New Latin Tutor ...Hilliard, Gray & Company, 1833 |
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Página 18
... Cicero scribo3 .. I did sing . Thou wast play- ing . The eagle was flying . Romans have conquered . father laughed . Troy fell . our had commanded . Cicero had written . The grape will hang , Trees will grow , Soldiers 18 LATIN EXERCISES .
... Cicero scribo3 .. I did sing . Thou wast play- ing . The eagle was flying . Romans have conquered . father laughed . Troy fell . our had commanded . Cicero had written . The grape will hang , Trees will grow , Soldiers 18 LATIN EXERCISES .
Página 29
... Cicero was esteemed eloquent . Pompey was named the great . Great princes are considered very happy , poor men are ac- counted very miserable . The sol- diers sleep secure . You will be- come a poet . Virtue is the high- est nobility ...
... Cicero was esteemed eloquent . Pompey was named the great . Great princes are considered very happy , poor men are ac- counted very miserable . The sol- diers sleep secure . You will be- come a poet . Virtue is the high- est nobility ...
Página 39
... Cicero are well . My father and mother are dead . Riches , honour , glory , are placed before our eyes . Rage and anger hurry the mind . Si tu et Tullia vale- tis , ego et Cicero valē- mus . Pater mihi et mater mortui sunt . Divitiæ ...
... Cicero are well . My father and mother are dead . Riches , honour , glory , are placed before our eyes . Rage and anger hurry the mind . Si tu et Tullia vale- tis , ego et Cicero valē- mus . Pater mihi et mater mortui sunt . Divitiæ ...
Página 58
... Cicero was too greedy of glory . Thou art not prodigal of gold . Live mindful of old age and death . Because he had known him desirous of new things [. The nature of man is fond of novelty . A mind , solicitous about the future , is ...
... Cicero was too greedy of glory . Thou art not prodigal of gold . Live mindful of old age and death . Because he had known him desirous of new things [. The nature of man is fond of novelty . A mind , solicitous about the future , is ...
Página 90
... , extravagance , idleness . + Here Cicero uses ille in a reproachful sense . Potior governs the gen . or abl . Adam , Rule 21. Obs . 1 . Thou art accustomed to forget nothing but injuries . Regardless 90 LATIN EXERCISES .
... , extravagance , idleness . + Here Cicero uses ille in a reproachful sense . Potior governs the gen . or abl . Adam , Rule 21. Obs . 1 . Thou art accustomed to forget nothing but injuries . Regardless 90 LATIN EXERCISES .
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Términos y frases comunes
accusative ADAM.-RULE adjective alius anapest apud Ariovistus atque Cæsar cæsura catalectic Catiline Cicero clause cùm dactyle dico domus elegant elegantly ellip enall enemy ENGLISH equus etiam EXERCISE facio father feet fero followed foot friends genitive gerund habeo Helvetii hexameter homo honour Horat iambic iambic trimeter ille ipse magnus malè mihi mind mitto MODEL modò multus neque neut nihil nisi noster nullus nunc omnis opus participle pentameter periphrasis plupf plur possum preposition pres pronoun puer quæ quàm quantus quid quis quod Roman sentence sing sometimes spondee subj subjunctive subjunctive mood substantive sum impf sum perf suus syllable synon tamen tantus tempus tergum thee things tibi tmesis trochaic trochee TURNED INTO LATIN tuus unus urbs venio verb verò verse virtue volo vowel words
Pasajes populares
Página 343 - 84. No. 17. When worn with sickness, oft hast thou With health renewed my face, And, when in sins and sorrow sunk, Revived my soul with grace. 85. No. 17. Thy bounteous hand with worldly bliss copia), And in a kind and faithful friend Has made my cup run
Página 345 - land The work of an almighty hand. 95. No. 17. 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 ; Whilst all the stars that round her burn, And all the planets in their turn, Confirm the tidings as they roll, And spread the truth from pole to pole. 30
Página 345 - the year. 93. No. 25. 10 Lines. Neither night nor dawn of day Puts a period to thy play; Sing then, and extend thy span Far beyond the date of man: Wretched man, whose years are spent In repining discontent, Lives not, aged though he be,
Página 343 - tot munera). 82. No. 17. When in the slippery paths of youth With heedless steps (Incogitans, animique praceps) I ran, Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe, And led me up to man ((mum
Página 322 - 28. So the sweet lark, high poised in air, Shuts close his pinions to his breast (Pentam.), If chance his mate's shrill note he hear, And drops at once into her nest. 29. Nations behold, remote from reason's beams (ellip.), Where Indian Ganges rolls his sandy streams, Of life impatient, rush into the fire, And willing victims to their gods expire,
Página 343 - (sat superque me bedrit 86. No. 17. Ten thousand thousand precious gifts My daily thanks employ ; Nor is the least a cheerful heart, That tastes
Página 346 - What though in solemn silence all More round this dark, terrestrial ball,— What though no real voice nor sound Amidst their radiant orbs be found,— In
Página 281 - Vox quoque per lucos vulgo exaudita silentes Ingens, et simulacra modis pallentia miris. Prepositions are often placed, in poetry, after the noun which they govern, and are sometimes separated from the words with which they are compounded, and placed in a different part of the verse ; as, Spemque metumque inter dubii seu vivere credant. Ter conatus ibi collo dare brachia
Página 198 - His learning and virtue are too great to be set forth with advantage by me, and too well known every where to need it, unless I would, according to the proverb, show the sun with a lantern. 2. Some boys are too idle to learn, and too contumacious
Página 227 - through the rest of the sentence. 2. It is impossible for me to pass over in silence such remarkable mildness, and singular and unheard-of clemency, and such unusual moderation, in the exercise of supreme power. 1. We make most use of the direction of the soul and of the service of the body. 3. For