with the infinitive and with ut, | cupere, construction of, 414; with
constructio ad synesim, 368. consuescere, 143; construction of, 416.
consuetudo est, with the infinitive
and with ut, 622, in fin. consulere, construction of, 414. consumere, with the dative of the gerund, 664. contendere ut, 614.
contentus, construction of, 467. Contentus sum with the infinit. perfect, 590.
conterminus, with the dative, 411. contineri, construction of, 452. contingit ut, 621.
continuo, meaning of, 272.
contra, meaning of, 299; contra ea, 349; contra auro, 323. contraction, 11.
convenio, construction of, 387. convenit, construction of, 413; used in the indicative instead of the subjunct., 518. convertere, 145.
conviciari, with the dative, 412. convincere, with the genitive, 446. corpus, used instead of the per- sonal pronoun, 678. correlative pronouns, 130; ad- verbs, 288.
Cos, declension of, 52, 3.
reare, with two accusatives, 394. credo, 777; crederes, 528. Creticus, verse, 850. crctus, with the ablat., 451. crimine, ellipsis of, 446. -crum, the termination, 239. cui, a monosyllabic word, 11. cui bono fuit, 422, note. cujus, a, um, 139, 2. -culum, the termination, 239. -culus, diminutive termination
of comparatives, 104, note. cum, meaning of, 307; in answer to the question "in what man- ner?" 472; ellipsis of, 473; appended to the ablative of personal and relative pronouns, 324, in fin.
cumprimis, meaning of, 273. --cunque, the suffix, 128.
the nom. or the accus. with the infinit., 609.
cupido, gender of, 75, in fin. cupidus, with the genitive, 436 cupiens, with the genit., 436. cupio tibi, tua causa, 414. cur, 276, 2; est cur, 562. curare, construction of, 614, 653, 713.
curiosus, with the genitive, 436.
| Damnare, construction of, 446. damnas, indeclinable, 103. dare, quantity of, 152, note; with the dative, 422; with the par- ticiple future passive, 653; with the infinit. it is poetical, except with bibere, 653 Darius and Dareus, 2. dative with verbs compounded with prepositions, 415; with verbs of difference, 468; with verbs of separation, 469. Da- tive of attraction with licet esse, 601; with mihi nomen est, 421. Dative with passive verbs in- stead of ab, 419; with the par- ticiple perf. pass., 419, note. Dativus commodi and incom- modi, 405. Dativus ethicus, 409. Dative of the gerund with esse, 664; with names of dignities and offices, 665. de, meaning of, 308; its position, 324; is used instead of the genitive, 430; de nocte, 308. debebat, the indicat. instead of the subjunct., 518.
decedere, construction of, 468 decernere, construction of, 619. decet, dedecet, with the accus., 390; decet, with the infinit. ac. tive and passive, 608. declarare, with two accusatives, 394.
dedocere, construction of, 391. deesse, with the dative of the go- rund, 664.
deest mihi, 420, note. defective nouns, in case, 88, foll.. in number, 91, foll. defendere, construction of, 469
deferre, scil. nomen, with the gen- it., 446.
deficere, construction of, 388. defungi, construction of, 465. dejicere, construction of, 468. dein, as a monosyllable, 11. delectari, construction of, 629. delectat me, 390, note. deligere, with two accusatives, 394. demonstratives, omitted, 765, note; used instead of rela- tives, 805.
demovere, construction of, 468. denique, meaning of, 727. depellere, construction of, 468. dependence of tenses on one an- other, 512.
deponents, derived from nouns, 147, note; deponents with the ablat., 465.
derivation of verbs from nouns,
235; from adjectives, 235. desiderative verbs, 232. designare, with two accusatives,
desitus sum, 200.
desperare, construction of, 417. desuetus, 633.
deterior and pejor, difference be- tween, 111, note.
deterrere with quominus and ne, 543.
deturbare, construction of, 468. dicere, with two accusatives, 394; ellipsis of, 620, 769.
dicit, ellipsis of, 772. dicitur, construction of, 607. dies, its gender, 86; compounded with numerals, 124; die, by day, 475; dies, repeated, 743. differre, construction of, 468. difficile, adverb, 267, and note 2. Difficile est, the indicat. being used for the subjunct., 520. difficilis, with the infinit., the su- pine, or ad, 671.
dignari, with the ablat., 467, note. dignus, with the ablat., 467; with qui and the subjunct., 568; with the supine, 670. diminutive verbs, 233; substan- I
tives, 240 adjectives, 250; comparatives, 104, note.
dis or di, the inseparable prepo- sition, 330. discerneres, 528.
discordari cum aliquo, 469. dissidere, construction of, 413, fin.
dissimilis, construction of, 411. distare, construction of, 468. distinguere, construction of, 46o, foll.
