A Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges

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D. Appleton, 1888 - 430 Seiten
 

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Seite 22 - NUMBER. 44. The Latin, like the English, has three persons and two numbers. The first person denotes the speaker; the second, the person spoken to; the third, the person spoken of. The singular number denotes one; the plural, more than one.
Seite 192 - Some verbs of asking and teaching may take two Accusatives, one of the Person, and the other of the Thing (§ 396).
Seite 232 - Ad, adversus (adversum), ante, apud, circa, circum, circlter, 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.
Seite 355 - This is the forest primeval ; but where are the hearts that beneath it Leaped like the roe, when he hears in the woodland the voice of the huntsman?
Seite 326 - A noun predicated of another noun denoting a different person or thing is put in the Genitive : Omnia hostium erant, all things belonged to the enemy.
Seite 245 - John and you, and / will do our duty." BULE 2. — When a pronoun refers to two or more words in the singular, taken separately, or to one of them exclusively, it must be singular ; as, " A clock or a watch moves merely as it is moved.

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