Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Latin Conjunctions and How to Use Them
Latin Conjunctions and How to Use Them In Latin and in English, conjunctions are words that join other words together. The very word conjunction means join together: con with  junct... (from iungo) join. The most common conjunctions in English are and, but, and or. And is used to join any two parts of a sentence together. But is an adversative, and contrasts parts of a sentence. Or may be referred to as a disjunction and means different things depending on whether it is being used informally or mathematically/logically. Latin Conjunctions Latin has comparable conjunctions, but it has more of them. The basic conjunctions in Latin are: et,-que,sed,at/ac,atquenec,neque,velaut. The Latin Conjunction And To translate the English and you would use the Latin et if you wanted the conjunction to be a separate and independent word, and -que if you wanted a conjunction that is added to the end of the second conjoined object. In the following, the bolded forms are the conjunctions. arma virumque canoarms and the man I singvsarma et virum canowhich doesnt fit the hexameter meter Vergil needed in the Aeneid, but means the same thing. There are other words for and like ac or atque. These can be used, like et ... et, in pairs as correlative conjunctions to mean both ... and. The Latin Conjunction But The Latin for but is sed or at vera dico, sed nequicquam....I speak the truth, but in vain.... The Latin Conjunction Or The Latin for the correlative conjunction either ... or is vel ... vel or aut ... aut. Aut or vel can also be used singly for or. the negative is nec ... nec or neque ... nequemeaning neither ... nor. Nec or Neque used singly means (and) not. Vel and autmay be described as disjunctions. An aside, the use of v to stand for or in symbolic logic comes from the Latin word vel. Coordinating Conjunctions A coordinating conjunction is one that pairs a set of equally ranked words, phrases, clauses, or sentences. ac - andat - butatque - and, and also, moreoveraut - oret - andnec non - and besidessed - butvel - or Pairs of Conjunctions (Correlative) Correlative conjunctions are terms that are pairs of equal objects: atque ... atque - both ... andaut ... aut - either ... oret ... et - both ... andnec ... et - not only ... but alsonec ... nec - neither ... nor Subordinating Conjunctions Subordinating conjunctions are words that compare an independent clause to a dependent clause: the dependent clause cannot stand on its own, but rather delimits the main part of a sentence. antequam - beforecum - when, whenever, since, becausedum - while, if only, so long as, untilsi - ifusque - untilut - while, as Sources Moreland, Floyd L., and Fleischer, Rita M. Latin: An Intensive Course. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977.Traupman, John C. The Bantam New College Latin English Dictionary. Third Edition. New York: Bantam Dell, 2007.
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