Lily, improved, corrected, and explained with the etymological part of the common accidence. By W. T. Master of a boarding-school at Fulham, near London, for above two and twenty years.

About this Item

Title
Lily, improved, corrected, and explained with the etymological part of the common accidence. By W. T. Master of a boarding-school at Fulham, near London, for above two and twenty years.
Author
W. T.
Publication
London :: printed for R. Bentley, in Russel-street, in Covent-garden,
MDCXCVI. [1696]
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
English language -- Grammar -- Early modern, 1500-1799.
Latin language -- Grammar -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A48527.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Lily, improved, corrected, and explained with the etymological part of the common accidence. By W. T. Master of a boarding-school at Fulham, near London, for above two and twenty years." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A48527.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2025.

Pages

Page 101

Propria Urbium & Oppidorum.

PRopria urbium & oppidorum quae in loco significant, & respondent ad quaestionem, Ʋbi? Si sint numeri singularis, & primae vel secundae declinationis in Geni∣tivo efferuntur, sin pluralis, tantùm numeri aut ter∣tiae declinationis fuerint in Dativo aut Ablativo efferun∣tur.

Humi, domi, militiae, belli, ruri vel rure, propriorum se∣quuntur formam.

Propria urbium & oppidorum ubi motus ad locum significatur, & ad quaestionem Quo? respondetur, in Ac∣cusativo citra Praepositionem efferuntur. Sic Domum & Rus usurpamus.

Propria urbium & ppidorum à loco aut per locum significantia & ad quaestionem, unde aut Quâ? respon∣dentia, in Ablativo sine Praepositione efferuntur. Sic Domo & rure utimur.

Domi non alios Genitivos adjectivorum patitur quam Meae, tuae, suae, nostrae, vestrae, alienae. Si alia addas Ad∣jectiva in Ablativo cum domo efferuntur.

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