ātrium – the atrium, the reception hall
canis (accusative canem) – the dog
coquus – the cook
cubiculum – the bedroom
culīna – the kitchen
est – is
esse (irregular) – to be
fīlius – the son
hortus – the garden
in – in, on
labōrat – works, is working
labōrāre – to work
māter (accusative mātrem) – the mother
pater (accusative patrem) – the father
sedet – sits, is sitting
sedēre – to sit
servus – the slave
tablīnum – the study
triclīnium – the dining room
via – the street
The horizontal lines on some of the vowels here are not accents like in other languages. They are called macrons and are just modern additions to the language to make pronunciation and inflection easier. When you learn the words, you do not need to learn them as well. I just include them in case they are or will be useful to you. Also note that I’ve translated every noun with the article the. That is not necessarily standard procedure, but it is a personal preference of mine for clarity’s sake.