Cato major sive, De senectute, Laelius sive De amicitia, et Epistolae selectaeWhittaker & Company, G. Bell, 1884 - 262 páginas |
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Página viii
... passage of the Brutus ( c . 27 ) he speaks again of the care of this Roman matron about her son's education : " Fuit Gracchus diligentia Corneliae matris a puero doctus et Graecis literis eruditus ; nam semper habuit exquisito Graecia ...
... passage of the Brutus ( c . 27 ) he speaks again of the care of this Roman matron about her son's education : " Fuit Gracchus diligentia Corneliae matris a puero doctus et Graecis literis eruditus ; nam semper habuit exquisito Graecia ...
Página ix
... passage is from the First Book of " The Schoolmaster ; or , a plain and perfect Way of teaching Children to understand , write , and speak the Latin Tongue , by Roger Ascham , Esquire , Preceptor to her Majesty Queen Elizabeth . Now ...
... passage is from the First Book of " The Schoolmaster ; or , a plain and perfect Way of teaching Children to understand , write , and speak the Latin Tongue , by Roger Ascham , Esquire , Preceptor to her Majesty Queen Elizabeth . Now ...
Página xv
... passages in which they occur , to a determination of their primary and secondary meanings . An examination of the various forms of nouns also leads to a better arrangement of their declensions . By reducing each noun to its crude form ...
... passages in which they occur , to a determination of their primary and secondary meanings . An examination of the various forms of nouns also leads to a better arrangement of their declensions . By reducing each noun to its crude form ...
Página xviii
... passages from good authors . Cicero's recommendation was founded on his own practice : " Exercenda est etiam memoria ediscendis ad verbum quam plurimis et nostris scriptis et alienis . " Cicero , De Orat . 1. 34 . L poetical ...
... passages from good authors . Cicero's recommendation was founded on his own practice : " Exercenda est etiam memoria ediscendis ad verbum quam plurimis et nostris scriptis et alienis . " Cicero , De Orat . 1. 34 . L poetical ...
Página xxv
... passage is from the second book of the School- master : " After that your scholar , as I said before , shall come indeed , first to a ready perfectness in translating , then to a ripe and skilful choice in marking out his six 5 points ...
... passage is from the second book of the School- master : " After that your scholar , as I said before , shall come indeed , first to a ready perfectness in translating , then to a ripe and skilful choice in marking out his six 5 points ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Cato Major Sive de Senectute, Laelius Sive de Amicitia, Et Epistolae ... Marcus Tullius Cicero Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Cato Major Sive, de Senectute, Laelius Sive de Amicitia, Et Epistolae Selectae Marcus Tullius Cicero Sin vista previa disponible - 2019 |
Cato Major Sive De Senectute: Laelius Sive De Amicitia, Et Epistolae ... Marcus Tullius Cicero Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
aetas aetatis aliquid amici amicitia animi animo Antonius apud atque autem Caesar Cato causa Cicero Cicero says consul Crown 8vo cujus dicere Edition ejus enim Ennius erat esset etiam Etsi expression F. A. Paley Fcap fuisse fuit Grammar Greek haec igitur illa illud ipsa ipse ipsi Itaque Laelius Latin Latin language legatus letter lictor literas Livy magis Manutius matter means mihi modo multa multis natura neque nihil nisi nobis nulla nunc omnes omnia omnibus omnis omnium Orelli passage Plutarch possit potest praetor primum publicani quae quaestor quam quamquam quibus quid quidem Quintus quod quoniam quum reading rebus rei publicae rerum Roman saepe Scipio sed etiam senectute sentence Seyffert sibi sint solum subjunctive summa sunt tamen tamquam thing tibi tion Tiro tuae tuam tuis ultro vero Verr vita word
Pasajes populares
Página vi - ... the child doubteth in nothing that his master taught him before. After this, the child must take a paper book, and sitting in some place, where no man shall prompt him, by himself, let him translate into English his former lesson. Then showing it to his master, let the master take from him his Latin book, and pausing an hour at the least, then let the child translate his own English into Latin again in another paper book. When the child bringeth it turned into Latin, the master must compare it...
Página 8 - An Elementary Treatise on Mensuration. By BT Moore, MA 5s. ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY AND DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS. An Introduction to Analytical Plane Geometry. By WP Turnbull, MA 8vo. 12s. Problems on the Principles of Plane Co-ordinate Geometry. By W. Walton, MA 8vo. 16s. Trilinear Co-ordinates, and Modern Analytical Geometry of Two Dimensions.
Página 201 - Epistularum genera multa esse non ignoras, sed unum illud certissimum, cuius causa inventa res ipsa est, ut certiores faceremus absentes, si quid esset, quod eos scire aut nostra aut ipsorum interesset.
Página 13 - The New Testament for English Readers. By the late H. Alford, DD Vol. I. Part I. 3rd Edit. 12s. Vol. I. Part II. 2nd Edit. 10s.
Página 15 - Richardson's Philological Dictionary of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE. Combining Explanation with Etymology, and copiously illustrated by Quotations from the Best Authorities. New Edition, with a Supplement containing additional Words and further Illustrations. In 2 vols.
Página 5 - Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. Greek Particles and their Combinations according to Attic Usage. A Short Treatise. By FA Paley, MA 2s.
Página xiii - AFTER the child hath learned perfectly the eight parts of speech, let him then learn the right joining together of substantives with adjectives, the noun with the verb, the relative with the antecedent.
Página 17 - Illustration. *The Old Boathouse. Bell and Fan; or, A Cold Dip. *Tot and the Cat. A Bit of Cake. The Jay. The Black Hen's Nest.
Página 5 - CLASSICAL TABLES. Latin Accidence. By the Rev. P. Frost, MA Is. Latin Versification. Is. Notabilia Qusedam ; or the Principal Tenses of most of the Irregular Greek Verbs and Elementary Greek, Latin, and French Construction.
Página viii - Loquendo, male loqui discunt"; and that excellent learned man G. Budaeus, in his Greek commentaries, sore complaineth that when he began to learn the Latin tongue, use of speaking Latin at the table and elsewhere unadvisedly did bring him to such an evil choice of words, to such a crooked framing of sentences, that no one thing did hurt or hinder him more all the days of his life afterward, both for readiness in speaking and also good judgment in writing.