NEW LATIN GRAMMAR

BY

CHARLES E. BENNETT

Goldwin Smith Professor of Latin in Cornell University

Quicquid praecipies, esto brevis, ut cito dicta

Percipiant animi dociles teneantque fideles:

Omne supervacuum pleno de pectore manat.

—HORACE, Ars Poetica.

COPYRIGHT, 1895; 1908; 1918 BY CHARLES E. BENNETT


PREFACE.

The present work is a revision of that published in 1908. No radical alterations have been introduced, although a number of minor changes will be noted. I have added an Introduction on the origin and development of the Latin language, which it is hoped will prove interesting and instructive to the more ambitious pupil. At the end of the book will be found an Index to the Sources of the Illustrative Examples cited in the Syntax.

C.E.B.

ITHACA, NEW YORK,
May 4, 1918


PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.

The present book is a revision of my Latin Grammar originally published in 1895. Wherever greater accuracy or precision of statement seemed possible, I have endeavored to secure this. The rules for syllable division have been changed and made to conform to the prevailing practice of the Romans themselves. In the Perfect Subjunctive Active, the endings -īs, -īmus, -ītis are now marked long. The theory of vowel length before the suffixes -gnus, -gna, -gnum, and also before j, has been discarded. In the Syntax I have recognized a special category of Ablative of Association, and have abandoned the original doctrine as to the force of tenses in the Prohibitive.

Apart from the foregoing, only minor and unessential modifications have been introduced. In its main lines the work remains unchanged.

ITHACA, NEW YORK,
October 16, 1907.


FROM THE PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.

The object of this book is to present the essential facts of Latin grammar in a direct and simple manner, and within the smallest compass consistent with scholarly standards. While intended primarily for the secondary school, it has not neglected the needs of the college student, and aims to furnish such grammatical information as is ordinarily required in undergraduate courses.

The experience of foreign educators in recent years has tended to restrict the size of school-grammars of Latin, and has demanded an incorporation of the main principles of the language in compact manuals of 250 pages. Within the past decade, several grammars of this scope have appeared abroad which have amply met the most exacting demands.

The publication in this country of a grammar of similar plan and scope seems fully justified at the present time, as all recent editions of classic texts summarize in introductions the special idioms of grammar and style peculiar to individual authors. This makes it feasible to dispense with the enumeration of many minutiae of usage which would otherwise demand consideration in a student's grammar.

In the chapter on Prosody, I have designedly omitted all special treatment of the lyric metres of Horace and Catullus, as well as of the measures of the comic poets. Our standard editions of these authors all give such thorough consideration to versification that repetition in a separate place seems superfluous.

ITHACA, NEW YORK,
December 15, 1894.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

[Introduction—The Latin language]

PART I.

SOUNDS, ACCENT, QUANTITY, ETC.

[The Alphabet]

[Classification of Sounds]

[Sounds of the Letters]

[Syllables]

[Quantity]

[Accent]

[Vowel Changes]

[Consonant Changes]

[Peculiarities of Orthography]

PART II.

INFLECTIONS.

CHAPTER I.—Declension.

A. [NOUNS.]

[Gender of Nouns]

[Number]

[Cases]

[The Five Declensions]

[First Declension]

[Second Declension]

[Third Declension]

[Fourth Declension]

[Fifth Declension]

[Defective Nouns]

B. [ADJECTIVES.]

[Adjectives of the First and Second Declensions]

[Adjectives of the Third Declension]

[Comparison of Adjectives]

[Formation and Comparison of Adverbs]

[Numerals]

C. [PRONOUNS.]

[Personal Pronouns]

[Reflexive Pronouns]

[Possessive Pronouns]

[Demonstrative Pronouns]

[The Intensive Pronoun]

[The Relative Pronoun]

[Interrogative Pronouns]

[Indefinite Pronouns]

[Pronominal Adjectives]

CHAPTER II.—[Conjugation.]

[Verb Stems]

[The Four Conjugations]

[Conjugation of Sum]

[First Conjugation]

[Second Conjugation]

[Third Conjugation]

[Fourth Conjugation]

[Verbs in -iō of the Third Conjugation]

[Deponent Verbs]

[Semi-Deponents]

[Periphrastic Conjugation]

[Peculiarities of Conjugation]

[Formation of the Verb Stems]

[List of the Most Important Verbs with Principal Parts]

[Irregular Verbs]

[Defective Verbs]

[Impersonal Verbs]

PART III.

[PARTICLES.]

[Adverbs]

[Prepositions]

[Interjections]

PART IV.

WORD FORMATION.

[I. DERIVATIVES.]

[Nouns]

[Adjectives]

[Verbs]

[Adverbs]

[II. COMPOUNDS.]

[Examples of Compounds]

PART V.

SYNTAX.

CHAPTER I.—Sentences.

[Classification of Sentences]

[Form of Interrogative Sentences]

[Subject and Predicate]

[Simple and Compound Sentences]

CHAPTER II.—Syntax of Nouns.

[Subject]

[Predicate Nouns]

[Appositives]

[The Nominative]

[The Accusative]

[The Dative]

[The Genitive]

[The Ablative]

[The Locative]

CHAPTER III.—Syntax of Adjectives.

[Agreement of Adjectives]

[Adjectives used Substantively]

[Adjectives with the Force of Adverbs]

[Comparatives and Superlatives]

[Other Peculiarities]

CHAPTER IV.—Syntax of Pronouns.

[Personal Pronouns]

[Possessive Pronouns]

[Reflexive Pronouns]

[Reciprocal Pronouns]

[Demonstrative Pronouns]

[Relative Pronouns]

[Indefinite Pronouns]

[Pronominal Adjectives]

CHAPTER V.—Syntax of Verbs.

[Agreement of Verbs]

[Voices]

Tenses

[Of the Indicative]

[Of the Subjunctive]

[Of the Infinitive]

Moods

[In Independent Sentences]

— — [Volitive Subjunctive]

— — [Optative Subjunctive]

— — [Potential Subjunctive]

— — [Imperative]

— In Dependent Clauses

— — [Clauses of Purpose]

— — [Clauses of Characteristic]

— — [Clauses of Result]

— — [Causal Clauses]

— — Temporal Clauses

— — — [Introduced by Postquam, Ut, Ubi, etc.]

— — — [Cum-Clauses]

— — — [Introduced by Antequam and Priusquam]

— — — [Introduced by Dum, Dōnec, Quoad]

— — [Substantive Clauses]

— — — [Developed from the Volitive]

— — — [Developed from the Optative]

— — — [Of Result]

— — — [After nōn dubito, etc.]

— — — [Introduced by Quod]

— — — [Indirect Questions]

— — [Conditional Sentences]

— — [Use of , Nisi, Sīn]

— — [Conditional Clauses of Comparison]

— — [Concessive Clauses]

— — [Adversative Clauses with Quamvīs, Quamquam, etc.]

— — [Clauses of Wish and Proviso]

— — [Relative Clauses]

— — [Indirect Discourse]

— — — [Moods in Indirect Discourse]

— — — [Tenses in Indirect Discourse]

— — — [Conditional Sentences in Indirect Discourse]

— — [Implied Indirect Discourse]

— — [Subjunctive by Attraction]

[Noun and Adjective Forms of the Verb]

[Infinitive]

[Participles]

[Gerund]

[Supine]

CHAPTER VI.—Particles.

[Coördinate Conjunctions]

[Adverbs]

CHAPTER VII.—Word-Order and Sentence-Structure.

[Word-Order]

[Sentence-Structure]

CHAPTER VIII.—[Hints on Latin Style.]

[Nouns]

[Adjectives]

[Pronouns]

[Verbs]

[The Cases]

PART VI.

[PROSODY.]

[Quantity of Vowels and Syllables]

[Verse-Structure]

[The Dactylic Hexameter]

[The Dactylic Pentameter]

[Iambic Measures]

SUPPLEMENTS TO THE GRAMMAR.

[ I. Roman Calendar]

[ II. Roman Names]

[III. Figures of Syntax and Rhetoric]


[Index to the Illustrative Examples Cited in the Syntax]

[Index to the Principal Parts of Latin Verbs]

[General Index]

[Footnotes]


INTRODUCTION.

THE LATIN LANGUAGE.

1. The Indo-European Family of Languages.—Latin belongs to one group of a large family of languages, known as Indo-European.[[1]] This Indo-European family of languages embraces the following groups:

ASIATIC MEMBERS OF THE INDO-EUROPEAN FAMILY.

a. The Sanskrit, spoken in ancient India. Of this there were several stages, the oldest of which is the Vedic, or language of the Vedic Hymns. These Hymns are the oldest literary productions known to us among all the branches of the Indo-European family. A conservative estimate places them as far back as 1500 B.C. Some scholars have even set them more than a thousand years earlier than this, i.e. anterior to 2500 B.C.

The Sanskrit, in modified form, has always continued to be spoken in India, and is represented to-day by a large number of dialects descended from the ancient Sanskrit, and spoken by millions of people.

b. The Iranian, spoken in ancient Persia, and closely related to the Sanskrit. There were two main branches of the Iranian group, viz. the Old Persian and the Avestan. The Old Persian was the official language of the court, and appears in a number of so-called cuneiform[[2]] inscriptions, the earliest of which date from the time of Darius I (sixth century B.C.). The other branch of the Iranian, the Avestan,[[3]] is the language of the Avesta or sacred books of the Parsees, the followers of Zoroaster, founder of the religion of the fire-worshippers. Portions of these sacred books may have been composed as early as 1000 B.C.

Modern Persian is a living representative of the old Iranian speech. It has naturally been much modified by time, particularly through the introduction of many words from the Arabic.

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.

d. The Tokharian. This language, only recently discovered and identified as Indo-European, was spoken in the districts east of the Caspian Sea (modern Turkestan). While in some respects closely related to the three Asiatic branches of the Indo-European family already considered, in others it shows close relationship to the European members of the family. The literature of the Tokharian, so far as it has been brought to light, consists mainly of translations from the Sanskrit sacred writings, and dates from the seventh century of our era.

EUROPEAN MEMBERS OF THE INDO-EUROPEAN FAMILY.

e. The Greek. The Greeks had apparently long been settled in Greece and Asia Minor as far back as 1500 B.C. Probably they arrived in these districts much earlier. The earliest literary productions are the Iliad and the Odyssey of Homer, which very likely go back to the ninth century B.C. From the sixth century B.C. on, Greek literature is continuous. Modern Greek, when we consider its distance in time from antiquity, is remarkably similar to the classical Greek of the fourth and fifth centuries B.C.

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.

g. The Celtic. In the earliest historical times of which we have any record, the Celts occupied extensive portions of northern Italy, as well as certain areas in central Europe; but after the second century B.C., they are found only in Gaul and the British Isles. Among the chief languages belonging to the Celtic group are the Gallic, spoken in ancient Gaul; the Breton, still spoken in the modern French province of Brittany; the Irish, which is still extensively spoken in Ireland among the common people, the Welsh; and the Gaelic of the Scotch Highlanders.

h. The Teutonic. The Teutonic group is very extensive. Its earliest representative is the Gothic, preserved for us in the translation of the scriptures by the Gothic Bishop Ulfilas (about 375 A.D.). Other languages belonging to this group are the Old Norse, once spoken in Scandinavia, and from which are descended the modern Icelandic, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish; German; Dutch; Anglo-Saxon, from which is descended the modern English.

i. The Balto-Slavic. The languages of this group belong to eastern Europe. The Baltic division of the group embraces the Lithuanian and Lettic, spoken to-day by the people living on the eastern shores of the Baltic Sea. The earliest literary productions of these languages date from the sixteenth century. The Slavic division comprises a large number of languages, the most important of which are the Russian, the Bulgarian, the Serbian, the Bohemian, the Polish. All of these were late in developing a literature, the earliest to do so being the Old Bulgarian, in which we find a translation of the Bible dating from the ninth century.

j. The Albanian, spoken in Albania and parts of Greece, Italy, and Sicily. This is most nearly related to the Balto-Slavic group, and is characterized by the very large proportion of words borrowed from Latin, Turkish, Greek, and Slavic. Its literature does not begin till the seventeenth century.

2. Home of the Indo-European Family.—Despite the many outward differences of the various languages of the foregoing groups, a careful examination of their structure and vocabulary demonstrates their intimate relationship and proves overwhelmingly their descent from a common parent. We must believe, therefore, that at one time there existed a homogeneous clan or tribe of people speaking a language from which all the above enumerated languages are descended. The precise location of the home of this ancient tribe cannot be determined. For a long time it was assumed that it was in central Asia north of the Himalaya Mountains, but this view has long been rejected as untenable. It arose from the exaggerated importance attached for a long while to Sanskrit. The great antiquity of the earliest literary remains of the Sanskrit (the Vedic Hymns) suggested that the inhabitants of India were geographically close to the original seat of the Indo-European Family. Hence the home was sought in the elevated plateau to the north. To-day it is thought that central or southeastern Europe is much more likely to have been the cradle of the Indo-European parent-speech, though anything like a logical demonstration of so difficult a problem can hardly be expected.

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.

3. Stages in the Development of the Latin Language.—The earliest remains of the Latin language are found in certain very archaic inscriptions. The oldest of these belong to the sixth and seventh centuries B.C. Roman literature does not begin till several centuries later, viz. shortly after the middle of the third century B.C. We may recognize the following clearly marked periods of the language and literature:

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:

Livius Andronicus, about 275-204 B.C. (Translation of Homer's Odyssey; Tragedies).

Plautus, about 250-184 B.C. (Comedies).

Naevius, about 270-199 B.C. ("Punic War"; Comedies).

Ennius, 239-169 B.C. ("Annals"; Tragedies).

Terence, about 190-159 B.C. (Comedies).

Lucilius, 180-103 B.C. (Satires).

Pacuvius, 220-about 130 B.C. (Tragedies).

