A Practical Introduction to Latin Prose Composition, Teil 1

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D. Appleton and Company, 1875 - 356 Seiten
 

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Seite 357 - Book," in which the elementary principles of the language are unfolded, not in abstract language, difficult both to comprehend and to remember, but as practically applied in sentences. Throughout the whole, the pupil sees just where he stands, and is taught to use and apply what he learns.
Seite 358 - Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic War. With English Notes, Critical and Explanatory ; a Lexicon, Geographical and Historical Indexes, a Map of Gaul, etc. By Rev. JA SPENCER, DD 12mo, 408 pages. In the preparation of this volume, great care has been taken to adapt It In every...
Seite 358 - Caesars life, a Map of the region in which his campaigns were carried on, and a Vocabulary, which removes the necessity of using a large dictionary and the waste of time consequent thereon, enhance the value of the volume in no small U*jr»e.
Seite 357 - Book, containing the Substance of the Practical Introduction to Greek Construing and a Treatise on the Greek Particles ; also, copious Selections from Greek Authors, with Critical and Explanatory English Notes, and a Lexicon.
Seite 48 - Cic. 353. DOUBLE or DISJUNCTIVE QUESTIONS offer a choice or alternative, and generally take one of the following forms : 1. The first clause has utrum or -ne, and the second an : Utrum ea vestra an nostra culpa est, is that your fault or ours Cic.
Seite 358 - History of Alexander the Great, though little used in the schools of this country, in England and on the Continent holds a high place in the estimation of classical instructors. The Interesting character of its subject, the elegance of its style, and the purity of its moral sentiments, ought to place it at least on a par with Csesar's Commentaries or Sallust's Histories.
Seite 147 - Venerit — dixerit. After ut a consequence (but not a purpose) is often put in the perf. subj. instead of the imperf., after a past tense. The perf.
Seite 359 - In the skill with which he sets forth the idiomatic peculiarities, as well as in the directness and simplicity with which he states the facts of the ancient languages, Mr. Arnold has no superior. I know of no books so admirably adapted to awaken an interest in the study of the language, or so well fitted to lay the foundation of a correct scholarship and refined taste/
Seite 357 - Second Part" carries the subject further, unfolding the most complicated constructions, and the nicest points of Latin Syntax. A Key is provided for the teacher's use. The

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