Each English phrase can be expressed as an ablative absolute with the Latin noun and verb provided, but you need to check carefully on active and passive and tense, so that the resulting ablative absolute still gives the same information. And an English active may need to be turned into a Latin passive, or vice versa. Express the phrase as an ablative absolute, leaving out words other than the supplied noun and verb:
Example:
Caesar, interficio (after Brutus killed Caesar) Answer: Caesare interfecto: a perfect participle is needed to express time before the action of the main verb, but interficio does not have a perfect active participle. You must therefore use the perfect passive participle, with the recipient of the action, Caesar, as the noun which the passive participle agrees with.
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