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Questions tagged [metamorphoses]

8 votes
1 answer
400 views

I am trying to verify a statement about Ovid's Metamorphoses made in the Wikipedia page on the subject. The claim is that it contains 11,995 verses. The following questions arise: Can I define the ...
David's user avatar
  • 183
4 votes
1 answer
247 views

I am scanning Ovid's metamorphoses. For the line "unus erat toto naturae vultus in orbe," I have - - | - - | - - | - ' ' | - ' ' | - x. There doesn't seem to be an obvious position for the ...
Sura's user avatar
  • 41
7 votes
2 answers
548 views

Ovid's Metamorphoses 7.66, here I marked my attempt: nempĕ tĕ/nens, quŏd ă/mo, grĕmĭ/oqu(e) in/ Iasŏnĭ/s haerens That makes the 3 first feet dactyls and the fourth one a spondee, but the ...
d_e's user avatar
  • 12.6k
4 votes
1 answer
266 views

What punctuation was used in Classical Latin? was very insightful, but it doesn't go into specifics. Wikipedia says we don't have any original sources of Ovid's Metamorphoses until the 9th or 10th ...
Lance Pollard's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
278 views

Lines 154–157: "hoc tamen amborum verbis estote rogati, o multum miseri meus illusque parentes, ut, quos certus amor, quos hora novissima iunxit, conponi tumulo non invideatis eodem" So, ...
tony's user avatar
  • 10.1k
5 votes
1 answer
1k views

Is there an edition of Ovid's Metamorphoses in Latin that comes with auxiliary features to make it an easier read? I want to read it in Latin, but to make it more pleasurable, I would like support ...
Joonas Ilmavirta's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
515 views

I was looking at the origin of the English word "competition" and it seems to come from the Latin competitio. Yet, this word comes from the Latin competere, which is the present infinitive of ...
luchonacho's user avatar
  • 12.7k
9 votes
2 answers
617 views

I came across a passage that is quite difficult to understand. Unlike most passages that I ask about, it is hard for me to make an attempt. nondum caesa suis, peregrinum ut viseret orbem, montibus ...
ktm5124's user avatar
  • 12.2k
9 votes
2 answers
1k views

I was translating this verse, and although I came up with several candidates for translating vindice, I am still not sure about the intended meaning. Aurea prima sata est aetas, quae vindice nullo, ...
ktm5124's user avatar
  • 12.2k
6 votes
1 answer
1k views

The first clause of the Metamorphoses goes, In nova fert animus mutatas dicere formas / corpora; My mind inclines me to speak of bodies changed into new forms. As an English speaker, this seems ...
ktm5124's user avatar
  • 12.2k
9 votes
2 answers
4k views

In this passage from the Metamorphoses, Juno just descended from heaven onto earth to spy the whereabouts of her husband. Jupiter, having foreseen his wife's arrival, changes Io into a heifer. ...
ktm5124's user avatar
  • 12.2k
6 votes
2 answers
387 views

In this short passage by Ovid, the pronoun "quam" seems to be used as a third person pronoun. Inachus unus abest imoque reconditus antro fletibus auget aquas natamque miserrimus Io luget ut ...
ktm5124's user avatar
  • 12.2k
6 votes
1 answer
130 views

I wonder is 'rigido rostro' here in dative or ablative? Under "Dative and verbs compounded with prepositions" (Gildersleeve & Lodge) it is said, that " Many verbs compounded with the prepositions ...
Aili J.'s user avatar
  • 1,179
10 votes
1 answer
286 views

There is a line in Ovid's Metamorphoses II 519, which I don't understand at all (Juno's complaint) 'quaeritis, aetheriis quare regina deorum sedibus huc adsim? pro me tenet altera caelum! ...
Aili J.'s user avatar
  • 1,179
6 votes
1 answer
181 views

Here is a line in Ovid which I find confusing: quo postquam subiit, nympharum tradidit uni armigerae iaculum pharetramque arcusque retentos, altera depositae subiecit bracchia pallae, vincla ...
Aili J.'s user avatar
  • 1,179

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