híc, this | SINGULAR | ||||||
M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | N. | ||
NOM. | híc | haec | hóc | hí | hae | haec | |
GEN. | huius | huius | huius | hórum | hárum | hórum | |
DAT. | huic | huic | huic | hís | hís | hís | |
ACC. | hunc | hanc | hóc | hós | hás | haec | |
ABL. | hóc | hác | hóc | hís | hís | hís |
NOTE 1: Híc is a compound of the stem ho- with the demonstrative enclitic -c[QUERY] In most of the cases final e is dropped, in some the whole termination. But in these latter it is sometimes retained for emphasis: as, huius-ce, hís-ce. In early Latin -c alon[QUERY] is retained in some of these (hórunc). The vowel in híc, hóc, was originally short, an perhaps this quantity was always retained. Ille and iste are sometimes found with the same enclitic: illic, illaec, illuc; also illoc. See a, p. 67.
NOTE 2: For the dative and ablative plural of híc the old form híbus is sometime found; haec occurs (rarely) for hae.
is, that | SINGULAR | ||||||
M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | N. | ||
NOM. | is | ea | id | eí, ií (í) | eae | ea | |
GEN. | eius | eius | eius | eórum | eárum | eórum | |
DAT. | eí | eí | eí | eís, iís (ís) | eís, iís (ís) | eís, iís (ís) | |
ACC. | eum | eam | id | eós | eás | ea | |
ABL. | eó | eá | eó | eís, iís (ís) | eís, iís (ís) | eís, iís (ís) |
NOTE 3: Obsolete forms are eae (dat. fem.), and eábus or íbus (dat. plur.). F[QUERY] dative eí are found also eí and ei (monosyllabic); ei, eos, etc., also occur in the plural.
ille, that | SINGULAR | ||||||
M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | N. | ||
NOM. | ille | illa | illud | illí | illae | illa | |
GEN. | illíus | illíus | illíus | illórum | illárum | illórum | |
DAT. | illí | illí | illí | illís | illís | illís | |
ACC. | illum | illam | illud | illós | illás | illa | |
ABL. | illó | illá | illó | illís | illís | illís |
Iste, ista, istud, that (yonder), is declined like ille.
NOTE 4: Ille replaces an earlier ollus (olle), of which several forms occur.
NOTE 5: Iste is sometimes found in early writers in the form ste etc. The fi[QUERY] syllable of ille and ipse is very often used as short in early poetry.
NOTE 6: The forms illí, istí (gen.), and illae, istae (dat.), are sometimes foun[QUERY] also the nominative plural istaece, illaece (for istae, illae). See a , p. 67.
ipse, self | SINGULAR | ||||||
M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | N. | ||
NOM. | ipse | ipsa | ipsum | ipsí | ipsae | ipsa | |
GEN. | ipsíus | ipsíus | ipsíus | ipsórum | ipsárum | ipsórum | |
DAT. | ipsí | ipsí | ipsí | ipsís | ipsís | ipsís | |
ACC. | ipsum | ipsam | ipsum | ipsós | ipsás | ipsa | |
ABL. | ipsó | ipsá | ipsó | ipsís | ipsís | ipsís |
NOTE 7: Ipse is compounded of is and -pse (a pronominal particle of uncertain origin: cf. § 145. a), meaning self. The former part was originally declined, as in reápse (for ré eápse), in fact. An old form ipsus occurs, with superlative ipsissimus, own self, used for comic effect.
NOTE 8: The intensive -pse is found in the forms eapse (nominative), eumpse, eampse, eópse, eápse (ablative).
ídem, the same | SINGULAR | ||||||
M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | N. | ||
NOM. | ídem | eadem | idem | ídem (eí) | eaedem | eadem | |
GEN. | eiusdem | eiusdem | eiusdem | eórundem | eárundem | eórundem | |
DAT. | eídem | eídem | eídem | eísdem or ísdem | ACC. | ||
ABL. | eódem | eádem | eódem | eísdem or ísdem |
NOTE 9: ídem is the demonstrative is with the indeclinable suffix -dem. The masculine ídem is for isdem; the neuter idem, however, is not for iddem, but is a relic of an older formation. A final m of is is changed to n before d: as, eundem for eumdem, etc. The plural forms ídem, ísdem, are often written iídem, iísdem.
a. Ille and iste appear in combination with the demonstrative particle -c, shortened from -ce, in the following forms: -
SINGULAR | M. | F. | N. | M. | F. | ||
NOM. | illic | illaec | illuc (illoc) | istic | istaec | istuc (istoc) | |
ACC. | illunc | illanc | illuc (illoc) | istunc | istanc | istuc (istoc) | |
ABL. | illóc | illác | illóc | istóc | istác | istóc |
PLURAL | N., ACC. | - - | - - | illaec | - - | - - |
NOTE 1: The appended -ce is also found with pronouns in numerous combinations: as, huiusce, hunce, hórunce, hárunce, hósce, hísce (cf. § 146. N. 1), illíusce, ísce; also with the interrogative -ne, in hócine, hóscine, istucine, illicine, etc.
NOTE 2: By composition with ecce or em, behold ! are formed eccum (for ecce eum), eccam, eccós, eccás; eccillum (for ecce illum); ellum (for em illum), ellam, ellós, ellás; eccistam. These forms are dramatic and colloquial.
b. The combinations huiusmodí (huiuscemodí), eiusmodí, etc., are used as indeclinable adjectives, equivalent to tális, such: as, rés eiusmodí, such a thing (a thing of that sort: cf. § 345. a).
For uses of the Demonstrative Pronouns, see §§ 296 ff.