A Grammar of the Latin Language: For the Use of Schools and Colleges

Portada
Crocker and Brewster, 1845 - 323 páginas
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 1 - A, a; B, b; C, c ; D, d; E, e ; F, f; G, g; H, h; I, i; J, j; K, k ; L, 1; M, m ; N, n...
Página 225 - REM. 2. When a future action is spoken of either in the future, or in the imperative, or the subjunctive used imperatively, and another future action is connected with it, the...
Página 305 - XVI XV XIV XIII XII XI X IX VIII VII VI v IV III J to •3 a r*!
Página 285 - Caesura is of three kinds : — 1, of the foot; 2, of the rhythm ; and 3, of the verse. 1.
Página 304 - ... both the day of the calends, &-c., and that whose date was to be determined, were reckoned ; hence the second day before the calends, &,c., was called tertio, the third quarto, &.c. 4. To reduce the Roman calendar to our own, therefore, it is necessary to take one from the number denoting the day, and to subtract the remainder from the number of the day on which the nones or ides fell. Thus, to determine the day equivalent to IV.
Página 63 - Mille, one. two. three. four. five. six. seven. eight. nine. ten. eleven. twelve. thirteen. fourteen. fifteen. sixteen. seventeen. eighteen. nineteen. twenty. twenty-one. twenty-two. thirty. forty.
Página 99 - I have been loved, thou hast been loved, he has been loved ; we have been loved, you have been loved, they have been loved.
Página 194 - The name of a town in which any thing is said to be, or to be done, if of the first or second declension and singular number, is put in the genitive ; as, Habitat MiUti, He lives at Miletus.
Página 64 - The first three cardinal numbers are declined : those from four to a hundred inclusive are indeclinable; those denoting hundreds are declined like the plural of bonus. For the declension of unus and tres, see §§ 107 and 109.
Página 16 - DECLENSION. 1 . Nouns of the neuter gender have the 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.

Información bibliográfica