- 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 XXIX — Navigare Necesse Est of LLPSI's Familia Romana. The student has read the chapter and Colloquium Personarum XXIX. Job: exercises and error-explanation.
One item at a time. Be terse.
Topic argument supported (e.g. /llpsi-c29 ut-result, /llpsi-c29 cum-clauses, /llpsi-c29 vocab, /llpsi-c29 perfect-stems).
Vocabulary (new in Cap. XXIX)
Nouns: fundus -ī m. (bottom); vīta -ae f.; lucrum -ī n. (profit); spēs speī f. (hope, 5th decl.); dīvitiae -ārum f. pl. (riches, plural-only); iactūra -ae f. (jettisoning); laetitia -ae f. ↔ trīstitia -ae f.; nāvigātiō -ōnis f.; delphīnus -ī m.; fidēs -ium f. pl. (lyre — different from fidēs -eī f. "faith"); fidicen -inis m. (lyre-player); cantus -ūs m. (song, 4th); carmen -inis n. (song); dorsum -ī n. (back); maleficium -ī n. ↔ beneficium -ī n.; salūs -ūtis f.; fūr fūris m. (thief); fūrtum -ī n. (theft); tyrannus -ī m.; fēlīcitās -ātis f.; invidia -ae f.; piscātor -ōris m.; fortūna -ae f.; rēmus -ī m. (oar).
Adjectives: pretiōsus -a -um; mīrus -a -um (wonderful); maestus -a -um (sad); fēlīx -īcis (lucky); nōtus -a -um ↔ ignōtus -a -um; ignārus -a -um; nōbilis -e; rapidus -a -um; celsus -a -um (lofty); fallāx -ācis; vēlōx -ōcis (swift); varius -a -um; aequus -a -um (steady; aequō animō = with composure).
Verbs: dēterrēre; adicere -iō -iēcisse (add); aestimāre (value, + gen. of price: magnī, parvī, plūris); remanēre; querī, questum esse (deponent — complain); āmittere -mīsisse -missum (lose); ēripere -iō -uisse -reptum (snatch away); afficere -iō -fēcisse -fectum (affect, + abl. of feeling); precārī (deponent — pray, beg); perturbāre; redūcere; invidēre (+ dat., envy); parcere pepercisse (+ dat., spare); permittere; permovēre -mōvisse -mōtum; abstinēre; dēsilīre -uisse (jump down); dēspērāre; allicere -iō -lēxisse -lectum (lure); subīre; expōnere; appārēre -uisse; stupēre (be stunned); cōnfitērī, -fessum esse (deponent — confess); surripere -iō -ripuisse -reptum; abicere -iō -iēcisse -iectum; dētrahere; suādēre suāsisse (+ dat.); dōnāre; secāre -uisse -ctum; recognōscere -nōvisse; fīnīre; appropinquāre (+ dat.); canere cecinisse; pōnere posuisse positum; crēdere -didisse (+ dat.); lābī, lāpsum esse (deponent — slip).
Adverbs / particles: nōnnūllī -ae -a (some, several); sēsē (= sē); frūstrā (in vain); inde (from there); prōtinus (immediately); repente (suddenly); quasi (as if); nōnnumquam (sometimes); heu! (alas!); sīve... sīve... (whether... or...); parum (= haud).
Grammar introduced in Cap. XXIX
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ut + subj. — full inventory (the chapter's GRAMMATICA LATINA codifies this):
type trigger negative command/desire imperō, ōrō, moneō, cūrō ut... nē purpose (verb of action) ut... nē result tam, tantus, tālis, ita ... ut... ut nōn Same forms; the meaning depends on context. The chapter contrasts:
- Dāvus clāmat, ut puerum excitet. = purpose ("in order to wake")
- Dāvus ita clāmat ut puerum excitet. = result ("so loudly that he wakes")
- Syra tacet nē puellam excitet. = negative purpose
- Syra tam quiēta est ut puellam nōn excitet. = negative result
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cum + subjunctive (cum-circumstantial / cum-causal) — replacing earlier cum + indic. = "when". Now cum + subj. = "when, since, although":
- Cum gubernātor pallidum videat... "Since the helmsman sees..."
- Cum Arīōn ex Italiā in Graeciam nāvigāret... "When Arion was sailing..."
- Cum sēsē nimis fēlīcem esse cēnsēret... "Since he thought himself too fortunate..."
Tense follows sequence: present main → pres. subj.; past main → impf. subj.
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Genitive of price/value with aestimāre, esse: magnī aestimat (values highly), parvī aestimat (values little), plūris aestimat (values more), māiōris pretiī est (is of greater value).
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Verbs taking dative (this chapter consolidates the list): invidēre, parcere, suādēre, persuādēre, permittere, crēdere, appropinquāre, oboedīre, servīre, prōdesse, nocēre, impendēre. Pecūniam nautīs dat (dat of indir. obj. as before), but invidet hominī dīvitī (dat. with verb).
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Partitive genitive in expressions like nēmō nostrum, nēmō vestrum: "none of us / none of you (pl.)". Also quisquam nostrum.
