scoutzuloo.blogg.se

Masculine accusative singular of aliquis
Masculine accusative singular of aliquis




(ambiguous) to employ one's time in.: tempus conferre ad aliquid.

masculine accusative singular of aliquis

  • (ambiguous) I have no time to do something: tempus mihi deest ad aliquid faciendum.
  • (ambiguous) to have time for a thing: tempus habere alicui rei.
  • (ambiguous) a crowd throngs around some one: multitudo circumfunditur alicui.
  • (ambiguous) to send to meet a person: obviam alicui aliquem mittere.
  • (ambiguous) to go to meet some one: obviam venire alicui.
  • (ambiguous) to meet any one: obviam ire alicui.
  • (ambiguous) make way for any one: (de via) decedere alicui.
  • one is able to see as far as.: prospectus est ad aliquid
  • some one is accused: aliquis reus fit (Fam.
  • some one feigns illness: aliquis simulat aegrum or se esse aegrum.
  • (ambiguous) somebody, something is never absent from my thoughts: aliquis, aliquid mihi curae or cordi est.
  • to love and make a bosom friend of a person: aliquem in sinu gestare (aliquis est in sinu alicuius) (Ter.
  • to cherish as the apple of one's eye: aliquis est mihi in oculis.
  • Carl Meißner Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book‎, London: Macmillan and Co.
  • aliquis in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
  • Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • *alicūnus ( see there for further descendants).
  • Ibero-Romance: ( via the accusative aliquem, with a stress shift ).
  • masculine accusative singular of aliquis

    † Turned conjunction with original meaning somewhat dissimulated Quis, quī, quīdam, aliquis, aliquī, quisque, quisquam, aliquisquam, quispiam, ūllus There is an old ablative singular form aliquī, found in Plautus.Indeclinable portion with a relative/ interrogative pronoun.ġIn Republican Latin or earlier, alternative spellings could be found for the following forms of quī/ quis and its compounds: the masculine nominative singular or plural quī (old spelling quei), the genitive singular cuius (old spelling quoius), the dative singular cui (old spelling quoi or quoiei), the dative/ablative plural quīs (old spelling queis). The feminine singular is rarely used as a pronoun, but is common as an adjective see aliquī.Either enclosed in this frame there lurk Achaeans, or this has been built as an engine of war against our walls, to spy into our homes and come down upon the city from above or some trickery lurks therein. Īnspectūra domōs ventūraque dēsuper urbī,Īut aliquis latet error equō nē crēdite, Teucrī. Aut hōc inclūsī lignō occultantur Achīvī,Īut haec in nostrōs fabricāta est māchina mūrōs,






    Masculine accusative singular of aliquis