Latin Sentence ConnectionYale University Press, 1917 - 214 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 18
Pagina 9
... syntactical study before the psychological side of lan- guage was taken into consideration . It is one - sided and begins with a wrong point of view . The funda- mental fact is that all contiguous sentences in con- nected discourse are ...
... syntactical study before the psychological side of lan- guage was taken into consideration . It is one - sided and begins with a wrong point of view . The funda- mental fact is that all contiguous sentences in con- nected discourse are ...
Pagina 18
... syntactically complete , but , by its very meaning , " afterwards " is incomplete without refer- ence to what has preceded . Again in the sentence , " He spoke the following words , " there is syntactical completeness but not logical ...
... syntactically complete , but , by its very meaning , " afterwards " is incomplete without refer- ence to what has preceded . Again in the sentence , " He spoke the following words , " there is syntactical completeness but not logical ...
Pagina 20
... syntactically independent phrase is injected into the middle of a sentence in such a way as distinctly to modify its tone or meaning , the relation between the two clauses being indicated by the incompleteness of the injected phrase ...
... syntactically independent phrase is injected into the middle of a sentence in such a way as distinctly to modify its tone or meaning , the relation between the two clauses being indicated by the incompleteness of the injected phrase ...
Pagina 70
... syntactical subject of each of the verbs in the future tense , and that he is addressed in each , gives a parallelism to the three sentences quite like that already studied . There fol- lows a sentence in which the repetition of the ...
... syntactical subject of each of the verbs in the future tense , and that he is addressed in each , gives a parallelism to the three sentences quite like that already studied . There fol- lows a sentence in which the repetition of the ...
Pagina 87
... Syntactically , the sentences which exhibit this type of connection may be complete , but to make their sense complete , to give them logical finish , they need the help of something from without . Illustration will make this clear ...
... Syntactically , the sentences which exhibit this type of connection may be complete , but to make their sense complete , to give them logical finish , they need the help of something from without . Illustration will make this clear ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
abrupt adverbs already anaphora anticipation anticipatory force atque autem Bell Caesar Cato causa ceterus Cicero clear concept conjunctions contrast defined demonstrative dico discourse effect emphasis enim Epist erat etiam fact functional repetition haec Hist hypothetical imperatives idea illustrated imperative implicit repetition indicate instances kernel of meaning Latin licet Livy logical incompleteness mihi mind mode modo multa neque nihil noun nunc obvious Orat parallel parataxis person phrase Plautus pleteness Pliny preceding present principle principle of repetition pronoun quae quaeso quam quid quidem Quinctio Quintilian quod rela repeated repetition of content repetition of function retrospective rhetorical Rosc Sallust sane second clause second sentence semantic change Seneca sentence connection sentence relation statement subjunctive subordinate subordinating conjunctions suggests sunt syntactically Tacitus tamen tence tense thought tion tium tive tone type of sentence types of repetition usage vague Verrem Vita Beata volo words
Brani popolari
Pagina 78 - Nam semper in civitate, quibus opes nullae sunt, bonis invident, malos extollunt, vetera odere, nova exoptant, odio suarum rerum mutari omnia student; turba atque seditionibus sine cura aluntur, quoniam egestas facile habetur sine damno.
Pagina 58 - Socrates autem primus philosophiam devocavit e caelo, et in urbibus collocavit, et in domos etiam introduxit, et coegit de vita et moribus, rebusque bonis et malis quaerere.
Pagina 77 - Ac fuit antea tempus, cum Germanos Galli virtute superarent, ultro bella inferrent, propter hominum multitudinem agrique inopiam trans Rhenum colonias mitterent.
Pagina 184 - Mandela bibit, rugosus frigore pagus, 105 quid sentire putas? quid credis, amice, precari? sit mihi quod nunc est, etiam minus, et mihi vivam quod superest aevi, si quid superesse volunt di ; sit bona librorum et provisae frugis in annum copia, neu fluitem dubiae spe pendulus horae.
Pagina 156 - Ac veterum quidem sapientiae professorum multos et honesta praecepisse et, ut praeceperint, etiam vixisse, facile concesserim ; nostris vero temporibus sub hoc nomine maxima in plerisque vitia latuerunt. Non enim virtute ac studiis, ut haberentur philosophi, laborabant, sed vultum et tristitiam et dissentientem a ceteris habitum pes16 simis moribus praetendebant.
Pagina 109 - Igitur talibus viris non labor insolitus, non locus ullus asper aut arduus erat, non armatus hostis formidulosus; virtus omnia domuerat.
Pagina 40 - ... scelera ostendi oporteat, dum puniuntur, flagitia abscondi. sed et levioribus delictis pro modo poena: equorum pecorumque numero convicti multantur. pars multae regi vel civitati, pars ipsi qui vindicatur vel propinquis eius exsolvitur.
Pagina 25 - Sed nostra omnis vis in animo et corpore sita est; animi imperio, corporis servitio magis utimur; alterum nobis cum dis, alterum cum beluis commune est.
Pagina 103 - Igitur reges populique finitumi bello temptare, pauci ex amicis auxilio esse; nam ceteri, metu perculsi, a periculis aberant. At Romani, domi militiaeque intenti festinare, parare, alius alium hortari, hostibus obviam ire, libertatem, patriam parentesque armis tegere.
Pagina 63 - Cur nolint, etiamsi tacent, satis dicunt ; verum non tacent : tamen his invitissimis te offeres ? tamen in aliena causa loquere ? tamen eos defendes qui se ab omnibus desertos potius quam abs te defenses esse malunt...