The First Part of Jacobs' Latin Reader: Adapted to Bullions' Latin Grammar

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Pratt, Woodford & Company, 1849
 

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Pagina 129 - Pyrrhus vulneratus est, elephanti interfecti, viginti millia hostium caesa sunt. Pyrrhus Tarentum fugit. Interjecto anno, Fabricius contra eum missus est. Ad hunc medicus Pyrrhi nocte venit promittens, se Pyrrhum veneno occisurum,
Pagina 229 - God :) a lawful thing. Fascis, is, m. a bundle; a fagot : fasces, pi. bundles of birchen rods, carried before the Roman magistrates, with an axe bound up in the middle of them. Fatalis, e, adj.
Pagina 20 - Roimperatorem a suis mans. that a commander should milittbus inte rfl c i. be killed by his own soldiers. 52. The verb must always be translated in its proper tense, and in the same person and number with its nominative. (See paradigms of the verb, §§ 54-70.) But when it has two or more nouns or pronouns in the singular, taken together...
Pagina 270 - Oratio, onis, f. (oro,) a discourse; an oration. Orator, oris, m. (oro,) an orator; an ambassador. Orbatus, a, um, part. (orbo,) bereaved or deprived of. Orbelus, i, m. a mountain of Thrace or Macedonia. Orbis, is, m. an orb; a circle : in orbem jacere, to lie round in a circle: orbis, or orbis terrarum, theworld. Orbo, are, avi,
Pagina 221 - Itum, intr. to sleep. Dorsum, i, n. the back. Dos, dotis, f. a portion ; a dowry. Draco, onis, m. a dragon; a species of serpent.
Pagina 236 - SB, f. a country in the eastern part of Gaul, now Switzerland. Helvetii, orum, m. pi. Helvetians ; the inhabitants of Helvetia. Helleborum, i, n. or Helleborus, i, m. the herb hellebore. Hellespontus, i, m. a strait be190 HEBACLEA HOMERUS.
Pagina 187 - Amycus, i, m. a son of Neptune, and king of Bebrycia. An, adv. whether; or. Anacreon, tis, m. a celebrated lyric poet of Teas, in Ionia. Anapus, i, m. a Catanean, the brother of Amphinomus. Anaxagoras, ae, m. a philosopher of Clazomene, in Ionia.
Pagina 225 - Excido, -cidC-re, -cldi, -cisum, tr. (ex & casdo,) to cut out; to cut down; to hew out. Exclsus, a, um, part. Excipio, -cipere, -cepi, -ceptum, tr. (ex & capio,) to take out; to except; to receive; to support; to follow; to succeed; to sustain. Excitandus, a, um, part, from Excito, are, avi, atum, tr. freq. (excieo,) to excite; to awaken; to arouse; to stir up. Exclamo, are, avi, atum, tr. (ex & clamo,) to cry out; to exclaim. Excludo, -cludgre, -olusi, -clusum, tr.
Pagina 46 - And if he forget, he should look it out again, and if necessary, again, till he know it thoroughly. 4. Frequent and accurate reviews of the portion previously studied, are of great importance. This is the best way to fix permanently in the memory, the acquisitions made. 5. Every instance of false quantity, either in reading or parsing, should be instantly corrected. Bad habits in this particular are easily formed, and, if ever, are corrected with great difficulty. If proper attention has been paid...
Pagina 267 - Obsidio, onis f. a siege. Obsidionalis, e, adj. belonging to a siege; obsidional : corona, a crown given to him who had raised a siege. Obstetrix, icis, f. a midwife. Obtestatus, a, um, part. from Obtestor, ari, atus sum, tr.

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