New Latin Grammar
New Latin Grammar
New Latin Grammar
Bennett
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Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW LATIN GRAMMAR ***
BY
CHARLES E. BENNETT
* * * * *
PREFACE.
C.E.B.
* * * * *
Apart from the foregoing, only minor and unessential modifications have
been introduced. In its main lines the work remains unchanged.
* * * * *
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
PART I.
PART II.
INFLECTIONS.
CHAPTER I.--_Declension._
A. NOUNS. Sec. 10
B. ADJECTIVES. Sec. 62
C. PRONOUNS. Sec. 82
PART III.
PART IV.
WORD FORMATION.
PART V.
SYNTAX.
CHAPTER I.--_Sentences._
CHAPTER VI.--_Particles._
PART VI.
* * * * *
* * * * *
INTRODUCTION.
c. _The Armenian_, spoken in Armenia, the district near the Black Sea and
Caucasus Mountains. This is closely related to the Iranian, and was
formerly classified under that group. It is now recognized as entitled to
independent rank. The earliest literary productions of the Armenian
language date from the fourth and fifth centuries of the Christian era. To
this period belong the translation of the Scriptures and the old Armenian
Chronicle. The Armenian is still a living language, though spoken in widely
separated districts, owing to the scattered locations in which the
Armenians are found to-day.
f. _The Italic Group._ The Italic Group embraces the Umbrian, spoken in the
northern part of the Italian peninsula (in ancient Umbria); the Latin,
spoken in the central part (in Latium); the Oscan, spoken in the southern
part (in Samnium, Campania, Lucania, etc.). Besides these, there were a
number of minor dialects, such as the Marsian, Volscian, etc. Of all these
(barring the Latin), there are no remains except a few scanty inscriptions.
Latin literature begins shortly after 250 B.C. in the works of Livius
Andronicus, Naevius, and Plautus, although a few brief inscriptions are
found belonging to a much earlier period.
As to the size and extent of the original tribe whence the Indo-European
languages have sprung, we can only speculate. It probably was not large,
and very likely formed a compact racial and linguistic unit for centuries,
possibly for thousands of years.
The time at which Indo-European unity ceased and the various individual
languages began their separate existence, is likewise shrouded in
obscurity. When we consider that the separate existence of the Sanskrit may
antedate 2500 B.C., it may well be believed that people speaking the
Indo-European parent-speech belonged to a period as far back as 5000 B.C.,
or possibly earlier.
a. _The Preliterary Period_, from the earliest times down to 240 B.C., when
Livius Andronicus brought out his first play. For this period our knowledge
of Latin depends almost exclusively upon the scanty inscriptions that have
survived from this remote time. Few of these are of any length.
b. _The Archaic Period_, from Livius Andronicus (240 B.C.) to Cicero (81
B.C.). Even in this age the language had already become highly developed as
a medium of expression. In the hands of certain gifted writers it had even
become a vehicle of power and beauty. In its simplicity, however, it
naturally marks a contrast with the more finished diction of later days. To
this period belong:
c. _The Golden Age_, from Cicero (81 B.C.) to the death of Augustus (14
A.D.). In this period the language, especially in the hands of Cicero,
reaches a high degree of stylistic perfection. Its vocabulary, however, has
not yet attained its greatest fullness and range. Traces of the diction of
the Archaic Period are often noticed, especially in the poets, who
naturally sought their effects by reverting to the speech of olden times.
Literature reached its culmination in this epoch, especially in the great
poets of the Augustan Age. The following writers belong here:
Lucretius, about 95-55 B.C. (Poem on Epicurean Philosophy).
Catullus, 87-about 54 B.C. (Poet).
Cicero, 106-43 B.C. (Orations; Rhetorical Works; Philosophical Works;
Letters).
Caesar, 102-44 B.C. (Commentaries on Gallic and Civil Wars),
Sallust, 86-36 B.C. (Historian).
Nepos, about 100-about 30 B.C. (Historian).
Virgil, 70-19 B.C. ("Aeneid"; "Georgics"; "Bucolics").
Horace, 65-8 B.C. (Odes; Satires, Epistles).
Tibullus, about 54-19 B.C. (Poet).
Propertius, about 50-about 15 B.C. (Poet).
Ovid, 43 B.C.-17 A.D. ("Metamorphoses" and other poems).
Livy. 59 B.C.-17 A.D. (Historian).
d. _The Silver Latinity_, from the death of Augustus (14 A.D.) to the death
of Marcus Aurelius (180 A.D.), This period is marked by a certain reaction
against the excessive precision of the previous age. It had become the
practice to pay too much attention to standardized forms of expression, and
to leave too little play to the individual writer. In the healthy reaction
against this formalism, greater freedom of expression now manifests itself.
We note also the introduction of idioms from the colloquial language, along
with many poetical words and usages. The following authors deserve mention:
f. _The Period of the Decline_, from 180 to the close of literary activity
in the sixth century A.D. This period is characterized by rapid and radical
alterations in the language. The features of the conversational idiom of
the lower strata of society invade the literature, while in the remote
provinces, such as Gaul, Spain, Africa, the language suffers from the
incorporation of local peculiarities. Representative writers of this period
are:
* * * * *
PART I.
* * * * *
* * * * *
THE ALPHABET.
1. The Latin Alphabet is the same as the English, except that the Latin has
no w.
2. With the Romans, who regularly employed only capitals, I served both as
vowel and consonant; so also V. For us, however, it is more convenient to
distinguish the vowel and consonant sounds, and to write i and u for the
former, j and v for the latter. Yet some scholars prefer to employ i and u
in the function of consonants as well as vowels.
CLASSIFICATION OF SOUNDS.
Labials, p, b, ph.
Dentals (or Linguals), t, d, th.
Gutturals (or Palatals), c, k, q, g, ch.
6. The Nasals are m, n. These were voiced. Besides its ordinary sound, n,
when followed by a guttural mute also had another sound,--that of ng in
_sing_,--the so-called n _adulterinum_; as,--
10. The following table will indicate the relations of the consonant
sounds:--
1. Vowels.
2. Diphthongs.
3. Consonants.
v like _w_.
z uncertain in sound; possibly like Eng. _zd_, possibly like _z_. The
latter sound is recommended.
The aspirates ph, ch, th were pronounced very nearly like our stressed
Eng. _p_, c, _t_--so nearly so, that, for practical purposes, the latter
sounds suffice.
Doubled letters, like ll, mm, tt, etc., should be so pronounced that both
members of the combination are distinctly articulated.
SYLLABLES.
4. There are as many syllables in a Latin word as there are separate vowels
and diphthongs.
2. Doubled consonants, like tt, ss, etc., are always separated; as, vit-ta,
mis-sus.
QUANTITY.
5. A. Quantity of Vowels.
1. A vowel is long,[6]--
2. A vowel is short,--
a) before nt, nd; as, amant, amandus. A few exceptions occur in compounds
whose first member has a long vowel; as, nondum (non dum).
B. Quantity of Syllables.
1. A syllable is long,[7]--
ACCENT.
6. 1. Words of two syllables are accented upon the first; as, tegit,
mo'rem.
2. Words of more than two syllables are accented upon the penult (next to
the last) if that is a long syllable, otherwise upon the antepenult (second
from the last); as, ama'vi, amantis, miserum.
3. When the enclitics -que, -ne, -ve, -ce, -met, -dum are appended to
words, if the syllable preceding the enclitic is long (either originally or
as a result of adding the enclitic) it is accented; as, misero'que,
hominisque. But if the syllable still remains short after the enclitic has
been added, it is not accented unless the word originally took the accent
on the antepenult. Thus, portaque; but miseraque.
4. Sometimes the final -e of -ne and -ce disappears, but without affecting
the accent; as, tanto'n, isti'c, illu'c.
VOWEL CHANGES.[9]
7.. 1. In Compounds,
d) ae becomes i; as,--
So periculum, saeculum.
CONSONANT CHANGES[10]
actus (ag-tus).
c) m before a dental or guttural becomes n; as,--
PECULIARITIES OF ORTHOGRAPHY.
2. In some words the orthography varies at one and the same period of the
language. Examples are exspecto, expecto; exsisto, existo; epistula,
epistola; adulescens, adolescens; paulus, paullus; cottidie, cotidie; and,
particularly, prepositional compounds, which often made a concession to the
etymology in the spelling; as,--
4. Adjectives and nouns in -quus, -quum; -vus, -vum; -uus, -uum preserved
the earlier forms in -quos, -quom; -vos, -vom; -uos, -uom, down through the
Ciceronian age; as, antiquos, antiquom; saevos; perpetuos; equos; servos.
Similarly verbs in the 3d plural present indicative exhibit the
terminations -quont, -quontur; -vont, -vontur; -uont, -uontur, for the same
period; as, relinquont, loquontur; vivont, metuont.
* * * * *
PART II.
* * * * *
INFLECTIONS.
* * * * *
10. The Parts of Speech in Latin are the same as in English, viz. Nouns,
Adjectives, Pronouns, Verbs, Adverbs, Prepositions, Conjunctions, and
Interjections; but the Latin has no article.
11. Of these eight parts of speech the first four are capable of
Inflection, i.e. of undergoing change of form to express modifications of
meaning. In case of Nouns, Adjectives, and Pronouns, this process is called
Declension; in case of verbs, Conjugation.
* * * * *
CHAPTER I.--_Declension._
A. NOUNS.
1. Nouns are either Proper or Common. Proper nouns are permanent names of
persons or places; as, Caesar, Roma. Other nouns are Common: as, penna,
virtus.
a) Concrete nouns are those which designate individual objects; as, mons,
_mountain_; pes, _foot_; dies, _day_; mens, _mind_.
Under concrete nouns are included, also, collective nouns; as, legio,
_legion_; comitatus, _retinue_.
GENDER OF NOUNS.
Natural Gender.
14. The gender of nouns is natural when it is based upon sex. Natural
gender is confined entirely to names of persons; and these are--
Grammatical Gender.
2. Names of _Trees_, and such names of _Towns_ and _Islands_ as end in -us,
are Feminine; as,--
quercus, _oak_; Corinthus, _Corinth_; Rhodus, _Rhodes_.
Other names of towns and islands follow the gender of their endings (see
_B_, below); as,--
NUMBER.
16. The Latin has two Numbers,--the Singular and Plural. The Singular
denotes one object, the Plural, more than one.
CASES.
2. OBLIQUE CASES. The Genitive, Dative, Accusative, and Ablative are called
Oblique Cases.
18. There are five Declensions in Latin, distinguished from each other by
the final letter of the Stem, and also by the Termination of the Genitive
Singular, as follows:--
3. In Neuters the Accusative and Nominative are always alike, and in the
Plural end in -a.
* * * * *
FIRST DECLENSION.
a-Stems.
20. Pure Latin nouns of the First Declension regularly end, in the
Nominative Singular, in -a, weakened from -a, and are of the Feminine
Gender. They are declined as follows:--
SINGULAR.
CASES. MEANINGS. TERMINATIONS.
_Nom._ porta _a gate_ (as subject) -a
_Gen._ portae _of a gate_ -ae
_Dat._ portae _to_ or _for a gate_ -ae
_Acc._ portam _a gate_ (as object) -am
_Voc._ porta _O gate!_ -a
_Abl._ porta _with, by, from, in a gate_ -a
PLURAL.
_Nom._ portae _gates_ (as subject) -ae
_Gen._ portarum _of gates_ -arum
_Dat._ portis _to_ or _for gates_ -is
_Acc._ portas _gates_ (as object) -as
_Voc._ portae _O gates!_ -ae
_Abl._ portis _with, by, from, in gates_ -is
1. The Latin has no article, and porta may mean either _a gate_ or _the
gate_; and in the Plural, _gates_ or _the gates_.
Peculiarities of Nouns of the First Declension.
21. 1. EXCEPTIONS IN GENDER. Nouns denoting males are Masculine; as, nauta,
_sailor_; agricola, _farmer_; also, Hadria, _Adriatic Sea_.
2. Rare Case-Endings,--
e) Instead of the regular ending -is, we usually find -abus in the Dative
and Ablative Plural of dea, _goddess_, and filia, _daughter_, especially
when it is important to distinguish these nouns from the corresponding
forms of deus, _god_, and filius, _son_. A few other words sometimes have
the same peculiarity; as, libertabus (from liberta, _freedwoman_),
equabus (_mares_), to avoid confusion with libertis (from libertus,
_freedman_) and equis (from equus, _horse_).
Greek Nouns.
22. These end in -e (Feminine); -as and -es (Masculine). In the Plural they
are declined like regular Latin nouns of the First Declension. In the
Singular they are declined as follows:--
1. But most Greek nouns in -e become regular Latin nouns in -a, and are
declined like porta; as, grammatica, _grammar_; musica, _music_; rhetorica,
_rhetoric_.
* * * * *
SECOND DECLENSION.
o-Stems.
23. Pure Latin nouns of the Second Declension end in -us, -er, -ir,
Masculine; -um, Neuter. Originally -us in the Nominative of the Masculine
was -os; and -um of the Neuters -om. So also in the Accusative.
Nouns in -us and -um are declined as follows:--
PLURAL.
_Nom._ horti -i bella -a
_Gen._ hortorum -orum bellorum -orum
_Dat._ hortis -is bellis -is
_Acc._ hortos -os bella -a
_Voc._ horti -i bella -a
_Abl._ hortis -is bellis -is
PLURAL.
_Nom._ pueri agri viri -i
_Gen._ puerorum agrorum virorum -orum
_Dat._ pueris agris viris -is
_Acc._ pueros agros viros -os
_Voc._ pueri agri viri -i
_Abl._ pueris agris viris -is
1. Note that in words of the type of puer and vir the final vowel of the
stem has disappeared in the Nominative and Vocative Singular.
2. The following nouns in -er are declined like puer: adulter, _adulterer_;
gener, _son-in-law_; Liber, _Bacchus_; socer, _father-in-law_; vesper,
_evening_; and compounds in -fer and -ger, as signifer, armiger.
24. Nouns ending in the Nominative Singular in -vus, -vum, -quus, exhibited
two types of inflection in the classical Latin,--an earlier and a
later,--as follows:--
2. Nouns in -ius and -ium, until after the beginning of the reign of
Augustus (31 B.C.), regularly formed the Genitive Singular in -i (instead
of -ii); as,--
_Nom._ di (dei)
_Gen._ deorum (deum)
_Dat._ dis (deis)
_Acc._ deos
_Voc._ di (dei)
_Abl._ dis (deis)
alvus, _belly_;
carbasus, _flax_;
colus, _distaff_;
humus, _ground_;
vannus, _winnowing-fan_.
atomus, _atom_;
diphthongus, _diphthong_.
pelagus, _sea_;
virus, _poison_;
vulgus, _crowd_.
27. These end in -os, -os, Masculine or Feminine; and -on, Neuter. They are
mainly proper names, and are declined as follows:--
3. For other rare forms of Greek nouns the lexicon may be consulted.
* * * * *
THIRD DECLENSION.
28. Nouns of the Third Declension end in -a, -e, -i, -o, -y, -c, -l, -n,
-r, -s, -t, -x. The Third Declension includes several distinct classes of
Stems,--
I. Pure Consonant-Stems.
II. i-Stems.
III. Consonant-Stems which have partially adapted themselves to the
inflection of i-Stems.
IV. A very few stems ending in a long vowel or a diphthong.
V. Irregular Nouns.
I. Consonant-Stems.
29. 1. In these the stem appears in its unaltered form in all the oblique
cases, so that the actual case-endings may be clearly recognized.
_A. Mute-Stems._
SINGULAR. TERMINATION.
_Nom._ princeps -s
_Gen._ principis -is
_Dat._ principi -i
_Acc._ principem -em
_Voc._ princeps -s
_Abl._ principe -e
PLURAL.
_Nom._ principes -es
_Gen._ principum -um
_Dat._ principibus -ibus
_Acc._ principes -es
_Voc._ principes -es
_Abl._ principibus -ibus
32. In these the termination -s of the Nominative Singular unites with the
guttural, thus producing -x.
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ vigil victor aequor
_Gen._ vigilis victoris aequoris
_Dat._ vigili victori aequori
_Acc._ vigilem victorem aequor
_Voc._ vigil victor aequor
_Abl._ vigile victore aequore
PLURAL.
_Nom._ vigiles victores aequora
_Gen._ vigilum victorum aequorum
_Dat._ vigilibus victoribus aequoribus
_Acc._ vigiles victores aequora
_Voc._ vigiles victores aequora
_Abl._ vigilibus victoribus aequoribus
1. Masculine and Feminine stems ending in a liquid form the Nominative and
Vocative Singular without termination.
35. These end in -n,[13] which often disappears in the Nom. Sing.
_D. s-Stems._
36. Mos, m. Genus, n., Honor, m.,
_custom_. _race_. _honor_.
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ mos genus honor
_Gen._ moris generis honoris
_Dat._ mori generi honori
_Acc._ morem genus honorem
_Voc._ mos genus honor
_Abl._ more genere honore
PLURAL.
_Nom._ mores genera honores
_Gen._ morum generum honorum
_Dat._ moribus generibus honoribus
_Acc._ mores genera honores
_Voc._ mores genera honores
_Abl._ moribus generibus honoribus
1. Note that the final s of the stem becomes r (between vowels) in the
oblique cases. In many words (honor, color, and the like) the r of the
oblique cases has, by analogy, crept into the Nominative, displacing the
earlier s, though the forms honos, colos, etc., also occur, particularly in
early Latin and in poetry.
II. i-Stems.
37. These regularly end in -is in the Nominative Singular, and always have
-ium in the Genitive Plural. Originally the Accusative Singular ended in
-im, the Ablative Singular in -i, and the Accusative Plural in -is; but
these endings have been largely displaced by -em, -e, and -es, the endings
of Consonant-Stems.
SINGULAR. TERMINATION.
_Nom._ tussis ignis hostis -is
_Gen._ tussis ignis hostis -is
_Dat._ tussi igni hosti -i
_Acc._ tussim ignem hostem -im, -em
_Voc._ tussis ignis hostis -is
_Abl._ tussi igni or e hoste -i, -e
PLURAL.
_Nom._ tusses ignes hostes -es
_Gen._ tussium ignium hostium -ium
_Dat._ tussibus ignibus hostibus -ibus
_Acc._ tussis or -es ignis or -es hostis or -es -is, -es
_Voc._ tusses ignes hostes -es
_Abl._ tussibus ignibus hostibus -ibus
Words marked with a star regularly have Acc. -im; those marked with a +
regularly have Abl. -i. Of the others, many at times show -im and -i. Town
and river names in -is regularly have -im, -i.
2. Not all nouns in -is are i-Stems. Some are genuine consonant-stems, and
have the regular consonant terminations throughout, notably, canis, _dog_;
juvenis, _youth_.[14]
39. These end in the Nominative Singular in -e, -al, and -ar. They always
have -i in the Ablative Singular, -ia in the Nominative, Accusative, and
Vocative Plural, and -ium in the Genitive Plural, thus holding more
steadfastly to the i-character than do Masculine and Feminine i-Stems.
SINGULAR. TERMINATION.
_Nom._ sedile animal calcar -e or wanting
_Gen._ sedilis animalis calcaris -is
_Dat._ sedili animali calcari -i
_Acc._ sedile animal calcar -e or wanting
_Voc._ sedile animal calcar -e or wanting
_Abl._ sedili animali calcari -i
PLURAL.
_Nom._ sedilia animalia calcaria -ia
_Gen._ sedilium animalium calcarium -ium
_Dat._ sedilibus animalibus calcaribus -ibus
_Acc._ sedilia animalia calcaria -ia
_Voc._ sedilia animalia calcaria -ia
_Abl._ sedilibus animalibus calcaribus -ibus
1. In most words of this class the final -i of the stem is lost in the
Nominative Singular; in others it appears as -e.
2. Proper names in -e form the Ablative Singular in -e; as, Soracte, _Mt.
Soracte_; so also sometimes mare, _sea_.
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ caedes arx linter
_Gen._ caedis arcis lintris
_Dat._ caedi arci lintri
_Acc._ caedem arcem lintrem
_Voc._ caedes arx linter
_Abl._ caede arce lintre
PLURAL.
_Nom._ caedes arces lintres
_Gen._ caedium arcium lintrium
_Dat._ caedibus arcibus lintribus
_Acc._ caedes, -is arces, -is lintres, -is
_Voc._ caedes arces lintres
_Abl._ caedibus arcibus lintribus
a) Nouns in -es, with Genitive in -is; as, nubes, aedes, clades, etc.
d) Uter, venter; fur, lis, mas, mus, nix; and the Plurals fauces,
penates, Optimates, Samnites, Quirites.
41. Vis, f., Sus, c., Bos, c., _ox_, Juppiter, m.,
_force_; _swine_; _cow_; _Jupiter_;
stem, vi-. stem, su-. stem, bou-. stem, Jou-.
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ vis sus bos Juppiter
_Gen._ ---- suis bovis Jovis
_Dat._ ---- sui bovi Jovi
_Acc._ vim suem bovem Jovem
_Voc._ vis sus bos Juppiter
_Abl._ vi sue bove Jove
PLURAL.
_Nom._ vires sues boves
_Gen._ virium suum bovum, boum
_Dat._ viribus suibus, subus bobus, bubus
_Acc._ vires sues boves
_Voc._ vires sues boves
_Abl._ viribus suibus, subus bobus, bubus
1. Notice that the oblique cases of sus have u in the root syllable.
2. Grus is declined like sus, except that the Dative and Ablative Plural
are always gruibus.
Navis was originally a diphthong stem ending in au-, but it has passed over
to the i-stems (Sec. 37). Its ablative often ends in -i.
V. Irregular Nouns.
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ senex caro os
_Gen._ senis carnis ossis
_Dat._ seni carni ossi
_Acc._ senem carnem os
_Voc._ senex caro os
_Abl._ sene carne osse
PLURAL.
_Nom._ senes carnes ossa
_Gen._ senum carnium ossium
_Dat._ senibus carnibus ossibus
_Acc._ senes carnes ossa
_Voc._ senes carnes ossa
_Abl._ senibus carnibus ossibus
3. Jecur, n., _liver_, forms its oblique cases from two stems,--jecor- and
jecinor-. Thus, Gen. jecoris or jecinoris.
4. Femur, n., _thigh_, usually forms its oblique cases from the stem
femor-, but sometimes from the stem femin-. Thus, Gen. femoris or feminis.
2. Nouns in -as, -es, -is, -ys, -x, -s (preceded by a consonant); -do, -go
(Genitive -inis); -io (abstract and collective), -us (Genitive -atis or
-udis) are Feminine.
3. Nouns ending in -a, -e, -i, -y, -o, -l, -n, -t, -ar, -ur, -us are
Neuter.
1. Nouns in -o.
2. Nouns in -or.
3. Nouns in -os.
4. Nouns in -er.
5. Nouns in -es.
1. Nouns in -as.
2. Nouns in -es.
3. Nouns in -is.
a. Masculine: all nouns in -nis and -guis; as, amnis, _river_; ignis,
_fire_; panis, _bread_; sanguis, _blood_; unguis, _nail_.
Also--
6. Nouns in -do.
1. Nouns in -l.
2. Nouns in -n.
3. Nouns in -ur.
4. Nouns in -us.
5. Neuters in -ma (Genitive -matis) have -is instead of -ibus in the Dative
and Ablative Plural; as, poematis, _poems_.
6. Orpheus, and other proper names ending in -eus, form the Vocative
Singular in -eu (Orpheu, etc.). But in prose the other cases usually follow
the second declension; as, Orphei, Orpheo, etc.
7. Proper names in -es, like Pericles, form the Genitive Singular sometimes
in -is, sometimes in -i, as, Periclis or Pericli.
* * * * *
FOURTH DECLENSION.
_u_-Stems.
48. Nouns of the Fourth Declension end in -us Masculine, and -u Neuter.
They are declined as follows:--
49. 1. Nouns in -us, particularly in early Latin, often form the Genitive
Singular in -i, following the analogy of nouns in -us of the Second
Declension; as, senati, ornati. This is usually the case in Plautus and
Terence.
3. The ending -ubus, instead of -ibus, occurs in the Dative and Ablative
Plural of artus (Plural), _limbs_; tribus, _tribe_; and in dis-syllables in
-cus; as, artubus, tribubus, arcubus, lacubus. But with the exception of
tribus, all these words admit the forms in -ibus as well as those in -ubus.
5. The only Neuters of this declension in common use are: cornu, _horn_;
genu, _knee_; and veru, _spit_.
50. The following nouns in -us are Feminine: acus, _needle_; domus,
_house_; manus, _hand_; porticus, _colonnade_; tribus, _tribe_; Idus
(Plural), _Ides_; also names of trees (Sec. 15, 2).
* * * * *
FIFTH DECLENSION.
e-Stems.
51. Nouns of the Fifth Declension end in -es, and are declined as
follows:--
52. 1. The ending of the Genitive and Dative Singular is -ei, instead of
-ei, when a consonant precedes; as, spei, rei, fidei.
4. With the exception of dies and res, most nouns of the Fifth Declension
are not declined in the Plural. But acies, series, species, spes, and a few
others are used in the Nominative and Accusative Plural.
53. Nouns of the Fifth Declension are regularly Feminine, except dies,
_day_, and meridies, _mid-day_. But dies is sometimes Feminine in the
Singular, particularly when it means an _appointed day_.
* * * * *
DEFECTIVE NOUNS.
4. Indeclinable Nouns.
55. Many nouns, from the nature of their signification, are regularly used
in the Singular only. Thus:--
4. But the above classes of words are sometimes used in the Plural. Thus:--
3. Many special words, of which the following are the most important:--
57. 1. Used in only One Case. Many nouns of the Fourth Declension are found
only in the Ablative Singular as, jussu, _by the order_; injussu, _without
the order_; natu, _by birth_.
3. Used in Three Cases. Nemo, _no one_ (Nom.), has also the Dat. nemini and
the Acc. neminem. The Gen. and Abl. are supplied by the corresponding cases
of nullus; viz. nullius and nullo.
4. Impetus has the Nom., Acc., and Abl. Sing., and the Nom. and Acc. Plu.;
viz. impetus, impetum, impetu, impetus.
5. a. Preci, precem, prece, lacks the Nom. and Gen. Sing.
7. Many monosyllables of the Third Declension lack the Gen. Plu.: as, cor,
lux, sol, aes, os (oris), rus, sal, tus.
Indeclinable Nouns.
1. With the exception of mane (which may serve also as Ablative, _in the
morning_), the nouns in this list are simply Neuters confined in use to the
Nominative and Accusative Singular.
Heteroclites.
59. These are nouns whose forms are partly of one declension, and partly of
another. Thus:--
1. Several nouns have the entire Singular of one declension, while the
Plural is of another; as,--
a) Many nouns of the First Declension ending in -ia take also a Nom. and
Acc. of the Fifth; as, materies, materiem, _material_, as well as
materia, materiam.
b) Fames, _hunger_, regularly of the Third Declension, has the Abl. fame
of the Fifth.
Heterogeneous Nouns.
2. Other nouns have one gender in the Singular, another in the Plural;
as,--
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
balneum, n., _bath_; balneae, f., _bath-house_.
epulum, n., _feast_; epulae, f., _feast_.
frenum, n., _bridle_; freni, m.(rarely frena, n.), _bridle_.
jocus, m., _jest_; joca, n. (also joci, m.), _jests_.
locus, m., _place_; loca, n., _places_; loci, m., _passages
or topics in an author_.
rastrum, n., _rake_; rastri, m.; rastra, n., _rakes_.
61. The following nouns have one meaning in the Singular, and another in
the Plural:--
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
aedes, _temple_; aedes, _house_.
auxilium, _help_; auxilia, _auxiliary troops_.
carcer, _prison_; carceres, _stalls for racing-chariot_.
castrum, _fort_; castra, _camp_.
copia, _abundance_; copiae, _troops_, _resources_.
finis, _end_; fines, _borders_, _territory_.
fortuna, _fortune_; fortunae, _possessions_, _wealth_.
gratia, _favor_, gratiae, _thanks_.
_gratitude_;
impedimentum, impedimenta, _baggage_.
_hindrance_;
littera, _letter_ (of the litterae, _epistle; literature_.
alphabet);
mos, _habit_, _custom_; mores, _character_.
opera, _help_, _service_; operae, _laborers_.
(ops) opis, _help_; opes, _resources_.
pars, _part_; partes, _party_; _role_.
sal, _salt_; sales, _wit_.
* * * * *
B. ADJECTIVES.
62. Adjectives denote _quality_. They are declined like nouns, and fall
into two classes,--
* * * * *
63. In these the Masculine is declined like hortus, puer, or ager, the
Feminine like porta, and the Neuter like bellum. Thus, Masculine like
hortus:--
Bonus, _good_.
SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ bonus bona bonum
_Gen._ boni bonae boni
_Dat._ bono bonae bono
_Acc._ bonum bonam bonum
_Voc._ bone bona bonum
_Abl._ bono bona bono
PLURAL.
_Nom._ boni bonae bona
_Gen._ bonorum bonarum bonorum
_Dat._ bonis bonis bonis
_Acc._ bonos bonas bona
_Voc._ boni bonae bona
_Abl._ bonis bonis bonis
1. The Gen. Sing. Masc. and Neut. of Adjectives in -ius ends in -ii (not in
-i as in case of Nouns; see Sec. 25, 1; 2). So also the Voc. Sing. of such
Adjectives ends in -ie, not in i. Thus eximius forms Gen. eximii; Voc.
eximie.
2. Distributives (see Sec. 78, 1, c) regularly form the Gen. Plu. Masc. and
Neut. in -um instead of -orum (compare Sec. 25, 6); as, denum centenum; but
always singulorum.
Tener, _tender_.
SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE NEUTER.
_Nom._ tener tenera tenerum
_Gen._ teneri tenerae teneri
_Dat._ tenero tenerae tenero
_Acc._ tenerum teneram tenerum
_Voc._ tener tenera tenerum
_Abl._ tenero tenera tenero
PLURAL.
_Nom._ teneri tenerae tenera
_Gen._ tenerorum tenerarum tenerorum
_Dat._ teneris teneris teneris
_Acc._ teneros teneras tenera
_Voc._ teneri tenerae tenera
_Abl._ teneris teneris teneris
Sacer, _sacred_.
SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ sacer sacra sacrum
_Gen._ sacri sacrae sacri
_Dat._ sacro sacrae sacro
_Acc._ sacrum sacram sacrum
_Voc._ sacer sacra sacrum
_Abl._ sacro sacra sacro
PLURAL.
_Nom._ sacri sacrae sacra
_Gen._ sacrorum sacrarum sacrorum
_Dat._ sacris sacris sacris
_Acc._ sacros sacras sacra
_Voc._ sacri sacrae sacra
_Abl._ sacris sacris sacris
1. Most adjectives in -er are declined like sacer. The following however,
are declined like tener: asper, _rough_; lacer, _torn_; liber, _free_;
miser, _wretched_; prosper, _prosperous_; compounds in -fer and -ger;
sometimes dexter, _right_.
SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ alius alia aliud
_Gen._ alterius alterius alterius[15]
_Dat._ alii alii alii
_Acc._ alium aliam aliud
_Voc._ ---- ---- ----
_Abl._ alio alia alio
* * * * *
Acer, _sharp_.
SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ acer acris acre
_Gen._ acris acris acris
_Dat._ acri acri acri
_Acc._ acrem acrem acre
_Voc._ acer acris acre
_Abl._ acri acri acri
PLURAL.
_Nom._ acres acres acria
_Gen._ acrium acrium acrium
_Dat_, acribus acribus acribus
_Acc._ acres, -is acres, -is acria
_Voc._ acres acres acria
_Abl._ acribus acribus acribus
2. Celer, celeris, celere, _swift_, retains the e before r, but lacks the
Genitive Plural.
PLURAL.
_Nom._ fortes fortia fortiores fortiora
_Gen._ fortium fortium fortiorum fortiorum
_Dat._ fortibus fortibus fortioribus fortioribus
_Acc._ fortes, -is fortia fortiores, -is fortiora
_Voc._ fortes fortia fortiores fortiora
_Abl._ fortibus fortibus fortioribus fortioribus
SINGULAR.
M. AND F. NEUT. M. AND F. NEUT.
_Nom._ felix felix prudens prudens
_Gen._ felicis felicis prudentis prudentis
_Dat._ felici felici prudenti prudenti
_Acc._ felicem felix prudentem prudens
_Voc._ felix felix prudens prudens
_Abl._ felici felici prudenti prudenti
PLURAL.
_Nom._ felices felicia prudentes prudentia
_Gen._ felicium felicium prudentium prudentium
_Dat._ felicibus felicibus prudentibus prudentibus
_Acc._ felices, -is felicia prudentes, -is prudentia
_Voc._ felices felicia prudentes prudentia
_Abl._ felicibus felicibus prudentibus prudentibus
SINGULAR.
M. AND F. NEUT. M. AND F. NEUT.
_Nom._ vetus vetus ---- plus
_Gen._ veteris veteris ---- pluris
_Dat._ veteri veteri ---- ----
_Acc._ veterem vetus ---- plus
_Voc._ vetus vetus ---- ----
_Abl._ vetere vetere ---- plure
PLURAL.
_Nom._ veteres vetera plures plura
_Gen._ veterum veterum plurium plurium
_Dat._ veteribus veteribus pluribus pluribus
_Acc._ veteres vetera plures, -is plura
_Voc._ veteres vetera ---- ----
_Abl._ veteribus veteribus pluribus pluribus
3. Participles in -ans and -ens follow the declension of i-stems. But they
do not have -i the Ablative, except when employed as adjectives; when used
as participles or as substantives, they have -e; as,--
6. A very few indeclinable adjectives occur, the chief of which are frugi,
_frugal_; nequam, _worthless_.
* * * * *
COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES.
2. The Comparative is regularly formed by adding -ior (Neut. -ius), and the
Superlative by adding -issimus (-a, -um), to the Stem of the Positive
deprived of its final vowel; as,--
Irregular Comparison.
Defective Comparison.
73. 1. Positive lacking entirely,--
3. Comparative lacking.
4. Superlative lacking.
74. Many adjectives do not admit terminational comparison, but form the
Comparative and Superlative degrees by prefixing magis (_more_) and maxime
(_most_). Here belong--
1. Many adjectives ending in -alis, -aris, -idus, -ilis, -icus, imus, inus,
-orus.
a. Adjectives in -quus, of course, do not come under this rule. The first
u in such cases is not a vowel, but a consonant.
2. Some special words; as, mirus, gnarus, merus; and a few others.
* * * * *
76. Adverbs are for the most part derived from adjectives, and depend upon
them for their comparison.
1. Adverbs derived from adjectives of the First and Second Declensions form
the Positive by changing -i of the Genitive Singular to -e; those derived
from adjectives of the Third Declension, by changing -is of the Genitive
Singular to -iter; as,--
a. But Adjectives in -ns, and a few others, add -er (instead of -iter),
to form the Adverb; as,--
4. A few adjectives of the First and Second Declensions form the Positive
in -iter; as,--
5. Various other adverbial suffixes occur, the most important of which are
-tus and -tim; as, antiquitus, _anciently_; paulatim, _gradually_.
