Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Made Simple

Latin Made Simple: A complete introductory course in Classical Latin

Rate this book
Latin Made Simple makes it easy to increase your understanding of the language and the many ways it has enriched our culture.

The perfect primer for anyone who wants to be able to read classical Latin or learn the basics to enhance their vocabulary, this complete course presents Latin grammar clearly and plainly. Void of all nonessentials and refreshingly easy to understand, Latin Made Simple


Complete Latin grammar
Extensive vocabulary
Review quizzes
Complete answer key
Practice readings
Examination of Latin words in the English language
Timeline of Roman History and Literature
A helpful verb chart
English/Latin Dictionary



Look for these Made Simple

Accounting Made Simple
Arithmetic Made Simple
Astronomy Made Simple
Biology Made Simple
Bookkeeping Made Simple
Business Letters Made Simple
Chemistry Made Simple
Computer Science Made Simple
Earth Science Made Simple
English Made Simple
French Made Simple
German Made Simple
Ingles Hecho Facil
Investing Made Simple
Italian Made Simple
Keyboarding Made Simple
Learning English Made Simple
Mathematics Made Simple
The Perfect Business Plan Made Simple
Philosophy Made Simple
Physics Made Simple
Psychology Made Simple
Sign Language Made Simple
Spanish Made Simple
Spelling Made Simple
Statistics Made Simple
Your Small Business Made Simple

400 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 1992

16 people are currently reading
79 people want to read

About the author

Doug Julius

2 books

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
7 (22%)
4 stars
11 (35%)
3 stars
10 (32%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
1 star
2 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Alan Crombie.
1 review
March 21, 2021
In thirty years of studying, teaching and researching five foreign languages – including Latin – I have never encountered a textbook worse than this one. I purchased a copy since I was writing a paper on Classics education and I was looking in particular at Chapters 9 and 10. These two chapters were littered with over seventy errors in the language itself. While a handful could be dismissed as typographical mistakes, the overwhelming majority were inaccuracies in case endings, verb endings, tenses, moods, spelling, non-existent forms, and English translations: these are the errors of an elementary student, not an author assigned to teach the subject. I cannot recall ever reading an academic work which contained a single error in the language it was designed to teach, let alone seventy in two chapters. It is an unmitigated disgrace on the part of both the author and the editor that this work has been permitted to be published in its current state. Those who have written reviews prior to this are learners: with respect, it is highly unlikely they would note the staggering number of flaws in these more advanced units. It is utterly inexcusable and will lead to the student’s confusion and frustration.
Authentic texts, while appropriately chosen, are presented with vocabulary lists, but nothing more. There are no explanations of the often complex syntactical features of the language in context, especially word order which, in the last two chapters at least, is not addressed at all. Explanations of more complex grammar, for example conditional clauses and subjunctive, have insufficient examples and, in places, the relationship between explanation and example are poorly laid out and misleading. It does not help that, in one instance, the example sentences contain the most blatant grammatical errors I have ever seen. It also does the author no credit to misspell the subject of one of the texts, and to provide an inaccurate source. Furthermore, there are numerous exercises where the sentences contradict the explanations i.e. they are simply wrong.
I am writing directly to the publishers with a full list of the errors uncovered so far. In the meantime, I would strongly advise against purchasing this book; if neither author nor editor can put in the effort to check what has been written, then do not put yourself in the position – as I have unwittingly done – of requiring to put the effort in yourself.
Profile Image for Barb.
118 reviews
June 1, 2011
A good introduction to Latin, this book works well for self study. The way the chapters are divided allows for a flexible pace. Answers are included at the back of the book. There are also a number of appendices with summaries of Latin grammar.

You will need a Latin dictionary to supplement the readings in later chapters. There are typos in some of the exercises, so it requires active studying.
Profile Image for Katy.
44 reviews
April 3, 2008
This book was more of reading and writing Latin. I wanted more on how to pronounce the words. To many other books to read right now to sit and study Latin. Good book though.
34 reviews
October 17, 2011
This is a really great textbook, and I'm using it as a supplement to my Latin I class this semester. There are a lot of translation exercises.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.