In Latin grammar, a double dative is the combination of a dative of reference with a dative of purpose. A common translation is "As a (dative of purpose) with reference to (dative of reference)." This was formerly known as "predicate dative" or "dative of service", with usually the following characteristics of the noun in the dative of purpose:
In an example from Julius Caesar ( Gallic War 7.50): suis saluti fuit, "he was the salvation of his men", the dative of an abstract noun ( salus "salvation") expresses purpose while the dative of reference expresses the person or thing affected ( suus, pl. sui "his men").
The best known example is "Cui bono?" This phrase, taken from Cicero, is usually rendered in English as something like, "Who benefits?", or more literally "To whose advantage?" The double dative construction sounds unnatural if translated literally, "to whom for an advantage", and is better rendered as "to whom as an advantage".
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