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ablative absolute การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The usage of present, passive or future participles determines the verbal idea in the ablative absolute.
  • The ablative absolute indicates the time, condition, or attending circumstances of an action being described in the main sentence.
  • In Latin grammar, the ablative absolute ( Latin : ablativus absolutus ) is a noun phrase cast in the ablative case.
  • Somehow an ablative absolute seems to be called for :'nullo equo mortuo inflagellato'perhaps ?-- talk ) 22 : 12, 7 February 2009 ( UTC)
  • The participle is used this way ablative absolutes as well, for example " hoc dicto " ( " this having been said " ).
  • :: : : : : : The Latin construction being the ablative absolute, its use here with " so and when " would be incorrect.
  • Examples are the ablative absolute, the accusative-plus-infinitive construction used for reported speech, gerundive constructions, and the common use of reduced relative clauses expressed through participles.
  • If I had taken Latin, I'd be able to explain the closely related ablative absolute . ) Lawler goes on to the essential meaning of that said : " It announces a change of subject, often despite whatever was just said ."
  • The club motto, suggested by Prof . Morris H . Morgan ( class of 1881 ) and adopted Feb . 1902, reads DURATURIS HAUD DURIS VINCULIS, an ablative absolute construction translated as " Bonds should be lasting, not chafing or hard ."
  • As a rule, these clauses affecting validity may be recognized by the conditional conjunction or adverb of exclusion with which they begin ( e . g . dummodo, " provided that "; et non aliter, " not otherwise " ), or by an ablative absolute.
  • Both words are participles of the Latin verb " } } " ( " to move; to change; to exchange " ) . " " is its ablative absolute, using the ablative case to show that the clause is a necessary condition for the rest of the sentence.
  • :Either " both of these charges carry " ( since it is a current fact of law that they do carry this penalty ) or " with both of these charges carrying " which is an ablative absolute construction are fine . even the past tense is okay, but it has a strange emphasis.
  • The first line of the bull reads " Audita tremendi severitate judicii, quod super terram Jerusalem divina manus exercuit . . . ", in English " On hearing with what severe and terrible judgement the land of Jerusalem has been smitten by the divine hand . . . " ( the phrase " audita severitate " is a Latin grammatical construction known as ablative absolute ).