The Problem About Latin
Bibliotek | Latin | Hornnes | Deiger
The problem about Latin is that you can study it for six years and still not be able to read a Latin sentence.
If you study French, you get pretty quickly to a point where you process a French sentence in much the same way you process an English one: "J'ai lu tous les livres" comes across to you as "I've read all the books" and you don't think much about it.
In Latin, you can still be looking at a sentence six years later and doing what I call a "crossword puzzle" reading of it. You find a masculine noun in the ablative singular, then you go hunting around the sentence for an adjective to go with the noun, and if you find one you set those two words aside mentally and go back and look at the verbs.
In short, you're trying to read the sentence somewhat as one assembles a model airplane from a kit: looking at the directions and fitting the parts together and hoping it all makes sense.
The reason this happens is that Latin is a "highly inflected" language and the other modern European languages mostly aren't.
I'll explain "highly inflected" below, but what this means for the short term is that French syntax or German syntax or Italian syntax works pretty much the same way as the English syntax you're used to (subject-verb-predicate, subject-verb-predicate), while Latin doesn't. So you can study it for six years without really learning how to "sweep up" a sentence the way you're reading this sentence right now.
Is There a Recipe for Disaster?
Suppose you want to make sure that, no matter how many years you put into studying Latin, you'll never be able to really "read" a sentence. Is there a recipe for disaster here?
There is.
Here's how to do it: (1) begin studying from Wheelock's Latin: An Introductory Course Based on Ancient Authors, (2) following the book, learn little snippets of Latin grammar, always moving around among categories so that you're thoroughly confused -- e.g., study a couple of verb forms the first week, then learn a noun declension, then learn a different verb tense, then move to adjectives -- and (3) make sure that your reading consists of short sentences taken from Latin authors about how the Romans hated money.
This way, you can make sure that you'll never be able to read Latin even if you study it for forty years. It passes the time.
Is There a Recipe for Success?
Yes.
It's described in this guide.
It goes as follows: (1) learn a few simple concepts necessary for understanding Latin grammar -- what the "case" of a noun is, for instance -- then (2) sit down and systematically learn the main categories of Latin grammar by "brute memorization," and (3) begin reading a great direct-method Latin reader entitled Lingua Latina, doing all the end-of-chapter exercises and making sure you understand every word of every sentence.
If you follow this method, you can learn to actually read Latin -- again, to read Latin sentences in the same way you're reading this one -- in about two years of daily work.
Two years sounds like a long time, but it's really nothing in comparison to the world that opens up when you can sit down and read Livy and understand what you're reading. This is like growing wings, or being born into another existence.
What Are These Grammatical Concepts I've Got to Learn?
This is the easy part.
In what follows, I'm going to introduce you to the main concepts and explain them. If you read them with perfect comprehension, you'll be ready to start memorizing the grammatical tables in the back of Wheelock (the only thing his widely-used Latin textbook is any good for).
When you've memorized those, you'll be ready to start reading volume 1 of Lingua Latina. You'll be on your way.
First Concept: Noun Cases
In English, it is the order of words in a sentence that tells you what their grammatical function is. Example:
The teacher gives a book to the student.
If you know even a little bit about English grammar, you will be able to say that the verb in this sentence is "gives." (It's the "action" word.) And once you've found the action word, the grammar of the rest of the sentence can be figured out by seeing how everything else relates to the action.
In this sentence, for instance, you can easily see that "the teacher" is the subject of the verb. (It's the teacher who's "doing the giving.") In the same way, you can see that "the book" is the direct object of the verb. (The book is what's being given.) You can then see that "the student" is the indirect object of the verb. (It's the student to whom the book is being given.)
Don't just rush past my explanations. Go back and read over the previous two paragraphs if you didn't understand them completely. The grammatical concepts I'm presenting here are very simple, but if you don't understand them completely, you won't understand the related Latin concepts I'm about to explain.
Verb = "action word." Subject = "doer of the action." Direct Object = "object of the action." Indirect Object = "recipient or beneficiary of the action." Okay?
