nemo

Adjective

 * , i.e. broadcast from some remote location instead.

Pronoun

 * 1) Not any person: nobody, no one. Synonym: necuno.

Etymology
Contraction of the phrase  (Classical ). Compare for.

Pronoun

 * 1) nobody, no one, no man

Usage notes

 * In sentences that already have a negative word, the negative polarity item is used instead of . It is preferred in Classical Latin to use "nec quisquam" instead of "et nēmō".
 * Nēmō is sometimes used adjectivally or appositively with a noun that refers to a person.

Declension

 * Only the nominative, dative, and accusative cases were used in Classical Latin.
 * The genitive is attested in some preclassical authors, and in the Christian poet Commodian (c. 3rd-century). Classical Latin authors regularly used  (the genitive singular form of ) instead.
 * The ablative occurs a couple of times in Plautus and appears to have been used freely by prose authors from Tacitus onwards. Classical Latin authors instead used  and  (the masculine and feminine ablative singular forms of ) after prepositions that govern the ablative case (e.g. Cicero: "cum ab nullo defensus esse", Pro S. Roscio Amerino 29.1, "primum memoria tanta, quantam in nullo cognovisse me arbitror" Brutus 301.7). In ablative absolutes, it seems to have been originally preferred to use a positive ablative pronoun along with a negated adjective form starting with  (as in "omnibus inscientibus", Cicero In Pisonem 89.10 and "inscientibus cunctis", Livy Ab Urbe Condita 7.5.3). The use of  in ablative absolute constructions seems to be attested first in Valerius Maximus.
 * No plural forms are attested in Classical Latin (compare the non-use of "*nobodies" as a plural negative indefinite pronoun in English). In postclassical Latin, there are some rare examples of plural forms (such as nominative/accusative or dative/ablative ) in contexts where Classical Latin would have either a singular form of nēmō (as a pronoun) or a plural form of  (as an adjective or pronoun).

Adverb

 * 1) mutely, dumbly