William Dugard, The Rudiments of the Latin Tongue (1656)

Full Text
Not available
EEBO/TCP
Not available
Date
1656
Book title
The English Rudiments Of The Latine Tongue, Explained by Question and Answer. Which are so formed, that a Childe, omitting altogether the Questions, may learn onely the answers, and bee fully instructed in the Rudiments of the Latine Tongue
Publication place
London
Printer
W. D.
Publisher
Francis Eglesfield
Text type
printed book
Genre
Grammars
Subject area
  • grammar
  • Latin
Word-group
type: undifferentiated
Word-entry
type: logical
sample: A Noun is the name of a thing that may bee seen, felt, heard, or understood: as manus an hand, domus an house, bonitas goodness. (p. 1)
Alston
XVI.105
Wing
D2464
Other editions
1660: Wing D2464a (Alston XVI.106);
1665: Wing D2465 (Alston XVI.107);
1672: Wing D2465a (Alston XVI.108);
1678: Wing D2465a (Alston XVI.109);
1684: Wing D2465ab (Alston XVI.110);
1693: Wing D2465b (Alston XVI.111)
Facsimiles
Dugard, William. The English Rudiments of the Latin Tongue, 1656. English linguistics, 1500-1800, no. 335. Menston: Scolar Press, 1972. view record