What case is Quem in Latin?
This grid on Wiktionary gives quem for the singular feminine accusative of the relative pronoun quis. According to books by Kennedy, Gwynne and Henry Cullen this should be quam.
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What is Qui QUAE quod?
The Relative Pronoun qui, quae, quod is the equivalent of the English who/which/that. It is used to join two complete sentences that share a common noun (or pronoun) so that the noun doesn’t have to be repeated.
How do you pronounce QUAE in Latin?
Thanks to all. Fortunately for the English learner of Latin (but less fortunately for the French, Spanish, etc), “qu” is pronounced exactly as it is in the English word “quick” (i.e., as “kw”). (the “o” in quoque is more the “o” in for without the “r” sound. But I wouldn’t worry about details like that at this point.)
What is a Valde?
valdē (comparative valdius, superlative valdissimē) very, very much, exceedingly quotations ▼ strongly, vigorously, intensely.
What Wiktionary is not?
Wiktionary is not an encyclopedia, a genealogy database, or an atlas; that is, it is not an in-depth collection of factual information, or of data about places and people. Encyclopedic information should be placed in our sister project, Wikipedia. Wiktionary entries are about words.
What is the case of Quis?
The Substantive Interrogative Pronoun quis (who?) quid (what?) is declined in the Singular as follows. The Plural is the same as that of the Relative quī, quae, quae….Relative, Interrogative and Indefinite Pronouns.
| SUBSTANTIVE | quis any one quid anything |
|---|---|
| ADJECTIVE | quī, qua (quae), quod any |