Table 4. INFLECTION OF ADJECTIVES. — II. ADJECTIVES OF ONE TERMINATION (Consonant Stems). The ablative singular commonly ends in i. Many adjectives, as, Inops, have only i; some, as sospes, only e. Comparatives, and participles in ns, when used as participles, have usually e; so also have adjectives used as nouns, as inops, a poor man, inŏpe. Liquid stems, and a few mute stems, as dīves, inops, supplex, particeps, with those that have abl. sing. e, have gen. pl. um. Some adjectives, as inops, sospes, are found only in the masc. and fem., and may be called adjectives of Common Gender. Plus, more (N.), has gen. plūris; plur., nom. plures, plura; gen. plurium, etc.: complures, several, has sometimes neut. pl. compluria. All other comparatives are declined like altior.) Idem is the demonstrative is, ea, id, with the affix -dem, same; which is also added to the ablatives eō, to that place, and eā, by that way. Like aliquis are declined the indefinite pronouns quis, quis Quisque, every, and unusquisque are thus declined: : unaquæ'que unumquid'que (-quodque, -quicquid) uniuscujus'que unicui'que A. unumquemque unamquam'que unumquid'que A. unoquoque unaqua que unoquo'que Compounds of quis (qui), who, and uter, which of the two, are: quisque, quivis, uterque (utrăque utrumque), each quilibet, uterlibet, whichever you please quicumque, utercumque, whichever [undique,] utrimque (adv.), on all (or both) sides alteruter (-tra, -trum, gen. trius), one or the other Quisquam (pron.) and ullus (adj.), any; umquam, ever; usquam, anywhere, are used only in negative, interrogative, and conditional sentences; also after quam, than, or sine, without. The use of these indefinites is seen in the following lines: Quis, quispiam, any, esse dant Vel ponunt; non determinant: Aliquis, some one, denotat Quempiam, sed non nominat. Quivis, quilibet, any you please, Donaldson. With all relatives, the enclitic affix -cumque, -soever, may be used: as, qualiscumque, of what kind soever. |