Chapter 53, Drill b: Practice using relative purpose clauses.

Each Latin sentence contains a phrase in English in parentheses which can be a relative clause of purpose in Latin. Translate into a relative purpose clause:

Example:
Marcus Quintusque puerum arcessivit (to bring wine [use fero]). Answer: qui vinum ferret

1. Quintus carmen confecit (which was to celebrate) ludos saeculares.
2. Quintus carmen ad Maecenatem misit (in order to explain by it) cur adhuc desideretur.
3. orationes scribebat (so others might deliver [habeo] them).
4. ille epistolam pollicitus est (in which, i.e. by means of which, he might propose) aliquid.
5. Vergilius carmina scripsit (to praise Augustus).
6. veni mecum, amice, ad urbem (to live in it, i.e. in which you might live) beatus.
7. ad fundum ibo (to spend the winter in it, i.e. in which I might spend [use perago] the winter).
8. Quintus epistolam ad Maecenatem misit (to propose, i.e. by which he might propose) ut Maecenas ad fundum adveniret.
9. Quintus uvis vinum faciebat (to drink, i.e. which he might drink).
10. fundus Quinto cordi erat (to escape to, i.e. to where he might escape).

Go to the previous exercise.