5 results filtered with: Latin language - Syntax - Early works to 1800
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An abstract of Latin syntax; together with directions for construing, parsing; and making Latin by the signs of cases. To which is added, prosody, Or, The Art of Latin Poetry, Considered at large; with notes confirming the Text, and explaining the Nature, and Elegance of the most considerable Measures used by the Latin Poets. For the use of schools. By the author of the Practical grammar of the Latin tongue.
Milner, John, 1718-1779.Date: M.DCC.XLIII. [1743]- Books
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Joan. Despauterii Ninivitae: grammaticae institutionis lib. VII. Doctè & concinnè in compendium redacti; a Sebastiano Duisburgensi. Ad prototypum collati, & aucti, in usum studiosae juventutis. Multo quàm antea castigatiores.
Spauter, Johannes de, -1520.Date: anno Dom. 1708- Books
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A short and plain syntax, for the instruction of children in the Latin tongue, by few and easy rules in their own language. (it being impossible for them to learn it by any other.) With Notes proper for the Higher Classes, An Alphabetical List of near six Hundred Adjectives of various Structure: And An Appendix, containing some Observations, which are not to be found in any former Syntax or Grammar. For the use of Tamworth School. The second edition. With the addition of a figurative syntax, 100 Adjectives, 200 various Structures, and several new chapters. By Samuel Shaw, M. D. And School-Master of Tamworth, in the Counties of Stafford and Warwick.
Shaw, Samuel, 1666-1730.Date: MDCCXXVII. [1727]- Books
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Rudiments of the Latin tongue, with critical notes and observations. To which are added the principal figures of rhetoric; and a vocabulary Accommodated to the foregoing Rudiments in Analogy and Syntax. For the Use of Schools. By John Milner, D. D. Author of the Practical Grammars of the Latin and Greek Tongues.
Milner, John, 1718-1779.Date: 1756- Books
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Exercises to the accidence; or, an exemplification of the several moods and tenses, and of the principal rules of construction; consisting chiefly of moral sentences, collected out of the best Roman authors, and translated into English, to be render'd back into Latin, the Latin words being set in the opposite Column. With references to the Latin syntax; and notes.
Turner, William, -1727?.Date: 1707