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Write Latin To Learn Latin: Part I: Caesar
Write Latin To Learn Latin: Part I: Caesar

Write Latin To Learn Latin: Part I: Caesar

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About Write Latin To Learn Latin: Part I: Caesar

Meet Caesar on his own terrain...and come away a winner. Write Latin To Learn Latin (Part 1) can be used by beginners as well as by more advanced students. Breaking down sentences into digestible phrases, you work from the language you know so well to the one that you are coming to master.With this book, you gradually learn the terms, the phrases, and the "chunks" of meaning that every student needs to know. Eventually, the repetitive vocabulary and the variations on similar themes build your background knowledge and exercise your comprehension skills. Gain confidence as you read Caesar (and eventually much more) with greater ease and enjoyment.This device is simple and effective for review or first-time efforts: here you get over 1250 sentences in English based on Caesar's Gallic War. Your task is to express the same ideas in Latin. Can't do it? No problem. Just imitate the answers which you readily find on the next page of the ereader. It only takes a swipe or a button press. Bit by bit, you come into possession of the language. You will have divided and conquered.Practice getting the right expressions on your own and you will feel soon feel quite at home in the Caesar's idiom. On an ereader, it is also extremely easy to reverse directions and go from the Latin to the English. You will not be bogged down by having to look up answers and vocabulary elsewhere. Nor will you lose precious time "figuring it out" all on your own before you are ready. And the superior ebook display gives you an uncluttered page of perfect text to help you focus on the content.So do it. "Caesar today, tomorrow the world." (But you may want to go on to Part 2, Cicero, first...)This is a unique combination of two original texts: Moses Grant Daniell’s New Latin Composition and its answer key. Word count of Part 1: Over 30,000. Number of paired items 1250.