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Bradley's Arnold Composition thread

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Bradley's Arnold Composition thread

Postby Rufus Gulielmus » Fri Apr 11, 2008 7:20 am

Salvete, amici!

I don't know how many of you have used Bradley's Arnold Latin Prose Composition, but it's what I have chosen to guide me through the wonders of Latin composition.

The idea of this thread is modeled on those that I have seen for texts like Lingua Latina where the original poster maps his progress/asks for help on certain tricky bits--and the members of Textkit so generously offer their help :)

Help/suggestions are greatly appreciated!

Here's what I have so far:

1. I have been elected consul by the votes of the Roman people; you are favored by the enemies of the human race.

Consul suffragiÄ«s populÅ￾rum RomanÅ￾rum factus sum; tibi ab hostibus humanÄ« favÄ“tur.

2. The town had now been blockaded for three days; it was taken by assault on the fourth day.

Oppidum trēs diēs nunc obsessum erat; quattuor diē expugnatum est.

I'm a little concerned about the switching of tenses in the second sentence, i.e., moving from pluperfect passive (obsessum erat) to perfect passive (expugnatum est). Are my doubts well-founded?

Valete!
Rufus
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Re: Bradley's Arnold Composition thread

Postby Didymus » Fri Apr 11, 2008 1:48 pm

Rufus Gulielmus wrote:1. I have been elected consul by the votes of the Roman people; you are favored by the enemies of the human race.

Consul suffragiÄ«s populÅ￾rum RomanÅ￾rum factus sum; tibi ab hostibus humanÄ« favÄ“tur.

2. The town had now been blockaded for three days; it was taken by assault on the fourth day.

Oppidum trēs diēs nunc obsessum erat; quattuor diē expugnatum est.


With a thread title like this, I must reply. :)

Sentence 1:
1. How many Roman people are there?
2. humani needs a noun, generis uel sim.

Sentence 2:
1. iam is better than nunc here
2. You need the ordinal number in the second half of the sentence; i.e., "fourth" not "four."

Passim:
You mark some long vowels but miss many others -- I shan't enumerate in detail. It is good to see you making an effort from an early stage to learn your quantities.
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Postby Rufus Gulielmus » Fri Apr 11, 2008 3:11 pm

Salve, Didyme!

Thanks for the comments!

1. There is more than one Roman, so I used the genitive plural. Is this wrong?

2. That's a very good point about using "fourth" vs. "four"--gotta love those little goofs :)

Also, I'm aware of missing some of the macrons. I just put in that I thought were most important, but I realize it's important to get in the habit of knowing where they all are. Maybe I should think of them as a necessary part of spelling...

Vale!
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Postby Didymus » Fri Apr 11, 2008 3:16 pm

Rufus Gulielmus wrote:1. There is more than one Roman, so I used the genitive plural. Is this wrong?


There is more than one Roman, but only one populus Romanus. Populus is a collective noun.
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Postby Rufus Gulielmus » Fri Apr 11, 2008 3:24 pm

Ah, yes--thank you very much!

Have you used Bradley's Arnold yourself?

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Postby Didymus » Sat Apr 12, 2008 11:10 pm

Rufus Gulielmus wrote:Have you used Bradley's Arnold yourself?


I have indeed. It is much to be recommended.
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