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For questions about Publius Vergilius Maro and his work.
6
votes
George Duckworth's Vergilius?
Vergilius 4: 5-17. This is the fourth volume of the journal and was published in 1940.
It seems the article is not available online. Vergilius took a hiatus (or had a different name?) …
8
votes
Why is the subjunctive used in Vergil's Georgics, 3,250?
It's an indirect question following the interrogative ut, which takes the subjunctive:
Surely you see how...
For ut used in this way, see its Lewis & Short entry.
4
votes
How would I translate If I cannot bend the will of hell, I shall move heaven
Funny enough, all you have to do is transpose superos and Acheronta. Both are accusative (direct objects of their respective verbs), so no further changes are necessary.
You have myriad options for ch …
5
votes
How do we we scan 'nunc tantum sinus et statio mala fidèle carinis'
My Mynors OCT has fida here instead of fidele, with no textual variation noted in the apparatus. Lewis and Short also have this line cited under fidus. Where are you seeing fidele?
With fida, the line …
9
votes
Potentially Ambiguous Subject for a Verb in the Aeneid
English is unhelpful here, as "hide" can be transitive or intransitive. However, the verb lateo, latere is intransitive. It doesn't mean to hide something, but rather to lie hidden or to be hidden. It …
15
votes
Translating "Nocte volat caelī mediō"
As an adjective, indeed, medius, -a, -um does not take a genitive. However, there is a noun, the substantive medium, -i, which also means "middle" or "midst." Referring to a physical space, it's fairl …
8
votes
Accepted
Can a supine verb have arguments?
Looking at it, I don't think me is ablative; it's more likely an accusative as the subject of an indirect statement with credere. Discessu here is not a supine, but a fourth-declension noun, discessus …