The True Doctrine of the Latin Subjunctive Mood |
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Page 1
... scarcely trace his way . This , however , does not arise from any pau- city of rules for the direction of the student t ; for there is no point of grammar upon which B critics and grammarians have written more largely . But the.
... scarcely trace his way . This , however , does not arise from any pau- city of rules for the direction of the student t ; for there is no point of grammar upon which B critics and grammarians have written more largely . But the.
Page 2
... grammarians have hitherto framed for the use of the mood . The only legitimate inference to be drawn from the circumstance is , that the true principle has not been discovered . It remains , then , a fit and interesting subject of ...
... grammarians have hitherto framed for the use of the mood . The only legitimate inference to be drawn from the circumstance is , that the true principle has not been discovered . It remains , then , a fit and interesting subject of ...
Page 3
... grammarians have laid down for the direction of students . To take a general view of them , however , it may be ob- jected to some of these rules , that they are in- consistent with each other ; to others , that they are swelled with an ...
... grammarians have laid down for the direction of students . To take a general view of them , however , it may be ob- jected to some of these rules , that they are in- consistent with each other ; to others , that they are swelled with an ...
Page 5
... grammarians of the earliest date , that the use of the subjunc- tive mood is regulated by the sense in which some connecting particle of the sentence is to be understood . This , in my opinion , is the grand and fatal error which has ...
... grammarians of the earliest date , that the use of the subjunc- tive mood is regulated by the sense in which some connecting particle of the sentence is to be understood . This , in my opinion , is the grand and fatal error which has ...
Page 9
... grammarians . I consider that we are indebted to Priscian principally for the embar- rassing notions with which the subject is hedged about . He took the lead in founding the use of the mood on the meaning to be attached to con ...
... grammarians . I consider that we are indebted to Priscian principally for the embar- rassing notions with which the subject is hedged about . He took the lead in founding the use of the mood on the meaning to be attached to con ...
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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
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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.
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Page 204 - Quo te cœlestis sapientia duceret, ires. Hoc opus, hoc Studium parvi properemus et ampli, Si patrias volumus, si nobis vivere cari.