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- Casus: an active perfect participle from a non-deponent verb?
Having noticed here that excidere, "to fall out", lacks a perfect participle, a reasonable deficiency given that it's intransitive and has no corresponding passive meaning, I checked Wiktionary's page for its root cadere and found passive forms, including the perfect participle casus The passive verb forms exist only in the third-person singular, though
- syntax - Ambiguitas casus genitivi? - Latin Language Stack Exchange
The first sentence of the introduction to the Systema Naturæ by Linnaeus is: Homo mundi intraturus theatrum quæritur Quis sit How do you tell what noun goes with mundi? Grammatically, two
- In “word x is case y”, what dictates the verb’s number?
What is happening here is that Ørberg implies the two words casus verbi before 6, 12 and 13, and casus verborum before the other ones Even with this correction, the resulting Latin is very different from Servius’ perfect example cited by Asteroides
- latin to english translation - Which case is used for titles? - Latin . . .
§1 Casus §2 Genere masculino, feminino et neutro §3 Numero singulare et plurale I wonder if casus should be understood as singular or as plural As far as I know it belongs to the 4th declension, I guess the case is nominative so I have no way to distinguish between "The case" and "The cases" Maybe the other titles will help
- latin to english translation - Latin Language Stack Exchange
Valerius Maximus, in Facta et Dicta Memorabilia, describes the death of Aeschylus (V Max 9 12(ext) 2): Aeschyli uero poetae excessus quem ad modum non uoluntarius, sic propter nouitatem casus
- latin to english translation - Quote from Leibniz - Latin Language . . .
I was trying to translate a quote from Leibniz: Nominum casus semper eliminari possunt substitutis in eorum locum particulis quibusdam My attempt is: We can always eliminate the nominal case,
- How did the fourth declension neuter dative singular become different . . .
Usually, when a neuter case ending is different from the non-neuter ending in the same declension, the difference is in the nominative or accusative case (e g -us and -um in the second declension
- Hottest terminology Answers - Latin Language Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, teachers, and students wanting to discuss the finer points of the Latin language
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