Why is there a Q in SPQR?









5

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The abbreviation SPQR stands for Senatus PopulusQue Romanus. Why is the Q included, as there are only three words? Why isn't it just SPR? Or does SPQR stand for something else?









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    – Nathaniel
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5

votes















The abbreviation SPQR stands for Senatus PopulusQue Romanus. Why is the Q included, as there are only three words? Why isn't it just SPR? Or does SPQR stand for something else?









share













locked by Nathaniel Nov 13 '18 at 21:07


This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site, so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here. This question and its answers are frozen and cannot be changed. More info: help center.

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  • MODERATOR NOTICE: This is not a real question! It is a place-holder for the example question on the tour page. As such the question and both answers are entirely contrived to fit the limited space and formatting restrictions. Please don't answer or edit this question and its answers directly. If you have any input please participate in this meta post.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40











  • Note that this content is heavily trimmed from Why is the Roman acronym SPQR and not SPR?.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40













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5

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5


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The abbreviation SPQR stands for Senatus PopulusQue Romanus. Why is the Q included, as there are only three words? Why isn't it just SPR? Or does SPQR stand for something else?









share














The abbreviation SPQR stands for Senatus PopulusQue Romanus. Why is the Q included, as there are only three words? Why isn't it just SPR? Or does SPQR stand for something else?







conjunction abbreviations





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asked Nov 13 '18 at 20:33









NathanielNathaniel

7,24232279




7,24232279




locked by Nathaniel Nov 13 '18 at 21:07


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locked by Nathaniel Nov 13 '18 at 21:07


This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site, so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here. This question and its answers are frozen and cannot be changed. More info: help center.

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  • MODERATOR NOTICE: This is not a real question! It is a place-holder for the example question on the tour page. As such the question and both answers are entirely contrived to fit the limited space and formatting restrictions. Please don't answer or edit this question and its answers directly. If you have any input please participate in this meta post.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40











  • Note that this content is heavily trimmed from Why is the Roman acronym SPQR and not SPR?.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40

















  • MODERATOR NOTICE: This is not a real question! It is a place-holder for the example question on the tour page. As such the question and both answers are entirely contrived to fit the limited space and formatting restrictions. Please don't answer or edit this question and its answers directly. If you have any input please participate in this meta post.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40











  • Note that this content is heavily trimmed from Why is the Roman acronym SPQR and not SPR?.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:40
















MODERATOR NOTICE: This is not a real question! It is a place-holder for the example question on the tour page. As such the question and both answers are entirely contrived to fit the limited space and formatting restrictions. Please don't answer or edit this question and its answers directly. If you have any input please participate in this meta post.

– Nathaniel
Nov 13 '18 at 20:40





MODERATOR NOTICE: This is not a real question! It is a place-holder for the example question on the tour page. As such the question and both answers are entirely contrived to fit the limited space and formatting restrictions. Please don't answer or edit this question and its answers directly. If you have any input please participate in this meta post.

– Nathaniel
Nov 13 '18 at 20:40













Note that this content is heavily trimmed from Why is the Roman acronym SPQR and not SPR?.

– Nathaniel
Nov 13 '18 at 20:40





Note that this content is heavily trimmed from Why is the Roman acronym SPQR and not SPR?.

– Nathaniel
Nov 13 '18 at 20:40










2 Answers
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The enclitic -que was treated much like a word. This is most evident in the way Ovid handles quotes, where -que is outside a quote but the word it's attached to is inside. There are few other ancient abbreviations with -que, if any, so it's difficult to compare.





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  • 2





    For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:35


















3

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We definitely know that SPQR refers to senatus populusque Romanus and not something else. This text is inscribed in full in the temple of Saturn and arch of Titus in Rome. It's hard to say whether the abbreviation is systematic or an arbitrary choice that happened to stick.





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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    3

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    The enclitic -que was treated much like a word. This is most evident in the way Ovid handles quotes, where -que is outside a quote but the word it's attached to is inside. There are few other ancient abbreviations with -que, if any, so it's difficult to compare.





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    • 2





      For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

      – Nathaniel
      Nov 13 '18 at 20:35















    3

    votes














    The enclitic -que was treated much like a word. This is most evident in the way Ovid handles quotes, where -que is outside a quote but the word it's attached to is inside. There are few other ancient abbreviations with -que, if any, so it's difficult to compare.





    share


















    • 2





      For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

      – Nathaniel
      Nov 13 '18 at 20:35













    3

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    3

    votes









    3

    votes



    3


    votes







    The enclitic -que was treated much like a word. This is most evident in the way Ovid handles quotes, where -que is outside a quote but the word it's attached to is inside. There are few other ancient abbreviations with -que, if any, so it's difficult to compare.





    share













    The enclitic -que was treated much like a word. This is most evident in the way Ovid handles quotes, where -que is outside a quote but the word it's attached to is inside. There are few other ancient abbreviations with -que, if any, so it's difficult to compare.






    share











    share


    share










    answered Nov 13 '18 at 20:34









    Joonas IlmavirtaJoonas Ilmavirta

    46.4k1158265




    46.4k1158265







    • 2





      For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

      – Nathaniel
      Nov 13 '18 at 20:35












    • 2





      For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

      – Nathaniel
      Nov 13 '18 at 20:35







    2




    2





    For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:35





    For a concrete example, consider Metamorphoses V.414: "adgnovitque deam 'ne' c 'longius ibitis!' inquit" which uses -c instead of -que.

    – Nathaniel
    Nov 13 '18 at 20:35











    3

    votes














    We definitely know that SPQR refers to senatus populusque Romanus and not something else. This text is inscribed in full in the temple of Saturn and arch of Titus in Rome. It's hard to say whether the abbreviation is systematic or an arbitrary choice that happened to stick.





    share



























      3

      votes














      We definitely know that SPQR refers to senatus populusque Romanus and not something else. This text is inscribed in full in the temple of Saturn and arch of Titus in Rome. It's hard to say whether the abbreviation is systematic or an arbitrary choice that happened to stick.





      share

























        3

        votes












        3

        votes









        3

        votes



        3


        votes







        We definitely know that SPQR refers to senatus populusque Romanus and not something else. This text is inscribed in full in the temple of Saturn and arch of Titus in Rome. It's hard to say whether the abbreviation is systematic or an arbitrary choice that happened to stick.





        share













        We definitely know that SPQR refers to senatus populusque Romanus and not something else. This text is inscribed in full in the temple of Saturn and arch of Titus in Rome. It's hard to say whether the abbreviation is systematic or an arbitrary choice that happened to stick.






        share











        share


        share










        answered Nov 13 '18 at 20:35









        CerberusCerberus

        11.3k23375




        11.3k23375













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