Accius, 170-about 85 B.C. (Tragedies).

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:

Phaedrus, flourished about 40 A.D. (Fables in Verse)

Velleius Paterculus, flourished about 30 A.D. (Historian).

Lucan, 39-65 A.D. (Poem on the Civil War).

Seneca, about 1-65 A.D. (Tragedies; Philosophical Works).

Pliny the Elder, 23-79 A.D. ("Natural History").

Pliny the Younger, 62-about 115 A.D. ("Letters").

Martial, about 45-about 104 A.D. (Epigrams).

Quintilian, about 35-about 100 A.D. (Treatise on Oratory and Education).

Tacitus, about 55-about 118 A.D. (Historian).

Juvenal, about 55-about 135 A.D. (Satirist).

Suetonius, about 73-about 118 A.D. ("Lives of the Twelve Caesars").

Minucius Felix, flourished about 160 A.D. (First Christian Apologist).

Apuleius, 125-about 200 A.D. ("Metamorphoses," or "Golden Ass").

e. The Archaizing Period. This period is characterized by a conscious imitation of the Archaic Period of the second and first centuries B.C.; it overlaps the preceding period, and is of importance from a linguistic rather than from a literary point of view. Of writers who manifest the archaizing tendency most conspicuously may be mentioned Fronto, from whose hand we have a collection of letters addressed to the Emperors Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius; also Aulus Gellius, author of the "Attic Nights." Both of these writers flourished in the second half of the second century A.D.

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:

Tertullian, about 160-about 240 A.D. (Christian Writer).

Cyprian, about 200-258 A.D. (Christian Writer).

Lactantius, flourished about 300 A.D. (Defense of Christianity).

Ausonius, about 310-about 395 A.D. (Poet).

Jerome, 340-420 A.D. (Translator of the Scriptures).

Ambrose, about 340-397 (Christian Father).

Augustine, 354-430 (Christian Father—"City of God").

Prudentius, flourished 400 A.D. (Christian Poet).

Claudian, flourished 400 A.D. (Poet).

Boëthius, about 480-524 A.D. ("Consolation of Philosophy ").

4. Subsequent History of the Latin Language.—After the sixth century A.D. Latin divides into two entirely different streams. One of these is the literary language maintained in courts, in the Church, and among scholars. This was no longer the language of people in general, and as time went on, became more and more artificial. The other stream is the colloquial idiom of the common people, which developed ultimately in the provinces into the modern so-called Romance idioms. These are the Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Provençal (spoken in Provence, i.e. southeastern France), the Rhaeto-Romance (spoken in the Canton of the Grisons in Switzerland), and the Roumanian, spoken in modern Roumania and adjacent districts. All these Romance languages bear the same relation to the Latin as the different groups of the Indo-European family of languages bear to the parent speech.


PART I.


SOUNDS, ACCENT, QUANTITY.


THE ALPHABET.

[1]. The Latin Alphabet is the same as the English, except that the Latin has no w.

1. K occurs only in Kalendae and a few other words; y and z were introduced from the Greek about 50 B.C., and occur only in foreign words—chiefly Greek.

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.

[2]. 1. The Vowels are a, e, i, o, u, y. The other letters are Consonants. The Diphthongs are ae, oe, ei, au, eu, ui.

2. Consonants are further subdivided into Mutes, Liquids, Nasals, and Spirants.

3. The Mutes are p, t, c, k, q; b, d, g; ph, th, ch. Of these,—

a) p, t, c, k, q are voiceless,[[4]] i.e. sounded without voice or vibration of the vocal cords.

b) b, d, g are voiced,[[5]] i.e. sounded with vibration of the vocal cords.

c) ph, th, ch are aspirates. These are confined almost exclusively to words derived from the Greek, and were equivalent to p + h, t + h, c + h, i.e. to the corresponding voiceless mutes with a following breath, as in Eng. loop-hole, hot-house, block-house.

4. The Mutes admit of classification also as

Labials, p, b, ph.
Dentals (or Linguals), t, d, th.
Gutturals (or Palatals), c, k, q, g, ch.

5. The Liquids are l, r. These sounds were voiced.

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 adulterīnum; as,—

anceps, double, pronounced angceps.

7. The Spirants (sometimes called Fricatives) are f, s, h. These were voiceless.

8. The Semivowels are j and v. These were voiced.

9. Double Consonants are x and z. Of these, x was equivalent to cs, while the equivalence of z is uncertain. See [§ 3], 3.

10. The following table will indicate the relations of the consonant sounds:—

VOICELESS. VOICED. ASPIRATES.
p, b, ph, (Labials).
Mutes, t, d, th, (Dentals).
c, k, q, g, ch, (Gutturals).
Liquids, l, r,
Nasals, m, n,
f, (Labial).
Spirants, s, (Dental).
h, (Guttural).
Semivowels, j, v.

a. The Double Consonants, x and z, being compound sounds, do not admit of classification in the above table.

SOUNDS OF THE LETTERS.

[3]. The following pronunciation (often called Roman) is substantially that employed by the Romans at the height of their civilization; i.e., roughly, from 50 B.C. to 50 A.D.

1. Vowels.

ā as in father; ă as in the first syllable ahá;
ē as in they; ĕ as in met;
ī as in machine; ĭ as in pin;
ō as in note; ŏ as in obey, melody;
ū as in rude; ŭ as in put;
y like French u, German ü.

2. Diphthongs.

ae like ai in aisle;
oe like oi in oil;
ei as in rein;
au like ow in how;
eu with its two elements, ĕ and ŭ, pronounced in rapid succession;
ui occurs almost exclusively in cui and huic. These words may be pronounced as though written kwee and wheek.

3. Consonants.

b, d, f, h, k, l, m, n, p, qu are pronounced as in English, except that bs, bt are pronounced ps, pt.

c is always pronounced as k.

t is always a plain t, never with the sound of sh as in Eng. oration.

g always as in get; when ngu precedes a vowel, gu has the sound of gw, as in anguis, languidus.

j has the sound of y as in yet.

r was probably slightly trilled with the tip of the tongue.

s always voiceless as in sin; in suādeō, suāvis, suēscō, and in compounds and derivatives of these words, su has the sound of sw.

v like w.

x always like ks; never like Eng. gz or z.

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.

In the division of words into syllables,—

1. A single consonant is joined to the following vowel; as, vo-lat, ge-rit, pe-rit, a-dest.

2. Doubled consonants, like tt, ss, etc., are always separated; as, vit-ta, mis-sus.

3. Other combinations of two or more consonants are regularly separated, and the first consonant of the combination is joined with the preceding vowel; as, ma-gis-trī, dig-nus, mōn-strum, sis-te-re.

4. An exception to Rule 3 occurs when the two consonants consist of a mute followed by l or r (pl, cl, tl; pr, cr, tr, etc.). In such cases both consonants are regularly joined to the following vowel; as, a-grī, vo-lu-cris, pa-tris, mā-tris. Yet if the l or r introduces the second part of a compound, the two consonants are separated; as, ab-rumpō, ad-lātus.

5. The double consonant x is joined to the preceding vowel; as, ax-is, tēx-ī.

QUANTITY.

[5]. A. Quantity of Vowels.

A vowel is long or short according to the length of time required for its pronunciation. No absolute rule can be given for determining the quantity of Latin vowels. This knowledge must be gained, in large measure, by experience; but the following principles are of aid:—

1. A vowel is long,[[6]]

a) before nf or ns; as, īnfāns, īnferior, cōnsūmō, cēnseō, īnsum.

b) when the result of contraction; as, nīlum for nihilum.

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, nōndum (nōn dum).

b) before another vowel, or h; as, meus, trahō. Some exceptions occur, chiefly in proper names derived from the Greek; as, Aenēās.

B. Quantity of Syllables.

Syllables are distinguished as long or short according to the length of time required for their pronunciation.

1. A syllable is long,[[7]]

a) if it contains a long vowel; as, māter, rēgnum, dīus.

b) if it contains a diphthong; as, causae, foedus.

c) if it contains a short vowel followed by x, z, or any two consonants (except a mute with l or r); as, axis, gaza, restō.

2. A syllable is short, if it contains a short vowel followed by a vowel or by a single consonant; as, mea, amat.

3. Sometimes a syllable varies in quantity, viz. when its vowel is short and is followed by a mute with l or r, i.e. by pl, cl, tl; pr, cr, tr, etc.; as, ăgrī, volŭcris.[[8]] Such syllables are called common. In prose they were regularly short, but in verse they might be treated as long at the option of the poet.

NOTE.—These distinctions of long and short are not arbitrary and artificial, but are purely natural. Thus, a syllable containing a short vowel followed by two consonants, as ng, is long, because such a syllable requires more time for its pronunciation; while a syllable containing a short vowel followed by one consonant is short, because it takes less time to pronounce it. In case of the common syllables, the mute and the liquid blend so easily as to produce a combination which takes no more time than a single consonant. Yet by separating the two elements (as ag-rī) the poets were able to use such syllables as long.

ACCENT.

[6]. 1. Words of two syllables are accented upon the first; as, tégit, mō´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, amā´vī, amántis, míserum.

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, miserō´que, hominísque. 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, pórtaque; but míseráque.

4. Sometimes the final -e of -ne and -ce disappears, but without affecting the accent; as, tantō´n, istī´c, illū´c.

5. In utră´que, each, and plēră´que, most, -que is not properly an enclitic; yet these words accent the penult, owing to the influence of their other cases,—utérque, utrúmque, plērúmque.

VOWEL CHANGES.[[9]]

[7].. 1. In Compounds,

a) ĕ before a single consonant becomes ĭ; as,—

colligō for con-legō.

b) ă before a single consonant becomes ĭ: as,—

adigō for ad-agō.

c) ă before two consonants becomes ē; as,—

expers for ex-pars.

d) ae becomes ī; as,—

conquīrō for con-quaerō.

e) au becomes ū, sometimes ō; as,—

conclūdō for con-claudō;
explōdō for ex-plaudō.

colligō for con-legō.
adigō for ad-agō.
expers for ex-pars.
conquīrō for con-quaerō.
conclūdō for con-claudō;
explōdō for ex-plaudō.

2. Contraction. Concurrent vowels were frequently contracted into one long vowel. The first of the two vowels regularly prevailed; as,—

trēs for tre-es; cōpia for co-opia;
mālō for ma(v)elō; cōgō for co-agō;
amāstī for amā(v)istī; cōmō for co-emō;
dēbeō for dē(h)abeō; jūnior for ju(v)enior.
nīl for nihil;

3. Parasitic Vowels. In the environment of liquids and nasals a parasitic vowel sometimes develops; as,—

vinculum for earlier vinclum.

So perīculum, saeculum.

4. Syncope. Sometimes a vowel drops out by syncope; as,—

ārdor for āridor (compare āridus);

valdē for validē (compare validus).

CONSONANT CHANGES[[10]]

[8]. 1. Rhotacism. An original s between vowels became r; as,—

arbōs, Gen. arboris (for arbosis);

genus, Gen. generis (for genesis);

dirimō (for dis-emō).

2. dt, tt, ts each give s or ss; as,—

pēnsum for pend-tum;

versum for vert-tum;

mīles for mīlet-s;

sessus for sedtus;

passus for pattus.

3. Final consonants were often omitted; as,—

cor for cord;

lac for lact.

4. Assimilation of Consonants. Consonants are often assimilated to a following sound. Thus: accurrō (adc-); aggerō (adg-); asserō (ads-); allātus (adl-); apportō (adp-); attulī (adt-); arrīdeō (adr-); afferō (adf-); occurrō (obc-); suppōnō (subp-); offerō (obf-); corruō (comr-); collātus (coml-); etc.

5. Partial Assimilation. Sometimes the assimilation is only partial. Thus:—

a) b before s or t becomes p; as,—

scrīpsī (scrīb-sī), scrīptum (scrīb-tum).

b) g before s or t becomes c; as,—

āctus (āg-tus).

c) m before a dental or guttural becomes n; as,—

eundem (eum-dem); prīnceps (prīm-ceps).

PECULIARITIES OF ORTHOGRAPHY.

[9]. Many words have variable orthography.

1. Sometimes the different forms belong to different periods of the language. Thus, quom, voltus, volnus, volt, etc., were the prevailing forms almost down to the Augustan age; after that, cum, vultus, vulnus, vult, etc. So optumus, maxumus, lubet, lubīdō, etc. down to about the same era; later, optimus, maximus, libet, libīdō, etc.

2. In some words the orthography varies at one and the same period of the language. Examples are exspectō, expectō; exsistō, existō; epistula, epistola; adulēscēns, adolēscēns; paulus, paullus; cottīdiē, cotīdiē; and, particularly, prepositional compounds, which often made a concession to the etymology in the spelling; as,—

ad-gerō or aggerō; ad-serō or asserō;
ad-liciō or alliciō; in-lātus or illātus;
ad-rogāns or arrogāns; sub-moveō or summoveō;
and many others.

3. Compounds of jaciō were usually written ēiciō, dēiciō, adiciō, obiciō, etc., but were probably pronounced as though written adjiciō, objiciō, etc.

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, antīquos, antīquom; 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; vīvont, metuont.

The older spelling, while generally followed in editions of Plautus and Terence, has not yet been adopted in our prose texts.


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.

[12]. A Noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or quality; as, Caesar, Caesar; Rōma, Rome; penna, feather; virtūs, courage.

1. Nouns are either Proper or Common. Proper nouns are permanent names of persons or places; as, Caesar, Rōma. Other nouns are Common: as, penna, virtūs.

2. Nouns are also distinguished as Concrete or Abstract.

a) Concrete nouns are those which designate individual objects; as, mōns, mountain; pēs, foot; diēs, day; mēns, mind.

Under concrete nouns are included, also, collective nouns; as, legiō, legion; comitātus, retinue.

b) Abstract nouns designate qualities; as, cōnstantia, steadfastness; paupertās, poverty.

