This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A16877 | Can I then be blamed, if I studie to performe that vnto their worthy progeny, which I can not to their Honours otherwise? |
A16877 | What is r more dishonest then s arrogant vnskilfulnesse? |
A16877 | o How many euils, doth idlenesse bring to men? |
A54756 | Phillips, Edward, 1630- 1696? |
A54756 | Phillips, Edward, 1630- 1696? |
A35352 | He that knoweth not that he doth amiss, will not be corrected How many mischiefs doth idleness bring upon men? |
A35352 | Quid turpius arroganti imperitiâ? |
A35352 | Quàm multa mala hominibus affert otium? |
A35352 | What is more filthy than proud unskilfulness? |
A18238 | * d What doe riches profit thee, if thou doest abound e being poore still? |
A18238 | For, whom can I finde more meet then your selfe? |
A18238 | Why l a sacrifice doth die for thee,[ or why doth a sacrifice die for thee] sith that thou thy selfe art m guilty[ or the offendour?] |
A18238 | l Dost thou maruell mee to write verses,[ or that I write verses] m in naked[ or bare] words? |
A48528 | Et also Hebraea quaedam certain Hebrew words in ● ending in ●: ut as, Michaēl a name of Christ,[ signifying, Who like God?] |
A48528 | Ne what dixisti me dignum hast thou said that I am worthy of tanto crimine so great blame? |
A48528 | audĭn''dost thou not hear? |
A48528 | nemŏn is there no body? |
A48528 | vidĕn''dost thou not see? |
A85540 | CAnst thou that art full twenty yeares and more? |
A85540 | How many are there that can speake French and Latine that never saw a Grammar? |
A85540 | Tremble and shake to heare thy Master roare Like a storme frighted Sea- man, oh yee Fooles, How does all wise men laugh to scorne your Schooles? |
A85540 | how many streams of blood? |
A50880 | Accusas furti, an stu ● … ri, an utroque? |
A50880 | Accusas furti, on stupri, an utroque? |
A50880 | Hunc tu non ames? |
A50880 | Idne estis authores mihi? |
A50880 | In te committere tantum quid Troes potuere? |
A50880 | Interrogatives also of disdain or reproach understood govern a Subjunctive; as tantum dem, quantum ille poposcerit? |
A50880 | Quanti mercatus es hunc equum? |
A50880 | Quid est cur tu in isto loco sedeas? |
A50880 | Quid mo vobis tactio est? |
A50880 | Quid tibi hanc curatio est rem? |
A50880 | Redeam? |
A50880 | Sometimes an Infinitive; as Méne incaepto desistere victam? |
A50880 | Sylvam tu Scantiam vendas? |
A50880 | ● … urem aliquem aut rapacem accusaris? |
A48810 | Ah Coridon Coridon quae te dementia ce ● it? |
A48810 | An mihi cantando victus non redderet illum, Quem mea carminibus meruisset fistula, caprum? |
A48810 | Are they insuperable in all obstructions? |
A48810 | Are they predominant to all other affections, whether of profit or pleasure? |
A48810 | Crudelis mater magis, an puer improbus ille? |
A48810 | Do such Students resolve to attain their designes or perish with them? |
A48810 | Do their studies aim at Honourable Eminencies? |
A48810 | H ● ccine mihimetillicita, vobis licere velletis? |
A48810 | Indignum est Italos Trojam succendere flammis, Quid face Trojanos atra vim ferre Latinis? |
A48810 | Juncta suit — Vos feram populi faeces: indesinenter feram? |
A48810 | Prob malum, quid dic ● m? |
A48810 | Quid memorem portus, Lucrinoque addita claustra? |
A48810 | Quis decem viros creavit? |
A48810 | Quis erat armorum sensus, quae tua mens oculi ma ● us? |
A48810 | Quis legem tulit? |
A48810 | Quis populum in tribus distribuit? |
A48810 | Quod licuit ● ueris, licet aetatique senili? |
A48810 | Sit tua res eadem, quidnam rationis inires? |
A48810 | Verbs of the Indicative, whence all other Moods are formed, either aske a Question or give a reason of doing or suffering, as Quo vadis? |
A48810 | Will they admit of no vacations, but still insinuate themselves, at all urgent intermissions? |
A48810 | — Anulla putatis Dona carere dolis Danaum; sic notus Ulisses? |
A42982 | And Hexameters; Quid juvat aspectus, si non conceditur usus? |
A42982 | And I pray you what end and measure is there of these kinde of Rules or Precepts? |
A42982 | And if any shall ask me, since I mislike that usual and old way of teaching, What other New One is it then, which I can approve of, or set forth? |
A42982 | And vvhat doth it profit one to knovv vvhat Latine vvord ansvvers to the Dutch, if he be ignorant of that matter? |
A42982 | And which is the most certain Umpire, Mistress, and Judge above or beyond all exception, but craves a reason, why we speak on this wise? |
A42982 | And who need make any doubt that more may be added daily to such Inventions? |
A42982 | Carew, Richard,-- Sir, d. 1643? |
A42982 | Now here it may be demanded, in what Order should these Sentences be propounded to boyes in Schools? |
A42982 | Now what absurdity is it to require of a boy to translate his Mother German tongue into Latine, which he hath not yet learned, but still learneth? |
A42982 | Now what and how great a calamity of Masters, and likewise of Scholars is this? |
A42982 | Now what, and how monstrous an absurdity is it, to propound those things to childish age, for the perceiving whereof it is not yet capable? |
A42982 | There may be added the Multiplications of single Numbers in themselves, which they call the Table of Pythagoras, how many may be five times nine? |
A42982 | To what end is the view without the use? |
A42982 | What should I say? |
A42982 | nine times seven? |
A42982 | seven times eight? |
A72221 | And whence commeth this madnesse? |
A72221 | And( as Horace saith) why throwest thou so thy proud and disdainefull sixe cornered words? |
A72221 | But let vs bend to those points that aptliest tend to our cause: Tell mee I pray thee, whence commeth to thee this folly and madnes? |
A72221 | But wherewith are you vexed? |
A72221 | First before all other, came Quando, the Duke of Aduerbes, with sixe of his Captaines, Vbi Quo, Vnde? |
A72221 | For what pernitious thing durst not thy great pride and arrogancie, enterprize and attempte? |
A72221 | John Spencer?. |
A72221 | Knowest thou how to make a construction, wherein forthwith the chiefe place is not giuen mee? |
A72221 | O ● what harme holdeth you? |
A72221 | Of what force? |
A72221 | Open thine eares now, wherefore hidest thou thy face so? |
A72221 | Or how great? |
A72221 | Or wa''st some higher cause, were the hot God''s ● hoebus and Vulcan,( old friends) now at ods? |
A72221 | Or who is hee that is ignorant, how the beginning of the Noune is more ancient then the Verbe? |
A72221 | Qua? |
A72221 | Quorsum? |
A72221 | Then said the Iudges, wherefore carriest thou with thee Greeke words, seeing that thou vnderstandest not? |
A72221 | VVHat heat of learning kindl''d your desire, You Muses sons to set your house on fire? |
A72221 | What Numbers heere of Nounes to wracke did goe? |
A72221 | What art thou? |
A72221 | What loue of Honor in your breast did turne, Those sparkes of Vertue into flames to burne? |
A72221 | What wilt thou now say? |
A72221 | Wherefore then speakest thou so impudently? |
A72221 | Who art thou? |
A72221 | Who is hee that knoweth not the Noune, before the Verbe? |
A72221 | and Quosque? |
A67267 | And is used both in the Masculine and Feminine Gender, Quid? |
A67267 | By a Place, answering to the question Quà? |
A67267 | Cujus pecus? |
A67267 | From a Place, answering to the question, Vnde? |
A67267 | Furtíne accusa ● an ho ● icidij? |
A67267 | How long, answering to the question, Quamdiu? |
A67267 | How often, answering to the question, Quoties? |
A67267 | In Time, answering to the question Quando? |
A67267 | In a Place, answering to the question, Vbi? |
A67267 | Meum: or when the Verb governs divers Cases, Quanti Constitit? |
A67267 | Q ● o, i. e. in q ● em locum? |
A67267 | Qua iter fecit? |
A67267 | Quamdiu vixit? |
A67267 | Quamdiu, i. e. per quod tempus? |
A67267 | Quamdudum, Quando, i. e. quo tempore? |
A67267 | Quando accidit? |
A67267 | Quid agitur? |
A67267 | Quid dicendum est de inqu ● nat et de diphthongo ui generatim? |
A67267 | Quis dives? |
A67267 | Quis is an Interrogative, Who? |
A67267 | Quis pauper? |
A67267 | Quis, who? |
A67267 | Quo vadis? |
A67267 | So Cujus, cuja, cujum, and Cujus whose is it? |
A67267 | The Answer is made in the same Case in which the Question is asked:( except in Possessives, as, Cujum pecus? |
A67267 | To a Place, answering to the question, Quo? |
A67267 | Towards a Place, answering to the question, Quorsum? |
A67267 | Vnde venis? |
A67267 | Vnde, i. e. à, è, ex, de quo loco? |
A67267 | What? |
A67267 | With a Conjunction, Ecquis, i. e. et quis, and who, siquis, if any, quisnam, for who? |
A67267 | as, Saepe, rarò,& c. Of Quantity, answering,& c. to quantùm? |
A67267 | in Angli ● m Qua, i. e. per quam viam? |
A67267 | or Accusative Case, and it answers to a question made by[ Whom?] |
A67267 | or[ What?] |
A67267 | or[ What?] |
A67267 | quid ad te pertinet? |
A05510 | 1520- 1561. aut[ 112] p. Printed by Bonham Norton, Printer to the kings most excellent maiestie, in the Latine, Greeke, and Hebrew, London: 16[33?] |
A05510 | An what est quisquam hominum is any man aequè miser such a wret ● h ut as ego ●? |
A05510 | At but si if pro for quamuis although tantùm onely subiunctivo to the subiunctiue ut as Redeam should I returne? |
A05510 | Credo I thinke so, ut est dementia like as is his madnes Vt valet how fares hee? |
A05510 | Cur why adcò delectaris art thou so deligh ● ed criminibus inferendis in bringing accusations? |
A05510 | Haec regula this rule fallit faileth quoties as often as interogatio the question fit is made per by cujus, a, um, ut as cujum pecus whose cattell? |
A05510 | Illicis enticest thou in fraudem into deceit eductos yong men brought up libe ● è honestly imperitos rerum void of experience? |
A05510 | Non pudent haec Doe not these things shame te thee? |
A05510 | Non pudet istud Doeth not this thing shame te thee? |
A05510 | Pontice ô Ponticus, vis wil ● thou fieri be made diues rich? |
A05510 | Quae dementia what madnesse malûm with a mischiefe? |
A05510 | Quae regio what countrey in terris in the earth non plena is not full nostri laboris of our labour? |
A05510 | Quid est what is there in hac causa in this matter quod which egeat needeth defensionis defence? |
A05510 | Quid rerum what busines nunc geritut is now a doing in Anglia in England? |
A05510 | Quid what potuêre could Troës the Troians? |
A05510 | Quid what siet will be done ab illo by him? |
A05510 | Quo sanguine of what bloud cretus is he come? |
A05510 | Quo terrarum into what part of the world abiit is he gone? |
A05510 | Quò te Moeri pedes, Mer ● s whether goest thou? |
A05510 | Veh misero mihi wo is me poore wretch that I am, quanta de spe from how great hope decidi am I falne? |
A05510 | Vt how meminit remembers hee nostri vs? |
A05510 | an or stupri of dishonesty? |
A05510 | an or vtroque of both, sive or de vtroque of both? |
A05510 | an what in urbem into the Citie quo whither via the way ducit leads? |
A05510 | ut as Vbi gentium in what countrey? |
A20469 | 2. in these words; Testis rogatus, an ab reo fustibus vapulasset? |
A20469 | Ad quid laboramus res Romanas? |
A20469 | Ad quid laboramus res Romanas? |
A20469 | An vero hoc pro nihilo putas, in quo quidem pro amicitiâ tua iure dolere soleo? |
A20469 | Ars haec, arte tuâ, reparatur: te ergo negaret Mors hic esse diu? |
A20469 | C. C. WHat mar''s yong wits, what drives them in their prime, From getting Knowledge, i''st not things sublime? |
A20469 | Cui praeceptori dedisti operam? |
A20469 | Cuius est haec oratio? |
A20469 | Cuius puerum adduxisti? |
A20469 | Emit tanti, could not he haue pronounced, Emit magni? |
A20469 | Et Cuius, cum ad hanc respondendum est per pronomen possessivum: ut, Cuius est Liber? |
A20469 | Et quando respondendum est per verbum variae Syntaxeos: ut Furtine accusas, an Homicidij? |
A20469 | Excipe quaestionem factam per Quanti; ut Quanti emptus est Liber? |
A20469 | Interrogatio& responsio eodem fere ponuntur casu: Cui Praeceptori dedisti operam? |
A20469 | Partitio, Ego te ijsdem de rebus interrogem? |
A20469 | Per varios casus, per quot discrimina rerum Tendimus in Latium? |
A20469 | Pergin precari pessimo? |
A20469 | Proximus te sum? |
A20469 | Quanti emi potest? |
A20469 | Quanto tu ere patris laudes tonas? |
A20469 | Quo morbo fuisti impeditus? |
A20469 | Reddin, an non mulierem priusquam te huic meae machaerae obijcio mastigia? |
A20469 | Si per Qua fiat interrogatio, per propria respondentes, Ablativo utemur, vel accusativo cum praepositione, Per: ut, Qua iter fecesti? |
A20469 | Si per Quorsum fiat interrogatio, quaecumque sint nomina ponuntur in accusativ ●, cum hâc voce, versus, Vt Quorsum tendis? |
A20469 | Sidere nunc meliore, leves appellimus oris, Quid superesse putem? |
A20469 | The, second that this speech shall be approved in Latine: Accusasne illum superbiae? |
A20469 | Vbi sunt isti, qui amant a Lenone? |
A20469 | WHat time is lost, what wit vex''t''what health spent, Onely in search of things impertinent? |
A20469 | What is not here discern''d? |
A20469 | an altero tantum? |
A20469 | an ambobus? |
A20469 | an avaritiae? |
A20469 | an utroque? |
A20469 | fuisti Romae, an Athenis? |
A20469 | i d est, Qua via iter fecisti? |
A20469 | 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 Deus quidnam sit naturam& rem, for natura& re? |
A48562 | And that casual word which cometh next after the verb, and answereth to this question whom? |
A48562 | Dost thou love? |
A48562 | Doth the king come? |
A48562 | Except a question be asked by Cujus, ja, um: as, a Cuja est sententia? |
A48562 | For wh ● ● r remaineth save onely prayers? |
A48562 | How much business? |
A48562 | How much business? |
A48562 | Is not that called Lutetia, that we do call Paris? |
A48562 | Is not that called Lutetia, that we do call Paris? |
A48562 | Lovest thou? |
A48562 | Or by a word that may govern divers cases: as b Quanti a emisti librum? |
A48562 | Or except I must answer by one of these possessives, Meus, tuus, suus, noster, vester, as, a Cujus est domus? |
A48562 | Quid a agitur in ludo literario? |
A48562 | Quis nisi bmentis ainops, oblatum respuat aurum? |
A48562 | Sometime of a participle: as, b Quibus rebus a adductus fecisti? |
