Servus rogat dominum: “Cuius est hic liber?”

Breakdown of Servus rogat dominum: “Cuius est hic liber?”

esse
to be
rogare
to ask
hic
this
cuius
whose
servus
servant
dominus
master
liber
book
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Questions & Answers about Servus rogat dominum: “Cuius est hic liber?”

Why does servus mean “the slave” and not “a slave”? Where is the/a in Latin?

Latin has no articles (the / a / an). A bare noun like servus can mean a slave or the slave depending on context. In a story, once a character has been introduced, English often uses the even though Latin still just says servus.


What case is servus, and how do I know it’s the subject?

Servus is nominative singular (2nd declension). The nominative is typically the subject of the clause. So servus rogat = “the slave asks.”


Why is the verb rogat ending in -t? What person/number is it?

Rogat is 3rd person singular present active indicative of rogāre (“to ask”). The -t ending usually marks he/she/it in the present tense: (he) asks.


Why is dominum in the accusative? How does rogāre work?

In servus rogat dominum, dominum is accusative singular because rogāre takes a direct object: you “ask someone.”
So dominum = “the master” as the person being asked.


Could the word order be different? How flexible is it?

Yes. Latin relies heavily on case endings rather than word order. You could see:

  • Servus dominum rogat
  • Dominum servus rogat All still mean “The slave asks the master,” though different orders can add emphasis.

Why is there a colon and quotation marks? Is that “real” Latin punctuation?

The colon and quotes are mostly modern editorial punctuation to show direct speech clearly. Classical Latin texts often use less punctuation, but modern textbooks add it for readability.


What is cuius exactly? Is it a pronoun?

Cuius is the genitive singular form of the interrogative/relative pronoun qui/quae/quod. In a question it often means whose? / of whom?
So cuius est... = “whose is...?”


Why does “whose” use the genitive in Latin?

Because “whose?” expresses possession, and Latin commonly expresses possession with the genitive case (“of X”).
So cuius liber literally corresponds to “the book of whom?”


Why is it cuius est and not something like cuius habet?

Latin often uses sum (est) to express ownership: X est Y = “X belongs to Y / X is Y’s.”
So Cuius est hic liber? is literally “Whose is this book?” = “To whom does this book belong?”


What case is liber and why isn’t it in the genitive too?

Liber is nominative singular (subject of est). The structure is:

  • hic liber (subject) + est
    • cuius (genitive of possessor)
      So: “This book is someone’s.”

Why is it hic and not haec or hoc?

Hic, haec, hoc (“this”) agrees with the noun it modifies in gender, number, and case.
Liber is masculine nominative singular, so you use hic (masc. nom. sg.).

  • haec would go with a feminine noun (e.g., haec aqua)
  • hoc would go with a neuter noun (e.g., hoc bellum)

Is hic an adjective or a pronoun here?

Here hic functions as a demonstrative adjective because it modifies liber (“this book”). It can also be used as a pronoun (“this man/this thing”) depending on context.


How do I know est means “is” and not “exists”?

Est can mean both, but context decides. With a genitive of possession (cuius) and a clear subject (hic liber), it’s the “is/belongs to” sense: “Whose does this book belong to?”


Why is dominum spelled with -um, but servus with -us?

They’re both 2nd declension masculine nouns, but in different cases:

  • servus = nominative singular (-us is common for nom. sg.)
  • dominum = accusative singular (-um is common for acc. sg.)

Is rogāre the only verb for “ask,” and does it always take an accusative?

Latin has several “ask” verbs with different patterns. Rogāre commonly takes an accusative person (the one asked) and can also take an additional element for what is asked (often an accusative thing, an infinitive, or a clause depending on phrasing). In this sentence it’s just ask + person: rogat dominum.


Could cuius refer to a person or a thing?

Yes. Cuius? can ask “whose?” for a person (“whose book?”) or for a thing/owner entity (“belonging to which household/library/etc.”), though in most basic contexts it expects a person as the owner.


What is the basic “dictionary form” I should learn for these words?

Common dictionary entries would be:

  • servus, -ī (m.) = slave
  • dominus, -ī (m.) = master
  • rogō, rogāre, rogāvī, rogātum = ask
  • hic, haec, hoc = this
  • līber, librī (m.) = book
  • sum, esse, fuī = be
  • qui, quae, quod (with cuius as its genitive singular) = who/which; whose?