Qui animo ægrotat, eum aera risum moventem ducere oportet.
He who is sick in mind should breathe the laughing gas.
Much learned controversy has been expended in endeavouring to determine whether this gas was the exhalation by which it is supposed that the ancient Pythonesses were affected.
| Rubet nasum: His nose is red. | Candet genas: His cheeks are pale. |
Some of these words are used also with the genitive case, as
Angitur animi juvenis iste, et mundum indignatur.
That young man is grieved in mind and disgusted with the world.
Such a man is called by the ladies an interesting young man.
Verbs Passive.
An ablative case of the doer (but with the preposition a or ab going before), and sometimes also a dative case, is added to verbs passive, as