GENDER OF NOUNS.

[13]. There are three Genders,—Masculine, Feminine, and Neuter. Gender in Latin is either natural or grammatical.

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—

1. Masculine, if they denote males; as,—

nauta, sailor; agricola, farmer.

2. Feminine, if they denote females; as,—

māter, mother; rēgīna, queen.

Grammatical Gender.

[15]. Grammatical gender is determined not by sex, but by the general signification of the word, or the ending of its Nominative Singular. By grammatical gender, nouns denoting things or qualities are often Masculine or Feminine, simply by virtue of their signification or the ending of the Nominative Singular. The following are the general principles for determining grammatical gender:—

A. Gender determined by Signification.

1. Names of Rivers, Winds, and Months are Masculine; as,—

Sēquana, Seine; Eurus, east wind; Aprīlis, April.

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,—

Delphī, n.; Leuctra, n.; Tībur, n.; Carthāgō, f.

3. Indeclinable nouns, also infinitives and phrases, are Neuter; as,—

nihil, nothing; nefās, wrong; amāre, to love.

NOTE.—Exceptions to the above principles sometimes occur; as, Allia (the river), f.

B. Gender determined by Ending of Nominative Singular.

The gender of other nouns is determined by the ending of the Nominative Singular.[[11]]

NOTE 1.—Common Gender. Certain nouns are sometimes Masculine, sometimes Feminine. Thus, sacerdōs may mean either priest or priestess, and is Masculine or Feminine accordingly. So also cīvis, citizen; parēns, parent; etc. The gender of such nouns is said to be common.

NOTE 2.—Names of animals usually have grammatical gender, according to the ending of the Nominative Singular, but the one form may designate either the male or female; as, ānser, m., goose or gander. So vulpēs, f., fox; aquīla, f., eagle.

NUMBER.

[16]. The Latin has two Numbers,—the Singular and Plural. The Singular denotes one object, the Plural, more than one.

CASES.

[17]. There are six Cases in Latin:—

Nominative, Case of Subject;
Genitive, Objective with of, or Possessive;
Dative, Objective with to or for;
Accusative, Case of Direct Object;
Vocative, Case of Address;
Ablative, Objective with by, from, in, with.

1. LOCATIVE. Vestiges of another case, the Locative (denoting place where), occur in names of towns and in a few other words.

2. OBLIQUE CASES. The Genitive, Dative, Accusative, and Ablative are called Oblique Cases.

3. STEM AND CASE-ENDINGS. The different cases are formed by appending certain case-endings to a fundamental part called the Stem.[[12]] Thus, portam (Accusative Singular) is formed by adding the case-ending -m to the stem porta-. But in most cases the final vowel of the stem has coalesced so closely with the actual case-ending that the latter has become more or less obscured. The apparent case-ending thus resulting is called a termination.

THE FIVE DECLENSIONS.

[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:—

DECLENSION. FINAL LETTER OF STEM. GEN. TERMINATION.
First ā -ae
Second ŏ
Third ĭ / Some consonant -īs
Fourth ŭ -ūs
Fifth ē -ēī / -ĕī

Cases alike in Form.

[19]. 1. The Vocative is regularly like the Nominative, except in the singular of nouns in -us of the Second Declension.

2. The Dative and Ablative Plural are always alike.

3. In Neuters the Accusative and Nominative are always alike, and in the Plural end in .

4. In the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Declensions, the Accusative Plural is regularly like the Nominative.


FIRST DECLENSION.

ā-Stems.

[20]. Pure Latin nouns of the First Declension regularly end, in the Nominative Singular, in , weakened from , and are of the Feminine Gender. They are declined as follows:—

Porta, gate; stem, portā-.

SINGULAR.
CASES. MEANINGS. TERMINATIONS.
Nom. portaa gate (as subject)
Gen. portaeof a gate-ae
Dat. portaeto or for a gate-ae
Acc. portama gate (as object) -am
Voc. portaO gate!
Abl. portāwith, by, from, in a gate

PLURAL.
Nom. portaegates (as subject) -ae
Gen. portārumof gates-ārum
Dat. portīsto or for gates-īs
Acc. portāsgates (as object) -ās
Voc. portaeO gates!-ae
Abl. portīswith, by, from, in gates-īs

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,—

a) An old form of the Genitive Singular in -ās is preserved in the combination pater familiās, father of a family; also in māter familiās, fīlius familiās, fīlia familiās. But the regular form of the Genitive in -ae is also admissible in these expressions; as, pater familiae.

b) In poetry a Genitive in -āī also occurs; as, aulāī.

c) The Locative Singular ends in -ae; as, Rōmae, at Rome.

d) A Genitive Plural in -um instead of -ārum sometimes occurs; as, Dardanidum instead of Dardanidārum. This termination -um is not a contraction of -ārum, but represents an entirely different case-ending.

e) Instead of the regular ending -īs, we usually find -ābus in the Dative and Ablative Plural of dea, goddess, and fīlia, daughter, especially when it is important to distinguish these nouns from the corresponding forms of deus, god, and fīlius, son. A few other words sometimes have the same peculiarity; as, lībertābus (from līberta, freedwoman), equābus (mares), to avoid confusion with lībertīs (from lībertus, freedman) and equīs (from equus, horse).

Greek Nouns.

[22]. These end in (Feminine); -ās and -ēs (Masculine). In the Plural they are declined like regular Latin nouns of the First Declension. In the Singular they are declined as follows:—

Archiās, Archias. Epitomē, epitome. Comētēs, comet.
Nom. Archiās epitomē comētēs
Gen. Archiae epitomēs comētae
Dat. Archiae epitomae comētae
Acc. Archiam (or -ān) epitomēn comētēn
Voc. Archiā epitomē comētē (or )
Abl. Archiā epitomē comētē (or )

1. But most Greek nouns in become regular Latin nouns in -a, and are declined like porta; as, grammatica, grammar; mūsica, music; rhētorica, rhetoric.

2. Some other peculiarities occur, especially in poetry.


SECOND DECLENSION.

ŏ-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:—

Hortus, garden; stem, hortŏ-. Bellum, war; stem, bellŏ-.
SINGULAR.
TERMINATION. TERMINATION.
Nom. hortus-us bellum-um
Gen. hortī bellī
Dat. hortō bellō
Acc. hortum-um bellum-um
Voc. horte-e bellum-um
Abl. hortō bellō

PLURAL.
Nom. hortī bella-a
Gen. hortōrum-ōrum bellōrum-ōrum
Dat. hortīs-īs bellīs-īs
Acc. hortōs-ōs bella-a
Voc. hortī bella-a
Abl. hortīs-īs bellīs-īs

Nouns in -er and -ir are declined as follows:—

Puer, boy; stem, puerŏ-Ager, field; stem, agrŏ-Vir, man; stem, virŏ-
SINGULAR. TERMINATION.
Nom. puer ager vir Wanting
Gen. puerī agrī virī
Dat. puerō agrō virō
Acc. puerum agrum virum-um
Voc. puer ager vir Wanting
Abl. puerō agrō virō

PLURAL.
Nom. puerī agrī virī
Gen. puerōrum agrōrum virōrum-ōrum
Dat. puerīs agrīs virīs-īs
Acc. puerōs agrōs virōs-ōs
Voc. puerī agrī virī
Abl. puerīs agrīs virīs-īs

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.

In the Nominative and Vocative Singular of ager, the stem is further modified by the development of e before r.

2. The following nouns in -er are declined like puer: adulter, adulterer; gener, son-in-law; Līber, Bacchus; socer, father-in-law; vesper, evening; and compounds in -fer and -ger, as signifer, armiger.

Nouns in -vus, -vum, -quus.

[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:—

Earlier Inflection (including Caesar and Cicero).
Servos, m., slave. Aevom, n., age. Equos, m., horse.
SINGULAR.
Nom. servos aevom equos
Gen. servī aevī equī
Dat. servō aevō equō
Acc. servom aevom equom
Voc. serve aevom eque
Abl. servō aevō equō

Later inflection (after Cicero).
SINGULAR.
Nom. servus aevum equus
Gen. servī aevī equī
Dat. servō aevō equō
Act. servum aevum equum
Voc. serve aevum eque
Abl. servō aevō equō

1. The Plural of these nouns is regular, and always uniform.

Peculiarities of Inflection in the Second Declension.

[25]. 1. Proper names in -ius regularly form the Genitive Singular in (instead of -iī), and the Vocative Singular in (for -ie); as Vergílī, of Virgil, or O Virgil (instead of Vergiliī, Vergilie). In such words the accent stands upon the penult, even though that be short. Nouns in -ajus, -ejus form the Gen. in -aī, -eī, as Pompejus, Pompeī.

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 -iī); as,—

Nom. ingenium fīlius
Gen. ingénī fīlī

These Genitives accent the penult, even when it is short.

3. Fīlius forms the Vocative Singular in (for -ie); viz. fīlī, O son!

4. Deus, god, lacks the Vocative Singular. The Plural is inflected as follows:—

Nom.(deī)
Gen.deōrum(deum)
Dat.dīs(deīs)
Acc.deōs
Voc.(deī)
Abl.dīs(deīs)

5. The Locative Singular ends in ; as, Corinthī, at Corinth.

6. The Genitive Plural has -um, instead of -ōrum,—

a) in words denoting money and measure; as, talentum, of talents; modium, of pecks; sēstertium, of sesterces.

b) in duumvir, triumvir, decemvir; as, duumvirum.

c) sometimes in other words; as, līberum, of the children; socium, of the allies.

Exceptions to Gender in the Second Declension.

[26]. 1. The following nouns in -us are Feminine by exception:—

a) Names of towns, islands, trees—according to the general rule laid down in [§ 15], 2; also some names of countries; as Aegyptus, Egypt.

b) Five special words,—

alvus, belly;

carbasus, flax;

colus, distaff;

humus, ground;

vannus, winnowing-fan.

c) A few Greek Feminines; as,—

atomus, atom;

diphthongus, diphthong.

2. The following nouns in -us are Neuter:—

pelagus, sea;

vīrus, poison;

vulgus, crowd.

Greek Nouns of the Second Declension.

[27]. These end in -os, -ōs, Masculine or Feminine; and -on, Neuter. They are mainly proper names, and are declined as follows:—

Barbitos, m. and f., lyre. Androgeōs, m., Androgeos. Īlion, n., Troy.
Nom. barbitos Androgeōs Īlion
Gen. barbitī Androgeō, Īliī
Dat. barbitō Androgeō Īliō
Acc. barbiton Androgeō, -ōn Īlion
Voc. barbite Androgeōs Īlion
Abl. barbitō Androgeō Īliō

1. Nouns in -os sometimes form the Accusative Singular in -um instead of -on; as, Dēlum, Delos.

2. The Plural of Greek nouns, when it occurs, is usually regular.

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, , , -y, -c, -l, -n, -r, -s, -t, -x. The Third Declension includes several distinct classes of Stems,—

I. Pure Consonant-Stems.
II. ĭ-Stems.
III. Consonant-Stems which have partially adapted themselves to the inflection of ĭ-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.

2. Consonant-Stems fall into several natural subdivisions, according as the stem ends in a Mute, Liquid, Nasal, or Spirant.

A. Mute-Stems.

[30]. Mute-Stems may end,—

1. In a Labial (p); as, prīncep-s.

2. In a Guttural (g or c); as, rēmex (rēmeg-s); dux (duc-s).

3. In a Dental (d or t); as, lapis (lapid-s); mīles (mīlet-s).

1. STEMS IN A LABIAL MUTE (p).

[31]. Prīnceps, m., chief.

SINGULAR. TERMINATION.
Nom. prīnceps-s
Gen. prīncipis-is
Dat. prīncipī
Acc. prīncipem-em
Voc. prīnceps-s
Abl. prīncipe-e

PLURAL.
Nom. prīncipēs-ēs
Gen. prīncipum-um
Dat. prīncipibus-ibus
Acc. prīncipēs-ēs
Voc. prīncipēs-ēs
Abl. prīncipibus-ibus

2. STEMS IN A GUTTURAL MUTE (g, c).

[32]. In these the termination -s of the Nominative Singular unites with the guttural, thus producing -x.

Rēmex, m., rower. Dux, c., leader.
SINGULAR. PLURAL. SINGULAR. PLURAL.
Nom. rēmex rēmigēs dux ducēs
Gen. rēmigis rēmigum ducis ducum
Dat. rēmigī rēmigibus ducī ducibus
Acc. rēmigem rēmigēs ducem ducēs
Voc. rēmex rēmigēs dux ducēs
Abl. rēmige rēmigibus duce ducibus

3. STEMS IN A DENTAL MUTE (d, t).

[33]. In these the final d or t of the stem disappears in the Nominative Singular before the ending -s.

Lapis, m., stone. Mīles, m., soldier.
SINGULAR. PLURAL. SINGULAR. PLURAL.
Nom. lapis lapidēs mīles mīlitēs
Gen. lapidis lapidum mīlitis mīlitum
Dat. lapidī lapidibus mīlitī mīlitibus
Acc. lapidem lapidēs mīlitem mīlitēs
Voc. lapis lapidēs mīles mīlitēs
Abl. lapide lapidibus mīlite mīlitibus

B. Liquid Stems.

[34]. These end in -l or -r.

Vigil, m., watchman. Victor, m., conqueror. Aequor, n., sea.

SINGULAR.
Nom. vigil victor aequor
Gen. vigilis victōris aequoris
Dat. vigilī victōrī aequorī
Acc. vigilem victōrem aequor
Voc. vigil victor aequor
Abl. vigile victōre aequore

PLURAL.
Nom. vigilēs victōrēs aequora
Gen. vigilum victōrum aequorum
Dat. vigilibus victōribus aequoribus
Acc. vigilēs victōrēs aequora
Voc. vigilēs victōrēs aequora
Abl. vigilibus victōribus aequoribus

1. Masculine and Feminine stems ending in a liquid form the Nominative and Vocative Singular without termination.

2. The termination is also lacking in the Nominative, Accusative and Vocative Singular of all neuters of the Third Declension.

