Qui Latin

Qui Latin




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Qui Latin
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Inminet his aer, qui , quanto est pondere terrae pondus aquae levius, tanto est onerosior igni.
Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres, quarum unam incolunt Belgae, aliam Aquitani, tertiam qui ipsorum lingua Celtae, nostra Galli appellantur.
p Sphaerae figurationem circulorumque qui in ea sunt notationem, et quae ratio fuerit, ut non aequis partibus dividerentur; praeterea terrae marisque definiti
fit, Maecenas, ut nemo, quam sibi sortem seu ratio dederit seu fors obiecerit, illa contentus vivat, laudet
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bis dat qui ci to dat

Latin phrase

ce n'est que le pre mier pas qui coûte

French phrase

ho ni soit qui mal y pense

French phrase

per eant qui an te nos nos tra dix e runt

Latin phrase

qui fa cit per ali um fa cit per se

Latin phrase

qui s'ex cuse s'ac cuse

French phrase

qui trans tu lit sus ti net

Latin phrase



tetchy
superficial
flashy
gregarious



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The following 10 entries include the term qui .


: alert , lookout

— used in the phrase on the qui vive



: he gives twice who gives promptly : payment rendered promptly is worth twice as much


: it is only the first step that costs : only the beginning is difficult


: shamed be (the person) who thinks evil of it

— motto of the Order of the Garter



: may they perish who have uttered ours (our ideas) before us


: he who does (something) through another does it by himself

— used especially as a principle in the law of agency



: he who excuses himself accuses himself : making excuses reveals a guilty conscience


: He who transplanted (us) sustains (us)

— motto of Connecticut



: who goes there?

— used by sentries to demand identification from an unknown person


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Meagan Ayer, Allen and Greenough’s New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges . Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Dickinson College Commentaries, 2014. ISBN: 978-1-947822-04-7. https://dcc.dickinson.edu/grammar/latin/relative-interrogative-and-indefinite-pronouns