I said that in English and the other modern European languages, it is word order that determines grammatical function. Look what happens when we invert the word order of the sample sentence:
The student gives a book to the teacher.
Watch very closely what's going on here. Note that "the student" is spelled just the same here as it was in the earlier sentence. So is "the teacher." The point is that neither word has changed its form. All we've done is move "student" up to the front of the sentence and put "teacher" at the end.
But now, to a speaker of English, the whole meaning has changed: it's the student who's doing the giving and the teacher who's doing the receiving of the book. (In grammatical terms, "the student" has become the subject of the sentence and "the teacher" has become the indirect object.)
Do English words ever change their form to indicate a change in meaning?
Yes.
Consider the following:
I bring my lunch to school on Thursdays. I brought my lunch to school last Thursday.
The change from bring to brought signals, in English, a change from the present tense of the verb to the past tense. Bring is what is called a "strong verb." It's left over from an earlier stage of English when many more words changed their form -- that is, changed the way they were pronounced and spelled -- bring/brought -- to indicate a change in grammatical function.
When a language has a lot of words that change their actual form to signal a change in grammatical function, that language is said to be "highly inflected."
In a highly-inflected language, words mainly show their grammatical function by their form -- that is, you can tell just by looking at the word in isolation what role it plays in the sentence: you don't need word order to tell you -- and so word order doesn't mean as much when you're trying to figure out grammatical function.
This is an important concept, so make sure you're following everything here. In the sentences
The teacher gives a book to the student.
and
The student gives a book to the teacher.
there is simply no way to tell whether "teacher" and "student" is the subject of the verb or the indirect object of the verb without looking at the whole sentence.
Just seeing
the teacher
in isolation gives you no grammatical information at all.
By contrast, in the few cases where English keeps some of its earlier inflections, you don't need a whole sentence to tell you what grammatical function the word is fulfilling. For instance, if you just see
bring
and
brought
sitting there alone on the page, you can say that bring is present tense and brought is past tense.
In Latin, practically every word in a sentence tells you its grammatical function by its form. Consider this sentence:
Magister dat librum discipulo.
Translation: "The teacher gives a book to the student."
For a number of reasons, that's not a very good Latin sentence, but I want to use it to make a point. The point is this: to someone who reads Latin, the form of "magister" says that "magister" is the subject of the verb. (It is the "magister" who is "doing the giving" here.)
In the same way, "librum" shows by its form that it is the direct object of the verb. (The "librum" is what the magister is giving.)
And finally, "discipulo" shows by its form that it is the indirect object of the verb. (It is the "discipulo" who is getting the librum from the magister.)
Here comes the important part: Because each of these nouns shows its grammatical function by its form, that function doesn't change even when you switch the word order around in the sentence.
Remember how we reversed the meaning of
The teacher gives a book to the student.
just by reversing the word order?
The student gives a book to the teacher.
In Latin, you can put the words of our example sentence in virtually any order you want, and the magister keeps on being the person who is doing the giving, the librum keeps on being the object that is given, and the discipulo keeps on being the person who is being given the book.
For purely stylistic reasons, some of the following are sentences no writer of "good" Latin would ever construct, but in purely grammatical terms they all mean exactly the same thing:
Magister dat librum discipulo. Librum discipulo magister dat. Discipulo librum magister dat. Dat discipulo magister librum. (etc.)
It gets clumsy after a while to have to keep on saying that "the nouns in the sentence above retain their grammatical function so long as they retain the same form," so grammarians invented a shorthand way of saying the same thing. To say what grammatical function a Latin noun shows by the form in which it is written, you simply mention the case of the noun.
This is the main "new" grammatical concept you're going to have to learn to study Latin. When you memorize Latin nouns -- and, as you'll see, adjectives, which have to "agree with" the nouns they modify -- what you really memorize is the cases through which each noun shows its grammatical function in a sentence.
Second concept: the nominative
This is easy. A noun occurs in the nominative case when it is the subject of the verb. In the sentence
Magister dat librum discipulo.
it is the nominative form of magister that tells you that the magister (teacher) is doing the giving here.
