You can have it display those endings, but seeing as they're Spanish, you might want to change them. :)
For the record, though, at least for verbs, Latin is astonishingly regular... I think there's something like seven or eight irregular verbs (velle, posse, esse, ferre, fieri, malle, ire, and dare or something). So even if you can't find a verb application, you can probably make your own cheat sheet without much trouble; most textbooks should have such a table in the back. (Nouns, that's another story.)
(quick edit: although some Latin verbs do have funky past tense stems, which would complicate things... for this reason, Latin dictionaries list the principal parts -- arm yourself with a dictionary and a verb chart)
yeah, i get that, i used the spanish to show what i was looking for... something that'd have charts set up with random verbs/nouns and where you fill in the endings based on person/case... regardless of german/spanish/por/latin...
Not verbs but also helpful, if you go to http://www.cambridgescp.com/ it has flash vocab drills of the vocab lists for A-level Latin in the UK, which are very well chosen, thorough and useful lists of vocab which give a very good base for reading literature.
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For the record, though, at least for verbs, Latin is astonishingly regular... I think there's something like seven or eight irregular verbs (velle, posse, esse, ferre, fieri, malle, ire, and dare or something). So even if you can't find a verb application, you can probably make your own cheat sheet without much trouble; most textbooks should have such a table in the back. (Nouns, that's another story.)
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