Videos

Videos > Rule 52: The Ablative of Degree of Difference

Rule 52: The Ablative of Degree of Difference


There are two types of ablatives that you can find around comparisons, the ablative of comparison that means "than", and the ablative of degree of difference, a mouthful to say, in which the ablative modifies the comparison. It's very common to treat this ablative like an adverb, multō, meaning "much" (or literally, "by much"). This video explains the nuts and bolts behind this.

Views: 5,618

Likes: 194

Topics: 91 rules of grammar cases nouns

Published on May 18, 2020