Lindores is said to have written "Examen Hæreticorum Lolardorum, quos toto regno exegit.
Victor ascribe the revolution to the favor of the Alani, and the discontent of the Roman troops Dum exercitum negligeret, et paucos ex Alanis, quos ingenti auro ad sa transtulerat, anteferret veteri ac Romano militi.
Anno praeterito, quum ex instituto vitae meae iussus in hanc insulam remeassem, clarissimi viri, offendi sane fluctus haud paulo saeviores in anglicano littore, quam quos in oceano brittannico recens a tergo reliqueram.
The inscription is placed on the polar continent, to the north-west of Greenland, and reads: "Quij populi ad quos Joes Scoluss danus peruenit circa annum 1476.
But it is very remarkable that it occurs in all the manuscripts but one, which has Romani veteres boni scientes erant ut quos locus, etc.
Quos vexabant, be it observed, refers to mores, as Gerlach and Kritz interpret, not to cives understood in civitatis, which is the evidently erroneous method of Cortius.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quos" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.