Practical Latin CompositionGinn & Company, 1894 - 268 pagine |
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Risultati 1-5 di 27
Pagina 42
... Athens with a north wind ? 9. Then Miltiades directed his course for the Chersonesus . 10. For he had no time for dawdling . 6 4 8 itaque . 11 If NOTES.1 had good hopes : hoped well . 2 was very conspicuous : flourished most . Not the ...
... Athens with a north wind ? 9. Then Miltiades directed his course for the Chersonesus . 10. For he had no time for dawdling . 6 4 8 itaque . 11 If NOTES.1 had good hopes : hoped well . 2 was very conspicuous : flourished most . Not the ...
Pagina 46
... Athens . 8. Miltiades is deserving of great praise . 9. For he thought more of 18 the liberty of all than of his own supremacy . NOTES . 1 Use the relative pronoun . 2 Use perpetuus . 4 — 3 over : not ut . 6 Use of . charge of towns ...
... Athens . 8. Miltiades is deserving of great praise . 9. For he thought more of 18 the liberty of all than of his own supremacy . NOTES . 1 Use the relative pronoun . 2 Use perpetuus . 4 — 3 over : not ut . 6 Use of . charge of towns ...
Pagina 47
... Athens . 6 NOTES.1 that the king was hard pressed : the king to be hard pressed . 2 would perish : to be about to perish . Not the present infinitive . 4 autem . 5 What case follows obsistō ? fearing : having feared . 7 nē . 8 revertor ...
... Athens . 6 NOTES.1 that the king was hard pressed : the king to be hard pressed . 2 would perish : to be about to perish . Not the present infinitive . 4 autem . 5 What case follows obsistō ? fearing : having feared . 7 nē . 8 revertor ...
Pagina 50
... Athens were once infrequent . 5. For that reason they seem to have been glorious . 6. Among the Athenians formerly hon- ors were much prized , now they are worthless . 7. What honor was bestowed on the man who had freed all Greece ? 8 ...
... Athens were once infrequent . 5. For that reason they seem to have been glorious . 6. Among the Athenians formerly hon- ors were much prized , now they are worthless . 7. What honor was bestowed on the man who had freed all Greece ? 8 ...
Pagina 51
... Athens 2 honors were infrequent and of trifling value , and for that reason highly prized ; now , however , 3 they are many in number and of no worth . A slight honor was bestowed on Miltiades , who by his victory at Marathon freed ...
... Athens 2 honors were infrequent and of trifling value , and for that reason highly prized ; now , however , 3 they are many in number and of no worth . A slight honor was bestowed on Miltiades , who by his victory at Marathon freed ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
accusative Amulius Ancus apud army ārum Athenians Athens ātis atque autem Belga Belgæ Bellovaci bellum Cæsar capiō Casticus castra Catiline Cicero clause comp conj consul Dumnorix eius enemy enim erant erat esset etiam express facere father Faustulus fight fuit Gallia Gaul Greenough Helvetii illustrations of Lat indecl inter ipse itum killed king Lacedæmonians Latine Dicenda Latine Scribenda milia Miltiades neque nōn NOTES NOTES.1 noun Numitor omnes one's ōnis Orgetorix ōris ōrum participle plur posse prep pron quae quam quid quod rei publicae Remi Remus Roman Rome Romulus Sabines senate sent sentence Sequani Servius Servius Tullius sibi subjunctive Suessiones sunt superl tamen Tarpeia Tarquin Tarquinius text illustrations Themistocles things tion Tullus urbem verb walls word in Latin
Brani popolari
Pagina 168 - Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres, quarum unam incolunt Belgae, aliam Aquitani, tertiam qui ipsorum lingua Celtae, nostra Galli appellantur.
Pagina iv - The way is this: After the three concordances learned, as I touched before, let the master read unto him the Epistles of Cicero, gathered together and Chosen out by Sturmius for the capacity of children.
Pagina iv - After this, the child must take a paper book, and sitting in some place, where no man shall prompt him, by himself, let him translate into English his former lesson. Then showing it to his master, let the master take from him his Latin book, and...
Pagina 168 - Horum omnium fortissimi sunt Belgae, propterea quod a cultu atque humanitate provinciae longissime absunt, minimeque ad eos mercatores saepe commeant atque ea quae ad effeminandos animos pertinent important, proximique sunt Germanis, qui trans Rhenum incolunt, quibuscum continenter bellum gerunt.