Every case comes in two "numbers," the singular and the plural. Don't let this perplex you. It just means that sometimes the form of the noun shows you that one person or thing is involved, and at other times it shows you that more than one person or thing is involved. Examples:
Magister dat librum discipulo. Magistri dant libros discipulis.
In the second sentence, I've put all the nouns into the plural number. Each noun is in the same case, so the meaning of the sentence stays the same: something is being given by someone to someone else. But in the first sentence it is a single teacher who is giving a single book to a single student. In the second sentence it is two or more teachers who are giving two or more books to two or more students.
Here's some grammatical jargon that I want you to make sure you understand. Don't go on until you're absolutely sure you understand what I'm saying about the two sentences above: 1) In the first sentence "magister" is in the nominative singular. 2) In the second sentence, "magistri" is in the nominative plural.
Do you understand that? Nominative means, in both sentences, that the noun is showing by its form that it is the subject of the verb. Singular means that the sentence is talking only about a single "magister." Plural means that there are two or more magistri giving away books.
Third concept: Accusative and Dative Case
Now I'm going to speed things up a bit.
Here are some more things you can say about the two sentences above: 1) In the first sentence, "librum" is in the accusative singular. 2) In the second sentence, "libros" is in the accusative plural. 3) In the first sentence, "discipulo" is in the dative singular. 4) In the second sentence, "discipulis" is in the dative plural.
Do you see what's going on here? The accusative is the Latin case that shows that a noun is the direct object of the verb. (The books are the "things being given" in these sentences.)
The dative is the Latin case that shows that a noun is the indirect object of the verb. (The students are the ones "to whom the books are being given" in both sentences.)
The accusative singular shows that only one book is being given. The dative singular shows that only one student is getting or receiving the book. The accusative plural shows that two or more books are being given. The dative plural shows that two or more students are getting the books.
When you get farther along with Latin, you'll learn that cases like the Accusative and the Dative have other uses as well, but these are the ones you want to start with.
Fourth Concept: the Genitive Case
This one is easy too.
The genitive case in Latin usually signals some idea of possession. Somebody or something owns or possesses something else. Here are a couple of simple examples in English of how the genetive works:
The boy's hat was bright red. The roof of the house was made of tile. The teacher's book is large.
Now look at the last of these sentences. I'm about to give you the same sentence in Latin. Here it is:
Liber magistri magnus est.
As always, it is the form of the noun that tells you what the grammatical function is. In technical terms, you only have to say that "magistri" in the sentence above is in the genitive case, and to understand what that means all you have to understand is that the book belongs to the teacher.
Fifth Concept: the Ablative Case
The ablative is the hardest Latin case to get an "intuitive" feel for, because the Romans used the ablative for all sorts of different grammatical purposes.
Here's the easiest way to make sense of the ablative. In Latin, the ablative tends to do the work that we do in English with common prepositions (of, on, with, by, for, etc).
Each of these little words signals some sort of relation between the noun and something else. For instance, you can say
The teacher puts the book on the table.
Here, the relation signalled by the preposition on is spatial: when the action is complete, one object (a book) is on top of another object (a table) as a result.
This is exactly what happens with the ablative in Latin. Here's the same sentence in Latin with "table" (mensa) in the ablative:
Magister librum in mensa ponit.
If you just basically concentrate on this idea, and then extend what you have understood to all the other common prepositions in English (again: on, in, with, by, from, etc), you'll never have trouble with the ablative in Latin.
The key is this: when you see an ablative in a Latin sentence, ask yourself what relation it is trying to signal between the noun in the ablative case and everything else in the sentence. Then you will figure out its meaning "intuitively."
Here is a warning. The ablative has so many common uses in Latin that grammarians have figured out names for a lot of them ("ablative of separation," "ablative of the place from which," "ablative of agent," etc).
It is still customary in some Latin courses to try to get students to understand the ablative by teaching them these categories.
My advice: forget the categories. They'll just confuse you, mainly because they get you worrying about non-essential secondary categories when what you want to know is what this ablative means in this sentence.