A48562 | Sísque animo attentus: quid enim docuisse juvabit, Si mea non firmo pectore verba premas? |
A48562 | The Accusative case followeth the Verb, and answereth to this question, Whom or what? |
A48562 | The Dative case is known by this token To: and answereth to this question, To whom? |
A48562 | The Genitive case is known by this token Of: and answereth to this question, Whose or whereof? |
A48562 | The Nominative case cometh before the Verb, and answereth to this question, Who or What? |
A48562 | The indicative mood sheweth a reason true or false, as, Ego amo, I love: or else asketh a question: as, Amas tu? |
A48562 | WHen ye have a relative, ask this question who? |
A48562 | WHen ye have an adjective, ask this question who? |
A48562 | When ye have found the verb ask this question, who, or what? |
A48562 | With what things moved didst thou it? |
A48562 | Yea, though the substantives be of divers numbers also: as, Estne ea a Lutetia, b quam nos Parisios dicimus? |
A48562 | Yea, though the substantives be of divers numbers also: as, ● stne ea a Lutetia, b quam nos Parisios dicimus? |
A48562 | a Cujus est fundus? |
A48562 | a Quantum b negotii? |
A48562 | a Quantum b negotii? |
A48562 | a Quid enim nisi a vota b supersunt? |
A48562 | b Spectatum a admissi, risum teneatis amici? |
A48562 | b Venítne a Rex? |
A48562 | or To what? |
A48562 | or else, Estne ea Lutetia, b quos nos a Parisios dicimus? |
A48562 | or else, Estne ea Lutetia, b quos nos a Parisios dicimus? |
A48562 | or what? |
A48562 | or what? |
A48562 | or what? |
A48562 | qualis erat? |
A30694 | & c. Miseret, miserescit, paenitet, pudet, taedet, will have an Accusative of the word answering to the Question whom or what? |
A30694 | Accedunt his& voces illae, quae per apocopen castrantur: ut, Mĕn? |
A30694 | All Verbs Actives, and most Deponents signifying Actively, will have an Accusative of the word answering to the question whom or what? |
A30694 | Ambobus, vel de ambobus? |
A30694 | An quisquam hominum est oequè miser ut ego? |
A30694 | Archaismus est structurae ratio veteribus in usu, quae jam exolevit; ut, Quid tibi hanc rem curatio est? |
A30694 | Audĭn? |
A30694 | But Nouns that signifie continuance of Time( answering to the Question how long?) |
A30694 | Estne ea Lutetia, quos nos Parisios dicimus? |
A30694 | Fallit denique cum Redditivum sit pronomen Possessivum, tum enim ponitur in casu nominis, à quo regitur Interrogativum ●; ut, Cujus est hic codex? |
A30694 | Fallit haec regula, quoties interrogatio fit per cujus, ia, ium; ut, cujum pecus? |
A30694 | GErundia in di pendent à quibusdam tum substantivis, tum adjectivis; ut, Et quae tanta fuit Romam tibi causa videndi? |
A30694 | His verò, Attinet, pertinet, spectat, propriè additur praepositio Ad; ut, Méne vis dicere quod ad te attinet? |
A30694 | In te committere tantum Quid Troes potuere? |
A30694 | Interrogativ ● m& ejus redditivum ejusdem casûs& temporis erun ●; ut, Quarum rerum nulla est satietas? |
A30694 | Loci; ut, Ubi, ubinam, nusquam, eò longè, quò, ubivis, huccinè; ut, Ubi gentium? |
A30694 | NOuns that signifie part of Time( answering to the Question when?) |
A30694 | Nemŏn? |
A30694 | Neutro, vel de neutro? |
A30694 | Nè, an, num, interrogandi particulae indicativum amant; ut, Superátnc& vescitur aurâ Aethereâ? |
A30694 | Parenthesis() Interrogatio? |
A30694 | Quae regio in terris nostri non plena laboris? |
A30694 | Quaeque negant, ut nemo: rogántve, ut, uter, quotus, ecquis? |
A30694 | Quid rerum nunc geritur in Anglia? |
A30694 | Quis vestrûm, which of you? |
A30694 | Quoád pro quamdiu, vel indicativis, vel subjunctivis; pro donec, subjunctivis solis adhibetur; ut, Quoad expectes contubernalem? |
A30694 | Quò terrarum abiit? |
A30694 | Si, utrique modo jungitur; at Si pro Quamvis subjunctivo tantùm; ut, Redeam? |
A30694 | Speras tibi laudi fore, quod mihi vitio vertis? |
A30694 | The Indicative plainly affirmeth or denieth a thing without any sign; as amo I do love; non amo I do not love: or else asketh a question; as, amas tu? |
A30694 | Ut meminit nostri? |
A30694 | Ut valet? |
A30694 | Vidĕn? |
A30694 | doest thou love? |
A30694 | laniorum; aut per dictionem variae Syntaxeos; ut, Furtíne accusas, au homicidii? |
A30694 | or to what? |
A30694 | or what? |
A30694 | sive de utroque? |
A30694 | — Quo sanguine cretus? |
A65219 | A. Cui aetati vitium hoc potissimum insidiari ● mdiu observatum est? |
A65219 | A. Cui rei debemus imprimis parcere? |
A65219 | A. Cui studio te addicis? |
A65219 | A. Cujus est iste liber? |
A65219 | A. Ecquod ● enenum est pueritiae dulce? |
A65219 | A. Quaenam est radix malorum omniū? |
A65219 | A. Qualibus amicis uti convenit? |
A65219 | A. Quanti as est existimationem hominum de nobis bonam facere? |
A65219 | A. Quanti pecuniam aestimare nefas est? |
A65219 | A. Quarum rerum eosdem oblivisci ● ● eet? |
A65219 | A. Quas ● pes maximas opinari possumus? |
A65219 | A. Quem condiscipulum vis? |
A65219 | A. Quem librum legis, mi puer? |
A65219 | A. Quem thesaurum pauperes fortiuntur? |
A65219 | A. Quibus cum hominibus versari licet? |
A65219 | A. Quorum mors est matura? |
A65219 | A. Quot annos ● a tus es? |
A65219 | A. Quotum aetatis annum agis? |
A65219 | A. Quotus quisque sic animatue est? |
A65219 | A. Quotâ in classe sedes? |
A65219 | A. Quotâ in classe ● edes? |
A65219 | A. Quâ labe ma ● ulatur adolescentia? |
A65219 | Cur cessas? |
A65219 | Cur ludis? |
A65219 | Cur nugaris? |
A65219 | Cur torpes? |
A65219 | Cur, cùm''longa dies urbes, cùm marmora solvat, Incautos homines tarda senecta premat? |
A65219 | G. Praeteriit cum dodrante, undecima, duodecim ● V. Quid ubi sit? |
A65219 | I. Opus est faciendum, quis faciet? |
A65219 | Ille, H ● c, Ipse, Cujus? |
A65219 | In secundâ, A. Ni ● l ● ne Colloquiorum, suavissime, didicit classis vestra? |
A65219 | Is not the Master''s authority to him more known and more important? |
A65219 | Lapis jactus jecit? |
A65219 | Non potes quin aliud agas? |
A65219 | Opus actum, egit? |
A65219 | Opus est factum, quis fecit? |
A65219 | Ought not the same condescension to be used in requiring the Work from them? |
A65219 | Q. Quid est illud in sinu tuo, mi puer? |
A65219 | Qu ● faciet? |
A65219 | Quamdiu? |
A65219 | Quando? |
A65219 | Quarum rerum omnes mortales meminisse oportet? |
A65219 | Quis? |
A65219 | Quota est hora? |
A65219 | V. A. Quorum mors est acerba? |
A65219 | Vitrum fractum, fregit? |
A65219 | Why must it be stood upon to attest the constant and ordinary expressions of the Tongue from the pure Writers? |
A65219 | composition: which way will our young Practitioner in Latin, now turn himself? |
A65219 | or what are Tully, Seneca, Terence, Virgill, Ovid, to him that enters on his Accidents? |
A65219 | should they be at once, at the very first engaged upon the whole work of Grammar promiscuously? |
A18944 | A fooles coat — Clitellae non conveniunt bovi? |
A18944 | Ad quem dies es profecturus? |
A18944 | Adeóne hospes es in hac regione? |
A18944 | An ego occasionem mihi ostentatam tam brevem tam optatam tam insperatam amitterem Should I let so fit an occasion slip? |
A18944 | An me putas Apologum comminisci? |
A18944 | Are not you ashamed? |
A18944 | Are you such a stranger here? |
A18944 | Calles Gallicè? |
A18944 | Came you a foot or horse backe? |
A18944 | Can I doe all at once? |
A18944 | Can you speake French? |
A18944 | Cui bono sunt? |
A18944 | Cui possit o ● rep ● re taedium? |
A18944 | Cui tandem rei? |
A18944 | Cui tandem rei? |
A18944 | Did not your conscience gall you? |
A18944 | Did you speed? |
A18944 | Doe not thinke much to tell? |
A18944 | Doe you flout me so at the first? |
A18944 | Doe you know in whose company you are? |
A18944 | Doe you love me no better? |
A18944 | Doe you pronounce right? |
A18944 | Doe you thinke I tell you a lye? |
A18944 | Doth no man finde fault with the reckoning? |
A18944 | Ecquid animi vobis est? |
A18944 | Ecquid novarum rerum affers è LONDINO? |
A18944 | Ecquis homo est? |
A18944 | Erat concio frequens? |
A18944 | Est aliud quod me velis? |
A18944 | Et quis Herculem vituperat? |
A18944 | Fateberi ● si divinâro? |
A18944 | For what thing I pray you, Sir? |
A18944 | For what thing I pray you? |
A18944 | God grant him long to live Itáne contemnor abs te? |
A18944 | Haeremus in vado, quis nos expediet? |
A18944 | Have we lived to see this? |
A18944 | Have you any thing else to say? |
A18944 | Have you that you looked for? |
A18944 | Have your wits about you Quid multis moror? |
A18944 | Hee had neede first helpe himselfe before hee helpe thee Hanccine ego contumeliam tam insignem in me accipiam? |
A18944 | How am I deceived? |
A18944 | How can I? |
A18944 | How did hee loose himselfe from that trouble? |
A18944 | How doe you all doe? |
A18944 | How doth all? |
A18944 | How feele you your selfe? |
A18944 | How is he changed? |
A18944 | How many ● ises shall wee make up? |
A18944 | How old are you? |
A18944 | How w ● ll doth a loose Gowne become her? |
A18944 | How you talke sirrah? |
A18944 | In what respect? |
A18944 | Is all well? |
A18944 | Is any man —? |
A18944 | Is it true? |
A18944 | Is there no newes? |
A18944 | Itáne statim me scommate excipis? |
A18944 | Laeta satis principia — — Sed quid longa dies? |
A18944 | May I trust you? |
A18944 | Nec quid dixeris, sed quorsum? |
A18944 | Nemo reclamat iniquae rationi? |
A18944 | Nihílne re ● istic novae? |
A18944 | Non reclamabat tibi conscientia? |
A18944 | Nonnè vides camelum saltantem? |
A18944 | Not what, but why? |
A18944 | Num contigit praeda quàm venabaris? |
A18944 | Nunquid tuis mandas per me? |
A18944 | Nunquid vis? |
A18944 | Nè gravare commemorare? |
A18944 | Obsecro quomodo sese ab hoc nodo expediebat? |
A18944 | Pedes advenis an eques? |
A18944 | Periculum faciam quàm sis bonae fidei? |
A18944 | Q ● antâ de spe decidi? |
A18944 | Quae Pallas istuc tibi misit in mentem? |
A18944 | Quae hunc agitant intemperiae? |
A18944 | Quam bella bellaria? |
A18944 | Quam decet nullo adstricta cingulo vestis, ac liberis diffluens laciniis? |
A18944 | Quanti istum locas? |
A18944 | Quanti venalis? |
A18944 | Quantula res? |
A18944 | Quantū mutatus ab illo? |
A18944 | Quas malum ambages mihi commemoras? |
A18944 | Quem vicarium constituit? |
A18944 | Quid agis rei? |
A18944 | Quid causae est? |
A18944 | Quid dici potuit hac sententiâ sanctius? |
A18944 | Quid est bonae rei? |
A18944 | Quid est quod me velis? |
A18944 | Quid istuc verbi est? |
A18944 | Quid licêris aut licitâris cum nihil sis empturus? |
A18944 | Quid loquebatur? |
A18944 | Quid officio inofficiofius? |
A18944 | Quid si coelum ruat? |
A18944 | Quid si divinem? |
A18944 | Quid te remoratum est? |
A18944 | Quid tibi aegrè est? |
A18944 | Quid tu es hominis? |
A18944 | Quid tu es hominis? |
A18944 | Quid venatur meus Spudaeus? |
A18944 | Quid verbis opus est? |
A18944 | Quis Deus aut quis ven tus te illuc adegit? |
A18944 | Quis Thales docuit te istud? |
A18944 | Quis audivit vocem campanae? |
A18944 | Quis potuit dexterius, deterius? |
A18944 | Quo colore possit excusari? |
A18944 | Quo nomine? |
A18944 | Quo ore appellabo hominem? |
A18944 | Quomodo se res habent tuae? |
A18944 | Quorsum haec igitur? |
A18944 | Quorsum ille musicus humilis in templo? |
A18944 | Quot annos numeras? |
A18944 | Quota Venus finiet ludum? |
A18944 | Quâ tandem horâ soles lectum relinquere? |
A18944 | Quî possim ego? |
A18944 | Rem certam narras? |
A18944 | Sed nè persequamur fabulas Democriticas, nonnè comperimus experimentis? |
A18944 | Shall I take this at his hand? |
A18944 | Sonásne probè sermonem Gallicum? |
A18944 | Such a little bit? |
A18944 | Tantillum fragmentulum? |
A18944 | To what purpose then? |
A18944 | Ut responsat nebulo? |
A18944 | Vidésne quod sodalitium tibi claudat latus? |
A18944 | Vivi pervenimus illuc? |
A18944 | Was it a great cogregation? |
A18944 | What a deale of doe tell you me of? |
A18944 | What a small matter? |
A18944 | What ailes the man? |
A18944 | What are you doing? |
A18944 | What can they say for it? |
A18944 | What doe you let it for? |
A18944 | What good doe they? |
A18944 | What good newes? |
A18944 | What hindred you? |
A18944 | What if I should guesse? |
A18944 | What is all the honour of the world without a good conscience? |
A18944 | What is the matter? |
A18944 | What is your pleasure with me? |
A18944 | What learned man taught you that, or who made you so w ● se? |
A18944 | What man are you? |
A18944 | What meane you by that? |
A18944 | What need I say more? |
A18944 | What need all this roaring? |
A18944 | What newes at London? |
A18944 | What seeke you for? |
A18944 | What shoul ● a cow doe with a cart saddle? |
A18944 | What strooke it? |
A18944 | What time are you wo nt to rise? |
A18944 | What troubles you? |
A18944 | What will it cost? |
A18944 | What winde blew you hither? |
A18944 | What would you? |
A18944 | When goe you? |
A18944 | Where left you last? |
A18944 | Who are you I pray? |
A18944 | Who can be weary? |
A18944 | Who can cleanse such a clowne? |
A18944 | Who could ever please all? |
A18944 | Who could have done it better, worse? |
A18944 | Who ever denied it? |
A18944 | Who heard the clocke? |
A18944 | Who is his Deputy? |
A18944 | Who perswaded you? |
A18944 | Who will helpe Dunne out of the mire? |
A18944 | Who will helpe you? |
A18944 | Why doe not you reade it your selfe? |
A18944 | Why so I pray you? |
A18944 | Will you tell me if I guesse? |
A18944 | With what face can I speak to him? |
A18944 | Would you any thing with me? |
A18944 | — Cui bono? |
A81795 | 10 How many Numbers bee there in a Noun? |
A81795 | 35. how know you the fift Declension? |
A81795 | 50 How many have the Vocative case? |
A81795 | 6. a Note of Interrogation —? |
A81795 | 93 How the Preterpersect Tens? |
A81795 | AN Adverb is a part of Speech joined to the Verbs, to declare their signification Why are Adverbs joyned to Verbs? |
A81795 | APreposition is a part of speech most commonly set before other parts, How many wayes? |
A81795 | Are not Prepositions somtimes made Adverbs? |
A81795 | Are not som Adverbs compared? |
A81795 | By what sign is it known? |
A81795 | Dementia? |
A81795 | Dost thou love? |
A81795 | How a Verb Commune? |
