Elementary Latin grammar. [With] Latin exercises1865 |
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... NOMINATIVE AND ACCU- SATIVE CASES , · USE OF THE DATIVE CASE , USE OF THE GENITIVE CASE , USE OF THE ABLATIVE CASE , USE OF THE VOCATIVE CASE , PECULIARITIES IN THE USE OF ADJECTIVES , DIFFERENT KINDS OF CLAUSES AND THEIR RELATIONS TO ...
... NOMINATIVE AND ACCU- SATIVE CASES , · USE OF THE DATIVE CASE , USE OF THE GENITIVE CASE , USE OF THE ABLATIVE CASE , USE OF THE VOCATIVE CASE , PECULIARITIES IN THE USE OF ADJECTIVES , DIFFERENT KINDS OF CLAUSES AND THEIR RELATIONS TO ...
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... Nominative , Genitive , Dative , Accusative , Vocative , and Ablative , which are distin- guished from each other by terminations or endings . 1. The Nominative expresses the subject of an assertion— as DECLENSION OF SUBSTANTIVES ...
... Nominative , Genitive , Dative , Accusative , Vocative , and Ablative , which are distin- guished from each other by terminations or endings . 1. The Nominative expresses the subject of an assertion— as DECLENSION OF SUBSTANTIVES ...
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Leonhard Schmitz. 1. The Nominative expresses the subject of an assertion— as DEUS creavit mundum , God created the world ; in which DEUS is the subject or nominative . 2. The Genitive denotes the author or possessor , or any of the ...
Leonhard Schmitz. 1. The Nominative expresses the subject of an assertion— as DEUS creavit mundum , God created the world ; in which DEUS is the subject or nominative . 2. The Genitive denotes the author or possessor , or any of the ...
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... nominative , accusative , and vocative alike , which in the plural end in -ă . Neuters are found only in the second , third , and fourth declensions . 2. The accusative of masculine and feminine nouns of all the declensions ends in the ...
... nominative , accusative , and vocative alike , which in the plural end in -ă . Neuters are found only in the second , third , and fourth declensions . 2. The accusative of masculine and feminine nouns of all the declensions ends in the ...
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... nominative singular and the stem are identical ; but the a of the stem is often contracted with the vowel of the termination in the other cases . 35. All nouns purely Latin ( both adjective and substantive ) belonging to the first ...
... nominative singular and the stem are identical ; but the a of the stem is often contracted with the vowel of the termination in the other cases . 35. All nouns purely Latin ( both adjective and substantive ) belonging to the first ...
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Common terms and phrases
ablative accusative action active adjectives adjectives denoting adverbs ama-re ama-tus ama-vi audi-re audi-tus belongs changing clause comp compounds conjugation connecting vowel consonant dative dele-re dele-tus dele-vi Deponent verbs derived destroyed English essem expressed feminine feminine-as fourth conjugation FUTURE PERFECT gender genitive gerund i-as Imperative IMPERFECT impersonal verbs Indicative infinitive Latin language loved Masc masculine masculine-as mayst mihi millia mood names neut neuter nominative nouns occurs Pages participle passive pater perf perfect and supine person or thing PLUPERFECT plur PLURAL praise predicate preposition Price pronoun prosum quae quod quum relative relative clause scrib-o scrip-ti ae scrip-tus second conjugation second declension simple SINGULAR sint sometimes stem ends stem-as stroyed subjunctive is wanting substantives suffix sunt superlative supine syllable tenses termination third conjugation third declension third person thou wilt tive transitive verbs verb-as vicesimus viginti Wood-cuts words write
Popular passages
Page 1 - H; I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z a, b, c, d, o, f, g, h, i...
Page 174 - Verbs of charging, accusing, convicting, condemning, and acquitting, govern the accusative of the person and the genitive of the thing with which one is charged, and of which he is accused, convicted, acquitted, &c.
Page 72 - The imperfect indicative active, by changing o into abam in the first conjugation, in the second into bam, and in the third and fourth into ebam. A change of the m into r makes the imperfect indicative passive, eg amabam, amabar ; monebam...
Page 44 - When a comparison is instituted between two persons or things in regard to a quality they have in common, or when the same quality existing in the same object is compared with itself at...
Page 166 - Spud, cirea, cireum, ctrciter, cis, citra, contra, erga, extra, infra, inter, intra, juxta, ob, penes, per, pone, post, praeter, prope, propter, secundum, supra, trans, ultra, versus: Ad urbem, To the city.
Page 58 - The pronoun of the third person is properly a reflective ; that is, one which refers either to the subject of the clause in which it occurs, or if it appears in an inserted clause, to the subject of the leading clause — as Cato se interfecit, 'Cato killed himself,' the se referring to Cato, the subject ; amicus meus contemnebat divitias, quod se felicem redden non possent, ' my friend despised wealth, because it could not make him happy,' the se referring to my friend, the subject of the leading...
Page 51 - Nom. duo duae duo Gen. duorum duarum duorum Dat. duobus duabus duobus Ace. duos, duo duas duo Abl. duobus duabus duobus a.
Page 136 - I do not know ; placet, it pleases ; perf. placuit and placitum est; praestat, it is better ; restat, it remains ; vacat, it is wanting ; est in the sense of licet, it is permitted or possible, eg est videre, non est dicere verum, but especially in poetry and late prose writers.
Page 50 - D. or 10. quingenti, ae, a. 600. DC. sexcenti, ae, a. 700. DCC. septingenti, ae, a. 800. DCCC. octingenti, ae, a. 900. DCCCC. nongenti, ae, a. 1000. M. or cio. »«7£e. 2000. cioci3. or MM. dwo milia, or oi