(not -cunque), quaecumque, quodcumque,
pron rel.,
whoever, whatever, whosoever, whatsoever, every one who, everything that, all
that
: quicumque is est, whosoever: quoscumque de te queri audivi, quācumque potui ratione placavi,
all I have heard complain I have satisfied in every possible way: petere fortunam, quaecumque accidat, what fortune soever,
Cs.—In tmesi: Cum quibus erat cumque, eis sese dedere, T.: quam se cumque in partem dedisset.—As subst n.,
whatever, however much: quodcumque diceret: quaecumque ille fecisset:
quodcumque est lucri, i. e. all the profit, Ph.: quodcunque hoc regni, all
this authority, V.—When the relat. introduces successive clauses, only qui is
repeated: quaecumque navis ex Asiā, quae ex Syriā, quae,
etc.—In abridged clauses, any whatever, every: quae sanari
poterunt, quācumque ratione sanabo (i. e. omni ratione,
quaecumque erit): qui quācumque de causā ad eos venerunt, Cs.:
quocumque modo, S.—Of quality, howsoever
constituted, of whatever kind: quaecumque mens illa fuit, Gabini
fuit.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.