SEARCH
0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Prev | Current Page 301 | Next

Bennett, Charles E.

"New Latin Grammar"


B. THE PROTASIS. The protasis takes those tenses of the Subjunctive which
are required by the Sequence of Tenses.
Examples:--
DIRECT. INDIRECT.
s?« h??c cr?“dis, err??s, d?«c??, s?« h??c cr?“d??s, t?“ err??re;
d?«x?«, s?« h??c cr?“der?“s, t?“ err??re.
s?« h??c cr?“d?“s, err??bis, d?«c??, s?« h??c cr?“d??s, t?“ err??t?«rum
esse;
d?«x?«, s?« h??c cr?“der?“s, t?“ err??t?«rum
esse.
s?« h??c cr?“dideris, err??bis, d?«c??, s?« h??c cr?“der?«s, t?“ err??t?«rum
esse;
d?«x?«, s?« h??c cr?“didiss?“s, t?“ err??t?«rum
esse.
s?« h??c cr?“d?“b??s, err??vist?«, d?«c??, s?« h??c cr?“der?“s, t?“ err??visse;
d?«x?«, s?« h??c cr?“der?“s, t?“ err??visse.
a. Note that a Future Perfect Indicative of the Direct Discourse
regularly appears in the Indirect as a Perfect Subjunctive after a
principal tense, and as a Pluperfect Subjunctive after an historical
tense.
Conditional Sentences of the Second Type.
320. A. THE APODOSIS. The Present Subjunctive of the Direct Discourse
regularly becomes the Future Infinitive of the Indirect.


Pages:
289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313