Examples from the authors showing:
[ii] quandō│when > aliquandō: sometime(s); at sometime; now and then
[iii] quot│ how much / many > aliquot: a few; some; several
[iv] quotiē(n)s │ how many times > aliquotiē(n)s: several times
[v] quantus, -a, -um │ how much / many / great
aliquantus, -a, -um: somewhat; considerable (amount)
aliquantum (adverb): to some extent
aliquantō (adverb): somewhat; a little; with the comparative: aliquantō longior │ a little longer
[vi] ubi│ where > alicubi: somewhere
[vii] unde│ from where > alicunde: from somewhere; from any place
revīse nōs* aliquandō │ come and see me again sometime
*a reminder: Cicero’s habit of using ‘we’ and ‘us’ when referring to himself
accēpī aliquot epistulās tuās (Cicero)│ I’ve received several letters of yours
id aliquotiēns in diē cotīdiē facitō (Cato) │ do this daily several times a day
Labōriōsa, adulēscēns, vīta est rūstica. / Urbāna egestās edepol aliquantō magis. (Plautus)│ It’s arduous, young man, the country life. / My goodness! The city poverty [ = living on nothing in a city] is rather more so.
subrūfus aliquantum, crīspus, cincinnātus (Plautus) │ hair a little reddish, waving, and curled
nam alicubi abstrūdam forīs (Plautus) │ for I’ll conceal it somewhere outside
ego in hōc trīduō aut terrā aut marī alicunde ēvolvam id argentum tibi (Plautus) │ Within the next three days, from land or sea or (from) somewhere, I'll raise this money for you.






