Exercises in Idiomatic Italian

Copertina anteriore
Cambridge University Press, 17 apr 2014 - 210 pagine
This innovative aid to the study of Italian was published in 1867 by Maria Francesca Rossetti (1827-76), the older sister of Dante Gabriel, William Michael and Christina. A scholar and teacher of Italian, she was later to publish A Shadow of Dante, a guide to the Divine Comedy, also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection. Her purpose here, as she explains in her preface, is to demonstrate idiomatic Italian usage by providing short passages translated very literally into English, so that the 'unnatural' English phraseology demonstrates the correct Italian construction. The passages are to be translated back into Italian, with the help of some supplied vocabulary and an opening chapter which elucidates some of the more difficult aspects of Italian grammar, often by comparing Italian with French usage. The technique had long been used for Latin and Greek prose composition, but was innovatory for modern languages.
 

Sommario

A Chapter supplementary to the Grammar 123
1
PAGE
2
Judgment of Phocion
24
The merciful Lion
25
The Mother victim of her Love
26
The Confiagration overcome by Maternal Afiection
27
The Mother inseparable from the Daughter
29
At what Price a Son may be saved
30
The Father who saves the Slayer of his Son
136
Virtue has triumphed over Sex
138
Artifice to oblige a Thief to restitution
139
73
140
Totila King of the Goths
141
The heroic Philanthropy
142
The noble and compassionate Butcher
145
The Sultan Saladin
146

The Son of Metellus to liberate his Father ofiers his own life
32
The Deserter through filial Love
33
The loving Daughter
35
The Fast through filial Love
36
The beneficent Surprise
39
Eudocia Empress
43
The Swimmer
44
The Heroic Substitution
46
The Admiral Chabot
48
The little Baker of Nérac
50
Joseph II _
108
generous Grenadier
110
The efficacious Recommendation
114
Unfaithfulness condoned and prevented _
116
Papinianus and Julius Grecinus
117
Claudius II
118
The Beggar made a Mandarin
119
Justice preferred to Life
120
Ottoman Justice
121
The most upright General
122
The Quaker without Imitators
123
6 The Prince more liberal than his Almoner
124
The Judge making restitution restorer
125
Where Virtue may go to burrow
126
A Gentleman without Posterity 65 Probity preferred to Love
127
The Vinedresser who will not buy cheap
131
68
133
The Captain who voluntarily degrades himself
135
Admirable accord between Doctrine and Practice
147
The beneficcnt Miser
149
Xenocrates
150
The merited Recompense diverted to another
151
The Mistake of a Cipher
152
The Amendment
153
The good Porter of Milan
156
The Heir through Compassion
157
6 The Viscount deTurenne
159
The generous Creditor
160
Boilean and Catherine II
161
The noble Recompense
162
The Captain of Algiers
164
Mercy remunerated
166
Claude Favre
167
The ingenious Gratitude
168
The Florentine Shoemaker
169
The Soldier through gratitude
172
The Merchant ennobled
174
Mecaenas
175
9B How one should die
177
One insensible to pain The Insensible through Virtue
179
Proper Names
180
Ardisheer Babegan Sophi of Persia
182
Index to the Notes I Italian Words
183
English French and German Words
186
Index to Rules
190
Copyright

Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto

Parole e frasi comuni

Informazioni bibliografiche