ADJECTIVES AS COMPLEMENTS. ADJECTIVES like Carus 'dear': that is, adjectives which denote qualities that operate on or affect objects, and which are therefore followed by nouns in the Dative, just like verbs. A. Vir est bonus. CHAPTER VI. The man is good. B. Puer carus est matri. EXAMPLES. The boy is dear to his mother. REMARKS. a. A sentence consists of the Subject-word and Predicate. The Subject-word names the subject: that is, the object about which the sentence is made. The Predicate is that which is 'predicated' or said about it. b. In this chapter the Predicate consists of the Copula and a Complement Adjective. An adjective is said to be a Complement when it is necessary to 'complete' the sense, as here. It is called an Epithet when it is added to a noun in a sentence which is complete without it: as, "The good man died.' c. The Complement Adjective, as well as the Epithet, agrees with its noun in gender, number, and case. d. The Copula is often omitted: as, Viri mortales, 'men are 呓 mortal.' Hortus est pulcher. 5 Puellæ erant formosæ. Nostra pericula erunt maxima. Rex multitudini gratus fuit. Ea res militibus fuit pergrata et jucunda. 10 Ea oratio plebi fuit acceptissima. Visam Britannos hospitibus feros. Cari mihi sunt liberi, carissima conjux. 15 Filius erat patri similis. Damnosus pecori fluvius currit, damnosior agris. Ea res est mihi facilis, tibi difficilis. 20 Auctumnus gravis est urbi agrisque. Hi tribuni sunt nobis amici. Equa Venus Teucris, Pallas iniqua fuit. 25 Raphani dentibus inimici sunt. Siculi Verri inimici infestique sunt. Hæc gens infestissima est nomini Romano. Hæ disciplinæ non sunt sibi consentaneæ. Mantua, væ miseræ nimium vicina Cremona. Iili facinori conscius es. 40 Cæteri filii superstites patri fuerunt. Notavi portus puppibus aptos. Huic colli ille mons adversus est et contrarius. Isti puellæ difficilis mane. 45 Ingratam Veneri pone superbiam. 50 Livius Ennio æqualis erat. Hic campus equis est aptus. Is dolor communis erat tribus fratribus. Hæc virtus fructuosa vobis, mihi periculosa est. 55 Tibi vilis vita erat mea. Pinnas pandunt dilectæ Thetidi alcyones. Filius patri discors erat. Illæ amicitiæ erant reipublicæ infelices. 60 Galli Romanis semper infensi fuerunt. Id iter populo Romano periculosum erit. 65 Fortuna nunc mihi, nunc tibi est benigna. Pater meus semper vixit convenienter naturæ. Vir ille præclarus sibi constanter dixit. CHAPTER VII. LAW OF THE GENITIVE CASE. GENITIVE after nouns naming the Active, Passive, and Partitive Possessor of an object. EXAMPLES. A. Pueri epistolam accepi. I have received the boy's letter. B. Cupido lucri pueros cepit. A desire of gain seized the boys. C. Pars exercitus agros vastabat. A part of the army was laying waste the fields. D. Utrumque nostrum tua nostri memoria delectat. Each of us two your recollection of us delights. REMARKS. a. The Primary idea denoted by the Genitive is Motion from. b. If an object is spoken of as possessing another object, its noun is in the Genitive' case (Law). c. An object may generally possess another object in one of these three ways: either Actively; as pueri epistola 'the boy's letter', 'the letter, that is, written by the boy': or Passively; as cupido lucri 'desire of gain', 'desire, that is, felt not by, but for, gain': or Partitively; as pars exercitus 'part of the army'. d. The Possessive adjectives meus, tuus, suus, noster and vester commonly denote the Active possessor: as mea epistola 'my letter'. The genitives mei, tui, sui, nostri and vestri are used to name the Passive possessor: as amor nostri 'love of us', or 'love felt for us': while the other plural forms nostrum and vestrum are used for the Partitive genitive: as uterque nostrum 'each of us two'. Cæsar epistolam Labieni accepit. Astrologi motus errantium stellarum notaverunt. 5 Populi Romani totiusque Italiæ mira consensio est. Germanos fuga Gallorum commovebat. Cæsaris imperia non diu sustinebimus. Percunctatio tribunorum vocesque Gallorum magnum 10 exercitui timorem injecere. Sermonem nostrum vester interventus diremit. Hostes militum nostrorum impetum non tulerunt. Jam Deorum spes humanaque consilia rem Romanam adjuvant. 15 Latini vim advenarum arcuerunt. Opes Etruscorum florebant. Amulius fratris sui filios interemit. 20 Voluntas patris pueros movebat. Consulis minæ patrem meum terruerunt. Nostra signa delubris Deorum affiximus. 25 Terentia magnos articulorum dolores habet. Rex ægritudinem animi dissimulavit. Crepitum armorum pæne audimus Vobis patria nostra vitam omnium civium commendat. 30 Turnus regi Latinorum bellum intulit. |