The Rudiments of Latin and English Grammar: Designed to Facilitate the Study of Both Languages by Connecting Them TogetherE. Duyckinck, and James Eastburn & Company, 1818 - 232 sider |
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Side 8
... expressed in English ; 1. With the indefinite article , a king . Nom . Singular . Plural . a king , Nom . kings , Gen. of a king , Gen. of kings , Dat . to or for a king , Dat . to or for kings , Acc . a king , Acc . kings , Voc . 0 ...
... expressed in English ; 1. With the indefinite article , a king . Nom . Singular . Plural . a king , Nom . kings , Gen. of a king , Gen. of kings , Dat . to or for a king , Dat . to or for kings , Acc . a king , Acc . kings , Voc . 0 ...
Side 43
... expressed or understood , and cannot make full sense without it . An adjective may be thus distinguished from a substantive : If the word thing be joined to an adjective , it will make sense ; but if it be joined to a substantive it ...
... expressed or understood , and cannot make full sense without it . An adjective may be thus distinguished from a substantive : If the word thing be joined to an adjective , it will make sense ; but if it be joined to a substantive it ...
Side 54
... expressed , have in the plural others , ones ; as , many others , great ones ; in which case they seem to be used as substantives . Who , which , that , are called Relatives , because they refer to some substantive going before , which ...
... expressed , have in the plural others , ones ; as , many others , great ones ; in which case they seem to be used as substantives . Who , which , that , are called Relatives , because they refer to some substantive going before , which ...
Side 58
... expressed , or govern one in the genitive . For this reason , they are by some reckoned substantives . VERB . A verb is a word which expresses what is affirmed of things ; as , The boy reads . loves . * The sun shines . The man Or , A ...
... expressed , or govern one in the genitive . For this reason , they are by some reckoned substantives . VERB . A verb is a word which expresses what is affirmed of things ; as , The boy reads . loves . * The sun shines . The man Or , A ...
Side 59
... expressed without any af- firmation , or in such a form as to be joined to a substantive noun , partaking thereby of the nature of an adjective , it is called a Participle ; as , amans , loving ; amatus , loved . But when it has the ...
... expressed without any af- firmation , or in such a form as to be joined to a substantive noun , partaking thereby of the nature of an adjective , it is called a Participle ; as , amans , loving ; amatus , loved . But when it has the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
ablative ablative absolute accusative adjective adverbs alicui alicujus aliquem aliquid aliquo Amatus animo animum apud atque Cæs called castra Cesura Cicero circum commonly compounds conjugation construed crement dactyles dative deponent verbs diem diphthong ejus English ĕris expressed feminine gender genitive gerund Greek nouns hæc Horat Indicative Mode infinitive inter joined Latin likewise literas loved manus masc masculine mihi neuter nihil nominative nouns omnes one's Ovid participle passive pecuniam penult person Plaut Plur plural præ præter preposition preterite pronouns quæ quam quid quis quod rule Sall scil sentence shorten sibi signify Sing singular sometimes spondee subjunctive Subjunctive Mode substantive sunt super supine syllable tempus thing third declension thou tibi tive understood urbe urbem Venit verbs verse Virg vowel words
Populære passager
Side 221 - Los números cardinales 0: zero 1: one 2: two 3: three 4: four 5: five 6: six 7: seven 8: eight 9: nine 10: ten 11: eleven 12: twelve 13: thirteen 14: fourteen 15: fifteen 16: sixteen 17: seventeen 18: eighteen 19: nineteen 20: twenty...
Side 217 - For wheresoe'er I turn my ravish'd eyes, gay gilded scenes and shining prospects rise, poetic fields encompass me around, and still I seem to tread on classic ground; for here the Muse so oft her harp has strung, that not a mountain rears its head unsung, renown'd in verse each shady thicket grows, and every stream in heavenly numbers flows.
Side 119 - GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF SYNTAX. 1. In every sentence there must be a verb and a nominative expressed or understood. 2. Every adjective must have a substantive expressed or understood. 3.
Side 155 - COMPOUND SENTENCES. A compound sentence is that which has more than one nominative, or one finite verb. A compound sentence is made up of two or more simple sentences or phrases, and is commonly called a Period.
Side 67 - MOOD. Present Tense, may or can. 1. Sim, I may be, Simus, We may be, 2. Sis, Thou mayest be, Sitis, Ye may be, 3. Sit, He may be ; Sint, They may be, Imperfect, might, could, wmtld, or should.
Side 156 - But if a nominative come between the relative and the verb, the relative will be of that case, which the verb or noun following, or the preposition going before, use to govern.
Side 159 - If the substantives be of different persons, the verb plural must agree with the first person rather than the second, and with the second rather than the third ; as...
Side 221 - II. signifies two; III. three; XX. twenty; XXX. thirty; CC. two hundred, &c. But V. and L. are never repeated. When a letter of a less value is placed before a letter of a greater, the less takes away what it stands for from the greater ; but being placed after, it adds what it stands for to the greater ; thus, IV. Four. V. Five. VI. Six. IX.
Side 197 - Thus le in lï!f<i is said to be short by authority, because it is always made short by the Latin poets. In most Latin words of one or two syllables, according to our manner of pronouncing, we can hardly distinguish by the ear a long syllable from a short. Thus le in ligo and ligi seem tn It...
Side 218 - WHEN all Thy mercies, O my God, My rising soul surveys, Transported with the view, I'm lost In wonder, love, and praise.