| Roger Ascham - 1895 - 200 sider
...profit of two faults, gently warned of, then of four things rightly hltx/. 97. In these few lined, I have wrapped up the most tedious part of Grammar and also the ground of almost all the Rules . . . Which after this snrt, the master shall teach without all error, and the scholar shall learn... | |
| Roger Ascham - 1898 - 340 sider
...not there; he would have ended the sentence with this verb, not with that noun or participle, etc. In these few lines, I have wrapped up the most tedious...Grammar and also the ground of almost all the Rules . . . AVhich after this sort, the master shall teach without all error, and the scholar shall learn... | |
| Simon Somerville Laurie - 1905 - 284 sider
...encourage a will to learning, as is praise " (p. 200). * * * » » 1 Ratke also advocated this plan. " In these few lines I have wrapped up the most tedious...and so hardly learned by the scholar in all common schools; which after this sort the master shall teach without all error, and the scholar shall learn... | |
| Roger Ascham - 1909 - 206 sider
...not there ; he would have ended the sentence with this verb, not with that noun or participle, etc. In these few lines I have wrapped up the most tedious...and so hardly learned by the scholar in all common schools, which after this sort the master shall teach without all error, and the scholar shall learn... | |
| 1897 - 428 sider
...this means it is claimed the child will easily acquire a knowledge of grammar, and also the ground of all the rules that are so busily taught by the master and so hardly learned by the scholar in all schools. It is certainly an admirable method of teaching grammar, taking the pupil as it does, to the... | |
| George Reuben Potter - 1928 - 640 sider
...not there: he would have ended the sentence with this verb, not with that noun or participle," etc. In these few lines I have wrapped up the most tedious...and so hardly learned by the scholar, in all common schools; which, after this sort, the master shall teach without all error, and the scholar shall learn... | |
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