Grammar, Syntax, and Scansion in Prose Passages - AP Latin

Card 1 of 180

0
Didn't Know
Knew It
0
1 of 2019 left
Question

Erat Miseni classemque imperio praesens regebat. Nonum Kal. Septembres hora fere septima mater mea indicat ei apparere nubem inusitata et magnitudine et specie. Usus ille sole, mox frigida, gustaverat iacens studebatque; poscit soleas, ascendit locum ex quo maxime miraculum illud conspici poterat. Nubes — incertum procul intuentibus ex quo monte; Vesuvium fuisse postea cognitum est — oriebatur, cuius similitudinem et formam non alia magis arbor quam pinus expresserit. Nam longissimo velut trunco elata in altum quibusdam ramis diffundebatur, credo quia recenti spiritu evecta, dein senescente eo destituta aut etiam pondere suo victa in latitudinem vanescebat, candida interdum, interdum sordida et maculosa prout terram cineremve sustulerat. Magnum propiusque noscendum ut eruditissimo viro visum. Iubet liburnicam aptari; mihi si venire una vellem facit copiam; respondi studere me malle, et forte ipse quod scriberem dederat. Egrediebatur domo; accipit codicillos Rectinae Tasci imminenti periculo exterritae — nam villa eius subiacebat, nec ulla nisi navibus fuga -: ut se tanto discrimini eriperet orabat. Vertit ille consilium et quod studioso animo incohaverat obit maximo. Deducit quadriremes, ascendit ipse non Rectinae modo sed multis — erat enim frequens amoenitas orae — laturus auxilium. Properat illuc unde alii fugiunt, rectumque cursum recta gubernacula in periculum tenet adeo solutus metu, ut omnes illius mali motus omnes figuras ut deprenderat oculis dictaret enotaretque.

The use of "alia" in the underlined phrase is an example of                     .

Tap to reveal answer

Answer

The underlined phrase is an example of a comparative phrase, where a tree is being compared to others. The word order, however, is a bit strange. Typically, the object of the verb would be closer to the end of the phrase, but it actually begins the phrase here. At the very least, one would expect it to follow the word "quam," but it does not. This reversal or word order, especially when what should come last comes first, is called hysteron proteron.

(Passage adapted from Pliny the Younger's Letters to Tacitus Book 6, #16)

← Didn't Know|Knew It →