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AP Latin Exam Review

The AP Latin exam tests your ability to read, translate, and analyze real Latin from Vergil's Aeneid and Pliny's Letters, plus four Course Project passages, all under timed conditions. Use this guide to understand the format, plan your time, and focus your review on the skills that earn points.

This page covers exam format, question types, scoring, and a focused study plan. Use the topic guides and practice questions linked here to build fluency before exam day.

What is the AP Latin Exam?

AP Latin is built around two required authors and a yearlong Course Project. Every question on the exam, whether multiple choice or free response, asks you to do something with actual Latin: parse a form, translate a segment, identify a construction, or build a written argument from textual evidence.

The exam has two sections of equal weight. Section I is 52 multiple-choice questions mixing sight-reading and syllabus passages. Section II is 5 free-response questions covering short answer, translation, short essay, and two project passage essays. Knowing the format and timing for each question type is the first step to scoring well.

Section I: Multiple Choice

52 questions in 65 minutes, worth 50% of your score. The section mixes 20 discrete sight-reading questions with four short passage sets (sight prose, sight poetry, syllabus prose, syllabus poetry) of 3 questions each, plus additional longer passage sets. You need to read unfamiliar Latin and recall your Vergil and Pliny texts.

Section II: Free Response

5 questions in 115 minutes, worth 50% of your score. FRQs 1-3 (short answer, translation, short essay) draw on Vergil and Pliny and together count for 30% of your total score. FRQs 4 and 5 are project passage essays worth 9% each, built on your Course Project prose and poetry passages.

Course Project

Four College Board-selected passages studied throughout the year. Two in-class teacher-scored checkpoints count for 2% of your score. The real payoff is FRQs 4 and 5, which are built directly on one project prose and one project poetry passage. Together the project connects to roughly 20% of your exam score.

Reading Latin is the core skill

Every point on this exam, from a discrete MCQ about a participle to a project passage essay, requires you to read and understand Latin accurately. Grammar knowledge matters because it lets you parse forms and identify constructions quickly. Literary analysis matters because FRQs 3, 4, and 5 ask you to interpret the text and support claims with specific Latin evidence. Practice translating timed passages and writing concise analytical sentences from Latin evidence every week.

Exam review study guides

1

Multiple-Choice Questions

52 questions in 65 minutes covering sight-reading and syllabus passages from Vergil and Pliny. The topic guide breaks down question patterns, pacing strategy, and worked examples for both discrete and passage-set questions.

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2

FRQs 1-3: Short Answer, Translation, Short Essay

The three shorter FRQs run about 55 minutes and count for 30% of your score. The topic guide covers scoring, timing, and strategies for the 15-segment translation and the two-part short essay on Vergil and Pliny.

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3

FRQs 4-5: Project Passage Essays

Two 30-minute essays on your Course Project prose and poetry passages, worth 9% each. The topic guide explains the two-part format, what Part A and Part B graders look for, and how to use your year of project study efficiently.

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4

Course Project

Four College Board-selected passages studied all year, assessed through two teacher-scored checkpoints (2%) and tested directly in FRQs 4 and 5 (18%). The topic guide explains the checkpoint requirements and how to prepare your project passages for exam-day essays.

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5

AP Latin Score Calculator

Use the score calculator to estimate your AP score from your MCQ raw score and FRQ performance. Helpful for setting a target score and identifying how many more MCQ points or FRQ improvements you need.

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6

Is AP Latin Hard? Difficulty and Worth It Guide

Is AP Latin hard? See AP Latin difficulty, 2025 score data, revised 2026 exam format, project context, and a two-week study path.

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AP Latin Exam review notes

Exam format

MCQ Section: Structure and Pacing

The MCQ section runs 65 minutes for 52 questions, giving you roughly 75 seconds per question. The section is not purely discrete: it includes both standalone questions and short passage sets. Half the section uses sight-reading passages (Latin you have never seen), and half uses syllabus passages from Vergil and Pliny. Pacing matters because the passage sets reward careful reading, while discrete questions reward fast parsing.

