Games Grammatica

I, Piscare (Go Fish!)

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A Game to play with Ch. 37
Perfect Tense v. Present Tense Forms

Preparations:

  1. Make copies of the cards sheet, on card stock if possible, one set for every 4 or 5 students.
  2. From each set, cut out the cards to make individual decks of cards (if you prefer larger cards, students can write out the words on 3 x 5 notecards).
  3. Arrange the students into groups.
  4. Give each group a deck of cards that will have an equal number of Latin and the matching English translation.

The Game:

  1. The dealer deals 5 cards to each player.
  2. The remaining cards are put face down, spread out, on the desk as the fish pond.
  3. Students try to match sets of verb forms by taking turns asking other players the following question: Habesne ------------? The students fill in the blank with the opposite tense form of the one he/she is trying to match. e.g. I have tradit (the present tense) so I would say "habesne tradidit?", asking for the perfect tense form.
  4. If the person asked has the form, it is given to the person asking.
  5. When the player has a matching pair of present tense and perfect tense of the same verb, the cards are removed from the player's hand and placed in a pile next to the player.
  6. The player continues to ask for cards of the other players until he/she gets a negative response.
  7. When the person asked does not have the form, the response given is 'I, piscare.' The one who has asked must draw from the fish pond (piscina), and the play moves to the next participant.
  8. The winner is the one who has the most pairs when one player has no cards in his/her hand.

Variations:

  1. When a match is made, a student must translate the forms in order to lay them down.
  2. The game may be played as a memory matching game by arranging all the cards face down in random rows. Players take turns turning over two cards. If they match, the student keeps the pair. If they do not match, the cards are turned over in the same place and the play moves to the next participant.
  3. The same format may be used for any vocabulary review activity.

I have included two pages of game cards so you can create two decks of cards that can be copied, cut up and distributed to students. Try to use cardstock in making the copies. I did not use cardstock on the original copies so that you can more easily put the pages through your copier. Students can opt to put the words on note cards rather than use these pages.

Thank you to Marissa Damon Markonish for inspiring this activity at ACL 2000

 

 

 

 

 

Answer KEY

Remember the Perfect tense can be translated as: have___ed, did _____, or simply _____ed; the Present tense can be translated as _____, are _____ing, do _____ ( I see, am seeing, do see-three ways in English = one way in Latin.) I give here some of the acceptable translation variations but not all.

hortamini you urge hortati estis you have urged
pateris you suffer passus es you suffered
egreditur he/she/it leaves egressus est he has left
loquuntur they speak locutae sunt they (f) spoke
sequimur we follow secuti sumus we followed
vereor I fear veritus sum I have feared
ingredimur we enter ingressi sumus we have entered
videtur it seems visum est it has seemed
conor I try conatus sum I did try, tried
loquimini you speak locutae estis you have spoken
arbitraris you hear, perceive arbitrata es you have heard
collaberis you collapse collapsus es you have collapsed
sequuntur they follow secuti sunt they have followed
proficiscitur he/she/it sets out profectus est he/she/it did set out
experitur he/she/it tries expertus est he/she/it did, tried
regredior I go back, return regressus sum I have gone back, returned

 

 

 

 

 

hortati estis passus es ëgressus est locutae sunt
secütï sumus veritus sum ingressi sumus visum est
conatus sum locutae estis arbiträta es collapsus es
secutï sunt profectus est expertus est regressus sum


hortamini pateris ëgreditur loquuntur (fem)
sequimur vereor ingredimur vidëtur
conor loquimini (fem) arbiträris collaberis
sequuntur proficiscitur experïtur regredior


       
       
       
       

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