A81795 | How a Verb Deponent? |
A81795 | How a Verb Neuter? |
A81795 | How a Verb Passive? |
A81795 | How are Eo and Queo formed? |
A81795 | How are Participles declined? |
A81795 | How are Pronouns used? |
A81795 | How are Verbs Impersonals declined? |
A81795 | How bee Nouns Adjectives of the Comparative degree declined? |
A81795 | How bee Verbs in O declined? |
A81795 | How bee these Cases known one from another? |
A81795 | How do the Optative, Potential, and Subjunctive Moods differ? |
A81795 | How do these differ one from another? |
A81795 | How end''s the Genitive Case singular in each Declension? |
A81795 | How is a Nonn Adjective declined? |
A81795 | How is a Noun Adjective of three Articles declined? |
A81795 | How is a Noun Adjective of three terminations declined? |
A81795 | How is a Noun Substantive declined? |
A81795 | How is hic declined? |
A81795 | How is it formed? |
A81795 | How is it formed? |
A81795 | How is it formed? |
A81795 | How know you a Participle of the Future in dus? |
A81795 | How know you a Participle of the Future in rus? |
A81795 | How know you a Participle of the Preter tens? |
A81795 | How know you a Participle of the present tens? |
A81795 | How know you a Verb Active? |
A81795 | How know you the Comparative? |
A81795 | How know you the Indicative Mood? |
A81795 | How know you the Masculine Gender? |
A81795 | How know you the Nominative Case? |
A81795 | How know you the Positive? |
A81795 | How know you the Present Tens? |
A81795 | How know you the Preterpluperfect Tens? |
A81795 | How know you the Singular Number? |
A81795 | How know you the Singular Number? |
A81795 | How know you the Superlative? |
A81795 | How know you the first Conjugation? |
A81795 | How know you the first person? |
A81795 | How know you the fourth Declension? |
A81795 | How know you the second Declension? |
A81795 | How know you the third Declension? |
A81795 | How manie Genders of Nouns bee there? |
A81795 | How many Cases bee there in Nouns? |
A81795 | How many Conjugations have Verbs? |
A81795 | How many Declensions are three of Pronouns? |
A81795 | How many Declensions be there? |
A81795 | How many Gerunds are there? |
A81795 | How many Moods are there? |
A81795 | How many Numbers bee there in Nouns? |
A81795 | How many Participles com of a Verb Active? |
A81795 | How many Persons are there in Verbs? |
A81795 | How many Persons bee there in a Pronoun? |
A81795 | How many Pronoun ▪ Derivatives are there? |
A81795 | How many Pronoun ▪ Primitives bee there? |
A81795 | How many Pronoun- Substantives bee there? |
A81795 | How many Pronouns bee of of the first Declension? |
A81795 | How many Pronouns bee of the fourth Declension? |
A81795 | How many Pronouns bee of the second Declension? |
A81795 | How many Pronouns bee of the third Declension? |
A81795 | How many Relatives are there? |
A81795 | How many Supines bee there? |
A81795 | How many Tenses bee there? |
A81795 | How many degrees of Comparison are there? |
A81795 | How many kindes of Verbs Personals bee there? |
A81795 | How many kinds of Interjections bee there? |
A81795 | How many kinds of Participles bee there? |
A81795 | How many of a Verb Commune? |
A81795 | How many of a Verb Deponent? |
A81795 | How many of a Verb passive? |
A81795 | How many parts of Speech are there? |
A81795 | How many serv to the Accusative? |
A81795 | How many sorts of Adverbs bee there? |
A81795 | How many sorts of Conjunctions bee there? |
A81795 | How many sorts of Nouns Substantives bee there? |
A81795 | How many sorts of Nouns are there? |
A81795 | How many sorts of Verbs bee there? |
A81795 | How many things belong to a Noun? |
A81795 | How many things belong to a Pronoun? |
A81795 | How the Ablative? |
A81795 | How the Accusative? |
A81795 | How the Common of three? |
A81795 | How the Common of two? |
A81795 | How the Dative? |
A81795 | How the Doubtfull? |
A81795 | How the Epicene? |
A81795 | How the Feminine? |
A81795 | How the Future Tens? |
A81795 | How the Genitive? |
A81795 | How the Imperative? |
A81795 | How the Neuter? |
A81795 | How the Optative? |
A81795 | How the Plural? |
A81795 | How the Plural? |
A81795 | How the Potential? |
A81795 | How the Preterimperfect Tens? |
A81795 | How the Subjunctive? |
A81795 | How the Vocative? |
A81795 | How the first? |
A81795 | How the fourth? |
A81795 | How the second? |
A81795 | How the second? |
A81795 | How the third? |
A81795 | How the third? |
A81795 | How will you know what Declension a Pronoun is of? |
A81795 | Interrogatives: as, Ne whether, an whether, utrùm whether, nécne whether or no, ánne whether or no, nónne is it not so? |
A81795 | It is commonly known by this sign To; as amar ● ▪ To love ▪ When two Verbs com together, what Mood must the later bee? |
A81795 | Qu 86 How know you the Infinitive Mood? |
A81795 | Quantum negotii? |
A81795 | Quid agitur in ludo literario? |
A81795 | Quò terrarum abiit? |
A81795 | THe first Supine signifie''s actively and is put after verbs and participles, that signifie moveing to a place: as, Cur te is perditum? |
A81795 | The Indicative Mood sheweth a reason, true or fals; as Ego amo, I ● ove: or els asketh a questiou; as Amas tu? |
A81795 | The former verb is somtimes concealed by the Figure Ellipsis: as, Haeccine fieri flagitia? |
A81795 | These Five Declensions are known asunder by the terminations of their Cases? |
A81795 | VErbs of the Infinitive Mood are set after Verbs, or adjectives: as, Vis fieri dives, Pontice? |
A81795 | What Cases do Prepositions serv to? |
A81795 | What Tenses are formed of the Preterperfect tens of the Indicative Mood? |
A81795 | What are added to the Pronouns? |
A81795 | What are there peculiarly belonging to the Infinitive Mood? |
A81795 | What are they called besides? |
A81795 | What bee the Common Signs of the Cases? |
A81795 | What do you in the school? |
A81795 | What exceptions are there from these general rules? |
A81795 | What is Comparison? |
A81795 | What is a Conjunction? |
A81795 | What is a Noun Adjective? |
A81795 | What is a Noun Substantive? |
A81795 | What is a Noun? |
A81795 | What is a Participle? |
A81795 | What is a Preposition? |
A81795 | What is a Pronoun? |
A81795 | What is a Verb? |
A81795 | What is a termination? |
A81795 | What is an Adverb? |
A81795 | What is an Interjection? |
A81795 | What is it to bee declined? |
A81795 | What is it to bee undeclined? |
A81795 | What is it, to have the signification increased or diminished? |
A81795 | What is the Vse of Articles? |
A81795 | What is the common Sign of Verbs Impersonals? |
A81795 | What is the difference between a Noun and a Verb? |
A81795 | What is the use of Conjunctions? |
A81795 | What mean you by that standeth by himself? |
A81795 | What particular observation have you in this first Declension? |
A81795 | What sorts of Nouns are compared? |
A81795 | When you have a Verb, Adjective, or Relative, ask the question, who? |
A81795 | Whence i ● is formed? |
A81795 | Whence is the Comparative degree formed? |
A81795 | Whence is the Superlative formed? |
A81795 | Whither is hee gon? |
A81795 | Whose ground is it? |
A81795 | Why are they called Primitives? |
A81795 | Why are they called Relatives? |
A81795 | Why bee they called Derivatives? |
A81795 | Why do they belong to the Infinitive Mood? |
A81795 | Why do you say Commonly set before other parts? |
A81795 | Why is it called a Pronoun? |
A81795 | Why is it called the Subjunctive Mood? |
A81795 | how much business? |
A81795 | or what? |
A81795 | singular, the Vocative for the most part like the Nominative? |
A81795 | which of the brethren? |
A81795 | who? |
A81795 | ● ● baudi, decet, vel oportet: Ought such villanies to bee committed? |
A16874 | * And what do you? |
A16874 | * But who, I pray you noted? |
A16874 | * But why art thou so* shreud a boy? |
A16874 | * Doe you wish mee r to call the rest? |
A16874 | * Haue you neuer vttered the English speech before this? |
A16874 | * Haue you not heard? |
A16874 | * How earely I pray you? |
A16874 | * IS there any amongst you r desirous of play? |
A16874 | * Is it heard? |
A16874 | * May not I doe the same that mice doe? |
A16874 | * Neuer spake you English before? |
A16874 | * Not? |
A16874 | * Those present, or those absent? |
A16874 | * What a clock is it? |
A16874 | * What saiest thou? |
A16874 | * You youthes, about what doe you contende? |
A16874 | * can stir you vp? |
A16874 | * could you not hear? |
A16874 | * for what would you doe? |
A16874 | * hath it sounded, or not yet? |
A16874 | * instituted 〈 ◊ 〉 taught? |
A16874 | * therefore what a clock is it? |
A16874 | * what thou wilt? |
A16874 | * when shall it be dined? |
A16874 | And nothing more? |
A16874 | Are you so taught? |
A16874 | Art thou so wicked& a biter? |
A16874 | At what a clock? |
A16874 | BOyes, what noise is there, as if[ your] Master* were absent? |
A16874 | But dare you buy stollen things? |
A16874 | But if your father shall enter in after, do you not salute him? |
A16874 | But if your mother be away, whom salute you? |
A16874 | But indeed, can you* tell mee readily why you loue[ him?] |
A16874 | But what will you bring now for the excuse of your selfe? |
A16874 | But when heardest thou mee* speake English? |
A16874 | But whence* had you[ it]? |
A16874 | But why say you r this knife to be stollen? |
A16874 | C. But how can you be stirred vp? |
A16874 | C. It is an vnprofitable& dangerous* skill, and* not granted to vs. D. r[ Are you not delighted] t ● shoot? |
A16874 | C. Know you not? |
A16874 | C. MOther what a clock is it? |
A16874 | C. What am I taught? |
A16874 | C. Where? |
A16874 | C. Whether? |
A16874 | C. Who* should raise you vp? |
A16874 | C. Wilt thou snort all the day? |
A16874 | C. Your master is entred into the schoole: yet thou askest whether it be time? |
A16874 | C.* Hath the clock smitten, or no? |
A16874 | C.* Wouldest thou beate indeed? |
A16874 | D. Could our master fore know what would ● all out? |
A16874 | D. Do you dote? |
A16874 | D. For what cause? |
A16874 | D. Haue you learned musick? |
A16874 | D. Hoe,* why r doe you suffer[ me] to sleep so long? |
A16874 | D. How long agoe entred he? |
A16874 | D. How? |
A16874 | D. Is it time? |
A16874 | D. Ought you not to r salute me before? |
A16874 | D. Sith you are so desirous of play, I pray you, what liketh i ● you to doe? |
A16874 | D. What wil you that I tel[ you?] |
A16874 | D. What, doth fishing please you? |
A16874 | D. Why not? |
A16874 | D. r Haue you called me in vary deed? |
A16874 | D. r What seems the hand- ball vnto you? |
A16874 | D. r Wherefore? |
A16874 | D. r[ Doth it not like you] t ● hunt? |
A16874 | D.* Doe you not like riding? |
A16874 | D.* What a clock is it then? |
A16874 | D.* What say you? |
A16874 | D.* What? |
A16874 | D.* Why, what* would you do? |
A16874 | D.[ Doe you not delight] t ● swim? |
A16874 | E. Can you not awake, vnlesse you be* raised vp? |
A16874 | E. Doe your parents* spend so many* pots of ale,[ and] can they not* spare so much from their throat, that they may buy a combe? |
A16874 | E. How* then could you not heare the bell? |
A16874 | E. What? |
A16874 | E. Why doe you not buy? |
A16874 | E. Will you rise hereafter more early? |
A16874 | E. r HOe you, from whence come you so late? |
A16874 | E.* Heard you not the sound of the bell? |
A16874 | E.* What heare I? |
A16874 | F. Doe you command mee t ● r run back straight way, afte ● I haue* deliuered it? |
A16874 | F. No man will* lend vs. E. Wherefore? |
A16874 | F. Shall I say nothing? |
A16874 | F. What if he be not at home? |
A16874 | F. Will you not* be angry, if I confesse the truth? |
A16874 | G. And where do dogs sit? |
A16874 | G. But where shall I sit? |
A16874 | G. Is he in the wine- tauerne? |
A16874 | G. What will you doe there? |
A16874 | G. Whither haste you? |
A16874 | G. Will you heare? |
A16874 | G. With whom went hee thither? |
A16874 | H. And knowest thou where? |
A16874 | H. But how will you change it? |
A16874 | H. But* doest thou knowe how thou sittest? |
A16874 | H. In a little booke? |
A16874 | H. O thou mad fellow, may we fight here being consecrated to the same studies, indued with the same precepts of vertue? |
A16874 | H. What businesse[ is it?] |
A16874 | H. What haue you done? |
A16874 | H. What will you doe? |
A16874 | H. What will you? |
A16874 | H. When? |
A16874 | H. Who calls me? |
A16874 | H. Why then doe you say, lest they complaine of you? |
A16874 | H. Will not this* bee knowne to our master? |
A16874 | H. You haue* detained mee ouer long? |
A16874 | H.* And what then? |
A16874 | H.* Doe you bid me to* open r other mens letters? |
A16874 | Haue you bought it? |
A16874 | Holde your peace,[ our] master is present, if he should see vs talking and r a ● ke, what can we answer? |
A16874 | How are you called? |
A16874 | How long agoe? |
A16874 | How many houres haue I slept? |
A16874 | How oft* in the week? |
A16874 | If I haue deserued r nothing? |
A16874 | In what thing will you declare this loue? |
A16874 | Is any of your schoole- fellowes r notably learn ● d? |
A16874 | Is it risen now? |
A16874 | L. Hoe, tell me,* was there any mention of me? |
A16874 | L. So earely? |
A16874 | L. What haue I done? |
A16874 | L. Where? |
A16874 | L. Whether? |
A16874 | L. Why so? |
A16874 | L.* Doe you delude me? |
A16874 | M. Baker, goe to, tell me what hindred you? |
A16874 | M. Come hither, why were you not heere to day? |
A16874 | M. Where are the names of thē which were away? |
A16874 | M. Why r cald you not me also among[ your] other guests? |
A16874 | M.* What, this euery day? |
A16874 | N. What haue I done? |
A16874 | N.* Why then did hee mis- call mee? |
A16874 | Now ask* what you will? |
A16874 | O mad[ boy]* dost thou beleeue that all are so* austere as thou art? |
A16874 | Obey both of them as much as* may be? |
A16874 | Of all good fellowship tell[ me] what day? |
A16874 | Of all loue tell mee, wh ● you haue got this* knife ● P. Why aske you that? |
A16874 | Of how many yeares[ of age] are you? |
A16874 | Of one[ yeare] of two[ yeares] of ten,& c.* What yeare* goe you on? |
A16874 | Ought you not to kemb your head, before you came to the schoole? |
A16874 | P. In what[ words?] |
