The Eton Latin grammar [ed.] by G. Taylor1828 |
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ablative ablativo ablativum accus accusativum additur Adjectiva adjectives Adverbs advised ALIENUS aliquando amat-i audit-us casus COMMUNIS compounds CONJUGATION cùm DATIVE dativum declension declined erátis etiam exigunt Exosus feminine FUERAM fuerimus fuerint fueris FUERO fuisti Future-shall gender genitive genitivo genitivum Gerunds govern a dative govern a genitive habent hæc heard horum huic hujus hunc IMPERATIVE MOOD IMPERATIVE MOOD-Let INDICATIVE MOOD INFINITIVE MOOD interdum junguntur magistratu malè Masc masculine mihi MISEREOR monit-us NATUS Neut neuter nominative Nouns omnes Participles Plur plural POTENTIAL AND SUBJUNCTIVE præ præpositione preposition Present and Preterimperfect Present-may Preterperfect Preterperfect-have Preterpluperfect Preterpluperfect-had pronoun quæ Quædam quod recordor rect-us refert Reg-ERE regunt rule short sibi signifying Sing singular spondee SUBJUNCTIVE MOODS substantive sunt Supines suus syllable Tene-ri tenses thing thou tibi Tibur Trist-es tuâ Verba verbis VIRG vocative volo vowel word
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Strana 46 - THE THREE CONCORDS EXPLAINED. THERE are three Concords, or Agreements, in Latin : 1. Between the nominative case and the verb. 2. Between the substantive and the adjective. 3. Between the antecedent and the relative. THE FIRST CONCORD. A VERB agrees with its nominative case in number and person. In order to find out the nominative case, ask the question who, or what? with the verb; and the word that...
Strana 49 - The relative agrees with its antecedent in gender, number, and person ; as, 8 Vir sapit, b qui pauca loquitur, The man is wise, who speaketh few words.
Strana 48 - A verb personal agrees with its nominative case in number and person : as, Sera nunquam est ad bonos mores via.
Strana 92 - Hurl'd often cuts off the vowel at the end of a word, when the next word begins with a vowel; though he does not like the Greeks wholly drop the vowel, but lull retains it in writing like the Latins.
Strana 10 - Sing. Ero, / shall, or, will be. Eris, thou shall, or, wilt be. Erit, he shall, or, will be. Plur.
Strana 1 - P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z. t Of these are vowels, a, e, i, o, u, y. J Four are double letters, j, w, x, z. § Four are liquids, 1, m, n, r. || And twelve are mutes, b, c, d, f, g, h, k, p, q, s, t, V.
Strana 7 - Quis, quce, quid, or quod, who, or what, is declined like qui; as are also aliquis, and other compounds of quis : these for the most part make the feminine gender of the nominative case singular, and the neuter of the nominative and accusative cases plural, in qiui.
Strana 11 - Fuissemus, We might, or, would have been. Fuissetis, ye might, or, would have been. Fuissent, they might, or, would have been. 5. Future Tense. — shall have. Sing. Fuero, / shall have been. Fueris, thou shalt have been. Fuerit, he shall have been. Plur. Fuerimus, We shall have been. Fueritis, ye shall have been. Fuerint, they shall have been. The Subjunctive Mood is conjugated like the Potential.
Strana 10 - Fu-Sram / had been Fu-eras thou hadst been Fu-erat he had been. Plur. Fu-eramus We had been Fu-eratis ye had been Fu-erant they had been. 5.
Strana 47 - When in English the word thing is put with an adjective, you may in Latin leave out the substantive, and put the adjective in the neuter gender : as, Multa me impedierunt : Many things have hindered me.