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The Allen and Greenough is still under construction;
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289.
 Neuter Adjectives are used substantively in the
following special senses: -  
a. The neuter singular may denote
either a single object or an abstract quality: -  
- raptó vívere, to live by plunder. 
- in aridó, on dry
ground.  
- honestum, an honorable
act, or virtue (as a quality).  
- opus est mátúrátó, there is
need of haste.  [Cf.  impersonal passives, § 208. d.]
b. The neuter plural is used to signify
objects in general having the quality denoted, and hence may stand for the
abstract idea: -  
- honesta, honoroble deeds
(in general).  
- praeterita, the past (lit., bygones).  
- omnés fortia laudant,
all men praise bravery (brave things).
c. A neuter adjective may be used as an
appositive or predicate noun with a noun of different gender
(cf. § 287. a): -  
- tríste lupus stabulís (Ecl. iii. 80), the
wolf [is] a grievous thing for the fold. 
- varium et mútábile semper fémina (Aen. iv. 569), woman is
ever a changing and fickle thing. 
- malum mihi vidétur esse mors (Tusc. i. 9),
death seems to me to be an evil.
d. A neuter adjective may be used as an
attributive or a predicate adjective with an infinitive or a Substantive
clause: -  
- istuc ipsum nón esse (Tusc. i. 12), that very ``not
to be.'' 
- húmánum est errare, to err is human. 
- aliud est erráre Caesarem nólle, aliud
nólle miserérí (Lig. 16), it is one thing
to be unwilling that Caesar should err, another to be unwilling that he
should pity.
 
 
 