* * * * *
NUMERALS.
CARDINALS. ORDINALS.
1. unus, una, unum primus, _first_
2. duo, duae, duo secundus, _second_
3. tres, tria tertius, _third_
4. quattuor quartus, _fourth_
5. quinque quintus, _fifth_
6. sex sextus
7. septem septimus
8. octo octavus
9. novem nonus
10. decem decimus
11. undecim undecimus
12. duodecim duodecimus
13. tredecim tertius decimus
14. quattuordecim quartus decimus
15. quindecim quintus decimus
16. sedecim, sextus decimus
sexdecim
17. septendecim septimus decimus
18. duodeviginti duodevicesimus
19. undeviginti undevicesimus
20. viginti vicesimus
21. viginti unus, vicesimus primus,
unus et viginti unus et vicesimus
22. viginti duo, vicesimus secundus,
duo et viginti alter et vicesimus
30. triginta tricesimus
40. quadraginta quadragesimus
50. quinquaginta quinquagesimus
60. sexaginta sexagesimus
70. septuaginta septuagesimus
80. octoginta octogesimus
90. nonaginta nonagesimus
100. centum centesimus
101. centum unus, centesimus primus,
centum et unus centesimus et primus
200. ducenti, -ae, -a ducentesimus
300. trecenti trecentesimus
400. quadringenti quadringentesimus
500. quingenti quingentesimus
600. sescenti sescentesimus
700. septingenti septingentesimus
800. octingenti octingentesimus
900. nongenti nongentesimus
1,000. mille millesimus
2,000. duo milia bis millesimus
100,000. centum milia centies millesimus
1,000,000. decies centena milia decies centies millesimus
DISTRIBUTIVES. ADVERBS.
1. singuli, _one by one_ semel, _once_
2. bini, _two by two_ bis
3. terni (trini) ter
4. quaterni quater
5. quini quinquies
6. seni sexies
7. septeni septies
8. octoni octies
9. noveni novies
10. deni decies
11. undeni undecies
12. duodeni duodecies
13. terni deni terdecies
14. quaterni deni quaterdecies
15. quini deni quinquies decies
16. seni deni sexies decies
17. septeni deni septies decies
18. duodeviceni octies decies
19. undeviceni novies decies
20. viceni vicies
21. viceni singuli, vicies semel
singuli et viceni
22. viceni bini, vicies bis
bini et viceni
30. triceni tricies
40. quadrageni quadragies
50. quinquageni quinquagies
60. sexageni sexagies
70. septuageni septuagies
80. octogeni octogies
90. nonageni nonagies
100. centeni centies
101. centeni singuli, centies semel
centeni et singuli
200. duceni ducenties
300. treceni trecenties
400. quadringeni quadringenties
500. quingeni quingenties
600. sesceni sescenties
700. septingeni septingenties
800. octingeni octingenties
900. nongeni nongenties
1,000. singula milia milies
2,000. bina milia bis milies
100,000. centena milia centies milies
1,000,000. decies centena milia decies centies milies
NOTE.-- -ensimus and -iens are often written in the numerals instead of
-esimus and -ies.
80. 1. The declension of unus has already been given under Sec. 66.
3. Tres is declined,--
4. The hundreds (except centum) are declined like the Plural of bonus.
Thus mille homines, _a thousand men_; but duo milia hominum, _two thousand
men_, literally _two thousands of men_.
81. 1. The compounds from 21 to 99 may be expressed either with the larger
or the smaller numeral first. In the latter case, et is used. Thus:--
3. Compounds over 100 regularly have the largest number first; the others
follow without et; as,--
Yet et may be inserted where the smaller number is either a digit or one of
the tens; as,--
bina talenta eis dedit, _he gave them two talents each_.
b) When those nouns that are ordinarily Plural in form, but Singular in
meaning, are employed in a Plural sense; as,--
But in such cases, uni (not singuli) is regularly employed for _one_, and
trini (not terni) for three; as,--
c) In multiplication; as,--
* * * * *
C. PRONOUNS.
I. Personal. V. Intensive.
II. Reflexive. VI. Relative.
III. Possessive. VII. Interrogative.
IV. Demonstrative. VIII. Indefinite.
I. PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
84. These correspond to the English _I_, _you_, _he_, _she_, _it_, etc.,
and are declined as follows:--
SINGULAR.
_Nom._ ego, _I_ tu, _thou_ is, _he_; ea, _she_; id,
_it_
_Gen._ mei tui (For declension see Sec. 87.)
_Dat._ mihi[22] tibi[22]
_Acc._ me te
_Voc._ ---- tu
_Abl._ me te
PLURAL.
_Nom._ nos, _we_ vos, _you_
_Gen._ nostrum, nostri vestrum, vestri
_Dat._ nobis vobis
_Acc._ nos vos
_Voc._ ---- vos
_Abl._ nobis vobis
3. In early Latin, med and ted occur as Accusative and Ablative forms.
* * * * *
85. These refer to the subject of the sentence or clause in which they
stand; like _myself_, _yourself_, in '_I see myself_,' etc. They are
declined as follows:--
1. The Reflexive of the Third Person serves for _all genders_ and for _both
numbers_. Thus sui may mean, _of himself_, _herself_, _itself_, or _of
themselves_; and so with the other forms.
* * * * *
86. These are strictly adjectives of the First and Second Declensions, and
are inflected as such. They are--
_Third Person._
suus, -a, -um, _his_, _her_, _its_, _their_.
* * * * *
Hic, iste, and ille are accordingly the Demonstratives of the First,
Second, and Third Persons respectively.
Hic, _this_.
SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ hic haec hoc hi hae haec
_Gen._ hujus[23] hujus hujus horum harum horum
_Dat._ huic huic huic his his his
_Acc._ hunc hanc hoc hos has haec
_Abl._ hoc hac hoc his his his
Ille (archaic olle), _that_, _that one_, _he_, is declined like iste.[25]
The Nom. Plu. Masc. also has idem, and the Dat. Abl. Plu. isdem or iisdem
* * * * *
SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ ipse ipsa ipsum ipsi ipsae ipsa
_Gen._ ipsius ipsius ipsius ipsorum ipsarum ipsorum
_Dat._ ipsi ipsi ipsi ipsis ipsis ipsis
_Acc._ ipsum ipsam ipsum ipsos ipsas ipsa
_Abl._ ipso ipsa ipso ipsis ipsis ipsis
* * * * *
SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
_Nom._ qui quae quod qui quae quae
_Gen._ cujus cujus cujus quorum quarum quorum
_Dat._ cui cui cui quibus[26] quibus quibus
_Acc._ quem quam quod quos quas quae
_Abl._ quo[27] qua[27] quo quibus[26] quibus quibus
* * * * *
90. The Interrogative Pronouns are quis, _who?_ (substantive) and qui,
_what? what kind of?_ (adjective).
1. Quis, _who_?
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
MASC. AND FEM. NEUTER
_Nom._ quis quid The rare Plural
_Gen._ cujus cujus follows the declension
_Dat._ cui cui of the Relative Pronoun.
_Acc._ quem quid
_Abl._ quo quo
2. Qui, _what? what kind of?_ is declined precisely like the Relative
Pronoun; viz. qui, quae, quod, etc.
* * * * *
91. These have the general force of _some one_, _any one_.
SUBSTANTIVES. ADJECTIVES.
M. AND F. NEUT. MASC. FEM. NEUT.
quis, quid, qui, quae, qua, quod,
_any one_, _anything_. _any_.
aliquis, aliquid, aliqui, aliqua, aliquod,
_some one_, _any_.
_something_.
quisquam, quidquam, quisquam, quidquam,
_any one_, _anything_. _any_ (rare)
quispiam, quidpiam, quispiam, quaepiam, quodpiam,
_any one_, _anything_. _any_.
quisque, quidque, quisque, quaeque, quodque,
_each_. _each_.
quivis, quaevis, quidvis, quivis, quaevis, quodvis,
quilibet, quaelibet, quidlibet quilibet, quaelibet, quodlibet,
_any one_ (_anything_) _any you wish_
_you wish_
quidam, quaedam, quiddam, quidam, quaedam, quoddam,
_a certain person_, or _a certain_
_thing_.
2. Note that aliqui has aliqua in the Nominative Singular Feminine, also in
the Nominative and Accusative Plural Neuter. Qui has both qua and quae in
these same cases.
5. In combination with ne, si, nisi, num, either quis or qui may stand as a
Substantive. Thus: si quis or si qui.
* * * * *
PRONOMINAL ADJECTIVES.
2. The compounds,--
In these, uter alone is declined. The rest of the word remains unchanged,
except in case of alteruter, which may decline both parts; as,--
* * * * *
CHAPTER II.--_Conjugation._
93. A Verb is a word which asserts something; as, est, _he is_; amat, _he
loves_. The Inflection of Verbs is called Conjugation.
3. Six Tenses,--
Present, Perfect,
Imperfect, Pluperfect,
Future, Future
Perfect.
But the Subjunctive lacks the Future and Future Perfect; while the
Imperative employs only the Present and Future.
Active. Passive.
_Sing_. 1. -o; -m; -i (Perf. Ind.); -r.
2. -s; -sti (Perf Ind.); -ris, -re;
-to or wanting (Impv.); -re, -tor (Impv.).
3. -t; -to (Impv.); -tur; -tor (Impv.).
_Plu_. 1. -mus; -mur.
2. -tis; -stis (Perf. Ind.); -mini.
-te, -tote (Impv.);
3. -nt; -erunt (Perf Ind.); -ntur; -ntor (Impv.).
-nto (Impv.);
VERB STEMS.
Apparently from the same stem, though really of different origin, are the
Supine, the Future Active Participle, the Future Infinitive Active and
Passive.
98. There are in Latin four regular Conjugations, distinguished from each
other by the vowel of the termination of the Present Infinitive Active, as
follows:--
INFINITIVE DISTINGUISHING
CONJUGATION. TERMINATION. VOWEL.
I. -are a
II. -ere e
III. -ere e
IV. -ire i
* * * * *
CONJUGATION OF SUM.
100. The irregular verb sum is so important for the conjugation of all
other verbs that its inflection is given at the outset.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. FUT. PARTIC.[29]
sum esse fui futurus
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
sum, _I am_, sumus, _we are_,
es, _thou art_, estis, _you are_,
est, _he is_; sunt, _they are_.
IMPERFECT.
eram, _I was_, eramus, _we were_,
eras, _thou wast_, eratis, _you were_,
erat, _he was_; erant, _they were_.
FUTURE.
ero, _I shall be_, erimus, _we shall be_,
eris, _thou wilt be_, eritis, _you will be_,
erit, _he will be_; erunt, _they will be_.
PERFECT.
fui, _I have been_, _I was_, fuimus, _we have been_, _we were_,
fuisti, _thou hast been_, _thou fuistis, _you have been_, _you
wast_, were_,
fuit, _he has been_, _he was_; fuerunt, fuere,
_they have been_, _they were_.
PLUPERFECT.
fueram, _I had been_, fueramus, _we had been_,
fueras, _thou hadst been_, fueratis, _you had been_,
fuerat, _he had been_; fuerant, _they had been_.
FUTURE PERFECT.
fuero, _I shall have been_, fuerimus, _we shall have been_,
fueris, _thou wilt have been_, fueritis, _you will have been_,
fuerit, _he will have been_; fuerint, _they will have been_.
SUBJUNCTIVE.[30]
PRESENT.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
sim, _may I be_, simus, _let us be_,
sis, _mayst thou be_, sitis, _be ye_, _may you be_,
sit, _let him be_, _may he be_; sint, _let them be_.
IMPERFECT.
essem,[31] _I should be_, essemus, _we should be_,
esses,[31] _thou wouldst be_, essetis, _you would be_,
esset,[31] _he would be_; essent,[31] _they would be_.
PERFECT.
fuerim, _I may have been_, fuerimus, _we may have been_,
fueris, _thou mayst have been_, fueritis, _you may have been_,
fuerit, _he may have been_; fuerint, _they may have been_.
PLUPERFECT.
fuissem, _I should have been_, fuissemus, _we should have been_.
fuisses, _thou wouldst have been_, fuissetis, _you would have been_,
fuisset, _he would have been_; fuissent, _they would have been_.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ es, _be thou_; este, _be ye_,
_Fut._ esto, _thou shalt be_, estote, _ye shall be_,
esto, _he shall be_; sunto, _they shall be_.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ esse, _to be_.
_Perf._ fuisse, _to have been_.
_Fut._ futurus esse,[32] _to be _Fut._ futurus,[33] _about to be_.
about to be_.
* * * * *
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
amo amare amavi amatus
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
amo, _I love_, amamus, _we love_,
amas, _you love_, amatis, _you love_,
amat, _he loves_; amant, _they love_.
IMPERFECT.
amabam, _I was loving_,[34] amabamus, _we were loving_,
amabas, _you were loving_, amabatis, _you were loving_,
amabat, _he was loving_; amabant, _they were loving_
FUTURE.
amabo, _I shall love_, amabimus, _we shall love_,
amabis, _you will love_, amabitis, _you will love_,
amabit, _he will love_; amabunt, _they will love_.
PERFECT.
amavi, _I have loved_, _I loved_, amavimus, _we have loved_, _we
loved_,
amavisti, _you have loved_, _you amavistis, _you have loved_, _you
loved_ loved_,
amavit, _he has loved_, _he loved_; amaverunt, -ere, _they have
loved_, _they loved_.
PLUPERFECT.
amaveram, _I had loved_, amaveramus, _we had loved_,
amaveras, _you had loved_, amaveratis, _you had loved_,
amaverat, _he had loved_; amaverant, _they had loved_.
FUTURE PERFECT.
amavero, _I shall have loved_, amaverimus, _we shall have
loved_,
amaveris, _you will have loved_, amaveritis, _you will have
loved_,
amaverit, _he will have loved_; amaverint, _they will have
loved_.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
amem, _may I love_, amemus, _let us love_,
ames, _may you love_, ametis, _may you love_,
amet, _let him love_; ament, _let them love_.
IMPERFECT.
amarem, _I should love_, amaremus, _we should love_,
amares, _you would love_, amaretis, _you would love_,
amaret, _he would love_; amarent, _they would love_.
PERFECT.
amaverim, _I may have loved_, amaverimus, _we may have loved_,
amaveris, _you may have loved_, amaveritis, _you may have loved_,
amaverit, _he may have loved_; amaverint, _they may have loved_.
PLUPERFECT.
amavissem, _I should have loved_, amavissemus, _we should have
loved_,
amavisses, _you would have loved_, amavissetis, _you would have
loved_,
amavisset, _he would have loved_; amavissent, _they would have
loved_.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ ama, _love thou_; amate, _love ye_.
_Fut._ amato, _thou shalt love_, amatote, _ye shall love_,
amato, _he shall love_; amanto, _they shall love_.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ amare, _to love_. _Pres._ amans,[35] _loving_.
_Perf._ amavisse, _to have loved_. (Gen. amantis.)
_Fut._ amaturus esse, _to be _Fut._ amaturus, _about to love_.
about to love_
GERUND. SUPINE.
_Gen._ amandi, _of loving_,
_Dat._ amando, _for loving_,
_Acc._ amandum, _loving_, _Acc._ amatum, _to love_,
_Abl._ amando, _by loving_. _Abl._ amatu, _to love_, _be
loved_.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
amor amari amatus sum
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I am loved._
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
amor amamur
amaris amamini
amatur amantur
IMPERFECT
_I was loved._
amabar amabamur
amabaris, _or_ -re amabamini
amabatur amabantur
FUTURE.
_I shall be loved._
amabor amabimur
amaberis, _or_ -re amabimini
amabitur amabuntur
PERFECT
_I have been loved_, or _I was loved._
amatus (-a, -um) sum[36] amati (-ae, -a) sumus
amatus es amati estis
amatus est amati sunt
PLUPERFECT.
_I had been loved._
amatus eram[36] amati eramus
amatus eras amati eratis
amatus erat amati erant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have been loved._
amatus ero[36] amati erimus
amatus eris amati eritis
amatus erit amati erunt
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
_May I be loved_, _let him be loved._
amer amemur
ameris, _or_ -re amemini
ametur amentur
IMPERFECT.
_I should be loved_, _he would be loved._
amarer amaremur
amareris, _or_ -re amaremini
amaretur amarentur
PERFECT.
PLUPERFECT.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ amare,[38] _be thou amamini, _be ye loved._
loved_;
_Fut._ amator, _thou shalt be
loved_,
amator, _he shall be amantor, _they shall be loved_.
loved_;
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ amari, _to be loved_.
_Perf._ amatus esse, _to have been _Perfect._ amatus, _loved_,
loved_. _having been loved_.
_Fut._ amatum iri, _to be about _Gerundive._ amandus, _to be
to be loved_. loved_, _deserving to
be loved._
* * * * *
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
moneo monere monui monitus
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I advise._
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
moneo monemus
mones monetis
monet monent
IMPERFECT.
_I was advising_, or _I advised._
monebam monebamus
monebas monebatis
monebat monebant
FUTURE.
_I shall advise._
monebo monebimus
monebis monebitis
monebit monebunt
PERFECT.
_I have advised_, or _I advised._
monui monuimus
monuisti monuistis
monuit monuerunt, _or_ -ere
PLUPERFECT.
_I had advised._
monueram monueramus
monueras monueratis
monuerat monuerant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have advised._
monuero monuerimus
monueris monueritis
monuerit monuerint
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
IMPERFECT.
_I should advise_, _he would advise._
monerem moneremus
moneres moneretis
moneret monerent
PERFECT.
_I may have advised._
monuerim monuerimus
monueris monueritis
monuerit monuerint
PLUPERFECT.
_I should have advised_, _he would have advised._
monuissem monuissemus
monuisses monuissetis
monuisset monuissent
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ mone, _advise thou_; monete, _advise ye_.
_Fut._ moneto, _thou shall monetote, _ye shall advise_,
advise_,
moneto, _he shall advise_; monento, _they shall advise._
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ monere, _to advise_. _Pres._ monens, _advising_.
_Perf._ monuisse, _to have (Gen. monentis.)
advised_.
_Fut._ moniturus esse, _to be _Fut._ moniturus, _about to
about to advise_. advise_.
GERUND. SUPINE.
_Gen._ monendi, _of advising_,
_Dat._ monendo, _for advising_,
_Acc._ monendum, _advising_, _Acc._ monitum, _to advise_,
_Abl._ monendo, _by advising_. _Abl._ monitu, _to advise_,
_be advised_.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
moneor moneri monitus sum
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I am advised._
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
moneor monemur
moneris monemini
monetur monentur
IMPERFECT.
_I was advised._
monebar monebamur
monebaris, _or_ -re monebamini
monebatur monebantur
FUTURE.
_I shall be advised._
monebor monebimur
moneberis, _or_ -re monebimini
monebitur monebuntur
PERFECT.
_I have been advised_, _I was advised._
monitus sum moniti sumus
monitus es moniti estis
monitus est moniti sunt
PLUPERFECT.
_I had been advised._
monitus eram moniti eramus
monitus eras moniti eratis
monitus erat moniti erant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have been advised._
monitus ero moniti erimus
monitus eris moniti eritis
monitus erit moniti erunt
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
_May I be advised_, _let him be advised._
monear moneamur
monearis, _or_ -re moneamini
moneatur moneantur
IMPERFECT.
_I should be advised_, _he would be advised._
monerer moneremur
monereris, _or_ -re moneremini
moneretur monerentur
PERFECT.
_I may have been advised._
monitus sim moniti simus
monitus sis moniti sitis
monitus sit moniti sint
PLUPERFECT.
_I should have been advised_, _he would have been advised._
monitus essem moniti essemus
monitus esses moniti essetis
monitus esset moniti essent
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ monere, _be thou advised_; monemini, _be ye advised_.
_Fut._ monetor, _thou shalt be
advised_,
monetor, _he shall be monentor, _they shall be
advised_. advised_.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ moneri, _to be advised_. _Perfect._ monitus, _advised_,
_having been advised_.
_Perf._ monitus esse, _to have
been advised_
_Fut._ monitum iri, _to be about _Gerundive._ monendus, _to be
to be advised._ advised_, _deserving to
be advised._
* * * * *
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
rego regere rexi rectus
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I rule_
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
rego regimus
regis regitis
regit regunt
IMPERFECT.
_I was ruling_, or _I ruled_.
regebam regebamus
regebas regebatis
regebat regebant
FUTURE.
_I shall rule_.
regam regemus
reges regetis
reget regent
PERFECT.
_I have ruled_, or _I ruled_
rexi reximus
rexisti rexistis
rexit rexerunt, _or_ -ere
PLUPERFECT.
_I had ruled_.
rexeram rexeramus
rexeras rexeratis
rexerat rexerant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have ruled_.
rexero rexerimus
rexeris rexeritis
rexerit rexerint
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
_May I rule_, _let him rule._
regam regamus
regas regatis
regat regant
IMPERFECT.
_I should rule_, _he would rule._
regerem regeremus
regeres regeretis
regeret regerent
PERFECT.
_I may have ruled._
rexerim rexerimus
rexeris rexeritis
rexerit rexerint
PLUPERFECT.
_I should have ruled_, _he would have ruled._
rexissem rexissemus
rexisses rexissetis
rexisset rexissent
IMPERATIVE.
rege, _rule thou_; regite, _rule ye_.
regito, _thou shall rule_, regitote, _ye shall rule_,
regito, _he shall rule_; regunto, _they shall rule_.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
regere, _to rule_. _Pres._ regens, _ruling_.
rexisse, _to have ruled_. (Gen. regentis.)
recturus esse, _to be about to _Fut._ recturus, _about to
rule_ rule_.
GERUND. SUPINE.
regendi, _of ruling_,
regendo, _for ruling_,
regendum, _ruling_, _Acc._ rectum, _to rule_,
regendo, _by ruling_. _Abl._ rectu, _to rule_, _be
ruled_.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
regor regi rectus sum
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I am ruled._
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
regor regimur
regeris regimini
regitur reguntur
IMPERFECT.
_I was ruled._
regebar regebamur
regebaris, _or_ -re regebamini
regebatur regebantur
FUTURE.
_I shall be ruled._
regar regemur
regeris, _or_ -re regemini
regetur regentur
PERFECT.
_I have been ruled_, or _I was ruled_.
rectus sum recti sumus
rectus es recti estis
rectus est recti sunt
PLUPERFECT.
_I had been ruled._
rectus eram recti eramus
rectus eras recti eratis
rectus erat recti erant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have been ruled_
rectus ero recti erimus
rectus eris recti eritis
rectus erit recti erunt
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
_May I be ruled_, _let him be ruled._
regar regamur
regaris, _or_ -re regamini
regatur regantur
IMPERFECT.
_I should be ruled_, _he would be ruled._
regerer regeremur
regereris, _or_ -re regeremini
regeretur regerentur
PERFECT.
_I may have been ruled._
rectus sim recti simus
rectus sis recti sitis
rectus sit recti sint
PLUPERFECT.
_I should have been ruled_, _he would have been ruled._
rectus essem recti essemus
rectus esses recti essetis
rectus esset recti essent
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ regere, _be thou ruled_; regimini, _be ye ruled_.
_Fut._ regitor, _thou shalt be
ruled_,
regitor, _he shall be reguntor, _they shall be ruled_.
ruled_;
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ regi, _to be ruled_. _Perfect._ rectus, _ruled_,
_having been ruled_.
_Perf._ rectus esse, _to have been _Gerundive._ regendus, _to be
ruled_. ruled_, _deserving to
be ruled_.
_Fut._ rectum iri, _to be about
to be ruled_.
* * * * *
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I hear._
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
audio audimus
audis auditis
audit audiunt
IMPERFECT.
_I was hearing_, or _I heard._
audiebam audiebamus
audiebas audiebatis
audiebat audiebant
FUTURE.
_I shall hear._
audiam audiemus
audies audietis
audiet audient
PERFECT.
_I have heard_, or _I heard._
audivi audivimus
audivisti audivistis
audivit audiverunt, _or _-ere
PLUPERFECT.
_I had heard._
audiveram audiveramus
audiveras audiveratis
audiverat audiverant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have heard._
audivero audiverimus
audiveris audiveritis
audiverit audiverint
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
_May I hear_, _let him hear._
audiam audiamus
audias audiatis
audiat audiant
IMPERFECT.
_I should hear_, _he would hear._
audirem audiremus
audires audiretis
audiret audirent
PERFECT.
_I may have heard._
audiverim audiverimus
audiveris audiveritis
audiverit audiverint
PLUPERFECT.
_I should have heard_, _he would have heard._
audivissem audivissemus
audivisses audivissetis
audivisset audivissent
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ audi, _hear thou_; audite, _hear ye_.
_Fut._ audito, _thou shalt hear_, auditote, _ye shall hear_,
audito, _he shall hear_; audiunto, _they shall hear_.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ audire, _to hear_. _Pres._ audiens, _hearing_.
_Perf._ audivisse, _to have (Gen. audientis.)
heard_.
_Fut._ auditurus esse, _to be _Fut._ auditurus, _about to
about to hear_. hear_.
GERUND. SUPINE
_Gen._ audiendi, _of hearing_,
_Dat._ audiendo, _for hearing_,
_Acc._ audiendum, _hearing_, _Acc._ auditum, _to hear_,
_Abl._ audiendo, _by hearing_. _Abl._ auditu, _to hear, be
heard_.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
audior audiri auditus sum
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
_I am heard_.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
audior audimur
audiris audimini
auditur audiuntur
IMPERFECT.
_I was heard_.
audiebar audiebamur
audiebaris, _or_ -re audiebamini
audiebatur audiebantur
FUTURE.
_I shall be heard_.
audiar audiemur
audieris, _or_ -re audiemini
audietur audientur
PERFECT.
_I have been heard_, or _I was heard_.
auditus sum auditi sumus
auditus es auditi estis
auditus est auditi sunt
PLUPERFECT.
_I had been heard_.
auditus eram auditi eramus
auditus eras auditi eratis
auditus erat auditi erant
FUTURE PERFECT.
_I shall have been heard_.
auditus ero auditi erimus
auditus eris auditi eritis
auditus erit auditi erunt
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
IMPERFECT.
_I should be heard_, _he would be heard_.
audirer audiremur
audireris, _or_ -re audiremini
audiretur audirentur
PERFECT.
_I may have been heard_.
auditus sim auditi simus
auditus sis auditi sitis
auditus sit auditi sint
PLUPERFECT.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ audire, _be thou heard_; audimini, be ye heard.
_Fut._ auditor, _thou shalt be
heard_,
auditor, _he shall be audiuntor, _they shall be heard_.
heard_;
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ audiri, _to be heard_. _Perfect._ auditus, _heard_,
_having been heard_
_Perf._ auditus esse, _to have _Gerundive._ audiendus, _to be
been heard_. heard_, _deserving to
be heard_
_Fut._ auditum iri, _to be about
to be heard_.
* * * * *
109. 1. Verbs in -io of the Third Conjugation take the endings of the
Fourth Conjugation wherever the latter endings have two successive vowels.
This occurs only in the Present System.
2. Here belong--
a) capio, _to take_; cupio, _to desire_; facio, _to make_; fodio, _to
dig_; fugio, _to flee_; jacio, _to throw_; pario, _to bear_; quatio, _to
shake_; rapio, _to seize_; sapio, _to taste_.
c) The deponents gradior, _to go_; morior, _to die_, patior, _to suffer_.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
capio, capere, cepi, captus.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
capio, capis, capit; capimus, capitis, capiunt.
IMPERFECT.
capiebam, -iebas, -iebat; capiebamus, -iebatis, -iebant.
FUTURE.
capiam, -ies, -iet; capiemus, -ietis, -ient.
PERFECT.
cepi, -isti, -it; cepimus, -istis, -erunt or -ere.
PLUPERFECT.
ceperam, -eras, -erat; ceperamus, -eratis, -erant.
FUTURE PERFECT.
cepero, -eris, -erit; ceperimus, -eritis, -erint.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
capiam, -ias, -iat; capiamus, -iatis, -iant.
IMPERFECT.
caperem, -eres, -eret; caperemus, -eretis, -erent.
PERFECT.
ceperim, -eris, -erit; ceperimus, -eritis, -erint.
PLUPERFECT.
cepissem, -isses, -isset; cepissemus, -issetis, -issent.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ cape; capite.
_Fut._ capito, capitote,
capito; capiunto.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ capere _Pres._ capiens.
_Perf._ cepisse.
_Fut._ capturus esse. _Fut._ capturus.
GERUND. SUPINE.
_Gen._ capiendi,
_Dat._ capiendo,
_Acc._ capiendum, _Acc._ captum,
_Abl._ capiendo. _Abl._ captu.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
capior, capi, captus sum.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PRESENT TENSE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
capior, caperis, capitur; capimur, capimini, capiuntur.
IMPERFECT.
capiebar, -iebaris, -iebatur; capiebamur, -iebamini, -iebantur.
FUTURE.
capiar, -ieris, -ietur; capiemur, -iemini, -ientur.
PERFECT.
captus sum, es, est; capti sumus, estis, sunt.
PLUPERFECT.
captus eram, eras, erat; capti eramus, eratis, erant.
FUTURE PERFECT.
captus ero, eris, erit; capti erimus, eritis, erunt.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
PRESENT.
capiar, -iaris, -iatur; capiamur, -iamini, -iantur.
IMPERFECT.
caperer, -ereris, -eretur; caperemur, -eremini, -erentur.
PERFECT.
captus sim, sis, sit; capti simus, sitis, sint.
PLUPERFECT.
captus essem, esses, esset; capti essemus, essetis, essent.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ capere; capimini.
_Fut._ capitor,
capitor; capiuntor.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ capi.
_Perf._ captus esse. _Perfect._ captus.
_Fut._ captum iri. _Gerundive._ capiendus.
* * * * *
DEPONENT VERBS.
112. Deponent Verbs have in the main Passive _forms_ with Active or Neuter
_meaning_. But--
a. They have the following Active forms: Future Infinitive, Present and
Future Participles, Gerund, and Supine.
b. They have the following Passive meanings: always in the Gerundive, and
sometimes in the Perfect Passive Participle; as--
INDICATIVE MOOD.
I. II. III. IV. III (in
-ior)
_Pres._ miror vereor sequor largior patior
miraris vereris sequeris largiris pateris
miratur veretur sequitur largitur patitur
miramur veremur sequimur largimur patimur
miramini veremini sequimini largimini patimini
mirantur verentur sequuntur largiuntur patiuntur
_Impf._ mirabar verebar sequebar largiebar patiebar
_Fut._ mirabor verebor sequar largiar patiar
_Perf._ miratus sum veritus sum secutus sum largitus sum passus sum
_Plup._ miratus veritus secutus largitus passus
eram eram eram eram eram
_F.P._ miratus ero veritus ero secutus ero largitus ero passus ero
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ mirer verear sequar largiar patiar
_Impf._ mirarer vererer sequerer largirer paterer
_Perf._ miratus sim veritus sim secutus sim largitus sim passus sim
_Plup._ miratus veritus sectutus largitus passus
essem essem essem essem essem
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ mirare, verere, sequere, largire, patere,
etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
_Fut._ mirator, veretor, sequitor, largitor, patitor,
etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ mirari vereri sequi largiri pati
_Perf._ miratus veritus secutus largitus passus
esse esse esse esse esse
_Fut._ miraturus veriturus secuturus largiturus passurus
esse esse esse esse esse
PARTICIPLES.
_Pres._ mirans verens sequens largiens patiens
_Fut._ miraturus veriturus secuturus largiturus passurus
_Perf._ miratus veritus secutus largitus passus
_Ger._ mirandus verendus sequendus largiendus patiendus
GERUND.
mirandi verendi sequendi largiendi patiendi
mirando, verendo, sequendo, largiendo, patiendo,
etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
SUPINE.
miratum, veritum, secutum, largitum, passum,
-tu -tu -tu -tu -su
* * * * *
SEMI-DEPONENTS.
114. 1. Semi-Deponents are verbs which have the Present System in the
Active Voice, but the Perfect System in the Passive without change of
meaning. Here belong--
3. Revertor and devertor both regularly form their Perfect in the Active
Voice; _viz_.--
* * * * *
PERIPHRASTIC CONJUGATION.
115. There are two Periphrastic Conjugations,--the Active and the Passive.
The Active is formed by combining the Future Active Participle with the
auxiliary sum, the Passive by combining the Gerundive with the same
auxiliary.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
_Pres._ amaturus (-a, -um) sum, _I am about to love_.
_Inf._ amaturus eram, _I was about to love_.
_Fut._ amaturus ero, _I shall be about to love_.
_Perf._ amaturus fui, _I have been (was) about to love_.
_Plup._ amaturus fueram, _I had been about to love_.
_Fut. P._ amaturus fuero, _I shall have been about to love_.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ amaturus sim, _may I be about to love_.
_Imp._ amaturus essem, _I should be about to love_.
_Perf._ amaturus fuerim, _I may have been about to love_.
_Plup._ amaturus fuissem, _I should have been about to love_.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ amaturus esse, _to be about to love_.
_Perf._ amaturus fuisse, _to have been about to love_.
INDICATIVE.
_Pres._ amandus (-a, -um) sum, _I am to be loved_, _must be loved_.
_Imp._ amandus eram, _I was to be loved_.
_Fut._ amandus ero, _I shall deserve to be loved_.
_Perf._ amandus fui, _I was to be loved_.
_Plup._ amandus fueram, _I had deserved to be loved_.
_Fut. P._ amandus fuero, _I shall have deserved to be loved_.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ amandus sim, _may I deserve to be loved_.
_Imp._ amandus essem, _I should deserve to be loved_.
_Perf._ amandus fuerim, _I may have deserved to be loved_.
_Plup._ amendus fuissem, _I should have deserved to be loved_.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ amandus esse, _to deserve to be loved_.
_Perf._ amantus fuisse, _to have deserved to be loved_.
* * * * *
PECULIARITIES OF CONJUGATION.
116. 1. Perfects in -avi, -evi, and -ivi, with the forms derived from them,
often drop the ve or vi before endings beginning with r or s. So also novi
(from nosco) and the compounds of movi (from moveo). Thus:--
2. In the Gerund and Gerundive of the Third and Fourth Conjugations, the
endings -undus, -undi, often occur instead of -endus and -endi, as
faciundus, faciundi.
3. Dico, duco, facio, form the Imperatives, dic, duc, fac. But compounds of
facio form the Imperative in -fice, as confice. Compounds of dico, duco,
accent the ultima; as, edu'c, edi'c.
d. The endings -im, -is, etc. (for -am, -as, etc.) occur in a few
Subjunctive forms; as, edim (_eat_), duint, perduint.
5. In the Future Active and Perfect Passive Infinitive, the auxiliary esse
is often omitted; as, acturum for acturum esse; ejectus for ejectus esse.
* * * * *
117. Many verbs employ the simple Verb Stem for the Present Stem;[39] as,
dicere, amare, monere, audire. Others modify the Verb Stem to form the
Present, as follows:--
flect-o.
cresc-o. scisc-o.
a. Note that before the ending -si a Dental Mute (t, d) is lost; a
Guttural Mute (c, g) unites with s to form x; while the Labial b is
changed to p.
