Heavy Construction
The Allen and Greenough is still under construction;
so some links may not work quite the way you would expect.
 
 
 
 
329.
 The particle immo,
nay, is used to contradict some part of a preceding statement or
question, or its form; in the latter case, the same statement is often
repeated in a stronger form, so that immo
becomes nearly equivalent to yes (nay but, nay rather): -
 
- causa igitur non bona est?  immo
optima (Att. ix. 7. 4), is the cause then not a good one?  on
the contrary, the best.
a. Minus,
less (especially with si, if, quo, in order that), and minime, least, often have a negative force:
-  
- si minus possunt, if they
cannot. [For quo minus, see §558.
b.]
- audacissimus ego ex omnibus? 
minime (Rosc. Am. 2), am I the boldest of them all?  by no means
(not at all).
 
 
 
