Nm 18:32 Et non peccabitis super hoc, egregia vobis et pinguia reservantes ne polluatis oblationes filiorum Israel, et moriamini.
And you shall not sin concerning this, reserving for yourselves the excellent and the fat things, lest you pollute the oblations of the sons of Israel, and die.’”
| # | Latin | Gloss | Grammar Tag |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Et | and | CONJ |
| 2 | non | not | ADV |
| 3 | peccabitis | you will sin | 2PL.FUT.ACT.IND |
| 4 | super | concerning | PREP+ACC |
| 5 | hoc | this | ACC.SG.N.DEM.PRON |
| 6 | egregia | excellent things | ACC.PL.N.ADJ.POS |
| 7 | vobis | for yourselves | DAT.PL.PERS.PRON |
| 8 | et | and | CONJ |
| 9 | pinguia | fat things | ACC.PL.N.ADJ.POS |
| 10 | reservantes | reserving | NOM.PL.M.PRES.ACT.PTCP |
| 11 | ne | lest | CONJ |
| 12 | polluatis | you pollute | 2PL.PRES.ACT.SUBJ |
| 13 | oblationes | oblations | ACC.PL.F.NOUN.3RD DECL |
| 14 | filiorum | of the sons | GEN.PL.M.NOUN.2ND DECL |
| 15 | Israel | of Israel | GEN.SG.M.INDECL.NOUN |
| 16 | et | and | CONJ |
| 17 | moriamini | you die | 2PL.PRES.DEP.SUBJ |
Syntax
Main Clause: The implied Subject is “you,” referring to those being addressed; peccabitis is the future indicative verb, negated by non.
Prepositional Phrase: super hoc functions as the matter or occasion concerning which sin would be committed.
Participial Phrase: egregia vobis et pinguia reservantes describes the manner or condition of the implied subject: “reserving for yourselves the excellent and the fat things.”
Purpose or Negative Result Clause: ne polluatis oblationes filiorum Israel expresses what must be avoided: polluting the sacred offerings belonging to the sons of Israel.
Coordinated Result: et moriamini is joined to the ne clause, expressing the grave consequence to be avoided: death following sacrilege.
Morphology
- Et — Lemma: et; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: coordinating conjunction; Function: connects this command to the preceding instruction; Translation: “and”; Notes: Here Et continues the legal exhortation and may carry the force of “then” in context.
- non — Lemma: non; Part of Speech: adverb; Form: negative adverb; Function: negates the finite verb peccabitis; Translation: “not”; Notes: The negation makes the statement a prohibition-like assurance tied to obedience.
- peccabitis — Lemma: pecco; Part of Speech: verb; Form: second person plural future active indicative; Function: main verbal predicate; Translation: “you shall sin”; Notes: The future tense has practical force: if the command is followed, guilt will not be incurred.
- super — Lemma: super; Part of Speech: preposition; Form: preposition governing the accusative; Function: introduces the matter concerned; Translation: “concerning”; Notes: With hoc, it indicates the issue over which guilt might arise.
- hoc — Lemma: hic; Part of Speech: demonstrative pronoun; Form: accusative singular neuter; Function: object of the preposition super; Translation: “this”; Notes: The pronoun points back to the regulation about setting apart the best portion.
- egregia — Lemma: egregius; Part of Speech: adjective used substantively; Form: accusative plural neuter positive degree; Function: direct object of reservantes; Translation: “excellent things”; Notes: The word denotes what is choice, outstanding, or selected from the rest.
- vobis — Lemma: vos; Part of Speech: personal pronoun; Form: dative plural second person; Function: dative of advantage with reservantes; Translation: “for yourselves”; Notes: The dative marks the beneficiaries of the reserved portions.
- et — Lemma: et; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: coordinating conjunction; Function: joins egregia and pinguia; Translation: “and”; Notes: It links two descriptions of superior portions.
- pinguia — Lemma: pinguis; Part of Speech: adjective used substantively; Form: accusative plural neuter positive degree; Function: direct object of reservantes; Translation: “fat things”; Notes: In sacrificial and agricultural language, “fat” suggests richness, abundance, and quality.
- reservantes — Lemma: reservo; Part of Speech: participle; Form: nominative plural masculine present active participle; Function: circumstantial participle describing the implied subject; Translation: “reserving”; Notes: The participle describes the action by which the addressees properly keep the allotted portion.
- ne — Lemma: ne; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: subordinating conjunction introducing a negative purpose clause; Function: introduces what is to be avoided; Translation: “lest”; Notes: It governs subjunctive verbs and gives the sentence a warning force.
- polluatis — Lemma: polluo; Part of Speech: verb; Form: second person plural present active subjunctive; Function: verb of the negative purpose clause; Translation: “you pollute”; Notes: The subjunctive follows ne and describes the sacrilege to be prevented.
- oblationes — Lemma: oblatio; Part of Speech: noun; Form: accusative plural feminine third declension; Function: direct object of polluatis; Translation: “oblations”; Notes: The term refers to offerings presented in sacred service.
- filiorum — Lemma: filius; Part of Speech: noun; Form: genitive plural masculine second declension; Function: possessive genitive modifying oblationes; Translation: “of the sons”; Notes: It identifies whose offerings are in view.
- Israel — Lemma: Israel; Part of Speech: proper noun; Form: genitive singular masculine indeclinable; Function: genitive complement to filiorum; Translation: “of Israel”; Notes: The indeclinable name completes the covenantal designation “sons of Israel.”
- et — Lemma: et; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: coordinating conjunction; Function: joins moriamini to the preceding negative purpose construction; Translation: “and”; Notes: It links pollution of the offerings with the severe consequence of death.
- moriamini — Lemma: morior; Part of Speech: deponent verb; Form: second person plural present deponent subjunctive; Function: coordinated verb in the negative purpose clause; Translation: “you die”; Notes: Though passive in form, morior is deponent and active in meaning.