The Public School Latin GrammarLongmans, Green, 1883 - 616 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 64
Side ix
... mood and tense in every Subjunctive Verb . The same mind , so prepared , and applying itself to write Latin , will be free from the risk of using any wrong construction . Not that the mastery of a grammatical Syntax alone will give the ...
... mood and tense in every Subjunctive Verb . The same mind , so prepared , and applying itself to write Latin , will be free from the risk of using any wrong construction . Not that the mastery of a grammatical Syntax alone will give the ...
Side xvi
... moods , & c . of words linked to others by various conjunctions . See Supplementary Note II . p . 579 . § 15. There are two great facts in Grammar which the student of language should always bear in mind : - : ( 1 ) Few Definitions are ...
... moods , & c . of words linked to others by various conjunctions . See Supplementary Note II . p . 579 . § 15. There are two great facts in Grammar which the student of language should always bear in mind : - : ( 1 ) Few Definitions are ...
Side xxi
... Mood ) , which belong in principle to the construc- tion of Sentences , and which many grammarians , as Madvig , intermingle with the rules of Syntax , thereby , we think , sadly breaking the continuity , and obscuring the doctrine of ...
... Mood ) , which belong in principle to the construc- tion of Sentences , and which many grammarians , as Madvig , intermingle with the rules of Syntax , thereby , we think , sadly breaking the continuity , and obscuring the doctrine of ...
Side xxii
... Mood in subordination to Oratio Obliqua , actual and virtual , with examples . Section III . contains : Rules and ... Moods should be learnt before the Laws of Compound Construction . This opinion is illustrated in Appendix II . to the ...
... Mood in subordination to Oratio Obliqua , actual and virtual , with examples . Section III . contains : Rules and ... Moods should be learnt before the Laws of Compound Construction . This opinion is illustrated in Appendix II . to the ...
Side xxiii
... Mood generally ) the term Subjunctive should be confined to its subordinate use 7. The distinction of Compound and Complex Sentences , which some English grammarians use , is superfluous in Latin . That of Coordinate and Subordinate ...
... Mood generally ) the term Subjunctive should be confined to its subordinate use 7. The distinction of Compound and Complex Sentences , which some English grammarians use , is superfluous in Latin . That of Coordinate and Subordinate ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Accusative action Active Adjectives Adverbs appears becomes Caes called Clause Comparative compounds Conjugation Conjunctive Consonant construction contains corresponds Decl derived ending English esse Examples express final forms Future Genitive Gerundive Greek Hence imply Indic Infinitive instances inter Latin letters loved Lucr meaning mihi Mood Names nihil nisi Nominative Note Nouns Object occurs Participles Particles Pass Passive Perf Perfect Person Plaut Plur Plural poets Prepositions Pres Present Pronouns quae quam quid quis quod rarely reference relation Relative root sense Sentence short Sing SINGULAR sometimes sound Stem Subject Substantives suffix sunt syllable Tenses usually Verbs Verg vowel words
Populære passager
Side xxxvi - The King to Oxford sent a troop of horse For Tories own no argument but force ; With equal care to Cambridge books he sent, For Whigs allow no force but argument.
Side 62 - Nam et illa, quae est sexta nostrarum, paene non humana voce vel omnino non voce potius inter discrimina dentium efflanda est; quae, etiam cum vocalem proxima accipit quassa quodammodo, utique quotiens aliquam consonantem frangit, ut in hoc ipso frangit, multo fit horridior.
Side xxxvi - The King, observing with judicious eyes, The state of both his universities, To Oxford sent a troop of horse ; and why ? That learned body wanted loyalty : To Cambridge books he sent, as well discerning How much that loyal body wanted learning.
Side 566 - Spernit ; nunc viridi membra sub arbuto Stratus, nunc ad aquae lene caput sacrae.
Side 496 - Quid? ii, qui dixerunt totam de dis immortalibus opinionem fictam esse ab hominibus sapientibus rei publicae causa, ut, quos ratio non posset, eos ad officium religio duceret, nonne omnem religionem funditus sustulerunt ? Quid ? Prodicus Ceus, qui ea quae prodessent hominum vitae, deorum in numero habita esse dixit, quam tandem religionem reliquit?
Side 436 - Primum memoria tanta, quantam in nullo cognovisse me arbitror, ut quae secum commentatus esset, ea sine scripto verbis eisdem redderet, quibus cogitavisset.
Side 532 - ALTERA iam teritur bellis civilibus aetas, Suis et ipsa Roma viribus ruit : Quam neque finitimi valuerunt perdere Marsi Minacis aut Etrusca Porsenae manus...
Side 566 - Terrarum dominos evehit ad déos ; Hune, si mobilium turba Quiritium Certat tergeminis tollere honoribus ; Illum, si proprio condidit hórreo Quidquid de Libycis verritur aréis.
Side 359 - Relative, qui, quae, quod, agrees with its antecedent in gender, number, and person ; but in case belongs to its own clause ; as, Deum.
Side 544 - With perfect certainty they guide us to the conclusion that from the common cradle of peoples and languages there issued a stock which embraced in common the ancestors of the Greeks and the Italians ; that from this, at a subsequent period, the Italians branched off, and these again divided into the western and eastern stocks, while at a still later date the eastern became subdivided into Umbrians and Oscans.