A16874 | P. What I? |
A16874 | P. What besides? |
A16874 | P. What will you doe? |
A16874 | P. What* say you? |
A16874 | P. What, in other words, then in which we are wo nt to salute other men? |
A16874 | P. What? |
A16874 | P. When? |
A16874 | P.* Am I to doe any thing besides that which I am wo nt? |
A16874 | Peter, Paul,& c. How many yeares* old are you? |
A16874 | R. For how much? |
A16874 | R. Haue you not another man ● knife? |
A16874 | R. How* saucily answere yo ● mee? |
A16874 | R. Neither haue you any knife? |
A16874 | R. Where is it? |
A16874 | R. Where r got you this knife? |
A16874 | R. Why should I not* dare when it is true? |
A16874 | R. Will you yeeld to me? |
A16874 | R. Wilt thou know? |
A16874 | S. For what cause? |
A16874 | S. Haue you noted me? |
A16874 | S. How saucily* r I pray you? |
A16874 | S. Should I not cry out, when* he dare tell such[ lies?] |
A16874 | S. Tell[ me]* who was present? |
A16874 | S.* To thee most notable lier? |
A16874 | S.* To whom haue I spoken? |
A16874 | Say you[ so?] |
A16874 | T. Are they single men, or maried? |
A16874 | T. Doe these loue you? |
A16874 | T. Doe they giue[ him] nothing? |
A16874 | T. Doe your mastersteach you these things? |
A16874 | T. Haue you done* any good in learning? |
A16874 | T. How many scholars haue they? |
A16874 | T. How many syllables* hath a Dactyle? |
A16874 | T. Is he so poore? |
A16874 | T. Is that Wert r a towne or ● village? |
A16874 | T. MOther,* when shall we dine? |
A16874 | T. No? |
A16874 | T. Of what sort? |
A16874 | T. The Infinitiue mood placuisse, whereof is it gouerned, or of what doth it depend? |
A16874 | T. What doe they teach you? |
A16874 | T. What learne you? |
A16874 | T. What manner of schoolemasters haue you there? |
A16874 | T. What ones are your schoole- fellowes? |
A16874 | T. What part of speech is Vltima? |
A16874 | T. What signifieth the last? |
A16874 | T. Whereof* consists it? |
A16874 | T.* CHild, r haue you* a pen and ink horne? |
A16874 | T.* Doe you loue your master? |
A16874 | T.* Doe you remember any little verse without book? |
A16874 | T.* How doth hee agree with the citizens? |
A16874 | T.* How then fell it out, that you should come hither* for to study? |
A16874 | T.* Shall I make a triall of you? |
A16874 | T.* What kinde of verse is this? |
A16874 | T.[ And] are they r of great learning? |
A16874 | V. By and by, if so be that you* wait a little? |
A16874 | V. How? |
A16874 | V. I beseech you, from whence haue I r drawen them otherwise? |
A16874 | V. Whither,* O good sir, so quickly? |
A16874 | WHo hath* the note for speaking English? |
A16874 | WHy come you* mon ● slowly to the schools* than the rest? |
A16874 | Well, what doe you after? |
A16874 | What are you wo nt to doe? |
A16874 | What aske you? |
A16874 | What is[ your] name? |
A16874 | What punishment shall I* impose if you doe deceiue mee? |
A16874 | What r dooest thou feare stripes more after dinner, than after sleep? |
A16874 | What r doth it belong to me whether it be* cleare or cloudie? |
A16874 | What say you r entering? |
A16874 | What will you giue me if I shall* get you leaue to play? |
A16874 | What will you? |
A16874 | When is the r pottage wo ● ● to seeth? |
A16874 | Where is[ my] shirt? |
A16874 | Where shall I finde him? |
A16874 | Whom haue you noted? |
A16874 | Why dost thou so cry out? |
A16874 | Why then rest you so securely in the morning? |
A16874 | Why then* am I blamed for doing this? |
A16874 | Why* skippe you[ so]? |
A16874 | Will you not, that we obey our parents? |
A16874 | Would you haue me to beleeue you? |
A16874 | doth not wrastling delight you? |
A16874 | enough there? |
A16874 | fishing with hook, or fishing with net? |
A16874 | haue you an ● thing that is* this boyes? |
A16874 | or r where? |
A16874 | r What need is there of any letter? |
A16874 | r Why? |
A16874 | r wets vs.* Whether doth wrastling delight you? |
A16874 | were you deafe? |
A16874 | where then? |
A16874 | ● HAue you not* a knife* that you may lend mee? |
A16874 | ● Wherefore? |
A16874 | ● r Will you heare what a one ● was? |
A16874 | ● ● aue you lost a knife indeed? |
A16874 | ● ● hat a one was it? |
A44384 | & C. A. VIsne mecum repetere praelectionem? |
A44384 | & P. O. VIsne mihi dare unicam pennam? |
A44384 | , Q, How know you a verb Active? |
A44384 | ? |
A44384 | A Question, is thus marked —? |
A44384 | A. Cur non dedisti signum? |
A44384 | A. Nónne vides misera, nos esse nudos? |
A44384 | A. Qui which, quis who? |
A44384 | A. Quid itá? |
A44384 | A. Tenésne? |
A44384 | About what? |
A44384 | Acuistíne pennam meam? |
A44384 | Ad quantum temporis? |
A44384 | An ego te toties audiam? |
A44384 | An ortus jam? |
A44384 | An quisquam hominum est aequè miser ut ego Which of the boyes dare''s dispute with me Quis puerórum audet mecum disputare? |
A44384 | And to these are added Qui who, or which, quis who? |
A44384 | Anne est intus? |
A44384 | Are wee com to this pass? |
A44384 | Are you deaf? |
A44384 | Avaro quid mali optes, nisi ut vivat diu? |
A44384 | Aïn''tu? |
A44384 | B Ubi est indusium? |
A44384 | B. Quid ad me attinet, sudum sit an nebulosum? |
A44384 | B. Quid ergò sic exclamas? |
A44384 | B. Quid vis? |
A44384 | B. Quot horas dormivi? |
A44384 | BAtte fili, mi fili, mi Batte? |
A44384 | C. MAter, quota est hora? |
A44384 | C. Non sa ● ìs rectè fortasse? |
A44384 | C. Quid aïs, ineptule? |
A44384 | C. Quid igitur expectamus? |
A44384 | C. Quid sim edoctus? |
A44384 | C. Sonuit, an nondum? |
A44384 | C.& F. C. SAtísne usus es scalpello meo? |
A44384 | C.& S. C. IAmne tenes, quae reddenda sunt horâ tertiâ? |
A44384 | Cui loqueris? |
A44384 | Cujus est hic codex? |
A44384 | Cujus who s''s? |
A44384 | Cupis eam revisere? |
A44384 | Cur i d quaeritas? |
A44384 | Cur ità fles? |
A44384 | Cur non scribis? |
A44384 | Cur tu caeteris tardiùs venis ad scholam? |
A44384 | D. Non me salutare debeas antea? |
A44384 | D. Quid tu aïs? |
A44384 | D. Quid vis ut dicam? |
A44384 | De Gallo Gallinaceo- GAllus gallinaceus, dum vertit stercorarium offendit gemmam; Quid, inquiens, rem sic nitidam reperio? |
A44384 | Do you dispatch or no? |
A44384 | Do you not hear what the master saith? |
A44384 | Do you not know what a clock it is? |
A44384 | Do you remember? |
A44384 | Do you seek mee? |
A44384 | E. Quid ego audio? |
A44384 | E. Quid est? |
A44384 | E. Quid non? |
A44384 | E. Quî non potuisti ergò audire campanam? |
A44384 | E. UNde venis tam serò, heus tu? |
A44384 | E. Video,& me pudet; sed quid nobis faciendum est? |
A44384 | Ecquid habes novi? |
A44384 | Ecquis mecum audet disputare? |
A44384 | Egóne curo? |
A44384 | F. Aliter Lutetiae ▪ aliter Londini vivitur; sed non opu ● est tot verbus; vis dire duodecim? |
A44384 | F. Cur me revocas? |
A44384 | F. Non indignaberis si verum fatear? |
A44384 | F. PEnnae istae quas circumfers, súntne venales? |
A44384 | F. Quid aïs? |
A44384 | F. Satìs video quales sint; quot vis dare pro quadrante? |
A44384 | F. Súntne vobis multi anseres? |
A44384 | Fecistíne officium tuum? |
A44384 | For how long time? |
A44384 | From what trees do the leaves never fall? |
A44384 | HOw many Concords bee there? |
A44384 | Habésne scalpellum? |
A44384 | Have I not said well? |
A44384 | Have you a penknife? |
A44384 | Have you anie good ink? |
A44384 | Have you anie news? |
A44384 | Have you dispatch''t your business? |
A44384 | Have you don with my penknife? |
A44384 | Have you don? |
A44384 | Have you mended my pen? |
A44384 | Have you not a knife to lend mee? |
A44384 | Have you such a sweet tooth? |
A44384 | Hoccine agis, an non? |
A44384 | How are Participles of the Present tens declined? |
A44384 | How are nouns Adjectives declined? |
A44384 | How are nouns Substantives decl ● ned? |
A44384 | How are other Participles declined? |
A44384 | How are verbs of the fourth Conjugation formed? |
A44384 | How are verbs of the second Conjugation formed? |
A44384 | How are verbs of the third Conjugation formed? |
A44384 | How bee these eight sorts of word called? |
A44384 | How can that bee don? |
A44384 | How can you tell of what Declension a noun is? |
A44384 | How can you tell of what Gender ● Noun ought to bee? |
A44384 | How do they treat of Latine words? |
A44384 | How do you know such verbs? |
A44384 | How do you? |
A44384 | How end their Genitive cases singular? |
A44384 | How ends the Genitive case singular of the five Declensions? |
A44384 | How is the Gerund in Di used? |
A44384 | How is the Gerund in Dum used? |
A44384 | How know you a Participle of the Future in dus? |
A44384 | How know you a Participle of the Present- tens? |
A44384 | How know you a verb Commune? |
A44384 | How know you a verb Deponent? |
A44384 | How know you a verb Neuter? |
A44384 | How know you a verb Passive? |
A44384 | How know you the Ablative case? |
A44384 | How know you the Accusative case? |
A44384 | How know you the Common of three gender? |
A44384 | How know you the Common of two genders? |
A44384 | How know you the Comparative de ● ree? |
A44384 | How know you the Dative case? |
A44384 | How know you the Doubtful gender? |
A44384 | How know you the Epicene gender? |
A44384 | How know you the Future tens? |
A44384 | How know you the Genitive case? |
A44384 | How know you the Imperative mood? |
A44384 | How know you the Indicative mood? |
A44384 | How know you the Infinitive mood? |
A44384 | How know you the Neuter gender? |
A44384 | How know you the Nominative case? |
A44384 | How know you the Positive degree? |
A44384 | How know you the Present tens? |
A44384 | How know you the Preterimperfect tens? |
A44384 | How know you the Preterperfect tens? |
A44384 | How know you the Preterpluperfect tens? |
A44384 | How know you the Subjunctive mood? |
A44384 | How know you the Superlative? |
A44384 | How know you the first Conjugation? |
A44384 | How know you the fourth Conjugation? |
A44384 | How know you the plural number? |
A44384 | How know you the second Conjugation? |
A44384 | How know you the singular number? |
A44384 | How know you the third Conjugation? |
A44384 | How know you? |
A44384 | How many Cases are there? |
A44384 | How many Conjugations have verbs? |
A44384 | How many Declensions are there? |
A44384 | How many Declensions hath a Pronoun? |
A44384 | How many Figures have Latine words? |
A44384 | How many Genders are there? |
A44384 | How many Gerunds are there? |
A44384 | How many Moods have verbs? |
A44384 | How many Persons hath a Pronoun? |
A44384 | How many Prepositions serv to an Ablative case? |
A44384 | How many Prepositions serv to an Accusative case? |
A44384 | How many Prepositions serv to an Accusative, or an Ablative case? |
A44384 | How many Pronouns bee of the fourth Declension? |
A44384 | How many Pronouns bee there? |
A44384 | How many Supines are there? |
A44384 | How many Tenses have Verbs? |
A44384 | How many boyes are forth? |
A44384 | How many kindes are there of both Substantives and Adjectives? |
A44384 | How many kindes of Nouns bee there? |
A44384 | How many kindes of Participles are there? |
A44384 | How many kindes of Verbs are there? |
A44384 | How many letters bee there? |
A44384 | How many sorts of Verbs are there? |
A44384 | How many things belong to a Noun? |
A44384 | How many things belong to a Participle? |
A44384 | How much cost it? |
A44384 | How old are you? |
A44384 | Húccine rerum venimus? |
A44384 | IN the Latine tongue how many sorts of words bee there? |
A44384 | In conjugateing verbs what are wee chiefly to minde? |
A44384 | Interrogatives: as, Qui vestrûm? |
A44384 | Is any man so miserable as I am? |
A44384 | Is hee within? |
A44384 | Is it struck or not? |
A44384 | Is not this thy book? |
A44384 | It answereth to the question from what? |
A44384 | It answereth to the question to whom? |
A44384 | It answereth to the question who? |
A44384 | It answereth to the question whom? |
A44384 | It answereth to the question whose? |
A44384 | It signifieth both sexes under one Article Q What are Articles? |
A44384 | It will bee miserable for anie of you to bewail himself hereafter, and say, How have I hated instruction? |
A44384 | J. Heus, heus Adame, ubi es? |
A44384 | J. Quid opus? |
A44384 | J. Unde didicistite nudum esse? |
A44384 | Let us chat awhile? |
A44384 | Let us play among our selves? |
A44384 | Licétne pauca? |
A44384 | M. Estne solus? |
A44384 | M. M R. M. HAbésne scalpellum? |
A44384 | M. Quid aïs? |
A44384 | M. Quâ formâ scripturae? |
A44384 | M. Sed ubi reliquisti? |
A44384 | M. Vis uno verbo dicam? |
A44384 | M.& B. M. ACuistíne pennam meam? |
A44384 | May I speak with you? |
A44384 | Men''quaeris? |
A44384 | Nihílne ampliús? |
A44384 | Non auditis, quid praeceptor imperet? |
A44384 | Non decet? |
A44384 | Non habes cultellum quem des mihi commodató? |
A44384 | Non licet igitur ludere? |
A44384 | Non tangeris desiderio matris? |
A44384 | Nonne bene dixi? |
A44384 | Nothing els? |
A44384 | Nunquid aliud vis? |
A44384 | Nunquid aliud vis? |
A44384 | Nunquid surdus es? |
A44384 | Nónne hic liber est tuus? |
A44384 | O. Credo equidem, agè, no ● peto dono: saltem commodabis? |
A44384 | O. Rem tant ● llam mihi negas? |
A44384 | Palatum tam doctum habes? |
A44384 | Parùm absuit quin perdiderā Quomodo i d accidit? |
A44384 | Perfecistíne? |
A44384 | Proper names of Cities that signif ● ● to a place, in what case shall they bee put? |
A44384 | Q Among the Interjections which to govern cases? |
A44384 | Q How are verbs of the first Conjugation formed? |
A44384 | Q How is the Gerund in Do used? |
A44384 | Q How is their signification to bee known? |
A44384 | Q How know you a Participle of the Future in rus? |
A44384 | Q How know you the Feminine gender? |
A44384 | Q How many degrees of Comparison are ● ● re? |
A44384 | Q How many numbers are there? |
A44384 | Q How may a verb govern divers cases? |
A44384 | Q Proper names that signifie from a place, in what case shall they bee put? |
A44384 | Q Proper num ● s of cities, that signifie 〈 ◊ 〉 or at a place, in what case shall they bee put? |
A44384 | Q WHat is a Pronoun? |
A44384 | Q What Common names bee used like these Proper names of Cities? |
A44384 | Q What directions have you for construing Latine? |
A44384 | Q What is the Rule of the second Concord? |