  • Discrete sight-reading questions: 20 standalone questions on unfamiliar Latin, testing morphology, syntax, and vocabulary in context.
  • Short passage sets: Four sets of 3 questions each covering sight prose, sight poetry, syllabus prose, and syllabus poetry.
  • Longer passage sets: Additional MCQ sets built on longer Latin passages, requiring sustained reading comprehension.
  • Syllabus passages: Questions drawn from the required Vergil Aeneid excerpts and Pliny Letters you studied all year.
Can you identify the case, number, and function of a Latin noun or adjective in under 30 seconds? That speed is what the discrete MCQ questions demand.
Question typeApproximate countLatin source
Discrete sight-reading20Unfamiliar Latin
Short passage sets12 (4 sets x 3)Sight and syllabus mix
Longer passage sets~20Sight and syllabus mix
Exam format

FRQs 1-3: Short Answer, Translation, and Short Essay

FRQs 1-3 run roughly 55 minutes and count for 30% of your total score. Question 1 is a short-answer set of 6-8 subquestions on a syllabus passage, testing grammar identification and comprehension. Question 2 is a 15-segment translation of a syllabus passage, scored segment by segment. Question 3 is a two-part short essay asking you to analyze a passage and compare it to another syllabus text. All three draw on Vergil and Pliny.

  • Short Answer (Q1): 6-8 subquestions on a syllabus passage; tasks include identifying constructions, parsing forms, and answering comprehension questions. About 15 minutes.
  • Translation (Q2): 15 scored segments from a syllabus passage. Each segment is graded for accuracy. About 15 minutes, or roughly 1 minute per segment.
  • Short Essay (Q3): Two-part essay asking for literary analysis of a passage and a comparison to another syllabus text. About 25 minutes. Requires specific Latin evidence.
  • Scored segment: A discrete unit of the translation passage, typically a phrase or clause, graded independently so one error does not cascade.
For Q2, practice translating 15 segments in 15 minutes using actual syllabus lines. For Q3, practice writing one analytical claim supported by a Latin word or phrase in 2-3 sentences.
QuestionTaskTimeScore weight
Q1 Short AnswerGrammar ID and comprehension~15 minPart of 30%
Q2 Translation15 scored segments~15 minPart of 30%
Q3 Short EssayAnalysis and comparison~25 minPart of 30%
Exam format

FRQs 4-5: Project Passage Essays

FRQs 4 and 5 are each worth 9% of your total score and each allow roughly 30 minutes. Question 4 uses your prose project passage and Question 5 uses your poetry project passage, each about 100-150 words of Latin. Both follow a two-part structure: Part A tests reading comprehension of the passage, and Part B asks you to develop an interpretation and support it with specific evidence from the Latin text. Because you studied these passages all year, you should know them well enough to quote and analyze efficiently.

  • Project prose passage (Q4): One of the four Course Project passages, in prose; Part A checks comprehension, Part B requires interpretive analysis with Latin evidence.
  • Project poetry passage (Q5): One of the four Course Project passages, in poetry; same two-part structure as Q4.
  • Part A: Comprehension-focused subquestion; demonstrates that you can read and understand the passage accurately.
  • Part B: Interpretive essay subquestion; requires a claim about the text supported by specific Latin words or phrases.
For each project passage, practice writing a 3-4 sentence interpretive argument that quotes at least two specific Latin words or phrases and explains their significance.
QuestionPassage typeTimeScore weight
Q4Project prose~30 min9%
Q5Project poetry~30 min9%
Scoring

How the Exam Is Scored

The MCQ section and the FRQ section each count for 50% of your composite score. Within the FRQ section, FRQs 1-3 together account for 30% of your total score and FRQs 4-5 together account for 18%, with the two Course Project checkpoints adding 2%. The composite score is converted to the 1-5 AP scale. Use the score calculator available on this page to estimate your AP score from a raw MCQ count and FRQ performance.

  • Composite score: The weighted combination of MCQ and FRQ raw scores, converted to the 1-5 AP scale.
  • MCQ raw score: One point per correct answer; no penalty for wrong answers, so always guess.
  • FRQ holistic scoring: FRQ essays are scored on rubrics that reward accurate Latin reading, specific evidence, and clear analytical claims.
  • Course Project checkpoints: Two teacher-scored in-class assessments worth 2% of your total score, graded by your teacher using College Board guidelines.
Because there is no wrong-answer penalty on the MCQ, never leave a question blank. On FRQs, a partially correct translation segment still earns partial credit.
ComponentWeight
MCQ (52 questions)50%
FRQs 1-330%
FRQs 4-518%
Course Project checkpoints2%

