Latin Handouts:
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/101/index.html
All these websites were designed with Wheelock's Latin in mind:
Wheelock's FAQ index by chapter http://www.quasillum.com/latin/faq/index.php Study Guide to Wheelock by Dale Grote http://humanum.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/Lexis/Wheelock-Latin/ ----- Explanations and paradigms ... Mark Damen, Utah State University http://www.usu.edu/markdamen/Latin1000/index.htm Dr. J's Latin Grammar Paradigms (it's the 10th heading) http://people.hsc.edu/drjclassics/site_index.htm Latin Praxis, St. Louis University http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/languages/classical/latin/tchmat/wh-prax.html ----- Games, quizzes, drills ... Verba Sequentur - explanations and quizzes (self-correcting) http://abacus.bates.edu/acad/depts/cms/verbasequentur/ http://abacus.bates.edu/acad/depts/crll/latin101/chapter.index.htm Games (self-correcting) ... http://www.quia.com/pages/wheelock.html University of Victoria - drills - self-correcting http://web.uvic.ca/hrd/latin/wheelock/contents.htm Hofstra University - self-correcting drills http://people.hofstra.edu/Ilaria_Marchesi/text/list_exercises.htm University of Houston - self-correcting drills http://www.class.uh.edu/mcl/faculty/armstrong/home/latn1301/latn1301main.html#drills Warmenhoven - self-correcting quizzes http://www.warmenhoven.org/latin/vocab/
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I would start with Latin For Beginners, & Latin for Beginner’s Key, Benjamin L. D’Ooge. After finishing these I would move on to the following: A New Latin Prose Composition, Charles E. Bennett and Latin Prose Composition, North and Hillard. After finishing D'Ooge you should also begin New Latin Grammar, Allen & Greenough. These will give you a solid foundation in Latin and will cover a period of two to four years of learning. For Ancient Greek I would start with First Greek Book, John Williams White & his key First Greek Book Key. Follow these up with Greek Grammar, William W. Goodwin & Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb, William W. Goodwin. For Koine I'd start with A Brief Introduction to New Testament Greek & A Brief Introduction to New Testament Greek Key, Samuel G. Green.
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