A44384 | Q What is the first Supine put after? |
A44384 | Q Which bee they? |
A44384 | Q Which bee they? |
A44384 | Q ▪ What Adverbs govern a Genitive case? |
A44384 | Q ▪ Which parts of Speech bee declined? |
A44384 | Q ● id illud prodest? |
A44384 | Q ● id novarum rerum? |
A44384 | Q, How know you the Vocative case? |
A44384 | Q. Cur latrant canes? |
A44384 | Q. ECquis mecum audet disputare? |
A44384 | Q. Nouns of place if they bee Appellatives, and proper names of great places, that signifie in, to, from or by a place, how shall they bee used? |
A44384 | Q. Quae est litera robustissima? |
A44384 | Q. Quando est dies longissimus? |
A44384 | Q. Quibus arboribus nunquam desluunt folia? |
A44384 | Q. Ubi est angustissima terra? |
A44384 | Q. Ubi sunt omnes mulieres bonae? |
A44384 | Qualis est caeli facies? |
A44384 | Quando prandebitur? |
A44384 | Quando profecturus es? |
A44384 | Quando repetes ludum literarium? |
A44384 | Quando ● ris doctus? |
A44384 | Quanti aestimas hunc librum? |
A44384 | Quanti constitit? |
A44384 | Quantum temporis abfuisti à maternis aedibus? |
A44384 | Quem librum legis? |
A44384 | Quem te dicam esse? |
A44384 | Qui ● us arboribus nunquam dés ● uunt foll ●? |
A44384 | Quid ad me attinet? |
A44384 | Quid affers mihi? |
A44384 | Quid agitis? |
A44384 | Quid causae fuit? |
A44384 | Quid clamitas? |
A44384 | Quid de te fiet? |
A44384 | Quid ego curo? |
A44384 | Quid ergò responderem praeceptori? |
A44384 | Quid habebas negotii? |
A44384 | Quid hoc sibi vult? |
A44384 | Quid ibi facturus? |
A44384 | Quid istic tumulti est? |
A44384 | Quid ità contrahis vultum? |
A44384 | Quid ità laetus es? |
A44384 | Quid mali feci? |
A44384 | Quid meâ refert? |
A44384 | Quid mihi tecum? |
A44384 | Quid negotii? |
A44384 | Quid prodieras? |
A44384 | Quid quaeris? |
A44384 | Quid rei est? |
A44384 | Quid si mediter? |
A44384 | Quid si sic? |
A44384 | Quid si sic? |
A44384 | Quid sibi vult ista tam subita muratio? |
A44384 | Quid sic exclamas? |
A44384 | Quid sic exclamas? |
A44384 | Quid te impellit? |
A44384 | Quid tibi deest? |
A44384 | Quid tibi videtur? |
A44384 | Quid tu ages? |
A44384 | Quid tu ais? |
A44384 | Quid tum postea? |
A44384 | Quid tuâ? |
A44384 | Quid vis faciam? |
A44384 | Quid vis mecum? |
A44384 | Quid vis mecum? |
A44384 | Quid vis? |
A44384 | Quid vobis videtur? |
A44384 | Quis dives est? |
A44384 | Quis isti ● est strepitus? |
A44384 | Quis nobis ludendi facultatem impetravit? |
A44384 | Quis pauper? |
A44384 | Quis pulsat fores? |
A44384 | Quis suggerit illi? |
A44384 | Quis tibi dedit? |
A44384 | Quis tibi erit side- jussor? |
A44384 | Quis tu es? |
A44384 | Quis venerit accersitum? |
A44384 | Quis ábstulit meum librum? |
A44384 | Quo lusu nos exercebimus? |
A44384 | Quo pignore contendes? |
A44384 | Quo vadis? |
A44384 | Quod erit pretium certaminis? |
A44384 | Quod est tibi nomen? |
A44384 | Quod prudentis opus? |
A44384 | Quod stulti proprium? |
A44384 | Quomodo vales? |
A44384 | Quot annos natus es? |
A44384 | Quot sunt literae? |
A44384 | Quota est hora? |
A44384 | Quâ de re? |
A44384 | Quî potest istud fieri? |
A44384 | Quî scis? |
A44384 | Quò nunc solus abis? |
A44384 | Quò properas? |
A44384 | R. Quando reddes? |
A44384 | Relative make the Antecedent ask the question who? |
A44384 | S. CUr vetuit vos Deus vesci ex omnibus arboribus pomarii? |
A44384 | S. Nuncquid vis aliud? |
A44384 | S. Quid times ubi nihil timendum est? |
A44384 | Satísne usus scalpello meo? |
A44384 | Say you so? |
A44384 | Scin''tu quota sit hora? |
A44384 | Sed quando afferes meliores pennas? |
A44384 | Sed quod sibi vult totus ille grex quem offendi veniens? |
A44384 | Shall I go with you? |
A44384 | Shall I hear you so oft? |
A44384 | Sic teipsum abjicies? |
A44384 | Sic ● ine doctus es? |
A44384 | Siccine doctus es? |
A44384 | Siccine edoctus es? |
A44384 | Siccine satís? |
A44384 | Sonuit, an nondum? |
A44384 | Stand straight, why doest thou go crooked Rectus s ● a, quid incedis curvus? |
A44384 | Substantive make the Adjective ask the question who? |
A44384 | The Accusative, which answereth to the question whom? |
A44384 | The D ● tive, which answereth to the question to whom? |
A44384 | The Genitive, which answereth to the question whose? |
A44384 | The Indicative, which telleth a thing, as, Amo I love; or asketh a question, as, Amas tu lovest thou? |
A44384 | The Nominative, which answereth to the question who? |
A44384 | Those book is this? |
A44384 | To whom do you speak? |
A44384 | Tu qu ● d discis? |
A44384 | Tu quid discis? |
A44384 | Ubi fuisti? |
A44384 | Ubi terrárum sumus? |
A44384 | Unde scirem ▪ Quando est profectus? |
A44384 | Unde venis? |
A44384 | Uter vicit? |
A44384 | Utrum mavis Oxoniae an Cantabrigiae studere? |
A44384 | Utrùm pedes an eques ivit? |
A44384 | Verbs of the Infinitive mood are set after Verbs or Adjectives: as, Vis fíeri díve ● ▪ Wilt thou bee made rich? |
A44384 | Vis me tibi comitem? |
A44384 | Vix scholam ingressus es,& jam de ludo loqueris? |
A44384 | WHat Adverbs govern a Nominative case? |
A44384 | WHat Impersonals govern a Ginitive case? |
A44384 | WHat bee the Grounds of Grammar? |
A44384 | WHat book doest thou read? |
A44384 | WHat case bee nouns put in that betoken part of time? |
A44384 | WHat case do Gerunds and Supines govern? |
A44384 | WHat doth the Construction treat of? |
A44384 | WHat is a Conjunction? |
A44384 | WHat is a Noun? |
A44384 | WHat is a Participle? |
A44384 | WHat is a Preposition? |
A44384 | WHat is a Verb? |
A44384 | WHat is an Adverb? |
A44384 | WHat is an Interjection? |
A44384 | WHat nouns govern a Genitive case? |
A44384 | WHat verbs govern a Nominative case? |
A44384 | Wast thou taught no better manners? |
A44384 | Wee have leav to play? |
A44384 | What Conjunctions couple like cases, and like moods and tenses? |
A44384 | What Impersonals govern a Dative case? |
A44384 | What Impersonals govern an Accusative case with the Preposition Ad? |
A44384 | What Impersonals govern an Accusative case? |
A44384 | What Impersonals govern an Accusative with a Genitive case? |
A44384 | What Prepositions are alwaies set in Composition? |
A44384 | What Pronouns bee of the first Declension? |
A44384 | What Pronouns bee of third Declension? |
A44384 | What Pronouns bee used of the second Declension? |
A44384 | What Rules are added to these? |
A44384 | What a clock is it? |
A44384 | What ado is there? |
A44384 | What are these? |
A44384 | What are verbs of the Infinitive mood set after? |
A44384 | What are you looking for? |
A44384 | What are you to do there? |
A44384 | What bee those Rules? |
A44384 | What belong''s to the parts of Speech undeclined? |
A44384 | What care I? |
A44384 | What case bee Nouns put in that signifie space between place and place? |
A44384 | What case bee nouns put in that signifie continued time? |
A44384 | What case govern Adverbs that are derived of Adjectives and Prepositions? |
A44384 | What case will Tenus have? |
A44384 | What cases do Participles govern? |
A44384 | What directions have you for makeing Latine? |
A44384 | What directions have you for parsing Latine? |
A44384 | What directions have you for righ ● writeing? |
A44384 | What do I care? |
A44384 | What do they treat of? |
A44384 | What do yee? |
A44384 | What do you bring mee? |
A44384 | What do you learn? |
A44384 | What do you think of it? |
A44384 | What do you think of it? |
A44384 | What doest thou learn? |
A44384 | What had you to do there? |
A44384 | What had you to do? |
A44384 | What harm have I don? |
A44384 | What have I to do with you? |
A44384 | What have you don with my ruler? |
A44384 | What if the monitor com? |
A44384 | What is a noun Adjective? |
A44384 | What is a noun Proper? |
A44384 | What is a noun Substantive? |
A44384 | What is a noun( Appellative, or) Common? |
A44384 | What is hee busie about? |
A44384 | What is that good for? |
A44384 | What is the Rule of the Question and Answer? |
A44384 | What is the Rule of the case of the Relative? |
A44384 | What is the Rule of the first Concord? |
A44384 | What is the Rule of the third Concord? |
A44384 | What is the later Supine put after? |
A44384 | What is the matter? |
A44384 | What is your business? |
A44384 | What is your name? |
A44384 | What matter is it to mee? |
A44384 | What matter is it to you? |
A44384 | What meaneth this? |
A44384 | What means this sudden alteration? |
A44384 | What mooved you? |
A44384 | What news? |
A44384 | What nois is there? |
A44384 | What nouns govern a Dative case? |
A44384 | What nouns govern an Ablative case? |
A44384 | What nouns govern an Accusative case? |
A44384 | What nouns have Comparison? |
A44384 | What of that? |
A44384 | What say you? |
A44384 | What shall I answer the master? |
A44384 | What shall wee play at? |
A44384 | What shall wee play at? |
A44384 | What shall wee play for? |
A44384 | What tenses are formed of the Preter- tens? |
A44384 | What things belong to a Pronoun? |
A44384 | What things belong to a Verb? |
A44384 | What things belong to the Infinitive mood? |
A44384 | What things of these hath a Pronoun of its own? |
A44384 | What things of these hath a Pronoun the same as a Noun hath? |
A44384 | What think you this book is worth? |
A44384 | What verbs belong to this Rule? |
A44384 | What verbs govern a Dative case? |
A44384 | What verbs govern a Genitive case? |
A44384 | What verbs govern an Ablative case? |
A44384 | What verbs govern an Accusative case? |
A44384 | What want you? |
A44384 | What was the reason? |
A44384 | What weather is it? |
A44384 | What will becom of you? |
A44384 | What will you stake? |
A44384 | What wilt thou do? |
A44384 | What words are added to these? |
A44384 | What would you have mee do? |
A44384 | What would you with mee? |
A44384 | When a question is asked, the answer must bee made by the same case, and tens, that the question is asked by: as, Cújus est fundus? |
A44384 | When is a noun put in the Ablative case absolute? |
A44384 | When is a word declined? |
A44384 | When is a word undeclined? |
A44384 | When shall wee have our dinner? |
A44384 | When went hee? |
A44384 | When will you bee a scholar? |
A44384 | When will you go? |
A44384 | When ● e com you? |
A44384 | Where are wee? |
A44384 | Where got you money? |
A44384 | Where have you been? |
A44384 | Where learn you the Rules to know Preterperfect- tenses& Supines of verbs? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which bee they? |
A44384 | Which of you? |
A44384 | Which parts of Speech bee undeclined? |
A44384 | Whither go you so fast? |
A44384 | Whither go you? |
A44384 | Who are of our side? |
A44384 | Who are you? |
A44384 | Who dare dispute with mee? |
A44384 | Who gave it you? |
A44384 | Who got us leav to play? |
A44384 | Who hath taken away my book? |
A44384 | Who hath won? |
A44384 | Who is poor? |
A44384 | Who is rich? |
A44384 | Who knock''s at the door? |
A44384 | Who prompt''s him? |
A44384 | Who will bee bound for you? |
A44384 | Whom should I say you are? |
A44384 | Whose ground is it? |
A44384 | Why are you so merrie? |
A44384 | Why came you forth? |
A44384 | Why do you ask that? |
A44384 | Why do you bawl so? |
A44384 | Why do you crie so? |
A44384 | Why do you frown so? |
A44384 | Why do you jog the seat? |
A44384 | Why do you not write? |
A44384 | Why do you speak so loud? |
A44384 | Why so? |
A44384 | Why so? |
A44384 | Will you do mee a kindeness? |
A44384 | Will you so debase your self? |
A44384 | Will you tell mee what I ask? |
A44384 | and cujas of who ● e side? |
A44384 | and cújas on whose side? |
A44384 | are you well? |
A44384 | case make the Verb ask the question who? |
A44384 | cújus whose? |
A44384 | habés ● e bonum atramentum? |
A44384 | num obsurduisti? |
A44384 | or From what? |
A44384 | or to what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or what? |
A44384 | or whereof? |
A44384 | or ● what? |
A44384 | or, what? |
A44384 | or, ● hereof? |
A44384 | ubi pascuntur? |
A44384 | valésne? |
A44384 | what would you have? |
A44384 | which answereth to the question From whom? |
A44372 | 10 Adversus quem locutus? |
A44372 | 10 Jubes me residere? |
A44372 | 10 Non tu debeas caput pectere, entequam venires ad ludum? |
A44372 | 10 Non tu mihi potes expedire, quid nos velit? |
A44372 | 10 Prae ceptor tuus intravit in ludum: tu rogas num fit tempus? |
A44372 | 10 Qualis est in Rosa? |
A44372 | 10 Quid deinde? |
A44372 | 10 Qut non potuisti ergò audire campanam? |
A44372 | 10 Quàm protervè verò? |
A44372 | 10 Sonuit an nondum? |
A44372 | 100 O insane, credis universo; tam tétricos esse quám tu et? |
A44372 | 105 Tace, magister adest, si nos confabulantes deprehendat,& perconté ur quid respondeamus? |
A44372 | 110 Quid si pudor me praepédiat, ut fit saepe, quo minūs ausim, quae volo, proloqui? |
A44372 | 110 Quo alioqui ruerem nisi his tanquam septis coercérer? |
A44372 | 115 Quae Pars orationis est Ultima? |
A44372 | 115 Quomodo vero totum diem cousumis citra taedium? |
A44372 | 130 Num satis estis instructi? |
A44372 | 15 Amisisti scilicet cultellum? |
A44372 | 15 Désipis núdius tértius lusimus; an i d éxcidit tibi? |
A44372 | 15 Egóne? |
A44372 | 15 Non auditis, quid praeceptor imperet? |
A44372 | 15 Non tu potes expergisci, ni susciteris? |
A44372 | 15 Quid mihi, gratiam habeas? |
A44372 | 15 Quin eam interroges, quae cibos coxit? |
A44372 | 15 Ubi sunt omnes mulieres bonae? |
A44372 | 160 Quid tibi videntur? |
A44372 | 165 Cujusmodi versic ulus est iste? |
A44372 | 175 Dáctylus quot syllabas récipit? |
A44372 | 180 Haeccine docent vos magistrivestri? |
A44372 | 20 Acétum: E. What hath the Hollander brewed? |
A44372 | 20 Cúrnam tu es tam sceleritus puer? |
A44372 | 20 Die sodes, quo die? |
A44372 | 20 Nunquid faciendum est, praeter solitum? |
A44372 | 20 Quem te dicem esse? |
A44372 | 20 Quid quaeritas? |
A44372 | 20 Scitis, quid fecerit? |
A44372 | 20 Vbi tu nactus es hunc cultellum? |
A44372 | 25 Canis micturus cur pedem levat áltetum? |
A44372 | 25 Cur etiam mihi dedit nomen ignominiosum? |
A44372 | 25 Quid vendit Rex? |
A44372 | 25 Vbi est indúcium? |
A44372 | 25 Vtros? |
A44372 | 30 Cùm ludendi tam sis cupidus, quid quaeso, tibi libet actitáre? |
A44372 | 30 Non tu vis ut parentibus obsequamur? |
