The reference here starts from Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar. It's a 1903 textbook, still the most thorough English-language treatment of classical Latin, and it's been in the public domain since 1958. Every topic page on antiq is anchored to specific sections of A&G, and those citations sit at the foot of each page so anyone can audit the source.
From those sections, antiq composes the page itself: a short orientation, the modern restatement of each rule, two or three annotated examples from Caesar, Vergil, or Cicero with role-tagged tokens, and a practice tab. The composition uses contemporary AI under a constrained framework that holds it to the cited source. That framework is mine, and so is the responsibility for what's published.
Built and edited by Baris Yildirim, Dartmouth ’25, Computer Science and Classics. The conviction behind antiq is that Latin students deserve a reference that pairs the depth of a 1903 reference grammar with the reading rhythm of contemporary teaching prose.