Iulianus wrote:Shouldn't this be "deleri"? "To be destroyed" sounds like a passive infinitive to me.
Sounds like it to me too.

Thanks for the correction.
Chris Weimer wrote:cdm2003 wrote:The above--less common though nevertheless acceptable--construction (iubeo + indic.) is what Wheelock's expects at the moment.
What's the frequency.
I'm not sure of an exact ratio here, but my OLD lists the following Classical sites for using
iubeo with an infinitive:
Cicero, de Lege Agraria, 2.63: "Hac pecunia iubet agros emi quo deducamini." Caesar, de Bello Gallico, 7.47.1: "Consecutus id quod animo proposuerat, Caesar receptui cani iussit legionique decimae, quacum erat, continuo signa constituit." Also, the OLD states that the construction is also used by Pliny, Ovid, Seneca, Apuleius, Suetonius, and others.
The construction with
ut +
subj. is defined with more examples, so, without an electronic analysis of the entire Classical Latin corpus, it looks as if the frequency is perhaps 2:3, with the iussive subjunctive leading by a length.
Chris Weimer wrote:I didn't know the context. If he's talking about a Greek τυÏαννος, then I suppose that tyrannus would be acceptable, although, and I don't know how ancient it is, but OἰδίπoÏ…Ï‚ Ï„ÏÏαννoÏ‚ was translated into Oedipus Rex in Latin.
Also, to the point, Numa Pompilius was a Latin, not a Greek. If he were king, I believe, but I'll have to check on this, that he has the option to be called either rex or tyrannus. Do let me check.
I apologize if I had seemed (and seem) to be picking nits--I don't mean offense. The sentence is, unfortunately, one of many in Wheelock's and other textnooks where there is no context given outside of the sentence itself, usually surrounded by other sentences which have no connection to one another aside from the similar vocabulary.
I suppose when I read his sentence, I immediately thought of Turnus, and so
tyrannus did make more sense (in my mind). But, those are my own blinders. Numa, however, is referenced as a
rex by Livy and Ovid. Yet the Tarquins alone of the Roman Kings were frequently referred to as
tyranni by Augustine.
Best,
Chris