Quis De Portugues

I definitely remember that one usually says: si quis veniret … and not: si aliquis veniret. But the recent question about quo quisque est sollertior and similar forms brought the following rule from

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When is quis used instead of aliquis? - Latin Language Stack Exchange

Quis is used as the interrogative pronoun for both masculine and feminine singular. You can use relatives as interrogative adjectives, but that doesn't seem to be what you're asking about.

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9 The interrogative pronouns quis and quī have me rather confused. I understand that quis is generally substantive, while quī is generally adjective. But Allen and Greenough (§148) indicate that quis is "very common as an adjective, especially with words denoting a person," and then they provide two examples: quis diēs fuit? what day was it?

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In British private schools children shout "Quis?" and the person to shout "Ego!" in reply first gets whatever was on offer. The Latin derivation is clear but I have two questions. First, when did ...

If I want to ask the question about the dog, whose name is Cerberus should I ask Quis est Cerberus? or Quid est Cerberus? Do we use quis or quae (according to gender) about animals or quid? Wha...

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In the Latin Vulgate, that text reads, "si Deus pro nobis quis contra nos". In order to change "us" to "me", we simply need to replace "nobis" with "me". Therefore: Si deus pro me

as far as I understand, quid is an interrogative pronoun but seemingly both quid (/quis) and quod (/quí) are relative pronouns. Do I understand that right? Why do I find so many examples of "q...

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