A Latin grammar for schools and collegesAppleton, 1871 - 355 Seiten |
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... 12mo . 459 pages . Cicero de Officiis . With English Notes , mostly translated from Zump and Bonnell . By THOMAS A. THACHER , of Yale College . 12mo . 194 pages . STANDARD CLASSICAL WORKS . Horace , The Works of . EdueT 918.711 1448.
... 12mo . 459 pages . Cicero de Officiis . With English Notes , mostly translated from Zump and Bonnell . By THOMAS A. THACHER , of Yale College . 12mo . 194 pages . STANDARD CLASSICAL WORKS . Horace , The Works of . EdueT 918.711 1448.
Seite
... English Notes for the use of Schools . By J. L. LINCOLN , Prof. of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature in Brown University . 12mo . 329 pages . Quintus Curtius : Life and Exploits of Alexander the Great . Edited and illustrated with English ...
... English Notes for the use of Schools . By J. L. LINCOLN , Prof. of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature in Brown University . 12mo . 329 pages . Quintus Curtius : Life and Exploits of Alexander the Great . Edited and illustrated with English ...
Seite vii
... English Method of Pronunciation , II . Continental Method , Syllables , Quantity , Accentuation , Gender , Person and Number , Cases , Declensions , First Declension , Greek Nouns , PART SECOND . ETYMOLOGY . CHAPTER I. NOUNS . Gender ...
... English Method of Pronunciation , II . Continental Method , Syllables , Quantity , Accentuation , Gender , Person and Number , Cases , Declensions , First Declension , Greek Nouns , PART SECOND . ETYMOLOGY . CHAPTER I. NOUNS . Gender ...
Seite 1
... English with the omission of w . 1. U supplies the place of w . 2. His only a breathing , and not strictly entitled to the rank of a letter . 3. J and did not originally belong to the Latin : their places were supplied respectively by i ...
... English with the omission of w . 1. U supplies the place of w . 2. His only a breathing , and not strictly entitled to the rank of a letter . 3. J and did not originally belong to the Latin : their places were supplied respectively by i ...
Seite 2
... ENGLISH METHOD . 1. Sounds of Vowels . 6. Vowels generally have their long or short English sounds . But 1. These sounds in Latin , as in English , are somewhat modified by the consonants which accompany them . 2. R , final , or ...
... ENGLISH METHOD . 1. Sounds of Vowels . 6. Vowels generally have their long or short English sounds . But 1. These sounds in Latin , as in English , are somewhat modified by the consonants which accompany them . 2. R , final , or ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Ablative Accusative action adjectives admit adverbs ǎmātus Anapaest apposition audītus Caes case-ending Catalectic classes clause compounds Conj conjugation Conjunctions consonant construction Dactyl Dative declension denoting DEPONENT VERBS dipody endings English ĕre ĕris essě examples EXCEPTIONS.-The following form expressed feminine form the genitive fructus fuit FUTURE PERFECT gender Gerund Greek Greek nouns haec Iambus IMPERATIVE Imperfect indeclinable Indicative Infinitive Irregular Latin loved masc masculine mihi millia MOOD neuter nihil nisi nominative object occurs omitted PARTICIPLE Passive Perf person Plup PLUPERFECT Plur PLURAL preposition Pres Present principal pronoun quae quam quid quis quod quum rarely rectus RULE Sall sense sentence sesterces sestertius short SINGULAR sometimes Spondee stem Subjunctive sunt Supine syllable tenses things third thou tive transitive verbs TRIMETER Trochee urbs verbs verse Virg vowel words
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 352 - Germania and Agricola of Caius Cornelius Tacitus : With Notes for Colleges. By WS TYLER, Professor of the Greek and Latin Languages in Amherst College. 12mo, 193 pages.
Seite ii - Syntax has received in every part special attention. An attempt has been made to exhibit, as clearly as possible, that beautiful system of laws which the genius of the language — that highest of all grammatical authority — has created for itself.
Seite 352 - In it win be found : 1. A Latin text, approved by all the more recent editors. 2. A copious illustration of the grammatical constructions, as well as of the rhetorical and poetical usages peculiar to Tacitus. In a writer so concise it has been deemed necessary to pay particular regard to the connection of thought, and to the particles as the hinges of that connection.
Seite 7 - 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 4 - In the pronunciation of Latin, every word has as many syllables as it has vowels and diphthongs ; thus the Latin words, more, vice, acute, and persuade, are pronounced, not as the same words are in English, but with their vowel sounds all heard in separate syllables ; thus, more, vi-ce, a-cu-te, per-sua-de.