Pompeius: change of politics, p. 17, §§ 18-20; put in command against, Mith. p. 20, §§ 23, 24; first triumvirate, p. 41, § 75; finally supports Cicero's recall, p. 45, § 82; Cicero's letter to him, Ep. I.; put in charge of the corn supply, Ep. XXIII. § 6; sole consul, p. 49, § 89; superintends Milo's trial, Mil. TITLE, ad iudices.
ponere, with in and abl., Mur. 45. 4.
Pontifices, p. 70, §§ 81, 82. populus plebsque, Mur. 1. 4. portenta, "fiction," Sull. 76. "monsters," Mil. 63. 35.
potissimum: of persons, Sull. 93. 15; Sest. 2. 28; 3. 5; 96. 19; place, Mur. 75. 15. possessor, Ep. XXIII. 4. 29; time, Sull. 45. 5; replaced by potiusquam, Sest. 1. 8 [3.5].
potius, omitted with ac non, Sest. 44. 27.
potiusquam and subj., II. 3. 4; IV. 3. 20; Sest. 45. 13, 15; with quod and subj., II. 15. 23; for potissimum, Sest. 3. 5.
prae se ferre, Ep. V. 3. 20, and see ferre.
praecipitans, Sull. 87. 15;
praeclarus, when ironical precedes its noun, Mur. 22. 4; Sest. 135. 40.
Praecones, p. 68, § 71. praefectura, III. 5. 35; Sest.
praerogativa, Mur. 38. 26. praesertim, with single words, Mur. 44. 20; in abl. abs., Ep. XI. 1. 3; p. cum, "especially when," Mur. 53. 15; especially as," Mur. 24. 14; 44. 26; 51. 30; ambiguous, Sest. 56. 10; p. qui, two meanings, Sull. 6. 28; " especially as (they)," III. 22. 36; “and that though (he)," Sull. 6. 28.
praestare, 'answer for," IV. 24. 24; Sest. 38. 34; 43. 20.
PRAETERITIO, rhet. term, I. 14. 14; III. 18. 8; Sest. 27. 12; Mil. 30. 3.
praeterquam, no influence on construction, III. 26. 3.
praetexta, II. 4. 24; praetextatus, Sest. 144. 6.
praetor, p. 65, § 59 f.; Exc. II.
§§ 3, 4; Mur. 41. 2. p. urbanus, I. 32. 18.
prandium, Mil. 56. 23.
PREGNANT meaning, Mur. 11. 8; III. 2. 11; 7. 21; Ep. XIII. 1. 10; Sest. 22. 25; 89. 19.
PREPOSITIONS: With verbs of asking, II. 13. 16; names of towns, Ep. IX. 1. 2. Repeated with nouns connected by coörd. conj., Mur. 79. 21. Omitted with common nouns in loc. abl., I. 19. 8; with Greek places not towns in -us, Mur. 34. 13; with decedere, IV. 21. 15. See also the several prepositions.
pridie with acc., I. 15. 24; with gen., Sull. 52. 34; Replaced by a. d., II. Ep. XIV. 3. 19.
PRIESTS, p. 70, § 80 f. primum; deinde omitted by slight anacoluthon, Sull 63. 12; Ep. XIV. 4. 35; Sest. 53. 3. primum . . deinde, where the second clause merely repeats the first, Mur. 55. 11-15.
princeps civitatis, Sest. 39. 9; 84. 8. p. senatus, p. 75, § 105.
privilegium, Ep. VII. Int. note; Sest. 30. 19; 65. 15.
priusquam, with inf., III. 7. 13, 14.
promulgare (legem, etc.), Sull. 62. 6.
