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Word Order | Questions | Answers | "There is" | Helping Words | "In" | "-que" | Numbers | Pronouns | Possessives | Adverbs | "Cum" | Interrogatives | Deponent verbs | Comparatives | "Quam"
Nolumus moti esse, non movebimur
Velut arbor sata propinqua aquae non movebimurlast revised Jan. 27, 2004
Pronouns
- Personal pronouns are used in Latin only for emphasis in the nominative case, since the subject of the verb is always inidicated by the declension.
- Third person pronouns can be used as demonstrative adjectives.
- In Latin, possession is generally shown using the possessive adjectives, rather than the genitive of the personal pronouns. Third person singular and plural genitives are sometimes used to indicate possession.
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