The Rudiments of Latin GrammarParker and Bliss, sold at the Troy bookstore, sign of the Bible, and by the principal booksellers, 1814 - Latin language - 252 pages |
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Common terms and phrases
ablative accufative active added adjectives adverbs agree alfo alicui aliquem aliquid aliquo alſo applied becauſe cafes called circum commonly compounds conjugation dative declenfion derived effe ejus Engliſh expreffed fame fcil fecond feet feminine fentence fhort fignify fingular firſt fome fometimes four fourth frequently fubftantive fupine fyllable gender genitive gerund govern Greek hæc iambus Indicative infinitive inter joined kind Latin letter likewife loved manner marked mihi Mode names neuter nominative nouns Ovid paffive participle perfon Plur plural præ prefent prepofition quid quis quod rule Sing terminations thefe theſe thing third Thou tibi tive ufed underſtood uſed verbs verfe Virg voice vowel
Popular passages
Page 2 - Co. of the said district, have deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as proprietors, in the words following, to wit : " Tadeuskund, the Last King of the Lenape. An Historical Tale." In conformity to the Act of the Congress of the United States...
Page 2 - IN Conformity to the Act of the Congrefs of the United States, entitled, "An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by fecuring the Copies of Maps, Charts, and Books, to the Authors and Proprietors of fuch Copies, during the Times therein mentioned...
Page 165 - If no nominative come between the relative and the verb, the relative will be the nominative to the verb. But if a...
Page 2 - Times therein mentioned;" and alfo to an Act, entitled,'' An Act fupplementary to an Act, entitled, An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by fecuring the Copies of Maps, Charts, and Books, to the Authors and Proprietors of fuch Copies, during the Times therein mentioned...
Page 42 - Adjectives of the third declension have e or t in the ablative singular : but if the neuter be in e, the ablative has i only. 2. The genitive plural ends in ium, and the neuter of the nominative, accusative, and vocative, in ia : except comparatives, which have urn and a.
Page 242 - ... to the greater; thus, IV. Four. V. Five. VI. Six. IX. Nine. X. Ten. XI. Eleven. XL. Forty. L. Fifty. LX. Sixty. XC. Ninety. C. A hundred. CX. A hundred and ten.
Page 5 - L, 1; M, m; N, n; O, o; P, p; Q, q; R, r; S, s; T, t; U, u; V, v; X, x; Y, y; Z, z.
Page 9 - Substantives are of two sorts, proper and common names. Proper names are the names appropriated to individuals, as the names of persons and places ; such are Cœsar, Rome.
Page 5 - Sentences consist of words ; Words consist of one or more syllables ; Syllables of one or more letters. So that Letters, Syllables, Words, and Sentences, make up the whole subject of Grammar.
Page 160 - PLACE. The circumstances of place may be reduced to four particulars. 1. The place where, or in which. 2. The place whither, or to which. 3. The place whence, or from which. 4. The place by, or through which. AT or IN a place is put in the genitive ; unless the noua be of the third declension, or of the plural number, and then it is expressed in the ablative. TO a place is put in the accusative ; FROM or BY a place in the ablative.