PRONOUNS standing by noun which they might but do not modify (cuiusque), Sull. 78. 15; (cuiusquam) Sull. 82. 37; (huius) Sull. 2. 20. Same pron. referring to different words in same sen- tence, Sull. 77. 1, 2. Different pronouns referring to same word in same sentence, Mur. 29. 28, 29. Forming protasis to condi- tional sentence, I. 18. 37. Demonstratives: Of 1st person, II. 17. 3, and see hic; of 2d per- son, I. 3. 27, and see iste. At- tracted to pred. noun, II. 23. 31; Sull. 89. 48; Sest. 17. 23; 135. 6. Attracted as in is timor, hoc numero, Mur. 68. 4; Sull. 11. 11; 53. 12; 77. 4; 90. 15. Referring to more remote of two nouns, IV. 11. 5. Where we should expect reflexive, Sull. 81. 20. See also hic, idem, ille, iste, and their neuter forms.
Indefinite and Interrogative: aliquis with si, ne, num, Sull. 39. 37. quid, see quid. quis and qui not always distinguished (quis adj.), Mur. 46. 21; (qui, substan- tive) Sull. 34. 2. quidam, to hint that a word is not quite right, Mur. 63. 29, and see qui- dam. quisquam, always a sub- stantive in Cic., Sull. 58. 39; ex- cept with persons, Sest. 78. 17. Intensive: ipse, agreeing by preference with subject, I. 19. 3, and see ipse; = sua sponte, II. 1. 5. = per se, Sull. 57. 20. Personal: not used in posses- sive genitive, Sull. 5. 26; (excep-
I. 22. 6, and see nos. vos, not used of one person, Sull. 12. 12; [52. 31]; Sest. 87. 22; gen. pl. in -i objective, IV. 19. 17; Ep. II. 1. 7; Ep. VI. 16. 21; gen pl. in -um partitive, IV. 17. 15; (pos- sessive, III. 29. 34). Standing before a noun which it might but does not modify: nostri praesidii, Ep. XVI. 5. 65.
Possessive: for subj. gen. of personal, I. 7. 22; Sull. 5. 26; Ep. XXII. 1. 6. For obj. gen. of pers. or reflex., Sest. 49. 11. In app. with gen., I. 9. 12. Agree- ing with locative, I. 19. 6; Sest. 41. 17; noster, see noster. tuum est, Mur. 83. 27. vester, not used of one person, Sull. 12. 12; 32. 6; vestrum est, III. 27. 5.
Reflexive referring to logical subject, III. 27. 6; Sest. 142. 10. In subord. clause referring to sub- ject of main clause, III. 9. 14. Replaced by a demonstrative, Sull. 81. 20.
Relative agreeing with antece- dent implied in a possessive, I. 7. 22; Sull. 79. 26; Ep. XXIII. 2. 15; with predicate noun, Mur. 58. 1; Sest. 91. 21; 97. 19; by synesis, Sest. 38. 6. In neuter pl. with two masc. antecedents, II. 19. 15; with masc. and fem. ant., Sull. 73. 19; Ep. II. 3. 26. Antecedent repeated in rel. cl., III. 15. 43; 25. 33; Sest. 11. 32; place of repeated ant. taken by a synonym, Mur. 38. 17; III. 22. 31; Sull. 21. 4; Sest. 26. 19. Forced back to ant. past nouns of
same gender and number, IV. 17. 28; Sull. 24.13; Ep. IX. 1. 4; Ep. XXIII. 4. 36; Sest. 69. 7; Modi- fied by adj. to be connected in Eng. with the ant., Mur. 12. 26; Ep. IV. 8. 80; Ep. XVI. 6. 79; Rel. cum is, etc., I. 24. 25; Sull. 32. 35; 36.7; (where the clause precedes main verb) III. 5. 28; Sest. 133. 16; Mil. 13. 23; et is, etc. (I. 10. 1; 20. 16), III. 27. 14; Ep. I. 2. 11; = si quis, etc., II. 27. 26; III. 27. 15; Sest. 27. 10; Mil. 39. 13; = ut is, etc. (pur- pose), I. 24. 25; (result) III. 25. 23; = as (after idem), III. 27.
