Latin language - Study and teaching
Works from the collections
11 works
- E-books
- Online
Some improvements to the art of teaching , especially in the first grounding of a young scholar in grammar-learning: shewing a short, sure, and easy way to bring a scholar to variety and elegancy in writing Latin. Written for the help and ease of all school-masters, and Ushers of Schools, and for the Use and Profit of all Young Scholars. The eighth edition, very much corrected. By William Walker, B. D. Author of the Treatise of Idioms, English Examples, Rhetorick, and Logick.
Walker, William, 1623-1684.Date: 1717- E-books
- Online
A collection of English exercises translated from the writings of Cicero only, for school-boys to re-translate into Latin; and adapted to the principal rules in the compendium of Erasmus's syntax. The third edition, corrected, and greatly enlarged by the author: to whic are added, some rules for adapting the English idiom to the Latin. By William Ellis, A. M. and Master of the Grammar School at Alford, in Lincolnshire.
Ellis, William, 1730-1801.Date: MDCCXCVII. [1797]- E-books
- Online
Nomenclator classicus , sive dictionariolum trilingue, Secund�um Locos communes. Nominibus usitatioribus Anglicis, Latinis, Graecis, ordine dispositis. A classical nomenclator with the gender and declension of each word and the quantities of the syllables. By John Ray, M. A. and Fellow of the Royal Society. To which are added paradigmatal of all the declensions, as well Greek as Latin; with a Century of Proverbs, and a Collection of modest Jests in English, Latin and Greek, from good Authors.
John RayDate: 1703- E-books
- Online
The scholemaster shewing a plain and perfect way of teaching the learned languages: by Roger Ascham, Esq; Preceptor to her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. Now revised a second time, and much improved, by James Upton, A. M. Rector of Monksilver in Somersetshire, and late Fellow of King's College in Cambridge.
Ascham, Roger, 1515-1568.Date: MDCCXLIII. [1743]- E-books
- Online
The schoolmaster or, a plain and perfect way of teaching children to understand, write, and speak the Latin tongue. By Roger Ascham, Esquire, Preceptor to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. Now corrected, and revis'd, with an Additition of Explanatory Notes, by the Reverend Mr. James Upton, A. M. Rector of Brimpton in Somersetshire; and late Fellow of King's College in Cambridge.
Ascham, Roger, 1515-1568.Date: MDCCXI. [1711]