“What god but enters yon forbidden field, Who yields assistance, or but wills to yield, Back to the skies with shame he shall be driven, Gash’d with dishonest wounds, the scorn of heaven.”—Pope’s Homer.
OBS. 12.—The compound whatever or whatsoever has the same peculiarities of construction as has the simpler word what: as, “Whatever word expresses an affirmation, or assertion, is a verb; or thus, Whatever word, with a noun or pronoun before or after it, makes full sense, is a verb.”—Adam’s Latin Gram., p. 78. That is, “Any word which expresses,” &c. “We will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth.”—Jeremiah, xliv, 17. That is—“any thing, or every thing, which.” “Whatever sounds are difficult in pronunciation, are, in the same proportion, harsh and painful to the ear.”—Blair’s Rhet., p. 121; Murray’s Gram., p. 325. “Whatsoever things were written aforetime, were written for our learning.”—Romans, xv, 4. In all these examples, the word whatever or whatsoever appears to be used both adjectively and relatively. There are instances, however, in which the relation of this term is not twofold, but simple: as, “Whatever useful or engaging endowments we possess, virtue is requisite in order to their shining with proper lustre.”—English Reader, p. 23. Here whatever is simply an adjective. “The declarations contained in them [the Scriptures] rest on the authority of God himself; and there can be no appeal from them to any other authority whatsoever.”—London Epistle, 1836. Here whatsoever may be parsed either as an adjective relating to authority, or as an emphatic pronoun in apposition with its noun, like himself in the preceding clause. In this general explanatory sense, whatsoever may be applied to persons as well as to things; as, “I should be sorry if it entered into the imagination of any person whatsoever, that I was preferred to all other patrons.”—Duncan’s Cicero, p. 11. Here the word whomsoever might have been used.