3; (after ita), Ep. XV. 2. 26; = Eng. adjective, I. 26. 14; Ep. III. 9. 138; expressing idea which we should put in princp. cl., II. 5. 7; 19. 17; Mur. 70. 9; Sull. 63. 12; Sest. 63. 21; 80. 20; Mil. 79. 23, 24; with indic. denoting conces- sion, II. 26. 7; in acc. where Eng. idiom would make it gen. and insert demons. in acc., Sest. 38.6; adversative, Mur. 11. 8; (with quidem) II. 2. 24; restrictive (subj.), IV. 16. 11; Sest. 106. 6; Mil. 87. 26; (indic.) Sest. 139. 3; Mil. 3. 27; used to attach a refu- tation to an opponent's argument, Sull. 21. 3; 90. 19; in compari- sons, Sull. 87. 14; Ep. XVI. 6. 86; juxtaposed, III. 27. 14, 15; Mil. 39. 13; giving nearer defi- nition of a pronoun, Sest. 27. 10; attracted (qua invidia = cuius rei invidia), Mil. 75. 50; 99. 12; qui, abl. sing. neuter, Mur. 22. 41, and see qui.
prope, excusing bold language,
III. 19. 25; IV. 2. 30; Sest. 50. 27; 58. 10; propius and proxime with acc., Mil. 59. 25, 26.
PROPOSITIO, rhet. term, Sest. Title oratio.
proprius, with gen., I. 12. 27; with poss. for gen., Ep. XXII. 1.
provincia, "sphere of duty," Mur. 41. 7; Sull. 52. 41. p. con- sularis, IV. 23. 2; p. quaestoria, Mur. 18. 30.
publicani, Ep. IV. 7. 74. publice, not "publicly," I.
pudet me uxori, Ep. XXII. 2. 10.
puer, contemptuous for adu- lescens, Sull. 51. 17; "child," Sull. 19. 18; "slave," Ep. XIII. 1. 2; Ep. XVI. 1. 2.
pugnare, "to carry a point," Ep. III. 2. 21.
pugnas edere, Ep. III. 1. 11, 12; pugnis et calcibus, Sull. 71. 31.
pulchellus, Ep. III. 10. 141. pulvinaria, III. 23. 1. punctum," vote," Mur. 72.30. PUNIC COUCHES, Mur. 75. 10. PUNISHMENTS, originally fines, I. 4. 9; of slaves, I. 13. 5; of ves- tal virgins, III. 9. 22.
PUNS, I. 27. 11; III. 25. 35. puteal, Sest. 18. 4.
Quae cum ita sint, I. (10. 1) 20. 16; II. 26. 1; IV. 18. 1.
Quaestores, p. 67, §§ 66, 67; entered upon office Dec. 5th, IV. 15. 33.
quaestoriae provinciae, Mur. 18. 30.
quaestio peculatus, Mur. 42. 10; nova, Sest. 85. 25; perpetuae, Exc. II. § 1; Mur. 41. 2.
quam, with gen. governing noun omitted, III. 24. 22; 27. 3; followed in 0.0. by acc. for nom., Ep. I. 3. 27; Ep. XXIII. 1. 5.
quamquam, concessive, III. 29. 34. Corrective, I. 22. 1; II. 26. 8; III. 18. 1; not correlative with following tamen, II. 26. 8; Ep. XV. 2. 17.
quantus, correl. to tantus with different nouns, Mur. 35. 7.
quasi, "almost," Sull. 1. 13; to modify unusual expression, Sull. 53. 10.
quatridui, with ellipse of gov- erning word, Ep. XIII. 1. 11.
-que, “but," after a negative, II. 28. 12; for the second + in (a+b)+c, Sull. 74. 33; attached to conj., Sest. 27. 9; to monosyl- labic preps., Sest. 41. 25; "and so," Mil. 84. 12; "I mean," Sest. 131. 5
quem ad modum, II. 13. 19. queo, with negative for nequeo in 1st pers., Mur. 55. 9; Sest. 134. 19.
