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The principles of Latin grammar; comprising the ... - Essan.org

The principles of Latin grammar; comprising the ... - Essan.org

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——§149 SYNTAX.—CONJUNCTIONS. 2897*22.— Obs. 1. <strong>The</strong> copulative conjunctions under this Rule are suchas et, ac, atque, etiam, que ; <strong>the</strong> disjunctives nee, neque, aut, vel, seu, slve,ve,neve, next; also qna?n, praeterquam, nisi, an, uempe, quamvis, necdum, sed yautem, verum, aud, in general, such connectives as do not imply a dependence<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> following, on <strong>the</strong> preceding clause.723.— Obs. 2. <strong>The</strong>se conjunctions connect not only words, but alsoclauses whose construction is <strong>the</strong> same, i. e. whose subjects are in <strong>the</strong> samecase, and <strong>the</strong>ir verbs in <strong>the</strong> same mood ; as, concldunt venti, fugiuntquenubss.724.Obs. 3. Words in <strong>the</strong> same construction are sometimes in a differentcase : still <strong>the</strong>y are connected by <strong>the</strong> copulative conjunctions ;thus,mea et reipubllcce interest. Here, mea and rripublica?, though in differentcases, are in <strong>the</strong> same construction by R. XVIII. (415). So, constitit asseet pluris, Rule XLIV. (581). Vir magni ingenii, summdque industrid,Rule VII. (339),

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