PR 3 .. Sapientiam amIcArum, fIlia mea, semper laudat.
Filia mea is clearly in apposition which Wheelock says "always agree(s) in case, usually in number, and often in gender as well."
As ‘filia mea’ is nominative singular, it thus must be in agreement with ‘laudat’.
“She always praises, my daughter,….â€
Again, Wheelock states “An appositive is a noun which is “put beside†another noun as the explanatory equivalent of the other noun;â€
In this case, should I assume that the noun in question is “Sheâ€, the assumed English pronoun –t on laudat?
All the same, “filia mea†seems to me to be the subject not the appositive.
