The New Latin Tutor, Or, Exercises in Etymology, Syntax and ProsodyHilliard, Gray, Little, and Wilkins, 1831 - 350 sider |
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Side 7
... friend . 14. O great truth . 15. O base gift . 16. With a wor- thy servant . 17. With a large 18. By a sudden death . sum . 1. Sick men . 2. Fair women . 3. Wretched fates . 4. Of pros- perous consuls . 5. Of ugly forms . 6. Of ...
... friend . 14. O great truth . 15. O base gift . 16. With a wor- thy servant . 17. With a large 18. By a sudden death . sum . 1. Sick men . 2. Fair women . 3. Wretched fates . 4. Of pros- perous consuls . 5. Of ugly forms . 6. Of ...
Side 9
... friend . 4. The pleasantest words . 5. The severest misfortunes . 6 . Of worse ages . 7. With a less weight . 8. More winters . 9 . With greater heaps . 10. The next summer . 11. Of the first complaints . 12. With the great- est wisdom ...
... friend . 4. The pleasantest words . 5. The severest misfortunes . 6 . Of worse ages . 7. With a less weight . 8. More winters . 9 . With greater heaps . 10. The next summer . 11. Of the first complaints . 12. With the great- est wisdom ...
Side 22
... Friends have been found . Fables have been written . The boys had been educated . The herald had been recalled . The prince had been invited . The times will be changed . The soldier will be killed . The ship will be sunk . The moon ...
... Friends have been found . Fables have been written . The boys had been educated . The herald had been recalled . The prince had been invited . The times will be changed . The soldier will be killed . The ship will be sunk . The moon ...
Side 27
... friends . One good turn obtains another . Learning makes life pleasant . Dido built Carthage . Fortune assists the ... Friendship makes prosperity more bright , adversity more tolerable . I will sing no songs . He suf- fers a cruel ...
... friends . One good turn obtains another . Learning makes life pleasant . Dido built Carthage . Fortune assists the ... Friendship makes prosperity more bright , adversity more tolerable . I will sing no songs . He suf- fers a cruel ...
Side 28
... friends . He has sent no letters . founded the Persian empire . Numa waged no war . pire . They continually wage war . Care follows money . The eyes conciliate love . Does the ground pour forth va- rious flowers ? Shall a barbarian have ...
... friends . He has sent no letters . founded the Persian empire . Numa waged no war . pire . They continually wage war . Care follows money . The eyes conciliate love . Does the ground pour forth va- rious flowers ? Shall a barbarian have ...
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The New Latin Tutor, Or, Exercises in Etymology, Syntax and Prosody Frederick Percival Leverett Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1845 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
ablative absolute accusative ADAM.-RULE adjective ætas alius amor anapest apud Ariovistus atque Cæsar cæsura catalectic Catiline clause conjunction cùm dactyle death dico domus dulcis elegant elegantly ellip enall enemy ENGLISH equus EXERCISE facio father feet fero followed genitive gerund habeo Helvetii hexameter homo honour Horat iambic ille ipse learned magnus malè mihi mind misereor mitto MODEL modò multus neque neut nihil nisi noun nullus nunc omnis opus participle perf plupf plur possum preposition pres pronoun quæ quàm quantus quid quis quod Roman sentence sing spondee subj subjunctive subjunctive mood substantive sum impf sunt suus syllable synon tamen tantus tempus tergum thee Themistocles things tibi tmesis trochee TURNED INTO LATIN tuus unus urbs venio verb verò verse virtue volo vowel words
Populære avsnitt
Side 253 - Soon as the evening shades prevail The moon takes up the wondrous tale, And nightly to the listening earth Repeats the story of her birth...
Side 253 - When in the slippery paths of youth With heedless steps I ran, Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe, And led me up to man. 4 When worn with sickness, oft hast Thou With health renewed my face; And, when in sins and sorrows sunk, Revived my soul with grace.
Side 219 - Vox quoque per lucos vulgo exaudita silentes Ingens ; et simulacra modis pallentia miris Visa sub obscurum noctis ; pecudesque locutae, Infandum ! sistunt amnes, terraeque dehiscunt, Et maestum illacrimat templis ebur, aeraque sudant.
Side 223 - Greta fertur Labyrinthus in alta Parietibus textum caecis iter, ancipitemque Mille viis habuisse dolum, qua signa sequendi...
Side 249 - Scandit aeratas vitiosa naves Cura, nee turmas equitum relinquit, Ocior cervis, et agente nimbos Ocior Euro. Laetus in praesens animus, quod ultra est, Oderit curare, et amara lento Temperet risu.
Side 253 - When all thy mercies, O my God, my rising soul surveys, transported with the view, I'm lost in wonder, love, and praise. No. 78. 3 2 O how shall words with equal warmth the gratitude declare, that .glows within my ravish'd heart! but thou canst read it there.
Side 223 - ... poma : Hie tamen hanc mecum poteris requiescere noctem Fronde super viridi. Sunt nobis mitia poma. An active verb may sometimes be changed into the passive voice, and a neuter verb into a verb impersonal, by altering the construction of the sentence ; as, insidiis capiere, for...
Side 203 - Your inability to preserve and defend it prove not infamous for you. Though this past behaviour of thine was beyond- all patience, Yet have I borne with it as I could. The structure of a period will be easily understood from these examples ; but as some difficulty will arise, where the simple idea does not immediately supply materials for the formation of the period, and as nothing contributes more to the true elegance of style, a few general...
Side 204 - Thus an additional clause explanatory of the subject, or denoting concession, &.C., may very easily be found out ; as, Industry without genius is of very little use ; It will soon occur to the mind that industry is very commendable, and that will form a period. Industry, though in itself very commendable, Is of little use without the help of genius. Or, Industry, if it be, or which is, without genius, &c. There are other methods of giving to a simple sentence the form of a period, which are more...
Side 29 - Pale death knocks at the cottages of the poor, and the palaces of kings, with an M Ccelum ipaum petinua.