When you're reading your Lingua Latina chapters, just go with the flow: learn the ablatives as they come up in the reading, and forget about fancy names for what they are doing.
In the end, you'll have learned all the categories, but without confusing yourself. (Once you've learned how the ablative "works" in its various uses, you can go and get a grammatical table and learn the categories in 10 minutes. "Oh," you say to yourself, "that use is called 'the ablative of the place from which'!" But the important thing is that you were already understanding what it meant.)
Sixth Concept: Adjective Cases
This isn't really a new concept, but I'm putting it under a separate heading to emphasize that you've got to learn adjectives separately from nouns.
The key "concept" is this: adjectives have to agree with the nouns they modify in number and case. That sounds hard. In fact, it's incredibly easy. Start with modify.
You may remember from grade school that adjectives are words that give you new information about nouns. The grammarians' way of saying this is to say that the adjective "modifies" the noun. So:
The teacher had a book.
All you know about the book at this point is, so to speak, that it is a book (i.e., a rectangular object containing print and able to be read by those who understand the language in which it is printed).
But when you add adjectives to the sentence, you begin to get more specific ideas about the book:
The teacher had a large book. The teacher had a large, old, dusty book. The teacher had a large, old, dusty, difficult book.
In each of these instances, you say that an adjective ("large," "old," "dusty," "difficult") is adding something new to ("modifying") your idea of the book owned by the teacher.
The point about number and case simply means that adjectives in Latin have to be singular when the noun is singular, plural when the noun is plural, and display by their form the same grammatical function as the noun they are modifying:
Magister librum magnum habet. (The teacher has a large book.) Magister libros magnos habet. (The teacher has [some] large books.)
The great news about adjectives is that they all have the same endings as one of the noun declensions you will already have learned. You do have to learn that adjectives belong to different declensions, but their forms are ones you'll already know from having memorized the noun declensions earlier.
Seventh Concept: Verb Tense and Mood
I'm not going to give you examples of Latin tenses and moods, but I want to remind you of what tense and mood are before you start memorizing Latin verb tables.
Tense just means that the form of a verb tells you the time in which the action described by the verb took place:
I brought my friend a book. (past tense) I bring my friend a book. (present tense) I will bring my friend a book (future tense)
In both English and Latin, verb tenses allow speakers and writers of the language to do wonderfully complicated things, and these things all have complicated names in the grammar books.
Look at the shifts of time implied by the verbs in this sentence, for instance:
By the time you finish your study of Lingua Latina, you will have been one of the most conscientious readers ever to have started the study of Latin this way.
Do you see what the verb lets the sentence do there? It takes the reader all the way up into a future state of affairs and lets them look back at it as a completed action or event.
Complicated tenses like that have complicated names (in both English and Latin), and these you do have to learn. But if you get the idea of each tense before you start learning, you will never have any trouble remembering what each one does.
And Latin verbs "behave" in wonderfully symmetrical ways: they are easy to memorize once you get a feel for how each tense is behaving. (This is impossible to explain ahead of time. You'll see what I mean when you start memorizing your verb tables.)
Eighth Concept: Verb Mood
Verbs come not only in tenses but in moods, which are, roughly speaking, the "conditions of reality" in which the action described by the verb takes place.
The two major moods for you as a student of Latin are going to be the indicative and the subjunctive.
Since Latin uses the subjunctive a lot more than English, and for much subtler purposes, you're going to have to memorize the tables and then start reading before you can really get a feel for what's going on with mood in Latin verb forms. But I would like you to have some preliminary feel for the concept.
Roughly, indicative means that the action reported by the verb "really happened." That is, it describes a really-existing state of affairs. (Or one that really did take place, or that really will take place.) Examples:
I went to the store. I am writing a guide to Latin grammar for my students. I will read Livy when I'm done writing this section.
The subjunctive, on the other hand, normally deals with some state of affairs that "departs from reality" in an essential way. I'm not going to try to illustrate the Latin subjunctive -- it would only confuse you -- but I want to give you one English example to show you what's going on. Here is a sentence with the verb in the subjunctive in English:
If I were President of the United States, I would institute an award for students who learned Latin.
