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Latling: 12th International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics
Alma Mater Studiorum, Università di Bologna
Bologna, Italy
June 9–14, 2003


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  program:  Tuesday, June 10 | Wednesday, June 11 |  Thursday, June 12
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Wolfgang DE MELO, University of Oxford

Extra-paradigmatic subjunctives in early Latin

This paper discusses extra-paradigmatic subjunctives such as faxis, aduenas and duis from a synchronic and diachronic perspective.
The sigmatic subjunctives of the type faxim / faxis have beside them future indicatives like faxo / faxis. The origin of the forms is unclear - they may go back to desideratives or aorists. Except for the fossilized form faxo (= faciam), the indicative forms have the value of future perfects. Their subjunctive counterparts, on the other hand, are semantically close to present subjunctives, cf. (1):
    (1) "Ita di faxint" inquito. - Ita di faciant. (Plaut. Aul. 788f.)

This equivalence leads to a synchronic discrepancy between form and meaning: while the future perfect fecero is formed from the same stem as the perfect subjunctive fecerim, the future perfect faxis has beside it a present subjunctive faxis.
The types aduenas (cf. the Umbrian "aorist" stem in benust = ueneris) and duis go back to modal forms of root aorists. Synchronically, they have the value of present subjunctives, cf. the sequence of tenses in (2):
    (2) Hanc metuo male, ne mi ex insidiis uerba imprudenti duit. (Plaut. Aul. 61f.)

The forms are disproportionately frequent in prohibitions and ne-clauses, which is also true of the type faxis and may point to an aoristic rather than a desiderative origin for the latter category as well.



    References
  • Benveniste, E. 1922. Les futurs et subjonctifs sigmatiques du latin archaique. BSLP 23, 32-63.
  • Meiser, G. 1998. Historische Laut- und Formenlehre der lateinischen Sprache. Darmstadt.