This course covers the material in the third and fourth volumes of the Ecce Romani series. The word-order method is the same. As the prose readings become more challenging, the student is encouraged to use intuition, common sense and English associations to predict the meanings of Latin words in context. There is a great emphasis on oral reading with proper attention to intelligent phrasing and intonation. New grammatical points are reinforced by translating English into Latin. Explanations in the text are concise and clear with little attention to peculiarities, exceptions, and technicalities that are used very rarely. Nevertheless, the traditional features of grammar are developed from the basis formed in the seventh grade course. The passive voice in all tenses is introduced along with the following topics: comparative and superlative adverbs and adjectives, deponent verbs, time and place constructions, the present active participle, various uses of the cases beyond the basic uses introduced in the seventh grade and gerunds. A wide variety of cultural topics is covered in English essays, which supplement the continuous Latin narrative about an upper class family's travels to Rome. These topics include dining, education, hospitality, the bustle of city life, the social and engineering