Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. In this lesson, we will look at relative pronouns in the nominative case.

Licence

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8 Questions

Q1.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'who' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
antecedent
relative clause
Correct answer: relative pronoun
Q2.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'man' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
Correct answer: antecedent
relative clause
relative pronoun
Q3.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'who took my dog' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
antecedent
Correct answer: relative clause
relative pronoun
Q4.
Which THREE of these words are Latin relative pronouns?
Correct answer: quae
Correct answer: qui
quid
Correct answer: quod
quoque
Q5.
What TWO things can quod mean?
Correct answer: because
what
Correct answer: which
who
why
Q6.
What does the following sentence mean: rex, qui sedet, cives salutat?
The king, who greets the citizens, sits.
Correct answer: The king, who sits, greets the citizens.
Q7.
What does the following sentence mean: rex cives, qui sunt laeti, salutat?
Correct answer: The king greets the citizens, who are happy.
The king's citizens, who are happy, greet.
Q8.
What does the following sentence mean: rex, quod fessus est, dormit?
Correct answer: The king, because he is tired, sleeps.
The king, who is tired, sleeps.

Lesson appears in

UnitLatin / The relative clause and the present participle