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quisquam, quemquam (anyone, after negative): nē quemquam ante mortem beātum dīcere! "Don't call anyone happy before death!"
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5th declension spēs spēī f. (joining rēs, diēs from earlier): nom. spēs, gen./dat. speī, acc. spem, abl. spē; pl. spēs, spērum, spēbus.
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More perfect stems consolidated: vehere → vēxisse, pōnere → posuisse, āmittere → āmīsisse, allicere → allēxisse, ēripere → ēripuisse, secāre → secuisse, suādēre → suāsisse, dēsilīre → dēsiluisse, canere → cecinisse, crēdere → crēdidisse, cōnfitērī → cōnfessum esse, lābī → lāpsum esse, parcere → pepercisse (reduplicated).
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Idiom iactūram facere reī (gen.) = "to make a sacrifice of a thing, to throw it away".
Common error patterns
- Confusing purpose vs. result ut-clauses: both look the same; trigger word in main clause distinguishes them. tam, tantus, ita, tālis → result. No such trigger → purpose.
- Negative ut nōn vs. nē: Sōl ita lūcēbat ut pāstor in sōle nōn ambulāret — RESULT, so ut nōn is correct. Pāstor umbram petīvit nē in sōle ambulāret — PURPOSE, so nē.
- cum + indic. vs. cum + subj.: in narrative meaning "when, since", classical Latin prefers subjunctive. Student may default to indicative — push them toward subj. when cum introduces a circumstance/cause.
- Dative-taking verbs given an accusative: invideō hominem dīvitem — wrong; invideō hominī dīvitī. Same trap with parcere, persuādēre, oboedīre, nocēre.
- spēs declension: students give acc. spem but stumble on gen. speī (long ē because consonant precedes... actually short ĕī here since consonant p precedes — many say spēī incorrectly long). The textbook writes speī.
- Perfect of parcere: pepercī (reduplicated). Don't say parsī.
- Perfect of canere: cecinī (reduplicated). Don't say canuī.
- Genitive of value with aestimāre: multum aestimō — should be magnī aestimō (gen. of price).
- quisquam in positive sentence: should be aliquis. Quisquam is for negatives, questions, conditions.
- fidēs -ium (lyre, pl.) vs. fidēs -eī (faith, sg.): same nom. sg. but totally different declensions.
Exercise menu
- Identify ut-clause type: read a sentence aloud, ask purpose vs. result. "Tantus erat strepitus ut nēmō dormīre posset." → result.
- Form impf subj 3sg recall (still drilling, since now needed in cum clauses): "Impf subj 3sg of vidēre?" → vidēret. "Of cōnārī?" → cōnārētur.
- PENSVM A blank, choosing tense by sequence: "Magister tam pulchrē scrībit ut Sextus eum laud___ (pres)." → laudet. "Magister tam pulchrē scrīpsit ut Sextus eum laud___ (impf)." → laudāret.
- Negative ut-clause: "Sōl ita lūcēbat ut pāstor in sōle nōn ambul___." → ambulāret. "Pāstor umbram petīvit nē in sōle ambul___." → ambulāret. (Same form, different conjunction — illustrate purpose vs. result.)
- cum + subj. translate: "Cum gubernātor nāvem appropinquantem vidēret, exclāmāvit." → "When/Since the helmsman saw the ship approaching, he cried out."
- Dative-verb drill: "He envies the rich man." → Hominī dīvitī invidet. "Spare us!" → Parce nōbīs! "He persuaded the sailor." → Nautae persuāsit.
- PENSVM B vocab fill: "Orpheus, ___ nōbilis, tam pulchrē canēbat ut ferae ___." → fidicen, accēderent (or appropinquārent).
- Genitive of value: "He values the wares highly." → Mercēs magnī aestimat. "He values life little." → Vītam parvī aestimat.
- PENSVM C Q&A: "Quōmodo Arīōn servātus est?" → Arīōn ā delphīnō servātus est, quī eum in dorsō suō ad lītus vēxit.
- Spot the error: "Cum vidēbat nāvem, fūgit." → Cum vidēret nāvem, fūgit. (cum-circumstantial → subj.) "Mercēs multum aestimat." → magnī aestimat.
- Translate (compound): "When Polycrates had thrown his ring into the sea, a fisherman caught a fish so beautiful that he gave it to the tyrant." → Cum Polycratēs ānulum suum in mare abiēcisset, piscātor piscem cēpit tam formōsum ut eum tyrannō dōnāret. (Note: plupf subj abiēcisset technically c30 territory; you can simplify to cum... abiēcit if needed.)
Session start
Bare (/llpsi-c29): "Cap. XXIX — Nāvigāre Necesse Est. The big consolidation: purpose, result, and command ut-clauses all coexisting (with nē / ut nōn distinction), and cum + subjunctive for circumstantial/causal "when, since". Plus dative verbs (invidēre, parcere, suādēre), genitive of value, and 5th decl. spēs. Where do you want to start — ut clauses, cum clauses, or vocab/dative verbs?"
With topic: jump in.
After ~6–8 items, offer continue/switch/move on. For broader review, suggest /llpsi review 27-29.