Word
Femina magnum equum videt.
Meaning
The woman sees the large horse.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Course
Lesson
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Questions & Answers about Femina magnum equum videt.
Why is femina in the nominative case?
Because femina is the subject of the sentence. In Latin, the subject normally appears in the nominative case.
Why does magnum come before equum, and how does it agree with equum?
Latin adjectives can appear either before or after the noun they describe, so the ordering of magnum equum is normal. Magnum agrees with equum in number (singular), gender (masculine), and case (accusative).
Why do we have equum instead of equus?
Equum is in the accusative case, used for direct objects in Latin. Since equus is the nominative form, changing it to equum signals that the horse is being acted upon (seen).
Could the word order be changed without altering the meaning?
Yes, Latin has flexible word order. You might see Magnum equum femina videt or Magnum equum videt femina, and so on. The core meaning remains the same, though emphasis can shift slightly depending on the order.
Why is videt in the third-person singular form?
Videt means he/she/it sees. Because femina (the woman) is a single subject, the verb must be in the third-person singular form to agree.
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