A grammar of the Greek language: originally composed for the College-School, at Gloucester: in which it has been the editor's design to reject what, in the most improved editions of Cambden [i.e., Camden], is redundant: to supply what is deficient: to reduce to order wha is intricate and confused: and to consign to an appendix what is not requisite to be got by heart.
- Camden, William, 1551-1623.
- Date:
- April, 1800
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Publication/Creation
Printed at Boston : by I. Thomas and E.T. Andrews. Sold by them in Boston; by Thomas, Andrews & Penniman, Albany; by Thomas, Andrews & Butler, Baltimore; by I. Thomas, Worcester; and by most of the booksellers in America, April, 1800.
Physical description
[4], 123 [i.e., 223], [1] p. ; 120.
Edition
First American from the third London edition. Recommended by the University at Cambridge (Mass.) to be used by those who are intended for that seminary.
References note
ESTC W19866
Evans, 37085
Reproduction note
Digital image available in the Readex/Newsbank Digital Evans series. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.