A Grammar of the Latin LanguageLongman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1845 - 602 páginas |
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Página vii
... language to a philosophical or rational source . The facts as such must first be established , and in this respect it has been my endeavour to examine the texts of the authors , and not to allow myself to be misled , as has been so ...
... language to a philosophical or rational source . The facts as such must first be established , and in this respect it has been my endeavour to examine the texts of the authors , and not to allow myself to be misled , as has been so ...
Página viii
... languages of different nations , both civilised and uncivilised , and I have confined myself to ex- plaining the peculiarities of the Latin language and its charac- teristic differences from the modern European languages of Roman and ...
... languages of different nations , both civilised and uncivilised , and I have confined myself to ex- plaining the peculiarities of the Latin language and its charac- teristic differences from the modern European languages of Roman and ...
Página xv
... languages ( Italian , French , Spanish , Por- tuguese , ) were gradually formed out of it . All persons who wrote Latin in later times had learned it as a dead language . During the long period in which the Latin language was spoken ...
... languages ( Italian , French , Spanish , Por- tuguese , ) were gradually formed out of it . All persons who wrote Latin in later times had learned it as a dead language . During the long period in which the Latin language was spoken ...
Página 4
... languages , for the purpose of distinguishing the pro- nunciation before a vowel at the beginning of a syllable , and we need not retain the defective mode of writing of the Romans , since they viewed these letters just as we do , and ...
... languages , for the purpose of distinguishing the pro- nunciation before a vowel at the beginning of a syllable , and we need not retain the defective mode of writing of the Romans , since they viewed these letters just as we do , and ...
Página 24
... 'pulus ( a poplar ) . In our own language accent and quantity coincide , but it is very wrong to apply this peculiarity to a lan- guage to which it is foreign . 25 THE ACCIDENCE . CHAP . V. DIVISION OF WORDS 24 LATIN GRAMMAR .
... 'pulus ( a poplar ) . In our own language accent and quantity coincide , but it is very wrong to apply this peculiarity to a lan- guage to which it is foreign . 25 THE ACCIDENCE . CHAP . V. DIVISION OF WORDS 24 LATIN GRAMMAR .
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Palavras e frases frequentes
ablative accusative adjectives adverbs aliquid apud atque aud-itus CHAP Cicero cloth commonly Comp compounds conjunctions connection dative declension denote deponents derived e. g. Cic e. g. Liv enim erat esset etiam expressed facere feminine frequently fuit future perfect gender genitive gerund Greek haec Hence Horat imperative imperfect inchoatives indicative infinitive intransitive verbs joined Latin language lec-tus Livy meaning mihi modo mon-itus names neque neuter nihil nisi nominative Note nouns occurs omnes Ovid participle particles passages passive person pluperfect Plur plural poets praeter preposition present Priscian pronoun prose quae quam quid quidem Quintilian quis quod quum rarely relative pronoun Sallust sense sentence sibi signifies Sing singular sometimes subjunctive substantive sunt supine syllable Tacitus tamen tenses Terence termination thing third conjugation tibi Tusc verbs vero Verr verse vowel words writers
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