Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ...
Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ...
Albert Harkness, Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Sallust
The book Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ... was written by author Albert Harkness, Julius Caesar, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Sallust Here you can read free online of Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ... book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ... a good or bad book?
What reading level is Preparatory Course in Latin Prose Authors: Comprising Four Books of Caesar's ... book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
G. 383, note ; 396, III.— Esse conjunctam, wot joined. The perfect participle with turn, is sometimes thus used to denote the retuU of a completed action ; it had been joined with, and as a result remained connected with, G. 500, note 2. — Nunc jam, now already. 12. Untoersam. Vhivertut denotes the whole as embracing all the parts ; totut the whole as a unit without any reference to its parts. Bee totam, line 14 below. 18* Vltam, the licet. Here the Latin uses the singular, though the English r...equires the plural 14. Ad exltium vocas, you doom to destruction, lit, call, etc. 15. Quod est prinm m, which is Jtrtt, i. e. t the first and most ob- vious thing to do, viz., to put Catiline to death. 16. Hujua Imperil, of this authority, i. e., which I possess, refer- ring not merely to the consular authority, but also to the extraordinary powers recently conferred upon him by the senate for the safety of the state. For construction, see G. 891, II., 4. 17. Ad, at to, in point of, 20. Quod; this pronoun refers to the act of leaving the city, as ex- pressed by exierit.
User Reviews: