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.

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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]
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Subject terms
English language -- Grammar -- Early modern, 1500-1799.
Latin language -- Grammar -- Early works to 1800.
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 May 9, 2024.

Pages

GENITIVUS.

HAeC Impersonalia interest & refert Genitivum sibi personae plurimùm subjiciunt, nisi quòd pro genitivis pronominum primitivorum regunt hos ablativos foemininos, Meâ, tuâ, suâ, nostrâ, vestrâ & cujâ. Re∣gunt & hos genitivos quantitatis, tanti, quanti, magni, parvi, pluris.

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