NOTE 1.--Compounds, with the exception of do, sto, sisto, disco, posco,
omit the reduplication. Thus: com-puli, but re-poposci.
b) The short vowel of the Verb Stem is lengthened; as, lego, legi; ago,
egi. Note that a by this process becomes e.
c) The vowel of the Verb Stem is unchanged; as, verto, verti; minuo,
minui.
119. The Perfect Passive Participle, from which the Participial Stem is
derived by dropping -us, is formed:--
2. After the analogy of Participles like sensus and caesus, where -sus
arises by phonetic change, -sus for -tus is added to other Verb Stems;
as,--
a. The same consonant changes occur in appending this ending -sus to the
stem as in the case of the Perfect ending -si (see Sec. 118, 3, a).
doma-re, dom-itus.
mone-re, mon-itus.
4. The Future Active Participle is usually identical in its stem with the
Perfect Passive Participle; as, ama-tus, amaturus; moni-tus, moniturus.
But--
* * * * *
V. DEPONENTS.
These are all regular, and follow _miror_, _mirari_, _miratus sum_.
VII. DEPONENTS.
1. Perfect in -si.
a. Type -o, -ere, -si, -tus.
5. Perfect in -ui.
6. Perfect in -vi.
These usually have Inchoative or Inceptive meaning (see Sec. 155, 1). When
they have the Perfect, it is the same as that of the Verbs from which they
are derived.
V. DEPONENTS.
Fourth Conjugation.
VII. DEPONENTS.
* * * * *
IRREGULAR VERBS.
124. A number of Verbs are called Irregular. The most important are sum,
do, edo, fero, volo, nolo, malo, eo, fio. The peculiarity of these Verbs is
that they append the personal endings in many forms directly to the stem,
instead of employing a connecting vowel, as fer-s (2d Sing. of fer-o),
instead of fer-i-s. They are but the relics of what was once in Latin a
large class of Verbs.
125. The Inflection of sum has already been given. Its various compounds
are inflected in the same way. They are--
126. Possum. In its Present System possum is a compound of pot- (for pote,
able) and sum; potui is from an obsolete potere.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
possum, posse, potui, _to be
able_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ possum, potes, potest; possumus, potestis, possunt.
_Imp._ poteram; poteramus.
_Fut._ potero; poterimus.
_Perf._ potui; potuimus.
_Plup._ potueram; potueramus.
_Fut. P._ potuero; potuerimus.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ possim, possis, possit; possimus, possitis, possint.
_Imp._ possem; possemus.
_Perf._ potuerim; potuerimus.
_Plup._ potuissem; potuissemus.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ posse. _Pres._ potens (_as an adjective_).
_Perf._ potuisse.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
do, dare, dedi, datus.
Active Voice.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ do, das, dat; damus, datis, dant.
_Imp._ dabam, etc.; dabamus.
_Fut._ dabo, etc.; dabimus.
_Perf._ dedi; dedimus.
_Plup._ dederam; dederamus.
_Fut. P._ dedero; dederimus.
SUBJUNCTIVE
_Pres._ dem; demus.
_Imp._ darem; daremus.
_Perf._ dederim; dederimus.
_Plup._ dedissem; dedissemus.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ da; date.
_Fut._ dato; datote.
dato. danto.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ dare. dans.
_Perf._ dedisse.
_Fut._ daturus esse. daturus.
GERUND. SUPINE.
dandi, etc. datum, datu.
1. The passive is inflected regularly with the short vowel. Thus: dari,
datur, daretur, etc.
2. The archaic and poetic Present Subjunctive forms duim, duint, perduit,
perduint, etc., are not from the root da-, but from du-, a collateral root
of similar meaning.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
edo, esse, edi, esus.
Active Voice.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
_Pres._ edo, edimus,
es, estis,
est; edunt.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Imp._ essem, essemus,
esses, essetis,
esset; essent.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ es; este.
_Fut._ esto; estote.
esto; edunto.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ esse.
Passive Voice.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
_Pres. 3d Sing_. estur.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Imp. 3d Sing_. essetur.
1. Observe the long vowel of the forms in es-, which alone distinguishes
them from the corresponding forms of esse, _to be_.
3. The Present Subjunctive has edim, -is, -it, etc., less often edam, -as,
etc.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
fero, ferre, tuli, latus.
Active Voice.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PLURAL.
SINGULAR.
_Pres._ fero, fers, fert; ferimus, fertis, ferunt.[46]
_Imp._ ferebam; ferebamus.
_Fut._ feram; feremus.
_Perf._ tuli; tulimus.
_Plup._ tuleram; tuleramus.
_Fut. P._ tulero; tulerimus.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ feram; feramus.
_Imp._ ferrem; ferremus.
_Perf._ tulerim; tulerimus.
_Plup._ tulissem; tulissemus.
IMPERATIVE
_Pres._ fer; ferte.
_Fut._ ferto; fertote.
ferto; ferunto.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ ferre. _Pres._ ferens.
_Perf._ tulisse.
_Fut._ laturus esse. _Fut._ laturus.
GERUND. SUPINE.
_Gen._ ferendi.
_Dat._ ferendo.
_Acc._ ferendum. _Acc._ latum.
_Abl._ ferendo. _Abl._ latu.
Passive Voice.
feror, ferri, latus sum, _to be borne_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
PLURAL.
SINGULAR.
_Pres._ feror, ferris, fertur; ferimur, ferimini, feruntur.
_Imp._ ferebar; ferebamur.
_Fut._ ferar; feremur.
_Perf._ latus sum; lati sumus.
_Plup._ latus eram; lati eramus.
_Fut. P._ latus ero; lati erimus.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ ferar; feramur.
_Imp._ ferrer; ferremur.
_Perf._ latus sim; lati simus.
_Plup._ latus essem; lati essemus.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ ferre; ferimimi.
_Fut._ fertor; ----
fertor; feruntor.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ ferri.
_Perf._ latus esse. _Perf._ latus.
_Fut._ latum iri. _Fut._ ferendus.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
volo, velle, volui, _to wish._
nolo, nolle, nolui, _to be unwilling._
malo, malle, malui, _to prefer._
INDICATIVE MOOD.
_Pres._ volo, nolo, malo,
vis, non vis, mavis,
vult; non vult; mavult;
volumus, nolumus, malumus,
vultis, non vultis, mavultis,
volunt. nolunt. malunt.
_Imp._ volebam. nolebam. malebam.
_Fut._ volam. nolam. malam.
_Perf._ volui. nolui. malui.
_Plup._ volueram. nolueram. malueram.
_Fut. P._ voluero. noluero. maluero.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ velim, -is, -it, nolim. malim.
etc.
_Inf._ vellem, -es, -et, nollem. mallem.
etc.
_Perf._ voluerim. noluerim. maluerim.
_Pluf._ voluissem. noluissem. maluissem.
IMPERATIVE.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ velle. nolle. malle.
_Perf._ voluisse. noluisse. maluisse
PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ volens nolens. ----
131. Fio.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
fio, fieri, factus sum, _to become_, _be
made_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR, PLURAL.
_Pres._ fio, fis, fit; fimus, fitis, fiunt.
_Inf._ fiebam; fiebamus.
_Fut._ fiam; fiemus.
_Perf._ factus sum; facti sumus.
_Pluf._ factus eram; facti eramus.
_Fut. P._ factus ero; facti erimus.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Pres._ fiam; fiamus.
_Imp._ fierem; fieremus.
_Perf._ factus sim; facti simus.
_Plup._ factus essem; facti essemus.
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ fi; fite.
PARTICIPLE.
INFINITIVE.
_Pres._ fieri.
_Perf._ factus esse. _Perf._ factus.
_Fut._ factum iri. _Ger._ faciendus.
NOTE.--A few isolated forms of compounds of fio occur; as, defit _lacks_;
infit, _begins_.
132. Eo.
PRINCIPAL PARTS.
eo, ire, ivi, itum (est), _to go_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ eo, is, it; imus, itis, eunt.
_Imp._ ibam; ibamus.
_Fut._ ibo; ibimus.
_Perf._ ivi (ii); ivimus (iimus).
_Plup._ iveram (ieram); iveramus (ieramus)
_Fut. P._ ivero (iero); iverimus (ierimus).
SUBJUNCTIVE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ eam; eamus.
_Inf._ irem; iremus.
_Perf._ iverim (ierim); iverimus (ierimus).
_Pluf._ ivissem (iissem, issem); ivissemus (iissemus, issemus).
IMPERATIVE.
_Pres._ i; ite.
_Fut._ ito; itote,
ito; eunto.
INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE.
_Pres._ ire. _Pres._ iens.
_Perf._ ivisse (isse). (_Gen._ euntis.)
_Fut._ iturus esse. _Fut._ iturus. _Gerundive_, eundum.
GERUND. SUPINE.
eundi, etc. itum, itu.
* * * * *
DEFECTIVE VERBS.
Defective Verbs lack certain forms. The following are the most important:--
INDICATIVE MOOD.
_Perf._ coepi. memini. odi.
_Plup._ coeperam. memineram. oderam.
_Fut. P._ coepero. meminero. odero.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
_Perf._ coeperim. meminerim. oderim.
_Pluf._ coepissem. meminissem. odissem.
IMPERATIVE.
_Sing._ memento; _Plur._ mementote.
INFINITIVE.
_Perf._ coepisse. meminisse. odisse.
_Fut._ coepturus esse. osurus esse.
PARTICIPLE.
_Perf._ coeptus, _begun_. osus.
_Fut._ coepturus. osurus.
2. Note that memini and odi, though Perfect in form, are Present in sense.
Similarly the Pluperfect and Future Perfect have the force of the Imperfect
and Future; as, memineram, _I remembered_; odero, _I shall hate_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ inquam, ----
inquis, ----
inquit; inquiunt.
_Fut._ ---- ----
inquies, ----
inquiet. ----
_Perf. 3d Sing._ inquit.
135. Ajo, _I say_.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL
_Pres._ ajo, ----
ais, ----
ait; ajunt.
_Imp._ ajebam, ajebamus,
ajebas, ajebatis,
ajebat; ajebant.
_Perf 3d Sing._ ait.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
INDICATIVE MOOD.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
_Pres._ ---- ----
---- ----
fatur. ----
_Fut._ fabor, ----
---- ----
fabitur. ----
_Impv._ fare.
_Inf._ fari.
_Pres. fantis, fanti, etc.
Partic._
_Gerund_, fandi; _D. and Abl._, fando.
_G._,
_Gerundive_, fandus.
NOTE.--Forms of fari are rare. More frequent are its compounds; as,--
affatur, _he addresses_; praefamur, _we say in advance._
1. Queo, quire, quivi, _to be able_, and nequeo, nequire, nequivi, _to be
unable_, are inflected like eo, but occur chiefly in the Present Tense, and
there only in special forms.
3. Cedo (2d sing. Impv.), cette (2d plu.); _give me_, _tell me_.
* * * * *
IMPERSONAL VERBS.
138. Impersonal Verbs correspond to the English, _it snows, it seems, etc._
They have no personal subject, but may take an Infinitive, a Clause, or a
Neuter Pronoun; as, me pudet hoc fecisse, lit. _it shames me to have done
this_; hoc decet, _this is fitting_. Here belong--
* * * * *
PART III.
* * * * *
PARTICLES.
* * * * *
139. Particles are the four Parts of Speech that do not admit of
inflection; _viz_. Adverbs, Prepositions, Conjunctions, Interjections.
ADVERBS.
140. Adverbs denote manner, place, time, or degree Most adverbs are in
origin case-forms which have become stereotyped by usage. The common
adverbial terminations have already been given above (Sec. 76). The following
TABLE OF CORRELATIVES is important:--
PREPOSITIONS.
Ubii proxime Rhenum incolunt, _the Ubii dwell next to the Rhine_;
propius castra hostium, _nearer the camp of the enemy_.
3. Tenus regularly follows its case, as, pectoribus tenus, _up to the
breast_. It sometimes governs the Genitive, as, labrorum tenus, _as far as
the lips_.
4. Cum is appended to the Pronouns of the First and Second Persons, and to
the Reflexive Pronoun; usually also to the Relative and Interrogative.
Thus:--
143. Two Prepositions, in, _in_, _into_, and sub, _under_, govern both the
Accusative and the Ablative. With the Accusative they denote motion; with
the Ablative, rest; as,--
1. Subter and super are also occasionally construed with the Ablative.
* * * * *
PART IV.
* * * * *
WORD-FORMATION.
* * * * *
I. DERIVATIVES.
A. NOUNS.
147. 1. The suffix -tor (-sor), Fem. -trix, denotes _the agent_; as,--
b) -ium; as,--
gaudium, _rejoicing_.
c) -ido; as,--
cupido, _desire_.
4. The suffixes -men, -mentum, -crum, -trum, -bulum, -culum, denote _the
means_ or _place_ of an action; as,--
as,--
NOTE 1.--It will be observed that in gender the Diminutives follow the
gender of the words from which they are derived.
NOTE 2.--The endings -ellus, -illus contain the primitive form of the
diminutive suffix, _viz_., -lo-. Thus:--
3. The suffixes -arium, -etum, -ile designate a place where objects _are
kept_ or _are found in abundance_; as,--
6. Patronymics are Greek proper names denoting _son of_ ..., _daughter of_
.... They have the following suffixes:--
149. The suffixes -tas (-itas), -tudo (-itudo), -ia, -itia are used for the
formation of abstract nouns _denoting qualities_; as,--
* * * * *
B. ADJECTIVES.
150. 1. The suffixes -bundus and -cundus give nearly the force of a present
participle; as,--
2. The suffixes -ax and -ulus denote _an inclination_ or _tendency_, mostly
a faulty one; as,--
151. 1. The suffixes -eus and -inus are appended to names of substances or
materials; as,--
2. The suffixes -ius, -icus, -ilis, -alis, -aris, -arius, -nus, -anus,
-inus, -ivus, -ensis signify _belonging to_, _connected with_; as,--
152. 1. Names of _persons_ take the suffixes: -anus, -ianus, -inus; as,--
3. Names of _places_ take the suffixes -anus, -inus, -ensis, -aeus, -ius;
as,--
parvolus, _little_;
misellus (passer), _poor little_ (_sparrow_);
pauperculus, _needy_.
* * * * *
C. VERBS.
155. 1. INCEPTIVES OR INCHOATIVES. These end in -sco, and are formed from
Present Stems. They denote _the beginning of an action_; as,--
a) From Nouns:--
b) From Adjectives:--
* * * * *
D. ADVERBS.
157. 1. Adverbs derived from verbs are formed from the Participial Stem by
means of the suffix -im; as,--
paulatim, _gradually_;
breviter, _briefly_.
* * * * *
II. COMPOUNDS.
158. 1. Compounds are formed by the union of simple words. The second
member usually contains the _essential meaning_ of the compound; the first
member expresses _some modification_ of this.
signifer, _standard-bearer_;
tubicen, _trumpeter_;
magnanimus, _high-minded_;
matricida, _matricide_.
1. Nouns:--
de-decus, _disgrace_;
pro-avus, _great-grandfather_.
agri-cola, _farmer_;
fratri-cida, _fratricide_.
2. Adjectives:--
a-mens, _frantic_.
magn-animus, _great-hearted_;
celeri-pes, _swift-footed_.
parti-ceps, _sharing_;
morti-fer, _death-dealing_.
3. Verbs:--
a) A Noun; as,--
aedi-fico, _build_.
b) An Adjective; as,--
ampli-fico, _enlarge_.
c) An Adverb; as,--
e) A Preposition; as,--
ab-jungo, _detach_;
dis-cerno, _distinguish_;
ex-specto, _await_.
por-, _forward_;
ve-, _without_.
4. Adverbs:--
antea, _before_;
imprimis, _especially_;
* * * * *
PART V.
* * * * *
SYNTAX.
* * * * *
CLASSIFICATION OF SENTENCES.
scribe, _write!_
quis venit, _who comes?_ quam diu manebit, _how long will he stay?_
num exspectas, _do you expect?_ (i.e. _you don't expect, do you?_)
tu in judicum conspectum venire audes, _do you dare to come into the
presence of the judges?_
5. Answers.
'estne frater intus?' 'non est.' _'Is your brother within?'_ _'No.'_
163. The two essential parts of a sentence are the SUBJECT and PREDICATE.
The SUBJECT is that _concerning which something is said, asked, etc._ The
PREDICATE is that _which is said, asked, etc., concerning_ the SUBJECT.
164. Sentences containing but one Subject and one Predicate are called
SIMPLE SENTENCES, those containing more are called COMPOUND SENTENCES. Thus
puer libros legit, _the boy reads books_, is a Simple Sentence; but puer
libros legit et epistulas scribit, _the boy reads books and writes
letters_, is a Compound Sentence. The different members of a Compound
Sentence are called Clauses.
* * * * *
SUBJECT.
166. The Subject of a Finite Verb (i.e. any form of the Indicative,
Subjunctive, or Imperative) is in the Nominative Case.
b) An Infinitive; as,--
decorum est pro patria mori, _to die for one's county is a noble
thing_.
c) A Clause; as,--
opportune accidit quod vidisti, _it happened opportunely that you saw_.
3. The verb is sometimes omitted when it can be easily supplied from the
context, especially the auxiliary sum; as,--
recte ille (_sc_. facit), _he does rightly_; consul profectus (_sc_.
est), _the consul set out_.
PREDICATE NOUNS.
167. A PREDICATE NOUN is one connected with the Subject by some form of the
verb Sum or a similar verb.
1. when possible, the Predicate Noun usually agrees with its Subect in
Gender also; as,--
Croesus non semper mansit rex, _Croesus did not always remain king_.
APPOSITIVES.
3. When possible, the Appositive agrees with its Subject in Gender also;
as,--
* * * * *
THE CASES.
THE NOMINATIVE.
* * * * *
THE VOCATIVE.
* * * * *
THE ACCUSATIVE.
173. The Direct Object may express either of the two following relations:--
174. Verbs that admit a Direct Object of either of these two types are
TRANSITIVE VERBS.
a. Verbs that regularly take a Direct Object are sometimes used without
it. They are then said to be employed _absolutely_; as,--
rumor est meum gnatum amare, _it is rumored that my son is in love_.
3. The adverbial use of several Neuter Pronouns and Adjectives grows out of
this Accusative; as,--
3. In the Passive the Direct Object becomes the Subject, and the Predicate
Accusative becomes Predicate Nominative (Sec. 168, 2, b): as,--
a. Not all Verbs admit the Passive construction; reddo and efficio, for
example, never take it.
178. 1. Some Verbs take two Accusatives, one of the Person Affected, the
other of the Result Produced. Thus:--
milites flumen transportat, _he leads his soldiers across the river_.
milites flumen traducebantur, _the soldiers were led across the river_.
180. 1. The Synecdochical (or Greek) Accusative denotes the _part_ to which
an action or quality refers; as,--
tremit artus, literally, _he trembles as to his limbs_, i.e. his limbs
tremble;
nuda genu, lit. _bare as to the knee_, i.e. with knee bare;
manus revinctus, lit. _tied as to the hands_, i.e. with hands tied.
hic locus passus sescentos aberat, _this place was six hundred paces
away_;
b. The name of a town denoting limit of motion may be combined with the
name of a country or other word dependent upon a preposition; as,--
Thurios in Italiam pervectus, _carried to Thurii in Italy;_
cum Acen ad exercitum venisset, _when he had come to the army at Ace._
3. To denote _toward_, _to the vicinity of_, _in the vicinity of,_ ad is
used; as,--
Accusative in Exclamations.
id genus, _of that kind_; as, homines id genus, _men of that kind_
(originally homines, id genus hominum, _men, that kind of men_);
virile secus, muliebre secus, _of the male sex_, _of the female sex_;
* * * * *
THE DATIVE.
186. The Dative case, in general, expresses relations which are designated
in English by the prepositions to and for.
187. The commonest use of the Dative is to denote the person _to whom_
something is _given_, _said_, or _done_. Thus:--
bonis nocet qui malis parcit, _he injures (does harm to) the good, who
spares the bad_.
NOTE.--It is to be borne in mind that these verbs do not take the Dative by
virtue of their apparent English equivalence, but simply because they are
_intransitive_, and adapted to an indirect object. Some verbs of the same
apparent English equivalence are _transitive_ and govern the Accusative;
as, juvo, laedo, delecto. Thus: audentes deus juvat, _God helps the bold_;
neminem laesit _he injured no one_.
b. Verbs of this class are used in the passive only impersonally; as,--
tibi parcitur, _you are spared_;
III. With many verbs compounded with the prepositions: ad, ante, circum,
com,[49] in, inter, ob, post, prae, pro, sub, super.
1. Many simple verbs which cannot take a Dative of the indirect object
become capable of doing so when compounded with a preposition; as,--
2. Many transitive verbs which take only a direct object become capable,
when compounded, of taking a dative also as indirect object; as,--
Dative of Reference.
188. 1. The Dative of Reference denotes the person _to whom a statement
refers, of whom it is true_, or _to whom it is of interest;_ as,--
mihi ante oculos versaris, _you hover before my eyes_ (lit. _hover
before the eyes to me_);
illi severitas amorem non deminuit, _in his case severity did not
diminish love_ (lit. _to him severity did not diminish_);
a. Note the phrase alicui interdicere aqua et igni, _to interdict one
from fire and water_.
tu mihi istius audaciam defendis? _tell me, do you defend that man's
audacity?_
erit ille mihi semper deus, _he will always be a god to me_ (i.e. in my
opinion);
quae ista servitus tam claro homini, _how can that be slavery to so
illustrious a man_ (i.e. to his mind)!
honorem detraxerunt homini, _they took away the honor from the man_;
Caesar regi tetrarchiam eripuit, _Caesar took the tetrarchy away from
the king_;
Dative of Agency.
mihi eundum est, _I must go_ (lit. _it must be gone by me_).
2. Much less frequently with the compound tenses of the passive voice and
the perfect passive participle; as,--
disputatio quae mihi nuper habita est, _the discussion which was
recently conducted by me_.
honesta bonis viris quaeruntur, _noble ends are sought by good men_.
Dative of Possession.
190. The Dative of Possession occurs with the verb esse in such expressions
as:--
1. But with nomen est the name is more commonly attracted into the Dative;
as, mihi Marco nomen est.
191. The Dative of Purpose or Tendency designates _the end toward which an
action is directed_ or _the direction in which it tends_. It is used--
fortunae tuae mihi curae sunt, _your fortunes are a care to me_ (lit.
_for a care_);
hos tibi muneri misit, _he has sent these to you for a present_;
me gerendo bello ducem creavere, _me they have made leader for carrying
on the war_.
192. The use of the Dative with Adjectives corresponds very closely to its
use with verbs. Thus:--
noxiae poena par esto, _let the penalty be equal to the damage_.
a. For propior and proximus with the Accusative, see Sec. 141, 3.
NOTE.--Adjectives of this last class often take the Accusative with ad.
Dative of Direction.
193. In the poets the Dative is occasionally used to denote the _direction
of motion_; as,--
cineres rivo fluenti jace, _cast the ashes toward a flowing stream_.
dum Latio deos inferret, _till he should bring his gods to Latium_.
* * * * *
THE GENITIVE.
195. With Nouns the Genitive is _the case which defines the meaning of the
limited noun more closely_. This relation is generally indicated in English
by the preposition of. There are the following varieties of the Genitive
with Nouns:--
1. Here belongs the Genitive with causa and gratia. The Genitive always
precedes; as,--
a. For the difference in force between the Possessive Genitive and the
Dative of Possession, see Sec. 359, 1.
199. Subjective Genitive. This denotes _the person who makes or produces
something or who has a feeling_; as,--
201. Genitive of the Whole. This designates the _whole_ of which a part is
taken. It is used--
2. The Genitive of the Whole is used also with the Nominative or Accusative
Singular Neuter of Pronouns, or of Adjectives used substantively; also with
the Adverbs parum, satis, and partim when used substantively; as,--
b. But Adjectives of the third declension agree directly with the noun
they limit; as, nihil dulcius, _nothing sweeter_.
magni opera ejus existimata est, _his assistance was highly esteemed_.
quanti aedes emisti, _at how high a price did you purchase the house?_
tantae molis erat Romanam condere gentem, _of so great difficulty was
it to found the Roman race_.
204. The Genitive is used with many Adjectives _to limit the extent of
their application_. Thus:--
filius patris simillimus est, _the son is exactly like his father_;
When the reference is to things, both Genitive and Dative occur; as,--
4. In the poets and later prose writers the use of the Genitive with
Adjectives is extended far beyond earlier limits; as, atrox animi, _fierce
of temper_; incertus consili, _undecided in purpose_.
With other words denoting persons memini takes the Accusative, rarely the
Genitive; as,--
3. The phrase mihi (tibi, etc.) in mentem venit, following the analogy of
memini, takes the Genitive; as,--
a. But more frequently (in Cicero almost invariably) these verbs take de
with the Ablative; as,--
mille nummis damnatus est, _he was condemned (to pay) a thousand
sesterces_ (lit. _by a thousand sesterces_, Abl. of Means).
209. 1. The Impersonals pudet, paenitet, miseret, taedet, piget take the
Accusative of _the person affected_, along with the Genitive _of the person
or thing toward whom the feeling is directed_; as,--
_Interest_, _Refert._
210. With interest, _it concerns_, three points enter into consideration;
viz.--
b) by an Infinitive; as,--
a) by the Genitive (cf. Sec. 203, 3): magni, parvi, etc.; as,--
212. 1. Verbs of _Plenty_ and _Want_ sometimes govern the Genitive; as,--
a. These verbs more commonly take the Ablative (Sec. 214, 1); indigeo is the
only verb which has a preference for the Genitive.
3. In poetry some verbs take the Genitive in imitation of the Greek; as,--
* * * * *
THE ABLATIVE.
213. The Latin Ablative unites in itself three cases which were originally
distinct both in form and in meaning; viz.--
The uses of the Latin Ablative accordingly fall into Genuine Ablative uses,
Instrumental uses, and Locative uses.
Ablative of Separation.
Thus:--
Caesar hostes armis exuit, _Caesar stripped the enemy of their arms_;
bonorum vita vacua est metu, _the life of the good is free from fear_.
NOTE 1.--Yet Adjectives and libero may take the preposition ab,--regularly
so with the Ablative of persons; as,--
urbem a tyranno liberarunt, _they freed the city from the tyrant._
2. Of Verbs signifying _to keep from_, _to remove_, _to withdraw_, some
take the preposition, others omit it. The same Verb often admits both
constructions. Examples:--
abstinere cibo, _to abstain from food;_
hostes finibus prohibuerunt, _they kept the enemy from their borders_;
praedones ab insula prohibuit, _he kept the pirates from the island_.
Ablative of Source.
215. The Ablative of Source is used with the participles natus and ortus
(in poetry also with editus, satus, and some others), to designate
_parentage_ or _station_; as,--
summo loco natus, _high-born_ (lit. _born from a very high place_);
Ablative of Agent.
Ablative of Comparison.
patria mihi vita carior est, _my country is dearer to me than life_.
Plus, minus, amplius, longius are often employed as the equivalents of plus
quam, minus quam, etc. Thus:--
amplius viginti urbes incenduntur, _more than twenty cities are fired_;
minus quinque milia processit, _he advanced less than five miles_.
opinione celerius venit, _he comes more quickly than expected_ (lit.
_than opinion_).
Ablative of Means.
1. Utor, fruor, fungor, potior, vescor, and their compounds take the
Ablative; as,--
divitiis utitur, _he uses his wealth_ (lit. _he benefits himself by his
wealth_);
vita fruitur, _he enjoys life_ (lit. _he enjoys himself by life_);
carne vescuntur, _they eat flesh_ (lit. _feed themselves by means of_);
castris potitus est, _he got possession of the camp_ (lit. _made
himself powerful by the camp_).
c. Note the occasional use of a perfect passive participle with opus est;
as,--
quid hoc homine facias, _what can you do with this man?_
quid mea Tulliola fiet, _what will become of my dear Tullia?_ (lit.
_what will be done with my dear Tullia?_)
a. But plenus more commonly takes the Genitive. See Sec. 204, 1.
9. Under 'Means' belongs also the Ablative of the Way by Which; as,--
multa gloriae cupiditate fecit, _he did many things on account of his
love of glory_.
a. fido and confido always take the Dative of the person (Sec. 187, II, a);
sometimes the Dative of the thing.
Ablative of Manner.
nulla est altercatio clamoribus umquam habita majoribus, _no debate was
ever held under circumstances of greater applause_;
Ablative of Accompaniment.
222. The Ablative with cum is used with verbs of motion to denote
_accompaniment_; as,--
cum comitibus profectus est, _he set out with his attendants_;
1. In military expressions the Ablative may stand without cum when modified
by any adjective except a numeral; as,--
omnibus copiis, ingenti exercitu, magna manu; but usually cum exercitu,
cum duabus legionibus.
Ablative of Association.
pacem bello permutant, _they change peace for_ (lit. _with) war_.
223. The Ablative is used with comparatives and words involving comparison
(as post, ante, infra, supra) to denote the _degree of difference_; as,--
quo plura habemus, eo cupimus ampliora, _the more we have, the more we
want_.
Ablative of Quality.
sunt specie et colore tauri, _they are of the appearance and color of a
bull_,
Ablative of Price.
servum quinque minis emit, _he bought the slave for five minae._
1. The Ablatives magno, plurimo, parvo, minimo (by omission of pretio) are
used to denote _indefinite price_; as,--
aedes magno vendidit, _he sold the house for a high price._
Ablative of Specification.
2. Here belongs the use of the Ablative with dignus, _worthy_, indignus,
_unworthy_, and dignor, _deem worthy of_; as,--
Ablative Absolute.
vivo Caesare res publica salva erat, _while Caesar was alive the state
was safe_ (lit. _Caesar being alive_);
b) Condition; as,--
c) Opposition; as,--
d) Cause; as,--
passis palmis pacem petiverunt, _with hands outstretched, they sued for
peace_.
Ablative of Place.
b) The general words loco, locis, parte; also many words modified by
totus or even by other Adjectives; as,--
c) The special words: foris, _out of doors_; ruri, _in the country_,
terra marique, _on land and sea_.
d) The poets freely omit the preposition with any word denoting place;
as,--
a Roma X milia aberat, _he was ten miles distant from Rome_.
Urbe and oppido, when standing in apposition with a town name, are
accompanied by a preposition; as,--
Ablative of Time.
230. The Ablative is used to denote the time _at which_; as,--
2. Words not denoting time require the preposition in, unless accompanied
by a modifier. Thus:--
* * * * *
THE LOCATIVE.
3. Note the phrase pendere animi, lit. _to be in suspense in one's mind_.
4. For urbs and oppidum in apposition with a Locative, see Sec. 169, 4.
* * * * *
233. 1. The word with which an Adjective agrees is called its Subject.
A Predicate Adjective is one that limits its subject through the medium of
a verb (usually esse); as,--
AGREEMENT OF ADJECTIVES.
234. Agreement with One Noun. When an Adjective limits one noun it agrees
with it in Gender, Number, and Case.
1. Two Adjectives in the Singular may limit a noun in the Plural, as; prima
et vicesima legiones, _the first and twentieth legions_.
omnium rerum mors est extremum, _death is the end of all things_.
A. AGREEMENT AS TO NUMBER.
a) If the nouns are of the same gender, the Adjective agrees with them in
gender; as,--
pater et mater mortui sunt, _the father and mother have died_.
c) In case they include both persons and things, the Adjective is,--
domus, uxor, liberi inventi sunt, _home, wife, and children are
secured._
pars bestiis objecti sunt, _part (of the men) were thrown to beasts._
2. Neuter Plural Adjectives thus used are confined mainly to the Nominative
and Accusative cases. Such forms as magnorum, omnium; magnis, omnibus,
would ordinarily lead to ambiguity; yet where there is no ambiguity, they
sometimes occur; as,--
verum, _truth_;
justum, _justice_;
honestum, _virtue_.
238. From Adjectives which, like the above, occasionally admit the
substantive use, must be carefully distinguished certain others which have
become nouns; as,--
239. The Latin often uses an Adjective where the English idiom employs an
Adverb or an adverbial phrase; as,--
3. Strengthening Words. Vel and quam are often used with the Superlative as
strengthening particles, vel with the force of '_very_,' and quam with the
force of '_as possible_'; as,--
4. Phrases of the type '_more rich than brave_' regularly take the
Comparative in both members; as,--
exercitus erat ditior quam fortior, _the army was more rich than
brave._
OTHER PECULIARITIES.
3. When multus and another adjective both limit the same noun et is
generally used; as,--
PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
But ego te video, et tu me vides, _I see you, and you see me_.
2. The Genitives mei, tui, nostri, vestri are used only as Objective
Genitives; nostrum and vestrum as Genitives of the Whole. Thus:--
a. But nostrum and vestrum are regularly used in the place of the
Possessive in the phrases omnium nostrum, omnium vestrum.
3. The First Plural is often used for the First Singular of Pronouns and
Verbs. Compare the Eng. editorial 'we.'
4. When two Verbs govern the same object, the Latin does not use a pronoun
with the second, as is the rule in English. Thus:--
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS.
243. 1. The Possessive Pronouns, as a rule, are not employed except for the
purpose of _clearness_. Thus:--
de filii morte flebas, _you wept for the death of your son_.
But--
de morte filii mei flebas, _you wept for the death of my son_.
sua manu liberos occidit, _with his own hand he slew his children_;
REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS.
244. 1. The Reflexive Pronoun se and the Possessive Reflexive suus have a
double use:--
II. They may stand in a subordinate clause and refer to the subject of the
principal clause,--'Indirect Reflexives'; as,--
3. Se and suus are sometimes used in the sense, _one's self_, _one's own_,
where the reference is not to any particular person; as,--
4. Suus sometimes occurs in the meaning _his own_, _their own_, etc.,
referring not to the subject but to an oblique case; as,--
5. The Reflexives for the first and second persons are supplied by the
oblique cases of ego and tu (Sec. 85); as,--
RECIPROCAL PRONOUNS.
245. 1. The Latin has no special reciprocal pronoun ('each other'), but
expresses the reciprocal notion by the phrases: inter nos, inter vos, inter
se; as,--
Belgae obsides inter se dederunt, _the Belgae gave each other hostages_
(lit. _among themselves_);
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS.
246. 1. Where hic and ille are used in contrast, hic usually refers to the
latter of two objects, and ille to the former.
2. Hic and ille are often used in the sense of 'the following'; as,--
3. Ille often means _the famous_; as, Solon ille, _the famous Solon_.
5. The above pronouns, along with is, are usually attracted to the gender
of a predicate noun; as, hic est honor, meminisse officium suum, _this is
an honor, to be mindful of one's duty._
Is.
Maximum, eum qui Tarentum recepit, dilexi, _I loved Maximus, the man
who retook Tarentum_.
non suspicabatur (id quod nunc sentiet) satis multos testes nobis
reliquos esse, _he did not suspect (a thing which he will now perceive)
that we had witnesses enough left_.
