Elegantiæ Latinæ; or Rules & exercises illustrative of elegant Latin style [by E. Valpy].A.J. Valpy. Sold by Messrs. Longmans; Baldwins; Whittakers, 1821 - 256 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 37
Strona
... greatest care is usually taken in con- ducting him to a certain point : when he understands the plain application of his rules of Syntax , he is then thrown upon the wide world of elegant Latinity , in which the range he is to take ...
... greatest care is usually taken in con- ducting him to a certain point : when he understands the plain application of his rules of Syntax , he is then thrown upon the wide world of elegant Latinity , in which the range he is to take ...
Strona 12
... greatest virtue and honor , has been cruelly put to death by a man of the most abandoned and infamous character . 2. I am very intimate with Fabius , that most excellent and learned man . ( To be intimate with ; familiariter uti . ) 3 ...
... greatest virtue and honor , has been cruelly put to death by a man of the most abandoned and infamous character . 2. I am very intimate with Fabius , that most excellent and learned man . ( To be intimate with ; familiariter uti . ) 3 ...
Strona 20
... greatest repre- hension . They waste their precious time in disputing among themselves , instead of marching directly against the enemy , and commencing the engagement . 2. Instead of showing his gratitude for the favors he has received ...
... greatest repre- hension . They waste their precious time in disputing among themselves , instead of marching directly against the enemy , and commencing the engagement . 2. Instead of showing his gratitude for the favors he has received ...
Strona 21
... greatest part of the winter at Capua , the dissoluteness and luxuries of which city so enervated the minds and bodies of his soldiers , that Marcellus seems to have said with great propriety that Capùa had proved a Cannæ to Hannibal ...
... greatest part of the winter at Capua , the dissoluteness and luxuries of which city so enervated the minds and bodies of his soldiers , that Marcellus seems to have said with great propriety that Capùa had proved a Cannæ to Hannibal ...
Strona 25
... greatest dan gers , and in every engagement , which they call presence of mind . We say that the verb sum is followed by a geni tive or an ablative when it serves to denote a Eleg . qua- lity , praise and blame , & c . but 25.
... greatest dan gers , and in every engagement , which they call presence of mind . We say that the verb sum is followed by a geni tive or an ablative when it serves to denote a Eleg . qua- lity , praise and blame , & c . but 25.
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Elegantiae Latinae; Or Rules & Exercises Illustrative of Elegant Latin Style ... Edward Valpy Podgląd niedostępny - 2016 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
ablative absolute accusative adeò adjective adverb alius army arts atque bound Cæsar Catiline cause chiefly Cicero clause conjunction connexion copiousness cùm dative death dignity effect elegant elegantly placed eloquence enemy English enim Ennius etiam etsi EXAMPLES excellent expressed father followed fortune friends friendship genitive genius give greater greatest happy honor idea infinitive labor Latin Latin language learned liberal Livy meaning mihi mind nature necessary nemo neque nihil nisi nominative noun numbers observed omnis omnium orator participle perfect periphrasis perspicuity pleasure PLEONASM pluperfect Pompey praise preposition present pronoun quæ quàm quantus quid quidem Quintilian quis quisque quod reason received relative relative clause rendered Roman rules Sallust scholar sense sentence sometimes speaking style subjunctive subjunctive mood substantive sunt talis tamen tantus tence thing tibi tive verb verò virtue volo whole wisdom wish words write
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 165 - Pra and pro for in comparison of; in respect of; in proportion to. 1. Our littleness, in comparison of the bigness of their bodies, is matter of contempt with most of the Gauls.
Strona 108 - JUSTUM et tenacem propositi virum Non civium ardor prava jubentium, Non vultus instantis tyranni Mente quatit solida, neque Auster, Dux inquieti turbidus Adriae, 5 Nee fulminantis magna manus Jovis : Si fractus illabatur orbis, * Impavidum ferient ruinae.
Strona 133 - Latins seldom use non followed by nee or neque, but repeat either of the two latter. 1. After this battle, Caesar resolved not to give audience to their ambassadors, nor admit them to terms of peace, seeing they had treacherously applied for a truce, and afterwards wantonly broken it. 2. That part of your excuse in which you say, that your letters are always couched in the same words, from your poverty of expression, / do not understand, and do not approve.
Strona 213 - Beware, citizens, beware lest, as it was glorious for them to transmit so extensive an empire to posterity, Your inability to preserve and defend it prove not infamous for you. Though this past behaviour of thine was beyond all patience, Yet have I borne with it as I could. The structure of a period will be easily understood from these examples ; but as some difficulty will arise, where the simple idea does not immediately supply materials for the formation of the period, and as nothing contributes...
Strona 195 - ... of a sentence, where quod though seemingly redundant, must refer to the subject of the preceding sentence. EXAMPLES. *1. He had but too much reason to suspect that the continuance of the Roman army could be with no other design, than that of oppressing him.
Strona 55 - ... of more accomplished parts than any of them, and of great reputation by the part he acted against the court and the duke of Buckingham, in the parliament of the fourth year of the king, (the last parliament that had been before the short one in April,) and...
Strona 49 - This form seems to have been originally made use of in verbs which wanted a supine, and consequently a future of the infinitive, and to have been afterwards adopted more universally on account of the elegance of the variation. After the verbs to will, to wish, to desire, to suffer, and after tequum est, oportet, necesse est, sequitur, either ut or the accusative with the infinitive may be used indifferently.
Strona 63 - The force of these two rules may be more clearly and briefly illustrated by these two short examples, in which it is shown, when the ablative absolute may, or may not, be used : When the sun rises,, the moon withdraws her light. . . Here are two nominatives to two different divisions of a sentence, the first of which may be rendered by the ablative absolute : and, When the sun rises, it puts the stars to flight.
Strona 134 - Thus the quality of their food, their perpetual exercise, and free unconfined manner of life, (because being from their childhood fettered by no rules of duty or education, they acknowledge no law but will and pleasure) contribute to make them strong, and to render them of a gigantic size.
Strona 185 - ... great admirers of polite learning. Rocks and deserts re-echo sounds ; savage beasts are often soothed by music, and listen to its charms : and shall we, with all the advantages of the best education, be unaffected with the voice of poetry ? The...