The Latine grammar fitted for the use of schools wherein the words of Lilie's Grammar are (as much as might bee) reteined, many errors thereof amended, many needless things left out, many necessaries that were wanting, supplied, and all things ordered in a method more agreeable to children's capacitie / by Charls Hoole ... ; and (that nothing might bee wanting to the purpose) the English translation is set down on the contrarie page for the benefit of yong [sic] learners.

About this Item

Title
The Latine grammar fitted for the use of schools wherein the words of Lilie's Grammar are (as much as might bee) reteined, many errors thereof amended, many needless things left out, many necessaries that were wanting, supplied, and all things ordered in a method more agreeable to children's capacitie / by Charls Hoole ... ; and (that nothing might bee wanting to the purpose) the English translation is set down on the contrarie page for the benefit of yong [sic] learners.
Author
Hoole, Charles, 1610-1667.
Publication
London :: Printed by William Du-Gard, and are to bee sold by John Clark ...,
1651.
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Subject terms
Latin language -- Grammar -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"The Latine grammar fitted for the use of schools wherein the words of Lilie's Grammar are (as much as might bee) reteined, many errors thereof amended, many needless things left out, many necessaries that were wanting, supplied, and all things ordered in a method more agreeable to children's capacitie / by Charls Hoole ... ; and (that nothing might bee wanting to the purpose) the English translation is set down on the contrarie page for the benefit of yong [sic] learners." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A44386.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 4, 2024.

Pages

Page 1

M. FAB. Quintil. Instit. Orat. l. 1. c. 4.

HAec Professio—plus habet in re∣cessu quàm in fronte promittit—Quò minùs sunt ferendi, qui hanc Artem ut tenuem ac jejunàm ca∣villantur: quae nisi Oratori futu∣rò fundamenta fideliter jecerit, quicquid super∣struxeris, corruet: & quae vel sola omni studio∣rum genere plus habet operis, quàm ostentationis. Nè quis igitur tanquam parva fastidiat Gram∣matices elementa; non quia magnae sit operae, consonantes à vocalibus discernere, ipsás que eas in semivocalium numerum, mutarùmque partiri: sed quia interiora velut sacri hujus adeuntibus, apparebit multa rerum subtili as, quae non modò acuere ingenia puerilia, sed exercere altissimam quoque eruditionem, ac scientiam possit.

CICERO de Oratore lib. 3.

PRaecepta latinè loquendi puerilis doctrina tra∣dit, & subtilior cognitio, ac ratio literarum alit; aut consuetudo sermonis quotidiani, ac do∣mestici libri confirmant, & lectio veterum Orato∣rum & Poêtarum.

Desid. ERASMUS Rotterodamus.

PRoclivius est vel in triplici jure Doctoris no∣men, quàm semel boni Grammatici titulum promeruisse.

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