The peculiar use and signification of certain words in the Latin tongue: or, a collection of observations, wherein The elegant, and commonly unobserv'd Sense of very near Nine Hundred common Latin Words (besides the various Senses of the same Word) is fully and distinctly explain'd in Proper English: The Whole translated from the purest Latin Writers, with many Classical Authorities; intended either to be read, or translated back into the original Language. By William Willymott, M. A. Fellow of King's College in Cambridge
- Willymott, William, d. 1737.
- Date:
- MDCCLXVII. [1767]
- E-books
- Online
About this work
Also known as
Peculiar use and signification of certain words in the Latin tongue: or, a collection of observations, wherein The elegant, and commonly unobserv'd Sense of very near Nine Hundred common Latin Words (besides the various Senses of the same Word) is fully and distinctly explain'd in Proper English: The Whole translated from the purest Latin Writers, with many Classical Authorities; intended either to be read, or translated back into the original Language. By William Willymott, M. A. Fellow of King's College in Cambridge (Online)
Publication/Creation
Eton : printed for J. and T. Pote. Also in London; for S. Crowder, and B. Law, MDCCLXVII. [1767]
Contributors
Edition
The sixth edition revised.
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Holdings
- Full text available: 1767.