This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1895 Excerpt: ... 30. 6 sicuti: this and sicut seem to be used indifferently by Cic. 7 Yi victa vis ve1: alliteration is particularly common in Latin with the letter v; cf. Lucr. 5, 993 viva videns vivo sepeliri viscera busto. 8 nihi1...nihi1...nihil: for the repetition of the same word at the heads of successive clauses (called ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1895 Excerpt: ... 30. 6 sicuti: this and sicut seem to be used indifferently by Cic. 7 Yi victa vis ve1: alliteration is particularly common in Latin with the letter v; cf. Lucr. 5, 993 viva videns vivo sepeliri viscera busto. 8 nihi1...nihi1...nihil: for the repetition of the same word at the heads of successive clauses (called anaphora by the grammarians) cf. 20, 1. 32 (tam); 3-, 11. 4, 5, 6; 34,11. 16, 17; 41, 1. 26; 42, p. 42,1. 3. 9 sane: is used both of an admission made by the speaker himself, and of one which he expects others to make; sometimes="as I admit," sometimes "as you must admit." I o natus est, ut... potuerit: Roby 1 j 16. Note the imperfect servant; and cf. Phil. 14, 17 interposui non tam ut...dixerim (so all the Mss.)... quam ut monerem. II Bi...sln: this form and sivc.sive are regular, but not si...sive. 14 natnra: so 10,1. 30. 15 ope: Ad Att. 14, 14, 6 omni ope atque opera enitar. capita: not really different from vita, and often put together with it, as Pro Caec. 63. 31. 1p quod si ita pntasset: here quod is pronoun and object to putasset; cf. hoc ita sentit in 1. 22 ("takes this view of the matter"). Quod at the beginning of a sentence followed by si or nisi or ut is usually a conjunction equivalent to "whereas," "however" (15, p. 31, 1. 4; 9, 1. 13; 51, 1. 31; 61, 1. 18; 68, 1. 17), though originally an accusative of respect, literally, "as to which matter." optabilius fuit: "it was preferable"; so aequius erat or fuerat is often found in the apodosis of a conditional sentence, though the protasis has a verb in the subjunctive; similarly opus erat, oportuit and other impersonal expressions. Cf. 40,1. 18; 58, 1. 22; 103, 1. 12. 20 non semel: "more than o...
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