agere – to do
negōtium agere – to do business
ānulus – the ring
cēra – the wax, the wax tablet
coquere – to cook
cūr? – why?
ē, ex – out of, from
ego – I
ēheu – alas! oh dear!
habēre – to have
inquit (no infinitive) – says
iūdex (accusative iūdicem) – the judge
mendāx (accusative mendācem) – the liar
nōs – we
pecūnia – the money
perterritus – terrified
poēta – the poet
quaerere – to search for, to look for
quis? – who?
reddere – to give back
satis – enough
sed – but
signum – the sign, the seal, the signal
tū – you (singular)
vēndere – to sell
vocāre – to call
vōs – you guys (plural)
For verbs starting this week, I am giving you the present active infinitive or just infinitive form of the verb. This is the one that translates to to + verb.
Also for nouns in the third declension, I am giving you their accusative singulars marked (accusative _____) in addition to their nominative singulars so you can decline them. This is just a short-term solution since I haven't taught you about principal parts yet. When we get to that, you won't have to worry about this. If you'd rather ignore the accusative singulars for now since using them for declension will be obsolete soon, that is totally fine.