4. tempore, [§ 501. 35].
5. quīnta hōra. The Romans numbered the hours of the day consecutively from sunrise to sunset, dividing the day, whether long or short, into twelve equal parts.
6. famē shows a slight irregularity in that the abl. ending -e is long.
7. sitis, thirst, has -im in the acc. sing., -ī in the abl. sing., and no plural.
8. Observe that the reflexive pronoun sibi does not here refer to the subject of the subordinate clause in which it stands, but to the subject of the main clause. This so-called indirect use of the reflexive is often found in object clauses of purpose.
9. What case? Cf. [§ 501. 14].
10. sē, cf. p. 205, l. 7, and [note].
11. Pompēiīs, [§ 501. 36. 1].
12. nihil ... veritī sunt, had no fears of the mountain.
13. in, for.