Key terms

TermDefinition
Ablative AbsoluteA noun and participle in the ablative case that together express a circumstance (time, cause, or condition) separate from the main clause. Frequently tested in MCQ identification questions and FRQ short-answer subquestions.
indirect statementA construction in which a verb of thinking, saying, or perceiving introduces an accusative subject and an infinitive verb. Common in both Vergil and Pliny and frequently tested in MCQ and FRQ grammar identification.
Subjunctive MoodA verb mood used in subordinate clauses to express purpose, result, indirect questions, conditions, and other non-factual ideas. Identifying the type of subjunctive clause is a core MCQ and short-answer skill.
purpose clauseA subordinate clause introduced by ut (or ne for negative) with a subjunctive verb, expressing the goal of the main action. Distinguishing purpose from result clauses is a common exam task.
result clauseA subordinate clause introduced by ut with a subjunctive verb, expressing the outcome of the main action, often signaled by a word like tam, ita, or tantus in the main clause.
ParticipleA verbal adjective that modifies a noun and must agree with it in case, number, and gender. Present, perfect, and future participles all appear in syllabus and sight-reading passages and are tested in MCQ and FRQ questions.
gerundiveA verbal adjective expressing necessity or obligation, often used in the passive periphrastic construction (gerundive plus a form of esse). Appears in Pliny's Letters and is tested in grammar identification questions.
passive periphrasticA construction using the gerundive plus a form of esse to express obligation or necessity, equivalent to 'must be done.' The agent is expressed in the dative case.
Relative ClausesA dependent clause introduced by a relative pronoun (qui, quae, quod) that modifies a noun or pronoun. Agreement of the relative pronoun with its antecedent in gender and number is a frequent MCQ and short-answer task.
syntaxThe arrangement and function of words and phrases in a Latin sentence, including case usage, clause types, and word order. Understanding syntax is essential for both accurate translation and grammatical identification questions.
morphologyThe forms of Latin words, including noun declensions and verb conjugations. Rapid morphological parsing is the core skill for discrete MCQ questions and the FRQ translation.
Imperative MoodThe verb form used to give commands. Appears in both Vergil's epic speeches and Pliny's Letters, and is tested in morphology and comprehension questions.
indirect questionA subordinate clause introduced by an interrogative word with a subjunctive verb, reporting a question indirectly. Common in Pliny's prose and tested in grammar identification tasks.
ablative caseA Latin case with many functions including means, manner, accompaniment, separation, and agent in passive constructions. Identifying the specific ablative use is a frequent short-answer and MCQ task.

Common mistakes

Translating too literally on FRQ 2

The 15-segment translation is scored for accuracy and Latin comprehension, not for elegant English. Students who try to produce polished prose lose time and sometimes mistranslate. Aim for accurate, clear English that shows you understood the Latin syntax.

Skipping Latin evidence in essays

FRQs 3, 4, and 5 require specific Latin words or phrases to support your argument. A claim without Latin evidence earns few or no points on the interpretive part. Always quote the Latin, then explain what it shows.

Ignoring sight-reading practice

Students who only review their Vergil and Pliny texts are unprepared for the 20 discrete sight-reading MCQs and the sight-reading passage sets. Unfamiliar Latin requires the same parsing skills, applied without the safety net of a known text.

Mismanaging FRQ time

115 minutes for 5 questions sounds generous, but Q3 and Q4-5 essays can expand to fill all available time. Stick to the approximate times: 15 min for Q1, 15 min for Q2, 25 min for Q3, and 30 min each for Q4 and Q5.

Leaving MCQ questions blank

There is no wrong-answer penalty on the AP Latin MCQ. Every blank is a missed opportunity. If you are unsure, eliminate what you can and guess from the remaining options.

How this exam guide helps with AP prep

Grammar identification connects MCQ and FRQ

The same constructions tested in discrete MCQ questions, ablative absolute, indirect statement, subjunctive clauses, and participle agreement, also appear in FRQ 1 short-answer subquestions. Reviewing grammar for the MCQ directly improves your FRQ 1 performance.

Syllabus passage fluency pays off in three question types

Your Vergil and Pliny readings are tested in MCQ syllabus passage sets, FRQ 1 short answer, FRQ 2 translation, and FRQ 3 short essay. The more fluently you can read and recall these texts, the faster and more accurately you work across all four question types.

Course Project study is direct FRQ preparation

FRQs 4 and 5 are built on your project prose and poetry passages. Every annotation, translation, and interpretive note you made during the year is preparation for writing Part A and Part B responses under timed conditions. Students who know their project passages well have a significant advantage on 18% of the exam.

