The second principal part of verbs in Latin is the infinitive, usually translated into English as "to ___" (for example, the second principal part of amo, amare, amavi, amatus is amare, to love).
The infinitive has many uses in Latin grammar, including indirect statements (puella canem ladrare videt = the girl sees that the dog barks) or with complementary verbs (canere possum = I am able to sing). Latin students often also use the infinitive and add/drop endings to conjugate other verb forms.
The first part is the genus. The second part is the species.
The principal part which never uses an auxiliary to form a tense is the PAST part. Or the fact reg both regular and irregular verbs form the present participle by adding ing. Depending on which way the question was meant.
Use a calculator (if you need) to find the principal square root. The second square root is the negative of the number.
"I sent you to the principal because you misbehaved."
it's the 4th principle part of duco, which means "I lead". The actual meaning probably depends on how you use it in the sentence. (I'm not a Latin teacher)
My principal is so mean that we have to come to school on weekends. or I love how honest and trustworthy your principal is.
No, people in Rome speak Italian as their main language. Latin is no longer in common use in daily conversation.
cur dice latina EDIT: That is not a grammatical translation at all :) Without more input, there are a few ways to take the questions you asked: Why should (I) speak Latin Why should (we) speak Latin Why should (you) speak Latin Why should (y'all) speak Latin Why should (he/she/it) speak Latin Why should (they) speak Latin In English and Latin you can leave out a nominative, but in Latin any regular verb needs to have a person. In any of these situations, you would still begin: Cur dicam/dicas/dicat/dicamus/dicatis/dicant "Why should [subj] speak", using the subjunctive to convey the "should" aspect. The second part is tricky as well. Do you mean "[speak] in Latin", or a more general "[speak] the Latin language"? for the first: Cur dicamus Latine? and for the second: Cur dicamus linguam Latinam? (NB I decided to use only why should we speak, as it seems to fit most contexts you might be asking this for)
The principal of the school tried to start an anti-drug program.
She is the principal stockholder in that company. The principal of our school spoke to the meeting.
Turkish switched to the Latin alphabet in 1928 as part of modernization efforts by Mustafa Kemal Atatrk to make the language more accessible and compatible with Western languages.
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".