The True Doctrine of the Latin Subjunctive Mood |
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Page 2
... circumstance is , that the true principle has not been discovered . It remains , then , a fit and interesting subject of inquiry ; and the advantage which will arise from its discovery will be proportionate to the difficulty and ...
... circumstance is , that the true principle has not been discovered . It remains , then , a fit and interesting subject of inquiry ; and the advantage which will arise from its discovery will be proportionate to the difficulty and ...
Page 6
... circumstance , is considered by the acute writer of the treatise as subsidiary only to a right application of other rules for the construction of qui . It is surprising that Mr. Carson should have entertained such correct views of the ...
... circumstance , is considered by the acute writer of the treatise as subsidiary only to a right application of other rules for the construction of qui . It is surprising that Mr. Carson should have entertained such correct views of the ...
Page 31
... circumstance of languages ex- isting without them . There is , indeed , nothing in the nature of a verb to require them . Aristotle confines the parts of speech to two , -noun and verb ; these alone being necessary to constitute a ...
... circumstance of languages ex- isting without them . There is , indeed , nothing in the nature of a verb to require them . Aristotle confines the parts of speech to two , -noun and verb ; these alone being necessary to constitute a ...
Page 37
... circumstances intended , and after- wards , by celerity of pronunciation , coalesced with the words of which they now form the termination . " - Crombie's Etymology . That this was the case in verbs , is not only conceivable , but ...
... circumstances intended , and after- wards , by celerity of pronunciation , coalesced with the words of which they now form the termination . " - Crombie's Etymology . That this was the case in verbs , is not only conceivable , but ...
Page 49
... circumstance of his subject . In reference to an obser- vation of Scioppius , who remarks upon two examples , that " dixe- rim " is used for " dicam , " Ursinus says with great justness , that it is one thing for a person to affirm ...
... circumstance of his subject . In reference to an obser- vation of Scioppius , who remarks upon two examples , that " dixe- rim " is used for " dicam , " Ursinus says with great justness , that it is one thing for a person to affirm ...
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Common terms and phrases
adduced admit affirmed antecedent appears apud atque autem Cæsar Cicero conjunction connexion considered construction copula Crombie dicate dicere Edinburgh Review ejus ellipsis enim erit esset etiam etsi examine examples expressed fact finitivis grammar grammarians gratias habet hæc homines illud illum indicative mood inflexion instance ipse joined junctive mood language Latin language Latin subjunctive mood lative Livy logical mark meaning mihi modal modo modus nemo neque nihil noun observation omnes omnia opinion Orat Parr participle particular passage Perizonius person potential mood predicate principle Priscian proposition quæ qualified quam quibus quid quidem quis quod relative clause remark rule says scio sentence sint Subj subjunctive form sunt tamen tempus tence tenses tibi tion tive mood Tmolus true subject Ursinus Varro verb Viden vides Vossius words writers
Popular passages
Page 48 - O that men would therefore praise the LORD for His goodness : and declare the wonders that He doeth for the children of men...
Page 199 - Namque canebat, uti magnum per inane coacta semina terrarumque animaeque marisque fuissent, et liquidi simul ignis ; ut his exordia primis omnia et ipse tener mundi concreverit orbis...
Page 142 - Appius regebat et caecus et senex : intentum enim animum tamquam areum habebat nec languescens succumbebat senectuti. Tenebat non modo auctoritatem, sed etiam imperium in suos : metuebant servi, verebantur liberi, carum omnes habebant ; vigebat in illa domo mos patrius et disciplina.
Page 121 - Facturusne operae pretium sim, si a primordio urbis res populi Romani perscripserim, nee satis scio...
Page 119 - Pythius, qui esset, ut argentarius, apud omnes ordines gratiosus, piscatores ad se convocavit, et ab his petivit, ut ante suos hortulos postridie piscarentur : dixitque, quid eos facere vellet.
Page 226 - Ventos et varium caeli praediscere morem Cura sit ac patrios cultusque habitusque locorum, Et quid quaeque ferat regio et quid quaeque recuset.
Page 200 - Salii ad cantus incensa altaria circum 285 populeis adsunt evincti tempora ramis, hic iuvenum chorus, ille senum ; qui carmine laudes Herculeas et facta ferunt : ut prima- novercae monstra manu geminosque premens eliserit angues, ut bello egregias idem disiecerit urbes, 290 Troiamque Oechaliamque, ut duros mille labores rege sub Eurystheo fatis lunonis iniquae pertulerit.
Page 159 - Nam fuit quoddam tempus cum in agris homines passim bestiarum modo vagabantur...
Page 89 - Quod idem cum Stoici de sapiente dicunt, nimis admirabiliter nimisque magnifice dicere videntur. 37 XVII. Ergo hie, quisquis est, qui moderatione et constantia quietus animo est sibique ipse placatus, ut nee tabescat molestiis nee frangatur timore nee sitienter quid expetens ardeat desiderio nee alacritate futili gestiens deliquescat, is est sapiens, quern quaerimus, is est beatus, cui nihil humanarum rerum aut intolerabile ad demittendum animum aut nimis laetabile ad efferendum videri potest.
Page 204 - Quo te cœlestis sapientia duceret, ires. Hoc opus, hoc Studium parvi properemus et ampli, Si patrias volumus, si nobis vivere cari.