C. Nasal Stems.

[35]. These end in -n,[[13]] which often disappears in the Nom. Sing.

Leō, m., lion. Nōmen, n., name
SINGULAR. PLURAL. SINGULAR. PLURAL.
Nom. leō leōnēs nōmen nōmina
Gen. leōnis leōnum nōminis nōminum
Dat. leōnī leōnibus nōminī nōminibus
Acc. leōnem leōnēs nōmen nōmina
Voc. leō leōnēs nōmen nōmina
Abl. leōne leōnibus nōmine nōminibus

D. s-Stems.

[36].

Mōs, m. custom. Genus, n., race. Honor, m., honor.

SINGULAR.
Nom. mōs genus honor
Gen. mōris generis honōris
Dat. mōrī generī honōrī
Acc. mōrem genus honōrem
Voc. mōs genus honor
Abl. mōre genere honōre

PLURAL.
Nom. mōrēs genera honōrēs
Gen. mōrum generum honōrum
Dat. mōribus generibus honōribus
Acc. mōrēs genera honōrēs
Voc. mōrēs genera honōrēs
Abl. mōribus generibus honōribus

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 honōs, colōs, etc., also occur, particularly in early Latin and in poetry.

II. ĭ-Stems.

A. Masculine and Feminine ĭ-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 , and the Accusative Plural in -īs; but these endings have been largely displaced by -em, -e, and -ēs, the endings of Consonant-Stems.

[38].

Tussis, f., cough; stem, tussi-. Īgnis, m., fire; stem, īgni-. Hostis, c., enemy; stem, hosti-.

SINGULAR.

TERMINATION.
Nom. tussis īgnis hostis-is
Gen. tussis īgnis hostis-is
Dat. tussī īgnī hostī
Acc. tussim īgnem hostem-im, -em
Voc. tussis īgnis hostis-is
Abl. tussī īgnī or e hoste, -e

PLURAL.
Nom. tussēs īgnēs hostēs-ēs
Gen. tussium īgnium hostium-ium
Dat. tussibus īgnibus hostibus-ibus
Acc. tussīs or -ēs īgnīs or -ēs hostīs or -ēs-īs, -ēs
Voc. tussēs īgnēs hostēs-ēs
Abl. tussibus īgnibus hostibus-ibus

1. To the same class belong—

apis, bee. crātis, hurdle. †*secūris, axe.
auris, ear. *febris, fever. sēmentis, sowing.
avis, bird. orbis, circle. †*sitis, thirst.
axis, axle. ovis, sheep. torris, brand.
*būris, plough-beam. pelvis, basin. †*turris, tower.
clāvis, key. puppis, stern. trudis, pole.
collis, hill. restis, rope. vectis, lever.
and many others.

Words marked with a star regularly have Acc. -im; those marked with a † regularly have Abl. . Of the others, many at times show -im and . Town and river names in -is regularly have -im, .

2. Not all nouns in -is are ĭ-Stems. Some are genuine consonant-stems, and have the regular consonant terminations throughout, notably, canis, dog; juvenis, youth.[[14]]

3. Some genuine ĭ-Stems have become disguised in the Nominative Singular; as, pars, part, for par(ti)s; anas, duck, for ana(ti)s; so also mors, death; dōs, dowry; nox, night; sors, lot; mēns, mind; ars, art; gēns, tribe; and some others.

B. Neuter ĭ-Stems.

[39]. These end in the Nominative Singular in -e, -al, and -ar. They always have 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 ĭ-Stems.

Sedile, seat;
stem, sedīli-.
Animal, animal;
stem, animāli-.
Calcar, spur;
stem, calcāri-.

SINGULAR.

TERMINATION.
Nom. sedīle animal calcar -e or wanting
Gen. sedīlis animālis calcāris-is
Dat. sedīlī animālī calcārī
Acc. sedīle animal calcar -e or wanting
Voc. sedīle animal calcar -e or wanting
Abl. sedīlī animālī calcārī

PLURAL.
Nom. sedīlia animālia calcāria-ia
Gen. sedīlium animālium calcārium-ium
Dat. sedīlibus animālibus calcāribus-ibus
Acc. sedīlia animālia calcāria-ia
Voc. sedīlia animālia calcāria-ia
Abl. sedīlibus animālibus calcāribus-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, Sōracte, Mt. Soracte; so also sometimes mare, sea.

III. Consonant-Stems that have partially adapted themselves to the Inflection of ĭ-Stems.

[40]. Many Consonant-Stems have so far adapted themselves to the inflection of ĭ-stems as to take -ium in the Genitive Plural, and -īs in the Accusative Plural. Their true character as Consonant-Stems, however, is shown by the fact that they never take -im in the Accusative Singular, or in the Ablative Singular. The following words are examples of this class:—

Caedēs, f., slaughter;
stem, caed-.
Arx, f., citadel;
stem, arc-.
Linter, f., skiff;
stem, lintr-.

SINGULAR.
Nom. caedēs arx linter
Gen. caedis arcis lintris
Dat. caedī arcī lintrī
Acc. caedem arcem lintrem
Voc. caedēs arx linter
Abl. caede arce lintre

PLURAL.
Nom. caedēs arcēs lintrēs
Gen. caedium arcium lintrium
Dat. caedibus arcibus lintribus
Acc. caedēs, -īs arcēs, -īs lintrēs, -īs
Voc. caedēs arcēs lintrēs
Abl. caedibus arcibus lintribus

1. The following classes of nouns belong here:—

a) Nouns in -ēs, with Genitive in -is; as, nūbēs, aedēs, clādēs, etc.

b) Many monosyllables in -s or -x preceded by one or more consonants; as, urbs, mōns, stirps, lanx.

c) Most nouns in -ns and -rs as, cliēns, cohors.

d) Ūter, venter; fūr, līs, mās, mūs, nix; and the Plurals faucēs, penātēs, Optimātēs, Samnitēs, Quirītēs.

e) Sometimes nouns in -tās with Genitive -tātis; as, cīvitās, aetās. Cīvitās usually has cīvitātium.

IV. Stems in , , and Diphthongs.

[41].

Vis, f., force;
stem, vī-.
Sūs, c., swine;
stem, sū-.
Bōs, c., ox, cow;
stem, bou-.
Juppiter, m., Jupiter;
stem, Jou-.

SINGULAR.
Nom.sss Juppiter
Gen. —— suis bovis Jovis
Dat. —— suī bovī Jovī
Acc. vim suem bovem Jovem
Voc.sss Juppiter
Abl. vī sue bove Jove

PLURAL.
Nom. vīrēs suēs bovēs
Gen. vīrium suum bovum, boum
Dat. vīribus suibus, subusbus, būbus
Acc. vīrēs suēs bovēs
Voc. vīrēs suēs bovēs
Abl. vīribus suibus, subusbus, būbus

1. Notice that the oblique cases of sūs have ŭ in the root syllable.

2. Grūs is declined like sūs, except that the Dative and Ablative Plural are always gruibus.

3. Juppiter is for Jou-pater, and therefore contains the same stem as in Jov-is, Jov-ī, etc.

Nāvis was originally a diphthong stem ending in au-, but it has passed over to the ĭ-stems ([§ 37]). Its ablative often ends in .

V. Irregular Nouns.

[42].

Senex, m.,
old man.
Carō, f., flesh. Os, n., bone.

SINGULAR.
Nom. senex carō os
Gen. senis carnis ossis
Dat. senī carnī ossī
Acc. senem carnem os
Voc. senex carō os
Abl. sene carne osse

PLURAL.
Nom. senēs carnēs ossa
Gen. senum carnium ossium
Dat. senibus carnibus ossibus
Acc. senēs carnēs ossa
Voc. senēs carnēs ossa
Abl. senibus carnibus ossibus

1. Iter, itineris, n., way, is inflected regularly throughout from the stem itiner-.

2. Supellex, supellectilis, f., furniture, is confined to the Singular. The oblique cases are formed from the stem supellectil-. The ablative has both and -e.

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.

General Principles of Gender in the Third Declension.

[43]. 1. Nouns in , -or, -ōs, -er, -ĕs are Masculine.

2. Nouns in -ās, -ēs, -is, -ys, -x, -s (preceded by a consonant); -dō, -gō (Genitive -inis); -iō (abstract and collective), -ūs (Genitive -ātis or -ūdis) are Feminine.

3. Nouns ending in -a, -e, -i, -y, -o, -l, -n, -t, -ar, -ur, -ŭs are Neuter.

Chief Exceptions to Gender in the Third Declension.

[44]. Exceptions to the Rule for Masculines.

1. Nouns in .

a. Feminine: carō, flesh.

2. Nouns in -or.

a. Feminine: arbor, tree.

b. Neuter: aequor, sea; cor, heart; marmor, marble.

3. Nouns in -ōs.

a. Feminine: dōs, dowry.

b. Neuter: ōs (ōris), mouth.

4. Nouns in -er.

a. Feminine: linter, skiff.

b. Neuter: cadāver, corpse; iter, way; tūber, tumor; ūber, udder. Also botanical names in -er; as, acer, maple.

5. Nouns in -ĕs.

a. Feminine: seges, crop.

[45]. Exceptions to the Rule for Feminines.

1. Nouns in -ās.

a. Masculine: vās, bondsman.

b. Neuter: vās, vessel.

2. Nouns in -ēs.

a. Masculine: ariēs, ram; pariēs, wall; pēs, foot.

3. Nouns in -is.

a. Masculine: all nouns in -nis and -guis; as, amnis, river; īgnis, fire; pānis, bread; sanguis, blood; unguis, nail.

Also—

axis, axle.
collis, hill.
fascis, bundle.
lapis, stone.
mēnsis, month.
piscis, fish.
postis, post.
pulvis, dust.
orbis, circle.
sentis, brier.

4. Nouns in -x.

a. Masculine: apex, peak; cōdex, tree-trunk; grex, flock; imbrex, tile; pollex, thumb; vertex, summit; calix, cup.

5. Nouns in -s preceded by a consonant.

a. Masculine: dēns, tooth; fōns, fountain; mōns, mountain; pōns, bridge.

6. Nouns in -dō.

a. Masculine: cardō, hinge; ōrdō, order.

[46]. Exceptions to the Rule for Neuters.

1. Nouns in -l.

a. Masculine: sōl, sun; sāl, salt.

2. Nouns in -n.

a. Masculine: pecten, comb.

3. Nouns in -ur.

a. Masculine: vultur, vulture.

4. Nouns in -ŭs.

a. Masculine: lepus, hare.

Greek Nouns of the Third Declension.

[47]. The following are the chief peculiarities of these:—

1. The ending in the Accusative Singular; as, aetheră, aether; Salamīnă, Salamis.

2. The ending -ĕs in the Nominative Plural; as, Phrygĕs, Phrygians.

3. The ending -ăs in the Accusative Plural; as, Phrygăs, Phrygians.

4. Proper names in -ās (Genitive -antis) have in the Vocative Singular; as, Atlās (Atlantis), Vocative Atlā, Atlas.

5. Neuters in -ma (Genitive -matis) have -īs instead of -ibus in the Dative and Ablative Plural; as, poēmatīs, 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, Orpheī, Orpheō, etc.

7. Proper names in -ēs, like Periclēs, form the Genitive Singular sometimes in -is, sometimes in , as, Periclis or Periclī.

8. Feminine proper names in have -ūs in the Genitive, but in the other oblique cases; as,—

Nom. Didō Acc. Didō
Gen. Didūs Voc. Didō
Dat. Didō Abl. Didō

9. The regular Latin endings often occur in Greek nouns.


FOURTH DECLENSION.

ŭ-Stems.

[48]. Nouns of the Fourth Declension end in -us Masculine, and Neuter. They are declined as follows:—

Frūctus, m., fruit. Cornū, n., horn.
SINGULAR. PLURAL. SINGULAR. PLURAL.
Nom. frūctus frūctūs cornū cornua
Gen. frūctūs frūctuum cornūs cornuum
Dat. frūct frūctibus cornū cornibus
Acc. frūctum frūctūs cornū cornua
Voc. frūctus frūctūs cornū cornua
Abl. frūctū frūctibus cornū cornibus

Peculiarities of Nouns of the Fourth Declension.

[49]. 1. Nouns in -us, particularly in early Latin, often form the Genitive Singular in , following the analogy of nouns in -us of the Second Declension; as, senātī, ōrnātī. This is usually the case in Plautus and Terence.

2. Nouns in -us sometimes have in the Dative Singular, instead of -uī; as, frūctū (for frūctuī).

3. The ending -ubus, instead of -ibus, occurs in the Dative and Ablative Plural of artūs (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.

4. Domus, house, is declined according to the Fourth Declension, but has also the following forms of the Second:—

domī (locative), at home;

domō, from home;

domum, homewards, to one's home;

domōs, homewards, to their (etc.) homes

5. The only Neuters of this declension in common use are: cornū, horn; genū, knee; and verū, spit.

Exceptions to Gender in the Fourth Declension.

[50]. The following nouns in -us are Feminine: acus, needle; domus, house; manus, hand; porticus, colonnade; tribus, tribe; Īdūs (Plural), Ides; also names of trees ([§ 15], 2).


FIFTH DECLENSION.

ē-Stems.

[51]. Nouns of the Fifth Declension end in -ēs, and are declined as follows:—

Diēs, m., day. Rēs, f., thing.
SINGULAR. PLURAL. SINGULAR. PLURAL.
Nom. diēs diēs rēs rēs
Gen. diēī diērum rĕī rērum
Dat. diēī diēbus rĕī rēbus
Acc. diem diēs rem rēs
Voc. diēs diēs rēs rēs
Abl. diē diēbus rē rēbus

Peculiarities of Nouns of the Fifth Declension.