distributive numerals and their use, 119. diu, 294.
diversus, with ab, dat. and genit. 468, 470.
divertor, as a deponent, 209, in fir dives, its declension and compar
ison, 102, note; its constru tion, 437, note 2.
division of words into syllable 14, 2.
docere, construction of, 391. dolere, construction of, 452, 629 dominari, construction of, 413. domus, its declension, 83; is con strued like names of towns 400.
donare, construction of, 418 donec, 350, 575. donicum, 350, note. doti dico, 422, note. dubitative mood, 530. dubito or non dubito, constructio of, 540, 541; dubito an, mean ing of, 354, 541.
ducere, like habere, with two accu satives, 394; in numero, or in loco, 394, note 3; with the genit., 444; with the dative 422. dudum, 287.
duim for dem, 162. dum, meaning and construction
350, note, 506, 507, 575; com. pounded with a negative, 733. dummodo, dummodo ne, its mean ing, 342; construction, 572, in fin.
duritaxat, meaning of, 274 duum, for duorum and duarum, 1:5 duumviri, is doubtful, 124.
ti or ex, meaning of, 309; is used | enunquam, 351.
instead of the genitive, 130;er, in the lengthening of the
cases in which it may be (mit- ted, 468.
re publica, for the good of the republic, 309, in fin.
e, the ancient termination of the dat. of the third declension,
-e, for ei, in the fiftn declension, 85, 3.
e, elided in the imperfect of the fourth conjugation, 162. ea, quantity of, 16, note 1. ecce, compounded with pronouns, 132, in fin.; with the nominat. and accus., 403. ccqua and ecquae, 136, note. ecquid, meaning of, 351, note. ecquis and ecquisnam, meaning of, 136.
edepol, 361, note.
edim for edam, 162.
editus, with the ablat., 451. edocere, with two accusat., 391. efficere ut, 618.
efficiens, with the genit., 438, note. efficitur, with the accus. with the
infinit., or ut, 618, note. effugere, construction of, 388. egere, construction of, 463. ei was used anciently instead of i, 2.
ejus used for suus, 550; (quoad) ejus fieri potest, 434. -ela, the termination, 237, note. elision, 8.
ellipsis, 758, foll.; of a preposi- tion, 778.
emere, construction of, 444. en, compounded with pronouns, 132, in fin.; the interrogative particle, 351; the interjection with the nominat., 403. ἐν διὰ δυοῖν, 741.
-endus and undus, terminations of the part. fut. pass., 167. nim and nam, 345, note inimvero, meaning of 348, note. trs, 156.
infinit. pass., 162.
eo, 344, note; with comparativ cs, 487; as a conjunction, 444, note; as an adverb of place with the genitive, 434. eodem, with the genit., 434. epicene (nomina epicoena), 42. epistola, with a possessive pro noun, 684. epistolary style, requires the per- fect and imperfect instead of the present, 503. epodus, gender of, 54, in fin. Eπоieɩ and èπoinσev, 500. equidem, 278.
-ēre, instead of ērunt, 163 erga, meaning of, 299. ergo, 679.
-errimus, termination of cert.in superlatives, 105.
-ērunt (3d pers. plur. perf. act.), shortened in poetry, 163. esse, joined with adverbs, 365; esse a pedibus, ab epistolis, a ra- tionibus, &c., 305, in fin. Esse with the cative, 420, 422; with the genit. of quality, 427, 448, note 1; with the dative of the gerund, 664; with the genit. of the gerund, 662; with the ablat. of quality, 471.
esse videtur, to be avoided at the
end of a sentence, 819. esse, in the infin. perf. pass., 592. esse, est, ellipsis of, 776. est, equivalent to licet, 227. est, qui, with the subjunct., 561. est, quod, with the subjunct., 562 est ut, 621, 752; equivalent to es cur, 562.
et, whether used for ac, 340, note for etiam, 335; rarely by Cicero, 698; is superfluous, 756; el- lipsis of, 783. Difference be tweer et and que, 333.
et-et (que), 337, 809.
et ipse, for etiam, 698; for idem, 697.
et is (quidem), 699.
-entissimus, termination of cer- et-neque (nec), 337, 809.
tain superlatives, 105, c.
exaequare, construction of, 399, fas, with the supine in u, 670.
excedere, with the accusat., 387. excellere, construction of, 488. excludere, construction of, 468. exire, construction of, 468. existimare, with two accusat., 394; is used pleonastically, 750. existunt qui, with the subjunct.,
expedire, construction of, 468. expedit, with the dative, 412. experiens, with the genit., 438,
expers, with the genit., 436, 437, note 2; with the ablat., 437, note 2.
x quo (scil. tempore), 309, 478, 763.
