Award-Winning Latin
Tutors
Award-Winning
Latin
Tutors
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
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Classics majors don't just study Latin — they live in it, and Sarah's undergraduate work means she's spent years translating original texts across genres from poetry to philosophy. She teaches all four levels with particular strength in helping students internalize the subjunctive mood and indirect discourse, two areas where rote memorization fails but understanding the underlying logic pays off.

Peter's history degree means he's spent years working with primary sources where Latin isn't decorative — it's the language of legal charters, church records, and the political documents that shaped Western civilization. That historical grounding gives him a concrete reason to teach case endings and verb forms: students learn to parse real inscriptions and texts, not just textbook exercises. Rated 4.8 by students.
A college English professor with dual degrees in the field, Toni knows how deeply Latin roots and grammatical structures run through the English language — every lesson on cases, conjugations, or syntax doubles as a window into why English works the way it does. She teaches Latin as a discovery process, encouraging students to piece together translations by recognizing patterns rather than relying on word-for-word lookup. Her 4.9 rating speaks to how well that active, student-driven approach lands.
Trained in Latin and Italian philology at Palacký University in the Czech Republic, Petra brings a European classical education to a language most American students encounter only through textbooks — she learned Latin as a living system intertwined with Italian, tracing how derivatives and grammatical structures migrated from one language into the other. That dual-language fluency is especially useful for teaching vocabulary roots, verb conjugations, and the way Latin's case system laid the groundwork for Romance language grammar. Rated 4.9 by students.
Declining nouns and conjugating verbs is just the entry point — Kelsey's BA in Latin means she's spent years reading Virgil, Ovid, and Cicero in the original and understands the grammar at a structural level. She breaks down tricky constructions like ablative absolutes and indirect discourse by connecting them to how Latin authors actually used them, making the language feel purposeful instead of purely mechanical.
Classics majors don't just dabble in Latin — Rebecca is building her entire undergraduate degree around the language and its literary tradition, covering all four levels plus AP. That depth means she can walk a first-year student through basic conjugation patterns and then, in the next session, tackle the syntactic complexity of reading Vergil or Cicero in the original. Rated 5.0 by students.
Having tutored high school Latin students while studying English and journalism at the University of Pennsylvania, Amy knows how to bridge the gap between memorizing paradigm charts and actually reading Latin with confidence. She zeroes in on building the kind of grammatical intuition — recognizing how a subjunctive signals purpose, or why word order shifts in poetry — that turns translation from a grind into something that clicks.
Three years of peer tutoring in Latin gave Brooke a clear sense of where students get stuck: noun declensions blurring together, ablative absolute constructions, the difference between purpose and result clauses. She walks through translations methodically, connecting each grammatical structure to how Romans actually built their sentences.
Grace's AP Latin coursework and political science studies at Vanderbilt mean she's read Roman oratory and governance texts in their original language — the kind of dense, clause-heavy prose where getting ablative absolutes and indirect statements right actually matters. She brings that firsthand experience with politically charged Latin passages to her teaching, walking students through how to decode complex syntax by anchoring each grammatical choice in what the author was trying to argue.
Studying Classics alongside Physics at Vanderbilt means Dylan reads Latin daily as part of his actual degree work — not as a side interest but as a core discipline. That dual training sharpens his ability to teach grammar as a logical system, walking students through subjunctive constructions, indirect statements, and the kinds of prose passages where precision with every case ending matters.
Charles teaches both Latin 1 and Latin 2 alongside a full slate of English grammar and literature courses, which means he's constantly working at the intersection of Latin's grammatical structures and their echoes in modern English. That dual focus sharpens his ability to walk students through conjugation patterns and case endings by linking them to syntax rules they already use every day. His two years as a high school peer tutor built an instinct for spotting exactly where a translation starts to fall apart.
Studying Classics at Yale means Maddie doesn't just translate Latin — she lives inside the language, reading original Roman texts as part of her daily coursework across all four levels and beyond. Her Socratic instinct kicks in during translation work especially: rather than correcting a misidentified subjunctive or misread ablative, she asks targeted questions that lead students to catch the error themselves and internalize the grammar rule behind it.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Latin verbs change based on person, number, tense, mood, and voice—creating hundreds of forms that feel overwhelming without a strategic approach. A tutor breaks this down by teaching the underlying patterns (principal parts, tense stems, and endings) rather than memorizing lists, helping you recognize conjugations in actual texts and build confidence with forms like the subjunctive and perfect tense that often trip up students.
Reading authentic Latin requires managing long sentences with embedded clauses, understanding word order patterns, and recognizing rhetorical devices—skills that go far beyond basic grammar. A tutor guides you through sentence structure analysis, teaches you to identify key grammatical relationships, and builds your ability to parse difficult passages, making texts like the Gallic Wars or Catilinarian Orations genuinely comprehensible rather than frustrating.
Latin vocabulary sticks best when you encounter words repeatedly in context and understand their roots—which inform English, Spanish, French, and other languages. A tutor helps you build active vocabulary through reading practice, teaches you to recognize word families and prefixes/suffixes, and uses spaced repetition with actual Latin sentences rather than isolated lists, making retention natural and meaningful.
Classical Latin grammar rules sometimes don't match what authors actually wrote—Cicero breaks his own rules for rhetorical effect, and poetic Latin uses different conventions than prose. A skilled tutor teaches you the core rules first, then shows you how real authors use (and bend) those rules, helping you develop intuition for what's grammatically correct versus what's stylistically intentional.
While written Latin is the primary focus, proper pronunciation helps with memorization, meter recognition in poetry, and understanding how Romans actually spoke. A tutor can teach you the restored classical pronunciation system, help you hear the stress patterns that affect meaning, and practice reading aloud—skills that deepen your connection to the language and make scanning Latin verse much easier.
Latin texts are full of cultural references—political systems, religious practices, daily life details—that are essential to understanding what you're reading. A tutor weaves in historical and cultural context as you encounter texts, explaining references to Roman government, mythology, and society so you're not just translating words but actually comprehending the author's meaning and rhetorical purpose.
AP Latin exams test both translation accuracy and comprehension of unseen passages, requiring you to recognize grammatical structures quickly and understand author intent. A tutor builds your scanning speed, teaches you to identify key grammatical markers instantly, provides practice with unfamiliar texts, and helps you develop strategies for the multiple-choice comprehension section—all skills that go beyond classroom preparation.
Beginning Latin students need strong foundational grammar (cases, declensions, conjugations) and confidence-building through manageable texts; advanced students need to tackle complex syntax, develop translation nuance, and build reading speed with authentic authors. A tutor tailors instruction to your level—scaffolding fundamentals for beginners or pushing into subjunctive clauses, indirect statements, and stylistic analysis for students aiming for AP success or college placement.
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