Yet quod alone, without preceding id, sometimes occurs in this use.
2. Is also in all cases serves as the personal pronoun of the third person,
'_he_,' '_she_,' '_it_,' '_they_,' '_them_.'
3. When the English uses '_that of_,' '_those of_,' to avoid repetition of
the noun, the Latin omits the pronoun: as,--
in exercitu Sullae et postea in Crassi fuerat, _he had been in the army
of Sulla and afterward in that of Crassus_;
4. Note the phrases et is, et ea, etc., in the sense: _and that too_; as,--
Idem.
248. 1. Idem in apposition with the subject or object often has the force
of _also_, _likewise_; as,--
quod idem mihi contigit, _which likewise happened to me_ (lit. _which,
the same thing_);
bonus vir, quem eundem sapientem appellamus, _a good man, whom we call
also wise_.
For idem atque (ac), _the same as_, see Sec. 341, 1. c.
Ipse.
249. 1. Ipse, literally _self_, acquires its special force from the
context; as,--
2. The reflexive pronouns are often emphasized by the addition of ipse, but
ipse in such cases, instead of standing in apposition with the reflexive,
more commonly agrees with the subject; as,--
secum ipsi loquuntur, _they talk with themselves_;
RELATIVE PRONOUNS.
2. Where the antecedent is compound, the same principles for number and
gender prevail as in case of predicate adjectives under similar conditions
(see Sec. 235, B, 2). Thus:--
pater et filius, qui capti sunt, _the father and son who were
captured_;
Belgae, quae est tertia pars, _the Belgians, who are the third part_.
4. Sometimes the Relative takes its gender and number from the meaning of
its antecedent; as,--
pars qui bestiis objecti sunt, _a part (of the men) who were thrown to
beasts._
erant itinera duo, quibus itineribus, _there were two routes, by which
(routes)._
quam quisque novit artem, in hac se exerceat, _let each one practice
the branch which he knows._
qua es prudentia; quae tua est prudentia, _such is your prudence_ (lit.
_of which prudence you are; which is your prudence_).
numquam digne satis laudari philosophia poterit, cui qui pareat, omne
tempus aetatis sine molestia possit degere, _philosophy can never be
praised enough, since he who obeys her can pass every period of life
without annoyance_ (lit. _he who obeys which, etc._).
Here cui introduces the subordinate clause possit and connects it with
philosophia; but cui is governed by pareat, which is subordinate to possit.
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS.
252. 1. Quis, _any one_, is the weakest of the Indefinites, and stands
usually in combination with si, nisi, ne, num; as,--
4. Quisquam, _any one_, _any one whoever_ (more general than quis), and its
corresponding adjective ullus, _any_, occur mostly in negative and
conditional sentences, in interrogative sentences implying a negative, and
in clauses of comparison; as,--
si quisquam, Cato sapiens fuit, _if anybody was ever wise, Cato was_;
taetrior hic tyrannus fuit quam quisquam superiorum, _he was a viler
tyrant than any of his predecessors_.
quod cuique obtigit, id teneat, _what falls to each, that let him
hold_.
quinto quoque anno, _every four years_ (lit. _each fifth year_).
6. Nemo, _no one_, in addition to its other uses, stands regularly with
adjectives used substantively; as,--
PRONOMINAL ADJECTIVES.
253. 1. Alius, _another_, and alter, _the other_, are often used
correlatively; as,--
aliud loquitur, aliud sentit, _he says one thing, he thinks another_;
alter exercitum perdidit, alter vendidit, _one ruined the army, the
other sold it_;
2. Where the English says _one does one thing, another another_, the Latin
uses a more condensed form of statement; as,--
3. The Latin also expresses the notion '_each other_' by means of alius
repeated; as,--
Galli alius alium cohortati sunt, _the Gauls encouraged each other_.
6. Nescio quis forms a compound indefinite pronoun with the force of _some
one or other_; as,--
* * * * *
AGREEMENT.
254. 1. Agreement in Number and Person. A Finite Verb agrees with its
subject in Number and Person; as,--
Tarquinii materna patria erat, _Tarquinii was his native country on his
mother's side_;
non omnis error stultitia est dicenda, _not every error is to be called
folly_.
a) In Number; as,--
b) In Gender; as,--
duo milia crucibus adfixi sunt, _two thousand (men) were crucified_.
2. But sometimes the verb agrees with the nearest subject; viz.,--
a) When the verb precedes both subjects or stands between them; as,--
b) When the subjects are connected by aut; aut ... aut; vel ... vel;
neque ... neque; as,--
neque pater neque filius mortuus est, _neither father nor son died_.
si tu et Tullia valetis, ego et Cicero valemus, _if you and Tullia are
well, Cicero and I are well_.
VOICES.
256. 1. The Passive Voice sometimes retains traces of its original middle
or reflexive meaning; as,--
ego non patiar eum defendi, _I shall not allow him to defend himself_.
ventum est, _he_ (_they_, etc.) _came_ (lit. _it was come_).
TENSES.
The Latin with its six tenses is able to express each of the three kinds of
action for each of the three periods of time (making practically nine
tenses). It does this by employing certain tenses in more than one way, as
may be seen by the following table:--
2. It will be seen that the Present may express Undefined action or action
Going on; so also the Future. The Perfect likewise has a double use,
according as it denotes action Completed in present time (Present Perfect)
or Undefined action belonging to past time (Historical Perfect).
258. Tenses which denote Present or Future time are called Principal (or
Primary) Tenses, those which denote Past time are called Historical (or
Secondary).
Present Indicative.
259. Besides the two uses indicated in the table, the Present Indicative
presents the following peculiarities:--
4. In combination with jam, jam diu, jam pridem, and similar words, the
Present is frequently used of an action originating in the past and
continuing in the present; as,--
jam pridem cupio te visere, _I have long been desiring to visit you_
(i.e. I desire and have long desired).
Imperfect Indicative.
2. From the notion of action _going on_, there easily develops the notion
of _repeated_ or _customary_ action; as,--
C. Duilium videbam puer, _as a boy I often used to see Gaius Duilius_.
4. The Imperfect, with jam, jam diu, jam dudum, etc., is sometimes used of
an action which had been continuing some time; as,--
domicilium Romae multos jam annos habebat, _he had had his residence at
Rome for many years_ (i.e. he had it at this time and had long had it).
Future Indicative.
261. 1. The Latin is much more exact in the use of the Future than is the
English. We say: '_If he comes, I shall be glad_,' where we really mean:
'_If he shall come_,' etc. In such cases the Latin rarely admits the
Present, but generally employs the Future.
Perfect Indicative.
Pluperfect Indicative.
263. The Latin Pluperfect, like the English Past Perfect, denotes an act
_completed in the past_; as,--
a. In those verbs whose Perfect has Present force (Sec. 262, A), the
Pluperfect has the force of an Imperfect; as,--
noveram, _I knew_.
scribam epistulam, cum redieris, _I will write the letter when you have
returned_ (lit. _when you shall have returned_).
a. The Latin is much more exact in the use of the Future Perfect than the
English, which commonly employs the Present Perfect instead of the Future
Perfect.
b. In those verbs whose Perfect has Present force (Sec. 262, A) the Future
Perfect has the force of a Future; as,--
Epistolary Tenses.
265. In letters the writer often uses tenses which are not appropriate at
the time of writing, but which will be so at the time when his letter is
received; he thus employs the Imperfect and the Perfect for the Present,
and the Pluperfect for the Present Perfect; as,--
Sequence of Tenses.
267. 1. In the Subjunctive the Present and Perfect are Principal tenses,
the Imperfect and Pluperfect, Historical.
PRINCIPAL SEQUENCE,--
videro quid facias, _I shall have seen what you are doing_.
videro quid feceris, _I shall have seen what you have done_.
HISTORICAL SEQUENCE,--
Peculiarities of Sequence.
Sulla suos hortatur ut forti animo sint, _Sulla exhorts his soldiers to
be stout-hearted_;
Gallos hortatur ut arma caperent, _he exhorted the Gauls to take arms_.
rex tantum motus est, ut Tissaphernem hostem judicarit, _the king was
so much moved that he adjudged Tissaphernes an enemy_.
269. The Future and Future Perfect, which are lacking to the Latin
Subjunctive, are supplied in subordinate clauses as follows:--
2. Even where the context does not contain a Future tense in the main
clause, Future time is often expressed in the subordinate clauses by the
Present and Imperfect Subjunctive. Thus:--
non dubito quin pater venturus sit, _I do not doubt that my father will
come_;
non dubitabam quin pater venturus esset, _I did not doubt that my
father would come_.
non dubito quin te mox hujus rei paeniteat, _I do not doubt that you
will soon repent of this thing;_
non dubitabam quin haec res brevi conficeretur, _I did not doubt that
this thing would soon be fnished._
270. 1. The tenses of the Infinitive denote time not absolutely, but _with
reference to the verb on which they depend._ Thus:--
b) The Perfect Infinitive represents an act as _prior to_ the time of the
verb on which it depends; as,--
visus est honores adsecutus esse, _he seemed to have gained honors_.
2. Where the English says '_ought to have done_,' '_might have done_,'
etc., the Latin uses debui, oportuit, potui (debebam, oportebat, poteram),
with the Present Infinitive; as,--
a. Oportuit, volo, nolo (and in poetry some other verbs), may take a
Perfect Infinitive instead of the Present; as,--
hoc jam pridem factum esse oportuit, _this ought long ago to have been
done_.
spero futurum esse ut hostes arceantur, _I hope that the enemy will be
kept off_.
spero epistulam scriptam fore, _I hope the letter will have been
written_;
dico me satis adeptum fore, _I say that I shall have gained enough_.
THE MOODS.
271. The Indicative is used for the _statement of facts_, _the supposition
of facts_, or _inquiry after facts_.
poteram multa dicere, _I might have said much_ (Sec. 270, 2).
1. As willed--Volitive Subjunctive;
2. As desired--Optative Subjunctive;
3. Conceived of as possible--Potential Subjunctive.
VOLITIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
273. The Volitive Subjunctive represents the action _as willed_. It always
implies authority on the part of the speaker, and has the following
varieties:--
A. HORTATORY SUBJUNCTIVE.
B. JUSSIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
1. Most frequently in the third singular and the third plural; as,--
2. Less frequently in the second person, often with indefinite force; as,--
C. PROHIBITIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
276. The Subjunctive is used in the second and third persons singular and
plural, with ne, to express _a prohibition_. Both Present and Perfect
occur, and without appreciable difference of meaning; as,--
impii ne placare audeant deos, _let not the impious dare to appease the
gods!_
cave ne haec facias, _do not do this_ (lit. _take care lest you do_)!
D. DELIBERATIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
E. CONCESSIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
sit hoc verum, _I grant that this is true_ (lit. _let this be true_);
fuerit malus civis aliis; tibi quando esse coepit, _I grant that he was
a bad citizen to others; when did he begin to be so toward you?_
OPTATIVE SUBJUNCTIVE.
1. The Present Tense, often accompanied by utinam, is used where the wish
is conceived of _as possible_.
utinam istud ex animo diceres, _would that you were saying that in
earnest_ (i.e. I regret that you are not saying it in earnest);
POTENTIAL SUBJUNCTIVE.
fortunam citius reperias quam retineas, _one would more quickly find
Fortune than keep it_ (i.e. if one should make the trial);
The Imperative.
vale, _farewell_.
1. The Present is the tense of the Imperative most commonly used, but the
Future is employed--
rem vobis proponam; vos eam penditote, _I will lay the matter before
you; do you (then) consider it_;
consules summum jus habento, _the consuls shall have supreme power_;
hominem mortuom in urbe ne sepelito, _no one shall bury a dead body in
the city_;
quartae esto partis Marcus heres, _let Marcus be heir to a fourth (of
the property_);
2. Except with the Future Imperative the negative is not used in classical
prose. Prohibitions are regularly expressed in other ways. See Sec. 276, b.
quin vocem continetis, _keep still!_ (lit. _why don't you stop your
voices?_);
quin equos conscendimus, _let us mount our horses_ (lit. _why do we not
mount our horses?_)
Clauses of Purpose.
adjuta me quo hoc fiat facilius, _help me, in order that this may be
done more easily;_
portas clausit, ne quam oppidani injuriam acciperent, _he closed the
gates, lest the townspeople should receive any injury._
haec faciunt quo Chremetem absterreant, _they are doing this in order
to frighten Chremes._
c. Ut non (not ne) is used where the negation belongs to some single
word, instead of to the purpose clause as a whole. Thus:--
ut non ejectus ad alienos, sed invitatus ad tuos videare, _that you may
seem not driven out among strangers, but invited to your own friends._
d. To say '_and that not_' or '_or that not_,' the Latin regularly uses
neve (neu); as,--
ut earum rerum vis minueretur, neu ponti nocerent, _that the violence
of these things might be lessened, and that they might not harm the
bridge_;
e. But neque (for neve) is sometimes used in a second Purpose Clause when
ut stands in the first, and, after the Augustan era, even when the first
clause is introduced by ne.
hac causa, ut pacem haberent, _on this account, that they might have
peace._
haec habui, de senectute quae dicerem, _I had these things to say about
old age_;
idoneus fuit nemo quem imitarere, _there was no one suitable for you to
imitate_ (_cf_. nemo fuit quem imitarere, _there was no one for you to
imitate_);
ut haec omnia omittam, abiimus, _to pass over all this,_ (_I will say
that_) _we departed_.
Clauses of Characteristic.
multa sunt, quae mentem acuant, _there are many things which sharpen
the wits._
The Clause of Characteristic implies '_a person of the sort that does
something_'; the Indicative relative clause implies '_a particular person
who does something_.'
sapientia est una quae maestitiam pellat, _philosophy is the only thing
that drives away sorrow_;
quae civitas est quae non everti possit, _what state is there that
cannot be overthrown?_
non is sum qui improbos laudem, _I am not the sort of man that praises
the wicked._
non longius hostes aberant quam quo telum adigi posset, _the enemy were
not too far off for a dart to reach them_ (lit. _further off than [a
point] to which a dart could be cast_).
b) Opposition:--
nemo est quin saepe audierit, _there is no one who has not often
heard_;
nemo fuit militum quin vulneraretur, _there was no one of the soldiers
who was not wounded_.
quod sciam, _so far as I know_; quem (quam, quod), audierim, _so far as
I have heard_.
Clauses of Result.
nemo est tam senex qui se annum non putet posse vivere, _nobody is so
old as not to think he can live a year_;
habetis eum consulem qui parere vestris decretis non dubitet, _you have
a consul such as does not hesitate to obey your decrees_.
nemo est tam fortis quin rei novitate perturbetur, _no one is so
steadfast as not to be thrown into confusion by a strange occurrence_.
4. Note the use of quam ut (sometimes quam alone) to denote Result after
comparatives; as,--
urbs erat munitior quam ut primo impetu capi posset, _the city was too
strongly fortified to be taken at the first attack_ (lit. _more
strongly fortified than [so] that it could be taken, etc._).
Causal Clauses.
1. Quod, quia, quoniam take the Indicative when the reason is _that of the
writer or speaker;_ they take the Subjunctive when the reason is viewed _as
that of another._ Thus:--
Bellovaci suum numerum non compleverunt quod se suo nomine cum Romanis
bellum gesturos dicerent, _the Bellovaci did not furnish their
complement, because they said they were going to wage war with the
Romans on their own account_.
b. Non quod, non quo (by attraction for non eo quod), non quia, _not
that_, _not because_; and non quod non, non quo non, non quin, _not that
... not_; _not because ... not_; _not but that_, are usually employed
merely to introduce a hypothetical reason, and hence take the
Subjunctive; as,--
Crasso commendationem non sum pollicitus, non quin eam valituram apud
te arbitrarer, sed egere mihi commendatione non videbatur, _I did not
promise a recommendation to Crassus, not that I did not think it would
have weight with you, but because he did not seem to me to need
recommendation_.
c. But clauses introduced by non quod, non quia take the Indicative _if
they state a fact_, even though that fact is denied to be the reason for
something; as,--
hoc ita sentio, non quia sum ipse augur, sed quia sic existimare nos
est necesse, _this I think, not because I am myself an augur (which I
really am), but because it is necessary for us to think so_.
cum sis mortalis, quae mortalia sunt, cura, _since you are mortal, care
for what is mortal_.
3. Quando (less frequent than the other causal particles) governs the
Indicative; as,--
id omitto, quando vobis ita placet, _I pass over that, since you so
wish_.
287. 1. Postquam (posteaquam), _after_; ut, ubi, _when_; cum primum, simul,
simul ac (simul atque), _as soon as_, when used to refer _to a single past
act_ regularly take the Perfect Indicative; as,--
a. The Historical Present may take the place of the Perfect in this
construction.
2. To denote _the repeated occurrence_ of an act, ut, ubi, simul atque, _as
often as_, when following an historical tense, take the Pluperfect
Indicative (compare Sec. 288, 3; 302, 3); as,--
Examples:--
INDICATIVE.
an tum eras consul, cum in Palatio mea domus ardebat, _or were you
consul at the time when my house burned up on the Palatine?_
credo tum cum Sicilia florebat opibus et copiis magna artificia fuisse
in ea insula, _I believe that at the time when Sicily was powerful in
riches and resources there were great crafts in that island_;
eo tempore paruit cum parere necesse erat, _he obeyed at the time when
it was necessary to obey_;
illo die, cum est lata lex de me, _on that day when the law concerning
me was passed_.
SUBJUNCTIVE.
a. Note that the Indicative is much less frequent in such clauses than
the Subjunctive, and is regularly confined to those cases where the main
clause has tum, eo die, eo anno, eo tempore or some similar correlative
of the cum. Sometimes it depends entirely upon the point of view of the
writer whether he shall employ the Indicative or Subjunctive.
2. Cum Inversum. When the logical order of the clauses is inverted, we find
cum with the Perfect Indicative or Historical Present, in the sense of
_when_, _when suddenly_. The main clause in such cases often has jam, vix,
aegre, nondum; as,--
saepe cum aliquem videret minus bene vestitum, suum amiculum dedit,
_often, wherever he saw some one more poorly clothed, he gave him his
own mantle_;
289. When cum refers to the Present or Future it regularly takes the
Indicative; as,--
tum tua res agitur, paries cum proximus ardet, _your own interests are
at stake when your neighbor's house is burning_;
cum videbis, tum scies, _when you see, then you will know._
cum tacent clamant, _their silence is a shout_ (lit. _when they are
silent, they shout_).
2. Cum ... tum. When cum ... tum mean _both ... and_, the cum-clause is in
the Indicative; but when cum has the force of _while_, _though_, it may
take the Subjunctive; as,--
cum te semper dilexerim, tum tuis factis incensus sum, _while I have
always loved you, at the same time I am stirred by your conduct_.
291. Antequam and priusquam (often written ante ... quam, prius ... quam)
take the Indicative to denote _an actual fact_.
non prius jugulandi finis fuit, quam Sulla omnes suos divitiis
explevit, _there was no end of murder until Sulla satisfied all his
henchmen with wealth_.
a) An act in preparation for which the main act takes place; as,--
priusquam telum adici posset, omnis acies terga vertit, _before a spear
could be hurled, the whole army fled._
animum omittunt priusquam loco demigrent, _they die rather than quit
their post._
II. Dum, donec, and quoad, _as long as_, take the Indicative; as,--
dum anima est, spes est, _as long as there is life, there is hope_;
Lacedaemoniorum gens fortis fuit, dum Lycurgi leges vigebant, _the race
of the Lacedaemonians was powerful, as long as the laws of Lycurgus
were in force_;
a. In Livy and subsequent historians dum and donec in this sense often
take the Subjunctive instead of the Indicative; as,--
exspectavit Caesar dum naves convenirent, _Caesar waited for the ships
to assemble_;
dum litterae veniant, morabor, _I shall wait for the letter to come_.
Substantive Clauses.
295. Substantive Clauses Developed from the Volitive are used with the
following classes of verbs:--
convenit ut unis castris miscerentur, _it was agreed that they should
be united in one camp_.
NOTE.--Verbs of all the above classes also admit the Infinitive, especially
in poetry.
6. With a few other expressions, such as necesse est, reliquus est,
sequitur, licet, oportet; as,--
7. Here also belong phrases of the type: nulla causa est cur, quin; non est
cur, etc.; nihil est cur, etc.; as,--
nulla causa est cur timeam, _there is no reason why I should fear_
(originally Deliberative: _why should I fear? There's no reason_);
nihil est quin dicam, _there is no reason why I should not say_.
8. Many of the above classes of verbs at times take the simple Subjunctive
without ut. In such cases we must not recognize any omission of ut, but
simply an earlier form of expression which existed before the ut-clause
arose. This is regularly the case with necesse est, licet, and oportet; see
6. Other examples are:--
huic imperat adeat civitates, _he orders him to visit the states_.
ita fit, ut nemo esse possit beatus, _thus it happens that no one can
be happy_;
est mos hominum ut nolint eundem pluribus rebus excellere, _it is the
way of men not to wish the same person to excel in many things._
quis dubitat quin in virtute divitiae sint, _who doubts that in virtue
there are riches?_
non dubium erat quin venturus esset, _there was no doubt that he was
about to come._
non dubitamus inventos esse, _we do not doubt that men were found_
hoc uno praestamus vel maxime feris, quod colloquimur inter nos, _in
this one respect we are especially superior to the beasts, that we talk
with each other_.
b) After bene fit, bene accidit, male fit, bene facere, miror, etc.;
as,--
bene mihi evenit, quod mittor ad mortem, _it is well for me that I am
sent to death_;
2. Quod at the beginning of the sentence sometimes has the force of _as
regards the fact that_. Thus:--
F. Indirect Questions.
dic mihi ubi fueris, quid feceris, _tell me where you were, what you
did_;
oculis judicari non potest in utram partem fluat Arar, _it cannot be
determined by the eye in which direction the Arar flows_;
bis bina quot essent, nesciebat, _he did not know how many two times
two were_.
effugere nemo id potest quod futurum est, _no one can escape what is
destined to come to pass;_ but saepe autem ne utile quidem est scire
quid futurum sit, _but often it is not even useful to know what is
coming to pass._
b) By num or -ne, without distinction of meaning; as,--
nescio quid faciam, _I do not know what to do._ (Direct: quid faciam,
_what shall I do!_)
Examples:--
di utrum sint necne, quaeritur, _it is asked whether there are gods or
not._
5. Haud scio an, nescio an, by omission of the first member of the double
question, occur with the Subjunctive in the sense: _I am inclined to think,
probably, perhaps;_ as,--
CONDITIONAL SENTENCES.
301. Conditional Sentences are compound sentences (Sec. 164) consisting of two
parts, the Protasis (or _condition_), usually introduced by si, nisi, or
sin, and the Apodosis (or _conclusion_). There are the following types of
Conditional Sentences:--
si hoc credis, erras, _if you believe this, you are mistaken_;
si hoc dixisti, errasti, _if you said this, you were in error_.
2. Sometimes the Protasis takes the Indefinite Second Person Singular (Sec.
356, 3) of the Present or Perfect Subjunctive, with the force of the
Indicative; as,--
4. Where the sense demands it, the Apodosis in conditional sentences of the
First Type may be an Imperative or one of the Independent Subjunctives
(Hortatory, Deliberative, etc.); as,--
303. Here we regularly have the Subjunctive (of the Present or Perfect
tense) in both Protasis and Apodosis; as,--
si hoc dicas, erres, or si hoc dixeris, erraveris, _if you should say
this, you would be mistaken_;
haec si tecum patria loquatur, nonne impetrare debeat, _if your country
should plead thus with you, would she not deserve to obtain her
request?_
si amici mei adessent, opis non indigerem, _if my friends were here, I
should not lack assistance_;
si hoc dixisses, errasses, _if you had said this, you would have
erred_;
eum patris loco colere debebas, si ulla in te pietas esset, _you ought
to revere him as a father, if you had any sense of devotion_.
si Sestius occisus esset, fuistisne ad arma ituri, _if Sestius had been
slain, would you have proceeded to arms?_
si unum diem morati essetis, moriendum omnibus fuit, _if you had
delayed one day, you would all have had to die_.
305. 1. The Protasis is not always expressed by a clause with si, but may
be implied in a word, a phrase, or merely by the context; as,--
cras petito, dabitur, _if you ask to-morrow, it shall be given you_
(lit. _ask to-morrow_, etc.);
haec reputent, videbunt, _if they consider this, they will see_ (lit.
_let them consider_, etc.);
roges Zenonem, respondeat, _if you should ask Zeno, he would answer_.
4. Nisi has a fondness for combining with negatives (non, nemo, nihil);
as,--
5. Nisi forte, nisi vero, nisi si, _unless perchance, unless indeed_ (often
with ironical force), take the Indicative; as,--
nisi vero, quia perfecta res non est, non videtur punienda, _unless
indeed, because an act is not consummated, it does not seem to merit
punishment_.
tantus patres metus cepit, velat si jam ad portas hostis esset, _as
great fear seized the senators as (would have seized them) if the enemy
were already at the gates_;
sed quid ego his testibus utor quasi res dubia aut obscura sit, _but
why do I use these witnesses, as (I should do) if the matter were
doubtful or obscure_;
serviam tibi tam quasi emeris me argento, _I will serve you as though
you had bought me for money_.
2. Note that in sentences of this kind the Latin observes the regular
principles for the Sequence of Tenses. Thus after principal tenses the
Latin uses the Present and Perfect (as in the second and third examples),
where the English uses the Past and Past Perfect.
Concessive Clauses.
ne sit summum malum dolor, malum certe est, _granted that pain is not
the greatest evil, yet it is certainly an evil_.
Atticus honores non petiit, cum ei paterent, _Atticus did not seek
honors, though they were open to him_.
4. Licet sometimes loses its verbal force (see Sec. 295, 6) and sinks to the
level of a conjunction with the force of _although_. It takes the
Subjunctive, Present or Perfect; as,--
5. Quamquam, with the force _and yet_, is often used to introduce principal
clauses; as,--
quamvis infesto animo perveneras, _though you had come with hostile
intent_.
310. These particles are followed by the Subjunctive (negative ne) and have
two distinct uses:--
nil obstat tibi, dum ne sit ditior alter, _nothing hinders you in your
desire that your neighbor may not be richer than you_.
nubant, dum ne dos fiat comes, _let them marry, provided no dowry goes
with it_.
Relative Clauses.
qui hoc dicit, errat, _he who says this is mistaken_ (First Type);
qui hoc dicat, erret, _he would be mistaken who should say this_
(Second Type);
qui hoc dixisset, errasset, _the man who had said this would have been
mistaken._
Declarative Sentences.
Regulus dixit quam diu jure jurando hostium teneretur non esse se
senatorem, _Regulus said that as long as he was held by his pledge to
the enemy he was not a senator._ (Direct: quam diu teneor non sum
senator.)
cum id nescire Mago diceret, _when Mago said he did not know this_ (for
se nescire).
Interrogative Sentences.
315. 1. Real questions of the Direct Discourse, upon becoming indirect, are
regularly put in the Subjunctive; as,--
2. Rhetorical questions, on the other hand, being asked merely for effect,
and being equivalent in force to emphatic statements, regularly stand in
the Infinitive in Indirect Discourse. Thus :--
Imperative Sentences.
ne suae virtuti tribueret, _let him not attribute it to his own valor!_
a. The Perfect Infinitive may represent any past tense of the Indicative
of Direct Discourse. Thus:--
318. These follow the regular principle for the Sequence of Tenses, being
Principal if the verb of _saying_ is Principal; Historical if it is
Historical. Yet for the sake of vividness, we often find the Present
Subjunctive used after an historical tense (_Repraesentatio_); as,--
a. For the sequence after the Perfect Infinitive, see Sec. 268, 2.
B. THE PROTASIS. The protasis takes those tenses of the Subjunctive which
are required by the Sequence of Tenses.
Examples:--
DIRECT. INDIRECT.
si hoc credis, erras, dico, si hoc credas, te errare;
dixi, si hoc crederes, te errare.
si hoc credes, errabis, dico, si hoc credas, te erraturum
esse;
dixi, si hoc crederes, te erraturum
esse.
si hoc credideris, errabis, dico, si hoc crederis, te erraturum
esse;
dixi, si hoc credidisses, te erraturum
esse.
si hoc credebas, erravisti, dico, si hoc crederes, te erravisse;
dixi, si hoc crederes, te erravisse.
Examples:--
b) In the Passive Voice it takes the form futurum fuisse ut with the
Imperfect Subjunctive.
Examples:--
Paetus omnes libros quos pater suus reliquisset mihi donavit, _Paetus
gave me all the books which (as he said) his father had left_.
SUBJUNCTIVE BY ATTRACTION.
nemo avarus adhuc inventus est, cui, quod haberet, esset satis, _no
miser has yet been found who was satisfed with what he had_;
mos est Athenis quotannis in contione laudari eos qui sint in proeliis
interfecti, _it is the custom at Athens every year for those to be
publicly eulogized who have been killed in battle_. (Here the notion of
'praising those who fell in battle' forms an inseparable whole.)
325. These are the Infinitive, Participle, Gerund, and Supine. All of these
partake of the nature of the Verb, on the one hand, and of the Noun or
Adjective, on the other. Thus:--
As Verbs,--
As Nouns or Adjectives,--
THE INFINITIVE.
NOTE.--The Infinitive was originally a Dative, and traces of this are still
to be seen in the poetical use of the Infinitive to express _purpose_; as,
nec dulces occurrent oscula nati praeripere, _and no sweet children will
run to snatch kisses_.
_A. As Subject._
dulce et decorum est pro patria mori, _it is sweet and noble to die for
one's country_;
virorum est fortium toleranter dolorem pati, _it is the part of brave
men to endure pain with patience_;
senatui placuit legatos mittere, _the Senate decided_ (lit. _it pleased
the Senate_) _to send envoys_.
2. Even though the Infinitive itself appears without Subject, it may take a
Predicate Noun or Adjective in the Accusative; as,--
impune quaelibet facere, id est regem esse, _to do whatever you please
with impunity, that is to be a king_.
_B. As Object._
as,--
beatus esse sine virtute nemo potest, _no one can be happy without
virtue_;
Cato esse quam videri bonus malebat, _Cato preferred to be good rather
than to seem so_.
_A. As Subject._
330. The Infinitive with Subject Accusative (like the simple Infinitive) is
used as Subject with esse and Impersonal verbs, particularly with aequum
est, utile est, turpe est, fama est, spes est, fas est, nefas est, opus
est, necesse est, oportet, constat, praestat, licet, etc.; as,--
apertum est sibi quemque natura esse carum, _it is manifest that by
nature everybody is dear to himself_.
_B. As Object._
331. The Infinitive with Subject Accusative is used as Object after the
following classes of verbs:
Thales dixit aquam esse initium rerum, _Thales said that water was the
first principle of the universe_;
nullo se implicari negotio passus est, _he did not permit himself to be
involved in any difficulty_.
IV. With volo, nolo, malo, cupio, when the Subject of the Infinitive is
different from that of the governing verb; as,--
nec mihi hunc errorem extorqueri volo, _nor do I wish this error to be
wrested from me_;
eas res jactari nolebat, _he was unwilling that these matters should be
discussed_;
te tua frui virtute cupimus, _we desire that you enjoy your worth_.
a. When the Subject of both verbs is the same, the simple Infinitive is
regularly used in accordance with Sec. 328, 1. But exceptions occur,
especially in case of esse and Passive Infinitives as,--
b. Volo also admits the Subjunctive, with or without ut; nolo the
Subjunctive alone. (See Sec. 296, 1, a.)
non moleste ferunt se libidinum vinculis laxatos esse, _they are not
troubled at being released from the bonds of passion_;
miror te ad me nihil scribere, _I wonder that you write me nothing_.
VI. Some verbs which take two Accusatives, one of the Person and the other
of the Thing (Sec. 178, 1), may substitute an Infinitive for the second
Accusative; as,--
332. Those verbs which in the Active are followed by the Infinitive with
Subject Accusative, usually admit the personal construction of the Passive.
This is true of the following and of some others:--
milites pontem facere jussi sunt, _the soldiers were ordered to build a
bridge_;
milites castris exire vetiti sunt, _the troops were forbidden to go out
of the camp_;
Sestius Clodium accusare non est situs, _Sestius was not allowed to
accuse Clodius_.
NOTE.--In compound tenses and periphrastic forms, the last two classes of
verbs, c), d), more commonly take the impersonal construction; as--
traditum est Homerum caecum fuisse, _the story goes that Homer was
blind_.
333. The Infinitive with Adjectives (except paratus, assuetus, etc.; see Sec.
328, 1) occurs only in poetry and post-Augustan prose writers; as,--
Infinitive in Exclamations.
huncine solem tam nigrum surrexe mihi, _to think that to-day's sun rose
with such evil omen for me!_
sedere totos dies in villa, _to stay whole days at the villa_.
Historical Infinitive.
PARTICIPLES.
336. 1. The tenses of the Participle, like those of the infinitive (see Sec.
270), express time not absolutely, but with reference to the verb upon
which the Participle depends.
assurgentem regem resupinat, _as the king was trying to rise, he threw
him down._
3. The Perfect Passive Participle denotes action _prior to_ that of the
verb. Thus:--
Use of Participles.
a) Time; as,--
b) A Condition; as,--
mente uti non possumus cibo et potione completi, _if gorged with food
and drink, we cannot use our intellects_.
c) Manner; as,--
d) Means; as,--
sol oriens diem conficit, _the sun, by its rising, makes the day._
f) Cause; as,--
3. Video and audio, besides the Infinitive, take the Present Participle in
the Predicate use; as,--
urbem captam diruit, _he captured and destroyed the city_ (lit. _he
destroyed the city captured_).
suo cuique utendum est judicio, _every man must use his own judgment_.
9. For the Gerundive as the equivalent of the Gerund, see Sec. 339, 1.
THE GERUND.
5. As a rule, only the Genitive of the Gerund and the Ablative (without a
preposition) admit a Direct Object.
3. In order to avoid ambiguity (see Sec. 236, 2), the Gerundive Construction
must not be employed in case of Neuter Adjectives used substantively. Thus
regularly--
4. From the nature of the case only Transitive Verbs can be used in the
Gerundive construction; but utor, fruor, fungor, potior (originally
transitive) regularly admit it; as,--
5. The Genitives mei, tui, sui, nostri, vestri, when used in the Gerundive
Construction, are regularly employed without reference to Gender or Number,
since they were originally Neuter Singular Adjectives used substantively.
Thus:--
mulier sui servandi causa aufugit, _the woman fled for the sake of
saving herself_;
legati in castra venerunt sui purgandi causa, _the envoys came into
camp for the purpose of clearing themselves_.
THE SUPINE.
pacem petitum oratores Romam mittunt, _they send envoys to Rome to ask
for peace_.
