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 13, 2025.

Pages

Dativus post Verborum.

OMnia Verba acquisitivè posita adsiscunt Dativum ejus ri aut personae cui aliquid acquiritur, & cui aliquid usitatius admitur.

Haec regula omnia Verborum genera in se compre∣hendit, Activa, Passiva, Neutra & Deponentia, tam tran∣sitiva, quam intransitiva, & quoslibet Dativos tam rei¦quam prsonae.

Hui regulae appendent imprimis Verba significantia com∣modum, incommodum. 2. Verba comparandi. 3. Dandi & reddendi. 4. Promittendi, solvendi & debendi. 5. Imperandi & nunciandi. 6. Fidendi & iis contraria.

Page 97

7. Obsequendi & repugnandi. 8. Minandi & irascendi. 9. Sum cum compositis. 10. Verba neutra & passiva composita cum his praepositionibus, prae, ad, con, sub, ante, post, ob, in, inter. 11. Verba composita cum his Adver∣hiis, satis, benè & malè. 12. Est & suppetit pro habeo. 13. Sum cum quibusdam aliis geminum adsciscit Dativum. Aliquando apponitur Verbis Dativus pro Accusativo cum praepositione; ut, it clamor coelo pro ad coelum: Belloque animos accendit agrestes, pro ad bellum; Me mea paupertas vitae tradueit inerti, pro ad inertm vitam.

Est aliquando Pleonasmus, (sc. Redundantia voca∣buli horum Dativoram) mihi, tibi, sibi.

Quaedam Verba variè construuntur; ut, ausculto tibi & te. Sic dono, aspergo, impertio, interdico; Tempero, mode∣ror tibi & te; refero tibi & ad te, & refero ad senatum; do tibi & ad te. Item mitto & scribo tibi & ad te lite∣ras; consulo tibi te & in te; aequi boni consulo & facio, caveo tibi; cavere periculum; aemulor tibi, sc. invideo; aemulor te sc. imtor; deficiunt mihi vel me vires; condu∣cit tuae laudi & in tuam laudem, &c.

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