Preparatory Latin Prose-book Containing All the Latin Prose Necessary for Entering College: With References to Harkness's, Bullions & Morris's, and Andrews & Stoddard's Latin Grammars, Notes Critical and Explanatory, a Vocabulary, and a Geographical and Historical Index |
Cosa dicono le persone - Scrivi una recensione
Nessuna recensione trovata nei soliti posti.
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Preparatory Latin Prose-book: Containing All the Latin Prose Necessary for ... James Hobbs Hanson Visualizzazione completa - 1868 |
Parole e frasi comuni
apud army atque autem belli bellum belonging bring Caes Caesar called carry castra castris Catilina causa cause Cicero command consul denotes Dist Död ejus enim erat esse esset etiam exercitu expression favor figur follow force fuit Gaul give haec homines honor illa illi inter ipse Italy means mihi mind modo neque nihil nisi omnes omni omnia omnibus omnium one's oration pass person populi propter quae quam quibus quid quidem quis quod quum rebus refers relation Roman Rome Sall senate sibi sine stand sunt tamen thing tibi tion vero vobis
Brani popolari
Pagina 153 - Avaritia pecuniae studium habet, quam nemo sapiens concupivit;" ea quasi venenis malis imbuta corpus animumque virilem effeminat, semper infinita, insatiabilis est, neque copia neque inopia minuitur.
Pagina 286 - Neque enim est hoc dissimulandum, — quod obscurari non potest, — sed prae nobis ferendum: trahimur omnes studio laudis, et optimus quisque maxime gloria ducitur. Ipsi illi philosophi, etiam in iis libellis quos de contemnenda gloria scribunt, nomen suum inscribunt; in eo ipso, in quo praedicationem nobilitatemque despiciunt, praedicari de se ac nominari volunt.
Pagina 182 - Catilinae? minume. sed ita censeo, publicandas eorum pecunias, ipsos in vinculis habendos per municipia, quae maxume opibus valent: neu quis de...
Pagina 186 - Postremo Caesar in animum induxerat laborare, vigilare; negotiis amicorum intentus, sua neglegere, nihil denegare, quod dono dignum esset; sibi magnum imperium, exercitum, bellum novom exoptabat, ubi virtus enitescere posset.
Pagina 180 - De poena possum equidem dicere, id quod res habet, in luctu atque miseriis mortem aerumnarum requiem, non cruciatum esse; eam cuncta mortalium mala dissolvere; ultra neque curae neque gaudio locum esse.
Pagina 399 - A testudo was formed (testudinem faceré) either in battle, to ward off the arrows and other missiles of the enemy, or which was more frequently the case, to form a protection to the soldiers when they advanced to the walls or gates of a town, for the purpose of attacking them. Sometimes the shields were so arranged as to make the testudo slope.
Pagina 186 - Cato nihil largiundo gloriam adeptus est. in altero miseris perfugium erat, in altero malis pernicies. illius facilitas, huius constantia laudabatur.
Pagina 577 - In the time of Cicero it was usual for a general, or a governor of a province, to report to the treasury the names of those under his command who had done good service to the state: those who were included in such report were said in beneftciis ad aerarium deferri.
Pagina 473 - Quousque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra ?" which paralyzed the traitor, not so much by the vehemence of the invective, as by the intimate acquaintance which it displayed with all his most hidden contrivances. Catiline, who upon his entrance had been avoided by all, and was sitting alone upon a bench from which every one had shrunk, rose to reply with downcast countenance, and in humble accents implored the fathers not to listen to the malignant calumnies of an upstart foreigner against...