* * * * *
CHAPTER VI.--_Particles._
COOeRDINATE CONJUNCTIONS.
b) -que joins more closely than et, and is used especially where the two
members have an internal connection with each other; as,--
cum homines aestu febrique jactantur, _when people are tossed about
with heat and fever_.
c) et non is used for neque when the emphasis of the negative rests upon
a special word; as,--
vetus et non ignobilis orator, _an old and not ignoble orator_.
d) For _and nowhere_, _and never_, _and none_, the Latin regularly said
nec usquam, nec umquam, nec ullus, etc.
Less frequently:--
4. In enumerations--
horae cedunt et dies et menses et anni, _hours and days and months and
years pass away_.
c) The connective may be omitted between the former members, while the
last two are connected by -que (rarely et); as,--
1. a) aut must be used when the alternatives are mutually exclusive; as,--
cita mors venit aut victoria laeta, _(either) swift death or glad
victory comes_.
f) tamen, _yet_, usually stands after the emphatic word, but not always.
non solum (non modo) ... sed etiam, _not only ... but also_;
non modo non ... sed ne ... quidem, _not only not, but not even_; as,--
non modo tibi non irascor, sed ne reprehendo quidem factum tuum, _I not
only am not angry with you, but I do not even blame your action_.
a. But when the sentence has but one verb, and this stands with the
second member, non modo may be used for non modo non; as,--
adsentatio non modo amico, sed ne libero quidem digne est, _flattery is
not only not worthy of a friend, but not even of a free man._
ADVERBS.
ne ... quidem means _not even_; the emphatic word or phrase always stands
between; as, ne ille quidem, _not even he_.
habeo hic neminem neque amicum neque cognatum, _I have here no one,
neither friend nor relative_.
non enim praetereundum est ne id quidem, _for not even that must be
passed by._
* * * * *
A. WORD-ORDER.
348. In the normal arrangement of the Latin sentence the Subject stands at
the beginning of the sentence, the Predicate at the end; as,--
349. But for the sake of emphasis the normal arrangement is often
abandoned, and the emphatic word is put at the beginning, less frequently
at the end of the sentence; as,--
SPECIAL PRINCIPLES.
350. 1. Nouns. A Genitive or other oblique case regularly follows the word
upon which it depends. Thus:--
Yet flumen Rhenus, _the River Rhine_; and always in good prose urbs Roma,
_the city Rome_.
5. Pronouns.
erant duo itinera, quibus itineribus, etc., _there were two routes, by
which_, etc.
b. But ille in the sense of '_that well known_,' '_that famous_,' usually
stands after its Noun; as,--
But for purposes of contrast the Possessive often precedes its Noun;
as,--
d. Where two or more Pronouns occur in the same sentence, the Latin is
fond of putting them in close proximity; as,--
nisi forte ego vobis cessare videor, _unless perchance I seem to you to
be doing nothing_.
6. Adverbs and Adverbial phrases regularly precede the word they modify;
as,--
a. But limiting words often intervene between the Preposition and its
case; as,--
de communi hominum memoria, _concerning the common memory of men_;
c. For Anastrophe, by which a Preposition is put after its case, see Sec.
144, 3.
10. The Latin has a fondness for putting side by side words which are
etymologically related; as,--
11. Special rhetorical devices for indicating emphasis are the following:--
sed pleni omnes sunt libri, plenae sapientium voces, plena exemplorum
vetustas, _but all books are full of it, the voices of sages are full
of it, antiquity is full of examples of it_.
c) Chiasmus,[59] which consists in changing the relative order of words
in two antithetical phrases; as,--
12. Metrical Close. At the end of a sentence certain cadences were avoided;
others were much employed. Thus:--
a) Cadences avoided.
_ v _ ; as, auxerant.
_ v _ v ; as, comprobavit.
B. SENTENCE-STRUCTURE.
2. A word serving as the common Subject or Object of the main clause and a
subordinate one, stands before both; as,--
postquam haec dixit, profectus est, _after he said this, he set out_;
si quis ita agat, imprudens sit, _if any one should act so, he would be
devoid of foresight_;
si quid est in me ingeni, quod sentio quam sit exiguum, _if there is
any talent in me, and I know how little it is_.
5. The Latin Period. The term Period, when strictly used, designates a
compound sentence in which the subordinate clauses are inserted within the
main clause; as,--
In the Periodic structure the thought is suspended until the end of the
sentence is reached. Many Roman writers were extremely fond of this
sentence-structure, and it was well adapted to the inflectional character
of their language; in English we generally avoid it.
6. When there are several subordinate clauses in one Period, the Latin so
arranges them as to avoid a succession of verbs. Thus:--
* * * * *
NOUNS.
3. The Latin is usually _more concrete_ than the English, and especially
_less bold in the personification_ of abstract qualities. Thus:--
4. The Nouns of Agency in -tor and -sor (see Sec. 147, 1) denote a _permanent_
or _characteristic activity_; as,--
oratores, _pleaders_;
cantores, _singers_;
a) A Genitive; as,--
b) An Adjective; as,--
c) A Participle; as,--
ADJECTIVES.
a) A Genitive; as,--
3. Adjectives are not used in immediate agreement with proper names; but an
Adjective may limit vir, homo, ille, or some other word used as an
Appositive of a proper name; as,--
PRONOUNS.
2. Uterque, ambo. Uterque means _each of two_; ambo means _both_; as,--
VERBS.
hostes qui in urbem irruperant, _the enemy having burst into the city_.
3. The Latin agrees with English in the stylistic employment of the Second
Person Singular in an indefinite sense (= '_one_'). _Cf._ the English '_You
can drive a horse to water, but you can't make him drink._' But in Latin
this use is mainly confined to certain varieties of the Subjunctive,
especially the Potential (Sec. 280), Jussive (Sec. 275), Deliberative (Sec. 277),
and the Subjunctive in conditional sentences of the sort included under Sec.
302, 2, and 303. Examples:--
quid hoc homine facias, _what are you to do with this man_?
357. 1. To denote '_so many years, etc., afterwards or before_' the Latin
employs not merely the Ablative of Degree of Difference with post and ante
(see Sec. 223), but has other forms of expression. Thus:--
post diem quartum quam ab urbe discesseramus, _four days after we had
left the city_;
ante tertium annum quam decesserat, _three years before he had died_.
2. The Latin seldom combines both Subject and Object with the same
Infinitive; as,--
Such a sentence would be ambiguous, and might mean either that the Romans
had conquered Hannibal, or that Hannibal had conquered the Romans.
Perspicuity was gained by the use of the Passive Infinitive; as,--
358. 1. The English _for_ does not always correspond to a Dative notion in
Latin, but is often the equivalent of pro with the Ablative, viz. in the
senses--
haec pro lege dicta sunt, _these things were said for the law_.
pro multitudine hominum eorum fines erant angusti, _for the population,
their territory was small_.
a. Note, however, that the Latin may say either scribere ad aliquem, or
scribere alicui, according as the idea of motion is or is not
predominant. So in several similar expressions.
2. The Latin can say either stulti or stultum est dicere, _it is foolish to
say_; but Adjectives of one ending permit only the Genitive; as,--
sapientis est haec secum reputare, _it is the part of a wise man to
consider this_.
* * * * *
PART VI.
PROSODY.
361. Latin Verse. Latin Poetry was essentially different in character from
English. In our own language, poetry is based upon _accent_, and poetical
form consists essentially in a certain succession of _accented_ and
_unaccented_ syllables. Latin poetry, on the other hand, was based not upon
accent, but upon _quantity_, so that with the Romans poetical form
consisted in a certain succession of _long and short syllables_, i.e. of
long and short intervals of time.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES.
362. The general principles for the quantity of vowels and syllables have
been given above in Sec. 5. The following peculiarities are to be noted
here:--
1. A vowel is usually short when followed by another vowel (Sec. 5, A, 2), but
the following exceptions occur:--
b) In the Genitive and Dative Singular of the Fifth Declension; as, diei,
aciei. But fidei, rei, spei (Sec. 52, 1).
d) In a few other words, especially words derived from the Greek; as,
dius, Aeneas, Darius, heroes, etc.
4. Compounds of jacio, though written inicit, adicit, etc., have the first
syllable long, as though written inj-, adj-.
a) In the Ablative Singular of the Fifth Declension; as, die, re; hence
hodie, quare. Here belongs also fame (Sec. 59, 2, b).
b) In the Imperative of the Second Conjugation; as, mone, habe, etc.; yet
occasionally cave, vale.
3. Final i is usually long, but is short in nisi and quasi. Mihi, tibi,
sibi, ibi, ubi, have regularly i, but sometimes i; yet always ibidem,
ibique, ubique.
364. 1. Final syllables ending in any other consonant than s are short. The
following words, however, have a long vowel: sal, sol, Lar, par, ver, fur,
dic, duc, en, non, quin, sin, sic, cur. Also the adverbs hic, illic,
istic.[60]
a) In the Nominative and Vocative Singular of dental stems (Sec. 33) of the
Third Declension which have a short penult in the Genitive; as, seges
(segetis), obses (obsidis), miles, dives. But a few have -es; viz. pes,
aries, abies, paries.
d) In vis, _force_; is, _thou goest_; fis; sis; velis; nolis; vis, _thou
wilt_ (mavis, quamvis, quivis, etc.).
6. Final -us is usually short, but is long:--
_b_) In the Nominative and Vocative Singular of those nouns of the Third
Declension in which the u belongs to the stem; as, palus (-udis),
servitus (-utis), tellus (-uris).
365. Greek Nouns retain in Latin their original quantity; as, Aenea,
epitome, Delos, Pallas, Simois, Salamis, Didus, Paridi, aer, aether,
crater, heroas. Yet Greek nouns in -_omega-rho_ (-or) regularly shorten
the vowel of the final syllable; as, rhetor, Hector.
VERSE-STRUCTURE.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES.
6. Thesis and Arsis. The syllable which receives the ictus is called the
thesis; the rest of the foot is called the arsis.
10. At the end of a verse a slight pause occurred. Hence the final syllable
may be either long or short (syllaba anceps), and may terminate in a vowel
or m, even though the next verse begins with a vowel.
SPECIAL PECULIARITIES.
videt, audit.
steterunt.
a. Diastole and Systole are not mere arbitrary processes. They usually
represent an earlier pronunciation which had passed out of vogue in the
ordinary speech.
2. Sometimes we find a spondee in the fifth foot. Such verses are called
Spondaic. A dactyl usually stands in the fourth place, and the fifth and
sixth feet are generally made up of a quadrisyllable; as,--
3. Caesura.
b) Less frequently the caesura occurs after the thesis of the fourth
foot, usually accompanied by another in the second foot; as,--
c) Sometimes the caesura occurs between the two short syllables of the
third foot; as,--
d) A pause sometimes occurs at the end of the fourth foot. This is called
the Bucolic Diaeresis, as it was borrowed by the Romans from the Bucolic
poetry of the Greeks. Thus:--
DACTYLIC PENTAMETER.
2. The Pentameter is never used alone, but only in connection with the
Hexameter. The two arranged alternately form the so-called Elegiac Distich.
Thus:--
IAMBIC MEASURES.
370. 1. The most important Iambic verse is the Iambic Trimeter (Sec. 366, 11),
called also Senarius. This is an acatalectic verse. It consists of six
Iambi. Its pure form is:--
v _ v _ v _ v _ v _ v _
Beatus ille qui procul negotiis.
The Caesura usually occurs in the third foot; less frequently in the
fourth.
* * * * *
I. JULIAN CALENDAR.
371. 1. The names of the Roman months are: Januarius, Februarius, Martius,
Aprilis, Majus, Junius, Julius (Quintilis[62] prior to 46 B.C.), Augustus
(Sextilis[62] before the Empire), September, October, November, December.
These words are properly Adjectives in agreement with mensis understood.
b) The Nones, usually the fifth of the month, but the seventh in March,
May, July, and October.
c) The Ides, usually the thirteenth of the month, but the fifteenth in
March, May, July, and October.
3. From these points dates were reckoned backward; consequently all days
after the Ides of any month were reckoned as so many days before the
Calends of the month next following.
4. The day before the Calends, Nones, or Ides of any month is designated as
pridie Kalendas, Nonas, Idus. The second day before was designated as die
tertio ante Kalendas, Nonas, etc. Similarly the third day before was
designated as die quarto, and so on. These designations are arithmetically
inaccurate, but the Romans reckoned both ends of the series. The Roman
numeral indicating the date is therefore always larger by one than the
actual number of days before Nones, Ides, or Calends.
=====================================================================
Days |March,May,July|January, August| April,June, |
of the| October. | December | September, | February
month.| | | November |
------+--------------+---------------+---------------+---------------
1 |KALENDIS |KALENDIS |KALENDIS |KALENDIS
2 |VI Nonas |IV Nonas |IV Nonas |IV Nonas
3 |V " |III " |III " |III "
4 |IV " |Pridie Nonas |Pridie Nonas |Pridie Nonas
5 |III " |NONIS |NONIS |NONIS
6 |Pridie Nonas |VIII Idus |VIII Idus |VIII Idus
7 |NONIS |VII " |VII " |VII "
8 |VIII Idus |VI " |VI " |VI "
9 |VII " |V " |V " |V "
10 |VI " |IV " |IV " |IV "
11 |V " |III " |III " |III "
12 |IV " |Pr. Idus |Pr. Idus |Pr. Idus
13 |III " |IDIBUS |IDIBUS |IDIBUS
14 |Pr. Idus |XIX Kalend. |XVIII Kalend.|XVI Kalend.
15 |IDIBUS |XVIII " |XVII " |XV "
16 |XVII Kalend. |XVII " |XVI " |XIV "
17 |XVI " |XVI " |XV " |XIII "
18 |XV " |XV " |XIV " |XII "
19 |XIV " |XIV " |XIII " |XI "
20 |XIII " |XIII " |XII " |X "
21 |XII " |XII " |XI " |IX "
22 |XI " |XI " |X " |VIII "
23 |X " |X " |IX " |VII "
24 |IX " |IX " |VIII " |VI "
25 |VIII " |VIII " |VII " |V (bis VI)"
26 |VII " |VII " |VI " |IV (V) "
27 |VI " |VI " |V " |III (IV) "
28 |V " |V " |IV " |Pr.Kal.(III K.)
29 |IV " |IV " |III " |(Prid. Kal.)
30 |III " |III " |Pr. Kalend. |(Enclosed forms are
31 |Pr. Kalend. |Pr. Kalend. | |for leap-year.)
=====================================================================
* * * * *
373. 1. The name of a Roman citizen regularly consisted of three parts: the
praenomen (or given name), the nomen (name of the _gens_ or clan), and the
cognomen (family name). Such a typical name is exemplied by Marcus Tullius
Cicero, in which Marcus is the praenomen, Tullius the nomen, and Cicero the
cognomen. Sometimes a second cognomen (in later Latin called an agnomen) is
added--expecially in honor of military achievements; as,--
* * * * *
III. FIGURES OF SYNTAX AND RHETORIC.
ut ager sine cultura fructuosus esse non potest, sic sine doctrina
animus, _as a field cannot be productive without cultivation, so the
mind (cannot be productive) without learning._
nosti Marcellum quam tardus sit, _you know how slow Marcellus is_ (lit.
_you know Marcellus, how slow he is_).
moriamur et in media arma ruamus = _let us rush into the midst of arms
and die_.
B. Figures of Rhetoric.
* * * * *
Sec. 162. nonne videtis, _Sest._ 47. num exspectas, _Phil._ ii, 86. videsne,
_Vatin._ 30. sensistine, _Cat._ 1, 8. a rebus, _de Sen._ 15. visne locum,
_Leg._ ii, 1. estisne, _Liv._ i, 38, 2. jam ea, _Ter. Phor._ 525. estne
frater, _Ter. Ad._ 569.
Sec. 166. decorum est, _Hor. Od._ iii, 2, 13. opportune accidit _Att._ i, 17,
2.
Sec. 171. audi tu, _Livy_, i, 24. nate, mea, _Aen._ i, 664.
Sec. 175. galeam, _Aen._ ii, 392. cinctus, _Ov. Am._ iii, 9, 61 nodo sinus,
_Aen._ i, 320.
Sec. 176. idem gloriari, _de Sen._ 32. eadem peccat, _N.D._ i, 31. multa egeo,
_Gell._ xiii, 24. multum valet, _Hor. Epp._ i, 6, 52. nihil peccat, _Stat._
161. minitantem vana, _Sil._ i, 306 acerba tuens, _Lucr._ v, 33. dulce
loquentem, _Hor. Od._ i, 22, 24. multum sunt, _B.G._ iv, 1, 8. servitutem,
_Pl. Pers._ 34 a. vitam, _Ter. Ad._ 859. stadium _Off._ iii, 10, 42.
Olympia, _de Sen._ 14. piscis, _Sen. N.Q._ iii, 18, 2. orationes, _Brut._
82.
Sec. 178. otium, _Hor. Od._ ii, 16, 1. me duas, _Att._ ii, 7, 1. te litteras,
_Pis._ 73. hoc te, _Ter. Hec._ 766. me id, _Pl. Tr._ 96. non te, _Fam._ ii,
16, 3. omnes artes, _Liv._ 25, 37. rogatus, _de Dom._ 16. multa, _N.D._ ii,
166.
Sec. 180. tremit, _Lucr._ iii, 489. nuda, _Aen._ i, 320. manus, _Aen._ ii, 57.
Sec. 182. Thalam, _Sall. Jug._ 75, 1. Thurios in, _Nep. Alc._ 4. cum Acen,
_Nep. Dat._ 5. Italiam venit, _Aen._ i, 2.
Sec. 187. amicis, _Sall. C._ 16, 4. Orgetorix, _B.G._ i, 2. munitioni, _B.G._
i, 10.
Sec. 188. mihi ante, _Verr._ v, 123. illi, _Tac. Ag._ 9. intercludere, _Pl.
M.G._ 223. oppidum, _B.C._ iii, 80 tu mihi, _Verr._ 3, 213. quid mihi,
_Hor. Epp._ i, 3, 15. erit ille, _Ecl._ i, 7. quae ista, _Par._ 41.
honorem, _Verr._ iv, 25. Caesar, _Div._ ii, 79. scintillam, _Aen._ i, 174.
Sec. 189. disputatio, _Tusc. Disp._ ii, 2. honesta, _Off._ iii, 38.
Sec. 191. castris, _B.G._ vii, 16. legiones, _B.C._ ii, 22. receptui, _B.G._
vii, 47. fortunae, _Fam._ vi, 5, 1. quibus, _Flac._ 19. hos tibi, _Nep.
Paus._ 2. me gerendo, _Liv._ i, 23. noxiae, _Leg._ iii, 11.
Sec. 204. viri, _Tusc. Disp._ ii, 43. memoria, _Or._ 54.
Sec. 207. te veteris, _ad Her._ iv, 24, 33. me admones, _ad Att._ v, 1, 3.
Sec. 212. desine, _Hor. Od._ ii, 9, 17. operum, _Hor. Od._ iii, 17, 16.
Sec. 214. p. 142, curis, _Marc._ 34. Caesar, _B.G._ 5, 51. caret, _Hor. Sat._
i, 3, 66. urbem, _Nep. Thras._ 1. abstinere, _Plin. Epp._ i, 12, 9. hostes,
_B.G._ i, 1, 4. praedones, _Verr._ iv, 144. dissentio, _Planc._ 9.
secernantur, _Cat._ i, 32.
Sec. 215. ab Ulixe, _Liv._ i, 49, 9.
Sec. 217. melle dulcior, _de Sen._ 31. patria, _Cat._ i, 27. amplius, _B.G._
vii, 15, 1. opinione, _B.G._ ii, 3, 1.
Sec. 218. munere, _Aen._ vi, 885. carne, _Sall. Jug._ 89. castris, _B.G._ ii,
26, 4. opus est properato, _Mil._ 49. nititur, _Aen._ vi, 760 nervis,
_N.D._ ii, 59 mortali, _Lucr._ v, 65. quid hoc, _Sest._ 29. quid mea,
_Fam._ xiv, 4, 3. fossas, _B.G._ iii, 18. vinum, _Juv._ vii, 121.
militibus, _B.G._ i, 8, 1.
Sec. 221. nulla est, _Brut._ 164. exstinguitur, _Tac. A._ ii, 72. longo,
_Aen._ v, 320.
Sec. 222A. cum febri, _de. Or._ iii, 6. improbitas, _de Or._ ii, 237. aer
calore, _N.D._ ii, 27. assuetus, _de Or._ iii, 58.
Sec. 224. puella, _Pl. Merc._ 13. vir singulari, _Pl. Vid._ 41. sunt specie,
_B.G._ vi, 28, 1. scopulis, _Aen._ i, 166.
Sec. 227. Cn. Pompeio, _B.G._ iv, 1. omnes virtutes, _Fin._ ii, 117. perditis,
_Fam._ vi, 1, 4. nullo adversante, _Tac. A._ i, 2. passis palmis, _B.C._
iii, 98. audito eum, _Liv._ xxviii, 7.
Sec. 231. stella, _N.D._ ii, 52. biennio, _Tac. Agr._ 14.
Sec. 234. prima et, _Tac. A._ i, 37. omnium rerum, _Fam._ vi, 21, 1.
Sec. 235. eadem alacritas, _B.G._ iv, 24, 4. res operae, _B.G._ v, 11, 5.
stultitia, F. iii, 39. domus, uxor, _Ter. And._ 891. pars, _Sall. Jug._ 14,
15.
Sec. 244. me oravit, _Phil._ ii, 45. me oraverunt, _Div. Caec._ 2. suum
genium, _Tac. Dial._ 9. Hannibalem, _Sest._ 142. suus quemque, _Rosc. Am._
67.
Sec. 246. Themistocles, _Nep. Them._ 9. illud intellego, _Sall. Jug._ 85, 5.
hic est, _Pl. Tr._ 697.
Sec. 247. Maximum, _de Sen._ 10. non is sum, _B.G._ v, 30, 2. non
suspicabatur, _Verr._ i, 36. vincula, _Cat._ iv, 7.
Sec. 248. quod idem, _Ac._ ii, 52. bonus vir, _Lael._ 65.
Sec. 249. ipso terrore, _B.G._ iv, 33, 1. valvae se, _Div._ i, 74. Persae,
_Nep. Alc._ 5. ea molestissime, _Q. Fr._ i, 1, 2.
Sec. 250. carcer quae, _Verr._ v, 143. Belgae, _B.G._ ii, 1, 1. nostra qui,
_Cat._ i, 7. servili, _B.G._ i, 40. erant, _B.G._ i, 6. quam quisque,
_Tusc. Disp._ i, 41. non longe, _B.G._ i, 10, 1. Themistocles, _Nep. Them._
4. 3. numquam digne, _de Sen._ 2.
Sec. 252. cognatio, _Arch._ 2. mors est, _Tusc. Disp._ i, 27. justitia, F. i,
50. si quisquam, _Lael._ 9. potestne, _Tusc. Disp._ iv, 54. si ullo, _Att._
xii, 23, 1. taetrior, _Verr._ iv, 123. quod cuique, _Off._ i, 21. quinto
quoque, _Verr._ ii, 139. nemo Romanus, _Liv._ viii, 30, 3.
Sec. 253. alter exercitum, _Planc._ 86. alteri se, _B.G._ i, 26, 1.
causidicus, _de Or._ i, 202.
Sec. 254. Tarquinii, _Liv._ i, 34, 7. non omnis, _Div._ ii, 90. Corioli,
_Liv._ ii, 33, 8. duo milia, _Curt._ iii, 2, 5.
Sec. 256. velatus, _Ov. Met._ v, 110. tunica, _Aen._ viii, 457.
Sec. 259. virtus, _Lael._ 100. dum vitant, _Hor. Sat._ i, 2, 24. Caesar,
_B.G._ vii, 90, 2. jam pridem, _Att._ ii, 5, 1.
Sec. 260. Duilium, _de Sen._ 44. hostes, _B.G._ v. 9, 6. domicilium, _Arch._
7.
Sec. 268. videor, _N.D._ ii, 72. Gallos, _B.G._ vii, 4, 4. honestum, F. ii,
49. si solos, _Tusc. Disp._ i, 9. rex tantum, _Nep. Con._ 4. Verres, _Verr.
Act. Pr._ 12. ardebat, _Brut._ 302.
Sec. 275. quare, _Cat._ 1, 32. isto bono, _de Sen._ 33.
Sec. 276. ne repugnetis, _Cluent._ 6 tu vero, _Tusc. Disp._ i, 112. impii ne,
_Leg._ ii, 41. cave ignoscas, _Lig._ 14.
Sec. 277. quid faciam, _Pl. Curc._ 589. ego redeam, _Ter. Eun._ 49. huic
cedamus! _Phil._ xiii, 16. quid facerem, _Ter. Eun._ 831. hunc ego, _Arch._
18.
Sec. 279. di istaec, _Ter. H.T._ 1038. falsus utinam, _Liv._ xxi, 10, 10.
Sec. 280. dicat aliquis, _Ter. And._ 640. fortunam, _Pub. Syr._ 193. velim
mihi, _Fam._ xiii, 75, 1. nolim putes, _Fam._ ix, 15, 4. dies deficat,
_N.D._ iii, 81.
Sec. 281. egredere, _Cat._ i, 20. rem vobis, _Verr._ iv, 1. si bene, _de Sen._
3. consules, _Leg._ iii, 8. hominem, _Twelve Tables._ amicitia, _Liv._ 38,
38, 1. quin equos, _Liv._ i, 57, 7.
Sec. 282. adjuta, _Ter. Eun._ 150. portas, _B.G._ ii, 33 haec, _And._ 472. ut
ne, _Off._ i, 103. ut non, _Cat._ i, 23. ut earum, _B.G._ iv, 17, 10.
Helvetii, _B.G._ i, 7, 3. haec habui, _de Sen._ 85. non habebant, _B.G._
iv, 38, 2. idoneus, _Verr._ iii, 41. dignus, _Leg._ iii, 5.
Sec. 283. multa, _Tusc. Disp._ i, 80. sunt qui, _Inv._ ii, 144. nemo, _Fam._
i, 4, 2. sapientia, _Fin._ i, 43. quae, _Lael._ 23. non is sum, _B.G._ v,
30, 2. non longius, _B.G._ ii, 21, 3. o fortunate, _Arch._ 24. ut qui,
_Phil._ xi, 30. egomet, _de Or._ i, 82. nemo est, _Verr._ iv, 115. nemo
fuit, _B.C._ iii, 53, 3. quem audierim, _Nep. Ar._ 1, 2.
Sec. 284. quis tam, _Tusc. Disp._ iii, 71. Siciliam, _Verr. Act. Pr._ 12.
mons, _B.G._ i, 6, 1. non is, _Cat._ i, 22. nemo est, _de Sen._ 24.
habetis, _Cat._ iv, 24. nihil, _Ter. H.T._ 675. nemo est, _B.G._ vi, 39, 3.
Sec. 286. Themistocles, _Nep. Them._ 8, 3. neque, _de Sen._ 84. quoniam, _Nep.
Milt._ 7, 5. noctu, _Tusc. Disp._ iv, 44. Bellovaci, _B.G._ vii, 75. id
feci, _Caec._ 101. Crasso, _Fam._ xiii, 16, 3. hoc ita, _Leg._ iii, 31.
Haeduos, _B.G._ i, 16, 6. id omitto, _Sall. Jug._ 110, 7.
Sec. 288. an tum, _Pis._ 26. credo tum, _Verr._ iv, 46. eo tempore, _Lig._ 20.
illo die, _Mil._ 38. Lysander, _Div._ i, 96. Pythagoras, _N.D._ iii, 88.
jam Galli, _B.G._ vii, 26, 3. Treveri, _B.G._ vi, 7, 1. cum ad, _Verr._ v,
27. cum equitatus, _B.G._ v, 19, 2. saepe cum, _Nep. Cim._ 4, 2. cum
procucurrissent, _B.C._ ii, 41, 6.
Sec. 289. tum tua, _Hor. Epp._ i, 18, 84. cum videbis, _Pl. Bacch._ 145.
stabilitas, _Lael._ 82.
Sec. 290. cum tacent, _Cat._ i, 21. cum te, _Att._ xiv, 17 A, 4.
Sec. 291. prius, _Pl. Merc._ 456. nihil contra, _Flacc._ 51. non prius, _Sall.
C._ 51.
Sec. 291. priusquam, _Liv._ i, 24, 3. tempestas, _Sen. Ep._ 103, 2. priusquam
telum, _B.C._ ii, 34, 6. animum, _Pl. Amph._ 240. sol antequam, _Phil._
xiv, 27.
Sec. 293. Alexander, _Quint. Curt._ iv, 6, 17. dum haec, _B.G._ iii, 17, 1.
dum anima, _Att._ ix, 10, 3. Lacedaemoniorum, _Tusc. Disp._ i, 101. Cato,
_Nep. Cat._ 2, 4. donec, _Liv._ xxiii, 31, 9. ferrum, _Nep. Ep._ 9, 3.
trepidationis, _Liv._ xxi, 28, 11. exspectavit, _B.G._ iv, 23, 4. dum
litterae, _Fam._ xi, 23, 2.
Sec. 295. postulo, _Ter. And._ 550. orat, _Ter. Ad._ 882. milites, _B.G._ ii,
21, 2. Helvetiis, _B.G._ i, 2, 1. huic, _Rosc. Am._ 54. consuli, _Liv._
xxxv, 20, 4. ne lustrum, _Liv._ xxiv, 43, 4. prohibuit, _Liv._ xxv, 35, 6.
nec quin, _Liv._ xxvi, 40, 4. constitueram, _Att._ xvi, 10, 1. decrevit,
_Cat._ i, 4. convenit, _Liv._ x, 27, 2. fac ut, _Pl. Rud._ 1218. cura ut,
_Cat._ iii, 12. laborabat, _B.G._ vii, 31, 1. sequitur, _N.D._ ii, 81. eos
moneo, _Cat._ ii, 20. huic imperat, _B.G._ iv, 21, 8.
Sec. 296. opto, _Verr. Act. Pr._ 50. vereor ne, _Att._ vii, 12, 2.
Sec. 297. ex quo, F. ii, 24. ita fit, _Tusc. Disp._ ii, 16. est mos, _Brut._
84.
Sec. 299. illud, _Off._ iii, 111. hoc uno, _de Or._ i, 32. bene mihi, _Tusc.
Disp._ i, 97. quod, _B.G._ i, 44, 6. quod me, _Nep. Ep._ 5, 6.
Sec. 300. oculis, _B.G._ i, 12, 1. bis bina, _N.D._ ii, 49. effugere, _N.D._
iii, 14. saepe autem, _N.D._ iii, 14. Epaminondas, F. ii, 97. ex Socrate,
_Tusc. Disp._ v, 34. nescio, _Pl. Amph._ 1056. conantur, _B.G._ i, 8, 4.
pergit, _Liv._ i, 7, 6, quaeritur, _N.D._ i, 61. haud scio, _Tusc. Disp._
ii, 41.
Sec. 302. naturam, _Off._ i, 100. memoria, _de Sen._ 21. si quis, _B.G._ i,
48, 6. si dicendo, _Tac. Dial._ 19.
Sec. 304. sapientia, F. i, 42. consilium, _de Sen._ 19. Laelius, _Arch._ 16.
num igitur, _de Sen._ 19. nisi felicitas, _Tac. Agr._ 31. eum patris,
_Phil._ ii, 99. si Sestius, _Sest._ 81. si unum, _Liv._ ii, 38, 5.
Sec. 305. non potestis, F. ii, 71. cras, _Pl. Merc._ 770. haec reputent,
_Tusc. Disp._ i, 51. roges, F. iv, 69.
Sec. 306. ferreus, _Fam._ xv, 21, 3. dolorem, _Phil._ 12, 21. si feceris,
_Fam._ v, 19, 2. hoc si, _Fam._ vii, 1, 6. hunc mihi, _Cat._ i, 18. nihil,
_Cat._ ii, 10. nisi, _Mil._ 19.
Sec. 307. sed quid, _Div. Caec._ 14. serviam, _Pl. Men._ 1101.
Sec. 308. sit fur, _Verr._ v, 4. haec sint, _Ac._ ii, 105. ne sit, _Tusc.
Disp._ ii, 14.
Sec. 309. homines, _Phil._ ii, 39. non est, _Rep._ i, 10. quamquam, _Off._ i,
56. Caesar, _B.G._ iv, 31, 1. Atticus, _Nep. Att._ 6, 2. licet, _Rosc. Am._
31. quamquam quid, _Cat._ i, 22. quamquam, _Liv._ xxxvi, 34, 6. quamvis,
multi, _Tac. Dial._ 2. quamvis infesto, _Liv._ ii, 40, 7.
Sec. 310. multi, _Off._ iii, 82. omnia postposui, _Fam._ xvi, 21, 6. nil
obstat, _Hor. Sat._ i, 1, 40. oderint, _Acc._ 204. manent, _de Sen._ 22.
nubant, _Pl. Aul._ 491.
Sec. 312. quidquid, _Aen._ ii, 49. quidquid oritur, _Div._ ii, 60.
Sec. 314. Regulus, _Off._ iii, 100. tum Romulus, _Liv._ i, 9, 2. nuntiatum,
_B.G._ i, 38, 1. dixit, _Nep. Them._ 7, 5.
Sec. 323. demonstrabantur, _de Sen._ 78. Paetus, _Att._ ii, 1, 12.
Sec. 324. nemo, _Par._ 52. cum diversas, _Tac. Dial._ 1, 4. mos est, _Orat._
151. quod ego, _Pl. Capt._ 961.
Sec. 327. dulce, _Hor. Od._ iii, 2, 13. virorum, _Tusc. Disp._ ii, 43. aliud
est, _Tusc. Disp._ iv, 27. impune, _Sall. Jug._ 31, 26. licuit, _Tusc.
Disp._ i, 33.
Sec. 328. Demosthenes, F. v, 5. beatus, _N.D._ i, 48. Cato, _Sall. Cat._ 54,
5.
Sec. 331. Epicurei, _Lael._ 13. Thales, _N.D._ i, 25. Democritus, _N.D._ i,
20. nullo se, _Lig._ 3. nec mihi, _de Sen._ 85. eas res, _B.G._ i, 18. te
tua, _Brut._ 331. cupio, _Cat._ i, 4. Timoleon, _Nep. Tim._ 3, 4. gaudeo,
_Pl. Bacch._ 456. non moleste, _de Sen._ 7.
Sec. 337. gloria, _Tusc. Disp._ iii, 3. Conon, _Nep. Con._ 4, 5. omne, _Phil._
v, 31. mente, _Tusc. Disp._ v, 100. Solon, _de Sen._ 26. sol, _N.D._ ii,
102. mendaci, _Div._ ii, 146. perfidiam, _B.G._ vii, 5, 5. eis Catonem, _de
Sen._ 3. Homerus, _de Sen._ 54. urbem, _Liv._ xxii, 20. equitatum, _B.G._
i, 15, 1. obliviscendum, _Tac. Hist._ ii, 1. numquam, _Verr._ i, 38. suo
cuique, _N.D._ iii, 1. Caesar, _B.G._ i, 13, 1.
Sec. 338. scribendo, _Fam._ xv, 6, 2. mens, _Off._ i, 105. Themistocles, _Nep.
Them._ 2, 3. multa, F. i, 5.
