7 Si quis vendiderit filiam suam in famulam, non egredietur sicut ancillæ exire consueverunt.
If anyone sells his daughter as a servant, she shall not go out as the maidservants used to go out.
| # | Latin | Gloss | Grammar Tag |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Si | if | CONJ INDECL |
| 2 | quis | anyone | NOM.SG.M INDEF.PRON |
| 3 | vendiderit | sells | 3SG.FUTP.ACT.SUBJ VERB |
| 4 | filiam | daughter | ACC.SG.F 1ST DECL NOUN |
| 5 | suam | his | ACC.SG.F POSS.ADJ |
| 6 | in | as | PREP+ACC PREP |
| 7 | famulam | a servant | ACC.SG.F 1ST DECL NOUN |
| 8 | non | not | ADV INDECL |
| 9 | egredietur | she shall go out | 3SG.FUT.DEP.IND VERB |
| 10 | sicut | as | CONJ INDECL |
| 11 | ancillæ | maidservants | NOM.PL.F 1ST DECL NOUN |
| 12 | exire | to go out | PRES.ACT.INF VERB |
| 13 | consueverunt | used to | 3PL.PERF.ACT.IND VERB |
Syntax
Conditional clause:
Si quis — subject phrase beginning a general legal condition (“if anyone”).
vendiderit — future perfect subjunctive in Latin, but expressing a general future condition; here rendered as simple English present “sells.”
filiam suam — direct object (“his daughter”), with reflexive possessive suam referring back to quis.
in famulam — predicate accusative expressing resulting status (“as a servant”).
Main clause:
non egredietur — deponent future indicative (“she shall not go out”).
Comparative clause:
sicut ancillæ — nominative plural subject (“as the maidservants”).
exire consueverunt — perfect indicative (“used to go out”), describing established customary release.
Morphology
- Si — Lemma: si; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: indeclinable; Function: introduces a conditional clause; Translation: if; Notes: a standard formula in legal stipulations.
- quis — Lemma: quis; Part of Speech: indefinite pronoun; Form: nominative singular masculine; Function: subject; Translation: anyone; Notes: establishes a general case applying universally.
- vendiderit — Lemma: vendo; Part of Speech: verb; Form: future perfect active subjunctive 3rd singular; Function: verb of the protasis; Translation: sells; Notes: Latin future perfect subjunctive in legal contexts often corresponds to English simple present in conditional laws.
- filiam — Lemma: filia; Part of Speech: noun; Form: accusative singular feminine 1st declension; Function: direct object; Translation: daughter; Notes: the person being sold.
- suam — Lemma: suus; Part of Speech: possessive adjective; Form: accusative singular feminine; Function: modifies filiam; Translation: his; Notes: reflexive to quis, indicating his own daughter.
- in — Lemma: in; Part of Speech: preposition; Form: governs accusative; Function: expresses change of status; Translation: as; Notes: predicate-accusative structure marking new role.
- famulam — Lemma: famula; Part of Speech: noun; Form: accusative singular feminine 1st declension; Function: predicate accusative; Translation: a servant; Notes: legal category distinct from a slave taken in war; indicates household servitude.
- non — Lemma: non; Part of Speech: adverb; Form: indeclinable; Function: negates verb; Translation: not; Notes: expresses legal prohibition.
- egredietur — Lemma: egredior; Part of Speech: deponent verb; Form: future indicative 3rd singular; Function: main verb of the apodosis; Translation: she shall go out; Notes: deponent but active in meaning; indicates exit from service.
- sicut — Lemma: sicut; Part of Speech: conjunction; Form: indeclinable; Function: introduces comparison; Translation: as; Notes: marks contrast between her case and customary releases.
- ancillæ — Lemma: ancilla; Part of Speech: noun; Form: nominative plural feminine 1st declension; Function: subject of consueverunt; Translation: maidservants; Notes: refers to ordinary female slaves who followed a historical pattern of release.
- exire — Lemma: exeo; Part of Speech: verb; Form: present active infinitive; Function: complementary infinitive with consueverunt; Translation: to go out; Notes: expresses the action customary for the maidservants.
- consueverunt — Lemma: consuesco; Part of Speech: verb; Form: perfect active indicative 3rd plural; Function: main verb of comparative clause; Translation: used to; Notes: perfect tense expressing established habitual action in past customary law.