Chapter 27, Drill c: Drill use of future tenses.

In each Latin sentence, provide the correct form of the correct future tense to translate the English phrase in parentheses.

Examples:
Augustus (will increase) imperium Romanum. Answer: augebit .

Augustus, si (increases) imperium Romanum, magnam gloriam Romanam colliget. Answer: auxerit: although English uses present tense in the if clause, Latin is more precise in the time.

1. Quintus cum Athenas (he arrives) epistolam Theomnesto dabit.
2. (Will you [singular] rush)ne Roma discedere?
3. Flaccus dixit: "Venusiam (I will go back)."
4. cras me (I will prepare, i.e. I will get ready).
5. si te (I annoy, i.e. I annoy you before you speak to me, future time), dic mihi.
6. cum turba aedificia (sets fire to), tempus erit fugere.
7. si cras navis parata (is, i.e. same time), eam conscendam.
8. cras urbem (they will go around).
9. si tumultus (breaks out [use accido]), magister ludum dimittet.
10. Quintus cum hoc carmen (he finishes [use perficio]), amicis leget.
11. si urbs scelestis plena (is, i.e. same time), prudentes discedent.
12. si tyrannus potestatem (gathers), omnes Romani erunt anxii.
13. navis a portu (will sail).
14. Quintus si Caesarem in gradibus iacentem (he sees, i.e. both actions in the future), timebit.
15. cras (she is coming).
16. Quintus cum Athenas (catches sight of), gaudebit.

Go to the previous exercise.