Sec. 339. ad pacem, _Liv._ xxi, 13. hostes, _B.G._ iii, 6, 2. legati, _B.G._
iv, 13, 5. quae ille, _Sall. Fr._ i, 77, 11.
Sec. 340. legati, _B.G._ i, 30, 1. do (colloco), _Pl. Tr._ 735. hoc est,
_Att._ vii, 22, 2.
Sec. 341. cum homines, _Cat._ i, 31. discidia, F. i, 44. horae, _de Sen._ 69.
Caesar, _B.G._ ii, 35, 3.
Sec. 342. cita, _Hor. Sat._ i, 1, 8. qui aether, _N.D._ ii, 41.
Sec. 350. erant duo, _B.G._ i, 6, 1. nisi forte, _de Sen._ 18. id ut, _Nep.
Them._ 8, 3. eo cum, _B.G._ vii, 7, 4. ut ad, _Lael._ 5. septimus, _de
Sen._ 38. recepto, _B.C._ iii, 12, 1. sed pleni, _Arch._ 14. horribilem,
_Tusc. Disp._ i, 118. simulatam, _Tac. A._ i, 10.
Sec. 351. Caesar, _B.G._ i, 25, 1. Haedui, _B.G._ i, 11, 2. Caesar cum, _B.G._
i, 7, 1. accidit, _Nep. Alc._ 3, 2. si quid, _Arch._ 1. Caesar, _B.G._ v,
4, 1.
Sec. 356. hostium, _B.G._ iii, 29, 3. mens quoque, _de Sen._ 36. tanto,
_Sull._ 59.
Sec. 374. ut ager, _Tusc. Disp._ ii, 13. minis, _Tusc. Disp._ v, 87.
dissimilis, _Nep. Chab._ 3, 4. febris, _Cat._ i, 31. submersas, _Aen._ i,
69. nosti, _Fam._ viii, 10, 3. tum Anci, _Liv._ i, 40, 2. moriamur, _Aen._
ii, 353.
* * * * *
A.
abdo, 122, I, 4. abicio, 122, III. abnuo, 122, II. aboleo, 121, I.
abstergeo, 121, III absum, 125. accendo, 122, I, 4. accidit, 138, III.
accio, 121, I, N. accipio, 122, III. acquiro, 122, I, 6. acuo, 122, II.
addo, 122, I, 2. adhaeresco, 122, IV, 2. adipiscor, 122, V. adolesco, 122,
IV, 1. adsum, 125. advenio, 123, IV. affero, 129. afficio, 122, III.
affligo, 122, I, 1, a. agnosco, 122, IV, 1. ago, 122, I, 3. algeo, 121,
III. alo, 122, I, 5. amicio, 123, III. amo, 120, I. amplector, 122, V.
ango, 122, I, 7. aperio, 123, II. appeto, 122, I, 6. arceo, 121, II, a.
arcesso, 122, I, 6. ardeo, 121, III. aresco, 122, IV, 2. arguo, 122, II.
ascendo, 122, I, 4. aspicio, 122, III. assentior, 123, VII. assuefacio,
122, III. assuefio, 122, III. audio, 123, I. aufero, 129. augeo, 121, III.
aveo, 121, II, a, N. 2.
C.
cado, 122, I, 2. caedo, 122, I, 2. calefacio, 122, III. calefio, 122, III.
caleo, 121, II, a. calesco, 122, IV, 2. cano, 122, I, 2. capesso, 122, I,
6. capio, 122, III. careo, 121, II, a. carpo, 121, I, 1, a. caveo, 121, V.
cedo, 122, I, 1, b. censeo, 121, II, b. cerno, 122, I, 6. cieo, 121, I.
cingo, 122, I, 1, a. circumsisto, 122, I, 2. claudo, 122, I, 1, b. claudo,
122, I, 7. coemo, 122, I, 3. coepi, 133. coerceo, 121, II, a. cognosco,
122, IV, 1. cogo, 122, I, 3. colligo, 122, I, 3. colo, 122, I, 5.
comminiscor, 122, V. comperio, 123, V. compleo, 121, I. concutio, 122, III.
condo, 122, I, 2. confero, 129. confiteor, 121, VII. congruo, 122, II.
consenesco, 122, IV, 2. consero, 122, I, 5. consero, 122, I, 6 (_plant_).
consido, 122, I, 4. consisto, 122, I, 2. conspicio, 122, III. constat, 138,
III. constituo, 122, II. consuesco, 122, IV, 1. consulo, 122, I, 5.
contineo, 121, II, b. contingit, 138, III. coquo, 122, I, 1, a. crepo, 120,
II. cresco, 122, IV, 1. cubo, 120, II. cupio, 122, III. curro, 122, I, 2.
D.
debeo, 121, II, a. decerno, 122, I, 6. decet, 138, II. dedecet, 138, II.
dedo, 122, I, 2. defendo, 122, I, 4. deleo, 121, I deligo, 122, I, 3. demo,
122, I, 3. desero, 122, I, 5 desino, 122, I, 6. desum, 125. dico, 122, I,
1, a. differo, 129. diligo, 122, I, 3. dimico, 120, II. dirimo, 122, I, 3.
diripio, 122, III. diruo, 122, II. discerno, 122, I, 6. disco, 122, IV, 1.
dissero, 122, I, 5. distinguo, 122, I, 1, a., footnote 44. divido, 122, I,
1, b. do, 127. doceo, 121, II, b. doleo, 121, II, a. domo, 120, II. duco,
122, I, 1, a.
E.
edo, 122, I, 2. edo, 122, I, 3. effero, 129. effugio, 122, III. egeo, 121,
II, a, N. 1. elicio, 122, III. emineo, 121, II, a, N. 1. emo, 122, I, 3.
eo, 132. esurio, 123, VI. evado, 122, I, 1, b., footnote 45. evanesco, 122,
IV, 3. excolo, 122, I, 5. excudo, 122, I, 4. exerceo, 121, II, a. experior,
123, VII. expleo, 121, I, N. explico, 120, II. exstinguo, 122, I, 1, a.,
footnote 44. extimesco, 122, IV, 2.
F.
facio, 122, III. fallo, 122, I, 2. fateor, 121, VII. faveo, 121, V. ferio,
123, VI. fero, 129. ferveo, 121, VI figo, 122, I, 1, b. findo,122, I, 2, N.
fingo, 122, I, 1, a. fio, 131. flecto, 122, I, 1, b. fleo, 121, I. floreo,
121, II, a, N. 1. floresco, 122, IV, 2. fluo, 122, II. fodio, 122, III.
foveo, 121, V. frango, 122, I, 3. fremo, 122, I, 5. frico, 120, II. frigeo,
121, II, a, N. 2. fruor, 122, V. fugio, 122, III. fulcio, 123, III. fulgeo,
121, III. fulget, 138, I. fundo, 122, I, 3. fungor, 122, V. furo, 122, I,
7.
G.
H.
habeo, 121, II, a. haereo, 121, III. haurio, 123, III. horreo, 121, II, a,
N. 1.
I.
ignosco, 121, IV, 2. illicio, 122, III. imbuo, 122, II. immineo, 121, II,
a, N. 2. impleo, 121, I, N. implico, 120, II. incipio, 122, III. incolo,
122, I, 5. incumbo, 122, I, 5. indulgeo, 121, III. induo, 122, II. infero,
129. ingemisco, 122, IV, 2. insum, 125. intellego, 122, I, 3. interficio,
122, III. intersum, 125. invado, 122, I, 1, b., footnote 45. invenio, 123,
IV. irascor, 122, V.
J.
jaceo, 121, II, a. jacio, 122, III. jubeo, 121, III. jungo, 122, I, 1, a.
juvo, 120, III.
L.
M.
maereo, 121, II, a, N. 2. malo, 130. maneo, 121, III. maturesco, 122, IV,
3. medeor, 121, VII. memini, 133. mereo, 121, II, a. mereor, 121, VII.
mergo, 122, I, 1, b. metior, 123, VII. metuo, 122, II. mico, 120, II.
minuo, 122, II. misceo, 121, II, b. miseret, 138, II. misereor, 121, VII.
mitto, 122, I, 1, b. molo, 122, I, 5. moneo, 121, II, a. mordeo, 121, IV.
morior, 122, V. moveo, 121, V.
N.
O.
P.
paenitet, 138, II. palleo, 121, II, a, N. 1. pando, 122, I, 4. parco, 122,
I, 2. pareo, 121, II, a. pario, 122, III. pasco, 122, IV, 1. pascor, 122,
IV, 1. patefacio, 122, III. patefio, 122, III. pateo, 121, II, a, N. 1.
patior, 122, V. paveo, 121, V. pellicio, 122, III. pello, 122, I, 2.
pendeo, 121, IV. pendo, 122, I, 2. perago, 122, I, 3. percello, 122, I, 2,
N. percrebresco, 122, IV, 3. perdo, 122, I, 2. perficio, 122, III.
perfringo, 122, I, 3. perfruor, 122, V. perlego, 122, I, 3. permulceo, 121,
III. perpetior, 122, V. pervado, 122, I, 1, b., footnote 45. peto, 122, I,
6. piget, 138, II. pingo, 122, I, 1, a. placeo, 121, II, a. plaudo, 122, I,
1, b. pluit, 138, I. polleo, 121, II, a, N. 2. polliceor, 121, VII. polluo,
122, II. pono, 122, I, 6. posco, 122, IV, 1. possido, 122, I, 4. possum,
126. poto, 120, I. praebeo, 121, II, a. praestat, 138, III. praesum, 125.
prandeo, 121, VI. prehendo, 122, I, 4. premo, 122, I, 1, b. prodo, 122, I,
2. promo, 122, I, 3. prosum, 125. prosterno, 122, I, 6. pudet, 138, II.
pungo, 122, I, 2.
Q.
quaero, 122, I, 6. quatio, 122, III. queror, 122, V. quiesco, 122, IV, 1.
R.
S.
saepio, 123, III. salio, 123, II. sancio, 123, III. sapio, 122, III.
sarcio, 123, III. scindo, 122, I, 2, N. scisco, 122, IV, 2. scribo, 122, I,
1, a. sculpo, 122, I, 1, a. seco, 120, II. sedeo, 121, V. sentio, 123, III.
sepelio, 123, I. sequor, 122, V. sero, 122, I, 6. serpo, 122, I, 1, a.
sileo, 121, II, a, N. sino, 122, I, 6. solvo, 122, I, 4. sono, 120, II.
spargo, 122, I, 1, b. sperno, 122, I, 6. splendeo, 121, II, a, N. 1.
spondeo, 121, IV. statuo, 122, II. sterno, 122, I, 6. -stinguo, 122, I, 1,
a. sto, 120, IV. strepo, 122, I, 5. strideo, 121, VI. stringo, 122, I, 1,
a. struo, 122, II. studeo, 121, II, a, N. 1. suadeo, 121, III. subigo, 122,
I, 3. subsum, 125. sum, 100. sumo, 122, I, 3. suo, 122, II. supersum, 125.
sustineo, 121, II, b.
T.
taceo, 121, II, a. taedet, 138, II. tango, 122, I, 2. tego, 122, I, 1, a.
temno, 122, I, 1, a. tendo, 122, I, 2. teneo, 121, II, b. tero, 122, I, 6.
terreo, 121, II, a. texo, 122, I, 5. timeo, 121, II, a, N. 1. tingo, 122,
I, 1, a. tollo, 122, I, 2, N. tonat, 138, I. tondeo, 121, IV. tono, 120,
II. torpeo, 121, II, a, N. 1. torqueo, 121, III. torreo, 121, II, b. trado,
122, I, 2. traho, 122, I, 1, a. tremo, 122, I, 5. tribuo, 122, II. trudo,
122, I, 1, b. tueor, 121, VII. tundo, 122, I, 2.
U.
V.
* * * * *
GENERAL INDEX.
* * * * *
* * * * *
A.
a, vowel, 2, 1;
---- pronunciation, 3, 1;
---- development of a, before a single consonant, 7, 1, a;
---- before two consonants, 7, 1, b;
---- a as ending of nom. sing. of 1st decl., 20;
---- in voc. sing. of Greek nouns in -es of 1st decl., 22;
---- in nom. sing. of Greek nouns in -e of 1st decl., 22, 3;
---- termination of nom. and acc. plu. of neuters, 23; 35; 48;
---- termination of nom. sing. of nouns of 3d decl., 28;
---- gender of nouns in -a of 3d decl., 43, 3;
---- ending of acc. sing. of Greek nouns of 3d decl., 47, 1;
---- regular quantity of final a, 363, 1;
---- exceptions to quantity of final a, 363, 1, a-c.
a, pronunciation, 3, 1;
---- arising by contraction, 7, 2;
---- as ending of stem in 1st decl., 18;
---- a-stems inflected, 20;
---- in voc. sing. of Greek nouns of 1st decl., 22;
---- in voc. sing. of Greek nouns in -as of 3d decl., 47, 4;
---- distinguishing vowel of 1st conjugation, 98;
---- ending of imperative act. of 1st conj., 101;
---- final a long by exception, 363, 1, a-c.
a, ab, abs, use, 142, 1;
---- with town names, 229, 2.
a to denote agency, 216.
---- to denote separation, 214.
---- place from which, 229.
---- with town names, 229, 2.
---- with abl. of gerund, 338, 4, b.
a-stems, 20; 98; 101.
Abbreviations of proper names, 373.
Ablative case, 17; 213 f.
---- in -abus, 21, 2, e.
---- in -d in prons., 84, 3; 85, 3.
---- formation of sing. of adjs. of 3d decl., 67, a; 70, 1-5.
---- of i-stems, 37; 38.
---- genuine abl. uses, 214 f.
---- absolute, 227.
---- of agent, 216.
---- of accompaniment, 222.
---- of accordance, 220, 3.
---- of association, 222A.
---- of attendant circumstance, 221; 227, 2, e).
---- of cause, 219.
---- of comparison, 217.
---- of degree of difference, 223.
---- of fine or penalty, 208, 2, b.
---- of manner, 220.
---- of material, 224, 3.
---- of means, 218.
---- of penalty, 208, 2, b.
---- of place where, 228.
---- of place whence, 229.
---- of price, 225.
---- of quality, 224.
---- of separation, 214;
---- ---- with compounds of dis- and se-, 214, 3.
---- of source, 215.
---- of specification, 226.
---- of time at which, 230.
---- of time during which, 231, 1.
---- of time within which, 231.
---- of way by which, 213, 9.
---- with contineri, consistere, constare, 218, 4.
---- with special phrases, 218, 7.
---- with jungere, miscere, mutare, etc., 222A.
---- with facio, fio, 218, 6
---- with prepositions, 142; 213 f.
---- with verbs of filling, 218, 8.
---- with verbs and adjs. of freeing, 214, I, a, and N. 1.
---- with adjs. of plenty, 218, 8.
---- with utor, fruor, fungor, potior, vescor, 218, 1.
---- with opus and usus, 218, 2
---- with nitor, innixus, and fretus, 218, 3.
abs, 142, 1.
absens, 125.
Absolute, ablative, 227.
---- time, of participles, 336, 4.
---- use of verbs, 174, a.
Abstract nouns, 12, 2, b);
---- plural of, 55, 4, c).
-abus, 21, 2, e).
ac, 341, 2, b);
---- = as, than, 341, 1, c).
Acatalectic verses, 366, 9.
accedit ut, 297, 2.
Accent, 6;
---- in gen. of nouns in -ius and -ium, 25, 1 and 2.
accidit ut, 297, 2.
accidit quod, 299, 1, b.
Accompaniment, abl. of, 222.
Accordance, abl. of, 220, 3.
Accusative case, 17;
---- in -an and -en of Greek nouns, 22;
---- in -om in 2d decl., 24;
---- in -on and -on in Greek nouns, 27;
---- in -a in sing. of Greek nouns, 47, 1;
---- in -as in plu., 47, 3;
---- in -im and -is in i-stems, 37; 38;
---- acc. sing. neut. as adv., 77, 3; 176, 3; 172 f.
---- of duration of time, 181.
---- of result produced, 173, B; 176.
---- of extent of space, 181.
---- of limit of motion, 182 f.
---- of neut. prons. or adjs., 176, 2.
---- of person or thing affected, 173, A; 175.
---- in exclamations, 183.
---- as subj. of inf., 184.
---- with admoneo, commoneo, etc., 207.
---- with adv. force, 176, 3.
---- with compounds, 175, 2.
---- with impersonal verbs, 175, 2, c.
---- with intransitive verbs, 175, 2, a.
---- with passive used as middle, 175, 2, d).
---- with verbs of remembering and forgetting (memini, obliviscor,
reminiscor), 206, 1; 2.
---- with verbs expressing emotion, 175, 2, b.
---- with verbs of tasting and smelling, 176, 5.
---- with verbs of making, choosing, calling, regarding, etc., 177.
---- with verbs of asking, requesting, demanding, teaching, concealing,
178, 1-5.
---- with adjs. (propior, proximus), 141, 3.
---- with adverbs (propius, proxime), 141, 3;
---- ---- clam, pridie, 144, 2.
---- Genavam ad oppidum, 182, 2, a.
---- cognate acc., 176, 4.
---- Greek acc., 180.
---- synecdochical acc., 180.
---- two accs., direct obj. and pred. acc., 177;
---- ---- person affected and result produced, 178;
---- ---- with compounds of trans, 179;
---- ---- with other compounds, 179, 2.
---- with prepositions, 141; 179 f.
---- retained in pass., 178, 2.
Accusing, verbs of, constr., 208 f.
accuso, constr., 178, 1, d).
acer, decl., 68;
---- compared, 71, 3.
Acquitting, verbs of, constr., 208 f.
ac si with subjv., 307, 1.
ad, 'toward,' 'in vicinity of,' 182, 3;
---- with acc. alternating with dat., 358, 2.
---- compounds of ad governing dat., 187, III; 188, 2, d.
---- with gerund denoting purpose, 338, 3.
-ades, patronymic ending, 148, 6, a.
adg- = agg-, 9, 2.
Adjectives, 62 f; 354;
---- derivation of, 150 f.
---- of 1st and 2d decl., 63 ff.
---- in -ius, gen. sing., 63, a.
---- of 3d decl., 67, ff;
---- ---- in abl., 70, 5.
---- comparison of adjs., 71 f.;
---- ---- in -er, 71, 3;
---- ---- in -ilis, 71, 4;
---- ---- comparative lacking, 73, 3;
---- ---- defective comparison, 73;
---- ---- not admitting comparison, 75;
---- ---- comparison by magis and maxime, 74.
---- numerals, 78 f.
---- syntax, 233 ff.;
---- ---- attributive and predicate adjs., 233, 2.
---- agreement, 234, f.
---- used substantively, 236 f.
---- denoting part of an object, 241, 1.
---- with force of adverbs, 239.
---- force of comp. and superl., 240, 1.
---- not followed by infinitive, 333.
---- not used with proper names, 354, 3.
---- equivalent to a poss. gen., 354, 4.
---- special Latin equivalents of Eng. adjs., 354, 1.
---- equiv. to rel. clause, 241, 2.
---- as pred. acc., 177, 2.
---- position of adj., 350, 4.
---- pronominal adjs., 92.
---- governing gen., 204.
---- governing dat., 192.
---- governing acc., 141, 3.
---- construed with abl., 214, 1, d; 217, 1; 218, 8; 223; 226, 2; 227, 1.
---- with supine in -u, 340, 2.
adl- = all-, 9, 2.
admoneo, constr., 207.
Admonishing, const. of verbs of, 207.
adr- = arr-, 9, 2.
ads- = ass-, 9, 2.
ad sensum, constr., 235, B, 2, c; 254, 4.
adulescens, spelling, 9, 2.
adulter, decl., 23, 2.
adultus, force, 114, 2.
Adverbs, defined, 140;
---- formation and comparison, 76 f.; 140; 157.
---- in -iter from adjs. in -us, 77, 4.
---- in -tus and -tim, 77, 5.
---- in o and -o, 77, 2.
---- numeral, 79.
---- as preps., 144, 2.
---- derivation of, 157.
---- with gen., 201, 2; 3; and a.
---- special meanings, 347.
---- position, 350, 6.
Adversative clauses, 309.
---- conjunctions, 343.
adversus, prep. with acc., 141.
ae, how pronounced, 3, 2;
---- phonetic changes, 7, 1, d.
aedes, plu., 61.
aequalis, abl. sing. of, 70, 5, a;
---- as subst., 238.
aequor, decl., 34.
aequum est = aequum sit, 271, 1, b).
aes, in plu., 55, 4, b;
---- lacks gen. plu., 57, 7.
aetas, decl., 40, 1, e);
---- id aetatis, 185, 2.
-aeus, suffix, 152, 3.
aevom, decl., 24.
Affected, acc. of person or thing, 175.
Agency, dat. of, 189;
---- abl., 216.
Agent, abl., 216;
---- with names of animals, 216, 2.
ager, decl., 23.
Agreement, nouns, 166; 168; 169, 2; 3; 4.
---- adjs., 234;
---- ---- in gender, 235, B;
---- ---- in number, 235, A;
---- prons., 250;
---- verbs, with one subj., 254, 1;
---- ---- with two or more subjs., 255, 1.
-ai, case-ending, gen. sing., 1st decl., poet., 21, 2, b).
ain, 135, N.
ajo, 135;
---- quantity of first syllable, 362, 5.
-al, declension of nouns in, 39.
alacer, decl., 68, 1;
---- comp., 73, 4.
aliqua, 91, 2.
aliqui, 91; 91, 2.
aliquis, 91; 252, 2;
---- aliquis dicat, dixerit, 280, 1.
-alis, suffix, 151, 2.
aliter ac, 341, 1, c.
alius, 66; 92, 1;
---- used correlatively, 253, 1.
alius ac, 'other than,' 341, 1, c).
Allia, gender of, 15, 3, N.
allicio, conj., 109, 2, b).
Alliteration, 375, 3.
Alphabet, 1.
alter, decl., 66; 92, 1;
---- used correlatively, 253, 1.
Alternative questions, 162, 4;
---- indirect, 300, 4.
alteruter, decl., 92, 2.
alvus, gender of, 26, 1, b.
amandus sum, conj., 115.
amaturus sum, conj., 115.
amb- (ambi-), 159, 3, N.
ambo, 80, 2, a;
---- usage, 355, 2.
amo, conj., 101.
amplius = amplius quam, 217, 3.
amussis, -im, 38, 1.
an, 162, 4, and a); 300, 4;
---- haud scio an, nescio an, 300, 5.
Anacoluthon, 374, 6.
Anapaest, 366, 2.
Anaphora, 350, 11, b).
Anastrophe of prep., 141, 2; 142, 3; 144, 3.
anceps (syllaba anceps), defined, 366, 10.
Androgeos, decl., 27.
animal, decl., 39.
Animals, as agents, 216, 2.
animi, locative, 232, 3.
annon, in double questions, 162, 4.
Answers, 162, 5.
ante, prep. w. acc., 141;
---- as adv., 144, 1;
---- dat. w. verbs compounded w. ante, 187, III;
---- in expressions of time, 357, 1; 371, 5;
---- ante diem, 371, 5; 6.
Antecedent of rel., 251.
---- attraction of, 251, 4.
---- incorporated with rel., 251, 4.
Antecedent omitted, 251, 1.
---- repeated with rel., 251, 3.
Antepenult, 6, 2.
antepono, with dat., 187, III, 2.
antequam, with ind., 291;
---- with subjv., 292.
Anticipation, denoted by subjv., w. antequam and priusquam, 292;
---- by subjv. with dum, donec, quoad, 293, III, 2; 374, 5.
-anus, suffix, 151, 2; 152, 1; 3.
Aorist tense, see Historical perfect.
Apodosis, 301 ff.
---- in conditional sent. of 1st type, 302, 4;
---- result clauses as apodoses, 322;
---- quin- clauses as apodoses, 322;
---- ind. questions as apodoses, 322, b;
---- potuerim in apodosis, 322, c;
---- apodosis in indir. disc., 319-321;
---- in expressions of obligation, ability, etc., 304, 3, a;
---- with periphrastic conjugations, 304, 3, b.
Apposition, 169;
---- agreement, 169, 2;
---- partitive, 169, 5;
---- with voc. in nom., 171, 2;
---- genitive w. force of appositive, 202;
---- id as appositive of clause, 247, 1, b;
---- inf. as appositive, 326; 329;
---- subst. clauses as appositives, 282, 1, f; 294; 297, 3.
Appositive of locative, 169, 4;
---- with acc. of limit of motion, 182, 2, a;
---- with town names, in abl. of place whence, 229, 2.
---- position of, 350, 2.
aptus, w. dat., 192, 2.
apud, prep. w. acc., 141.
Archias, declension of, 22.
-ar, declension of nouns in, 39.
arguo, constr., 178, 1, d).
-aris, suffix, 151, 2.
-arium, suffix, 148, 3.
-arius, suffix, 151, 2.
armiger, decl., 23, 2.
Arrangement of words, 348-350;
---- of clauses, 351.
Arsis, defined, 366, 6.
artus, dat. and abl. plu. of, 49, 3.
arx, decl., 40.
-as, acc. plu. in Greek nouns, 47, 3.
-as, old gen. sing., 1st decl., case-ending, 21, 2, a).
---- ending of Greek nouns, nom. sing. in, 22.
---- gender of nouns in -as, 43, 2; 45, 1.
---- voc. of Greek nouns in -as, antis, 47, 4.
---- -atis, abl. of patrials in, 70, 5, c).
Asking, case const, with verbs of, 178, 1, c;
---- subst. clauses w., 295, 1;
---- ind. questions, 300, 1.
Aspirates, 2, 3, c.
Assimilation of consonants, 8, 4 f.; 9, 2.
Association, abl. of, 222A.
Asyndeton, 341, 4, a); 346.
at, 343, 1, d).
-atim, suffix, 157, 2.
Atlas, decl., 47, 4.
atomus, gender of, 26, 1, c).
atque, 341, 2, b);
---- = as, 341, 1, c).
atqui, 343, 1, e).
Attendant circumstance, abl. of, 221: 227, 2, e).
Attraction of demonstratives, 246, 5;
---- of relatives, 250, 5;
---- subjunctive by attraction, 324;
---- of adjectives, 327, 2, a; 328, 2.
Attributive adjs., 233, 2.
-atus, its force as suffix, 151, 4.
audacter, formation and comparison, 76, 2.
audeo, conj., 114, 1.
audio, conj., 107;
---- with pres. partic., 337, 3.
aulai, archaic gen., 21, 2, b.
ausus, force as participle, 336, 5.
aut, 342, 1, a).
autem, 343, 1, c); 350, 8.
Auxiliary omitted in infin., 116, 5:
---- ---- in finite forms, 166, 3.
auxilium, auxilia, 61.
-ax, suffix, 150, 2.
B.
C.
D.
D, changed to s, 8, 2;
---- d final omitted, 8, 3;
---- assimilated, 8, 4.
Dactyl, 366, 2.
Dactylic hexameter, 368.
---- pentameter, 369.
dapis, defective, 57, 6.
Daring, verbs of, with obj. inf., 328, 1.
Dates 371, 2-5;
---- as indeclinable nouns, 371, 6;
---- in leap year, 371, 7.
Dative 17;
---- irregular, 1st decl., 21, 2, c);
---- 3d decl., 47, 5;
---- 4th decl., 49, 2; 3;
---- 5th decl., 52, 1 and 3; 186 ff.
---- in the gerundive const., 339, 7.
---- of agency, 189.
---- of direction and limit of motion, 193.
---- of indir. obj., 187.
---- of advantage or disadvantage, so called, 188, 1.
---- of local standpoint, 188, 2, a).
---- of person judging, 188, 2, c).
---- of possession, 190; 359, 1.
---- of purpose or tendency, 191; 339, 7.
---- of reference, 188.
---- of separation, 188, 2, d).
---- of the gerund, 338, 2.
---- with adjs., 192;
---- with proprius, communis, 204, 2;
---- with similis, 204, 3.
---- with compound verbs, 187, III.
---- with intrans. verbs, 187, II.
---- with nomen est, 190, 1.
---- with impersonal pass. verbs, 187, II, b.
---- with trans. verbs, 187, I.
---- with verbs of mingling, 358, 3.
---- ethical dat., 188, 2, b).
de, prep. w. abl., 142;
---- with abl. instead of gen. of whole, 201, 1, a;
---- with verbs of reminding, 207, a;
---- compounds of de governing dat., 188, 2, d;
---- de vi, with verbs of accusing and convicting, 208, 3;
---- with gerund and gerundive, 338, 4, b.
dea, deabus, 21, 2, e).
debebam, debui in apodosis, 304, 3, a).
debeo, governing obj. inf., 328, 1.
debui, with pres inf., 270, 2.
decemvir, gen. plu. of, 25, 6, b).
decerne, w. subst. clause developed from volitive, 295, 4.
decet, w. acc., 175, 2, c).
Declarative sentences, defined, 161, 1;
---- in indir. disc., 314.
Declension, 11;
---- heteroclites, 59.
---- stems and gen. terminations, 18.
---- 1st decl., 20-22;
---- 2d decl., 23-27;
---- 3d decl., 28-47;
---- 4th decl., 48-50;
---- 5th decl., 51-53;
---- of Greek nouns, 22; 27; 47;
---- of adjs., 62-69;
---- of prons., 84-90.
Decreeing, verbs of, w. subjv., 295, 4.
dedecet, 175, 2, c).
Defective verbs, 133 f.;
---- nouns, 54 f.; 52, 4; 57;
---- comparison, 73.
Definite perfect, see Present perfect.
Degree of difference, abl. of, 223.
Degrees of comparison, 71 ff.
delectat, w. inf. as subj., 327, 1.
delector, w. abl. of cause, 219.
Deliberative subjv., 277;
---- in indir. questions, 300, 2;
---- in indir. disc., 315, 3.
Demanding, verbs of, w. two accs., 178, 1;
---- w. subst. clause, 295, 1.
Demonstrative pronouns, 87; 246;
---- of 1st, 2d, and 3d persons, 87;
---- position of demonstratives, 350, 5, a.
Denominative verbs, 156.
Dental mutes, 2, 4;
---- stems, 33.
Dependent clauses, 282 ff.
Deponent verbs, 112;
---- forms with passive meanings, 112, b);
---- semi-deponents, 114.
Depriving, verbs of, w. abl, 214, 1, b.
Derivatives, 147 f.
-des, patronymics in, 148, 6.
Description, imperf. as tense of, 260, 1, a.
Desideratives, 155, 3.
Desire, adjs. of, w. gen., 204, 1;
---- verbs of, w. subst. clauses, 296, 1.
deterior, 73, 1.
deus, decl., 25, 4.
devertor, 114, 3.
dexter, decl, 65, 1.
di-, 159, 3, N.
Diaeresis, 366, 8;
---- bucolic d., 368, 3, d).
Diastole, 367, 2.
dic, 116, 3.
dicitur, dictum est, w. inf., 332, note.
dico, accent of compounds of, in imperative, 116, 3.
-dicus, comparison of adjs. in, 71, 5.
Dido, decl, 47, 8.
dies, decl., 51;
---- gender, 53.
Difference, abl of degree of, 223.
difficile est = Eng. potential, 271, 1, b).
difficilis, comp., 71, 4.
dignor, with abl., 226, 2.
dignus, 226, 2;
---- in rel. clauses of purpose, 282, 3.
Dimeter, verses, 366, 11.
Diminutives, 148, 1.
Diphthongs, 2, 1; 3, 2;
---- diphthong stems, 41;
---- diphthongs shortened, 362, 2.
diphthongus, gender of, 26, 1. c).
Dipodies, 366, 11.
Direct reflexives, 244, 1.
---- object, 172.
---- quotation, 313.
---- discourse, 313.
---- questions, 162.
dis-, in compounds, 159, 3, N.
Disjunctive conjunctions, 342.
dissimilis, comp., 71, 4.
Distributives, 63, 2; 78, 1; 79; 81, 4.
diu, compared, 77, 1.
dives, decl., 70, 1;
---- compared, 71, 6.
dixti, 116, 4, c.
do, conj., 127.
doceo, with acc., 178, 1, b);
---- with inf., 331, VI.
domi, locative, 232, 2.
domo, 229, 1, b).
domos, 182, 1, b.
domum, 182, 1, b);
---- 'house,' in acc., 182, N.
domus, decl., 49, 4;
---- gender, 50.
donec, with ind., 293;
---- with subjv., 293, III, 2.
dono, constr., 187, 1, a.
dos, gender, 44, 3.
Double consonants, 2, 9.
---- questions, 162, 4;
---- ---- indirect, 300, 4.
Doubting, verbs of, w. quin, 298.
Dubitative subjunctive, see Deliberative.
dubito, dubium est, non dubito, non dubium est, with quin, 298;
---- non dubito w. inf., 298, a.
duc, 116, 3.
duco, accent of compounds of, in imper., 116, 3.
duim, duint, 127, 2.
-dum, 6, 3.
dum, temporal with ind., 293;
---- with subjv., 293, III, 2;
---- in wishes and provisos, 310.
dummodo, 310.
duo, decl, 80, 2.
Duration of time, 181, 2.
Duty, expressed by gerundive, 189, 337, 8;
---- verbs of duty in conclusion of cond. sentences contrary-to-fact,
304, 3, a;
---- subst. clauses dependent on verbs of, 295, 6;
---- inf. w. verbs of duty, 327, 1; 328, 1; 330;
---- 'it is the duty of,' 198, 3;
---- 'I perform a duty, 218, 1.
duumvir, gen. plu. of, 25, 6, b).
dux, decl, 32.
E.
e, as vowel, 2, 1;
---- as second member of diphthongs, 2, 1;
---- sound of, 3, 1;
---- change, to i, 7, 1, a;
---- for a, 7, 1, c;
---- in voc. sing, of 2d decl., 23;
---- in abl. sing, of 3d decl., 31;
---- dropped in nom. of neuters of 3d decl., 39;
---- -e for -i in abl. of mare, 39;
---- alternating w. i in abl. sing. of i-stems, 37, 38;
---- for e in gen. sing. of 5th decl., 52, 1;
---- in abl. sing. of adjs. of 3d decl., 70, 1;
---- in bene and male, 77, 1;
---- distinguishing vowel of 3d conj., 98;
---- before j, 362, 5;
---- for -e in imperatives, 363, 2, b;
---- in temere and saepe, 363, 2, c.
e, pronunciation, 3, 1;
---- by contraction, 7, 2;
---- as ending of Greek nouns, 22;
---- e-stems, 51;
---- ending of dat. of 5th decl., 52, 3;
---- distinguishing vowel of 2d conj., 98;
---- -e in fame 363, 2, a;
---- ---- in adverbs, 363, 2, c
e, ex, use, 142; see ex.
ecquis, 91, 6.
edic, 116, 3.
Editorial 'we,' 242, 3.
edo, 128.
educ, 116, 3.
efficio ut, 297, 1.
efficitur ut, 297, 2.
Effort, subjv. w. verbs of, 295, 5.
egeo, w. abl., 214, 1, c.
ego, 84.
egomet, 84, 2.
ei, diphthong, 2, 1; 3, 2.
