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        <title>Chapter 280</title>
        <title level="m">Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar</title>
        <author>Dickinson College</author>
        <principal>Christopher Francese</principal>
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      <p>
        A word is said to
        <emph rend="ital">agree</emph>
        with another when it is required by usage to be in the same Gender, Number, Case, or Person.
      </p>
      <p>
        The following are the general forms of agreement, sometimes called the Four Concords:—
      </p>
      <list type="ordered">
        <item n="1">
          The agreement of the Noun in Apposition or as Predicate (§§
          281
          -
          284
          ).
        </item>
        <item n="2">
          The agreement of the Adjective with its Noun (§
          286
          ).
        </item>
        <item n="3">
          The agreement of the Relative with its Antecedent (§
          305
          ).
        </item>
        <item n="4">
          The agreement of the Finite Verb with its Subject (§
          316
          ).
        </item>
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      <p>
        A word sometimes takes the gender or number, not of the word with which it should regularly agree, but of some other word
        <emph rend="ital">implied</emph>
        in that word.
      </p>
      <p>
        This use is called
        <foreign>Synesis</foreign>
        , or
        <emph rend="ital">
          <foreign>cōnstrūctiō ad sēnsum</foreign>
        </emph>
        (construction according to sense).
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