[52]. 1. The ending of the Genitive and Dative Singular is -ĕī, instead of -ēī, when a consonant precedes; as, spĕī, rĕī, fidĕī.

2. A Genitive ending (for -ĕī) is found in plēbī (from plēbēs = plēbs) in the expressions tribūnus plēbī, tribune of the people, and plēbī scītum, decree of the people; sometimes also in other words.

3. A Genitive and Dative form in sometimes occurs; as, aciē.

4. With the exception of diēs and rēs, most nouns of the Fifth Declension are not declined in the Plural. But aciēs, seriēs, speciēs, spēs, and a few others are used in the Nominative and Accusative Plural.

Gender in the Fifth Declension.

[53]. Nouns of the Fifth Declension are regularly Feminine, except diēs, day, and merīdiēs, mid-day. But diēs is sometimes Feminine in the Singular, particularly when it means an appointed day.


DEFECTIVE NOUNS.

[54]. Here belong—

1. Nouns used in the Singular only.

2. Nouns used in the Plural only.

3. Nouns used only in certain cases.

4. Indeclinable Nouns.

Nouns used in the Singular only.

[55]. Many nouns, from the nature of their signification, are regularly used in the Singular only. Thus:—

1. Proper names; as, Cicerō, Cicero; Italia, Italy.

2. Nouns denoting material; as, aes, copper; lac, milk.

3. Abstract nouns; as, ignōrantia, ignorance; bonitās, goodness.

4. But the above classes of words are sometimes used in the Plural. Thus:—

a) Proper names,—to denote different members of a family, or specimens of a type; as, Cicerōnēs, the Ciceros; Catōnēs, men like Cato.

b) Names of materials,—to denote objects made of the material, or different kinds of the substance; as, aera, bronzes (i.e. bronze figures); ligna, woods.

c) Abstract nouns,—to denote instances of the quality; as, ignōrantiae, cases of ignorance.

Nouns used in the Plural only.

[56]. Here belong—

1. Many geographical names; as, Thēbae, Thebes; Leuctra, Leuctra; Pompejī, Pompeii.

2. Many names of festivals; as, Megalēsia, the Megalesian festival.

3. Many special words, of which the following are the most important:—

angustiae, narrow pass.
arma, weapons.
dēliciae, delight.
dīvitiae, riches.
Īdūs, Ides.
indūtiae, truce.
īnsidiae, ambush.
majōrēs, ancestors.
mānēs, spirits of the dead.
moenia, city walls.
minae, threats.
nūptiae, marriage.
posterī, descendants.
reliquiae, remainder.
tenebrae, darkness.
verbera, blows.

Also in classical prose regularly—

cervīcēs, neck.
fidēs, lyre.
nārēs, nose.
vīscerā, viscera.

Nouns used only in Certain Cases.

[57]. 1. Used in only One Case. Many nouns of the Fourth Declension are found only in the Ablative Singular as, jussū, by the order; injussū, without the order; nātū, by birth.

2. Used in Two Cases.

a. Fors (chance), Nom. Sing.; forte, Abl. Sing.

b. Spontis (free-will), Gen. Sing.; sponte, Abl. Sing.

3. Used in Three Cases. Nēmō, no one (Nom.), has also the Dat. nēminī and the Acc. nēminem. The Gen. and Abl. are supplied by the corresponding cases of nūllus; viz. nūllīus and nūllō.

4. Impetus has the Nom., Acc., and Abl. Sing., and the Nom. and Acc. Plu.; viz. impetus, impetum, impetū, impetūs.

5.

a. Precī, precem, prece, lacks the Nom. and Gen. Sing.

b. Vicis, vicem, vice, lacks the Nom. and Dat. Sing.

6. Opis, dapis, and frūgis,—all lack the Nom. Sing.

7. Many monosyllables of the Third Declension lack the Gen. Plu.: as, cor, lūx, sōl, aes, ōs (ōris), rūs, sāl, tūs.

Indeclinable Nouns.

[58]. Here belong—

fās, n., right.
īnstar, n., likeness.
māne, n., morning.
nefās, n., impiety.
nihil, n., nothing.
secus, n., sex.

1. With the exception of māne (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,—

vās, vāsis (vessel); Plu., vāsa, vāsorōum, vāsīs, etc.
jūgerum, jūgerī (acre); Plu., jūgera, jūgerum, jūgeribus, etc.

2. Several nouns, while belonging in the main to one declension, have certain special forms belonging to another. Thus:—

a) Many nouns of the First Declension ending in -ia take also a Nom. and Acc. of the Fifth; as, māteriēs, māteriem, material, as well as māteria, māteriam.

b) Famēs, hunger, regularly of the Third Declension, has the Abl. famē of the Fifth.

c) Requiēs, requiētis, rest, regularly of the Third Declension, takes an Acc. of the Fifth, requiem, in addition to requiētem.

d) Besides plēbs, plēbis, common people, of the Third Declension, we find plēbēs, plēbĕī (also plēbī, see [§ 52], 2), of the Fifth.

Heterogeneous Nouns.

[60]. Heterogeneous nouns vary in Gender. Thus:—

1. Several nouns of the Second Declension have two forms,—one Masc. in -us, and one Neuter in -um; as, clipeus, clipeum, shield; carrus, carrum, cart.

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.
frēnum, n., bridle; frēnī, m.(rarely frēna, n.), bridle.
jocus, m., jest; joca, n. (also jocī, m.), jests.
locus, m., place; loca, n., places; locī, m., passages or topics in an author.
rāstrum, n., rake; rāstrī, m.; rāstra, n., rakes.

a. Heterogeneous nouns may at the same time be heteroclites, as in case of the first two examples above.

Plurals with Change of Meaning.

[61]. The following nouns have one meaning in the Singular, and another in the Plural:—

SINGULAR. PLURAL.
aedēs, temple; aedēs, house.
auxilium, help; auxilia, auxiliary troops.
carcer, prison; carcerēs, stalls for racing-chariot.
castrum, fort; castra, camp.
cōpia, abundance; cōpiae, troops, resources.
fīnis, end; fīnēs, borders, territory.
fortūna, fortune; fortūnae, possessions, wealth.
grātia, favor, gratitude; grātiae, thanks.
impedīmentum, hindrance; impedīmenta, baggage.
littera, letter (of the alphabet); litterae, epistle; literature.
mōs, habit, custom; mōrēs, character.
opera, help, service; operae, laborers.
(ops) opis, help; opēs, resources.
pars, part; partēs, party; rôle.
sāl, salt; sălēs, wit.

B. ADJECTIVES.

[62]. Adjectives denote quality. They are declined like nouns, and fall into two classes,—

1. Adjectives of the First and Second Declensions.

2. Adjectives of the Third Declension.


ADJECTIVES OF THE FIRST AND SECOND DECLENSIONS.

[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. bonī bonae bonī
Dat. bonō bonae bonō
Acc. bonum bonam bonum
Voc. bone bona bonum
Abl. bonō bonā bonō

PLURAL.
Nom. bonī bonae bona
Gen. bonōrum bonārum bonōrum
Dat. bonīs bonīs bonīs
Acc. bonōs bonās bona
Voc. bonī bonae bona
Abl. bonīs bonīs bonīs

1. The Gen. Sing. Masc. and Neut. of Adjectives in -ius ends in -iī (not in as in case of Nouns; see [§ 25], 1; 2). So also the Voc. Sing. of such Adjectives ends in -ie, not in ī. Thus eximius forms Gen. eximiī; Voc. eximie.

2. Distributives (see [§ 78], 1, c) regularly form the Gen. Plu. Masc. and Neut. in -um instead of -ōrum (compare [§ 25], 6); as, dēnum centēnum; but always singulōrum.

[64]. Masculine like puer:—

Tener, tender.

SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE NEUTER.
Nom. tener tenera tenerum
Gen. tenerī tenerae tenerī
Dat. tenerō tenerae tenerō
Acc. tenerum teneram tenerum
Voc. tener tenera tenerum
Abl. tenerō tenerā tenerō

PLURAL.
Nom. tenerī tenerae tenera
Gen. tenerōrum tenerārum tenerōrum
Dat. tenerīs tenerīs tenerīs
Acc. tenerōs tenerās tenera
Voc. tenerī tenerae tenera
Abl. tenerīs tenerīs tenerīs

[65]. Masculine like ager:—

Sacer, sacred.

SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. sacer sacra sacrum
Gen. sacrī sacrae sacrī
Dat. sacrō sacrae sacrō
Acc. sacrum sacram sacrum
Voc. sacer sacra sacrum
Abl. sacrō sacrā sacrō

PLURAL.
Nom. sacrī sacrae sacra
Gen. sacrōrum sacrārum sacrōrum
Dat. sacrīs sacrīs sacrīs
Acc. sacrōs sacrās sacra
Voc. sacrī sacrae sacra
Abl. sacrīs sacrīs sacrīs

1. Most adjectives in -er are declined like sacer. The following however, are declined like tener: asper, rough; lacer, torn; līber, free; miser, wretched; prōsper, prosperous; compounds in -fer and -ger; sometimes dexter, right.

2. Satur, full, is declined: satur, satura, saturum.

Nine Irregular Adjectives.

[66]. Here belong—

alius, another; alter, the other;
ūllus, any; nūllus, none;
uter, which? (of two); neuter, neither;
sōlus, alone; tōtus, whole;
ūnus, one, alone.

They are declined as follows:—

SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. alius alia aliud alter altera alterum
Gen. alterĭus alterĭus alterĭus[[15]] alterĭus alterĭus alterĭus
Dat. aliī aliī aliī alterī alterī[[16]] alterī
Acc. alium aliam aliud alterum alteram alterum
Voc. —— —— —— —— —— ——
Abl. aliō aliā aliō alterō alterā alterō

Nom. uter utra utrum tōtus tōta tōtum
Gen. utrīus utrīus utrīus tōtīus tōtīus tōtīus
Dat. utrī utrī utrī tōtī tōtī tōtī
Acc. utrum utram utrum tōtum tōtam tōtum
Voc. —— —— —— —— —— ——
Abl. utrō utrā utrō tōtō tōtā tōtō

1. All these words lack the Vocative. The Plural is regular.

2. Neuter is declined like uter.


ADJECTIVES OF THE THIRD DECLENSION.

[67]. These fall into three classes,—

1. Adjectives of three terminations in the Nominative Singular,—one for each gender.

2. Adjectives of two terminations.

3. Adjectives of one termination.

a. With the exception of Comparatives, and a few other words mentioned below in [§ 70], 1, all Adjectives of the Third Declension follow the inflection of ĭ-stems; i.e. they have the Ablative Singular in , the Genitive Plural in -ium, the Accusative Plural in -īs (as well as -ēs) in the Masculine and Feminine, and the Nominative and Accusative Plural in -ia in Neuters.

Adjectives of Three Terminations.

[68]. These are declined as follows:—

Ācer, sharp.

SINGULAR.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. ācer ācris ācre
Gen. ācris ācris ācris
Dat. ācrī ācrī ācrī
Acc. ācrem ācrem ācre
Voc. ācer ācris ācre
Abl. ācrī ācrī ācrī

PLURAL.
Nom. ācrēs ācrēs ācria
Gen. ācrium ācrium ācrium
Dat, ācribus ācribus ācribus
Acc. ācrēs, -īs ācrēs, -īs ācria
Voc. ācrēs ācrēs ācria
Abl. ācribus ācribus ācribus

1. Like ācer are declined alacer, lively; campester, level; celeber, famous; equester, equestrian; palūster, marshy; pedester, pedestrian; puter, rotten; salūber, wholesome; silvester, woody; terrester, terrestrial; volucer, winged; also names of months in -ber, as September.

2. Celer, celeris, celere, swift, retains the e before r, but lacks the Genitive Plural.

3. In the Nominative Singular of Adjectives of this class the Feminine form is sometimes used for the Masculine. This is regularly true of salūbris, silvestris, and terrestris. In case of the other words in the list, the use of the Feminine for the Masculine is confined chiefly to early and late Latin, and to poetry.

Adjectives of Two Terminations.

[69]. These are declined as follows:—

Fortis, strong.Fortior, stronger.
SINGULAR.
M. AND F. NEUT. M. AND F. NEUT.
Nom. fortis forte fortior fortius
Gen. fortis fortis fortiōris fortiōris
Dat. fortī fortī fortiōrī fortiōrī
Acc. fortem forte fortiōrem fortius
Voc. fortis forte fortior fortius
Abl. fortī fortī fortiōre fortiōre

PLURAL.
Nom. fortēs fortia fortiōrēs fortiōra
Gen. fortium fortium fortiōrum fortiōrum
Dat. fortibus fortibus fortiōribus fortiōribus
Acc. fortēs, -īs fortia fortiōrēs, -īs fortiōra
Voc. fortēs fortia fortiōrēs fortiōra
Abl. fortibus fortibus fortiōribus fortiōribus

1. Fortior is the Comparative of fortis. All Comparatives are regularly declined in the same way. The Acc. Plu. in -īs is rare.

Adjectives of One Termination.

[70].

Fēlīx, happy.. Prūdēns, prudent.

SINGULAR.
M. AND F. NEUT. M. AND F. NEUT.
Nom. fēlīx fēlīx prūdēns prūdēns
Gen. fēlīcīs fēlīcis prūdentis prūdentis
Dat. fēlīcī fēlīcī prūdentī prūdentī
Acc. fēlīcem fēlīx prūdentem prūdēns
Voc. fēlīx fēlīx prūdēns prūdēns
Abl. fēlīcī fēlīcī prūdentī prūdentī

PLURAL.
Nom. fēlīcēs fēlīcia prūdentēs prūdentia
Gen. fēlīcium fēlīcium prūdentium prūdentium
Dat. fēlīcibus fēlīcibus prūdentibus prūdentibus
Acc. fēlīcēs, -īs fēlīcia prūdentēs, -īs prūdentia
Voc. fēlīcēs fēlīcia prūdentēs prūdentia
Abl. fēlīcibus fēlīcibus prūdentibus prūdentibus

Vetus, old.