-ei, gen. of 5th decl., 52, 1.
-eis, 148, 6, b).
ejus, as poss., 86, 1;
---- quantity, 362, 5.
Elegiac distich, 369, 2.
Elision, 266, 7.
Ellipsis, 374, 1.
-ellus (a, um), 148, 1.
Emphasis, 349.
Enclitics, accent of preceding syllable, 6, 3.
---- -met, 84, 2;
---- -pte, 86, 3;
---- cum as enclitic, 142, 4
End of motion, see Limit.
Endings, case endings, 17, 3;
---- personal, of verb, 96;
---- in formation of words, 147 f.
enim, 345.
-ensimus (-ensumus), 79, N.
-ensis, 151, 2; 152, 3.
Envy, verbs of, with dat., 187, II
eo, 132;
---- cpds., 132, 1.
Epexegetical genitive, 202.
Epistolary tenses, 265.
epistula, spelling, 9, 2.
epitome, decl., 22.
epulum, epulae, 60, 2.
equabus, 21, 2, e).
equester, decl., 68, 1.
equos, decl., 24.
-er, decl., of nouns in, 23;
---- adjs., 63; 64; 65;
---- adjs. in -er compared, 71, 3.
erga, prep. w. acc., 141.
ergo, 344, 1, b).
-ernus, suffix, 154.
-es, gender of nouns in, 43, 1;
---- ---- exception, 44, 5;
---- in nom. plu. of Greek nouns of 3d decl., 47, 2.
-es, ending of Greek nouns, nom. sing. in, 22.
---- gen. -is, decl. of nouns in, 40, 1, a).
esse, conjugation of, 100;
---- compounds of, 125; 126;
---- esse omitted, 116, 5.
est qui, with subj., 283, 2.
et, 341, 1, a;
---- in enumerations, 341, 4, c).
et is, 247, 4.
et ... neque, 341, 3.
Ethical dative, 188, 2, b).
etiam, in answers, 162, 5.
et non, 341, 2, c).
etsi, 'although,' 309, 2;
---- etsi, 'even if,' 309, 2, a.
-etum, suffix, 148, 3.
-eus, inflection of Greek nouns in, 47, 6;
---- adj. suffix, 151, 1.
evenit ut, 297, 2.
ex, 142, 2;
---- with abl., instead of gen. of whole, 201, 1, a;
---- compounds of, with dat., 188, 2, d;
---- with abl. of source, 215, 1.
Exchanging, verbs of, with abl. of association, 222A.
Exclamation, acc. of, 183.
Exclamatory sentences, 161, 3.
Expectancy, clauses denoting, in subjv., 292, 1; 293, III, 2.
exposco, constr., 178, 1, a).
exsisto, spelling, 9, 2.
exspecto, spelling, 9, 2.
exteri, xterior, 73, 2.
extremus, use, 241, 1.
exuo, w. abl., 214, 1, b.
F.
f, pronunciation, 3, 3;
---- nf, quantity of vowel before, 5, 1, a.
fac, 116, 3;
---- with subjv., 295, 5.
facile, 77, 3.
facilis, comp., 71, 4.
facio, 109, 2, a);
---- pass. of, 131.
---- in imper., 116, 3.
falsus, comparison, 73, 3.
fame, 59, 2, b).
Familiarity, adjs. of, w. gen., 204. 1.
familias, 21, 2, a.
fari, 136.
fas, indeclinable, 58.
fauces, decl., 40, 1, d.
Favor, verbs signifying, with dat., 187, II.
Fearing, verbs of, constr. 296, 2.
febris, decl. 38, 1.
felix, 70.
Feminine, see Gender.
Feminine caesura, 368, 3, c.
femur, decl. 42, 4.
-fer, decl. of nouns in; adjs., 23, 2;
---- adjs. 65, 1.
fero, and its compounds, 129.
-ficus, comparison of adjs. in, 71, 5.
fidei, 52, 1.
fido, 114, 1;
---- with abl., 219, 1, a.
fidus, compared, 73, 3.
fierem, fieri 362, 1, c;
---- fieri potest ut, 298, 2.
Fifth decl., 51 f.
Figures of rhetoric, 375.
---- of syntax, 374.
fili, 25, 3.
filia, filiabus, 21, 2, e
Filling, verbs of, w. abl., 218, 8.
Final clauses, see Purpose clauses.
Final consonant omitted, 8, 3.
Final syllables, quantity, 363, 364.
finis, fines, 61.
Finite verb, 95.
fio, conj., 131.
fio, with abl., 218, 6.
First conj., 101;
---- principal parts of verbs of, 120;
---- deponents of 1st conj., 113.
First decl., 20 f.;
---- peculiarities, 21;
---- Greek nouns of 1st decl., 22.
fit ut, 297, 2.
flagito, constr., 178, 1, a.
fodio, conj., 109, 2, a.
Foot, in verse, 366, 2.
'For,' its Latin equivalents, 358, 1.
fore, 100, footnote 32.
fore ut, 270, 3;
---- 297, 2.
forem, fores, etc., 100, footnote 31.
foris, 228, 1, c.
Formation of words, 146 f.
fors, forte, 57, 2, a.
fortior, decl., 69.
fortis, 69.
fortuna, fortunae, 61.
Fourth conj., 107.
Fourth decl., 48;
---- dat. in -u, 49, 2;
---- gen. in -i, 49, 1;
---- dat. abl. plu. in -ubus, 49, 3.
fraude, abl. of manner, 220, 2.
Free, abl. w. adjs. signifying, 214, 1, d.
Freeing, abl. w. verbs of, 214, 1, a.
frenum, plu. of, 60, 2.
Frequentatives, 155, 2.
fretus w. abl., 218, 3.
Fricatives, 2, 7.
Friendly, dat. w. adjs. signifying, 192, 1.
fructus, decl., 48.
frugi, compared, 72; 70, 6.
frugis, 57, 6.
fruor, with abl., 218, 1;
---- in gerundive constr., 339, 4.
fugio, conj., 109, 2, a).
fui, fuisti, etc., for sum, es, etc., in compound tenses, 102, footnotes
36, 37.
Fullness, adjs. of, w. abl., 218, 8;
---- w. gen., 204, 1.
fungor, w. abl., 218, 1;
---- in gerundive constr., 339, 4.
fur, decl., 40, 1, d.
furto, abl. of manner, 220, 2.
Future tense, 161;
---- w. imperative force, 261, 3.
---- time in the subjv., 269.
---- perfect, 264;
---- ---- with future meaning, 133, 2;
---- ---- inf., 270, 4.
---- imperative, 281, 1.
---- infinitive, 270;
---- ---- periphrastic fut. inf., 270, 3, and a.
---- participle, 337, 4.
futurum esse ut, with subjv., 270, 3.
G.
H.
h, pron., 3, 3;
---- ph, ch, th, 2, 4; 3, 3.
habeo, with perf. pass. partic., 337, 6.
Hadria, gender, 21, 1.
Happening, verbs of, w. ind., 299, 1, 2;
---- w. subjv., 297, 2.
Hard consonants, 2, 3, a), footnote 4.
Hardening, 367, 4.
haud, use, 347, 2, a;
---- haud scio an, 300, 5.
have, 137, 5.
Help, verbs signifying, w. dat. 187, II.
Hendiadys, 374, 4.
heri, locative, 232, 2.
Heteroclites, 59.
Heterogeneous nouns, 60.
Hexameter, dactylic, 368.
Hiatus, 366, 7, a.
hic, 87; 246, 1; 246, 2;
---- hic, 364, footnote 60.
hiems, 35, footnote 13.
Hindering, verbs of, with subjv., 295, 3.
Historical tenses, 258;
---- historical present, 259, 3; 268, 3;
---- historical perfect, 262, B;
---- historical infinitive, 335.
honor, decl., 36.
Hoping, verbs of, w. inf., 331, I.
Hortatory subjv., 274.
hortus, decl., 23.
hoscine, 87, footnote 23
hostis, decl., 38.
hujusce, 87, footnote 23
humi, locative, 232, 2.
humilis, comp., 71, 4.
humus, gender of, 26, 1, b.
huncine, 87, footnote 23
Hyperbaton, 350, 11, a.
Hypermeter, 367, 6.
Hysteron proteron, 374, 7.
I.
i, 1, 1;
---- in diphthongs, 2, 1;
---- pron., 3, 1;
---- from e, 7, 1, a;
---- from a, 7, 1, b;
---- dropped by syncope, 7, 4;
---- for u in some words, 9, 1;
---- changes to e, 39;
---- dropped, 39;
---- final i short, 363, 3;
---- becomes j, 367, 4.
i-stems, 37; 39;
---- not always ending in -is, 38, 3.
-i, gen. and voc. of 2d decl. nouns in -ius and -ium in, 25, 1 and 2.
---- gen. of 4th decl. nouns in -us, 49, 1.
---- gen. of 5th decl. nouns, 52, 2.
i-stem, vis, 41.
i, in abl., 3d decl., 38, 1; 39;
---- in adjs., 67, 3, a; 70, 5;
---- participles, 70, 3;
---- patrials, 70, 5, c);
---- nom. plu., of is, 87;
---- as characteristic of 4th conj., 98.
-ia, 149.
Iambus, 366, 2.
Iambic measures, 370.
---- trimeter, 370.
-ianus, suffix, 152, 1.
-ias, suffix, 148, 6, b).
-ibam, in imperf., 116, 4, b).
-ibo, in future, 116, 4, b).
Ictus, 366, 5.
-icus, suffix, 151, 2; 152, 2.
id aetatis, 185, 2.
id genus, 185, 1.
id quod 247, 1, b.
id temporis, 185, 2.
Ideal 'you'; see Indefinite second person.
idem, 87; 248.
idem ac, 248, 2.
Ides, 371, 2, c).
-ides, suffix, 148, 6, a).
-ides, suffix, 148, 6, a).
-ido, suffix, 147, 3, c).
idoneus, not compared, 74, 2;
---- w. dat., 192, 2.;
---- w. ad and acc., 192, 2 and N.;
---- with rel. clause of purpose, 282, 3.
-idus, suffix, 150, 3.
Idus, fem. by exception, 50.
-ie, in voc. sing. of adjs. in -ius, 63, 1.
iens, pres. partic. from eo, 132.
-iens, as ending of numeral adverbs, 97 and N.
-ier, inf. ending, 116, 4, a.
-ies, nouns in, 51.
igitur, 344, 1, c).
ignis, decl., 38.
-ii, in gen, sing. of io-stems, 25, 2.
iis, in dat. and abl. plu. of is, 87.
-ile, suffix, 148, 3.
Ilion, decl., 27.
-ilis, suffix, 151, 2.
-ilis, suffix, 150, 4.
Illative conjunctions, 344.
ille, 87;
---- 'the following,' 246, 2;
---- 'the former,' 246, 1;
---- 'the well-known,' 246, 3;
---- position, 350, 5, b.
illuc, 87, footnote 25.
-illus (a, um), diminutive suffix, 148, 1.
-im, in acc., 3d decl., 38, 1.
-im, -is in subjv., 116, 4, d.
impedimentum, impedimenta, 61.
Imperative, 281;
---- tenses in, 94, 3; 281, 1;
---- future indic. with force of, 261, 3.
---- as protasis of a conditional sent., 305, 2;
---- ---- as apodosis, 302, 4.
---- sent. in indir disc., 316.
Imperfect tense, 260;
---- conative, 260, 3;
---- inceptive, 260, 3;
---- with jam, etc., 260, 4;
---- epistolary imp., 265.
Imperfect subjv. in conditional sent. referring to the past, 304, 2.
Impersonal verbs, 138;
---- gen. with, 209;
---- dat. with, 187, II, b;
---- in passive, 256, 3;
---- with substantive clauses developed from volitive, 295, 6;
---- of result, 297, 2;
---- with infin., 327, 1; 330.
impetus, defective, 57, 4.
Implied indir. disc., 323.
imus, 'bottom of,' 241, 1.
in, prep., 143;
---- verbs compounded w. in governing acc., 175, 2, a, 2;
---- verbs compounded w. in governing dat., 187, III.
in with abl. of place, 228;
---- with abl. of time, 230, 2; 231.
-ina, suffix, 148, 5.
Inceptives, 155, 1.
Inchoatives, 155, 1.
Incomplete action, 257, 1, b; 267, 3.
Indeclinable adjs., 70, 6; 80, 6.
---- nouns, 58;
---- ---- gender of, 15, 3.
Indefinite price, 225, 1; 203, 4.
Indefinite pronouns, 91, 252;
---- in conditions, 302, 3.
Indefinite second person, 280, 3; 356, 3; 302, 2.
Indefinite value, 203, 3.
Indicative, equivalent to Eng. subjv., 271.
---- in apodosis of conditional sent. of 3d type, 304, 3, a) and b).
indigeo, constr., 214, 1, N. 2.
indignus, with abl., 226, 2;
---- with rel. clause of purpose, 282, 3.
Indirect discourse, defined, 313 f.;
---- ---- mood in, 313 ff.;
---- ---- tenses in 317-18;
---- ---- declarative sentences in, 314;
---- ---- interrog. sentences in, 315;
---- ---- imperative sentences in, 316;
---- ---- conditional sentences in, 319-22;
---- ---- verbs introducing, 331, 1;
---- ---- verb of saying, etc., implied, 314, 2;
---- ---- ind. in subord. clauses of indir. disc., 314, 3;
---- ---- inf. for subjv. in indir. disc., 314, 4;
---- ---- subj. acc. omitted, 314, 5;
---- ---- implied indir. disc., 323.
---- questions, 300;
---- ---- particles introducing, 300, 1, a;
---- ---- deliberative subjv. in indir. quest., 300, 2;
---- ---- indir. quest. w. si, 300, 3;
---- ---- double indir. questions, 300, 4;
---- ---- in indir. quest., 300, 6;
---- ---- in conditional sents. of 3d type, 322, b.
---- reflexives, 244, 2.
---- object, 187.
inferum, inferior, 73, 2.
infimus, 241, 1.
Infinitive, gender of, 15, A 3;
---- in -ier, 116, 4, a;
---- force of tenses in, 270; 326 ff.
---- fut. perf. inf., 270, 4;
---- ---- periphrastic future, 270, 3.
---- without subj. acc., 326-328; 314, 5.
---- with subj. acc., 329-331.
---- as obj., 328; 331,
---- as subj., 327; 330.
---- with adjs., 333.
---- denoting purpose, 326, N.
---- in abl. abs., 227, 3.
---- in exclamations, 334.
---- historical inf., 335.
infitias, constr., 182, 5.
Inflection, 11.
Inflections, 11 ff.
infra, prep. w. acc., 141.
ingens, comp., 73, 4.
injuria, abl. of manner, 220, 2.
injussu, defective, 57, 1;
---- the abl., 219, 2.
inl- = ill-, 9, 2.
innixus, w. abl., 218, 3.
inops, decl., 70, 2.
inquam, conj., 134.
Inseparable prepositions, 159, 3, N.
insidiae, plu. only, 56, 3.
instar, 58.
Instrumental uses of abl., 213; 218 ff.
Intensive pron., 88.
Intensives (verbs), 155, 2.
inter, prep. w. acc., 141;
---- compounded w. verbs, governing dat. 187, III;
---- to express reciprocal relation, 245.
interdico, const., 188, 1, a.
interest, constr., 210; 211.
interior, comp., 73, 1.
Interjections, 145.
Interlocked order, 350, 11, d.
Interrogative pronouns, 90.
---- sentences, 162;
---- particles, 162, 2;
---- ---- omitted, 162, 2, d);
---- in indir. disc., 315.
intra, prep. w. acc., 141.
Intransitive verbs, with cognate acc., 176, 4;
---- in passive, 256, 3; 187, II, b;
---- impersonal intransitives, 138, IV.
-inus, suffix, 151, 2; 152, 1; 152, 3.
-io, verbs of 3d conj., 109.
-ior, ius, comparative ending, 71.
ipse, 88; 249;
---- as indir. reflexive, 249, 3.
ipsius and ipsorum, with possessive pronouns, 243, 3.
-ir, decl. of nouns in, 23.
Irregular comparison, 72 ff.;
---- nouns, 42;
---- verbs, 124 f.
is, 87; 247;
---- as personal pron., 247, 2.
-is, as patronymic ending, 148, 6, b);
---- nouns in -is of 3d decl., 37 f.;
---- adjs. in -is, 69.
-is, acc. plu., 3d decl., 37; 40.
---- -itis, abl. of patrials in, 70, 5, c).
istaec, 87, footnote 24.
iste, 87; 246, 4.
istic, 6, 4.
istuc, 6, 4; 87, footnote 24.
ita, in answers, 162, 5.
itaque, 344, 1, a).
iter, 42, 1.
-itia, 149.
-ito, frequentatives in, 155, 2, a.
-ium, gen. of nouns in, 25, 2;
---- ending of gen. plu., 3d decl., 37 f.; 39; 40; 147, 3, b); 148, 2.
-ius, gen. and voc. sing. of nouns in, 25, 1 and 2;
---- of adjs., 63, a; 151, 2; 152, 2; 152, 3;
---- -ius for -ius, 362, 1, a).
-ivus, suffix, 151, 2.
J.
j, 1, 2.
jacio, conj., 109, 2, a);
---- compounds of, 9, 3; 362, 5.
jam, etc., with present tense, 259, 4;
---- with imperfect, 260, 4.
jecur, decl., 42, 3.
joco, abl. of manner, 220, 2.
jocus, plu. of, 60, 2.
Joining, verbs of, construction, 358, 3.
jubeo, constr., 295, 1, a: 331, II.
judicor, w. inf., 332, c.
jugerum, 59, 1.
Julian calendar, 371.
jungo, w. abl., 222A.
Juppiter, decl., 41.
juratus, 114, 2.
jure, abl. of manner, 220, 2.
jus est, with substantive clause, 297, 3.
jussu, 57, 1;
---- the abl., 219, 2.
Jussive subjv., 275;
---- equiv. to a protasis, 305, 2.
juvat, w. acc., 172, 2, c);
---- with inf., 327, 1.
Juvenale, abl., 70, 5, b.
juvenis, a cons. stem, 38, 2;
---- comparison, 73, 4.
juvo, with acc., 187, II, N.
juxta, prep. w. acc., 141.
K.
k, 1, 1.
Knowing, verbs of, w. inf., 331, I.
Knowledge, adjs. of, w. gen., 204.
L.
l, pron., 3, 3.
Labial mutes, 2, 4.
---- stems, 31;
---- ---- gender of, 43, 3; 46, 1.
lacer, decl., 65, 1.
lacus, decl., 49, 3.
laedo, w. acc., 187, II, N.
laetus, w. adverbial force, 239.
lapis, decl., 33.
largior, 113.
Latin period, 351, 5.
Length of syllables, 5, B.
Length of vowels, 5, A.
-lentus, suffix, 151, 3.
leo, decl., 35.
Liber, decl, 23, 2.
liber, adj., decl., 65, 1.
libero, constr., 214, 1, N. 1.
liberta, libertabus, 21, 2, e).
liberum, gen. plu., 25, 6, c).
licet, with subjv., 295, 6 and 8; 308, a;
---- with inf., 327, 1; 330.
licet, adversative, 309, 4.
Likeness, adjs. of, w. dat., 192, 1.
Limit of motion, acc. of., 182.
Lingual mutes, 2, 4.
linter, decl., 40.
Liquids, 2, 5.
---- stems, 34.
lis, decl., 40, 1, d).
Litotes, 375, 1.
littera, litterae, 61.
Locative, 17, 1;
---- in -ae, 21, 2, c);
---- in -i, 25, 5;
---- syntax, 232;
---- apposition with, 169, 4;
---- loc. uses of abl., 213; 228 f.
loco, locis, the abl., 228, 1, b.
locus, plurals of, 60, 2.
Long syllables, 5, B, 1.
---- vowels, 5, A, 1.
longius = longius quam, 271, 3.
longum est = Eng. potential, 217, 1, b.
lubet, lubido, spelling, 9, 1.
ludis, the abl., 230, 1.
-lus, -la, -lum, diminutives in, 148, 1.
lux, 57, 7.
M.
m, pron., 3, 3;
---- changed to n before d, c, 8, 5, c;
---- m-stem, 35, footnote 13;
---- m-final in poetry, 366, 10.
maereo, w. acc., 175, 2, b.
magis, comparison, 77, 1;
---- comparison with, 74.
magni, gen. of value, 203, 3.
magnopere, compared, 77, 1.
magnus, compared, 72.
Making, verbs of, w. two accusatives, 177.
male, comparison, 77, 1.
maledicens, comparison, 71, 5, a).
malim, potential subjv., 280, 2, a.
mallem, potential subjv., 280, 4.
malo, 130;
---- with inf., 331, IV, and a;
---- with subjv., 296, 1, a.
malus, comparison, 72.
mane, indeclinable, 58.
Manner, abl. of, 200.
mare, decl., 39, 2;
---- mari, 228, 1, c).
mas, decl., 40, 1, d).
Masculine, see Gender.
Masculine caesura, 368, 3, c.
Material, abl. of, 224, 3.
materies, materia, 59, 2, a).
mature, compared, 77, 1.
maturus, compared, 71, 3.
maxime, adjs. compared with, 74.
maximi, as gen. of value, 203, 3.
maxumus, 9, 1.
Means, abl. of, 218;
---- abl. abs. denoting, 227, 2;
---- denoted by partic., 337, 2, d.
med, for me, 84, 3.
Mediae (consonants), 2, 3, b), footnote 5.
medius, 'middle of', 241, 1.
mei, as objective gen., 242, 2.
melior, comparison, 72.
melius est = Eng. potential, 271, 1, b).
memini, 133;
---- constr., 206, 1, a; 2, a.
memor, decl., 70, 2.
-men, -mentum, suffixes, 147, 4.
mensis, 38, 2, footnote 14.
mentem (in mentem venire), 206, 3.
-met, enclitic, 6, 3; 84, 2.
Metrical close of sent., 350, 12.
metuo, w. subjv., 296, 2.
mi, dat., 84, 1.
mi, voc. of meus, 86, 2.
Middle voice, verbs in, 175, 2, d).
miles, decl., 33.
militiae, locative, 232, 2.
mille, milia, decl., 80, 5.
minime, comparison, 77, 1;
---- in answers, 162, 5, b).
minimus, comparison, 72.
minor, comparison, 72.
minoris, gen. of value, 203, 3;
---- of price, 203, 4.
minus, comparison 77, 1;
---- = minus quam, 217, 3;
---- quo minus, 295, 3;
---- si minus, 306, 2 and a.
miror, conj., 113.
mirus, comparison, 75, 2.
miscere, with abl., 222A;
---- with dat., 358, 3.
misereor, with gen., 209, 2.
miseresco, with gen., 209, 2.
miseret, constr., 209.
Mixed stems, 40.
modium, gen. plu., 25, 6, a).
modo, in wishes and provisos, 310.
moneo, 103;
---- constr., 178, 1, d).
months, gender of names of, 15, 1;
---- decl. 68, 1;
---- abl., of month names, 70, 5, a);
---- names, 371, 1.
Moods, 94, 2.
---- in independent sentences, 271 f.
---- in dependent clauses, 282 f.
Mora, 366, 1.
morior, conj. 109, 2, c);
mos, decl., 36;
---- mores, 61.
mos est, with subjv. clause, 297, 3.
muliebre secus, constr., 185, 1.
Multiplication, distributives used to indicate, 81, 4, c.
multum, 77, 3;
---- compared, 77, 1.
multus, compared, 72;
---- with another adj., 241, 3.
mus decl., 40, 1, d).
mutare, with abl., 222A.
Mutes, 2, 3.
Mute stems, 30.
N.
n, pronunciation, 3, 3;
---- n-stems, 35.
n adulterinum, 2, 6.
-nam, appended to quis, 90, 2, d.
Names, Roman, 373.
Naming, verbs of, w. two accusatives, 117, 1.
Nasals, 2, 6.
Nasal stems, 35.
natu, 57, 1;
---- maximus natu, minimus natu, 73, 4, footnotes 20, 21; 226, 1.
Natural gender, 14.
natus, constr., 215.
navis, decl., 41, 4.
nd, vowel short before, 5, 2, a.
-ne, 6, 3 f; 162, 2, c); 300, 1, b);
---- -ne ... an, 162, 4;
---- ---- in indir. double questions, 300, 4.
ne, in prohibitions, 276;
---- with hortatory subjv., 274;
---- with concessive, 278;
---- with optative, 279;
---- in purpose clauses, 282;
---- in substantive clauses, 295 f., 296;
---- in provisos, 310.
ne, 'lest,' 282, 1; 296, 2.
ne non for ut after verbs of fearing, 296, 2, a.
ne ... quidem, 347, 1; 2.
Nearness, adjs. of, w. dat., 192, 1.
nec, 341, 1, d);
---- nec usquam, 341, 2, d).
necesse est, w. subjv., 295, 8.
necne, in double questions, 162, 4.
nefas, indeclinable, 58.
Negatives, 347, 2;
---- two negatives strengthening the negation, 347, 2.
nemo, defective, 57, 3;
---- use, 252, 6.
nequam, indeclinable, 70, 6;
---- compared, 72.
neque, 341, 1, d);
---- neque in purpose clauses, 282, 1, e.
nequeo, conj., 137, 1.
ne quis, use, 91, 5.
nequiter, compared, 77, 1.
nescio an, 300, 5.
nescio quis, as indef. pron., 253, 6.
Neuter, see Gender.
neuter, decl., 66;
---- use, 92, 1.
neve (neu), in purpose clauses, 282, 1, d.
nf, quantity of vowel before, 5, 1, a.
nihil, indeclinable, 58.
nihil est cur, quin, 295, 7.
ningit, 'it snows,' 138, 1.
nisi, 306, 1 and 4.
nisi forte, 306, 5.
nisi si, 306, 5.
nisi vero, 306, 5.
nitor, constr., 218, 3.
nix, decl., 40, 1, d).
No, in answers, 162, 5, b.
-no, class of verbs, 117, 4.
noli, with inf., in prohibitions, 276, b.
nolim, potential subjv., 280, 2, a.
nollem, potential subjv., 280, 4.
nolo, 130;
---- with inf., 331, IV and a; 276, 2, a;
---- with subjv., 296, 1, a.
nomen, decl., 35;
---- nomen est, constr., 190, 1;
---- nomen, as part of Roman name, 373.
Nominative, 17; 170;
---- used for voc., 171, 1;
---- nom. sing. lacking, 57, 6;
---- pred. nom., 168.
Nones, 371, 2, b).
non, in answers, 162, 5, b);
---- with poten. subjv., 280;
---- with deliberative, 277.
non dubito quin, with subjv., 298;
---- non dubito, w. inf., 298, a; b.
non modo for non modo non, 343, 2, a.
nonne, 162, 2, a); 300, 1, b), N.
non quia, with ind., 286, 1, c;
---- with subjv., 286, 1, b.
non quin, with sujbv., 286, 1, b.
non quod, with ind., 286, 1, c;
---- with subjv., 286, 1, b.
nos = ego, 242, 3.
nostri, as objective gen., 242, 2.
nostrum, as gen. of whole, 242, 2;
---- as possessive gen., 242, 2, a.
Nouns, 12 ff.; 353;
---- derivation of, 147 f.
---- in -is not always i-stems, 38, 1.
---- of agency, force, 353, 4.
---- used in plu. only, 56.
---- used in sing. only, 55.
---- used only in certain cases, 57.
---- indeclinable, 58.
---- with change of meaning in plural, 61.
---- syntax, 166 f.
---- predicate, agreement of, etc., 167 f.
---- appositives, agreement of, etc., 169 f.
Noun and adj. forms of the verb, 95, 2.
novi, as pres., 262, A.
novus, compared, 73, 3.
ns, quantity of vowel before, 5, 1, a.
-ns, decl. of nouns in, 40, 1, c).
nt, quantity of vowel before, 5, 2, a.
nubes, decl., 40, 1, a
nulla causa est cur, quin, 295, 7.
nullus, decl., 66; 57, 3;
---- use, 92, 1.
num, 162, 2, b); 300, 1, b).
Number, 16; 94, 4.
Numerals, 78 f.;
---- peculiarities in use of, 81.
numquis, decl., 91, 5.
nuper, compared, 77, 1.
-nus, suffix, 151, 2.
O.
o, vowel, 2, 1;
---- as element in dipthong oe, 2, 1;
---- pron., 3, 1;
---- alternating w. u in certain classes of words, 9, 1; 2; 4;
---- o-stems, 23; 24;
---- in cito, 77, 2, a;
---- in duo, 80, 2;
---- in ego, 84; 363, 4, a;
---- in modo, 363, 4, a;
---- in compounds of pro-, 363, 4, c;
---- in amo, leo, etc., 363, 4, b.
o, pron. 3, 1;
---- for au, 7, 1, e;
---- by contraction, 7, 2;
---- in abl. sing. of 2d decl., 23;
---- in nom. sing. of 3d decl., 35;
---- in Greek nouns, 47, 8;
---- in adverbs, 77, 2;
---- in ambo, 80, 2, a;
---- in personal endings, 96.
ob, prep. w. acc., 141;
---- verbs compounded w. governing dat., 187, III.
Obeying, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
Object, direct, 172 f.;
---- two objects w. same verb, 177; 178;
---- indirect, 187 f.;
---- inf. as obj., 326; 328; 329; 331.
Objective gen., 200.
Obligation, verb in expression of, 304, 3, a;
---- see also Duty.
Oblique cases, 71, 2.
obliviscor, constr., 206, 1, b; 2.
octodecim (for duodeviginti), 81, 2.
odi, 133.
oe, 2, 1;
---- pron., 3, 2.
Old forms, familias, 21, 2, a;
---- aulai, 21, 2, b;
---- servos, aevom, equos, etc., 24;
---- med, ted, 84, 3;
---- sed, 85, 3.
olle, archaic for ille, 87.
-olus (a, um), 148, 1.
-om, later -um in 2d decl., 23.
-on, Greek nouns, 2d decl. in, 27.
Onomatopoeia, 375, 4.
opera, operae, 61.
Operations of nature, impersonal verbs expressing, 138, 1.
opinione with comparatives, 217, 4.
opis, 57, 6;
---- opes, 61.
oportet, 138;
---- w. subjv., 295, 6; 8;
---- w. inf., 327, 330.
oportuit, with pres. inf. 'ought to have', 270, 2;
---- with perf. inf., 270, 2, a.
oppidum (Genavam ad oppidum), 182, 2, a.
Optative subjv., 272; 279;
---- substantive clauses developed from, 296.
optimates, decl., 40, 1, d.
optimus, comp., 72.
opto, w. subst. cl. developed from optative, 296, 1.
optumus, spelling, 9, 1.
opus est, w. abl., 218, 2;
---- w. partic., 218, 2, c.
-or, nouns in, 34;
---- -or for -os, 36;
---- gender of nouns in, 43, 1;
---- exceptions in gender, 44, 2;
---- as suffix, 147, 2.
Oratio Obliqua, 313 f.
Order of words, 348 f.
Ordinals, 78, 1; 79.
orior, conjugation, 123, VII.
oriundus, constr., 215, 2.
oro, with acc., 178, 1, a
Orpheus, decl., 47, 6.
Orthography, peculiarities, 9.
ortus, constr., 215.
os, decl., 57, 7.
os, decl., 42.
-os, later -us in 2d decl., 23.
-os, later -or in 3d decl., 36, 1.
---- -os, Greek nouns, 2d decl. in, 27.
-osus, form of suffix, 151, 3.
ovis, decl., 38, 1.
Oxymoron, 375, 2.
P.
p, pron., 3, 3;
---- by assimilation, 8, 4;
---- by partial assimilation, 8, 5.
paenitet, 138, II;
---- with gen., 209
palam, as prep. w. abl., 144, 2.
Palatal mutes, 2, 4.
paluster, decl., 68, 1.
Parasitic vowels, 7, 3.
paratus, with infin., 333.
Pardon, verbs signifying, w. dat., 187, II.
pario, 109, 2, a).
pars, partes, 61.
parte, abl. of place, 228, 1, b.
partem, adverbially used, 185, 1.
Participation, adjs. of, w. gen., 204, 1.
Participial stem, 97, III;
---- formation, 119.
Participles, in -ans and -ens, 70, 3;
---- gen. plu. of in -um, 70, 7;
---- pres. act. partic., 97, I, 5; 101; 103; 105; 107; 110; 113;
---- fut. act. partic., 97, III;
---- as one of the principal parts of the verb, 99, footnote 28; 100;
101; 103; 105; 107; 110; 113;
---- perf. pass. partic., 97, III; 102; 104; 106; 108; 111; 113;;
---- gerundive, see Gerundive;
---- fut. act., peculiar formation of, 119, 4;
---- perf. pass., w. act. or neuter meaning, 114, 2;
---- of deponents, 112, b;
---- syntax, 336 ff.
Participles, fut. act., 119, 4;
---- ---- denoting purpose, 337, 4.
---- perf. act., how supplied, 356, 2.
---- perf. pass. 336, 3;
---- ---- as pres., 336, 5.
---- pres. partic., 336, 2;
---- ---- with conative force, 336, 2, a.
---- perf. pass., with active meaning, 114, 2;
---- pred. use of partic., 337, 2;
---- participles equivalent to subordinate clauses, 337, 2;
---- ---- to cooerdinate clauses, 337, 5;
---- w. opus est, 218, 2, c;
---- with noun, equivalent to abstract noun, 337, 6;
---- with habeo, 337, 7.
---- with video, audio, facio, etc., 337, 3.
Particles, 139 f.; 341 f.
Partitive apposition, 169, 5.
Partitive gen., so called, 201.
Parts of speech, 10.
parum, comparison, 77, 1.
parvi, gen. of value, 203, 3.
parvus, comparison, 72.
Passive, verbs in, with middle meaning, 175, 2, d; 256;
---- verbs governing dat. used in pass. only impersonally, 187, II, b;
---- constr. of passive verbs of saying, etc., 332 and note;
---- how supplied when missing, 356, 1.
patior, conj., 109, 2, c; 113;
---- with inf., 331, III.
Patrial adjs., 70, 5, c.
Patronymics, 148, 6.
paulum, formation, 77, 3.
paulus, spelling, 9, 2.
pauper, decl.,, 70, 1.
pedester, decl., 68, 1.
pejor, quantity of first syllable, 362, 5.
pelagus, gender of, 26, 2.
Penalty, abl. of, 208, 2, b.
penates, decl., 40, 1, d).
penes, prep. w. acc., 141.
Pentameter, dactylic, 369.
Penult, 6, 2.
per, prep. w. acc., 141;
---- with acc. of time and space, 181, 2.
Perceiving, verbs of, w. inf., 331, I.
Perfect active ptc., how supplied in Latin, 356, 2.
Perfect pass. partic., force of w. deponent verbs, 112, b;
---- dat. of agency sometimes used w., 189, 2;
---- opus, 218, 2, c.
Perfect stem, 97, II;
---- ---- formation, 118.
---- in -avi, -evi, -ivi contracted, 116, 1.
