Pagina:MAXEY, Mima; FAY, Marjorie - A New Latin Primer (1933).pdf/108

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Vesperī agricolae cēnam edunt. Tum colloquia cum fliis et fīliābus habent. DICTATION AND IMITATION-LESSON XIII Iūlia, flia nautae, est amīca Cornēliae. Cornelia, the farmer's daughter, is a friend of the woman's. Julia, the poet's daughter, is a friend of the girl's. Mārcus, fīlius agricolae, est amīcus Cassi. Cassius, the sailor's son, is a friend of the man's. Iūlia cum nautā in viā ambulat. Cornelia is standing in the cottage with the farmer. The girl is walking in the woods with the woman. Puer cum virō in agrō labōrat. The man is standing in the garden with the boy. The man is walking in the town with another man. Agricola Cornēliae pectniam dat. The woman is giving the sailor money. The girl is showing the farmer a picture. The girl is pointing out the cottage to the sailor. Vir puerō dōnum dat. The man is giving his friend a reward. The boy is giving his friend a present. The boy is giving the horse grain. Viri puerīs et puellīs dōna dant. The teachers are giving the pupils prizes. The men are giving the sailors money. The women are showing the girls pictures. Fābulās agricolārum, sed nōn fābulās medicōrum, amō. I praise my friends' stories. I do not like the teachers' pictures. I see the stables of the horses.