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Latin Grammar nōnne īdem, eadem, idem nēmo (Grammar 3C, pp. 173-74)

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Presentation on theme: "Latin Grammar nōnne īdem, eadem, idem nēmo (Grammar 3C, pp. 173-74)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Latin Grammar nōnne īdem, eadem, idem nēmo (Grammar 3C, pp. 173-74)

2 nōnne

3  Languages typically have ways to indicate that a yes or a no answer is expected when a question is asked.  These questions in English expect a yes answer: Don’t you like pizza? You like pizza, don’t you? tag question

4 nōnne  In Latin, nōnne is put at the beginning of a sentence that expects a yes answer nōnne mē amās? Don’t you love me? Surely you love me? You love me, don’t you?

5 tag questions…  Yes—No—Yes You love me, don’t you? Yes, I do. Yes No Yes

6 tag questions…  Yes—No—Yes You will come, won’t you? Yes, I will. Yes No Yes

7 nōnne nōnne Bacchidem uīdistī? You saw Bacchis, didn’t you? (Yes, I did) Yes No

8 īdem, eadem, idem

9 īdem, eādem, idem  The latin word for the same is īdem, eadem, idem.  In English, we think of the word same as an adjective.  In Latin, it is treated as a demonstrative, and is a fifth Latin demonstrative. 1. hic, haec, hoc 2. iste, ista, istud 3. ille, illa, illud 4. is, ea, id 5. īdem, eadem, idem

10 īdem, eadem, idem  It’s easy to form.  Unfortunately, the nominative singular just has to be memorized: īdem, eadem, idem  The remaining forms are just the forms of is, ea, id, with the suffix –dem added.  There’s just one problem…

11 īdem, eadem, idem  Romans didn’t like the combination –md-  So, wherever you would wind up with –md- from adding -dem to is, ea, id, the –md- changes to –nd-. eum + dem = eundem eam + dem = eandem eōrum + dem = eōrundem eārum + dem = eārundem

12 īdem, eadem, idem singularplural īdemeademidemeīdemeaedemeadem eundemeandemidemeōsdem eadem eiusdem eōrundemeārundemeōrundem eīdem eīsdem eōdemeādemeōdemeīsdem

13 nēmo

14 nēmo = no one, nobody  How do you say no one in Latin?  The easiest thing to do is to use nūllus, -a, -um nullus = no one

15 nēmo  But the Romans actually preferred to use the word nēmo. nē + homo = nēmo

16 nēmo  nēmō exists only in the singular, but it declines just like the regular third-declension consonant-stem homo, hominis, m. & f. homonēmo hominemnēminem hominisnēminis hominīnēminī hominenēmine

17 nēmo  In the genitive and ablative, Latin tends to use forms of nūllus, -a, -um instead of nēmo. nēmo nēminem nullīus (nēminis) nēminī nūllō (nēmine)


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