Heavy Construction
The Allen and Greenough is still under construction;
so some links may not work quite the way you would expect.
 
 
 
 
571.
 A substantive clause of result may serve as
predicate nominative after mós
est and similar expressions: -  
-  
- est mós hominum, ut
nólint eundem plúribus róbus excellere
(Brut.  84), it is the way of men to be unwilling for one man to excel
in several things.  
a. A result clause, with or without
ut, frequently follows quam after a comparative (but see § 583.  c): -  
-  
- Canachí sígna
rigidióra sunt quam ut imitentur véritátem
 (Brut.  70), the statues of Canachus are too stiff to represent
nature (stiffer than that they should).  
- perpessus est omnia potius quam
indicáret  (Tusc.  ii.  52), he endured all rather
than betray, etc.  [Regularly without ut except in Livy.] 
b. The phrase tantum abest, it is so far [from being
the case], regularly takes two clauses of result with ut:  one is substantive, the subject of
abest; the other is adverbial,
correlative with tantum: -  
-  
- tantum abest ut nostra
mírémur, ut =usque e=o
difficil=es ac m=or=os=i s=imus, ut n=ob=is n=on satis faciat ipse D=emosthen=es (Or.  104),
so far from admiring my own works, I am difficult and captious to that
degree that not Demosthenes himself satisfies me.  [Here the first
ut-clause is the subject of abest (§ 569.  2); the second, a result
clause after tantum (§ 537); and
the third, after úsque
eó.] 
c. Rarely, a thought or an
idea is considered as a result, and is expressed by the subjunctive
with ut instead of the accusative and
infinitive (§ 580).  In this case a demonstrative usually precedes:
 
-  
- praeclárum illud est, ut
eós amémus  (Tusc.  iii.  73), this is a
noble thing, that we should love, etc.  
- vérí simile nón est
ut ille antepóneret  (Verr.  iv.  11), it
is not likely that he preferred.  
For Relative Clauses with quín after verbs of hindering
etc., see § 558. 
 
 
 
