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Ille

Ille is a Latin demonstrative pronoun and adjective meaning that or the former. It refers to a person or thing already mentioned or understood from context and can function either as an adjective agreeing with a noun in gender, number, and case, or as a stand-alone pronoun.

Usage and nuance: Ille often conveys distance, emphasis, or contrast. It is commonly used to distinguish from

Declension: Ille declines like a typical demonstrative adjective, with distinct masculine, feminine, and neuter forms in

Examples: Ille vir venit. That man came. Illud non est verum. That is not true. Ille qui

hic
(this)
and
iste
(that
of
yours
or
that
one,
often
with
a
particular
shade
of
meaning).
In
narrative
and
rhetoric,
ille
can
mark
the
referent
back
to
a
previously
mentioned
subject
or
designate
the
“former”
of
two
items,
enhancing
a
sense
of
succession
or
distinction.
singular
and
plural.
In
practice,
readers
encounter
the
basic
singular
nominatives
ille
(masc),
illa
(fem),
illud
(neut).
The
word’s
other
cases
and
numbers
follow
the
same
patterns
as
other
demonstratives;
full
forms
vary
by
case
and
number
and
are
learned
in
standard
Latin
grammar.
venit
amicus
meus
est.
That
man
who
comes
is
my
friend.
These
examples
illustrate
its
use
to
refer
to
a
person
or
thing
already
in
view
or
previously
mentioned
and
to
add
emphasis
or
contrast
within
a
sentence.