This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1872 edition. Excerpt: ... 16. Ego te . . . . valde rogo, ' I earnestly request you to do whatever may occur to you as useful to me.' 'Interest' has an option of constructions, ' mea, ' or ' mei.' 'Mea ' may agree with 're' understood: 'in mea re.' Key, however, considers' mea' as a corruption of' meam;' est inter me am rem.' ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1872 edition. Excerpt: ... 16. Ego te . . . . valde rogo, ' I earnestly request you to do whatever may occur to you as useful to me.' 'Interest' has an option of constructions, ' mea, ' or ' mei.' 'Mea ' may agree with 're' understood: 'in mea re.' Key, however, considers' mea' as a corruption of' meam;' est inter me am rem.' Ep. 29. 2. Ne quid novi decernatur, 'that no new decree may be made '--such, namely, as might prolong his tenure of his government. 3. TJt hoc nostrum desiderium no plus sit aimuum, 'that this loss (i.e. of one another's company) which we feel may not be for. more than a year.' 'Plus, ' 'amplius, ' and 'minus, ' are often added to the word which they affect without altering its case, yet without 'quam.' 'Num est hoc, non plus annum obtinere provinciam?' Ep. 35. 27. 'Apes nunquam plus unum regem patientur' Sen. CI. 1. 19. Madv. 305. 4. Aniiio. Nothing seems to be known of this allusion. De satis dando.. des, ' with regard to giving security, I ask you, as long as you are at Rome, to do it for me yourself.' Cicero had some debts which he had not paid. 5. Et sunt aliquot satisdationes .... Atilianorum, 'there are also some securities by mortgage; among these you might give mortgages on my Mennian or Atilian farms.' If we read Memmianorum we may say, he had probably bought these estates when the properties of Memmius and Atilius Serranus were sold by auction. The former was condemned for corruption in his competition for the consulship B.c. 54 and was now living at Mytilene, though he had property at Athens also, and was citizen of Patrae. Att. 5. 11: 6.1. Cicero wished Atticus to use these estates as security for his debts. 'Mancipium' and 'mancipatio ' properly express an act of transfer of property: 'Mancipatio dicitur quasi manu res...
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