All Questions
Tagged with classical-latin conjunction
12 questions
6
votes
1
answer
252
views
Two levels of 'and'
What I am looking for is best illustrate by an example, so please excuse the detour.
In Finnish there are two words for "and": "ja" and "sekä".
When used together, "...
3
votes
1
answer
624
views
Is "que" or "et" better for a “God and Family” tattoo?
Hi I’m planning to have a tattoo and I would like to have a translation in Latin of “God and Family”.
Which one is appropriate, "deo et familia" or "deo familiaque"?
4
votes
0
answers
328
views
Differences between et and atque [duplicate]
What are the differences between et and atque?
When should each be used?
My current understanding is that they both mean and, although atque implies a slightly closer relationship.
18
votes
1
answer
392
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Can "si etiam" have the same meaning as "etiam si"?
As is well known, "etiam si" is a Latin conjunction that means "even if." Are there any examples in Classical or Medieval Latin in which reversing the word order and saying "si etiam" preserves the ...
13
votes
1
answer
301
views
Can you place "et" inside a prepositional phrase?
I became curious about this question as I was translating a passage written by a textbook author. The passage begins,
Poeta Ovidius fabulam de dea Latona et de femina Niobe narrat. (Latin via Ovid)...
6
votes
1
answer
178
views
Is the coordinating conjunction necessary in a parallel series of terms?
I just finished translating line 6 of Bellum Gallicum, Book I Ch. I, and the absence of a coordinating conjunction at the end made me wonder.
Belgae ab extremis Galliae finibus oriuntur, pertinent ad ...
7
votes
1
answer
868
views
Fieri potest with final ut or explicative quod
Suppose I want to say:
It can happen that my horse dies.
I do not want to say "my horse can die", but I want to keep this structure where the thing that happens is in a subordinate clause.
...
8
votes
2
answers
3k
views
What is the difference between cum, quia and quod in a causal clause?
I asked yesterday about the difference between causal clauses and causal relative clauses, and I was surprised by a comment:
apparently there is a difference between causal cum clauses and causal quia ...
8
votes
2
answers
346
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Is the -que in quinque at all related to the conjunction -que?
I noticed that quinque ends in -que. I asked my teacher if this was sheer coincidence or so reason for it. He didn't know but he thought it was coincidental. I, however, think that they probably share ...
12
votes
1
answer
17k
views
Why does "ut" mean such different things when it has a subjunctive verb vs. an indicative one?
We all know that ut, when paired with a subjunctive, is translated as "in order to" (purpose), "to" (indirect command), and, with some words, "that" (result/fear). However, ut with an indicative ...
37
votes
2
answers
11k
views
What's the difference between vel, aut, -ve, et cetera?
So I see "vel", "aut", and "-ve" being used (mostly) interchangeably in the Latin I read. Is there any idiomatic difference, or can they be used interchangeably?
For ...
59
votes
5
answers
14k
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Are "-que" and "et" equivalent?
I was taught that one can use the '-que' suffix to string together multiple words, in a similar way to putting 'et' between them.
Are these two equivalent? Did one have a connotation in classical (...