When an indefinite pronoun is found in a Latin conditional clause, it is quis in most cases, but in some cases it can also be aliquis or even quidam. This investigation tries to explain both the usual case represented by quis and the exceptional cases, represented by aliquis. Furthermore, negative conditional clauses present unexpected phenomena like the low number of occurrences of quis and the absence of quisquam in nisi clauses
This study is a summary of a qualitative and quantitative linguistic investigation of the Portuguese...
Latin grammars usually describe relative clauses as attributes of a head constituent. Independently ...
This article investigates the Latin conditional clause si placet ‘if (it) pleases (you)’, also cons...
When an indefinite pronoun is found in a Latin conditional clause, it is quis in most cases, but in ...
The confusion between the various indefinite pronouns (quis, quidam, aliquis, quisquam, and quisque ...
This chapter provides an analysis of the indefinite items quis, aliquis, quispiam, quidam, quisquam,...
This book investigates the syntactic and semantic development of a selection of indefinite pronouns ...
I investigate the interplay between sentential negation and indefinites in some Late Latin texts (si...
Bernard Colombat, « The treatment of Qui, qui(s), quod in the Latin grammatical tradition: some stag...
Most of the world's languages have indefinite pronouns, that is, expressions such as someone, anythi...
This paper offers an analysis of the relation between a proper noun and the use of an indefinite con...
The Latin Bible is the Latin document which uses the greatest number of indefinite pronouns. Some ad...
Croatian negative indefinite expressions, or the so-called ni-words, are complex forms made by addin...
Job Léon. Richard Horton-Smith. The Theory of Conditional Sentences in Greek and Latin. . In: Revue ...
This paper shows that the French indefinite pronouns (quelqu'un, quelque chose) are neither PPIs (Ba...
This study is a summary of a qualitative and quantitative linguistic investigation of the Portuguese...
Latin grammars usually describe relative clauses as attributes of a head constituent. Independently ...
This article investigates the Latin conditional clause si placet ‘if (it) pleases (you)’, also cons...
When an indefinite pronoun is found in a Latin conditional clause, it is quis in most cases, but in ...
The confusion between the various indefinite pronouns (quis, quidam, aliquis, quisquam, and quisque ...
This chapter provides an analysis of the indefinite items quis, aliquis, quispiam, quidam, quisquam,...
This book investigates the syntactic and semantic development of a selection of indefinite pronouns ...
I investigate the interplay between sentential negation and indefinites in some Late Latin texts (si...
Bernard Colombat, « The treatment of Qui, qui(s), quod in the Latin grammatical tradition: some stag...
Most of the world's languages have indefinite pronouns, that is, expressions such as someone, anythi...
This paper offers an analysis of the relation between a proper noun and the use of an indefinite con...
The Latin Bible is the Latin document which uses the greatest number of indefinite pronouns. Some ad...
Croatian negative indefinite expressions, or the so-called ni-words, are complex forms made by addin...
Job Léon. Richard Horton-Smith. The Theory of Conditional Sentences in Greek and Latin. . In: Revue ...
This paper shows that the French indefinite pronouns (quelqu'un, quelque chose) are neither PPIs (Ba...
This study is a summary of a qualitative and quantitative linguistic investigation of the Portuguese...
Latin grammars usually describe relative clauses as attributes of a head constituent. Independently ...
This article investigates the Latin conditional clause si placet ‘if (it) pleases (you)’, also cons...