Language and Character of the Roman People |
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Page 2
... hold good in a measure of his own countrymen . It was to the special capacity of her sons for war and politics that Rome owed her rise from an unimportant state to a world - power of the first order . 2. As the mental endowments of the ...
... hold good in a measure of his own countrymen . It was to the special capacity of her sons for war and politics that Rome owed her rise from an unimportant state to a world - power of the first order . 2. As the mental endowments of the ...
Page 21
... hold one feature as the essential characteristic of the word : another people may hold another feature as more truly so . Thus it is that etymology enables us to realize every corner of the intellectual storehouse of any given people ...
... hold one feature as the essential characteristic of the word : another people may hold another feature as more truly so . Thus it is that etymology enables us to realize every corner of the intellectual storehouse of any given people ...
Page 23
... hold dearest , and mulieres puerique , when they would dwell on their helpless- ness : and in this they agree with our method of expression . Love is to the Roman more an impulse of the intellect than of the heart . Diligere signifies ...
... hold dearest , and mulieres puerique , when they would dwell on their helpless- ness : and in this they agree with our method of expression . Love is to the Roman more an impulse of the intellect than of the heart . Diligere signifies ...
Page 27
... holds pleasures to be mere temptations ( deliciae and delectare from delicere ) , * and we may gather his ideas of dancing from Cicero's utterance : " Nemo fere saltat sobrius , nisi forte insanit " † ( Pro Mur . 13 ) . An honest man ...
... holds pleasures to be mere temptations ( deliciae and delectare from delicere ) , * and we may gather his ideas of dancing from Cicero's utterance : " Nemo fere saltat sobrius , nisi forte insanit " † ( Pro Mur . 13 ) . An honest man ...
Page 37
... a purview of a nation's pro- cess in culture , and enable us to realize how it judges of its neighbours and of its progenitors . Thus it is interesting to observe how prone the Romans were to hold OF THE ROMAN PEOPLE 37.
... a purview of a nation's pro- cess in culture , and enable us to realize how it judges of its neighbours and of its progenitors . Thus it is interesting to observe how prone the Romans were to hold OF THE ROMAN PEOPLE 37.
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Common terms and phrases
adjectives alliteration ancient apud Archiv atque Bell Bellum Berlin borrowed Caesar called Cato Catullus characteristic Cicero classical connected construction dative declension deities denotes dialect diction Dräger employed English Ennius especially etiam expressions fact favour feeling figures of speech formations frequently Gall genitive German Graeci Greek Grégoire de Tours hence Hexameter Homer Horace influence instance Jahrbücher later Latin language Leipzig less lingua literature Livy Lucretius meaning merely metaphors method noun occurs old Latin old Roman orator oratory origin Ovid peculiarities periods Philol phrases Plautus pleonasm plural poetry popular preferred Propertius prose quae quam Quintilian quod rhetorical Roman Roman poets Romance languages Rome Sallust says sense sentences signification similes simple sounds speaking Sprache style substantive Syntax Tacitus thought Tibullus tion trait treatise usage utterances verbis verborum verbs Vergil verse vowel vulgar Latin Walde Weise's words writers
Popular passages
Page 133 - Virgilio Varioque ? Ego cur acquirere pauca Si possum invideor, cum lingua Catonis et Enni Sermonem patrium ditaverit et nova rerum Nomina protulerit ? Licuit semperque licebit Signatum praesente nota producere nomen.
Page 107 - ... at qui legitimum cupiet fecisse poema, cum tabulis animum censoris sumet honesti ; 110 audebit, quaecumque parum splendoris habebunt et sine pondere erunt et honore indigna ferentur, verba movere loco, quamvis invita recedant et versentur adhuc intra penetralia Vestae...
Page 188 - Converti enim ex Atticis duorum eloquentissimorum nobilissimas orationes inter seque contrarias, Aeschinis et 2 Demosthenis ; nee converti ut interpres, sed ut orator, sententiis isdem et earum formis tamquam figuris, verbis ad nostram consuetudinem aptis.
Page 101 - Multi ex alieno saeculo petunt verba, duodecim tabulas loquuntur. Gracchus illis et Crassus et Curio nimis culti et recentes sunt, ad Appium usque et Coruncanium redeunt.
Page 5 - Equidem soleo etiam, quod uno Graeci, si aliter non possum, idem pluribus verbis exponere.
Page 114 - In freta dum fluvii current, dum montibus umbrae Lustrabunt convexa, polus dum sidera pascet, Semper honos nomenque tuum laudesque manebunt, Quae me cumque vocant terrae.
Page 87 - Nec me animi fallit Graiorum obscura reperta difficile inlustrare Latinis versibus esse, multa novis verbis praesertim cum sit agendum propter egestatem linguae et rerum novitatem...
Page 4 - Latinis etiam litteris con8 tineri; eoque me minus instituti mei paenitet quod facile sentio quam multorum non modo discendi sed etiam scribendi studia commoverim. Complures enim Graecis institutionibus eruditi ea quae didicerant cum civibus suis communicare non poterant, quod ilia quae a Graecis accepissent Latine dici posse diffiderent: quo in genere tantum profecisse videmur ut a Graecis ne verborum quidem copia vincere9 mur.
Page 69 - Scio solere plerisque hominibus rebus secundis atque prolixis atque prosperis animum excellere atque superbiam atque ferociam augescere atque crescere.
Page 14 - Nam scutum, gladium, galeam in onere nostri milites non plus numerant, quam humeros, lacertos, manus. Arma enim membra militis esse dicunt.