| FIRST PERSON |
|
NOM. | ego, I | nós, we |
GEN. | meí, of me | nostrum, nostrí, of us |
DAT. | mihi (mí), to me | nóbís, to us |
ACC. | mé, me | nós, us |
ABL. | mé, by me | nóbís, by us |
| SECOND PERSON |
NOM. |
GEN. | tuí, of thee or you | vestrum, vestri; vostrum (-trí) |
DAT. | tibi | vóbís |
ACC. | té | vós |
ABL. | té | vóbís |
a. The plural nós is often used for the singular ego; the plural vós is never so used for the singular tú.
NOTE: Old forms are genitive mís, tís; accusative and ablative méd, téd ([QUERY] § 43. N. 1).
b. The forms nostrum, vestrum, etc., are used partitively: -
NOTE: The forms of the genitive of the personal pronouns are really the genitive of the possessives: meí, tuí, suí, nostrí, vestrí, genitive singular neuter: nostrum, [QUERY]trum, genitive plural masculine or neuter. So in early and later Latin we find [QUERY] vestrárum, one of you (women).
c. The genitives meí, tuí, suí, nostri, vestrí, are chiefly used objective (§ 347): -
d. Emphatic forms of tú are túte and tútemet (tútimet). The [QUERY] cases of the personal pronouns, excepting the genitive plural, are ma[QUERY] emphatic by adding -met: as, egomet, vósmet.
NOTE: Early emphatic forms are mépte and tépte.
e. Reduplicated forms are found in the accusative and ablative singular: as, mémé, tété.
f. The preposition cum, with, is joined enclitically with the ablative: técum loquitur, he talks with you.