The Principles of Latin Grammar: Comprising the Substance of the Most Approved Grammars Extant, with an AppendixPratt, Woodford, Farmer & Brace, 1854 - 344 sider |
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ablative active voice adjectives adverbs advised agrees Amatūrus amātus antecedent Audītus Cæsar catalectic clause commonly compounds construction dative declension denoting DEPONENT VERBS dicit Dixit English ĕram ĕris ĕrit essem expressed feminine fuĕrim fuisse FUTURE-PERFECT genitive gerund govern the accusative govern the dative govern the genitive Grammar Greek hæc hear heard IMPERATIVE MOOD imperfect Impersonal verbs impersonally INDICATIVE MOOD INFINITIVE MOOD intransitive verbs īri Latin leading verb loved Masc masculine mihi Monitus Neut neuter nominative nouns object opus passive voice penult PERF perfect participle PLUP pluperfect Plur plural præ predicate preposition PRES present infinitive pronoun quæ quam quid quod quum Rectus relative rendered ruled sense sentence signification singular sometimes spondee SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD substantive sunt supine syllable thing third conjugation tibi tive transitive Translate the following understood VIRG vocative vowel word write
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Side 5 - A word of one syllable is called a monosyllable ; a word of two syllables, a dissyllable ; a word of three syllables, a trissyllable ; and a word of four or more syllables, a polysyllable. DIPHTHONGS AND TRIPHTHONGS. A diphthong is two vowels joined in one syllable ; as, ea in beat, ou in sound.
Side 300 - Etenim omnes artes, quae ad humanitatem pertinent, habent quoddam commune vinculum ; et, quasi cognatione quadam, inter se continentur.
Side 109 - The Conjugation of a verb is the regular combination and arrangement of its several numbers, persons, moods, and tenses. The conjugation of an active verb is styled the ACTIVE VOICE ; and that of a passive verb, the PASSIVE VOICE.
Side 195 - Verbs of this kind do not always express frequency of action. Many of them have much the same sense with their primitives, or express the meaning more strongly.
Side 2 - The consonants are, 6, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, I, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, x, z, and w and y beginning a word or syllable.
Side 36 - All nouns of this declension are feminine, except dies, a day, which is masculine or feminine in the singular, and always masculine in the plural ; and meridies, the mid-day, which is masculine in the singular, and wants the plural.
Side 327 - Latins, 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 ftill retains it in writing, like the
Side 246 - XX. Verbs of plenty and scarceness for the most part govern the ablative ; as, Abundat divitiis, He abounds in riches.
Side 164 - INFINITIVE. Pres. amaturus esse, to be about to love. Perf. amaturus fuisse, to have been about to love.
Side 14 - 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.