![]() All suggestions will be manually verified. Its not possible to enter the url of a release group. ![]() You can make changes to the tracklist directly on MusicBrainz.Įnter the url below of the most international release on MusicBrainz. Click the button on the left to link a MusicBrainz release to this album (authorization required). But it doesn't work for Shelmerdine's sentence because, as far as I can tell, all these cited passages with an emphatic quidam are paired up, either with alius, or with another quidam: in none of them does 'quidam' stand on its own.All tracklists are provided by MusicBrainz, an open content music database. This is much closer to Shelmerdine's intended meaning, since she means 'to feed on a certain kind of food, as opposed to other kinds, will make you ill'. hamata, curvata quaedam' (Cicero) makes it pretty clear what's going on. But Strong Together Lyrics: Im so excited / Well surely make it to the top / With music that we make / Im so delighted / Cant wait to read youre loving. The OLD's first citation: esse corpuscula quaedam levia, alia aspera, rutunda alia, partim autem. Here the 'quidam' is emphatic, and necessary to the sense. I don't think Shelmerdine's 'vesci quodam cibo te aegrum faciet' fits under this heading: the 'certain' which she presumably has in mind is emphatic, and is necessary to understand the sentence.Īnd the OLD's meaning 1b: "in subdivisions, alternating with alius etc quidam. I think I can make a reasonable argument that all the OLD's citations in this section are like that, (apart from the Pliny 'quasdam proprietates quibusdam locis esse', which shouldn't be here, but should be under the next heading). You know the sort of thing: Pompeius tumulum quendam occupavit (Caesar), erat Romae Numida quidam nomine Massiva (Sallust). In this meaning 'quidam' is unemphatic, and indeed strictly unnecessary to make sense. Though the OLD doesn't put it this way, it seems its main function is to introduce us to something/someone that hasn't been mentioned before. This is the one we're most familiar with: and it's pretty much identical to our indefinite article 'a/some'. So we're left with OLD's meaning 1a: "a particular -, usually not specified". Maybe even it's just another version of softening of extreme statements? ![]() responsum excellentis cuiusdam est ingeni ac singularis (Cicero). In passing, I think I can discount the OLD's meaning number 2, "picking out an outstanding example of its kind" (could this be what Imber was thinking of?), since all the cited passages involve an adjective to make clear that it is amazing, marvellous, exceptional, unique: e.g. QUIDAM - Strong Together Progressive Rock 8.89K subscribers Subscribe 17 1.6K views 6 years ago Show more Show more Depicting Colours of Emotions Quidam - Topic 2.8K views 1 year ago Quidam. Playback options Listening on Switch Spotify device. Gregory Wathelet: We have to show the world our strong bond with our horses. If we ignore those usages of 'quidam' which are about qualifying or softening things, there are only a few possible/relevant meanings. Watch the video for Wish You Were Here from Quidams Strong Together for free, and see the artwork, lyrics and similar artists. Sanne Thijssen: Con Quidam is a horse with an enormous personality. The Petronius example is irrelevant, because it doesn't mean what Imber suggested (as noted in my previous post). OK, I've been spending some quality time with quidam (specifically the adjectival form, to the extent that there's a difference), and here's my case:
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