Heavy Construction
The Allen and Greenough is still under construction;
so some links may not work quite the way you would expect.
 
 
 
 
The Locative Case.
 
80.
 The Locative form for nouns of the third
declension end in the singular in -í or -e, in the plural in -ibus: as, rúrí, in the country;
Cartháginí or Carthágine, at Carthage; Trallibus, at Tralles.[1][The
Indo-European locative singular ended in -í, which became -e in Latin.  Thus the Latin ablative in
-é is, historically considered,
a locative.  The Latin ablative -í (from -íd) was an analogical formation (cf.  -á from -ád, -ó from -ód), properly belonging to i-stems.  With names of towns and a few other
words, a locative function was ascribed to forms in -í (as, Cartháginí), partly on the
analogy of the real locative o-stems
(as, Corinthí, § 49.  a); but forms in -e also
survived in this use.  The plural -bus
is properly dative or ablative, but in forms like Trallibus it has a locative function.  Cf. 
Philippís (§ 49.  a), in which the ending -ís is, historically considered, either
locative, or instrumental, or both, and Athénís (§ 43.  c),
in which the ending is formed on the analogy of o-stems.] 
 
 
 
