The North American Review, Volume 68Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1849 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 445
... Latin , especially to a child , whose natural perception of fitness is not yet perverted . Nor is this inconvenience confined to the study of Latin . The other ancient languages connected with it , whether more or less nearly , are ...
... Latin , especially to a child , whose natural perception of fitness is not yet perverted . Nor is this inconvenience confined to the study of Latin . The other ancient languages connected with it , whether more or less nearly , are ...
Page 452
... Latin pronuncia- tion in the language itself ; or , in the works of ancient gram- marians , and who , in the simplicity of ignorance , might even have supposed that quantity had something to do in Latin verse . 66 Every accented ...
... Latin pronuncia- tion in the language itself ; or , in the works of ancient gram- marians , and who , in the simplicity of ignorance , might even have supposed that quantity had something to do in Latin verse . 66 Every accented ...
Page 460
... Latin vowels to accommodate them to the supposed rule of pronunciation in our own language , we have a number of Latin words in common use among us that still retain , by tradition , their original sound . Thus we pronounce the word dōs ...
... Latin vowels to accommodate them to the supposed rule of pronunciation in our own language , we have a number of Latin words in common use among us that still retain , by tradition , their original sound . Thus we pronounce the word dōs ...
Contents
HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL POETRY | 1 |
Lives of the Chief Fathers of New England | 82 |
A Sketch of the History of Harvard College | 99 |
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