A Complete Latin Course for the First YearAmerican Book Company, 1888 |
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Seite iv
... things . 4. The grammatical information , which will be of immediate and constant use to the learner in reading and understanding Latin , is given in the lessons them- selves , while other grammatical facts which ought to be within his ...
... things . 4. The grammatical information , which will be of immediate and constant use to the learner in reading and understanding Latin , is given in the lessons them- selves , while other grammatical facts which ought to be within his ...
Seite 12
... thing : filius à patre amātur , the son is loved by his father . 196. There are three moods : 4 . - I. The INDICATIVE MOOD either asserts something as a fact or inquires after the fact : Legit , HE IS READING . Legitne , IS HE READING ...
... thing : filius à patre amātur , the son is loved by his father . 196. There are three moods : 4 . - I. The INDICATIVE MOOD either asserts something as a fact or inquires after the fact : Legit , HE IS READING . Legitne , IS HE READING ...
Seite 14
... things . Haec scire juvat , TO KNOW these things affords pleasure . II . The GERUND gives the meaning of the verb in the form of a verbal noun of the second declension , 1 used only in the genitive , dative , accusative , and ablative ...
... things . Haec scire juvat , TO KNOW these things affords pleasure . II . The GERUND gives the meaning of the verb in the form of a verbal noun of the second declension , 1 used only in the genitive , dative , accusative , and ablative ...
Seite 15
... thing : Cicero , Cicero ; Roma , Rome ; domus , house . 1. A PROPER NOUN is a proper name , as of a person or place : Cicero ; Róma . 2. A COMMON NOUN is a name common to all the members of a class of objects : vir , man ; equus , horse ...
... thing : Cicero , Cicero ; Roma , Rome ; domus , house . 1. A PROPER NOUN is a proper name , as of a person or place : Cicero ; Róma . 2. A COMMON NOUN is a name common to all the members of a class of objects : vir , man ; equus , horse ...
Seite 31
... thing , as rēgīna in the second example and rēgīnam in the fourth , is called an appositive . Regina , " the queen ... thing as the noun or pronoun which it qualifies , while the Genitive always denotes a different person or thing . The ...
... thing , as rēgīna in the second example and rēgīnam in the fourth , is called an appositive . Regina , " the queen ... thing as the noun or pronoun which it qualifies , while the Genitive always denotes a different person or thing . The ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Ablative Ablative Absolute Accusative adjective adverbs advised Aedui amātus āre Ariovistus Artemisia Arverni ātum āvī Belgae brave Caesar camp castra Cicero clause conj CONJUGATION consonants consul Dative declension denote diphthongs Direct Object Dumnorix enemy eōs erant erat esset examples exercitum Filia foot-note fortify fortiter Gallia Gaul Genitive GERUND Grammar haec Helvetii Hostēs hostium IMPERATIVE IMPERFECT indeclinable INDICATIVE MOOD Infinitive itum king Latin laudat legiōnēs legions LESSON MASC Militēs NEUT Nominative nōn Nōnne noun omnes ōnis oppidum Orgetorix ōris ōrum PARTICIPLE Perf PLUPERFECT PLURAL Poēta praise prep preposition Pres prō pronoun quae quam queen quod rēgīna rēgnat reigning rendered rēs rēx Roman RULE sẽ sentence servi SINGULAR soldiers stem Subjunctive sunt syllable tense thou Translate into English Translate into Latin Tullia urbem verb Vocabulary vowel words
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 221 - Some verbs of ASKING, DEMANDING, TEACHING, and CONCEALING, admit two Accusatives — one of the person and the other of the thing : Me sententiam rogavit, he asked me MY OPINION.
Seite 193 - Horum omnium fortissimi sunt Belgae, propterea quod a cultu atque humanitate provinciae longissime absunt, minimeque ad eos mercatores saepe commeant atque ea quae ad effeminandos animos pertinent important, proximique sunt Germanis, qui trans Rhenum incolunt, quibuscum continenter bellum gerunt.
Seite 16 - AND NUMBER. 44. The Latin, like the English, has three persons and two numbers. The first person denotes the speaker ; the second, the person spoken to ; the third, the person spoken of. The singular number denotes one ; the plural, more than one.
Seite vi - Writing Latin, with Frequent Practice in Reading at Sight, intended as a Companion Hook to the Author's Latin Grammar.