A Second Latin Exercise Book with Hints for Higher Latin Prose Composition |
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Page vii
... reference is made throughout , and for the convenience of those who use the Public Schools Latin Primer a reference table has been added , giving the corre- sponding paragraphs of that book . My best thanks are due to those who have ...
... reference is made throughout , and for the convenience of those who use the Public Schools Latin Primer a reference table has been added , giving the corre- sponding paragraphs of that book . My best thanks are due to those who have ...
Page 12
... reference to some Noun immediately preceding , and in this respect the usage of both Pronouns is similar ; Inde Lepidus arcessitus . Hunc ( or eum ) dictator benigne ex- cepit . Then Lepidus was summoned . The dictator welcomed him ...
... reference to some Noun immediately preceding , and in this respect the usage of both Pronouns is similar ; Inde Lepidus arcessitus . Hunc ( or eum ) dictator benigne ex- cepit . Then Lepidus was summoned . The dictator welcomed him ...
Page 13
... reference to the Subject , we must use suus . Scaevola is here with his son . Scaevola cum filio suo hic est . ( 2 ) When the Principal Verb of a Latin sentence is in the Third Person , se and suus will , in accordance with the rule ...
... reference to the Subject , we must use suus . Scaevola is here with his son . Scaevola cum filio suo hic est . ( 2 ) When the Principal Verb of a Latin sentence is in the Third Person , se and suus will , in accordance with the rule ...
Page 25
... reference to the words or thoughts of any actual Person , but the whole Oblique Sentence is to be regarded as a Conception , and a Subordinate Clause will be judged to belong to it or not according as it does or does not form a ...
... reference to the words or thoughts of any actual Person , but the whole Oblique Sentence is to be regarded as a Conception , and a Subordinate Clause will be judged to belong to it or not according as it does or does not form a ...
Page 28
... reference to the Subject of some Verb in the Oratio Obliqua itself2 . When the Principal Verb is an Impersonal or is in the First or Second Person , se and suus must always refer to the Subject of some Verb in the Oratio Obliqua itself ...
... reference to the Subject of some Verb in the Oratio Obliqua itself2 . When the Principal Verb is an Impersonal or is in the First or Second Person , se and suus must always refer to the Subject of some Verb in the Oratio Obliqua itself ...
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A Second Latin Exercise Book: With Hints for Higher Latin Prose Composition ... John Barrow Allen No preview available - 2016 |
A Second Latin Exercise Book with Hints for Higher Latin Prose Composition John Barrow Allen No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
abdy Ablative Ablative Absolute Accusative Adjective Adverb agere Apodosis Ariovistus army asked athg atque B. G. vii battle Belgae Caes Caesar castra Cicero cloth command Conditional Sentences Crown 8vo Dative Demy 8vo denoting dixit Ecbatana enemy English Epithets erat examples EXERCISE expressed facere Gauls Genitive Gerund Grammar habere haec honour hope illud inquit introduced Introduction and Notes king Latin Livy M. A. Second M.A. Second Edition meaning mihi Milo nihil Noun omitted Oratio Obliqua Oratio Recta Oxford Participle Person phrases poenas potest Preposition Principal Verb Pronoun Protasis punishment quae quam quid quidem quin quis quod quum reference Relative Clause rendered Romans Rome rule Senate sentence soldiers speech Spolia Opima Subject Subjunctive Subordinate Clause sunt suus take an Infinitive Third Edition translated urbe usually utrum W. W. Skeat wished words
Popular passages
Page 162 - In the time of the poet it was crowned with the golden roofs of a temple; the temple is overthrown, the gold has been pillaged, the wheel of fortune has accomplished her revolution, and the sacred ground is again disfigured with thorns and brambles. The hill of the Capitol, on which we sit, was formerly the head of the Roman Empire, the citadel of the earth...
Page 188 - ... if their martial and veteran bands could once break those raw soldiers, who had rashly dared to approach them, they conquered a kingdom at one blow, and were justly entitled to all its possessions as the reward of their prosperous...
Page 81 - Libertatis autem originem inde magis , quia annuum Imperium consulare factum est, quam quod deminutum quicquam sit ex regia potestate, numeres.
Page 176 - Nothing of this is new to me ; I have foreseen and am prepared for it all." I am sensible that in the disorders of the mind, as well as those of the body, discourses are not thought the most efficacious remedies ; but I am persuaded also that the malady of the soul ought to be cured by spiritual applications.
Page 166 - ... the most successful of their countrymen, he inspired them with such enthusiastic resolution, that they followed him without murmuring. When they had penetrated a good way into the mountains, a powerful cazique appeared in a narrow pass, with a numerous body •of his subjects, to obstruct their progress. But men who had surmounted so many obstacles, despised the opposition of such feeble enemies. They attacked them with impetuosity, and, having dispersed them with much ease and great slaughter,...
Page 186 - But the priests had closed the doors ; and in his haste he stumbled over a dead body and fell. As he was rising, one of his own colleagues struck him on the head with a stool ; another claimed the honour of repeating the blow; and before the statues of the old kings, at the portico of the temple, the Tribune lay dead. Many of his adherents were slain with him ; many were forced over the edge of the Tarpeian rock, and were killed by their fall.
Page 165 - Philip, who, in an attitude of deep respect, stood awaiting his commands, thus addressed him: " If the vast possessions which are now bestowed on you had come by inheritance, there would be abundant cause for gratitude. How much more, when they come as a free gift, in the lifetime of your father ! But, however large the debt, I shall consider it all repaid, if you only discharge your duty to your subjects. So rule over them that men shall commend, and not censure me for the part I am now acting.
Page 162 - A young Spartan, named Isadas, distinguished himself particularly in this action. He was very handsome in the face, perfectly well shaped, of an advantageous stature, and in the flower of his youth ; he had neither armour nor clothes upon his body, which- shone with oil : he held a spear in one hand, and a sword in the other.
Page 177 - ... This made the people say, " Publius wants to become a king, and is building a house in a strong place, as if for a citadel where he may live with his guards, and oppress us." But he called the people together, and when he went down to them, the lictors who walked before him lowered the rods and the axes which they bore, to show that he owned the people to be greater than himself. He complained that they had mistrusted him, and he said that he would not build his house on the top of the hill Velia,...
Page 173 - Accordingly an embassy was dispatched to offer an exchange of prisoners and to propose terms on which a peace might be concluded. Regulus (according to the well-known story) accompanied this embassy, under promise to return to Carthage if the purposes of the embassy should fail.