Elements of Latin GrammarD. Appleton and Company, 1870 - 156 Seiten |
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Seite 73
... designate one's occupation . 2. Ium and itium denote office , condition , or collection . 3. Tus designates some characteristic or condition . 4. Atus denotes rank , office , collection . II . NOUNS FROM ADJECTIVES . 319. From ...
... designate one's occupation . 2. Ium and itium denote office , condition , or collection . 3. Tus designates some characteristic or condition . 4. Atus denotes rank , office , collection . II . NOUNS FROM ADJECTIVES . 319. From ...
Seite 74
Albert Harkness. 1. Or designates the action or state denoted by the verb . 2. Ium has nearly the same force , but sometimes designates the thing done : aedificium , edifice , from aedifico . 3. Men and mentum generally designate the ...
Albert Harkness. 1. Or designates the action or state denoted by the verb . 2. Ium has nearly the same force , but sometimes designates the thing done : aedificium , edifice , from aedifico . 3. Men and mentum generally designate the ...
Seite 83
... designates the per- son , the other the thing : with the Passive the accusative of the Person becomes the subject and the accusative of the thing is retained . See examples . 3. Verbs of Asking , Demanding , etc. , sometimes take the ...
... designates the per- son , the other the thing : with the Passive the accusative of the Person becomes the subject and the accusative of the thing is retained . See examples . 3. Verbs of Asking , Demanding , etc. , sometimes take the ...
Seite 87
... designates the person who has the work to do ; while with the Compound Tenses of passive verbs , it designates the person who has the work already done . See examples above . 4. DATIVE OF AGENT IN POETS . - In the poets the Dative is ...
... designates the person who has the work to do ; while with the Compound Tenses of passive verbs , it designates the person who has the work already done . See examples above . 4. DATIVE OF AGENT IN POETS . - In the poets the Dative is ...
Seite 89
... designates the subject or agent of the action , feeling , etc. , including the author and possessor : Serpentis morsus , the bite of the serpent . Cic . Xenophontis libri , the books of Xenophon . Cic . II . The OBJECTIVE GENITIVE ...
... designates the subject or agent of the action , feeling , etc. , including the author and possessor : Serpentis morsus , the bite of the serpent . Cic . Xenophontis libri , the books of Xenophon . Cic . II . The OBJECTIVE GENITIVE ...
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Elements of Latin Grammar, for Schools (Classic Reprint) Albert Harkness Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2019 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Acatalectic Accusative ACTIVE VOICE adjectives Adverbs advised aegris ǎmandus ǎmāti ǎmātūrus ǎmātus audītus bonus Caes clause compounds Conj CONJUGATION consonant consul Dactyl Dactylic Hexameter Dative declension declined as follows denote endings English ĕrăm ĕris ĕro essě essěm essēmus essent essētis factus feminine follow the analogy fructus fuĕris fuit FUTURE PERFECT gender Genitive Gerund Grammar Greek Greek nouns hear heard IMPERATIVE IMPERFECT INDICATIVE MOOD INFINITIVE ipsī Latin libĕris liběrō loved masc masculine monitus Neut neuters Nominative object PARTICIPLE PASSIVE VOICE PERF Periphrastic person PLUP PLUPERFECT Plur PLURAL Predicate preposition PRES Present Stem PRESENT TENSE Pridie PRINCIPAL Pronouns quae quam quibus quibus quid quis quod quum recti rectus reduplication RULE sentence Sing SINGULAR sometimes Spondee Subjunctive sunt superlative Supine syllable third thou tion tium tristi ūnus urbs verbs Virg vowel
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 32 - ... gives the meaning of the verb in the form of a verbal noun of the second declension, used only in the genitive, dative, accusative, and ablative singular. It corresponds to the English participial noun in ING : amandi, of loving ; amandi causa, for the sake of loving.
Seite 154 - In the astrological system, the day, from sunrise to sunset, and the night, from sunset to sunrise, being each divided into twelve hours, it is plain that the hours of the day and night were never equal except just at the equinoxes. The hours attributed to the planets were of this unequal sort. See Kalendrier de Berg. loc. cit., and our author's treatise on the Astrolabe.
Seite 4 - 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 154 - English date ; but it may be convenient also to have the following rule : I. If the day is numbered from the Nones or Ides, subtract the number diminished by one from the number of the day on which the Nones or Ides fall : VIII.
Seite 82 - DURATION OF TIME and EXTENT OF SPACE are expressed by the Accusative : Romulus septem et triginta regnavit annos, Romulus reigned thirlytemn years.