The Greek Testament Roots, in a Selection of Texts, Giving the Power of Reading the Whole Greek Testament Without Difficulty; with Grammatical Notes and a Parsing Lexicon Associating the Greek Primitives with English DerivativesWalton and Maberly, 1858 - 292 σελίδες |
Αναζήτηση στο βιβλίο
Αποτελέσματα 1 - 5 από τα 27.
Σελίδα vii
... tion of the complete sense . The extent of these extracts is about five hundred and ninety verses ; a number less than that of the verses in the shortest of the gospels , and only a little more than a fourteenth part of the whole New ...
... tion of the complete sense . The extent of these extracts is about five hundred and ninety verses ; a number less than that of the verses in the shortest of the gospels , and only a little more than a fourteenth part of the whole New ...
Σελίδα viii
... tion of the Parsing Lexicon to save him all trouble of investigation . A vocabulary , parsing all words indis- criminately , presents too great an inducement to indo- lence ; and to a laborious student is not only useless , but ...
... tion of the Parsing Lexicon to save him all trouble of investigation . A vocabulary , parsing all words indis- criminately , presents too great an inducement to indo- lence ; and to a laborious student is not only useless , but ...
Σελίδα xi
... tion has been given to the classification of the MUTES . The distribution of the Nine Mutes into three classes and three orders , is a part of grammar usually passed over without adequate attention by the learner , from ignorance of its ...
... tion has been given to the classification of the MUTES . The distribution of the Nine Mutes into three classes and three orders , is a part of grammar usually passed over without adequate attention by the learner , from ignorance of its ...
Σελίδα xiii
... its being brought more conspicuously before the learner than it would be , if presented to him in the disguise of a compound word . Had it not been for this considera- b tion , the extent of the extracts might have been PREFACE . xiii.
... its being brought more conspicuously before the learner than it would be , if presented to him in the disguise of a compound word . Had it not been for this considera- b tion , the extent of the extracts might have been PREFACE . xiii.
Σελίδα xiv
George Knox Gillespie. tion , the extent of the extracts might have been still further restricted , by the exclusion of verses which have been added to the selection solely for the purpose of introducing , in their simple form , words ...
George Knox Gillespie. tion , the extent of the extracts might have been still further restricted , by the exclusion of verses which have been added to the selection solely for the purpose of introducing , in their simple form , words ...