Samuel Hoadly, The Accidence in Questions and Answers (1683)
Full Text
Not available
EEBO/TCP
Not available
Date
1683
Author
Book title
The Accidence In Questions and Answers. Explained, Amended, Abridged, and fitted to the Capacity and use of the lowest Form. Being An Introduction Into Useful Learning. In a new but Natural Method, leading the Learner, From Letters to Syllables. Syllables to Words. Words to Sentences: 1. Single. 2. Compounded. Where is added an account of the Transposition, and most usual Ellipses of words in a sentence. By perpetual plain, easie, necessary, I. Examples to be imitated. II. Rules to direct the imitation. III. Exercises to ascertain the imitation by the direction of the Rules. Into which is inserted I. A Vocabulary of English and Latin words under each part of Speech reduced into a tolerable order. II. Sententiae Pueriles consisting of the same words reduced into plain Sentences under every Syntactick Rule
Publication place
London
Publisher
John Wright
Text type
printed book
Genre
Grammars
Subject area
- grammar
- Latin
Word-group
type: undifferentiated
Word-entry
type: logical
sample: Q. WHat is a Noun? 31. A. A Noun is the name of a thing, which may be seen, felt, heard or understood, as, The Name of *THIS Thing in English is An Hand And in Latin the name of it is Manus ... (p. 7) 498. The Executioners Work is To Torment Cruci-&amacron;re. To Strangle, Choak, Strangul-&amacron;re. To Hang-up, Sus-Pend-&ebreve;re. (p. 44)
sample: Q. WHat is a Noun? 31. A. A Noun is the name of a thing, which may be seen, felt, heard or understood, as, The Name of *THIS Thing in English is An Hand And in Latin the name of it is Manus ... (p. 7) 498. The Executioners Work is To Torment Cruci-&amacron;re. To Strangle, Choak, Strangul-&amacron;re. To Hang-up, Sus-Pend-&ebreve;re. (p. 44)
Alston
XVI.476
Wing
H2195aA
Other editions
1688: Wing H2195A (Alston XVI.477);
1694: Wing H2195a (Alston XVI.478)
1694: Wing H2195a (Alston XVI.478)