Resource for Conjugation/Declension Charts

CMatthiasT88

Civis

  • Civis

Location:
Mandan, ND, USA
I'm working through Caesar's De Bello Gallico, and I'm having a bit of trouble parsing a certain word, utrique (from 5.50). The resources I've been using are A&G's grammar, and the two websites: www.online-latin-dictionary.com, and Logeion which only gives a parse. Firstly, I'm wondering if there is a better resource online for conjugation/declension charts from each various word. And secondly, I'm wondering why the resources mentioned didn't agree. A&G pointed me to section 66, which has uter, utris declined like imber, imbris, the nominative plural being utres. However the two online resources listed utri for nominative plural, which fits the context in DBG.
 

Clemens

Aedilis

  • Aedilis

Location:
Maine, United States.
Uter, utrēs is a noun meaning "water skin" or something similar. Uter, utra, utrum (plural utrī, utrae, utra) is an adjective meaning "which (of two)?" Uterque follows the latter declension, meaning "each (of two)" or "both."
 
 

cinefactus

Censor

  • Censor

  • Patronus

Location:
litore aureo
Words usually does a pretty good job of parsing.
 

CMatthiasT88

Civis

  • Civis

Location:
Mandan, ND, USA
That looks good for parsing, however I couldn't find any charts/paradigms offered there. That latin online dictionary I mentioned has them, but the website is glitchy on my laptop. Or perhaps any printed materials for paradigms?
 

Iáson

Cívis Illústris

  • Civis Illustris

For parsing there is Perseus.

Odd that A&G doesn't have uter under the section on interrogative pronouns. Maybe a mistake in the book? I tend to use Kennedy's grammar by preference anyway.

I don't trust Wiktionary in the slightest, though it's fair to say that it's usually correct.
 
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