Relative Clause Drill for Fun and Profit.

1. And so we entrust our money to those who can expect good fortune.

Itaque pecuniam nostram eis bonam fortunam expectare possunt committimus.

2. At that difficult time men whose deeds I cannot praise came into our city.

Eô tempore difficilî virî facta laudâre nôn possum in urbem vênêrunt.

3. The tyrant destroyed the city into which those nine citizens had fled.

Tyrannus urbem dêlêvit in illî novem cîvês fûgerant.

4. The man whose friendship is worth nothing is himself nothing.

Vir amicitia nihil valet ipse nihil est.

5. Those for whom no error is a crime often will have wicked children.

Illî nullus error vitium est malôs fîliôs saepe habêbunt.

6. The king will overcome the dangers which we all fear.

Rex perîcula omnês timêmus superâbit.

7. I will entrust myself to the great man about whose fame the poets write many books.

Virô magnô dê fâmâ poêtae multôs librôs scrîbunt mê committam.

8. Tyrants destroy the rights of the citizens they capture.

Tyrannî iûra cîvium capiunt dêlent.

9. Tyrants destroy the rights of the citizens whose cities they capture.

Tyrannî iûra cîvium urbês capiunt.

10. The queen herself gave money to the mothers whose sons were brave and who had no others.

Ipsa regîna pecûniam mâtribus dabat fîliî fortês erant et aliôs nôn habêbant.