A Grammar of the Latin LanguageHarper & Brothers, 1853 - 594 pagine |
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Risultati 1-5 di 100
Pagina xvii
... Poets • APPENDIX II . The Roman Calendar APPENDIX III . Roman Weights , Coins , and Measures APPENDIX IV . Notae sive Compendia Scripturae ; or , Abbrevi- ations of Words APPENDIX V. Ancient Forms of Declension APPENDIX VI . Remains of ...
... Poets • APPENDIX II . The Roman Calendar APPENDIX III . Roman Weights , Coins , and Measures APPENDIX IV . Notae sive Compendia Scripturae ; or , Abbrevi- ations of Words APPENDIX V. Ancient Forms of Declension APPENDIX VI . Remains of ...
Pagina 2
... poetry which necessarily demand the diphthong . Neutiquam , in the comic poets , has its first syllable always short , as if it were nutiquam , from which we may infer that it was not so much the long diphthong as the two short vowels ...
... poetry which necessarily demand the diphthong . Neutiquam , in the comic poets , has its first syllable always short , as if it were nutiquam , from which we may infer that it was not so much the long diphthong as the two short vowels ...
Pagina 9
... poets threw out the s in the terminations us and is when they were followed by consonants . Lucilius , e . g . , says , Tum laterali dolor certissimu ' nuntiu ' mortis ; and even Cicero , in his youthful attempts at poetry , sometimes ...
... poets threw out the s in the terminations us and is when they were followed by consonants . Lucilius , e . g . , says , Tum laterali dolor certissimu ' nuntiu ' mortis ; and even Cicero , in his youthful attempts at poetry , sometimes ...
Pagina 10
... poets always make dero and desse out of deero and deesse . This explains the forms nil for nihil , and deprendo for deprehendo , which arise from the elision of the aspirate . The contraction of two equal or unequal vowels in the ...
... poets always make dero and desse out of deero and deesse . This explains the forms nil for nihil , and deprendo for deprehendo , which arise from the elision of the aspirate . The contraction of two equal or unequal vowels in the ...
Pagina 16
... poets use academia instead of academia , although in Greek writers it is always long , whether spelled with ε or with . * Note 2. - It is a part of the above rule , that a long vowel or diphthong at the end of a word , when the word ...
... poets use academia instead of academia , although in Greek writers it is always long , whether spelled with ε or with . * Note 2. - It is a part of the above rule , that a long vowel or diphthong at the end of a word , when the word ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
ablative accus accusative adjectives adverbs aliquid aliquo ancient atque causa Cicero commonly Comp Compare compounds conjugation conjunctions connexion consonants dative declension denote derived dicere enim erat esset etiam expressed facere feminine frequently fuit future gender genitive gerund Greek haec Hence Horace Horat imperfect indicative infinitive joined Latin language Livy masculine meaning mihi milia modo names neque neuter nihil nisi nominative Note 2.-The nouns occurs omnes Ovid participle passages passive perfect person Plautus pluperfect Plur plural poets preposition present Priscian pronoun prose quae quam quid quidem Quintilian quis quod quum rarely Roman Sallust sense sentence sibi signifies Sing singular sometimes subjunctive substantive sunt supine syllable Tacitus tamen tenses Terent termination thing tibi tion tive transitive verbs Tusc verbs vero Verr verse vocative vowel words writers
Brani popolari
Pagina 343 - Bibulus de caelo turn servasset necne, sibi quaerendum non fuisse ; de publicanis voluisse se illi ordini commodare, quid futurum fuerit, si Bibulus turn in forum descendisset, se divinare non potuisse. Nunc vero, Sampsicerame, quid dices ? vectigal te nobis in monte Antilibano constituisse, agri Campani abstulisse ? Quid ? hoc quern ad modum obtinebis ? " Oppresses vos," inquit,
Pagina 414 - Latini dicuntur scripti inconsiderate ab optimis illis quidem viris, sed non satis eruditis. fieri autem potest, ut recte quis sentiat et id, quod sentit, polite eloqui non possit.
Pagina 384 - ... et invidia dicta putant, ubi de magna virtute atque gloria bonorum memores, quae sibi quisque facilia factu putat, aequo animo accipit, supra ea veluti ficta pro falsis ducit.
Pagina 399 - Theophrastus autem moriens accusasse naturam dicitur, quod cervis et cornicibus vitam diuturnam, quorum id nihil interesset, hominibus, quorum maxime interfuisset, tarn exiguam vitam dedisset : quorum si aetas potuisset esse longinquior, futurum fuisse ut omnibus perfectis artibus omni doctrina hominum vita erudiretur.
Pagina 224 - Quibus actis : Quid ergo ? inquit ille, quoniam oratorias exercitationes non tu quidem, ut spero, reliquisti, sed certe philosophiam illis anteposuisti, possumne aliquid audire?
Pagina 489 - Howsoever high." Figures of Syntax. The principal figures of Syntax are Ellipsis, Pleonasm, Enallage, and Hyperbaton.
Pagina 553 - XVIII XVII XVI XV XIV XIII XII XI X IX VIII VII VI v IV III p cT W S.
Pagina 385 - The imperfect subjunctive, however, is also used after a present, when we mean to express that in reality the thing is not so, in which case we must always supply a hypothetical imperfect ; eg Cic. ad Fam. xiii. 42.: Egnatii rem ut tueare aeque a te peto, ac si mea negotia essent, L e.
Pagina 385 - Haec ad te die natali meo scripsi. Quo utinam susceptus non essem aut ne quid ex eadem matre postea natum esset ! Plura scribere fletu prohibeor.