Plūs, more.

SINGULAR.
M. AND F. NEUT. M. AND F. NEUT.
Nom. vetus vetus —— plūs
Gen. veteris veteris —— plūris
Dat. veterī veterī —— ——
Acc. veterem vetus —— plūs
Voc. vetus vetus —— ——
Abl. vetere vetere —— plūre

PLURAL.
Nom. veterēs vetera plūrēs plūra
Gen. veterum veterum plūrium plūrium
Dat. veteribus veteribus plūribus plūribus
Acc. veterēs vetera plūrēs, -īs plūra
Voc. veterēs vetera —— ——
Abl. veteribus veteribus plūribus plūribus

1. It will be observed that vetus is declined as a pure Consonant-Stem; i.e. Ablative Singular in -e, Genitive Plural in -um, Nominative Plural Neuter in -a, and Accusative Plural Masculine and Feminine in -ēs only. In the same way are declined compos, controlling; dīves, rich; particeps, sharing; pauper, poor; prīnceps, chief; sōspes, safe; superstes, surviving. Yet dīves always has Neut. Plu. dītia.

2. Inops, needy, and memor, mindful, have Ablative Singular inopī, memorī, but Genitive Plural inopum, memorum.

3. Participles in -āns and -ēns follow the declension of ī-stems. But they do not have the Ablative, except when employed as adjectives; when used as participles or as substantives, they have -e; as,—

ā sapientī virō, by a wise man; but

ā sapiente, by a philosopher.

Tarquiniō rēgnante, under the reign of Tarquin.

4. Plūs, in the Singular, is always a noun.

5. In the Ablative Singular, adjectives, when used as substantives,—

a) usually retain the adjective declension; as,—

aequālis, contemporary, Abl. aequālī.

cōnsulāris, ex-consul, Abl. cōnsulārī

So names of Months; as, Aprīlī, April; Decembrī, December.

b) But adjectives used as proper names have -e in the Ablative Singular; as, Celere, Celer; Juvenāle, Juvenal.

c) Patrials in -ās, -ātis and -īs, -ītis, when designating places regularly have ; as, in Arpīnātī, on the estate at Arpinum, yet -e, when used of persons; as, ab Arpīnāte, by an Arpinatian.

6. A very few indeclinable adjectives occur, the chief of which are frūgī, frugal; nēquam, worthless.

7. In poetry, adjectives and participles in -ns sometimes form the Gen. Plu. in -um instead of -ium; as, venientum, of those coming.


COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES.

[71]. 1. There are three degrees of Comparison,—the Positive, the Comparative, and the Superlative.

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,—

altus, high, altior, higher, altissimus, highest, very high.
fortis, brave, fortior, fortissimus.
fēlīx, fortunate, fēlīcior, fēlīcissimus.

So also Participles, when used as Adjectives; as,—

doctus, learned, doctior, doctissimus.
egēns, needy, egentior, egentissimus.

3. Adjectives in -er form the Superlative by appending -rimus to the Nominative of the Positive. The Comparative is regular. Thus:—

asper, rough, asperior, asperrimus.
pulcher, beautiful, pulchrior, pulcherrimus.
ācer, sharp, ācrior, ācerrimus.
celer, swift, celerior, celerrimus.

a. Notice mātūrus, mātūrior, mātūrissimus or mātūrrimus.

4. Five Adjectives in -ilis form the Superlative by adding -limus to the Stem of the Positive deprived of its final vowel. The Comparative is regular. Thus:—

facilis, easy, facilior, facillimus.
difficilis, diffcult, difficilior, difficillimus.
similis, like, similior, simillimus.
dissimilis, unlike, dissimilior, dissimillimus.
humilis, low, humilior, humillimus.

5. Adjectives in -dicus, -ficus, and -volus form the Comparative and Superlative as though from forms in -dīcēns, -ficēns, -volēns. Thus:—

maledicus, slanderous, maledīcentior, maledīcentissimus.
magnificus, magnificent, magnificentior, magnificentissimus.
benevolus, kindly, benevolentior, benevolentissimus.

a. Positives in -dīcēns and -volēns occur in early Latin; as maledīcēns, benevolēns.

6. Dīves has the Comparative dīvitior or dītior; Superlative dīvitissimus or dītissimus.

Irregular Comparison.

[72]. Several Adjectives vary the Stem in Comparison; viz.—

bonus, good, melior, optimus.
malus, bad, pejor, pessimus.
parvus, small, minor, minimus.
magnus, large, major, maximus.
multus, much, plūs, plūrimus,
frūgī, thrifty, frūgālior, frūgālissimus,
nēquam, worthless, nēquior, nēquissimus.

Defective Comparison.

[73]. 1. Positive lacking entirely,—

(Cf. prae, in front of.) prior, former, prīmus, first
(Cf. citrā, this side of.) citerior, on this side, citimus, near.
(Cf. ultrā, beyond.) ulterior, farther, ultimus, farthest.
(Cf. intrā, within.) interior, inner, intimus, inmost
(Cf. prope, near.) propior, nearer, proximus, nearest.
(Cf. , down.) dēterior, inferior, dēterrimus, worst.
(Cf. archaic potis, possible.) potior, preferable, potissimus, chiefest

2. Positive occurring only in special cases,—

posterō diē, annō, etc. the following day, etc.,
posterī, descendants,
posterior, later, postrēmus, latest, last.
postumus, late-born, posthumous.
exteri, foreigners,
nātiōnēs exterae, foreign nations,
exterior, outer extrēmus, extimus, outermost.
inferī, gods of the lower world,
Mare Inferum, Mediterranean Sea,
īnferior, lower, īnfimus, īmus, lowest.
superī, gods above,
Mare Superum, Adriatic Sea,
superior, higher, suprēmus, last.
summus, highest.

3. Comparative lacking.

vetus, old, ——[[17]] veterrimus.
fīdus, faithful, —— fīdissimus.
novus, new, ——[[18]] novissimus,[[19]] last.
sacer, sacred, —— sacerrimus.
falsus, false, —— falsissimus.

Also in some other words less frequently used.

4. Superlative lacking.

alacer, lively, alacrior, ——
ingēns, great, ingentior, ——
salūtāris, wholesome, salūtārior, ——
juvenis, young, jūnior, ——[[20]]
senex, old, senior. ——[[21]]

a. The Superlative is lacking also in many adjectives in -ālis, -īlis, -ĭlis, -bilis, and in a few others.

Comparison by Magis and Maximē.

[74]. Many adjectives do not admit terminational comparison, but form the Comparative and Superlative degrees by prefixing magis (more) and maximē (most). Here belong—

1. Many adjectives ending in -ālis, -āris, -idus, -īlis, -icus, imus, īnus, -ōrus.

2. Adjectives in -us, preceded by a vowel; as, idōneus, adapted; arduus, steep; necessārius, necessary.

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.

Adjectives not admitting Comparison.

[75]. Here belong—

1. Many adjectives, which, from the nature of their signification, do not admit of comparison; as, hodiernus, of to-day; annuus, annual; mortālis, mortal.

2. Some special words; as, mīrus, gnārus, merus; and a few others.


FORMATION AND COMPARISON OF ADVERBS.

[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 of the Genitive Singular to ; those derived from adjectives of the Third Declension, by changing -is of the Genitive Singular to -iter; as,—

cārus, cārē, dearly;
pulcher, pulchrē, beautifully;
ācer, ācriter, fiercely;
levis, leviter, lightly.

a. But Adjectives in -ns, and a few others, add -er (instead of -iter), to form the Adverb; as,—

sapiēns, sapienter, wisely;
sollers, sollerter, skillfully.

Note audāx, audācter, boldly.

2. The Comparative of all Adverbs regularly consists of the Accusative Singular Neuter of the Comparative of the Adjective; while the Superlative of the Adverb is formed by changing the of the Genitive Singular of the Superlative of the Adjective to . Thus—

(cārus) cārē, dearly, cārius, cārissimē.
(pulcher) pulchrē, beautifully, pulchrius, pulcherrimē.
(ācer) ācriter, fiercely, ācrius, ācerrimē.
(levis) leviter, lightly, levius, levissimē.
(sapiēns) sapienter, wisely, sapientius, sapientissimē.
(audāx) audācter, boldly, audācius, audācissimē.

Adverbs Peculiar in Comparison and Formation.

[77]. 1.

benĕ, well, melius, optimē.
malĕ, ill, pejus, pessimē.
magnopere, greatly, magis, maximē.
multum, much, plūs, plūrimum.
nōn multum, little,
parum,
minus, minimē.
diū, long, diūtius, diūtissimē.
nēquiter, worthlessly, nēquius, nēquissimē.
saepe, often, saepius, saepissimē.
mātūrē, betimes, mātūrius, mātūrrimē.
mātūrissimē.
prope, near, propius, proximē.
nūper, recently, —— nūperrimē.
—— potius, rather, potissimum, especially.
—— prius, previously, before, prīmum, first.
secus, otherwise, sētius, less.

2. A number of adjectives of the First and Second Declensions form an Adverb in , instead of ; as,—

crēbrō, frequently; falsō, falsely;
continuō, immediately; subitō, suddenly;
rārō, rarely, and a few others.

a. cito, quickly, has .

3. A few adjectives employ the Accusative Singular Neuter as the Positive of the Adverb; as,—

multum, much; paulum, little; facile, easily.

4. A few adjectives of the First and Second Declensions form the Positive in -iter; as,—

fīrmus, fīrmiter, firmly; hūmānus, hūmāniter, humanly;
largus, largiter, copiously; alius, aliter, otherwise.

a. violentus has violenter.

5. Various other adverbial suffixes occur, the most important of which are -tus and -tim; as, antīquitus, anciently; paulātim, gradually.


NUMERALS.

[78]. Numerals may be divided into—

I. Numeral Adjectives, comprising—

a. Cardinals; as, ūnus, one; duo, two; etc.

b. Ordinals; as, prīmus, first; secundus, second; etc.

c. Distributives; as, singulī, one by one; bīnī, two by two; etc.

II. Numeral Adverbs; as, semel, once; bis, twice; etc.

[79]. TABLE OF NUMERAL ADJECTIVES AND ADVERBS.

CARDINALS. ORDINALS. DISTRIBUTIVES. ADVERBS.
1. ūnus, ūna, ūnum prīmus, first singulī, one by one semel, once
2. duo, duae, duo secundus, second bīnī, two by two bis
3. trēs, tria tertius, third ternī (trīnī) ter
4. quattuor quārtus, fourth quaternī quater
5. quīnque quīntus, fifth quīnī quīnquiēs
6. sex sextus sēnī sexiēs
7. septem septimus septēnī septiēs
8. octō octāvus octōnī octiēs
9. novem nōnus novēnī noviēs
10. decem decimus dēnī deciēs
11. ūndecim ūndecimus ūndēnī ūndeciēs
12. duodecim duodecimus duodēnī duodeciēs
13. tredecim tertius decimus ternī denī terdeciēs
14. quattuordecim quārtus decimus quaternī denī quaterdeciēs
15. quīndecim quīntus decimus quīnī dēnī quīnquiēs deciēs
16. sēdecim,
sexdecim
sextus decimus sēnī dēnī sexiēs deciēs
17. septendecim septimus decimus septēnī dēnī septiēs deciēs
18. duodēvīgintī duodēvīcēsimus duodēvīcēnī octiēs deciēs
19. ūndēvīgintī ūndēvīcēsimus ūndēvīcēnī noviēs deciēs
20. vīgintī vīcēsimus vīcēnī vīciēs
21. vīgintī ūnus,
ūnus et vīgintī
vīcēsimus prīmus,
ūnus et vīcēsimus
vīcēnī singulī,
singulī et vīcēni
vīciēs semel
22. vīgintī duo,
duo et vīgintī
vīcēsimus secundus,
alter et vīcēsimus
vīcēnī bīnī,
bīnī et vīcēnī
vīciēs bis
30. trīgintā trīcēsimus trīcēnī triciēs
40. quadrāgintā quadrāgēsimus quadrāgēnī quadrāgiēs
50. quīnquāgintā quīnquāgēsimus quinquāgēnī quīnquāgiēs
60. sexāgintā sexāgēsimus sexāgēnī sexāgiēs
70. septuāgintā septuāgēsimus septuāgēnī septuāgiēs
80. octōgintā octōgēsimus octōgēnī octōgiēs
90. nōnāgintā nōnāgēsimus nōnāgēnī nōnāgiēs
100. centum centēsimus centēnī centiēs
101. centum ūnus,
centum et ūnus
centēsimus prīmus,
centēsimus et prīmus
centēnī singulī,
centēnī et singulī
centiēs semel
200. ducentī, -ae, -a ducentēsimus ducēnī ducentiēs
300. trecentī trecentēsimus trecēnī trecentiēs
400. quadringentī quadringentēsimus quadringēnī quadringentiēs
500. quīngentī quīngentēsimus quīngēnī quīngentiēs
600. sescentī sescentēsimus sescēnī sescentiēs
700. septingentī septingentēsimus septingēnī septingentiēs
800. octingentī octingentēsimus octingēnī octingentiēs
900. nōngentī nōngentēsimus nōngēnī nōngentiēs
1,000. mīlle mīllēsimus singula mīlia mīliēs
2,000. duo mīlia bis mīllēsimus bīna mīlia bis mīliēs
100,000. centum mīlia centiēs mīllēsimus centēna mīlia centiēs mīliēs
1,000,000. deciēs centēna mīlia deciēs centiēs mīllēsimus deciēs centēna mīlia deciēs centiēs mīliēs

NOTE.— -ēnsimus and -iēns are often written in the numerals instead of -ēsimus and -iēs.

