- Horace's Satires:
Audire est operæ pretium,
procedere recte Qui mæchis non
vultis.—Hor. Sat. i. 2, 37. —Metuat doti deprensa—Ibid. Our
Dramatic Heritage:...
- him. The text
reads as such: "'Desilite', inquit, 'commilitiones, nisi
vultis aquilam hostibus prodere; ego
certe meum rei
publicae atque imperatori officium...
-
spellings volt and
voltis were used up
until the time of
Cicero for vult and
vultis.
These verbs are not used in the p****ive.
Other forms: Infinitive: velle...
-
potestis possunt ferō fers fert
ferimus fertis ferunt volō vīs vult
volumus vultis volunt eō īs it īmus ītis eunt
Infinitive to esse
posse ferre velle īre...
- (eō, īs, it, īmus, ītis, eunt) volō 'I want' (volō, vīs, vult, volumus,
vultis, volunt) sum 'I am' (sum, es, est, sumus, estis, sunt)
possum 'I am able'...
- in ****ure '****ure
perfect indicative' 'dēsilite', inquit, 'mīlitēs, nisī
vultis aquilam hostibus prōdere; egō certē meum reī pūblicae
atque imperātōrī officium...
- possible, such as the
imperative below: "dēsilite", inquit, "mīlitēs, nisi
vultis aquilam hostibus prōdere" (Caesar) '"jump down, soldiers," he said, "unless...
- church, when John
preached from the text: "Et
angelus testamenti, quem vos
vultis. Ecce venit" (Mal., iii, 1). In the
council he
exonerated the
absent cardinals...