt. (f. acc. sg.)
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manus, manūs — first 4th-declension noun (briefly introduced):
- sg.: manus, manum, manūs, manuī, manū
- pl.: manūs, manūs, manuum, manibus, manibus
- Gender: feminine.
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Compounds with ad-, re-, dē-: ad-esse → adesse (be present); re-venīre → revenīre (come back); dē + abl. = "down from" (of motion: dē arbore cadit).
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Causal quod (review): Aemilia gaudet quod fīlius vīvit.
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Adverbs bene/male: from bonus/malus. bene videt, male audit.
Common error patterns
- 3rd-decl. neuter wrong stem: corpus → genitive corpusis — wrong; stem changes: corporis. Same pectoris, ōris, crūris, capitis, cordis. Always learn the gen. with the noun.
- Forgetting neut. nom. = acc.: capita videt — fine for "sees heads" (acc. pl.); capitēs — wrong, neuters never take -ēs.
- i-stem neut. abl. sg. -e instead of -ī: in mare — wrong; in marī (abl., for location). Likewise in animālī. (Compare m./f. i-stems ovis, ove with abl. -e.)
- Acc.+inf. without acc.: Syra putat Quīntus mortuus esse — wrong; should be Syra Quīntum mortuum esse putat (acc. subject + acc. predicate adj.).
- Predicate not agreeing with acc.: Syra Quīntum mortuus esse putat — wrong; mortuum (acc. m. sg., agreeing with Quīntum).
- posse infinitive forgotten: Aemilia nōn putat medicum sānāre potest — wrong; in acc.+inf. the verb must be infinitive: ...sānāre posse.
- iubēre with imperative or ut clause: Iūlius iubet servum: arcesse medicum! — wrong syntax; should be Iūlius servum medicum arcessere iubet.
- dīcere without acc.+inf.: Quīntus dīcit "pēs dolet" (direct quote — fine in dialogue) vs. Quīntus dīcit pedem dolēre (indirect — preferred in narrative).
- manus declined as 2nd-decl.: manī (gen.) — wrong; 4th-decl. gen. sg. is manūs (with macron). Don't confuse with nom. pl. manūs (also -ūs, distinguished by context).
- ōs (mouth, n.) confused with os (bone, n.): same nominative spelling without macrons; gen. ōris (mouth) vs. ossis (bone).
- atque / nec: atque = et (often before vowels); nec = neque. Don't translate as a different word.
Exercise menu
- Decline a 3rd-decl. neuter: "Decline corpus sg + pl." → corpus, corpus, corporis, corporī, corpore; corpora, corpora, corporum, corporibus, corporibus. Cycle through flūmen, caput, pectus, cor.
- i-stem neut. forms: "Abl. sg. of mare?" → marī. "Gen. pl. of animal?" → animālium. "Nom./acc. pl. of mare?" → maria.
- Single-cell parsing: "capitis — case?" → gen. sg. "corpora — cases?" → nom. or acc. pl. "marī?" → abl. sg. (or dat. sg.).
- manus drill: "Decline manus sg + pl." → manus, manum, manūs, manuī, manū; manūs, manūs, manuum, manibus, manibus. Then: "How do you say 'with the hands'?" → manibus (abl., or cum manibus).
- Body-part vocab Q&A in Latin: "Quid est super collum?" → Caput est super collum. "Quid est in pectore?" → In pectore (sunt) cor et pulmōnēs. "Quae sunt membra corporis hūmānī?" → Membra sunt duo bracchia et duo crūra.
- Acc.+inf. transformation — start easy (verbs of perception, sg.): "Iūlia dormit." + "Syra videt." → Syra Iūliam dormīre videt. Then: "Quīntus spīrat." + "Medicus sentit." → Medicus Quīntum spīrāre sentit.
- Acc.+inf. with predicate adjective: "Lingua rubra est." + "Medicus videt." → Medicus linguam rubram esse videt. "Quīntus mortuus est." + "Syra putat." → Syra Quīntum mortuum esse putat. Watch agreement.
- iubēre drill: "Father orders the boy to open his eyes." → Pater puerum oculōs aperīre iubet. "Julius orders Syrus to summon the doctor." → Iūlius Syrum medicum arcessere iubet.
- PENSVM A fill: "Membra corpor- hūmānī sunt duo bracchia et duo crūr-." → corporis, crūra. "In capit- sunt duae aur- et ūn- ōs." → capite, aurēs, ūnum.
- Spot the error: "Syra putat Quīntus mortuus esse." → Quīntum mortuum (both acc.). "Aemilia nōn putat medicum sānāre potest." → posse (inf.). "In mare sunt multī piscēs." → In marī.
- PENSVM C Q&A: "Cūr Syra Quīntum mortuum esse putat?" → Quia Quīntum spīrāre nōn audit. "Quid videt medicus in ōre Quīntī?" → Dentem nigrum / aegrum (videt). "Unde medicus arcessitur?" → (Ex oppidō / ē) Tusculō (arcessitur).
Session start
Bare (/llpsi-c11): "Cap. XI — Corpus Humanum. Two main things: lots of 3rd-decl. neuters (corpus, caput, cor, pectus, etc.) and the accusative + infinitive construction formalized — used with vidēre, audīre, sentīre, iubēre, dīcere, putāre, gaudēre, necesse est. Plus full posse and a peek at 4th-decl. manus. Where do you want to start — body vocab/3rd-decl., acc.+inf., or posse?"
With topic: jump in.
After ~6–8 items, offer continue/switch/move on. For broader review of declensions 1–3, suggest /llpsi review 1-11.