Declension of the Cardinals.

[80]. 1. The declension of ūnus has already been given under [§ 66].

2. Duo is declined as follows:—

Nom. duo duae duo
Gen. duōrum duārum duōrum
Dat. duōbus duābus duōbus
Acc. duōs, duo duās duo
Abl. duōbus duābus duōbus

a. So ambō, both, except that its final o is long.

3. Trēs is declined,—

Nom. trēs tria
Gen. trium trium
Dat. tribus tribus
Acc. trēs (trīs) tria
Abl. tribus tribus

4. The hundreds (except centum) are declined like the Plural of bonus.

5. Mīlle is regularly an adjective in the Singular, and indeclinable. In the Plural it is a substantive (followed by the Genitive of the objects enumerated; [§ 201], 1), and is declined,—

Nom. mīlia Acc. mīlia
Gen. mīlium Voc. mīlia
Dat. mīlibus Abl. mīlibus

Thus mīlle hominēs, a thousand men; but duo mīlia hominum, two thousand men, literally two thousands of men.

a. Occasionally the Singular admits the Genitive construction; as, mīlle hominum.

6. Other Cardinals are indeclinable. Ordinals and Distributives are declined like Adjectives of the First and Second Declensions.

Peculiarities in the Use of Numerals.

[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:—

trīgintā sex or sex et trīgintā, thirty-six.

2. The numerals under 90, ending in 8 and 9, are often expressed by subtraction; as,—

duodēvīgintī, eighteen (but also octōdecim);

ūndēquadrāgintā, thirty-nine (but also trīgintā novem or novem et trīgintā).

3. Compounds over 100 regularly have the largest number first; the others follow without et; as,—

centum vīgintī septem, one hundred and twenty-seven.

annō octingentēsimō octōgēsimō secundō, in the year 882.

Yet et may be inserted where the smaller number is either a digit or one of the tens; as,—

centum et septem, one hundred and seven;

centum et quadrāgintā, one hundred and forty.

4. The Distributives are used—

a) To denote so much each, so many apiece; as,—

bīna talenta eīs 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,—

bīnae litterae, two epistles.

But in such cases, ūnī (not singulī) is regularly employed for one, and trīnī (not ternī) for three; as,—

ūnae litterae, one epistle; trīnae litterae, three epistles.

c) In multiplication; as,—

bis bīna sunt quattuor, twice two are four.

d) Often in poetry, instead of the cardinals; as,—

bīna hastīlia, two spears.


C. PRONOUNS.

[82]. A Pronoun is a word that indicates something without naming it.

[83]. There are the following classes of 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:—

First Person. Second Person. Third Person.

SINGULAR.
Nom. ego, I tū, thou is, he; ea, she; id, it
Gen. meī tuī (For declension see [§ 87].)
Dat. mihi[[22]] tibi[[22]]
Acc.
Voc. ——
Abl.

PLURAL.
Nom. nōs, we vōs, you
Gen. nostrum, nostrī vestrum, vestrī
Dat. nōbīs vōbīs
Acc. nōs vōs
Voc. —— vōs
Abl. nōbīs vōbīs

1. A Dative Singular occurs in poetry.

2. Emphatic forms in -met are occasionally found; as, egomet, I myself; tibimet, to you yourself; has tūte and tūtemet (written also tūtimet).

3. In early Latin, mēd and tēd occur as Accusative and Ablative forms.


II. REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS.

[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:—

First Person.Second Person.Third Person.
Supplied by oblique cases of ego. Supplied by oblique cases of .
Gen. meī, of myself tuī, of thyself suī
Dat. mihi, to myself tibi, to thyself sibi[[22]]
Acc. mē, myself tē, thyself sē or sēsē
Voc. —— —— ——
Abl. mē, with myself, etc. tē, with thyself, etc. sē or sēsē

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.

2. All of the Reflexive Pronouns have at times a reciprocal force; as,—

inter sē pugnant, they fight with each other.

3. In early Latin, sēd occurs as Accusative and Ablative.


III. POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS.

[86]. These are strictly adjectives of the First and Second Declensions, and are inflected as such. They are—

First Person.
meus, -a, -um, my;
noster, nostra, nostrum, our;
Second Person.
tuus, -a, -um, thy;
vester, vestra, vestrum, your;

Third Person.
suus, -a, -um, his, her, its, their.

1. Suus is exclusively Reflexive; as,—

pater līberōs suōs amat, the father loves his children.

Otherwise, his, her, its are regularly expressed by the Genitive Singular of is, viz. ejus; and their by the Genitive Plural, eōrum, eārum.

2. The Vocative Singular Masculine of meus is .

3. The enclitic -pte may be joined to the Ablative Singular of the Possessive Pronouns for the purpose of emphasis. This is particularly common in case of suō, suā; as, suōpte, suāpte.


IV. DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS.

[87]. These point out an object as here or there, or as previously mentioned. They are—

hīc, this (where I am);

iste, that (where you are);

ille, that (something distinct from the speaker);

is, that (weaker than ille);

īdem, the same.

Hīc, iste, and ille are accordingly the Demonstratives of the First, Second, and Third Persons respectively.

Hīc, this.
SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. hīc haec hōc hae haec
Gen. hūjus[[23]] hūjus hūjus hōrum hārum hōrum
Dat. huic huic huic hīs hīs hīs
Acc. hunc hanc hōc hōs hās haec
Abl. hōc hāc hōc hīs hīs hīs

Iste, that, that of yours.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. iste ista istud[[24]] istī istae ista[[24]]
Gen. istīus istīus istīus istōrum istārum istōrum
Dat. istī istī istī istīs istīs istīs
Acc. istum istam istud istōs istās ista[[24]]
Abl. istō istā istō istīs istīs istīs

Ille (archaic olle), that, that one, he, is declined like iste.[[25]]

Is, he, this, that.
SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. is ea id eī, iī, (ī) eae ea
Gen. ejus ejus ejus eōrum eārum eōrum
Dat. eīs, iīs eīs, iīs eīs, iīs
Acc. eum eam id eōs eās ea
Abl. eīs, iīs eīs, iīs eīs, iīs

Īdem, the same.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. īdem eadem idem eīdem, iīdem eaedem eadem
Gen. ejusdem ejusdem ejusdem eōrundem eārundem eōrundem
Dat. eīdem eīdem eīdem eīsdem eīsdem eīsdem
Acc. eundem eandem idem eōsdem eāsdem eadem
Abl. eōdem eādem eōdem eīsdem eīsdem eīsdem

The Nom. Plu. Masc. also has īdem, and the Dat. Abl. Plu. īsdem or iīsdem


V. THE INTENSIVE PRONOUN.

[88]. The Intensive Pronoun in Latin is ipse. It corresponds to the English myself, etc., in 'I myself, he himself.'

SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. ipse ipsa ipsum ipsī ipsae ipsa
Gen. ipsīus ipsīus ipsīus ipsōrum ipsārum ipsōrum
Dat. ipsī ipsī ipsī ipsīs ipsīs ipsīs
Acc. ipsum ipsam ipsum ipsōs ipsās ipsa
Abl. ipsō ipsā ipsō ipsīs ipsīs ipsīs

VI. THE RELATIVE PRONOUN.

[89]. The Relative Pronoun is quī, who. It is declined:—

SINGULAR PLURAL.
MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER. MASCULINE. FEMININE. NEUTER.
Nom. quī quae quod quī quae quae
Gen. cūjus cūjus cūjus quōrum quārum quōrum
Dat. cui cui cui quibus[[26]] quibus quibus
Acc. quem quam quod quōs quās quae
Abl. quō[[27]] quā[[27]] quō quibus[[26]] quibus quibus

VII. INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS.

[90]. The Interrogative Pronouns are quis, who? (substantive) and quī, what? what kind of? (adjective).

1. Quis, who?

SINGULAR. PLURAL.
MASC. AND FEM. NEUTER
Nom. quis quid The rare Plural
Gen. cūjus cūjus follows the declension
Dat. cui cui of the Relative Pronoun.
Acc. quem quid
Abl. quō quō

2. Quī, what? what kind of? is declined precisely like the Relative Pronoun; viz. quī, quae, quod, etc.

a. An old Ablative quī occurs, in the sense of how? why?

b. Quī is sometimes used for quis in Indirect Questions.

c. Quis, when limiting words denoting persons, is sometimes an adjective. But in such cases quis homō = what man? whereas quī homō = what sort of man?

d. Quis and quī may be strengthened by adding -nam. Thus:—

Substantive: quisnam, who, pray? quidnam, what, pray?
Adjective: quīnam, quaenam, quodnam, of what kind, pray?

VIII. INDEFINITE PRONOUNS.

[91]. These have the general force of some one, any one.

SUBSTANTIVES. ADJECTIVES.
M. AND F. NEUT. MASC. FEM. NEUT.
quis, quid, quī, quae, qua, quod,
any one, anything. any.
aliquis, aliquid, aliquī, aliqua, aliquod,
some one, something. any.
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.
quīvīs, quaevīs, quidvīs, quīvis, quaevīs, quodvis,
quīlibet, quaelibet, quidlibet quilibet, quaelibet, quodlibet,
any one (anything) you wishany you wish
quīdam, quaedam, quiddam, quīdam, quaedam, quoddam,
a certain person, or thing. a certain

1. In the Indefinite Pronouns, only the pronominal part is declined. Thus: Genitive Singular alicūjus, cūjuslibet, etc.

2. Note that aliquī has aliqua in the Nominative Singular Feminine, also in the Nominative and Accusative Plural Neuter. Quī has both qua and quae in these same cases.

3. Quīdam forms Accusative Singular quendam, quandam; Genitive Plural quōrundam, quārundam; the m being assimilated to n before d.

4. Aliquis may be used adjectively, and (occasionally) aliquī substantively.

5. In combination with , , nisi, num, either quis or quī may stand as a Substantive. Thus: sī quis or sī quī.

6. Ecquis, any one, though strictly an Indefinite, generally has interrogative force. It has both substantive and adjective forms,—substantive, ecquis, ecquid; adjective, ecquī, ecquae and ecqua, ecquod.

7. Quisquam is not used in the Plural.

8. There are two Indefinite Relatives,—quīcumque and quisquis, whoever. Quīcumque declines only the first part; quisquis declines both but has only quisquis, quidquid, quōquō, in common use.


PRONOMINAL ADJECTIVES.

[92]. The following adjectives, also, frequently have pronominal force:—

1.

alius, another; alter, the other;
uter, which of two? (interr.);
whichever of two (rel.);
neuter, neither;
ūnus, one; nūllus, no one (in oblique cases)

2. The compounds,—

uterque, utraque, utrumque, each of two;

utercumque, utracumque, utrumcumque, whoever of two;

uterlibet, utralibet, utrumlibet, either one you please;

utervīs, utravīs, utrumvīs, either one you please;

alteruter, alterutra, alterutrum, the one or the other.

In these, uter alone is declined. The rest of the word remains unchanged, except in case of alteruter, which may decline both parts; as,—

Nom.alteruteraltera utraalterum utrum
Gen.alterius utrīus, etc.

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.

[94]. Verbs have Voice, Mood, Tense, Number, and Person:—

1. Two Voices,—Active and Passive.

2. Three Moods,—Indicative, Subjunctive, Imperative.

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.

4. Two Numbers,—Singular and Plural.

5. Three Persons,—First, Second, and Third.

Present, Perfect,
Imperfect, Pluperfect,
Future, Future Perfect.

[95]. These make up the so-called Finite Verb. Besides this, we have the following Noun and Adjective Forms:—

1. Noun Forms,—Infinitive, Gerund, and Supine.

2. Adjective Forms,—Participles (including the Gerundive).

[96]. The Personal Endings of the Verb are,—

Active. Passive.
Sing. 1. -ō; -m; -ī (Perf. Ind.); -r.
2. -s; -stī (Perf Ind.);
-tō or wanting (Impv.);
-rīs, -re;
-re, -tor (Impv.).
3. -t; -tō (Impv.); -tur; -tor (Impv.).
Plu. 1. -mus; -mur.
2. -tis; -stis (Perf. Ind.);
-te, -tōte (Impv.);
-minī.
3. -nt; -ērunt (Perf Ind.);
-ntō (Impv.);
-ntur; -ntor (Impv.).

VERB STEMS.

[97]. Conjugation consists in appending certain endings to the Stem. We distinguish three different stems in a fully inflected verb,—

I. Present Stem, from which are formed—

1. Present, Imperfect, and Future Indicative,

2. Present and Imperfect Subjunctive,

3. The Imperative,

4. The Present Infinitive,

- (Active and Passive.)

5. The Present Active Participle, the Gerund, and Gerundive.

II. Perfect Stem, from which are formed—

1. Perfect, Pluperfect, and Future Perfect Indicative,

2. Perfect and Pluperfect Subjunctive,

3. Perfect Infinitive,

- (Active.)

III. Participial Stem, from which are formed—

1. Perfect Participle,

2. Perfect, Pluperfect, and Future Perfect Indicative,

3. Perfect and Pluperfect Subjunctive,

4. Perfect Infinitive,

- (Passive.)

Apparently from the same stem, though really of different origin, are the Supine, the Future Active Participle, the Future Infinitive Active and Passive.

THE FOUR CONJUGATIONS.

[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:—


CONJUGATION.
INFINITIVE TERMINATION. DISTINGUISHING VOWEL.
I. -āre ā
II. -ēre ē
III. -ĕre ĕ
IV. -īre ī

[99]. PRINCIPAL PARTS. The Present Indicative, Present Infinitive, Perfect Indicative, and the Perfect Participle[[28]] constitute the Principal Parts of a Latin verb,—so called because they contain the different stems, from which the full conjugation of the verb may be derived.