Review checklist

  • Know your syllabus passages coldYou should be able to locate, translate, and discuss any assigned excerpt from Vergil's Aeneid (Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 12) and the required Pliny Letters. MCQ passage sets and FRQs 1-3 draw directly from these texts.
  • Practice sight-reading timed LatinHalf the MCQ section is unfamiliar Latin. Use the 25+ practice questions available here to build the habit of parsing forms and reading for meaning quickly, without translating word by word.
  • Drill the 15-segment translation formatFor FRQ 2, practice translating a 15-segment syllabus passage in 15 minutes. Focus on accuracy per segment, since each segment is scored independently. One mistranslation does not ruin the whole question.
  • Write analytical sentences with Latin evidenceFRQs 3, 4, and 5 all require you to support claims with specific Latin words or phrases. Practice writing one claim plus one piece of Latin evidence plus one explanation in 2-3 sentences, timed.
  • Review your four Course Project passagesRe-read and annotate each project passage. For each one, prepare a short interpretive argument you could write in 10 minutes, with at least two specific Latin quotations ready to deploy.
  • Review high-frequency grammar constructionsAblative absolute, indirect statement, purpose clauses, result clauses, and subjunctive mood uses appear constantly in both MCQ and FRQ questions. Make sure you can identify and explain each one quickly.
  • Estimate your score and set a targetUse the score calculator to see where you stand. If you need to improve, identify whether your gap is in MCQ accuracy (grammar and sight-reading) or FRQ quality (translation precision and essay evidence) and focus there.

How to study AP latin exam

Week 1: Grammar and sight-readingSpend the first week reviewing the grammar constructions that appear most often in MCQ discrete questions: ablative absolute, indirect statement, subjunctive mood uses, purpose clauses, result clauses, and participle agreement. Use the practice questions available here to test yourself on unfamiliar Latin passages.
Week 2: Syllabus passage reviewRe-read and annotate your assigned Vergil and Pliny excerpts. For each passage, practice translating a 15-line section in 15 minutes, then write one analytical sentence with a Latin quotation. Focus on passages you remember least clearly.
Week 3: FRQ format practiceWork through the FRQ format for each question type. Practice a short-answer set (Q1), a timed 15-segment translation (Q2), and a two-part short essay (Q3). Review the topic guides for FRQs 1-3 to understand what each question type rewards.
Week 4: Course Project and project passage essaysRe-read all four Course Project passages and prepare an interpretive argument for each. Practice writing a Part A comprehension response and a Part B analytical paragraph for at least two of the passages. Review the FRQs 4-5 topic guide for scoring guidance.
Final days: Timed review and score estimationDo a timed MCQ set using the practice questions here, then use the score calculator to estimate your AP score. Identify your weakest area (sight-reading accuracy, translation precision, or essay evidence) and spend your last sessions there.

More ways to review

Topic study guides

Open the individual guides for AP Latin Exam when you want a closer review of one topic.

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FRQ practice

Practice free-response reasoning and compare your answer with scoring guidance.

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Cheatsheets

Use unit cheatsheets for a quick visual review after you work through the notes.

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Score calculator

Estimate your broader AP score goal after you review the course and exam format.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What's on the AP Latin progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The AP Latin progress check in AP Classroom includes both MCQ and FRQ parts that test your ability to read and analyze passages from Caesar's *Gallic War* and Vergil's *Aeneid*. The MCQ section asks you to translate, interpret, and identify literary and grammatical features. The FRQ section requires short translation passages and analytical responses about theme, style, and context. For matched practice questions and study guides, visit AP Latin Exam.

How do I practice AP Latin FRQs?

AP Latin FRQs focus on two main tasks: translating a passage from Caesar or Vergil accurately, and writing a analytical essay that compares Latin texts or discusses literary technique, meter, or theme. To practice, work through timed translations of *Gallic War* and *Aeneid* excerpts, then write short analytical responses explaining how Vergil uses imagery or how Caesar structures his narrative. Check AP Latin Exam for FRQ-style practice sets and scoring guidance.

Where can I find AP Latin practice questions?

You can find AP Latin multiple-choice and practice test questions at AP Latin Exam, which has MCQs covering grammar, translation, and literary analysis drawn from Caesar's *Gallic War* and Vergil's *Aeneid*. The page includes passage-based questions that mirror the real exam format, so you can practice both the reading comprehension and the close-analysis skills the test rewards.

How should I study for the AP Latin exam?

Start by reading your required Latin passages from Caesar's *Gallic War* and Vergil's *Aeneid* out loud, then translate them sentence by sentence without looking at notes. Review ablative absolute constructions, indirect statement, and subjunctive uses regularly since those grammar points appear constantly. Once your translation is solid, practice writing short analytical responses about Vergil's epic similes or Caesar's use of third-person narration. Timed practice is key: set a 15-minute timer for translation drills to build the speed the exam demands. Visit AP Latin Exam for study guides and practice sets organized by text and skill.

Ready to review AP Latin Exam?Start with the notes, check the topic cards, and use the practice or resource links when they are available for this course.