A44372 | 30 Quis reliquias caeteras absumit? |
A44372 | 30 Tot cyathos cervisiae tui parentes exhauriuns: non tantum possunt detráhere gutturi suo, ut emant pectinem? |
A44372 | 30 Tu me jubes aliénas literas resignáre? |
A44372 | 35 Adeoscelestus& mordax? |
A44372 | 35 Curetiam non coquant bonam cer visiam? |
A44372 | 35 Etiam petasónes,& caro salita? |
A44372 | 35 Noras virum, qui te nuper alloquebátur in foro? |
A44372 | 35 Oppidum est, an pagus Guerteum istud? |
A44372 | 35 Quid istud est, quaeso, proverbium? |
A44372 | 35 Ubi coêunt flumina? |
A44372 | 40 Meritissin è. Sinmater ab est, quem salutas? |
A44372 | 40 Non scis? |
A44372 | 40 Quae merx máximè necessária? |
A44372 | 40 Quid fecisti? |
A44372 | 40 Vis mihi acquiescere? |
A44372 | 40 Vnde vivitis autem? |
A44372 | 45 Quid respondebas? |
A44372 | 45 Quis i d faciet? |
A44372 | 45 Ubi est divinum adjutórium praesentissimum? |
A44372 | 5 De qua re conténditis, vos juvenes? |
A44372 | 5 Dic sodes, ecquam hic èx erces artem? |
A44372 | 5 Pisces? |
A44372 | 5 Quamobrem? |
A44372 | 5 Quando solet holus decequere? |
A44372 | 5 Quid au igitur? |
A44372 | 5 Quid magister malefécit tibi, ut sic in ● um destomachéris? |
A44372 | 5 Quid opus scalis? |
A44372 | 5 Quidais tandem? |
A44372 | 5 Quonam, O bone, tam propere? |
A44372 | 5 Sunt paráia omnia? |
A44372 | 5 Tu me notaveris? |
A44372 | 5 Ubi secébo autem? |
A44372 | 5 Vis mihi diee: e quod te interrogo? |
A44372 | 50 Gratis? |
A44372 | 50 Qui formam illárum carpit? |
A44372 | 50 Quid precar? |
A44372 | 50 Quid tibi vidétur pila palmária? |
A44372 | 55 Adeóne stulius es, ut alicui te in pérpetuam servitútem tradas nullo praemio? |
A44372 | 55 An ego divináre póteram, quot essent futuri convivae? |
A44372 | 55 Audes tu veró mercári res furtivas? |
A44372 | 60 Caelibes sunt an mariti? |
A44372 | 60 Ecquid magis praemium expetas, quám ego fero? |
A44372 | 60 Nempe hoc assidué? |
A44372 | 60 Quis sermo auditu gratissimus? |
A44372 | 60 Quitus? |
A44372 | 60 Sed cur tu dicis hunc esse cultrum furtivum? |
A44372 | 65 Quid? |
A44372 | 65 Tune servis pro alimonia tantum? |
A44372 | 70 Non tibi libet equtiâre? |
A44372 | 70 Quid facies? |
A44372 | 70 Quot annos natus es? |
A44372 | 75 Quid aliud, quaeso quám te nihil esse inertius, nihil somniculosius? |
A44372 | 80 Quid si longus te morbus excoxerit? |
A44372 | 80 Vbi? |
A44372 | 85 Didicisti músicam? |
A44372 | 85 Licet periculum tui facere? |
A44372 | 85 Quare non est mihi continuè áspiciendus? |
A44372 | 85 Quem, quaeso? |
A44372 | 95 Non tibi facultas evagandi datur aliquando? |
A44372 | A pox take thee with the question? |
A44372 | A quo igitur es institútus? |
A44372 | About what doe you fall our, you youngsters? |
A44372 | Ad quos? |
A44372 | Adeóne verécundus de repente factus? |
A44372 | Ain''tu? |
A44372 | Aliisne verbis, quàm quibus caeteros hómines salutáre solémus? |
A44372 | Amant hi te? |
A44372 | An mihi non licet eum adire? |
A44372 | Angling, or fishing with the net? |
A44372 | Annon audivisti sónitum campanae? |
A44372 | Anortus jam? |
A44372 | Anus vulpes extat apud Erasmum: T. What kinde of verse is this? |
A44372 | Are they not cleanly enough? |
A44372 | Are you so villanous& biting? |
A44372 | Art thou such a foole, that thou wouldst yeeld thy self perpetually to serve any man for no reward? |
A44372 | At verò potes mihi expedire, cur ames? |
A44372 | At what a clock? |
A44372 | But how do you spend the whole day without tediousnesse? |
A44372 | But if your father shall come in after doe you not salute him? |
A44372 | But if your mother be away, whom doe you salute? |
A44372 | But remember this boyes, hereafter you shall not at all excuse your absence? |
A44372 | But whence come you so late and so nastie? |
A44372 | But whence had you it? |
A44372 | C. But how can you bee raised? |
A44372 | C. Do you see none of those things awanting here, which you have reckoned up? |
A44372 | C. Doe you not know? |
A44372 | C. Hath it struck, or not yet? |
A44372 | C. Is that the beginning of your prayers? |
A44372 | C. Mother: what a clock is it? |
A44372 | C. O you mad boy, do you think that all are so testy as you are? |
A44372 | C. What about? |
A44372 | C. What else I pray you then, that you are as sleepy as a dormous? |
A44372 | C. What should I be taught? |
A44372 | C. Where? |
A44372 | C. Whether? |
A44372 | C. Who cover''d this table Quis hanc mensam adornavit? |
A44372 | C. Who should raise you? |
A44372 | C. Your master is gone into the schoole: and doe you ask whether it be time or no? |
A44372 | Chrysocéphalus quid promit? |
A44372 | Consecráte nobis mensam pueri, Vbi haeretis? |
A44372 | Cujusmodi Praeceptores habes illic? |
A44372 | Cujusmodi? |
A44372 | Cur ergò tam secúrè requiescis manè? |
A44372 | Cur ergò timere te dicis, ne te criminentur? |
A44372 | Cur igitur nunc hoc secisse arguor? |
A44372 | Cur latrant canes? |
A44372 | Cur me quoque inter cateros convivas, non vocasti? |
A44372 | Cur natant pisces? |
A44372 | Cur non adfuisti hodie? |
A44372 | Cur non émitis? |
A44372 | Cur non? |
A44372 | Cur ringeris? |
A44372 | Cur tu caeteris tardiùs venis ad ludum? |
A44372 | Cur vesluntur ánseres? |
A44372 | Curid quaeritas? |
A44372 | D Did you call me then? |
A44372 | D ▪ Why, what would you doe? |
A44372 | D. Alas, why do you let me sleep so long? |
A44372 | D. And what is that I pray you? |
A44372 | D. Could our master foreknow what weather would happen? |
A44372 | D. Have you not a mind to ride? |
A44372 | D. Have you not a mind to shoot? |
A44372 | D. Have you not a mind to swim? |
A44372 | D. Hold your peace, the master is here: if he should catch us talking, and ask us, what answer should we make? |
A44372 | D. How long is it since he went in? |
A44372 | D. How? |
A44372 | D. O strange I what a fine sport is that? |
A44372 | D. Seeing you are so desirous to play what, I pray you, have you a mind to doe? |
A44372 | D. Should you not salute me first? |
A44372 | D. What a clock is it then? |
A44372 | D. What do you say sir; are you taught no better manners? |
A44372 | D. What doe you say now? |
A44372 | D. What harm hath the master done you that you so storm against him? |
A44372 | D. What should I pray? |
A44372 | D. What would you have me tell you? |
A44372 | D. What, doth fishing please you? |
A44372 | D. What? |
A44372 | D. Who shall do that? |
A44372 | D. Why not? |
A44372 | D. Why so? |
A44372 | D. Why so? |
A44372 | De quibus? |
A44372 | Dic absolútè unde habes? |
A44372 | Dic amabo, ubi noctus e ● istum cultellum? |
A44372 | Dic, quo praesente? |
A44372 | Did any body hear it? |
A44372 | Did you call me? |
A44372 | Did you never speake English before? |
A44372 | Do I find you here? |
A44372 | Do you mock me? |
A44372 | Do you serve for meat and drink onely? |
A44372 | Do you understand? |
A44372 | E What is it at the Star? |
A44372 | E, Whence come you so late? |
A44372 | E. A pox take all the Brewers? |
A44372 | E. Connot you awake unlesse you be called up? |
A44372 | E. Do your parents drink so many jugs of beer, and can they not spare so much from their throat, as to buy a comb? |
A44372 | E. Heard you not the sound of the bell? |
A44372 | E. Is there none at the helmet? |
A44372 | E. VVhat doth the Golden- head draw? |
A44372 | E. VVhat is at the Moore? |
A44372 | E. What do they sell at the King? |
A44372 | E. What do they sell at the budget? |
A44372 | E. What doe I heare? |
A44372 | E. What is at the Rose? |
A44372 | E. What is awanting then? |
A44372 | E. Why could you not hear the bell then? |
A44372 | E. Why do they not brew good beer then? |
A44372 | E. Why so? |
A44372 | E. Will you get up earlier hereafter? |
A44372 | Ecquam habet cursuram? |
A44372 | Ecquem versiculum tenes memoriter? |
A44372 | Ecquid hobes, heus tu, quod est hujus? |
A44372 | Ecquid operae pretium fecisti in literis? |
A44372 | Ecquid placet, praeceptor observande, ut nostros mores jam formes? |
A44372 | Ecquid praeceptorem tuum amas? |
A44372 | Ecquis inter condiscipulos tuos est insignitèr doctus? |
A44372 | Ecquis inter vos est ludendi cúpidus? |
A44372 | Ecquis mecum audet disputáre? |
A44372 | Eheu, quid sinis me tam diu dormire? |
A44372 | Emisti? |
A44372 | Erga te, mendacissime? |
A44372 | Erige corpus modo somnus abscesserit? |
A44372 | Est audita? |
A44372 | Est in oenopólio? |
A44372 | Est ludi- magister in vestrâ domo? |
A44372 | Et scis ubi? |
A44372 | Eum timet? |
A44372 | F. But why doe you not ask to borrow a comb some where else then? |
A44372 | F. How much is this? |
A44372 | F. How much must I have again of it? |
A44372 | F. Must I come againe quickly, after I have delivered them? |
A44372 | F. Ought you not to comb your head before you come to schoole? |
A44372 | F. Shall I say nothing? |
A44372 | F. What if he be not at home? |
A44372 | F. What if he neither say I, nor nay? |
A44372 | F. What needs any letter? |
A44372 | F. What? |
A44372 | F. Why doe you not buy one? |
A44372 | F. Will you not be angry, if I confesse the truth? |
A44372 | From what trees do the leaves never fall? |
A44372 | G. And where do the dogs sit? |
A44372 | G. Is he at the Teverne? |
A44372 | G. What will you do there? |
A44372 | G. Will you heare? |
A44372 | G. With whom did he goe thither? |
A44372 | H, What will you doe? |
A44372 | H. And doe you know where? |
A44372 | H. And what then? |
A44372 | H. But doe you know how you sit? |
A44372 | H. But how will you change it? |
A44372 | H. Do you bid me to break open another mans letter? |
A44372 | H. Hath it any custome? |
A44372 | H. Have you not room enough there? |
A44372 | H. In a little booke? |
A44372 | H. VVho led you thither? |
A44372 | H. What have you done? |
A44372 | H. What is the businesse? |
A44372 | H. When? |
A44372 | H. Who call''s me? |
A44372 | H. Why then do you say you fear, lest it should complaine of you? |
A44372 | Habes thecam pennáriam sili? |
A44372 | Hamátilis, an reticulá ia? |
A44372 | Hast not thou another boyes knife? |
A44372 | Hiccine te reperio? |
A44372 | Ho, tel me, did any body mention me? |
A44372 | How can you lay up so much meate in one belly? |
A44372 | How doe you know? |
A44372 | How long agoe? |
A44372 | How long are you imployed in that reading? |
A44372 | Imo nunc lava pót? |
A44372 | In Galea, nulla? |
A44372 | In Mauro qualis? |
A44372 | In libello? |
A44372 | Intellxistis? |
A44372 | Is any of your school fellowes a very good schollar? |
A44372 | Is it up already? |
A44372 | Is the School- master at your house? |
A44372 | Is there any among you that hath a good mind to play? |
A44372 | Is there any one dare dispute with me? |
A44372 | Ita pauper est? |
A44372 | Jubes me conjectare tamen? |
A44372 | L. How early indeed? |
A44372 | L. What have I done? |
A44372 | L. What if I break them, when I begin to scrape them? |
A44372 | L. Where? |
A44372 | L. Where? |
A44372 | L. Which? |
A44372 | L. Whom should I say you are? |
A44372 | L. Why do you skip so? |
A44372 | L. Why so? |
A44372 | L. Would you have me beleeve you? |
A44372 | M. Can not you resolv me what he would with me? |
A44372 | M. Do you enquire for me, Nych sius? |
A44372 | M. VVhat If I aske one again when I have not well understood him? |
A44372 | M. VVhat remains after so many instructions? |
A44372 | M. What do you say then? |
A44372 | M. What every day thus forsooth? |
A44372 | M. Where are the names of them that are away? |
A44372 | M. Will you not have mee wash it? |
A44372 | Magnâ sunt eruditione? |
A44372 | Mater, quando prandébitur? |
A44372 | Mater, quota est hora? |
A44372 | May not I doe the same, that the little mice do? |
A44372 | May not I goe to him? |
A44372 | Mén''quaetis, Nichasi? |
A44372 | N What have I done? |
A44372 | N. Doe you promise you will do that so for me? |
A44372 | Nihil dant? |
A44372 | Non istud subolébi: praeceptori? |
A44372 | Non jaculári? |
A44372 | Non me jubes abluere? |
A44372 | Non me salutare débeas antea? |
A44372 | Non sunt satis pura? |
A44372 | Non tu cultrum aliénum habes? |
A44372 | Non? |
A44372 | Num tempus est? |
A44372 | Nunquam antehac protulis ● t vernaculū sermonem? |
A44372 | Nunquam ascendi equum D. Have you not a mind to hunt? |
A44372 | O But dare you buy stolne goods? |
A44372 | O Did you buy it? |
A44372 | O Of whom, I pray thee? |
A44372 | O Tel me plainly whence had you it? |
A44372 | O Whom I pray you? |
A44372 | O You will allow me to guesse it? |
A44372 | O. Doe you know what you ought to doe? |
A44372 | O. Doth he feare him? |
A44372 | O. Hast thou no leave given thee to gad abroad sometimes? |
A44372 | O. I pray you tell me, doe you practise any trade ● ere? |
A44372 | Obsecro, unde ego alioqui háuserim? |
A44372 | Of what years are you? |
A44372 | Omnésne? |
A44372 | On free cost? |
A44372 | On what day; or in what place? |
A44372 | P. But why did you say this is a stolne knife? |
A44372 | P. Can you desire any greater reward then I have? |
A44372 | P. Have you lost your knife then? |
A44372 | P. In other words, then we use to salute other men? |
A44372 | P. In what? |
A44372 | P. Nay rather I take what serves my turn of what I have a minde to? |
A44372 | P. This man hath sharpened me and informed me? |
A44372 | P. VVhither else should I run to my own ruine, unlesse I were kept in as it were by these sences? |
A44372 | P. What I? |
A44372 | P. What a one was it? |
A44372 | P. What do you thinke of me? |
A44372 | P. What doe you say? |
A44372 | P. What else? |
A44372 | P. What? |
A44372 | P. When? |
A44372 | Pennam eripuisti illi putro, N Why did he likewise cal me out of my name? |
A44372 | Possunt quidvis Latinè dicere? |
A44372 | Primum, secundū,& c. On my first second& c. What a clock is it? |
A44372 | Q VVhich is the best garment? |
A44372 | Q When is the day the longest? |
A44372 | Q Where are all women good? |
A44372 | Q Where do the rivers meet? |
A44372 | Q what sort of men is the j ● stest? |
A44372 | Q. VVhat comodity is the most necessary? |
A44372 | Q. VVhat enticeth a wolfe out of a Forrest? |
A44372 | Q. VVhat fruit is the most hurtfull? |
A44372 | Q. VVhat speech is most delightfull to be heard? |
A44372 | Q. VVhere do Foxes fart? |
A44372 | Q. VVhere is Gods help the most ready? |
A44372 | Q. VVhich ground is the best? |