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]]
sumessefuīfutūrus

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, erāmus, we were,
erās, thou wast, erātis, you were,
erat, he was; erant, they were.

FUTURE.
erō, I shall be, erimus, we shall be,
eris, thou wilt be, eritis, you will be,
erit, he will be; erunt, they will be.

PERFECT.
fuī, I have been, I was, fuimus, we have been, we were,
fuistī, thou hast been, thou wast, fuistis, you have been, you were,
fuit, he has been, he was; fuērunt, fuēre,
they have been, they were.

PLUPERFECT.
fueram, I had been, fuerāmus, we had been,
fuerās, thou hadst been, fuerātis, you had been,
fuerat, he had been; fuerant, they had been.

FUTURE PERFECT.
fuerō, 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, sīmus, let us be,
sīs, mayst thou be, sītis, be ye, may you be,
sit, let him be, may he be; sint, let them be.

IMPERFECT.
essem,[[31]] I should be, essēmus, we should be,
essēs,[[31]] thou wouldst be, essētis, you would be,
esset,[[31]] he would be; essent,[[31]] they would be.

PERFECT.
fuerim, I may have been, fuerīmus, we may have been,
fuerīs, thou mayst have been, fuerītis, you may have been,
fuerit, he may have been; fuerint, they may have been.

PLUPERFECT.
fuissem, I should have been, fuissēmus, we should have been.
fuissēs, thou wouldst have been, fuissētis, you would have been,
fuisset, he would have been; fuissent, they would have been.

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. es, be thou; este, be ye,
Fut. es, thou shalt be, estōte, ye shall be,
es, he shall be; suntō, they shall be.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. esse, to be.
Perf. fuisse, to have been.
Fut. futūrus esse,[[32]] to be about to be. Fut. futūrus,[[33]] about to be.

FIRST (OR Ā-) CONJUGATION.

[101]. Active Voice.—Amō, I love.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
amō amāre amāvī amātus

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
amō, I love, amāmus, we love,
amās, you love, amātis, you love,
amat, he loves; amant, they love.

IMPERFECT.
amābam, I was loving,[[34]] amābāmus, we were loving,
amābās, you were loving, amābātis, you were loving,
amābat, he was loving; amābant, they were loving

FUTURE.
amābō, I shall love, amābimus, we shall love,
amābis, you will love, amābitis, you will love,
amābit, he will love; amābunt, they will love.

PERFECT.
amāvī, I have loved, I loved, amāvimus, we have loved, we loved,
amāvistī, you have loved, you loved amāvistis, you have loved, you loved,
amāvit, he has loved, he loved; amāvērunt, -ēre, they have loved, they loved.

PLUPERFECT.
amāveram, I had loved, amāverāmus, we had loved,
amāverās, you had loved, amāverātis, you had loved,
amāverat, he had loved; amāverant, they had loved.

FUTURE PERFECT.
amāverō, I shall have loved, amāverimus, we shall have loved,
amāveris, you will have loved, amāveritis, you will have loved,
amāverit, he will have loved; amāverint, they will have loved.

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
amem, may I love, amēmus, let us love,
amēs, may you love, amētis, may you love,
amet, let him love; ament, let them love.

IMPERFECT.
amārem, I should love, amārēmus, we should love,
amārēs, you would love, amārētis, you would love,
amāret, he would love; amārent, they would love.

PERFECT.
amāverim, I may have loved, amāverīmus, we may have loved,
amāverīs, you may have loved, amāverītis, you may have loved,
amāverit, he may have loved; amāverint, they may have loved.

PLUPERFECT.
amāvissem, I should have loved, amāvīssēmus, we should have loved,
amāvissēs, you would have loved, amāvissētis, you would have loved,
amāvisset, he would have loved; amāvissent, they would have loved.

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. amā, love thou; amāte, love ye.
Fut. amātō, thou shalt love, amātōte, ye shall love,
amātō, he shall love; amantō, they shall love.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. amāre, to love. Pres. amāns,[[35]]loving.
Perf. amāvisse, to have loved. (Gen. amantis.)
Fut. amātūrus esse, to be about to loveFut. amātūrus, about to love.

GERUND.

SUPINE.
Gen. amandī, of loving,
Dat. amandō, for loving,
Acc. amandum, loving, Acc. amātum, to love,
Abl. amandō, by loving. Abl. amātū, to love, be loved.

[102]. Passive Voice.—Amor, I am loved.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
amōr amārī amātus sum

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
I am loved.
SINGULAR. PLURAL.
amor amāmur
amāris amāminī
amātur amantur

IMPERFECT
I was loved.
amābar amābāmur
amābāris, or -re amābāmini
amābātur amābantur

FUTURE.
I shall be loved.
amābor amābimur
amāberis, or -re amābiminī
amābitur amābuntur

PERFECT
I have been loved, or I was loved.
amātus (-a, -um) sum[[36]] amātī (-ae, -a) sumus
amātus es amātī estis
amātus est amātī sunt

PLUPERFECT.
I had been loved.
amātus eram[[36]] amātī erāmus
amātus erās amātī erātis
amātus erat amātī erant

FUTURE PERFECT.
I shall have been loved.
amātus erō[[36]] amātī erimus
amātus eris amātī eritis
amātus erit amātī erunt

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
May I be loved, let him be loved.
amer amēmur
amēris, or -re amēmini
amētur amentur

IMPERFECT.
I should be loved, he would be loved.
amārer amārēmur
amārēris, or -re amārēminī
amārētur amārentur

PERFECT.
I may have been loved.
amātus sim[[37]] amātī sīmus
amātus sīs amāti sītis
amātus sit amāti sint

PLUPERFECT.
I should have been loved, he would have been loved.
amātus essem[[37]] amātī essēmus
amātus essēs amātī essētis
amātus esset amāti essent

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. amāre,[[38]]be thou loved; amāminī, be ye loved.
Fut. amātor, thou shalt be loved,
amātor, he shall be loved; amantor, they shall be loved.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. amārī, to be loved.
Perf. amātus esse, to have been loved. Perfect. amātus, loved, having been loved.
Fut. amātum īrī, to be about to be loved. Gerundive. amandus, to be loved, deserving to be loved.

SECOND (OR Ē-) CONJUGATION.

[103]. Active voice.—Moneō, I advise.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
mon monēre mon monitus

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
I advise.

SINGULAR.

PLURAL.
mon monēmus
monēs monētis
monet monent

IMPERFECT.
I was advising, or I advised.
monēbam monēbāmus
monēbās monēbātis
monēbat monēbant

FUTURE.
I shall advise.
monēbō monēbimus
monēbis monēbitis
monēbit monēbunt

PERFECT.
I have advised, or I advised.
monuī monuimus
monuistī monuistis
monuit monuērunt, or -ēre

PLUPERFECT.
I had advised.
monueram monuerāmus
monuerās monuerātis
monuerat monuerant

FUTURE PERFECT.
I shall have advised.
monuerō monuerimus
monueris monueritis
monuerit monuerint

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
May I advise, let him advise.
moneam moneāmus
moneās moneātis
moneat moneant

IMPERFECT.
I should advise, he would advise.
monērem monērēmus
monērēs monērētis
monēret monērent

PERFECT.
I may have advised.
monuerim monuerīmus
monuerīs monuerītis
monuerit monuerint

PLUPERFECT.
I should have advised, he would have advised.
monuissem monuissēmus
monuissēs monuissētis
monuisset monuissent

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. monē, advise thou; monēte, advise ye.
Fut. monētō, thou shall advise, monētōte, ye shall advise,
monētō, he shall advise; monentō, they shall advise.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. monēre, to advise. Pres. monēns, advising.
Perf. monuisse, to have advised. (Gen. monentis.)
Fut. monitūrus esse, to be about to advise. Fut. monitūrus, about to advise.

GERUND.

SUPINE.
Gen. monendī, of advising,
Dat. monendō, for advising,
Acc. monendum, advising, Acc. monitum, to advise,
Abl. monendō, by advising. Abl. monitū, to advise, be advised.

[104]. Passive voice.—Moneor, I am advised.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
moneor monērī monitus sum

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
I am advised.

SINGULAR.

PLURAL.
moneor monēmur
monēris monēminī
monētur monentur

IMPERFECT.
I was advised.
monēbar monēbāmur
monēbāris, or -re monēbāminī
monēbātur monēbantur

FUTURE.
I shall be advised.
monēbor monēbimur
monēberis, or -re monēbiminī
monēbitur monēbuntur

PERFECT.
I have been advised, I was advised.
monitus sum monitī sumus
monitus es monitī estis
monitus est monitī sunt

PLUPERFECT.
I had been advised.
monitus eram monitī erāmus
monitus erās monitī erātis
monitus erat monitī erant

FUTURE PERFECT.
I shall have been advised.
monitus erō monitī erimus
monitus eris monitī eritis
monitus erit monitī erunt

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
May I be advised, let him be advised.
monear moneāmur
moneāris, or -re moneāminī
moneātur moneantur

IMPERFECT.
I should be advised, he would be advised.
monērer monērēmur
monērēris, or -re monērēminī
monērētur monērentur

PERFECT.
I may have been advised.
monitus sim monitī sīmus
monitus sīs monitī sītis
monitus sit monitī sint

PLUPERFECT.
I should have been advised, he would have been advised.
monitus essem monitī essēmus
monitus essēs monitī essētis
monitus esset monitī essent

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. monēre, be thou advised; monēminī, be ye advised.
Fut. monētor, thou shalt be advised,
monētor, he shall be advised. monentor, they shall be advised.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. monērī, to be advised. Perfect. monitus, advised, having been advised.
Perf. monitus esse, to have been advised
Fut. monitum īrī, to be about to be advised.Gerundive. monendus, to be advised, deserving to be advised.

THIRD (OR CONSONANT-) CONJUGATION.

[105]. Active Voice.—Regō, I rule.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
regō regere rēctus

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
I rule

SINGULAR.

PLURAL.
regō regimus
regis regitis
regit regunt

IMPERFECT.
I was ruling, or I ruled.
regēbam regēbāmus
regēbās regēbātis
regēbat regēbant

FUTURE.
I shall rule.
regam regēmus
regēs regētis
reget regent

PERFECT.
I have ruled, or I ruled
rēxī rēximus
rēxistī rēxistis
rēxit rēxērunt, or -ēre

PLUPERFECT.
I had ruled.
rēxeram rēxerāmus
rēxerās rēxerātis
rēxerat rēxerant

FUTURE PERFECT.
I shall have ruled.
rēxerō rēxerimus
rēxeris rēxeritis
rēxerit rēxerint

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
May I rule, let him rule.
regam regāmus
regās regātis
regat regant

IMPERFECT.
I should rule, he would rule.
regerem regerēmus
regerēs regerētis
regeret regerent

PERFECT.
I may have ruled.
rēxerim rēxerīmus
rēxerīs rēxerītis
rēxerit rēxerint

PLUPERFECT.
I should have ruled, he would have ruled.
rēxissem rēxissēmus
rēxissēs rēxissētis
rēxisset rēxissent

IMPERATIVE.
rege, rule thou; regite, rule ye.
regitō, thou shall rule, regitōte, ye shall rule,
regitō, he shall rule; reguntō, they shall rule.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
regere, to rule. Pres. regēns, ruling.
rēxisse, to have ruled. (Gen. regentis.)
rēctūrus esse, to be about to ruleFut. rēctūrus, about to rule.

GERUND.

SUPINE.
regendī, of ruling,
regendō, for ruling,
regendum, ruling, Acc. rēctum, to rule,
regendō, by ruling. Abl. rēctū, to rule, be ruled.

[106]. Passive Voice.—Regor, I am ruled.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND.
regor regī rēctus sum

INDICATIVE MOOD.

PRESENT TENSE.
I am ruled.

SINGULAR.

PLURAL.
regor regimur
regeris regiminī
regitur reguntur

IMPERFECT.
I was ruled.
regēbar regēbāmur
regēbāris, or -re regēbāminī
regēbātur regēbantur

FUTURE.
I shall be ruled.
regar regēmur
regēris, or -re regēminī
regētur regentur

PERFECT.
I have been ruled, or I was ruled.
rēctus sum rēctī sumus
rēctus es rēctī estis
rēctus est rēctī sunt

PLUPERFECT.
I had been ruled.
rēctus eram rēctī erāmus
rēctus erās rēctī erātis
rēctus erat rēctī erant

FUTURE PERFECT.
I shall have been ruled
rēctus erō rēctī erimus
rēctus eris rēctī eritis
rēctus erit rēctī erunt

SUBJUNCTIVE.

PRESENT.
May I be ruled, let him be ruled.
regar regāmur
regāris, or -re regāminī
regātur regantur

IMPERFECT.
I should be ruled, he would be ruled.
regerer regerēmur
regerēris, or -re regerēminī
regerētur regerentur

PERFECT.
I may have been ruled.
rēctus sim rēctī sīmus
rēctus sīs rēctī sītis
rēctus sit rēctī sint

PLUPERFECT.
I should have been ruled, he would have been ruled.
rēctus essem rēctī essēmus
rēctus essēs rectī essētis
rēctus esset rectī essent

IMPERATIVE.
Pres. regere, be thou ruled; regiminī, be ye ruled.
Fut. regitor, thou shalt be ruled,
regitor, he shall be ruled; reguntor, they shall be ruled.

INFINITIVE.

PARTICIPLE.
Pres. regī, to be ruled. Perfect. rēctus, ruled, having been ruled.
Perf. rēctus esse, to have been ruled. Gerundive. regendus, to be ruled, deserving to be ruled.
Fut. rēctum īrī, to be about to be ruled.

FOURTH (OR Ī-) CONJUGATION.

[107]. Active voice.—Audiō, I hear.

PRINCIPAL PARTS.
PRES. IND. PRES. INF. PERF. IND. PERF. PASS. PARTIC.
aud audīre audīvī audītus