The Latin grammar of pharmacy for the use of medical and pharmaceutical students with an essay on the reading of Latin prescriptions.
- Ince, Joseph
- Date:
- 1882
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The Latin grammar of pharmacy for the use of medical and pharmaceutical students with an essay on the reading of Latin prescriptions. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by UCL Library Services. The original may be consulted at UCL (University College London)
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![Decline: Avis, avis, f., a bird. Clavis, clavis, f., a key. Dosis, dosis, f., a dose (med.). Febris, febns, i., a fever, acc. febrem and febrim, abl., febri. Sitis, sitis, f., thirst (only in sing.). Tussis, tussis, f., a cough. Unguis, unguis, m., a nail. Vitis, vitis, f., a vine. Some of these words in is make the accusative singular in iMj as, Tussis, a cough; acc, tussim. Febris,/^z/^r/ acc. febrim. Sitis, thirst; acc, sitim. Others maket he accusative in in ; as, dos/«, a dose. The ablative will then end in i] as, febri, by a fever; siti, by thirst; tussi, by a cough. Frater, mater, and pater, make the genitive plural in um ; as, fratrum, matrum, patrum; of brothers, mothers, and fathers. I nouns in ans and ens sometimes drop / in gen. plural: gigantes, gigantum, giants ; parentum for parentium, ofparefits. Table of endings (masculine and feminine) of—■ Declension III. Siftgular. Plural. Notn. various es Vac. same es Acc. em es Gen. is um or lURi. I>at. i ibus Abl. e or i ibus](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21687274_0021.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)