Nicholas Farmborow, Fundamenta Grammatices or the Foundation of the Latin Tongue (1690)

Full Text
Not available
EEBO/TCP
Not available
Date
1690
Book title
Fundamenta Grammatices: Or The Foundation Of The Latin Tongue In Two Parts. The First, Being an Explanation of the Eight Parts of Speech; with a most easie Method for the declining of Nouns, terminating the Declensions, comparing of Adjectives, onjugating of Verbs, &c. The Second, Being a Methodical Examination and Explanation of Propria quæ Maribus, Quæ Genus and As in Præsenti, both fitted to the meanest Capacity; with the meaning of all the rules in the Syntaxis, with the particular Examples of each Rule applied; with a Dictionariolum or Index thereunto annexed, for the more ready Use, Benefit and Ease of all those that desire to be instructed in the Latin Tongue
Publication place
London
Printer
M. C.
Publisher
Robert Clavell
Text type
printed book
Genre
Grammars
Subject area
  • grammar
  • Latin
Summary
Explanations of grammatical terminology. "Dictionariolum: Or A Short Dictionary; Declaring what Part of Speech any word is of, which belongs to the examples of the several Rules in Syntaxis, with the manner of declining them" (pp. 264-83) does not give English equivalents for Latin headwords.
Word-group
type: alphabetical
Word-entry
type: headword
sample: Q. WHat is a Noun? A. Noun is the name of a thing which may be either seen, felt, heard or understood. (p. 2)
Alston
XVI.422
Wing
F439a
Other editions
1679: not in Wing (Alston XVI.421);
1699: not in Wing (Alston XVI.423)