Terminalia Or Notes on the Subjects of the Litterae Humaniores and Modernation Schools, Issues 1-2Francis Macpherson., 1851 |
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Page 3
... dative , though he contradicts himself a little in the rest of his note , first saying that the notion of the dative is quid aptum sit , conveniat , " and then proceeding to explain this and other passages as if sit were equivalent to ...
... dative , though he contradicts himself a little in the rest of his note , first saying that the notion of the dative is quid aptum sit , conveniat , " and then proceeding to explain this and other passages as if sit were equivalent to ...
Page 4
... dative , " when earth unbinds her frozen bosom to the western winds . " Wakefield connects it with putris . It seems rather to be the ablative of the instrument , the reflexive se resolvit being used where a prose writer would have ...
... dative , " when earth unbinds her frozen bosom to the western winds . " Wakefield connects it with putris . It seems rather to be the ablative of the instrument , the reflexive se resolvit being used where a prose writer would have ...
Page 8
... dative , a construction suffi- ciently common with deficere ? Glandes silvæ seu sil- varum , as Heyne observes , would be less poetical . V. 150. Ut here expresses the result , not the object , labor additus ut being equivalent to ...
... dative , a construction suffi- ciently common with deficere ? Glandes silvæ seu sil- varum , as Heyne observes , would be less poetical . V. 150. Ut here expresses the result , not the object , labor additus ut being equivalent to ...
Page 9
... dative adversæ Tauri fronti : if averso , it is not an adjective , but a participle , and the case is the ablative absolute . The former seems in every B way preferable , being better supported by MSS . and NOTES ON VIRGIL . 9.
... dative adversæ Tauri fronti : if averso , it is not an adjective , but a participle , and the case is the ablative absolute . The former seems in every B way preferable , being better supported by MSS . and NOTES ON VIRGIL . 9.
Page 18
... dative , used metri gratiâ . Taken as a feminine ablative , it would be difficult to give any satisfactory account of it , consistently with the rules of language . It should be remembered that the so - called anomalies in grammar are ...
... dative , used metri gratiâ . Taken as a feminine ablative , it would be difficult to give any satisfactory account of it , consistently with the rules of language . It should be remembered that the so - called anomalies in grammar are ...
Common terms and phrases
Æneas ÆSCHYLUS Agamemnon Ancus antistrophe appears atque Attus Navius Blakesley Blomfield cognate Comp Conington connected construction construed Cratylus Crustumerium cultus curule curule magistrates dative denote Dindorf Dionys Dionysius epithet epitheton Eschylus explained expression genitive GEORGIC Greek Hermann Herodotus Heyne Heyne's instance interpretation Latin Lavinium legend Livy Lucius Tarquinius Priscus maturare mean mind natural Niebuhr notion object Orelli passage Pelasgian perhaps poet predicate Priscus probably Prom proposition quæ quam Quirites quoted reading refer rendering Roman Rome Romulus Sabine says seems sense Servius Servius Tullius Soph Strabo sub pedibus suggested supposed syllogism taken thing thought Thucydides tion verb Virgil Wagner word Wunder ἂν γὰρ γε δὲ δὴ εἶναι ἐκ ἐν ἐπὶ καὶ κατὰ μᾶλλον μὲν μὴ οὐ οὐκ οὔτε παρ παρὰ πρὸς τὰ ταῦτα τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῦ τοὺς τῷ τῶν ὡς
Popular passages
Page 45 - And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
Page 70 - Peace, brother : be not over exquisite To cast the fashion of uncertain evils : For grant they be so ; while they rest unknown, What need a man forestall his date of grief, And run to meet what he would most avoid ? Or, if they be but false alarms of fear, How bitter is such self-delusion...
Page 7 - Sic melius quam ut sit, in qua propter frigoris rigorem nulla res tractari, agi, potest.
Page 38 - Lex horrendi carminis erat; Duumviri perduellionem judicent. Si a Duumviris provocarit, provocatione certato ; si vincent, caput obnubito : infelici arbori reste suspendito. Verberato vel intra pomœrium, vel extra pomœrium. Нac lege Duumviri creati ; qui se absolvere non rebantur ea lege ne innoxium quidem posse, quum condemnassent, tum alter ex his, P. Horati, tibi perduellionem judico, inquit, I lictor, colliga manus. Accesserat lictor, injiciebatque laqueum. tum Horatius, auctore Tullo, clemente...
Page 7 - Non aliter quam is retro sublapsus refertur qui navigium agit atque ilium in przeceps prono rapit alveus amni;" an explanation which, even although it had not been, almost totidem verbis, Virgil's own, would have been established beyond the possibility of doubt by the nearly parallel passage of Lucretius, iv. 422.