Page:Latin for beginners (1911).djvu/206

1 82 THE DATIVE WITH COMPOUNDS I.each sentence there is a dative, and in each a verb combined with a preposition. In no case would the simple verb take the dative.

426. Dative with Compounds. ''Some verbs compounded with ad, ante, con, dē, in, inter, ob, post, prae, prō, sub, super, admit the dative of the indirect object. Transitive compounds may take both an accusative and a dative.''

Among such verbs are

427.

428.

I.
 * 1) Fer, ferent, ut ferant, ferunt.
 * 2) Ferte, ut ferrent, tulisse, tulerant.
 * 3) Tulimus, ferēns, lātus esse, ferre.
 * 4) Cum nāvigia insulae adpropinquārent, barbarī terrōre commōtī pedem referre cōnātī sunt.
 * 5) Gallī molestē ferēbant Rōmānōs agrōs vastāre.
 * 6) Caesar sociīs imperāvit nē fīnitimis suīs bellum īnferrent.
 * 7) Explorātōrēs, qui Caesarī occurrērunt, dīxērunt exercitum hostium vulneribus dēfessum sēsē in alium locum contulisse.
 * 8) Hostes sciēbant Rōmānōs frūmentō egēre et hanc rem Caesarī summum perīculum adlātūram esse.
 * 9) Impedīmentīs in ūnum locum conlātis, aliquī mīlitum flūmen quod nōn longē