The reason the verb is subjunctive there, in short, is to show that I am asking my listener to imagine what is called a hypothetical or contrary-to-fact state of affairs. The little word "were" is doing a lot of work. It is saying, in effect, "Look, I am not in fact the President of the United States, but if I were President -- a situation I am now asking you briefly to imagine as fact -- then I would" (etc).
Just get this simple distinction between the indicative and the subjunctive into your head now and the more complex cases will take care of themselves when you begin to read Lingua Latina.
Ninth Concept: Verb Voice
The voice of a verb is either active or passive. The best way to understand this concept is to go look it up in a freshman comp book if you've forgotten. Here is the principle:
Active: John cooked the turkey. Passive: The turkey was cooked by John.
Got it? Roughly speaking, the active voice signals that a person is performing or carrying out an action. The passive voice puts the object of the verb up into the subject position and says that the action was done "to" it: "The turkey was cooked by John."
The active and passive have different forms in Latin. They're easy to learn and easy to understand. Just memorize the tables.
Tenth Concept: Deponent Verbs
This is the hardest concept you have to learn when you start studying Latin, and it's hard because there's nothing like it in English. The idea is simple enough, though: in Latin, certain verbs that have passive forms have active meanings. These are called "deponent" verbs.
What makes the concept difficult to deal with is that there's nothing "intuitive" about it to a speaker of English. If you could imagine a situation in which I could say
The turkey was cooked by John.
and mean
John cooked the turkey.
you'd have a rough idea of what goes on with deponent verbs. But, unfortunately, English grammar doesn't allow that.
Latin grammar does. Most grammar books put off teaching the use of the deponent forms, because they think that students will only be confused by them. But the Romans used deponents interchangeably with regular verbs, and Lingua Latina, to its great credit, starts you right out with them.
So you are going to have to get used to the idea "passive form, active meaning" pretty early in your study of Latin.
That's the bad news.
The good news is that, when you memorize your tables of regular verbs, you'll be learning the passive forms of all the major conjugations as a matter of course. This means that you are already learning the deponents without being aware of it.
In short, learning deponent verbs simply means that you have to understand something you've already learned ("this form signals the passive voice") in a different way ("Oops: this verb is a deponent, so the passive form here has an active meaning.")
Don't let all this talk about passive forms and active meanings discourage you. It sounds hard right now because you don't know any Latin verb forms, active or passive.
When you've begun to memorize your tables, everything will fall into place, and you'll come back to this section and understand exactly what I'm talking about. (You'll also say to yourself: "How could I have ever thought that this was hard?")
Stage 2: Memorizing the Forms
Students today aren't used to memorizing, so even small tasks of memorization seem hard. But the only way to really learn Latin is to memorize the major grammatical forms systematically.
It isn't as hard as it looks. Think of this: you might have been in a high school play once where you had to memorize an entire part, or perhaps you had a friend who had to memorize a part. And maybe your friend wasn't terrifically bright. (A lot of good actors aren't.)
And yet he or she memorized the part without any trouble, because they knew that was the only way to get applause on opening night.
The amount of memorization you have to do to get ready to read Lingua Latina is less than you'd have to memorize to be in a high school play. There are two steps involved:
Write out the tables. To really memorize grammar, you have to write out the tables repeatedly. (Grammarians call these "paradigms," pronounced like "pair - ah - dimes." That's because each form in the table shows you how hundreds or thousands of similar nouns or verbs or adjectives work in Latin.)
Get a bunch of blank notebooks. Start with the noun declensions. Write out each declension until you know it by heart.
When I hit upon the method I'm describing here, I then wrote out the entire table of noun declensions 200 times. When I'd finished the nouns, I went on to the adjectives. (These I wrote out only 100 times, since I knew all the forms from having written out the nouns.) I kept count in my notebook of how many tmes I'd written out each set of tables. This was forty years ago. Since then, I've never not known the noun and adjective declensions by heart.
Then I did the regular verbs in the indicative active. Then in the indicative passive. Then the subjunctives. I wrote each set of these out 200 times. The whole process took about six months.
