Page:Latin for beginners (1911).djvu/204

180 421. IDIOMS

422.

I. II.
 * It, īmus, īte, īre.
 * 1) Euntī, iisse or īsse, ībunt, eunt.
 * 2) Eundi, ut eant, ībitis, īs.
 * 3) Nē īrent, ī, ībant, ierat.
 * 4) Caesar per explorātores cognōvit Gallōs flūmen trānsīsse.
 * 5) Rōmānī audīvērunt Helvētiōs initā aestāte dē fīnibus suīs exitūrōs esse.
 * 6) Legātī respondērunt nēminem ante Caesarem illam īnsulam adīsse.
 * 7) Prīncipēs Gallōrum dīcunt sē nūllum cōnsilium contrā Caesaris imperium initūrōs esse.
 * 8) Arbitrāmur potentiam rēgīnae esse maiōrem quam cīvium.
 * 9) Rōmānī negant sē lībertātem Gallīs ēreptūrōs esse.
 * 10) Hīs rēbus cognitīs sēnsimus lēgātōs nōn vēnisse ad pācem petendam.
 * 11) Helvētii sciunt Rōmānōs priōrēs victōriās memoriā tenēre.
 * 12) Sociī cum intellegerent multōs vulnerārī, statuērunt in suōs fīnīs redīre.
 * 13) Aliquis nūntiāvit Mārcum cōnsulem creātum esse.
 * 1) The boy is slow. He says that the boy is, was, (and) will be slow.
 * 2) The horse is, has been, (and) will be strong. He judged that the horse was, had been, (and) would be strong.
 * 3) We think that the army will go forth from the camp at the beginning of summer.
 * 4) The next day we learned through scouts that the enemy’s town was ten miles off.
 * 5) The king replied that the ornaments belonged to the queen.

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