QUESTIONS: Exclamatory with ut, I. 22. 1; 24.31; Sest. 17. 25, 26. Indirect, to be trans. by nouns, Sest. 62. 8; 66. 21; 71. 3; 127. 21; 131. 1; Mil. 84. 7; indirect double (necne), II. 13. 15, 17. Participial, IV. 19. 21, 23. Cor- rective, Sull. 51. 22. Dubitative or Rhetorical (1st pers. pres.), I. 24. 25; Sull. 30. 10; (2d pers. pres.), II. 18. 18; Sull. 44. 31; (past time, regular) Sull. 45. 1, 2, 4, and see Dubitative Subj. under
MOODS; (past, rare perfect) Mur. 21. 31, and see Dub. Subj. Quid est quod, with indic. and subj., Sull. 51. 16. qui and quis, con- fused, Mur. 46. 21, and see Indef. and Interrog. under PRONOUNS. qui, abl. sing., Mur. 22. 41; Ep. IV. 1.3; Mil. 46. 14; 54. 20; 81. 8. quo qua re, Sull. 31. 19; 87. 14; 93. 16; Sest. 2. 16; 45. 3; 134. 18.
quid, I. 8. 23; postponed, II. 15. 26; followed by second ques- tion, I. 16. 8; q. ergo, Sull. 84. 21; Sest. 40. 1; q. est quod (indic.), Sull. 51. 16; (subj.) Sull. 7. 1, 2; 50. 2, 3; q. quaeris, "in short," Ep. III. 4. 51; q. quod, I. 16. 8; Ep. XVI. 3. 38; q. vero, III. 22. 30; Sull. 80. 1; quid (quod), re- sponderet non habebat, distinc- tion, Mur. 26. 7, 8; q. est alicui cum aliquo, III. 11. 25; Ep. III. 10. 144.
quidam, contemptuous, Ep. IV. 4. 53; to indicate that a word is not satisfactory, Mur. 63. 29; IV. 2. 19; 11. 11; 13. 50; Sull. 35. 20; 53. 10; Sest. 37. 15; 82. 34; quodam modo, to soften a bold expression, I. 18. 29.
quidem, adversative, II. 2. 25; Sest. 15. 4; 24. 24; concessive, II. 10. 20; IV. 17. 18; Sest. 105. 20; 122. 21; restrictive, II. 7. 10; Sest. 49. 21.
quin etiam, in startling state- ments, II. 12. 12; with imp. mood, Mil. 79. 7.
quippe, in replies, Mur. 74.
Quirinus, III. 2. 12. Quirites, II. 1. 1.
quis, used adjectively, see In- terrog. and Indef. PRONOUNS. quo (pronoun) qua re, Sull. 31. 19, and see qui.
quo (adv.), its correlatives, I. 9. 18; ad quod, etc., Mur. 28. 18, and see ADVERBS. non quo, with subj., Mur. 2. 27, and see
quod (pronoun), in subst. clauses, I. 3. 25; II. 27. 21; Mur. 5. 1; Ep. III. 14. 193; Ep. XIII. 1. 4; 2. 18; Ep. XIV. 5. 41; quod for id quod, Ep. XVI. 9. 116; Ep. XXIII. 3. 19; q. erat = vetus, Ep. III. 9. 138; quod propter quod, Sest. 96. 19; nihil est quod, Sest. 104. 4; quid est quod, Sull. 51. 16; quodsi, "but if," I. 29. 11; II. 10. 19; Mur. §§ 1. 3. 4. 6; III. 28. 18; not "but if," II. 12. 2; quod utinam, Ep. XIV. 1. 4.
quod (conj.), distinction in moods, II. 2. 25; almost si, IV. 11. 9.
quodam modo, see quidam. quomodo," why," Ep. III. 1.3. quoniam (et and sed), in tran- sitions, III. 13. 4; 27. 1.
quot, not used substantively, Sest 8. 31.
ratio, pleonastic, Mur. 35.8. = r. pecuniaria, Sull. 56. 9.
-re, in fut. ind. passive, I. 1. 1; in present subj. pass., I. 22. 10; Sull. 6. 38; Mil. 60. 34; (-ris for re, rare, Mur. 7. 31).
Reate, III. 5. 35. recipior, "be admitted," Ep. IX. 1. 9.
reducere, of escort homeward from senate, Mur. 69. 11.
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