Since "Learning Latin by the Dowling Method" first went up on the web, though, I've had a lot of mail from people who told me that they found that writing out the nouns, adjectives, and verbs 100 times was enough to let them get started on Lingua Latin (see below) with a firm grasp of how Latin grammar as a whole works. That may be right. I'm not sorry that I began with doing everything 200 times -- it was tedious, but tedium gloriously spent -- but if 100 times works for some people, there's probably no reason to overdo.
Also, since this page first appeared on the internet, a generous soul has put up a simple feature called "Dowling's Wheel," which lets you fill in the blanks in the declensions and the conjugations at the keyboard. I have no idea whether or not this works as well as writing them out by hand -- to be honest, I doubt that it does: the transmission of memory from the brain through the hand to the page seems to me somehow a more "permanent" process -- but those who want to try it may click on the link earlier in this paragraph. I'd be glad to hear from people who have tried Dowling's Wheel and found that it works as well as handwritten transcription.
Finally, a caveat. Whenever someone suggests a program for thorough learning, it won't be long before people come up with "easier" versions to try to trick you into believing that you can avoid a lot of the effort involved. In the modern languages, for instance, there are hundreds of programs with titles like "French in Three Months," and "Learn Italian While You Drive," and "Romanian the Easy Way." They are all utterly fraudulent.
When I was growing up, I remember seeing ads in Life magazine for records that promised to let you "learn German (or French, or Norwegian) while you sleep!" The idea was that you'd put on a record just as you were drifting off, and some subliminal process would magically install a knowledge of grammar and vocabulary in your slumbering brain.
I wouldn't be surprised to see people trying to modify the Dowling method so that you could, for instance, learn just one noun declension and then start right in reading Lingua Latina and then zip along effortlessly to a fluent reading knowledge of Latin in three weeks. In contemporary culture, that sort of thing is inevitable. Still, I think you'd be well advised to steer clear of such modifications, and especially of any version that promises to let you learn Latin grammar while you sleep.
Finally, an important trick. I used it when I was inventing this method, and it did wonders to strengthen the memorization process. Say the paradigms to yourself. When you're going through the "memorization stage," use the dead time that occurs during the day to say the paradigms to yourself.
If you're waiting for a bus or standing in line in a store or waiting to see the doctor, repeat a noun declension or a verb conjugation. The amount of "dead time" that occurs during a normal day is amazing, and if you use it efficiently you will speed up the memorization process by a tremendous amount.
Stage 3: Lingua Latina
This is the exciting part.
When you've written out all your tables 200 times each, you are ready to start reading volume I of Lingua Latina. This is a "direct method" book that starts you off with very simple Latin, and that tells a story about a Roman family living around the time of Augustus. It is a work of pedagogical genius.
The book is very hard to find in American bookstores. Almost impossible, in fact. But the wonderful thing is that, in this age of the Web, you can order it online. Just click here on Lingua Latina.
It has wonderful exercises and introduces grammatical concepts and vocabulary very gradually, so that you're almost not aware that you're learning new things as you go along. But you go from the simplest Latin sentences to reading unaltered Livy in a series of easy, graduated steps.
When you've finished Lingua Latina, you can read any Latin you encounter. You will have a very large Latin vocabulary and lots of practice with grammar, so for the rest of your life all you'll need to do is keep on reading to stay in practice.
Here's how to use Lingua Latina:
Read slowly, and make sure that you understand the grammatical function of every word. This is absolutely essential. If you start with the first lesson and read the sentences so that you "sort of get the idea of the sentence," all your memorization and practice will be wasted.
You've got to ask yourself what the case of every noun is as you read -- and ask yourself why it's in that case -- and the tense and mood of every verb, and make sure you understand the prepositions, the adjectives and the adverbs. But if you do this, you will understand every sentence perfectly, and your Latin reading ability will increase by leaps and bounds.
When you've finished each lesson, study the grammar section until you understand its presentation of the material you have already memorized. This is where your "partial understanding" of the forms in the tables becomes "real" understanding. You've got to take the grammar sections slowly and read them aloud until you are sure you understand all the material.
