IN the pensum A to LLPSI Cap XXXVIII Orberg has:
Aedes Iovis Capitolini mult_ magnifecentior est.....
The exercise is titled 'De casu ablativo' and the correct answer to 'mult_' is o....so it's
'Aedes Iovis Capitolini multo magnifecentior est.....'
This is one of those moments in Latin learning when I feel rather disheartened.....! I mean surely, to heaven, 'multo' is an adverb ('...much greater'...and not an ablative case of anything...!??
Is this really ablative??
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Re: Is this really ablative??
Salve pmda!
Don't be disheartened. The ablatives get easier as you progress, they become almost second nature. In this case it is the ablative of degree of difference.
I can recommend the Compendium of Latin Grammar compiled and edited by Andrew Csontos. It provides a good overview of the cases and their uses.
Vale,
Carolus Raeticus
Don't be disheartened. The ablatives get easier as you progress, they become almost second nature. In this case it is the ablative of degree of difference.
I can recommend the Compendium of Latin Grammar compiled and edited by Andrew Csontos. It provides a good overview of the cases and their uses.
Vale,
Carolus Raeticus
Sperate miseri, cavete felices.
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Re: Is this really ablative??
It's actually a good question, so don't fret. It is indeed an ablative of degree of difference (see: http://www.personal.kent.edu/~bkharvey/ ... seabld.htm, http://www.hhhh.org/perseant/libellus/a ... e.414.html, or this), but it's certainly confusing. Think of multo as it is literally translated as an ablative, hence modifying/intensifying magnifecentior: "... is more magnificent by 'far'/much".
Now that I'm thinking about it, though, the ablative of degree of difference might be quick to recognise, but I can't recollect a time I've seen an adverb used in its place, if that's at all possible. I'm trying to remember if such a case exists, and tentatively will propose a 'rule' that sounds odd even to my ears, only so that someone can tell me if I'm wrong: it might be - and I"ll be quickly corrected here if I'm wrong, which I suspect I may be - that adverbs cannot quantify adjectival comparisons. If someone can throw up a reference for that, either validating or tearing that hypothesis apart, please do!
Now that I'm thinking about it, though, the ablative of degree of difference might be quick to recognise, but I can't recollect a time I've seen an adverb used in its place, if that's at all possible. I'm trying to remember if such a case exists, and tentatively will propose a 'rule' that sounds odd even to my ears, only so that someone can tell me if I'm wrong: it might be - and I"ll be quickly corrected here if I'm wrong, which I suspect I may be - that adverbs cannot quantify adjectival comparisons. If someone can throw up a reference for that, either validating or tearing that hypothesis apart, please do!
mirantur quidem divinam speciem, sed ut simulacrum fabre politum mirantur omnes.
- Psyche et Cupido, Lucius Apuleius
- Psyche et Cupido, Lucius Apuleius
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Re: Is this really ablative??
Many thanks. What, though, is 'multo' in agreement with?
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Re: Is this really ablative??
As an ablative of extent/degree of difference, it merely modifies the meaning of the comparative. E.g. filius multo est altior quam pater - it agrees with neither son nor father, though if you use the ablative of comparison (filius multo est altior patre), patre would in the ablative too. Either way, even if it is morphologically the same as patre, I'm almost certain it stands on its own to adjust the meaning of 'altior'. Others could include pede (by a foot) or paulo (by a little), for instance; the only issue is confusing one of these for agreeing with the compared in the ablative, as I just said (i.e., thinking 'the son is taller than the much father', though understandably there's not much room for that either).pmda wrote:Many thanks. What, though, is 'multo' in agreement with?
mirantur quidem divinam speciem, sed ut simulacrum fabre politum mirantur omnes.
- Psyche et Cupido, Lucius Apuleius
- Psyche et Cupido, Lucius Apuleius
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Re: Is this really ablative??
Thanks Caecilius. Now that I think of it it can't, given that it's modifying an adjective, be an adverb as an adverb can only modify a verb. So it seems logical.
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Re: Is this really ablative??
Actually, adverbs can be used to modify adjectives and other adverbs as well as verbs. See Wheelock among others, concerning this.pmda wrote:Thanks Caecilius. Now that I think of it it can't, given that it's modifying an adjective, be an adverb as an adverb can only modify a verb. So it seems logical.
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Re: Is this really ablative??
thanks...i'll check this out..