Monday, April 18, 2016

“duc mē ad ducem tuum.”

Text
Iulia domī nocte dormiēbat. subitō Iulia aliquid ē caelō audīvit! Iulia domō discessit. in caelō lucēs et nāvem vīdit! magnō cum clamōre nāvis dē caelō ad terram vēnit. et ē nāve, aliquis vēnit… nōn homō erat, sed aliēnus! Iulia nōn movēre potuit. aliēnus ad Iuliam vēnit.
aliēnus inquit, “duc mē ad ducem tuum.”

Info & extras under the cut.



Intended purpose: dictation; reading
This dictatio goes with a general weird TPRS-type-thing I did for "bellum gerit" and "vincit." You can read about it here. There's an actual story script there for a story based off of this one.

Target Structures: caelō, vēnit

NLE Level: I

Word count: 53

Unique Word List: ad, aliēnus, aliquid, aliquis, audīvit, caelō, clamōre, cum, dē, discessit, domī, domō, dormiēbat, duc, ducem, ē, erat, et, homō, in, inquit, Iulia, Iuliam, lucēs, magnō, mē, movēre, nāve, nāvem, nāvis, nocte, nōn, potuit, sed, subitō, terram, tuum, vēnit, vīdit

Unique Lemmata excluding proper nouns: ad, aliēnus, aliquid, aliquis, audiō, caelum, clamor, cum, dē, discedō, domus, dormiō, ducō, dux, ē / ex, et, homō, in, inquam, lux, magnus, moveō, nāvis, nōn, nox, possum, sed, subitō, terra, tuus, veniō, videō

Extras:




No comments:

Post a Comment