| SEVERAL HANDS - 1758 - Liczba stron: 668
...and correcting ; who had fpent * all his days in reading, writing, and talking Latin; for he « feems to have had no turn for modern languages, and perhaps * he had almoft forgotten his mother-tongue. His ftylc there* fore is always unaffected, eafy, copious, fluent,... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1759 - Liczba stron: 516
...revifing and correcting; who had fpent all his days in reading, writing, and talking Latin; for he feems to have had no turn for modern languages, and perhaps he had almolt forgotten his mother-tongue. His ftyle therefore is always unaffected, eafy, copious, fluent,... | |
| 1764 - Liczba stron: 524
...revifing and correcting ; who had fpcnt all his days in reading, writing, and talking Latin ; for he feems to have had no turn for modern languages, and perhaps he had almoll forgotten his inothLT-tcr.guc. II:s ftyle therefore is al.V3>s unaffected, eafy, copious, fluent,... | |
| 1795 - Liczba stron: 532
...with great facility and rapitliiy, and who did not care for the trouble of revising and correfting ; who had spent all his days in reading, writing, and...seems to have had no turn for modern languages, and j-crhaps he had almost forgotten his mother-tongue. His style, therefore, is always unaffeéled, easy,... | |
| John Platts - 1826 - Liczba stron: 632
...volumes folio, 1703. Dr. Jortin, the biographer of Erasmus, speaking of his Latin style, says, it " is that of a man who had a strong memory, a natural...therefore, is always unaffected, easy, copious, fluent, and dear, but not always perfectly pure and strictly classical." No one contributed so much as Erasmus... | |
| David Nutt - 1837 - Liczba stron: 774
...moment ;" and Dr. .tin tin, who knew more of his works than any man, adds, " His style is that of a man who had spent all his days in reading, writing, and talking Latin, and it is therefore always unaffected, easy, copious, fluent, and clear," — nosmall recommendation... | |
| David Nutt - 1857 - Liczba stron: 618
...moment ;" and Dr. Jortin, who knew more of his works than any man, adds, " His style is that of a man who had spent all his days in reading, writing, and talking Latin, and it is therefore always unaffected, easy, copious, fluent, and clear," — nosmall recommendation... | |
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