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compiled by Bruce R. Magee
* Wright, Thomas, ed. A Selection of Latin Stories, from Manuscripts of the Thirteenth and Founteenth Centuries: A Contribution to the History of Fiction During the Middle Ages. London: The Percy Society. 1842. http://www2.LaTech.edu/~bmagee/latin/wright/wright_contents.htm http://garts.LaTech.edu/bmagee/latin/wright/wright_contents.htm o The book of medieval stories we've posted on the web site. Wheelock Study Materials * Electronic Resources for Wheelock's Latin http://cheiron.humanities.mcmaster.ca/latin/ o This site contains a series of drill programmes which are intended to assist students of Latin (particulary those using Wheelock's text) with their vocabulary. There are a number of programmes to choose from including: Flash Cards, Click On Words, Fill-In-The-Blanks (used for meanings, cases and principle parts), a growing Database of Wheelock's vocabulary (used for listing vocabulary by type or by chapter which also will decline nouns on-the-fly), a searchable Latin/English English/Latin lexicon. * Guide to Wheelock http://humanum.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/Lexis/Wheelock-Latin/ghindex.html o Dale A. Grote. "Study Guide to Wheelock Latin." Grammatical explanations and exercises keyed to Wheelock's Latin Grammar 5th ed through chapter 35. We're using the 6th ed., but most of the lessons follow the same order. * Latin Teaching Materials http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/MCL/tchmat.html o from Saint Louis University in various formats for downloading, including a Vocabulary Grid for Wheelock's Latin (5th ed.), Assorted Grammatical Handouts and Diagrams, and Paedagogical Devices for the Acquisition of Latin. * Listening Lab: Wheelock Audio Files http://latin.about.com/homework/latin/cs/wheelockaudios/index.htm o Audio files for Wheelock vocabulary lists, stories, and exercises. Hear the stories &exercises pronounced in a "repeat after me" fashion. o Wheelock: Pronunciation of Exercises o Wheelock: Pronunciation of the Stories o Wheelock: Pronunciation of Vocabulary * Quia flashcards: Wheelock's Latin Vocabulary http://www.quia.com/jg/120408.html o Vocabulary matching game & flashcards to drill on vocabulary. From the Quia Latin. site (http://www.quia.com/dir/latin/), which is on the Quia site (http://www.quia.com/). * RealAudio Files for Optional Self-Tutorial Exercises http://www.uncc.edu/classics/latin/tutorial_realaudio.htm. o Dale A. Grote works through the exercises at the end of Wheelock 5th ed. We're using the 6th ed., so the page numbers are different, but most of the exercises are the same. * The "Required" Vocabulary in Wheelock Chapters 1-22 http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/cla ... ocab.chap.1_22.html o The vocabulary arranged into conjunctions & declensions. With definitions. * The Wheelock Page http://latin.gal.ohio-state.edu/wheelock.htm o Online explanations and quizzes from Ohio State University. * Wheelock Vocabulary Grid http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/l ... cabulary/grid1.html o Vocabulary listed without definitions. Greek Grammar Classic Recital Page http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~classics/poetry_and_prose/poetry.html This recital site was created for (and by) the classics teaching staff at Harvard to help students grasp the vital performative aspect of ancient literature. Greek Grammar on the Web http://perswww.kuleuven.ac.be/~p3481184/greekg.htm The electronic gateway to the Study of Ancient Greek. Reading Ancient Greek http://kenwoodward.ne.mediaone.net/greek/template/xample13.htm Enchiridion: A User-Friendly Guide to Reading Ancient Greek Latin Grammar Classic Recital Page http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~classics/poetry_and_prose/poetry.html This recital site was created for (and by) the classics teaching staff at Harvard to help students grasp the vital performative aspect of ancient literature. Classics Technology Center http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/index2.html This is a portal to the future of Classics education. It is a repository of practical tools, for educators and other classicists, to enhance the use of computer technology in Classics education. CyberLatin® http://206.211.90.4/latin/library.htm A one-stop resource for Latin students and educators. Elementary Latin at Tufts University http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cla ... tins/latin1.fall96/ Susan Stenik's home page for her Latin courses. Grex Alter Latine Loquentium http://digilander.iol.it/Marziale/Grex/nexus/thesauri.html Links to on-line dictionaries in Latin. How the Romans Cussed and Swore: Invective http://people.mw.mediaone.net/rthamper/invective.htm Epithets and Other Roman Interjections. The Intelligent Person's Guide to Latin http://www.middlebury.edu/~harris/Classics/LatinGrammar.html This Project has two purposes: 1. To deliver an "architectonic view" of the Latin linguistic system, with a sense of what the parts mean and where they fit into a working linguistic whole. 