quomodo

English

Etymology

From Latin quōmodo (In what way?).

Noun

quomodo (plural quomodos)

  1. (obsolete) The means, way, or method (of doing something).

Latin

Alternative forms

  • quō modō
  • cōmodo, cōmo (non-literary, epigraphy and manuscripts)
  • quōmo (non-literary, 4-5th c. CE manuscripts)
  • quōmodī, comdī, quāmodī, quīmodī (non-standard)

Etymology

Univerbation of quō (what, abl. sg.) + modō (manner, way, abl. sg.). CO-spellings first attested in 2nd c. BCE in Pompeii. /d/-less variants (through allegro-speech consonant elision or some kind of metanalysis) securely attested from mid-1st c. CE onwards. The length of the latter ones' final vowel is unattested and most likely varied. Forms in /-ī/ most likely formed by analogy to cuius-/eiusmodī.

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈkʷoː.mo.doː/, [ˈkʷoːmɔd̪oː] or IPA(key): /ˈkʷoː.mo.do/, [ˈkʷoːmɔd̪ɔ]
  • (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈkwo.mo.do/, [ˈkwɔːmod̪o]
  • Note: the final vowel scanning as long is common in tmesis, variable in scenic verse, once in hendecasyllables (Catullus 10.7).

Adverb

quōmodo (not comparable)

  1. (interrogative) in what manner or way?; how?
    1. (rhetorical) how is that possible (that)?
  2. in what condition or circumstances? how?
    Quōmodo tibi rēs sē habet?How's your business going along?
    1. Used in warnings, threats and exclamations.
      At scīn' quōmodo?You know what I'm gonna do?
      Sed quōmodo dissimulabat!But how he was faking it!
  3. (relative) in the same manner or way as; how, like
    1. (with the correlatives sīc or ita) in the manner in which, just as, just like
      • 1 cent. BC (curse tablet) CIL I2 1012 = CIL VI 140 = SIAtt-1, p. 82 = ILLRP 1144 = D 8749 = DefTab 139 = Kropp-01-04-04-03:
        Quōmodo mortuos, quī istīc sepultus est nec loquī nec sermōnāre potest, seic Rhodinē apud M(ārcum) Licinium Faustum mortua sit nec loquī nec sermōnāre possit
        Just like the dead man who's been buried here cannot speak nor talk [to anyone], so may Rhodine be dead for Marcus Licinius Faustus, nor be able to speak or talk [to him].
    2. (with subjunctive, introducing final clauses) by means of which, using which

Synonyms

Descendants

Note: all inherited from the d-less variant, with the exception of Friulian.

References

Further reading

  • quomodo”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • quomodo in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette
  • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
    • to detail the whole history of an affair: ordine narrare, quomodo res gesta sit
    • as the proverb says: ut or quod or quomodo aiunt, ut or quemadmodum dicitur
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.