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A map of all locations mentioned in the text and notes of the Aetia . 
Links to resources for finding sight reading passages of moderate difficulty, most with glosses. 
147. The Relative Pronoun quī ( who , which ) is declined as follows.
148. The Substantive Interrogative Pronoun quis ( who? ) quid ( what? ) is declined in the Singular as follows.
The Plural is the same as that of the Relative quī , quae , quae .
a. The singular quis is either masculine or of indeterminate gender, but in old writers it is sometimes distinctly feminine.
b. The Adjective Interrogative Pronoun quī , quae , quod ( what kind of? what? which? ) is declined throughout like the Relative.
Note— But quī is often used without any apparent adjective force; and quis is very common as an adjective, especially with words denoting a person.
Quī nōminat mē? Who calls my name?
Quis diēs fuit? What day was it?
Quis homō? What man?
But often
Quī homō? What kind of man?
Nesciō quī sīs. I know not who you are.
c. Quisnam ( pray, who? ) is an emphatic interrogative. It has both substantive and adjective forms like quis , quī .
149. The Indefinite Pronouns quis ( any one ) and quī ( any ) are declined like the corresponding Interrogatives, but qua is commonly used for quae except in the nominative plural feminine.
a. The feminine forms qua and quae are sometimes used substantively.
b. The indefinites quis and quī are rare except after sī , nisi , nē , and num , and in compounds (see § 310. a-b ).
Note— After these particles quī is often used as a substantive and quis as an adjective (cf. § 148. b Note , above).
150. The Relative, Interrogative, and Indefinite Pronouns are originally of the same stem, and most of the forms are the same (compare § 147 with § 148 , above). The stem has two forms in the masculine and neuter, quo- , qui- , and one for the feminine, quā- . The interrogative sense is doubtless the original one.
a. Old forms for the genitive and dative singular are quôius , quoi .
b. The form quī is used for the ablative of both numbers and all genders; but especially as an adverb ( how , by which way, in any way ), and in the combination quīcum ( with whom ), as an interrogative or an indefinite relative.
c. A nominative plural quēs ( qui- ) occurs in early Latin. A dative and ablative plural quīs ( quo- ) is found even in classic Latin.
d. The preposition cum is joined enclitically to all forms of the ablative, as with the personal pronouns ( § 143. f ).
Note— But occasionally cum precedes.
151. The pronouns quis and quī appear in various combinations. The adverb -cumque ( -cunque ; cf. quisque ) added to the relative makes an indefinite relative, which is declined like the simple word.
quīcumque , quaecumque , quodcumque ( whoever , whatever ) cûiuscumque , etc.
Note— This suffix, with the same meaning, may be used with any relative
quāliscumque of whatever sort
quandōcumque (also rarely quandōque ) whenever
ubicumque wherever
a. In quisquis ( whoever ) both parts are declined, but the only forms commonly used are quisquis , quidquid ( quicquid ), and quōquō .
Note 1— Rare forms are quemquem and quibusquibus ; an ablative quīquī is sometimes found in early Latin; the ablative feminine quāquā is both late and rare. Cuicui occurs as a genitive in the phrase cuicui modī ( of whatever kind ).Other cases are cited, but have no authority. In early Latin quisquis is occasionally feminine.
Note 2— Quisquis is usually substantive, except in the ablative quōquō , which is more commonly an adjective.
c. The indefinite pronouns quīdam [ a certain ( one )], quīvīs , quīlibet ( any you please ) are used both as substantives and as adjectives. The first part is declined like the relative quī , but the neuter has both quid- (substantive) and quod- (adjective).
Quīdam changes m to n before d in the accusative singular [ quendam (m.), quandam (f.)] and the genitive plural [ quōrundam (m. / n.), quārundam (f.)].
d. The indefinite pronouns quispiam ( some , any ) and quisquam ( any at all ) are used both as substantives and as adjectives. Quispiam has feminine quaepiam (adjective), neuter quidpiam (substantive) and quodpiam (adjective); the plural is very rare. Quisquam is both masculine and feminine; the neuter is quidquam ( quicquam ), substantive only; there is no plural. Ūllus , -a , -um , is commonly used as the adjective corresponding to quisquam .
e. The indefinite pronoun aliquis ( some one , substantive), aliquī ( some , adjective), is declined like quis and quī , but aliqua is used instead of aliquae except in the nominative plural feminine.
Note— Aliquī is sometimes used substantively and aliquis as an adjective.
f. The indefinite pronoun ecquis ( whether any one , substantive), ecquī ( whether any , adjective), is declined like aliquis , but has either ecquae or ecqua in the nominative singular feminine of the adjective form.
Note— Ecquis ( ecquī ) has no genitive singular, and in the plural occurs in the nominative and accusative only.
g. The enclitic particle -que added to the interrogative gives a universal
quisque every one
uterque each of two, or both .
Quisque is declined like the interrogative quis , quī
quisque , quidque (substantive)
quīque , quaeque , quodque (adjective)
In the compound ūnusquisque ( every single one ) both parts are declined (genitive unīuscûiusque ), and they are sometimes written separately and even separated by other words.
nē in ūnō quidem quōque not even in a single one ( Lael. 92 )
h. The relative and interrogative have rarely a possessive adjective cûius , -a , -um ( whose ; older quôius ) and a patrial cûiās ( cûiāt- ), of what country .
i. Quantus ( how great ) quālis ( of what sort ) are derivative adjectives from the interrogative. They are either interrogative or relative, corresponding respectively to the demonstratives tantus , tālis ( § 152 ). Indefinite compounds are quantuscumque and quāliscumque (see § 151. a , above).
To provide readers of Greek and Latin with high interest texts equipped with media, vocabulary, and grammatical, historical, and stylistic notes.
Dickinson College Commentaries Department of Classical Studies Dickinson College Carlisle, PA 17013 USA dickinsoncommentaries@gmail.com (717) 245-1493 
quod templum vidēs
what temple do you see?
quis any one   quid anything


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