2. At the same time to present a rational explanation of the individual components as they are described (paradigms and all), in the belief that we know enough about practical linguistics at this time to revamp the Classical traditional-ese jargon and talk about Latin as a language-system which was quite satisfactory for well over a millennium of varied communications. Latin http://www.eleaston.com/latin.html Links to various resources for studying Latin, from grammar to on-line recordings to a guide to Latin in the movies. Latin Chat http://campus.fortunecity.com/athena/300/latinchat-l.html Even though the internet hasn't quite advanced enough to allow us to talk to each other, scattered all over the globe as we are, it does make it very easy for us to write to each other ... IN LATIN! Latin Curriculum Reviews http://www.classicalhomeschooling.org/celoop/latin.html Evaluations of resources for studying Latin &Greek. Especially designed for home schooling. Latin Dictionary Online HTTP://www.perseus.tufts.edu:80/ ... e=begin&author= *Roman&options=Sort+Results+Alphabetically&lang=la Look up Latin words at the Perseus Digital Library (http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/) Latin Grammar Aid and Wordlist http://www.progsoc.uts.edu.au/~kaleid/latin/ Type in the form of the word that you would expect to find in a dictionary or a truncated form of the word. If you want help with the ending of a word, type the ending in the space provided. Latin - Home Page http://latin.about.com/ About.com resources. "Expert guides to help you find / learn / share." Latin Homework Forum http://www.delphi.com/ab-latin2/start/ You can post your Latin questions here. They may even be answered. Latin Library http://patriot.net/~lillard/cp/latlib The Latin Library at Ad FontesAcademy. Ancient texts in Latin Latin Literature - Grammar Front Page http://www.dl.ket.org/latinlit/grammar/home.htm Good explanations of grammar--nouns, pronouns, verbs, etc. Latin Maxims http://user.tninet.se/~dfr732s/show-off.html Sayings in Latin. Latin Praxis. http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/l ... tchmat/wh-prax.html Using words & phrases to master Latin. Latin Teaching Materials at Saint Louis Missouri http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/l ... /tchmat/tchmat.html This site has many charts to help with your study of grammar. Latin Teaching Resources http://www.virginia.edu/~libarts/cl-latin.htm University of Virginia resources for Latin teachers. Latin Page http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/3773/ Download Latin software. Latin: The Key Concepts http://www2.rhbnc.ac.uk/Classics/NJL/Latin/ This is a companion to the Royal Holloway course in Beginners Latin, based on Units 1-16 of Gavin Betts, Teach Yourself Latin. It's designed principally for review by those who have already completed the course, but can be studied as an independent guide. It doesn't follow the order of material in the coursebook precisely; rather, it threads what I hope is a logical and progressive way through the grammatical topics covered. Latin Verbs http://www.informalmusic.com/latinsoc/verbs/ Drills on conjugating various verbs. Latinteach http://www.latinteach.com/ Latin classroom ideas &projects. Latinteach Links http://www.latinteach.com/links.html Useful links for Latin teachers. Latinteach Webring http://www.webring.org/cgi-bin/webring?ring=latinteach&list Links to sites aiding the teaching of Latin. Lingua Latina, aka Winlatin http://www.ucc.uconn.edu/~hasenfra/wlatin.html Free software you can install on your computer. It lets you practice writing forms for nouns, verbs, &adjectives. This file is 5.2 megs. If it takes too long for you to download, you can bring a zip disk to my office © it directly. Listening Lab: Audio Files http://latin.about.com/homework/latin/cs/audiofiles/index.htm Here are the sounds of Latin -- with a little Greek thrown