An Essay On Analogy in Syntax : Illustrated Chiefly From the Classical Languages With An Appendix Containing the Instances of Syntactical Analogy Peculiar to Herodotus

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(6.) With hioTL, hi. 55, Tifiav Be ?Sa[ilov Brjfioaoa biro %ap.ia>v. So, also, iii. 156, iradelv Be ravra Bioti o-ufi,6ov\evaai, where the reading o-vfifiovXevo-ai is unnecessary.
(7) With e? o, ii. 102, tov eXeyov . . . KaTaaTpe^eaBai, e? o irXeovTa fiiv irpoaco aTTiKeaOai,, (8) With etas, iv. 42, eKirXeeiv ea>? . . . ai^iKveeaOai.
(9) With eo-Te, vii. 171, ecne . . . vvv vifieo-0cu, Of. also Hhodian Inscription (Cauer, 179), virep ov vvv Bia/cpiveo-Qcu.
.Cicero, de Fin. iii. 19, 64, Mundum au
...tem censent regi numine deorum, ex quo illud natura consequi.
It is to be noticed that this construction is not pre- Ciceronian, a fact which of itself would preclude any possi- bility of an Indo-European origin.
In Greek the indicative often appears in oratio obliqua 3 34 with on, &>?, etc., after a past tense, this being the original usage and the natural construction, and not due to attraction to the mood of the principal verb. The optative of oratio obliqua was a purely Greek development, due first, according to Brugmann, 1 to such sentences as Iliad, v.


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