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For 'tis an Easier Thing To make Trees Leape, and Stones selfe-burthens bring (As once Amphion to the walls of Thæbes,) Then Stop the giddie Clamouring of Plebs...
1993, Max Cavalera, "Refuse/Resist", Sepultura, Chaos A.D.
Chaos A.D. / Tanks On The Streets / Confronting Police / Bleeding The Plebs
2000, James Fentress, chapter 1, in Rebels & Mafiosi: Death in a Sicilian Landscape:
The history of Palermo was punctuated by such uprisings; when they happened, the great barons simply fled to the safety of their country villas, leaving the urban plebs free to sack their palaces in the city.
2009, Erica Benner, chapter 8, in Machiavelli's Ethics:
The lesser plebs are not unscrupulous troublemakers.
Usage notes
Although the Latin plebs was usually declined as a singular group noun, English plebs is usually treated as grammatically plural in all its senses.
4th-5th century AD [2nd century BC], Servius, quoting Cassius Hemina, Annals, quoted in In Vergilii Aeneidos Libros:
'circum fremunt': quidam hoc loco 'fremunt' id est imperia recusant intellegunt, ut apud Cassium in annalium secundo “ne quis regnum occuparet, si plebs nostra fremere imperia coepisset” , id est recusare.
"circum fremunt': Some in this place understand that they 'grumble' that is, protest commands, as Cassius in the second book of Annals: "lest anyone seize power, if the plebs started to 'grumble' our commands", that is, to protest.
Quod si nullam progeniem tulerint favi, duas vel tres alv(e)orum plebes in unam contribuere licebit, sed prius respersas dulci liquore
1954 translation by E. S. Forster, Edward H. Heffner
But if the combs have produced no offspring, it will be open to you to bring together the population of two or three hives into one, but only after they have been sprinkled with sweet liquid
aut si per epistolas agi placet, ipsae plebibus recitentur, ut aliquando non plebes, sed plebs una dicatur.
or if you prefer the discussion to be carried out by letters, let them be read to the congregations, so that at length they may be called not "congregations", but one congregation.
Usage notes
Alongside plēbs, the older nominative singular form plēbēsf sg continued to be used with singular verb and adjective agreement in authors such as Cicero and Livy. In Livy, plēbēs is sometimes used instead as the subject of a plural verb; in such cases, it is ambiguous whether the noun itself is plural, or singular with the verb showing notional agreement (as sometimes seen with collective nouns such as populus). The first unambiguously plural form to be attested is accusative plēbēs, found in Columella[1] and later in Apuleius. Plural genitive, dative, and ablative forms are not attested in Classical Latin, but can be found from Late Latin onwards.
Other old forms with continued use include a fifth-declension genitive singular plēbē̆ī or plēbī (versus third-declension plēbis) and a fifth-declension dative singular plēbē̆ī (versus plēbī). By the end of the first century BC, the use of fifth declension forms seems to have been an archaism.[2]
The earliest attested use of the nominative singular form plēbs is found in a fragment attributed by Servius to the historian Cassius Hemina, who wrote in the second century BC;[2] it is not found on inscriptions until Augustus.[3]
^ Bell, Andrew J. (1923) The Latin Dual & Poetic Diction: Studies in Numbers and Figures, page 69
↑ 2.02.1Millband, Edward James (2021) A Commentary on Selected Chapters of Tacitus Annales 13 (Thesis), →DOI, pages 120-121
^ Herbermann, Charles George (1886) The Jugurthine War, page 150
Further reading
“plebs”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
“plebs”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
plebs in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
plebs in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
one of the people: homo plebeius, de plebe
to get oneself admitted as a plebeian: traduci ad plebem (Att. 1. 18. 4)
to transfer oneself from the patrician to the plebeian order: transitio ad plebem (Brut. 16. 62)
to transfer oneself from the patrician to the plebeian order: traductio ad plebem
to stir up the lower classes: plebem concitare, sollicitare
to hold the people in one's power, in check: plebem continere
(ambiguous) the dregs of the people: faex populi, plebis, civitatis
(ambiguous) a demagogue, agitator: plebis dux, vulgi turbator, civis turbulentus, civis rerum novarum cupidus
(ambiguous) the plebeian tribunes, whose persons are inviolable: tribuni plebis sacrosancti (Liv. 3. 19. 10)
(ambiguous) to appeal to the plebeian tribunes against a praetor's decision: appellaretribunos plebis (in aliqua re a praetore) (Liv. 2. 55)
“plebs”, in Harry Thurston Peck, editor (1898), Harper's Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, New York: Harper & Brothers