What people are saying - Write a reviewReview: Gildersleeve's Latin GrammarUser Review - Kat - GoodreadsOther than for cool points, you don't not really need a grammar of this caliber until you have passed the stage where most of your grammar questions can still be answered by a Latin textbook. Read full review Review: Gildersleeve's Latin GrammarUser Review - Chris - GoodreadsOnce, at a fencing meet at Hunger College, an eighty year old judge approached me as I was working on my latin homework between bouts. He peered at my texts, then said, in a thick, Oxfordian accent ... Read full review Related books
Other editions - View allCommon terms and phrasesAblative Accusative action adjectives adverbs Apodosis Apposition Ariovistus atque Caes Caesar Cat.M causal chiefly Cicero classical Latin clause common Compare compounds Conditional Sentences conjugation construction Dative Declension denote early Latin Ennius erat especially esset etiam facere forms fuit Future Genitive Gerund Greek Impf Indicative Indie Infinitive interrogative ipse late Latin later Livy negative neque neuter nihil nisi object Obliqua occasionally omnia Oratio Participle passive Perfect Periphrastic Person phrases Plautus Pluperfect Plupf poetical poets post-classical predicate prepositions Present principal pronoun prose Protasis quae quam quia quid Quint quln quod rare regularly Relative Remark.—The Sallust sentence sibi sometimes stems Subjunctive Subjv substantives sunt Supine Tacitus tamen temporal tenses Terence tibi tive Tusc usage usually verbs Verr vowel words Popular passagesPage 220 - Many verbs compounded with the prepositions ad, ante, con, in, inter, ob, (post), prae, sub, and super, take the Dative, especially in moral relations. Page 456 - Thus, a verse of one Dactyl is called a Monometer ; of two, a Dimeter ; of three, a Trimeter ; of four, a Tetrameter ; of five, a Pentameter ; of six, a Hexameter. Page 423 - ... atque infesta. An Syphaci Numidisque credis? Satis sit semel creditum; non semper temeritas est felix, et fraus fidem in parvis sibi praestruit, ut, cum operae pretium sit, cum mercede magna fallat. Page 213 - Some verbs of asking and teaching may take two Accusatives, one of the Person, and the other of the Thing (§ 396). References to this bookFrom Google ScholarThe Position Of Morphological Case In The DerivationThomas McFadden - 2004 Passives and impersonalsJAMES P BLEVINS - 2003 - Journal of Linguistics Stems And ParadigmsJAMES P BLEVINS - 2003 - LANGUAGE An Interpretation of Paradigmatic MorphologyJonathan HR Calder References from web pagesJSTOR: Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar Internet Archive: Details: Gildersleeve's Latin grammar bolchazy.com: Latin — Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar Chaos and Art - Latin Refresher - Declensions of Nouns 2007-10-02 - Untitled 読書メモ Bibliographic information |