The Latin Dual and Poetic Diction: Studies in Numbers and Figures
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Andrew J. Bell. The Latin Dual and Poetic Diction: Studies in Numbers and Figures
The Latin Dual and Poetic Diction: Studies in Numbers and Figures
Table of Contents
PREFACE
I. INTRODUCTORY
I. GEMINUSQUE POLLUX
II. DOMITUS POLLUCIS HABENIS
III. PILUMNUS AND PITUMNUS
IV. LIBERI
II. GREEK AND LATIN DUALS
V. THE NUMBERS IN GREEK AND LATIN, AND THEIR RELATIONS
VI. THE DUAL IN LATIN
VII. INFLEXIONS OF THE DUAL
VIII. INTER
IX. ALTER AND ALIUS
X. UTER—NEUTER—UTERQUE—NOSTER—POETASTER
XI. USE OF THE DUAL FOR THE PLURAL, AND OF THE PLURAL FOR THE DUAL
XII. USE OF THE SINGULAR FOR THE DUAL. AND OF THE DUAL FOR THE SINGULAR
XIII. USE OF THE SINGULAR FOR THE PLURAL
XIV. USE OF THE PLURAL FOR THE SINGULAR
XV. THE DUAL PRONOUNS σφώ, σφῶϊ, and σφωέ
XVI. THE SCHEMA PINDARICUM AND ALLIED CONSTRUCTIONS
XVII. THE SCHEMA ALCMANICUM, AND FURTHER SYNTAX OF THE DUAL
XVIII. NUMERALS, CARDINAL AND DISTRIBUTIVE
XIX. CONSTRUCTIO AD SENSUM
XX. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE IMPERATIVE IN LATIN
XXI. USE OF THE INFINITIVE FOR THE IMPERATIVE
XXII. AIT FUISSE NAVIUM CELERRIMUS
III. LATIN POETIC DICTION
XXIII. POETIC DICTION
XXIV. LONGE LATEQUE
XXV. SYNECDOCHE AND METONYMY
XXVI. TELLUS TERRA
XXVII. PROLEPSIS
XXVIII. PROXIMUS ARDET UCALEGON
XXIX. ILICET EXTEMPLO
XXX. TOLLO AND PUTO
XXXI. HENDIADYS
XXXII. THE ELLIPSIS WITH QUE
XXXIII. SYNCHYSIS OR DISTRIBUTION
XXXIV. PRIMUS QUISQUE—IAMDUDUM—NEQUIDQUAM
XXXV. THE AMPHIBOLE
XXXVI. ZEUGMA
XXXVII. HYPALLAGE
XXXVIII. OMISSION OF THE PREFIX
XXXIX. ANTALLAGE
XL. NISI AND DONEC
XLI. FIRST AND LAST
XLII. THE OXYMORON
XLIII. QUOD MINIME RERIS
XLIV. ALIA QUAEDAM
I
II
III
IV
APPENDIX A
APPENDIX B
APPENDIX C
APPENDIX D
INDEX OF PASSAGES EXPLAINED
GENERAL INDEX
Отрывок из книги
Andrew J. Bell
Published by Good Press, 2021
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Pilumnusque illi quartus pater (10. 619),
where the quartus puzzles Servius, who thinks of this Pilumnus as the avus of the Pilumnus mentioned in v.76. But it seems more likely that both Virgil’s avus and his quartus pater refer to the same Pilumnus, who is, strictly speaking, the tertius pater, according to the usual form of the legend. In:
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