Axscissum and excisum, 189. extemplo, meaning of, 272. extra, meaning of, 300. extremum est ut, 621. exuere, construction of, 418. exulare, construction of, 468. exuor, construction of, 458.
Fabula, ellipsis of, 39, in fin. fac (facio), quantity of, 24. Fac forming a circumlocution for the imperative, 586; with the subjunct., 618, 624. facere de aliquo, aliquo, alicui, and facere cum aliquo, 491; facere, with two accusatives, 394; with the genitive, 444; with a participle, 618. facere certiorem, construction of, 394, note 1. "acere non possum quin, 538. facere quod, 628
faxo, faxim, &c., 161, e.
fearing, verbs of, with ut and ne. 533.
febris, ellipsis of, 763. fecundus, with the genit., 436 fer, quantity of, 24. ferax, with the genit., 436. fere and ferme, their difference from paene and prope, 275. fertilis, with the genit., 436, 437
fidere, construction of, 413, 452. fieri and esse, with the genit., 444, 448.
fieri non potest ut, 621; quin, 538 figures, 821, &c.
filius and filia, ellipsis of, 761. finitimus, with the dative, 411. fit, construction of, 621. flagitare, with two accusat., 393. flocci habere, 444, note. florere, with the ablat., 460. foras and foris, 400, in fin. forem, 156, in fin., 224. fore ut, 594.
forte, fortasse, forsitan, 271, 728 fortuna fortes, 759. fortuitus, as a word of three syl lables, 11.
fractions, how expressed, 120 freni, proved to occur, 99. frequentative verbs, 231, 1. fretus, construction of, 467. frui, construction of, 465, 466 frustra, meaning of, 275. fugere, construction of, 388; fugi me, 390, note. fuisse, instead of esse, with the part. perf. pass, 592
fulgurat and fulminat, difference | gloriari, construction of, 45%. of, 228.
fungi, construction of, 465, 466. future tense, its use, 509, 510, 516; in the sense of the im- perat., 586; future perfect, 511; future perfect with ero and fue- To, 168, note.
futurum esse ut, 594, 621. futurum fuisse ut, 595.
G, the letter, 4. gaudeo, construction of, 629. gender, of the predicate, 376. genitive, of the subject and ob- ject, 423, and note 1. The genitive instead of a noun in apposition, 425. The genit. with adverbs of place, 434; with neuters of adjectives, 435; with relative adjectives, 436; with the participle present ac- tive, 438; with neuters of pro- nouns, and adjective pronouns, 432. Genitive of quality, 426, 427. Pleonastic genitive in ex- pressions denoting time, 434, in fin. Genitive paraphrased by prepositions, 430; of value and price, 444, 445; of guilt and crime, 446; of punishment, 447.
genitive of the gerund, 425, 659,
foll.; joined with the genit. plural of substantives, 661. genitive, of the participle fut. passive with esse, 662. genitivus partitivus, 429, 431. genitive, its position, 791; in- stead of the ablat., 437, 470; instead of the accusat., 661; the genit. animi with adjec- tives, 437, 1.
genitus, with the ablat. alone, 451. gentium, used pleonastically, 434. genus, used in circumlocutions, 678; (hoc, id, illud omne) genus used adverbially, 428; genus clari, for genere, in Tacitus, 458. gerund, in a passive sense, 658. gerundivum, 656.
gladiatoribus, in answer to the question, "when?" 475, note.
gnarus, with the genit., 436 gradatio, a figure, 822. gratia and causa, 679; their pos tion, 792.
gratias agere, construction of, 628. gratias, 271.
gratis constat, equivalent to nihils constat, 445.
gratulari, construction of, 629. gratum mihi est, construction of,
Greek words in poç, Latinized, 52, 1.
Habere, with two accusat., 394, in numero, or in loco, 394, note 3; with the genit., 444; with the dative, 442; with the par- ticiple perf. pass., 634. habeo (non habeo) quod, with the subjunct., 562; habeo facere, 562, 653.
hactenus, meaning of, 291, fin haec, instead of hae, 132. haud and non, difference between,
277; haud scio an, 354, 721 hei, with the dative, 403. heu, with the accusat., 402. hexameter, 841.
hiatus, 8, 10; within a word, 11. hic, meaning of, 127; in expres-
sions of time, 479, note; as an adverb of place with the genit., 434.
hic-ille, 700, foll.; hic joined
with talis and tantus, 701, note; hic et hic, hic et ille, 701. hic, huc, hinc, adverbs of place, 291.
hinc, 344, note 291.
historical infinitive, 582; histor-
ical period, 817. hoc, pleonastic, 748; with the genit., 432.
hoc, with comparatives, 487. hoc dico, 700.
homo, homines, ellipsis of, 363, 381, 760.
honor and honos, 59. hortor, construed with ut, 615 hortus and horti (hortuli), 96.
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