Heavy Construction
The Allen and Greenough is still under construction;
so some links may not work quite the way you would expect.
 
 
 
 
2.
 When the main clause of a quotation is merged in
the verb of saying, or some modifier of it: -  
-  
- sí quíd dé hís
rébus dícere vellet, fécí
potestátem  (Cat.  iii.  11), if he wished to say
anything about these matters, I gave him a chance.  
- tulit dé caede quae in Appiá
viá facta esset  (Mil.  15), he passed a law
concerning the murder which (in the language of the bill) took
place in the Appian Way.  
- nisi restituissent statuás,
vehementer minátur  (Verr.  ii.  162), he threatens them
violently unless they should restore the statues.  [Here the main
clause, ``that he will inflict punishment,'' is contained in minátur.] 
- iís auxilium suum pollicitus
sí ab Suébís premerentur  (B.  G.  iv.  19), he promised them his aid if they should be molested by the
Suevi.  [= pollicitus sé auxilium
látúrum, etc.] 
- prohibitió tollendí, nisi
pactus esset, vim adhibébat pactióní 
(Verr.  iii.  37), the forbidding to take away unless he came to terms
gave force to the bargain.  
 
 
 