A44372 | Q. VVhich is the comliest suite? |
A44372 | Q. VVhich is the first word from the beginning of the world? |
A44372 | Q. VVhich is the strongest Letter? |
A44372 | Q. VVho is most hatefull to women? |
A44372 | Q. VVhy are Geese pulled? |
A44372 | Q. VVhy do fishes swim? |
A44372 | Qoties per hebdó madem? |
A44372 | Quaeve sunt quotidiána alimenta? |
A44372 | Quales sunt tui condiscipuli? |
A44372 | Qualis erat? |
A44372 | Qualis in Stella? |
A44372 | Qualis primum? |
A44372 | Quam ab causam? |
A44372 | Quam dúdum intravit? |
A44372 | Quam ob causam? |
A44372 | Quam quaeso? |
A44372 | Quamdiu versátis in ealectione? |
A44372 | Quamdúdum? |
A44372 | Quamobrem? |
A44372 | Quando disces tandem? |
A44372 | Quando est dies longissimus? |
A44372 | Quando veró audivisti me loquentem Anglice? |
A44372 | Quando? |
A44372 | Quando? |
A44372 | Quando? |
A44372 | Quanti valet haec? |
A44372 | Quanti? |
A44372 | Quantum red ibit hinc mibi? |
A44372 | Quem notasti? |
A44372 | Qui scis? |
A44372 | Qui sic? |
A44372 | Qui vocaris? |
A44372 | Qui? |
A44372 | Quibus arbóribus nunquam desluunt solia? |
A44372 | Quicum abivit illuc? |
A44372 | Quid Ascopéra? |
A44372 | Quid ad me attinet, sudum sit an nebulosum? |
A44372 | Quid adest illi? |
A44372 | Quid affert mihi? |
A44372 | Quid coxit Bátavus? |
A44372 | Quid deest igitur? |
A44372 | Quid dicebat tibi? |
A44372 | Quid ea oratie sibi vult? |
A44372 | Quid ego audio? |
A44372 | Quid enim ● ● cere velis? |
A44372 | Quid facis ámplius? |
A44372 | Quid feci? |
A44372 | Quid fàcies? |
A44372 | Quid gestis? |
A44372 | Quid ibi facturus? |
A44372 | Quid igitur áccidit, ut huc studendi causâ advenias? |
A44372 | Quid imperas? |
A44372 | Quid ist ud tandem? |
A44372 | Quid lupum è faltu prolicit? |
A44372 | Quid me censes? |
A44372 | Quid narras? |
A44372 | Quid negotii? |
A44372 | Quid opus est tabellis? |
A44372 | Quid placet tibi? |
A44372 | Quid postea facis? |
A44372 | Quid praeterea? |
A44372 | Quid restat igitur? |
A44372 | Quid seci? |
A44372 | Quid si denuo rogitem, cum intellexi minus? |
A44372 | Quid si frangam, ubi occepi rádere? |
A44372 | Quid si me pater nec videat, nec alloquátur? |
A44372 | Quid si non sit domi? |
A44372 | Quid sibi vult principibus viris? |
A44372 | Quid sim edoctus? |
A44372 | Quid superest post tot praecepta? |
A44372 | Quid tu ais? |
A44372 | Quid tum postea? |
A44372 | Quid vi ●? |
A44372 | Quid vis primum? |
A44372 | Quid vis, ut dicam? |
A44372 | Quid vis? |
A44372 | Quid vobis vidétur púeri? |
A44372 | Quid vociferaris? |
A44372 | Quid ássoles facere? |
A44372 | Quid ésitas? |
A44372 | Quid, piscásio placet? |
A44372 | Quid? |
A44372 | Quid? |
A44372 | Quin mox ratiunculam subducimus? |
A44372 | Quin rogetis utendum aliundè péctinem? |
A44372 | Quin tu cibum petis, aut potum? |
A44372 | Quis ager optimus? |
A44372 | Quis babet signum vernaculi sermonis? |
A44372 | Quis fructus perniciosissimus? |
A44372 | Quis istic est strepitu''●, puer, quasi dominus absit? |
A44372 | Quis me vocat? |
A44372 | Quis muliéribus máximè invisus? |
A44372 | Quis parat ei cibos? |
A44372 | Quis te súscitet? |
A44372 | Quo scholasticum irè decet? |
A44372 | Quod est tibi nomen? |
A44372 | Quod est á condito mundo verbum primum? |
A44372 | Quod hominum genus est justissimum? |
A44372 | Quod vestimentum optimum? |
A44372 | Quomodo civibus& ipsi convenit? |
A44372 | Quomodo mutábis autem? |
A44372 | Quomodo pote tantum cibi cóndere in unam alvum? |
A44372 | Quot discipulos habent? |
A44372 | Quot horas dormivi? |
A44372 | Quota ergó est hora? |
A44372 | Quota est hora? |
A44372 | Quota horâ? |
A44372 | Quoties me jubes flectere genu? |
A44372 | Quotum annum agis? |
A44372 | Quàm tu mihi protervè respondes? |
A44372 | Quámobrem? |
A44372 | Quâ de re? |
A44372 | Quâ horâ? |
A44372 | Quòmodo quaeas verò suscitári? |
A44372 | Quómodo? |
A44372 | R Where got you this knife? |
A44372 | R. For how much? |
A44372 | R. Ho you firrha have you any thing that is this boyes? |
A44372 | R. Why should I not bee bold to say it when it is true? |
A44372 | R. Will you refer your selfe to me? |
A44372 | R. Would you know; Vis scire? |
A44372 | S. Doth it please you good master, to teach us manners now? |
A44372 | S. Fishes? |
A44372 | S. Have you set me down? |
A44372 | S. How often would you have me make a leg? |
A44372 | S. How saucily, I pray you? |
A44372 | S. I doe not understand what that meaneth? |
A44372 | S. Now and then? |
A44372 | S. Say, who was there by? |
A44372 | S. Should I not speak aloud when he dare be bold to say such things openly? |
A44372 | S. To whom have I spoken? |
A44372 | S. To you, you errant lier? |
A44372 | S. VVhen? |
A44372 | S. VVhy may I not looke upon him constantly? |
A44372 | S. What if bashfulnesse hinder me, as it fals out often times, whereby I dare not spake out, what I would say? |
A44372 | S. Whether the right or the left? |
A44372 | S. Why so? |
A44372 | S. Would you have me sit down againe? |
A44372 | Say grace for us boys what do you stick on? |
A44372 | Say you so? |
A44372 | Scis veró quomodo sedeas? |
A44372 | Sed unde habes? |
A44372 | Si fefelléritis, quam poenam irrogábo? |
A44372 | Sin pater postea ingrediétur, non salútas? |
A44372 | So early? |
A44372 | Spondes i d mihi sic facturum? |
A44372 | Statim adiram? |
A44372 | Subinde? |
A44372 | T But she badelme, that I should ask you? |
A44372 | T. About what? |
A44372 | T. Are you sufficiently taught? |
A44372 | T. Can they say any thing what one will in Latine? |
A44372 | T. Can you say any verse by heart? |
A44372 | T. Did you know the man that spoke with you of late in the market place? |
A44372 | T. Do you know what he hath done? |
A44372 | T. Do you love your master? |
A44372 | T. Do you see this youth, boyes? |
A44372 | T. Do your masters teach you these things? |
A44372 | T. Doe they give him nothing? |
A44372 | T. Doe they love you? |
A44372 | T. Have you a pen and inke child? |
A44372 | T. Have you done any good at your learning? |
A44372 | T. How doth he and the citizens agree? |
A44372 | T. How many schollars have they? |
A44372 | T. How many sylables hath a Dactile foot? |
A44372 | T. Is he so poore? |
A44372 | T. Is that, that Wert, a good town or a countrey- village? |
A44372 | T. Mother, when shall I have my dinner? |
A44372 | T. No? |
A44372 | T. Of what sort? |
A44372 | T. Shall I make tryall of you? |
A44372 | T. Straitway fall into passion? |
A44372 | T. VVhat did you answer? |
A44372 | T. What doe you learn? |
A44372 | T. What meaneth chiefe men? |
A44372 | T. What meaneth that sentence? |
A44372 | T. What next? |
A44372 | T. What ones are your school- fellowes? |
A44372 | T. What part of speech is Ultima? |
A44372 | T. What remaines then? |
A44372 | T. What signifieth the last? |
A44372 | T. What would you have first? |
A44372 | T. Whereof doth it consist? |
A44372 | T. Whither is it fit for a scholar to goe? |
A44372 | T. Why do you stand to aske? |
A44372 | Tam manè? |
A44372 | Tell me of all loves, where gotst thou this knife? |
A44372 | To whom? |
A44372 | Tu me vocâsti? |
A44372 | Tu quando prandes? |
A44372 | Tu quid discis? |
A44372 | Tu scis quidte facere opo? |
A44372 | Ubi est ergo? |
A44372 | Ubi est terra angustissima? |
A44372 | Ubi praebent máximum lumen candelae? |
A44372 | Ubi? |
A44372 | Uib pedunt vulpes? |
A44372 | Ultimum quid significat? |
A44372 | Unde adfers istam? |
A44372 | Unde me jubes afferre? |
A44372 | V. Are all things ready? |
A44372 | V. Are they batchelours or married men? |
A44372 | V. Are they men of great learning, i e. great scholars? |
A44372 | V. At what a clock? |
A44372 | V. By whom then art thou taught? |
A44372 | V. How often in a weeke? |
A44372 | V. How so? |
A44372 | V. I beseech you, from whence else should I learn them? |
A44372 | V. What do they teach you Quid docent vos? |
A44372 | V. What like masters have you there? |
A44372 | V. Whence is the infinitive Mood, placuisse governed, or upon what doth it depend? |
A44372 | V. Whither, O good Sir, so hastily? |
A44372 | V. Why doe you not ask her, who drest the meat? |
A44372 | V. Why should you thanke me? |
A44372 | VVhat is that Proverb, I pray you? |
A44372 | VVhence doe you bring it? |
A44372 | Vbi est? |
A44372 | Vbi nomina absentium? |
A44372 | Vbi verò sedent canes? |
A44372 | Vbi? |
A44372 | Verùm quis notáv it? |
A44372 | Videtis hunc adolescentem, pueri? |
A44372 | Vis audire qualis fucrat? |
A44372 | Vis ut credam tibi? |
A44372 | Vis ut credam? |
A44372 | Vnae constat ille? |
A44372 | Vocásti me scilicet? |
A44372 | Vtra? |
A44372 | Vtraque? |
A44372 | Vtrum? |
A44372 | What a one first? |
A44372 | What all? |
A44372 | What are you called? |
A44372 | What are you wo nt to doe? |
A44372 | What do you else? |
A44372 | What doe you after? |
A44372 | What doe you live on then? |
A44372 | What doe you say when you goe in? |
A44372 | What doe you thinke boyes? |
A44372 | What doe you thinke of them? |
A44372 | What doe you use to eat? |
A44372 | What doth he? |
A44372 | What if my father doe neither see me, nor speak to me? |
A44372 | What if you should lye lingering on a long disease? |
A44372 | What is that to me, whether it be fair weather or foul? |
A44372 | What is your command? |
A44372 | What is your name? |
A44372 | What need is there of any ladders? |
A44372 | What punishment shal I instict upon you, in case you deceive me? |
A44372 | What will you doe? |
A44372 | What will you give me if I grant you leave to play? |
A44372 | What would you? |
A44372 | What, I pray you? |
A44372 | When do you dine your selfe? |
A44372 | When doth she use to make pottage? |
A44372 | When wil you learn one at last? |
A44372 | Where do candles give the greatest light? |
A44372 | Where is he then? |
A44372 | Where is my shirt? |
A44372 | Where is the earth the narrowest? |
A44372 | Who gets his meate ready for him? |
A44372 | Who is with him? |
A44372 | Who spends the other that is left? |
A44372 | Whom have you set down? |
A44372 | Why come you later then the teste to the schoole? |
A44372 | Why do you grin? |
A44372 | Why do you not aske rather for meat or drink? |
A44372 | Why do you speak so loud? |
A44372 | Why doe dogs bark? |
A44372 | Why doe we not call a reckoning presently? |
A44372 | Why doth a dog, being to piss, hold up one leg? |
A44372 | Why so? |
A44372 | Why then am I now blamed for having done so? |
A44372 | Will you heare what a one it was? |
A44372 | Will you tell me what I ask you? |
A44372 | Would you have me believe you? |
A44372 | Would you not have us to obey our parents? |
A44372 | alias aliud adfers; Quid vero nunc profers in excusationem tui? |
A44372 | audire? |
A44372 | but when did you heare mee speake English? |
A44372 | dexterumne, an sinistrum? |
A44372 | dic ci ò. G. Whither go you so fast Quò properas? |
A44372 | doth not wrastling like you? |
A44372 | ho you sirrah: Unde venis tam seró? |
A44372 | how many there would be at the Table? |
A44372 | lúbes me caeteros recitare? |
A44372 | ne? |
A44372 | no? |
A44372 | num te lucta delectat? |
A44372 | of one, two, ten,& c. 71 Quot annorum es? |
A44372 | or what is your daily sustenance? |
A44372 | senex adolescentulo praesertim ob nullum officium? |
A44372 | should an old mā thanke a boy especially for no service? |
A44372 | sicine doctus es? |
A44372 | teat? |
A44372 | ubi igitur? |
A44372 | ubi vestitus interim? |
A44372 | unius, duorum, decem,& c. What yeare are you going on? |
A44372 | what is your pleasure? |
A44372 | where is your apparell in the meane time? |
A44372 | where then? |
A44372 | you bring sometimes one thing and sometimes another, but what have you now to say for your selfe? |
A48527 | & spatium loci respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quantum? |
A48527 | A Note of Interr ● gation, thus,(?) |
A48527 | Ad quam regulam specialem pertinet? |
A48527 | Adeò, ideò, ità, sic, tam, talis, tantus, tot, tantum abest,& c? |
A48527 | After one hath found out the Principal Verb, what must he then do? |
A48527 | After what Verbs may Ut be also used? |
A48527 | An credis hanc anum tam deliram futuram esse? |
A48527 | And how are the Common Names of Places( i. e ▪ Nouns Substantives common, denoting place) uttered? |
A48527 | And in what Case is the space of a place put answering to Quantum, How much or how far? |
A48527 | Are all Interjections imperfect V ● ices? |
A48527 | Are all Verbs in ● o of the second Conjugation? |
A48527 | Are n ● t some Adverbs compared? |
A48527 | Are not Verbs of the Infinitive sometimes put absolutely and figuratively? |
A48527 | Are there any Exceptions to this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there any more of the Letters quiescent? |
A48527 | Are there any other Verbs that govern an Ablative? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions from this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions from this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions on this Rule? |
A48527 | Are there no Exceptions, but that a, of the first Conjugation must be long? |
A48527 | Are there no Redundants of other Declensions, besides those of the second and fourth Declension? |
A48527 | Are there no other Feminines that want the Plural Number? |
A48527 | Are there not many Nouns and Verbs undeclined? |
A48527 | Are there not many Verbs in io, which are not of the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | Are there not some Datives of Nouns Substantives used adverbially? |
A48527 | Are these all the more usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Before you examine the following Parts of the Syntaxis, be pleased to tell me, to how many Heads the examination of any declined word may be reduced? |
A48527 | But are there not some Prepositions, that are never found but when they are compounded with Verbs? |
A48527 | But do not Poets often use the Accusative Cases of Nouns Adjectives of the Neuter Gender in both Numbers for Adverbs? |
A48527 | But have we not many English words in which several Letters are quiescent, or not pronounced? |
A48527 | But how can hic, ille, iste, and is be Demonstratives and Relatives too? |
A48527 | But how can it be, that Passives have an Imperative Mood, seeing that a Passion can not be commanded? |