Then take a notebook and write out a complete version of each Pensum excercise. The pensa are the best thing about Lingua Latina. At the end of each chapter, you must be able to fill out each pensum without looking back at the chapter to check grammatical forms. If you have to check back, then you need to read the chapter all over again, slowly, until you can do the pensa out of your own head.
Keep a separate Pensum Notebook for your exercises. Clearly indicate the chapter and section of each pensum. When you've completed all three exercises, then you may go back to the chapter to see that all your answers are correct. (Do the pensa in black ink, mark your answers in red. Then when you come back to check your work several weeks or months from now, it will be clear to you what you mastered easily and what you needed to study more.)
Repeat this process for each chapter until you have completed all of Lingua Latina. When you've done this, you will be a competent reader of Latin, both poetry and prose. From now on, all you have to do is keep in practice and you will be a respectable Latinist for the rest of your life.
Professor Dowling describes the best means of apprehending Latin: memorizing all the noun declensions, then all the adjective declensions, then all the verb conjugations. He dissents from the usual recommendation of Wheelock, the popular Latin for beginners book, but does say that the grammar tables in the back with all the declensions and conjugations (it is very comprehensive) are the most useful part of the book. I accomplished the full repetitions of all the Latin nouns, adjectives, and verbs back in June. It took about two weeks. But then, I did it constantly, and though I made sure to do the first set of fifty or so by hand, I finished the rest by typing on the computer (I'm a much faster typist), which was just as effective, if not more so due to the clear, printed style of the computerized text. Now they're all memorized, and ingrained, and I could write most of the grammatical tables from Wheelock from memory. It makes apprehension of Latin infinitely easier, and I think it's the only way to catch up with the ancient Roman children, to ingrain the grammar as well as their young minds ingrained it for them. In short, it has been very effective. After "brute memorization" of the grammatical forms, one proceeds to Lingua Latina, a tremendous book, all in Latin, that teaches Latin via the "direct method," like a children's book, comprehensible and self-instructive from the very first sentence. It is a wondrous novel, actually, a novella in its own right with a beautiful little story that follows the day-to-day routine of a Roman family. I am now more than two thirds of the way through the first volume, and I am simply astounded at how my Latin skills have improved. Every few chapters I've been looking back at random pages of Caesar's Gallic Wars, rejoicing how each time my intuitive grasp of random selections of the text has leapt forward by fantastic strides to say nothing of how entertaining the Lingua Latina story is.--Lucus Eques, Textkit Classics Forum
Good Luck
One last principle. The only way to learn a language is to work on it every day.
This is something most people never figure out, and it is why most people are no good at languages.
This isn't simply a matter of "discipline." It has something to do with the learning process -- my guess is, with the way the synapses in your brain work when you're learning grammar and syntax.
If you work on a hit-or-miss basis, missing an occasional day and then trying to make up for it by putting in twice as much time the next day you study Latin, you'll never learn the language. My motto: it is far better to put in 30 minutes every day for seven days (3 1/2 hours) than to wait until Saturday and put in 8 straight hours then.
Don't ask me why this is so. I'm not a neurologist. But I have spent over 30 years studying languages, and I'm telling you it's true.
The matter of "discipline" comes in this way. Even when you make up your mind to do your Latin every day, life has a way of intruding so that you will be tempted to miss days. There will be crises and upsets and intrusions and excitements, and your feeling will be that "missing just one day can't hurt."
It does hurt. You've got to do your Latin every day, through death and disease and accidents and heartbreak, when you're travelling and when you're at home, when you're in school and when you're on vacation.
The best way to do this is: do your Latin first thing every morning, before you do anything else. Then, no matter what happens for the rest of day, they can't take your Latin lesson away from you.
When you're travelling, take your Lingua Latina along with you. When I was first starting to use the method I'm describing here, I did an amazing amount of Latin on buses and trains and sitting around airports.
It's interesting and fun, and it beats watching the fat lady over at the Baskin & Robbins stand buy her kid an ice cream cone.
Good luck!
Source: William C. Dowling's Homepage