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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Forgetting about right and wrong answers is where Latin actually starts — William treats translation as an act of interpretation, encouraging students to play with how a sentence's meaning shifts depending on how they read a subjunctive or resolve an ambiguous ablative. His BA in Classical Languages and Literature means he's spent years inside the original texts, not just parsing grammar exercises, and he also reads Ancient Greek, which sharpens his eye for the cross-linguistic patterns that make Latin's structures click. He covers all four levels plus the SAT Subject Test in Latin.

Psychology's technical vocabulary is packed with Latin — terms like "affect," "stimulus," "ego," and "corpus callosum" all come straight from the language, and Aneri's neuroscience coursework at Cornell means she hits these roots constantly. She teaches Latin 1 and 2 with a knack for turning conjugation and declension patterns into something systematic, drawing on the same analytical rigor that earned her a 1520 SAT. Her SAT Subject Test preparation in Latin adds direct experience with the kind of grammar and reading comprehension the language demands.
An honors thesis on linguistic relativity among bilinguals gave Mary a researcher's eye for how languages encode meaning differently — exactly the kind of thinking that makes Latin's case system and word order feel logical rather than arbitrary. She teaches all three levels and draws on her speech-language pathology training at Vanderbilt to break down how Latin's morphological patterns actually work at a structural level, not just as rules to memorize. Rated 5.0 by students.
Four years of Latin at Notre Dame — enough to earn a minor — gave Lauren deep fluency with declensions, conjugations, and the grammatical logic that makes translating Virgil or Caesar feel less like guesswork. She teaches students to parse sentence structure methodically, starting with verb identification and working outward, so even complex passages become manageable. Rated 5.0 by students.
Working in Sewanee's writing center gave Wallis a sharp eye for how Latin grammatical structures — particularly case usage and participial constructions — surface in English academic prose, making her explanations feel grounded rather than abstract. She also studied at the European University at St. Petersburg, where reading across languages reinforced the kind of close, syntax-level attention that Latin translation demands. Her Latin 1 and Latin 2 teaching covers foundational declensions through more complex sentence parsing.
Dennis's Latin studies through AP level sit alongside his physics and math work at Princeton — an unusual combination that means he treats Latin grammar the way he treats a physics problem, breaking complex sentence structures into their component parts and solving them systematically. He's especially effective with the kind of precise syntactic parsing that AP Latin demands, where identifying an ablative absolute or untangling a periodic sentence requires the same logical rigor as modeling turbulent plasmas.
As a Classics major at Carleton who aspires to teach high school Latin full-time, Emma has spent years immersed in the language — not just grammar drills, but reading original texts alongside Ancient Greek and the historical contexts that bring both languages to life. She covers all four levels plus AP Latin, and her weekly tutoring at a nearby high school means she's constantly refining how she explains everything from first-year noun declensions to the subjunctive constructions that trip up advanced students.
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.
Paula's psychology and communication studies background means she's constantly bumping into Latin roots — in clinical terminology, rhetorical frameworks, and the academic vocabulary that underpins both fields. She leans on that familiarity to make vocabulary acquisition and grammatical patterns feel connected to words students already use, turning declension drills into something closer to code-breaking. Rated 4.8 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.
Ruth's University of Chicago English degree and SAT Subject Test preparation in Latin mean she's spent serious time with the language's grammar, vocabulary, and literary roots — not just skimming declension charts but actually working through how Latin sentence structure operates. Her high school teaching background gives her a practical sense of where students get tripped up on things like verb conjugations and case identification, and she builds lessons that make those sticking points click. Rated 4.9 by students.
Latin's case system and verb conjugations can feel overwhelming until someone maps out the patterns clearly. Zora teaches declensions and syntax by showing how each grammatical structure signals meaning in a sentence, turning translation from a guessing game into a systematic process of decoding.
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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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