in. Hundreds of audio files that can be heard using Real Player. Pronunciation guides, vocabulary, exercises from major grammars. Medieval Latin http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/latin/latin.html Latin Culture Resources. Links to Latin resources, especially Medieval. MOO http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/teachdemo/moo.html Penn's MOO is also the first Latin MOO in cyberspace, passing under the name MUGIT (which is Latin for the noise a cow makes but seems also to acronymize Multorum Utentium Gregi Interesse Transcribendo -- "to be in a flock of many users by writing"). Multilingua. (Better Read than Dead) http://www.lingua.co.uk/ Web site of George Sharpley, author of our textbook. Obscenity in Classical Latin http://www.obscure.org/obscene-latin/ The ancient Romans had lusty appetites; just like modern people, they seemed to have one thing on their minds. The Charles Bukowski Memorial Center for Classical Latin Studies seeks to drag obscenity out of those dusty tomes and stick it right where it belongs. Orbilius Download Page http://www2.rhbnc.ac.uk/Classics/NJL/Latin/download.html Orbilius is an interactive vocabulary and verb tester designed to be used with Teach Yourself Latin Units 1-16. You can use it to test yourself on vocabulary and verb endings, or simply as a kind of interactive flash card to help you review. Paul Barrette's Latin Resources http://cheiron.humanities.mcmaster.ca/latin/ Vocabulary flash cards. Also translates dates into the Julian calendar. Prurient Latin Vocabulary List http://www.obscure.org/obscene-latin/vocabulary.html Get your prurient Latin vocabulary (dirty Latin words) here. QuickLatin http://www.quicklatin.com/ "QuickLatin is a tool which helps you translate Latin into English. At the moment it does not do English into Latin. It has dictionary and parsing capabilities, plus some sentence-handling abilities. QuickLatin 1.0 is a competely rewritten shareware application which uses the Whitaker's Words dictionary and includes algorithms like those of Words, but adds sentence and translation-handling code. It's still a bit basic at the moment, but I will keep enhancing it." Rude words in Latin http://www.user.globalnet.co.uk/~loxias/rudelatin.htm A list of rude Latin words found in Plautus. (They often end in "e" because they're in the vocative case.) Tips for Studying Latin http://www.cornell-iowa.edu/classical_studies/latin/tips.shtml How to study Latin with less stress. Tolle, lege! http://dekart.f.bg.ac.yu/~vnedeljk/TL/ Here you will find some easy Latin texts. Even if you have seen more difficult ones before, you may find these worth a try. In fact, reading should be easy. Quizzes over Latin Noun Forms (http://chss2.montclair.edu/class ... unformsquizzes.htm) Java-based quizzes. Translation Tips http://www2.LaTech.edu/~bmagee/latin/201/translation_tips.htm href="http://garts.LaTech.edu/bmagee/latin/201/translation_tips.htm">http://garts.LaTech.edu/bmagee/latin/201/translation_tips.htm Tips for translating Latin in 201 & 202. VivaVoce -- Roman Poetry Recited--MP3 http://dekart.f.bg.ac.yu/~vnedeljk/VV/ Listen to Latin poetry over the Internet. This page also has an introduction to Latin meter. Vocabula computatralia http://www.obta.uw.edu.pl/~draco/docs/voccomp.html Vocabulary words for talking about computers in Latin. Vroma http://www.vroma.org/ VRoma itself can be conceptualized in two distinct (though related) ways: * an on-line "place," modeled to some extent upon the ancient city of Rome, where students and instructors can interact live, hold courses and lectures, and share resources for the study of the ancient world. As an on-line virtual environment, VRoma contextualizes and situates linguistic and cultural information within a simulated space, a virtual 'city' containing historical places (a simulation of the city of Rome circa 150 CE) and non-historical places (simulations of various types of spaces that imaginatively evoke ancient life). * a collection of and filter for internet resources, which will be accessible in a variety of formats for individual learning, research and perusal. These extendible and customizable resources will include texts, commentaries, images, maps and other materials. Students and instructors will also have the option of customizing materials to suit their own reading levels and curricula. YLE: Nuntii Latini http://www.yle.fi/fbc/latini/ Weekly broadcast of news in Latin. Broadcast from Finland. |
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