Supines in Latin
The supines are an amazing to say bit of complex grammar. It is a strange fourth declension verbal noun only found in two cases: the accusative and ablative singular. This video covers formation and translation of this very weird noun... verb... verbal noun. Mirabile dictu!

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Adverbs in Latin

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An Introduction to the Dative Case

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Principal Parts Supine Version

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Rule 41: The Ablative of Separation

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Solving Latin Nouns

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How I Learned Latin at HOME

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How to Learn Latin like a 10th Century English Monk

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The Locative Case

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A visual guide to Bayesian thinking

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Penultimate Stress Rule: How to accent any Latin word CORRECTLY

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The Passive Voice in Latin
![Duke of Windsor (Edward VIII) Interview in German | 1966 [eng. subtitles]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/aOs6bNqrtJE/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwE9CNACELwBSFryq4qpAy8IARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAHwAQH4Af4JgALQBYoCDAgAEAEYZSBlKGUwDw==&rs=AOn4CLBllosh_vX5ldCfTgrQLtNh9wymgA)
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Duke of Windsor (Edward VIII) Interview in German | 1966 [eng. subtitles]

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The Dative in Latin Made Simple | Easy Latin Grammar Lessons

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iste, ista, istud

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Ancient Greek Word Order - Is There A Default Order?

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