A Grammar of the Latin Language: For the Use of Schools and Colleges

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Crocker and Brewster, 1860 - 410 sider
 

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Side 50 - Nouns which vary in gender are called heterogeneous ; those which vary in declension are called hétéroclites. Heterogeneous Nouns. 1. Masculine in the singular, and neuter in the plural ; as, Avernas, Dindymus, Ismárus, Jíaisicus, Mámalas, Pangonia, Tartarus, Taygltus i plur.
Side 323 - Hurl'd often cuts off the vowel at the end of a word, when the next word begins with a vowel; though he does not like the Greeks wholly drop the vowel, but lull retains it in writing like the Latins.
Side 234 - Verbs signifying to name or call ; to choose, render or constitute ; to esteem or reckon...
Side 186 - REM. 11. The principal noun or pronoun in the answer to a question, must be in the same case as the corresponding interrogative word; as, Quis lieras est ubi t Amphitruo, seil.
Side 24 - ... in the genitive. . Although Latin nouns be said to have six cases, yet none of them have that number of different terminations, both in the singular and plural. GENERAL RULES OF DECLENSION. 1 . Nouns of the neuter gender have the Accusative and Vocative like the Nominative, in both numbers ; and these cases in the plural end always in a. 2. The Dative and Ablative plural end always alike.
Side 108 - P. a-ma'-ti er'-I-mus or fu-er'-f-mus, a-ma'-ti er'-I-tis or fu-er'-T-tis, a-ma'-ti e'-runt or fu'-g-rint, / shall have been loved, thou wilt have been loved, he will have been loved ; we shall have been loved, ye will have been loved, they will have been loved. SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD. Present.
Side 49 - GENDER. 1 . Dies, a day, is masculine or feminine in the singular, and always masculine in the plural ; meridies, mid-day, is masculine only.
Side 186 - Adjectives, adjective pronouns, and participles, agree with their nouns in gender, number, and case; as, Bonus vir, A good man. Bonos viros, Good men. Benigna mater, A kind mother.
Side 349 - Cœsura is the separation, by the ending of a word, of syllables rhythmically or metrically connected.
Side 361 - The Roman Calendar agreed with our own, in the number of months, and of the days in each ; but instead of reckoning in an uninterrupted series, from the first to the thirty-first, they had three points from which their days were counted. 1. The Calends or Kalends, which were always the first day of the month. They received their name from the old verb...

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