---- historical perf., 262.
---- with force of pres. 262; 133, 2;
---- pres. perf. and hist. perf. distinguished, 237, 1 and 2;
---- gnomic perf., 262, 1;
---- perf. subjv. as historical tense, 268, 6 and 7, b;
---- perf. inf. w. oportuit, 270, 2;
---- perf. prohibitive, 279, a;
---- perf. potential, 280, 1 and 2;
---- perf. concessive, 278;
---- sequence of tenses after perf. inf., 268, 2.
Periodic structure, 351, 5.
Periphrastic conj., 115; 269, 3;
---- in conditional sentences of the 3d type, 304, 3, b);
---- in indir. disc., 322;
---- in passive, 337, 8, b, 1.
---- fut. inf., 270, 3.
Persons, 95, 4;
---- 2d sing, of indefinite subject, 356, 3.
Personal pronouns 84; 242;
---- ---- as subject, omission of, 166, 2;
---- ---- as objective genitives, 242, 2.
---- endings, 96.
persuadeo, with dat., 187, II, a;
---- with subjv., 295, 1.
Persuading, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
ph, 2, 3, c; 2, 4; 3, 3.
piget, with gen., 209.
Pity, verbs of, w. gen., 209, 1 and 2.
Place to which, 182;
---- whence, 229;
---- place where, 228.
placitus, force, 114, 2.
Pleasing, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II, a;
---- w. acc., 187, II, a, N.
plebes, heteroclite, 59, 2, d).
plebi, gen., 52, 2.
Plenty and Want, verbs of, constr., 212; cf. 218, 8.
plenus, w. gen., 218, 8, a.
Pleonasm, 374, 3.
pleraque, 6, 5.
pluit, 138, I.
Pluperfect tense, formation, 100;
---- syntax, 263; 265; 287, 2; 288, 3;
---- with imperfect meaning, 133, 2.
Plural, 16;
---- in 5th decl., 52, 4;
---- of proper names, 55, 4, a);
---- of abstract nouns, 5, 4, c);
---- nouns used in, only, 56;
---- with change of meaning, 61;
---- stylistic use, 353, 1, 2.
Pluralia tantum, 56; 81, 4, b).
pluris, gen. of value, 203, 3;
---- of price, 203, 4.
plus, decl., 70; 70, 4;
---- = plus quam, 217, 3.
poema, decl., 47, 5.
Polysyndeton, 341, 4, b).
por-, inseparable prep., 159, 3, e.
porticus, gender, 50.
portus, decl., 49, 3.
posco, constr., 178, 1, a).
Position of clauses, 351, 3.
---- of words, 348; 350; 351.
Possessive dat., 190;
---- gen., 198;
---- ---- contrasted with dat. of poss., 359, 1.
Possessive pronouns, 86, 243;
---- = objective gen., 243, 2;
---- position of, 243, 1, a.
Possibility, verbs of, put in indic. in cond. sentences, 304, 3, a.
possum, 126;
---- with present infin., 'I might,' 271, 1, a;
---- in cond. sentences, 304, 3, a.
post, prep. w. acc., 144, 1;
---- in expressions of time, 357, 1.
Post-positive words, 343, 1, c).
posteaquam, 287;
---- separated, 287, 3;
---- with imperf. ind., 287, 4;
---- w. pluperf. ind., 287, 3;
---- with subjv., 287, 5.
posterus, posterior, comp., 73, 2.
postremus, use, 241, 2.
postridie, with gen., 201, 3, a.
postulo, constr., 178, 1, a.
Potential subjv., 272; 280.
potior, with gen., 212, 2;
---- with abl., 218, 1;
---- in gerundive constr., 339, 4.
---- adj., 73, 1.
potius, compared, 77, 1.
potui, poteram, in apodosis of conditional sent. of 3d type, 304, 3, a);
---- in indir. disc., 322, c.
potui, with pres. inf. = 'could have,' 270, 2.
potuerim, in dependent apodosis, 322, c.
potus, force, 114, 2.
prae, prep, w. abl., 142;
---- verbs compounded with governing dat., 187, III;
---- short in praeacutus, etc., 362, 2.
Praenomen, 373.
praesens, 125.
praesum, w. dat., 187, III.
pransus, force, 114, 2.
preci, -em, -e, 57, 5, a.
Predicate, 163.
---- gen., 198, 3; 203, 5.
Predicate nouns, 167; 168;
---- in acc., 177;
---- predicate nouns or adjs. attracted to dat., 327, 2, a;
---- ---- to nom., 328, 2.
---- adjectives, 232, 2; 177, 2.
Prepositions, assimilation of, in compounds, 8, 4; 9, 2;
---- with acc., 141;
---- with abl., 142;
---- as adverbs, 144;
---- inseparable prepositions, 159, 3, N.;
---- position, 350, 7;
---- prepositional phrases as attributive modifiers, 353, 5;
---- anastrophe of, 144, 3; 141, 2; 142, 3;
---- usage with abl. of sep., 214 f;
---- with abl. of source, 215.
Present tense, 259;
---- gnomic, 259, 1;
---- conative, 259, 2;
---- historical, 259, 3;
---- with jam pridem, jam diu, etc., 259, 4;
---- with dum, 'while,' 293, I;
---- in Repraesentatio, 318;
---- pres. subjv., in -im, 127, 2;
---- pres. partic., see Participle.
---- stem, 97, I;
---- ---- formation, 117.
---- perf., 257, 1 and 2.
Preventing, verbs of, w. subjv. clause, 295, 3.
Price, indefinite, special words in gen. 203, 4; also 225, 1.
---- abl. of, 225.
pridie, with gen., 201, 3, a;
---- with acc., 144, 2.
Primary tenses, see Principal tenses.
primus, 'first who,' 241, 2.
princeps, decl., 31.
Principal parts, 99;
---- list, p. 251.
---- tenses, 258 f.
prior, compared, 73, 1.
prius, compared, 77, 1.
priusquam, with ind., 291;
---- with subjv., 292;
---- separated, 292.
Privation, verbs of, w. abl., 214, 1, b and c.
pro, prep. w. abl., 142.
procul, as prep. w. abl., 144, 2.
prohibeo, w. abl., 214, 2;
---- w. subjv. clause, 295, 3.
Prohibitions, method of expressing, 276.
Prohibitive subjv., 276.
Prolepsis, 374, 5.
Pronominal adjs., 253.
Pronouns, defined, 82;
---- classes, 83;
---- personal, 84;
---- reflexive, 85;
---- possessive, 86;
---- demonstrative, 87;
---- intensive, 88;
---- relative, 89;
---- interrogative, 90;
---- indefinite, 91;
---- pronominal adjs., 92;
---- personal, omission of, as subject, 166, 2;
---- syntax, 242 f.;
---- ---- personal, 242 f.;
---- ---- possess., 243 f.;
---- ---- reflex., 244 f.;
---- ---- reciprocal, 245 f.;
---- ---- demonstrative, 246 f.;
---- ---- relative, 250 f.;
---- ---- indef., 252 f.;
---- position, 350, 5; 355.
Pronunciation, Roman, 3.
prope, compared, 77, 1.
Proper names, abbreviated, 373.
---- nouns, 12, 1.
propior, compared, 73, 1;
---- with acc., 141, 3.
proprius, with dat., 204, 2, a;
---- with gen., 204, 2.
propter, prep. w. acc., 141.
Prosody, 360 f.
prosper, decl., 65, 1.
prosum, conj., 125, N.
Protasis, 301;
---- denoting repeated action, 302, 3;
---- without si, 305;
---- of indef. 2d sing., 302, 2;
---- see Conditions.
Provisos, 310.
proxime, -us, comp., 73, 1; 77, 1;
---- with acc., 141, 3.
prudens, decl., 70.
-pte, 86, 3.
pudet, with gen, 209;
---- w. inf., 327, 1.
puer, decl., 23.
pulcher, comp., 71, 3.
puppis, decl., 38, 1.
Purpose, dat. of purpose, 191;
---- with dat. and gerundive, 191, 3;
---- w. ad and acc., 192, 2;
---- subjv. of purp., 282, 1;
---- ---- w. quo, 282, 1, a;
---- ---- w. ut ne, 282, 1, b;
---- ---- with non in purpose clause, 282, 1, c;
---- ---- neve (neu) in purpose clauses, 292, 1, d;
---- ---- neque, 282, 1, e;
---- rel. clauses of purpose, 282, 2;
---- ---- w. dignus, indignus, idoneus, 282, 3;
---- independent of principal verb, 282, 4;
---- inf., denoting purpose, 326, N.;
---- fut. partic., denoting purpose, 337, 4;
---- gerund, w. ad, 338, 3;
---- gerundive, 339, 2;
---- supine, 340.
Q.
qu, pron., 3, 3;
---- both letters consonants, 74, a.
quaero, w. indir. questions, 300, 1, b), N.
quaeso, 137, 2.
Quality, gen., 203;
---- abl., 224.
quam, in comparisons, 217, 2;
---- with superl., 240, 3;
---- ante ... quam, post ... quam, prius ... quam, see antequam,
postquam, priusquam; quam qui, 283, 2, a.
quam si, 307, 1.
quam ut, with subjv., 284, 4.
quamquam, with ind., 309, 2;
---- with subjv., 309, 6;
---- = 'and yet,' 309, 5.
quamvis, with subjv., 309, 1; 6;
---- denoting a fact, 309, 6.
quando, 286, 3, b.
quanti, as gen. of price, 203, 4;
---- of value, 203, 3.
Quantity, 5.
---- of syllables, 5, B; 363 f.
---- of vowels, 5, A; 362;
---- ---- in Greek words, 365.
quasi, 307, 1.
quatio, conj., 109, 2, a).
-que, accent of word preceding, 6, 3; 6, 5; 341, 1, b); 2, a); 4, c).
queo, 137, 1.
Questions, word, sentence, 162 f.;
---- rhetorical, 162, 3;
---- double (alternative), 162, 4;
---- indirect, 300;
---- questions in indir. disc., 315.
qui, rel., 89;
---- interr., 90;
---- indef., 91;
---- for quis in indir. questions, 90, 2, b;
---- with ne, si, nisi, num, 91, 5;
---- in purpose clauses, 282, 2;
---- abl., 90, 2, a.
quia, in causal clauses, 286, 1.
quicum, 89.
quicumque, decl., 91, 8.
quidam, decl, 91; syntax, 252, 3.
quidem, post-positive, 347, 1.
quilibet, decl., 91,
quin, in result clauses, 284, 3;
---- in substantive clauses, 295, 3; 298;
---- = qui non in clauses of characteristic, 283, 4;
---- with ind., 281, 3;
---- in indir. disc, 322 and a;
---- nulla causa est quin, 295, 7.
quinam, 90, 2, d.
Quintilis (= Julius), 371.
quippe qui, in clauses of characteristic, 283, 3.
Quirites, decl., 40, 1, d.
quis, indef., 91;
---- interr., 90; 90, 2, c.; 252, 1;
---- nescio quis, 253, 6;
---- with ne, si, nisi, num, 91, 5.
quis est qui, 283, 2.
quis = quibus, 89.
quisnam, inflection, 90, 2, d.
quispiam, inflection, 91.
quisquam, inflection, 91;
---- usage, 252, 4.
quisque, inflection, 91;
---- usage, 252, 5.
quisquis, inflection, 91, 8.
quivis, inflection, 91
quo, in purpose clauses, 282, 1, a..
quoad, with ind., 293;
---- with subjv. 293, III, 2.
quod, in causal clauses, 286, 1;
---- in substantive clauses, 299; 331, V, a;
---- 'as regards the fact,' 299, 2.
quod audierim, 283, 5;
---- quod sciam, 283, 5.
quod (si), adverbial acc., 185, 2.
quom, early form of cum, 9, 1.
quo minus, after verbs of hindering, 295, 3.
quoniam, in causal clauses, 286, 1.
quoque, post-positive, 347.
-quus, decl. of nouns in, 24.
R.
r, pron., 3, 3;
---- for s between vowels ('Rhotacism'), 8, 1.
rapio, conj., 100, 2 a).
rastrum, plurals of, 60, 2.
ratus, 'thinking,' 336, 5.
Reciprocal pronouns, 85, 2; 245; cf. 253, 3.
Reduplication in perf., 118, 4, a);
---- in pres., 117, 7.
Reference, dat. of, 188.
refert, constr., 210; 211, 4.
Reflexive pronouns, 85; 244; 249, 3.
rego, conj., 105.
Regular verbs, 101-113.
rei, 362, 1, b).
reicio, quantity, 362, 5.
Relative adverbs, in rel. clauses of purp., 282, 2.
---- clauses, of purp., 282, 2;
---- ---- w. dignus, indignus, idoneus, 282, 3;
---- ---- of characteristic, 283;
---- ---- denoting cause or opposition, 283, 3;
---- ---- restrictive, 283, 5;
---- ---- introduced by quin, 283, 4; 284, 3;
---- ---- conditional rel. clauses, 311; 312, 1 and 2;
---- ---- relative as subj. of inf., 314, 4;
---- ---- rel. clause standing first, 251, 4, a.
---- pronouns, inflection, 89;
---- ---- use, 250, ff.;
---- ---- = Eng. demonstrative, 251, 6;
---- ---- agreement, 250;
---- ---- not omitted as in Eng., 251, 5;
---- ---- fondness for subordinate clauses, 355.
relinquitur ut, 297, 2.
reliqui, use, 253, 5.
reliquum est, with subjv., 295, 6.
remex, decl., 32.
Remembering, verbs of, cases used w., 206.
Reminding, verbs of, const., 207.
reminiscor, constr., 206, 2.
Removing, verbs of, w. abl., 214, 2.
reposco, constr., 178, 1, a).
Repraesentatio, 318.
requies, requiem, requietem, 59, 2, c).
res, decl., 51.
Resisting, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
Restrictive clauses, 283, 5.
Result, acc. of, 173, B; 176;
---- clauses of, 284; 297;
---- ---- in dependent apodosis, 322, and a;
---- ---- sequence of tense in, 268, 6.
revertor, semi-deponent, 114, 3.
Rhetorical questions, 162, 3; 277, a;
---- in indir. disc., 315, 2.
Rhotacism, 8, 1; 36, 1.
Rivers, gender of names of, 15, A, 1.
rogatu, abl. of cause, 219, 2.
rogo, constr., 178, 1, c); 178, 1, a).
Roman pronunciation, 3.
Root, 17, 3, footnote 12.
-rs, decl. of nouns in, 40, 1, c).
rure, abl., place from which, 229, 1, b.
ruri, abl., place in which, 228, 1, c.
rus, 57, 7;
---- acc., limit of motion, 182, 1, b.
S.
s, pron., 3, 3;
---- changed to r between vowels, 8, 1:
---- s, ss from dt, tt, ts, 8, 2.
-s, decl. of monosyllables in, preceded by one or more consonants, 40, 1,
b).
s-stems, 36.
sacer, decl., 65;
---- comparison, 73, 3.
saepe, compared, 77, 1.
sal, 57, 7;
---- sales, 61.
salubris, decl., 68, 3.
salutaris, comp., 73, 4.
salve, salvete, 137, 4.
Samnites, 40, 1, d).
sane, in answers, 162, 5.
sapio, conj., 109, 2, a).
satur, decl., 65, 2.
Saying, verbs of, w. inf. of ind. disc., 331, I.
scio, quod sciam, 283, 5.
-sco-class of verbs, 117, 6; 155.
scribere ad aliquem, 358, 2.
se, use, 244.
se-, compounds of, 159, 3, e.
Second conj., 103;
---- decl., 23;
---- peculiarities, 25;
---- second person indefinite, 280, 3; 356, 3; 302, 2.
Secondary tenses, see Historical tenses.
secundum, prep. w. acc., 141.
securis, decl., 38, 1.
secus, compared, 77, 1.
secus (virile secus), 185, 1; 58.
secutus, 'following', 336, 5.
sed, se, 85, 3.
sed-, compounds of, 159, 3, e.
sed, 343, 1, a).
sedile, decl., 39.
sementis, decl., 38, 1.
Semi-deponent verbs, 114.
Semivowels, 2, 8.
senex, decl., 42;
---- compared, 73, 4.
Sentences, classification, 160, f.;
---- simple and compound, 164;
---- sentence-structure, 351;
---- sentence questions, 162, 2.
sententia, abl. of accordance, 220, 3.
Separation, dat. of, 188, 2, d);
---- gen., 212, 3;
---- abl., 214.
Sequence of tenses, 267; 268.
sequester, decl., 68, 1.
sequitur ut, 297, 2.
sequor, conj., 113.
Serving, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
servos, decl., 24.
sese, decl., 85.
Sextilis (= Augustus), 371.
Sharing, adjs. of, w. gen., 204, 1.
Short syllables, 5, B, 2;
---- vowels, 5, A, 2.
Showing, verbs of, w. two accs., 177.
si, with indir. questions, 300, 3;
---- in protasis, 301;
---- omitted, 305.
signifer, decl., 23, 2.
silentio, abl of manner, 220, 2.
silvester, decl., 68, 3.
similis, with dat., 204, 3;
---- with gen., 204, 3;
---- comp., 71, 4.
si minus, use, 306, 2.
Simple sentences, 164.
simul, as prep., w. abl., 144, 2.
simul ac, w. ind., 287, 1; 2.
si non, usage, 306, 1 and 2.
sin, usage, 306, 3.
sin minus, 306, 2, a.
Singular, second person indefinite, 280, 3; 356, 3; 302, 2.
sino with inf., 331, III.
sitis, decl., 38, 1.
Smelling, verbs of, constr., 176, 5.
Soft consonants, 2, 3, b), footnote 5.
-so, verbs in, 155, 2.
socer, decl., 23, 2.
socium, gen, plu., 25, 6, c).
sol, decl., 57, 7.
soleo, semi-dep., 114, 1.
solitus, used as present partic., 336, 5.
solus, 66;
---- solus est qui with subjv., 283, 2.
Sonant consonants, 2, 3, b), footnote 5.
Soracte, decl., 39, 2.
Sounds, classification, 2.
---- of the letters, 3.
Source, abl., 215.
Space, extent of, 181.
Sparing, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
Specification, abl. of, 226.
spei, quantity, 362, 1, b.
Spelling, see Orthography.
Spirants, 2, 7.
Spondaic verses, 368, 2.
Spondee, 368, 1.
sponte sua, abl. accordance, 220, 3.
spontis, -e, defective, 57, 2, b.
Statutes, fut. imperative used in, 281, 1, b.
Stem, 17, 3.
---- verb, 97; 117.
Structure of sentences, see Sentences.
Style, hints on, 352 f.
su = sv, 3, 3.
sub, prep. with acc. and abl., 143;
---- compounds of, w. dat., 187, III.
Subject, 163;
---- nom., 166;
---- acc., 184;
---- subject acc. of inf., 184;
---- omitted, 314, 5;
---- clauses as subject, 294; 295, 6;
---- inf. as subj., 327; 330.
Subjective gen., 199.
Subjunctive, tenses in, 95, 3.
---- in independent sentences, 272;
---- by attraction, 324;
---- tenses of, 266 f.;
---- method of expressing future time in, 269;
---- volitive (hortatory, jussive, probibitive, deliberative,
concessive), 273 f.;
---- optative (wishes), 279;
---- potential, 280;
---- in clauses of purpose, 282;
---- of characteristic, 283;
---- of result, 284;
---- of cause, 286;
---- temporal clauses with postquam, posteaquam, 287, 5;
---- temporal clauses with cum, 288-290;
---- with antequam and priusquam, 292;
---- with dum, donec, quoad, 293, III, 2;
---- substantive clauses, 294 f.;
---- indir. questions, 300;
---- in apodosis of first type conditions, 302, 4;
---- jussive subjunctive as protasis of condition, 305, 2;
---- with velut, tamquam, etc., 307;
---- with necesse est, opportet, etc., 295, 6 and 8;
---- with licet, 309, 4;
---- with quamvis, quamquam, etsi, cum 'although,' 309 f.
sublatus, 129, N.
subm- = summ-, 9, 2.
Subordinate clauses, 165.
Substantive clauses, 294 f.;
---- ---- developed from the volitive, 295, 1-8;
---- ---- developed from the optative, 296;
---- ---- with non dubito, 298;
---- ---- indir. questions, 300;
---- ---- without ut, 295, 8;
---- ---- of result, 297;
---- ---- introduced by quod, 299.
---- use of adjs., 236-238.
subter, prep, w. acc., 143, 1.
Suffixes, 17, 3, footnote 12; 147 f.
sui, 85;
---- as objective gen., 244, 2;
---- = possessive gen., 244, 2.
sum, conj., 100;
---- omitted when auxiliary, 166, 3.
summus, 'top of,' 241, 1.
sunt qui, with subjv., 283, 2.
suopte, suapte, 86, 3.
supellex, decl., 42, 2.
super, prep. w. acc., 143, 1.
Superlative degree;
---- of adjs., 71, 1;
---- ---- in -rimus, 91, 3;
---- ---- in -limus, 71, 4;
---- ---- irregular superl., 72; 73;
---- ---- lacking, 73, 4;
---- ---- formed w. maxime, 74;
---- of adverbs, 76, 2;
---- ---- irregular, 77, 1;
---- force of, 240, 2.
superus, compared, 73, 2.
Supine, 340.
supra, prep. w. acc., 141.
-sura, suffix, 147, 3, a.
Surd consonants, 2, 3, a), footnote 4.
sus, decl., 41.
sustuli, 129, N.
suus, decl., 86, 1; 244;
---- suus quisque, 244, 4, a.
Syllaba anceps, 366, 10.
Syllables, division, 4;
---- quantity of, 5, B.
Synapheia, 367, 6.
Synaeresis, 367, 1.
Synchysis, 350, 11, d.
Syncope, 7, 4; 367, 8.
Synecdochical acc., 180.
Synizesis, 367, 1.
Syntax, 160 f.
Systole, 367, 3.
T.
t, pron., 3, 3;
---- th, 2, 3, c; 3, 3;
---- changes, 8, 2;
---- dropped, 8, 3.
taedet, 138, II;
---- w. gen., 209.
Taking away, verbs of, w. dat., 188, 2, d.
talentum, gen. plu., 25, 5, a.
tamen, 343, 1, f.
tametsi, 309, 2.
tamquam, tamquam si, w. subjv., 307.
tanton, 6, 4.
-tas, 149;
---- gen. -tatis, decl. of nouns in, 40, 1, e).
Tasting, verbs of, constr., 176, 5.
Teaching, verbs of, constr., 178, 1, b.
ted = te, 84, 3.
Temporal clauses, w. postquam, ut, ubi, simul ac, 287;
---- w. cum, 288; 289;
---- w. antequam and priusquam, 291; 292;
---- with dum, donec, quoad, 293.
temporis (id temporis), 185, 2.
Tendency, dat. of, 191.
tener, decl., 64.
Tenses, 94, 3; 257 ff.;
---- of inf., 270;
---- of inf. in indir. disc., 317;
---- of participles, 336;
---- of subjv., 266;
---- sequence of, 266-268;
---- in indir. disc., 317; 318.
Tenues (consonants), 2, 3, a), footnote 4.
tenus, position, 142, 3.
Terminations, 17, 3.
terni, how used, 81, 4, b.
-ternus, 154.
terra marique, 228, 1, c.
terrester, 68, 3.
Tetrameter verses, 366, 11.
Thematic verbs, 101-113.
---- vowels, 117, footnote 39.
Thesis, 366, 6.
Third conj., 105; 109 f.;
---- decl., 28 f.;
---- gender in, 43 f.
Threatening, verbs of, 187, II.
-tim, adverbs in, 157, 2.
Time, at which, 230;
---- during which, 181; 231, 1;
---- within which, 231.
timeo ne and ut, 296, 2.
-tinus, suffix, 154.
-tio, suffix, 147, 3.
Tmesis, 367, 7.
-to as suffix of verbs, 155, 2.
-tor, use of nouns in, 353, 4.
totus, 66;
---- preposition absent w., in expression of place relations, 228, 1,
b).
Towns, gender of names of, 15, 2;
---- names of, denoting limit of motion, 182, 1, a;
---- denoting place where, 228, 1, a;
---- place from which, 229, 1, a;
---- appositives of town names, 169, 4; 229, 2.
traditur, traditum est, w. inf., 332, N.
trans, prep, w. acc., 141;
---- constr. of verbs compounded with, 179.
Transitive verbs, 174.
Trees, gender of names of, 15, 2.
tres, decl., 80, 3.
Tribrach, 370, 2.
tribus, decl., 49, 3;
---- gender, 50.
Trimeter verses, 366, 11.
trini, use, 81, 4, b).
triumvir, gen. plu. of, 25, 6, b).
-trix, suffix, 147, 1.
Trochee, 366, 2.
-trum, suffix, 147, 4.
Trusting, verbs of, w. dat., 187, II.
tu, decl., 84.
-tudo, suffix, 84.
tui, as objective gen., 242, 2.
-tura, suffix, 147, 3, a).
tus, decl., 57, 7.
-tus, suffix, 147, 3; 151, 4.
tussis, decl., 38.
tute, tutemet, tutimet, 84, 2.
Two accusatives, 177; 178.
Two datives, 191, 2.
U.
u, instead of i in some words, 9, 1;
---- instead of a, 9, 1; 9, 4.
u, becomes v 367, 4.
u-stems, 48.
u-stems, 41.
-u, dat. sing., 4th decl, 49, 2.
uber, decl., 70, 1.
ubi, with ind., 287, 1; 2;
---- with gen., 201, 3.
-ubus, dat., plu., 4th decl., 49, 3.
ullus, decl., 66.
ulterior, compared, 73, 1.
ultimus, use, 241, 2.
ultra, prep. w. acc., 141.
-ulus, diminutive ending, 150, 2;
---- (a, um), 148, 1.
-um, 1st decl., gen. plu. in, 21, 2, d);
---- 2d decl., 25, 6;
---- for -ium, 70, 7.
-undus, -undi, in gerund and gerundive, 116, 2.
unus, decl., 66; 92, 1;
---- unus est qui, with subjv., 283, 2.
-urio, ending of desiderative verbs, 155, 3.
-urus, ending of fut. act. partic., 101; 103 ff.;
---- -urus fuisse in apodosis of conditional sentences contrary-to-fact,
in indir. disc., 321, 2;
---- -urus fuerim in indir. questions serving as apodoses, 322, b.
-us, neuter nouns of 2d decl. in, 26, 2;
---- nom. in 3d decl., in -us, 36;
---- gender of nouns in -us of 3d decl., 43, 3;
---- exceptions in gender, 46, 4.
-us, nouns of 3d decl. in, 43, 2.
usque ad, w. acc., 141, 1.
usus est, with abl., 218, 2.
ut, temporal, 287, 1; 2;
---- ut, uti, in purpose clauses, 282;
---- in result clauses, 284;
---- in substantive clauses, 295 f.;
---- substantive clauses without, 295, 8;
---- with verbs of fearing, 296, 2.
ut ne = ne, 282, 1, b; 295, 1, 4, 5.
ut non instead of ne, 282, 1, c;
---- in clauses of result, 284, 297.
ut qui, introducing clauses of characteristic, 283, 3.
ut si, w. subjv., 307, 1.
uter, decl., 66; 92, 1.
uter, decl., 40, 1, d).
utercumque, decl., 92, 2.
uterlibet, decl., 92, 2.
uterque, decl., 92, 2;
---- use, 355, 2.
utervis, decl., 92, 2.
utilius est = Eng. potential, 271, 1, b).
utinam, with optative subjv., 279, 1 and 2.
utor, with abl., 218, 1;
---- in gerundive constr., 339, 4
utpote qui, introducing clauses of characteristic, 283, 3.
utraque, 6, 5.
utrum ... an, 162, 4; 300, 4.
V.
v, 1, 1;
---- pron., 3, 3:
---- developing from u, 367, 4.
v, becomes u, 367, 5.
valde, by syncope, for valide, 7, 4.
vale, 363, 2, b).
Value, indefinite, in gen., 203, 3.
vannus, gender of, 26, 1, b).
Variations in spelling, 9.
vas, decl., 59, 1.
-ve, 6, 3; 342, 1, b).
vel, 342, 1, b);
---- with superl., 240, 3.
velim, potential subjv., 280, 2, a.
vellem, potential subjv., 280, 4.
velut, velut si, w. subjv., 307, 1.
venter, decl., 40, 1, d).
Verba sentiendi et declarandi, w. inf. of indir. disc., 331, I;
---- passive use of these, 332.
Verbal adjs., 150, 1-4.
Verbs, 94 f.;
---- personal endings, 96;
---- deponent, 112;
---- archaic and poetic forms, 116, 4;
---- irregular, 124;
---- defective, 133;
---- impersonal, 138;
---- with substantive clauses of result, 297, 2;
---- omission of, 166, 3;
---- transitive, 174;
---- ---- used absolutely, 174, a;
---- passives used as middles, 175, 2, d);
---- of smelling and tasting, constr., 176, 5;
---- not used in passive, 177, 3, a;
---- intransitives impersonal in passive, 187, II, b; 256, 3;
---- compounded with preps., constr., 187, III;
---- of judicial action, constr., 208;
---- derivation of, 155 f.;
---- inceptive or inchoative, 155, 1;
---- frequentative or intensive, 155, 2;
---- desiderative, 155, 3;
---- denominative, 156;
---- agreement of, 254 f.
Verb stems, 97;
---- formation of, 117 f.
vereor, conj., 113;
---- with subst. clause in subjv., 296, 2.
Vergilius, gen. of, 25, 1.
veritus, with present force; 336, 5.
vero, 343, 1, g);
---- in answers, 162, 5.
Verse, 366, 3.
Verse-structure, 366 f.
Versification, 361.
versus, prep. w. acc., 141;
---- follows its case, 141, 2.
verum, 343, 1, b).
vescor, with abl., 218, 1.
vesper, decl., 23, 2.
vesperi, locative, 232, 2.
vestri, as obj. gen., 242, 2.
vestrum, as gen. of whole, 242, 2;
---- as possessive gen., 242, 2, a.
veto, with inf. 331, II.
vetus, decl., 70;
---- compared, 73, 3.
vi, 220, 2.
vicem, used adverbially, 185, 1;
---- vicis, vice, 57, 5, b.
victor, decl., 34.
video, with pres. partic., 337, 3.
vigil, decl., 34.
violenter, formation, 77, 4, a.
vir, decl., 23.
---- gen. plu. of nouns compounded with, 25, 6, b).
virile seces, constr., 185, 1.
virus, gender of, 26, 2.
vis, decl., 41.
viscera, used in plu. only, 56, 3.
Vocative case, 17; 19, 1;
---- of Greek proper names in -as, 47, 4;
---- of adjs. in -ius, 63, 1; 171;
---- in -i for -ie, 25, 1;
---- position of, 350, 3.
Voiced sounds, 2, 3, a).
Voiced consonants, 2, 3, b).
Voiceless consonants, 2, 3, a).
Voices, 94; 256;
---- middle voice, 256, 1.
Volitive subjunctive, 272 f.
volnus, spelling, 9, 1.
volo, 130;
---- with inf., 331, IV and a; 270, 2, a;
---- with subjv., 296, 1, a.
volt, spelling, 9, 1.
voltus, spelling, 8, 1.
volucer, decl., 68, 1.
voluntate, 220, 2.
-volus, comparison of adjs. in, 71, 5
Vowels, 2, 1;
---- sounds of the, 3, 1;
---- quantity of, 5, A;
---- contraction of, 7, 2;
---- parasitic, 7, 3.
Vowel changes, 7.
vulgus, gender of, 26, 2.
-vum, -vus, decl. of nouns in, 24.
W.
X.
x, 2, 9;
---- = cs and gs, 32.
-x, decl. of monosyllables in, preceded by one or more cons., 40, 1, b);
---- gender of nouns in -x of 3d decl., 43, 2;
---- exceptions, 45, 4.
Y.
y, 1, 1.
Yes, how expressed, 162, 5.
'You,' indefinite, 356, 3; 280, 3; 302, 2.
Z.
z, 1, 1; 2, 9.
Zeugma, 374, 2, a).
* * * * *
FOOTNOTES
[2] Cuneiform means "wedge-shaped." The name applies to the form of the
strokes of which the characters consist.
[6] In this book, long vowels are indicated by a horizontal line above
them; as, a, i, o, etc. Vowels not thus marked are short. Occasionally a
curve is set above short vowels; as, e, u.
[9] Only the simplest and most obvious of these are here treated.
[10] Only the simplest and most obvious of these are here treated.
[11] The great majority of all Latin nouns come under this category. The
principles for determining their gender are given under the separate
declensions.
[12] The Stem is often derived from a more primitive form called the Root.
Thus, the stem porta- goes back to the root per-, por-. Roots are usually
monosyllabic. The addition made to a root to form a stem is called a
Suffix. Thus in porta- the suffix is -ta.
[23] Forms of hic ending in -s sometimes append -ce for emphasis; as,
hujusce, _this ... here_; hosce, hisce. When -ne is added, -c and -ce
become -ci; as huncine, hoscine.
[28] Where the Perfect Participle is not in use, the Future Active
Participle, if it occurs, is given as one of the Principal Parts.
[30] The meanings of the different tenses of the Subjunctive are so many
and so varied, particularly in subordinate clauses, that no attempt can be
made to give them here. For fuller information the pupil is referred to the
Syntax.
[31] For essem, esses, esset, essent, the forms forem, fores, foret, forent
are sometimes used.
[36] Fui, fuisti, etc., are sometimes used for sum, es, etc. So fueram,
fueras, etc., for eram, etc.; fuero, etc., for ero, etc.
[37] Fuerim, etc., are sometimes used for sim; so fuissem, etc., for essem.
[38] In actual usage passive imperatives occur only in deponents (Sec. 112).
[39] Strictly speaking, the Present Stem always ends in a Thematic Vowel (e
or o); as, dic-e-, dic-o-; ama-e-, ama-o-. But the multitude of phonetic
changes involved prevents a scientific treatment of the subject here. See
the author's _Latin Language_.
[40] But the compounds of juvo sometimes have _-juturus_; as, _adjuturus_.
[46] It will be observed that not all the forms of fero lack the connecting
vowel. Some of them, as ferimus, ferunt, follow the regular inflection of
verbs of the Third Conjugation.
[48] Many such verbs were originally intransitive in English also, and once
governed the Dative.
[50] Place from which, though strictly a Genuine Ablative use, is treated
here for sake of convenience.
[51] Especially: moneo, admoneo; rogo, oro, peto, postulo, precor, flagito;
mando, impero, praecipio; suadeo, hortor, cohortor; persuadeo, impello.
[59] So named from a fancied analogy to the strokes of the Greek letter
(_chi_). Thus:--
multos laesi
_chi_
defendi neminem
[60] The pronouns hic, hoc, and the adverb huc, probably had a short
_vowel_. The syllable was made long by pronouncing hicc, hocc, etc.
[61] Ictus was not accent,--neither stress accent not musical accent,--but
was simply the quantitative prominence inherent in the long syllables of
_fundamental feet_.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of New Latin Grammar, by Charles E. Bennett
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