24 July 2010

Consortes regno

This phrase occurs in the new Novus Collect for today, in honour of S Sharbel Makhluf. I see examples of consors with an ablative (or even a dative) in OLD, but my instinct is that these are abnormal in comparison with consors with a genitive (as in divinitatis eius esse consortes). Do those qualified to have a view, have a view?

2 comments:

  1. Well, there's no lack of genitive examples in L&S (II.A.a) -
    http://archimedes.fas.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/dict?word=consors&name=ls

    Also, concerning the meaning and derivation of "consors", Fr Zed has a short note, plus another genitive example - http://bit.ly/at5Kwi

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  2. divinitatis... Dear father, as you mention the phrase, what think you of the change from esse to fieri in that prayer? Was it mere grammatical tinkering, or is theology involved?

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