EXAMPLES. 1. dulce et decorum est pro patria mori, it is sweet and noble to die for one's country. 2. senatui placuit legatos mittere, the Senate decided (lit. it pleased the Senate} to send envoys. 3. non semper licet otiosum esse, one cannot be always... A complete Latin grammar - Página 255por John William Donaldson - 1860 - 540 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| John William Donaldson - 1860 - 570 páginas
...Dicaearchus, meae deliciae, ' Dictearchus, my favourite author;1 but, niea Gly cerium, ' my dear Gly cerium.' And, Millia triginta servilium capitum dicuntur capti,...degree; as Roma parentem, Roma patrem patriae Ciceronem libera dixit, ' Rome, while still free, called Cicero parent, and father. of his country.' Prudens,... | |
| Charles Edwin Bennett - 1896 - 192 páginas
...Accusative, used as Object. 328. 1, 2; A. & G. 271 and a; H. 533 and I. 1, 2; II. 3; 536. 2.1). EXAMPLES. 1. dulce et decorum est pro patria mori, it is sweet and noble to die for one's country. 2. senatui placuit legatos mittere, the Senate decided (lit. it pleased the Senate} to send envoys.... | |
| Charles Edwin Bennett - 1896 - 184 páginas
...used as Object. 328. 1, 2; A. & G. 271 and a; H. 533 and I. 1, 2; II. 3; 536. 2.1). EXAMPLES. 1. dnlce et decorum est pro patria mori, it is sweet and noble to die for one's country. 2. senatui placuit legatos mittere, the Senate decided (lit. it pleased the Senate') to send envoys.... | |
| Charles Edwin Bennett - 1905 - 216 páginas
...Accusative, used as Object. 328. 1, 2; A. & G. 456; II. 607 and 1, 2, 608. 4, 612 and 1. EXAMPLES. 1. dulce et decorum est pro patria mori, it is sweet and noble to die for one's country. 2. aenatui placuit legatos mittere, the Senate decided (lit. it pleased the Senate) to send envoys.... | |
| Charles Edwin Bennett - 1915 - 296 páginas
...oportet, juvat, dSlectat, placet, libet, licet, praestat, decet, pudet, interest, etc.; as, — c'.ulce et decorum est pro patria mori, it is sweet and noble to die for one^s country; virorum est fortium toleranter dolorem pat!, it is the part of brave men to endure pain... | |
| Josiah Lee Auspitz - 742 páginas
...no summum bonum. There are, however, rare instances of joy from pain. Although I take slogans like dulce et decorum est pro patria mori (It is sweet and noble to die for the fatherland) as militaristic propaganda, the pride of a soldier may sometimes be stronger than his... | |
| Richard Jenkyns - 1992 - 526 páginas
...sixteenthcentury reader. Even the most apparently Roman of Roman tags — for example, Horace's 'Dulee ct decorum est pro patria mori' ('It is sweet and noble to die for one's country') — could be wrenched from its context in history and moral philosophy and poetry and used, in this... | |
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