A48527 | But how do Cedo, vado, rado,& c. make their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | But how many ways are Participles changed into Nouns? |
A48527 | But may not some Impersonals become Personals? |
A48527 | But may not some of them sometimes have the Plural Number? |
A48527 | But may there not be same Exceptions made on these Rules of the Accents? |
A48527 | But may they not couple sometimes divers Cases? |
A48527 | But of what quantity are Ablatives in a, and Numerals of Nouns of Number in ginta? |
A48527 | But what Nouns of the fifth Declension are excepted? |
A48527 | But what is the meaning of this Rule, Haec sed ui mutant in sum? |
A48527 | But what say you of Natus, commodus, incommodus, utilis, inutilis, vehemens, par, aequalis? |
A48527 | But what say you of Verbs doubling the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | But why do you chuse to call this Mood the Subjunctive, rather than either the Optative or Potential? |
A48527 | But will they always have a Nominative after them when they have it before them? |
A48527 | Can all Verbs govern an Infinitive Mood after them? |
A48527 | Can not a Verb Neuter, seeing it ends in( O) as well as a Verb Active, take( R) to make it a Passive? |
A48527 | Can unus, signifying but one, have the Plural Number? |
A48527 | Conjugation? |
A48527 | Do all Nouns of the Singular Number speak but of One? |
A48527 | Do all other Nouns Participials require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Do all these always govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Do none of the Prepositions serve to a Genitive? |
A48527 | Do none of these that are excepted, ever make their Preterperfect Tense in ivi, according to the Rule of the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | Do the Periphrastical Tenses of the Passive Voice vary their Gender according to their N ● minative and Substantive? |
A48527 | Do they change their Gender? |
A48527 | Do you accuse me of Theft, or Murther, or both? |
A48527 | Dost thou love? |
A48527 | Emphasis est cum plùs significamus quàm expressè dicimus; ut, tu audes ista loqui, cantando tu illum? |
A48527 | Fa ●, nil, nihil, instar, cornu, genu, gummi, frugi? |
A48527 | Haec habeo, lateo,& c. wherein Compound Verbs differ from the Simple? |
A48527 | Have Impersonals a Nominative Case before them? |
A48527 | Have you no more Prepositions but those that serve to the aforesaid Cases? |
A48527 | Hordea, farra, ● orum,& c? |
A48527 | Hostis habet muros, pro hostes habent Q. Quid est Hellen ● sinus in Et ● mologiâ? |
A48527 | How and from whence do we form their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | How are Adjectives of one ending, and Participles of the Present tense declined? |
A48527 | How are Adjectives of two endings declined? |
A48527 | How are Impersonals put? |
A48527 | How are Pronouns divided according to their Species? |
A48527 | How are Verbs Deponents declined? |
A48527 | How are ille and ipse declined? |
A48527 | How are is and qui declined? |
A48527 | How are noster, and tuus, suus, vester declined? |
A48527 | How are quis and quid declined? |
A48527 | How are quòd and ut distinguished in making Latin, for both signifie that? |
A48527 | How are such Participles as are changed into Nouns called? |
A48527 | How are the Proper Names of great Places used, to wit, of Countries, Islands, and Provinces? |
A48527 | How are the Signs of the Cases delivered in short? |
A48527 | How are the second sort of Defectives in Case called? |
A48527 | How are the third Persons of the Imperative Mood Active and ● assive, ending in to, and tor, called by Grammarians? |
A48527 | How are the third sort of Defectives in Case called? |
A48527 | How are these Eight Parts of Speech divided? |
A48527 | How are these formed of the Preterperfect Tense of the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | How are these four kinds of Participles dec ● ined? |
A48527 | How are they declined? |
A48527 | How are they declined? |
A48527 | How comes it to pass that one Substantive oftentimes agrees with another Substantive in the same Case? |
A48527 | How comes nihil to be a Noun when it signifies nothing? |
A48527 | How differ your Persons in Verbs from Persons in Nouns and P ● ● nouns? |
A48527 | How do all other Nouns in( 〈 ◊ 〉) form their Superlative Degree? |
A48527 | How do the three Gerunds end? |
A48527 | How do the two Supines end? |
A48527 | How do these five sorts of Verbs differ one from another? |
A48527 | How do you compare the said three Degrees of Comparison? |
A48527 | How do you decline Articles together and severally with a Noun? |
A48527 | How do you decline Gerunds, and what are they, are they Verbs or Participles? |
A48527 | How do you decline them? |
A48527 | How do you know the kinds of Participles? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Common end, which you say is out of use? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Deponent end? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Neuter end? |
A48527 | How doth a Verb Neuter signifie? |
A48527 | How doth it d ● ffer from a Noun? |
A48527 | How doth it differ from Orthoepia? |
A48527 | How doth it signifie? |
A48527 | How doth it signifie? |
A48527 | How doth the Genitive Case singular of each of the declensions end? |
A48527 | How is Duo declin''d? |
A48527 | How is Prosodia divided? |
A48527 | How is Quisquis declined? |
A48527 | How is a Noun Adjective of three terminations declined? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Active known? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Deponent declined? |
A48527 | How is a Verb Passive known? |
A48527 | How is c pronounced or spelt before a, e, ae, oe i, y, o, u? |
A48527 | How is g spelt or pronounced before an e, or i, and how before a, o, and u? |
A48527 | How is hic declined? |
A48527 | How is iste declined? |
A48527 | How is meus then declined? |
A48527 | How is the Sup ● ne of a Simple Verb known, being the Third Part of As in praesenti? |
A48527 | How is the quantity of syllables known, and by how many manner of ways? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Future in Rus, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Future in dus, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Present Tense? |
A48527 | How know you a Participle of the Present or Preter Tense Passive, and whence is it formed? |
A48527 | How know you the Ablative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Accusative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Dative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Genitive Case? |
A48527 | How know you the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | How know you the Subjunctive Mood? |
A48527 | How know you the Vocative Case? |
A48527 | How know you the quantity of words that end in s? |
A48527 | How many Articles are there, and whence are they borrowed? |
A48527 | How many Breathings or Spirits are there? |
A48527 | How many Cases are there? |
A48527 | How many Concords or Agreements are there? |
A48527 | How many Conjugations have Verbs? |
A48527 | How many Declensions may Adjectives be said to have? |
A48527 | How many Declensions of Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Declensions of Pronouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Degrees of Comparison are there? |
A48527 | How many Dipthongs are there? |
A48527 | How many Examples have you to decline and conjugate all perfect Verbs by? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there from these regular and general Rules of Comparison? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there from this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this second Special Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions are there under this third Special Rule? |
A48527 | How many Exceptions have you from this Rule? |
A48527 | How many Genders are there? |
A48527 | How many General Rules are there for the declining of Nouns Substantives Proper? |
A48527 | How many Letters are there in the Latin Tongue? |
A48527 | How many Masculine Exceptions hath it? |
A48527 | How many Moods are there? |
A48527 | How many Mutes are there? |
A48527 | How many Numbers are there? |
A48527 | How many Parts of Grammar are there? |
A48527 | How many Parts, or how many sorts of Words are there in the Latin Tongue or Speech? |
A48527 | How many Persons are there in Verbs? |
A48527 | How many Persons hath a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Adjectives? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Derivatives are there, and why are they so called? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Relatives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun Substantives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronoun- Primitives are there? |
A48527 | How many Pronouns are there? |
A48527 | How many Rules are there for the declining of Nouns Adjectives? |
A48527 | How many Rules of Masculine Exceptions not encreasing are there? |
A48527 | How many Special Rules have you to know the Gender by the encrea ● ● ng or not encreasing of the G ● ni ● ive Case? |
A48527 | How many Tenses or Times are there? |
A48527 | How many are declined? |
A48527 | How many are of the first sort, that according to different Terminations are of different Genders? |
A48527 | How many are undeclined? |
A48527 | How many fold are the Rules? |
A48527 | How many fold are these half Vowels? |
A48527 | How many fold is Government? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Letter as to it s found? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Noun Adjective from its manner of signifying? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Noun Substantive, according to its signification? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Syllable? |
A48527 | How many fold is a Tone or an Accent? |
A48527 | How many fold is the plain or analogous Syntaxis? |
A48527 | How many half Vowels are there, and what is a half Vowel? |
A48527 | How many kind of Participles are there? |
A48527 | How many kinds of Epicenes are there? |
A48527 | How many kinds of Verbs Personals are there? |
A48527 | How many manner of ways is a Pronoun us''d? |
A48527 | How many of th ● se Primitives may also be called Relatives? |
A48527 | How many of the Parts of Speech are declined with case, and how many without case? |
A48527 | How many serve to an Ablative? |
A48527 | How many serve to an Accusative? |
A48527 | How many sold is a Consonant in Latin? |
A48527 | How many sorts are redundant in the Nominative Case? |
A48527 | How many sorts are there of Deficient Heteroclites? |
A48527 | How many sorts o ● Redundants are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Conjunctions are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Derivatives are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Feet are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Heteroclites or Irregular Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Nouns Heteroclites are there that change their Gender and Declension? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Nouns are there? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Proper Names are there of the Feminine Gender? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Proper Names are there of the Masculine Gender? |
A48527 | How many sorts of Redundant Substantives are there? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Noun? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Pronoun? |
A48527 | How many things belong to a Verb? |
A48527 | How many things do you observe in this Second Part of Propria quae Maribus? |
A48527 | How many ways may Prepositions be changed into Adverbs? |
A48527 | How many 〈 ◊ 〉 of Adverbs are th ● re? |
A48527 | How many- fold is a Verb? |
A48527 | How many- fold is an Adjective, according to its declining? |
A48527 | How may I know which are Intransitive Verbs? |
A48527 | How may a Verb Impersonal of the Passive Voice signifie? |
A48527 | How may one come to know every kind of Verb, and what Tense it is of? |
A48527 | How may one know of what declension a Pronoun is? |
A48527 | How may one know the Gend ● r in Pronoun Substantives? |
A48527 | How may one know the quantity of the middle syllables, and what syllables are reckoned to be the middle syllables? |
A48527 | How may the Cases be known one from the other? |
A48527 | How may the Genders of Nouns be known? |
A48527 | How may the four Conjugations be known asunder? |
A48527 | How may this Mood, or Figurative Way of Speaking be resolved? |
A48527 | How may 〈 ◊ 〉 know Adverbs? |
A48527 | How shall the Nominative Case be set in Making or Construing Latin? |
A48527 | How then doth the Genitive Case of each Declension end, and how do all the rest of the Cases end that proceed from those Genitives? |
A48527 | If a Question be asked by Cujus, ● a, jum; as, Whose Saying is this? |
A48527 | If the Present Tense end in po, how must the Preterperfect Tense end? |
A48527 | If the Present Tense end in quo, how doth the Preterperfect Tense end? |
A48527 | In declining and conjugating of Verbs, what am I chiefly to mind? |
A48527 | In these two parts, we use these or the like Forms of Speech: Nam, Enim, Erenim, Quippe, Nimirum, quid enim? |
A48527 | In what Case are the Proper Names of Cities and Towns put in, when they signifie moving to a place, and answer to the Question Quo, Whither? |
A48527 | In what Case is it put answering to the Question, How long? |
A48527 | In what Case is the Term or Word of Time put, answering to the Question When? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts is the Accidence divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts may Propria quae Maribus be divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Parts may it be divided? |
A48527 | Into how many Voices are these Examples formed? |
A48527 | Is a Hand a Noun? |
A48527 | Is a Vowel before two Consonants in the same word always long? |
A48527 | Is every w ● rd ending in Ing, a Participle of the Present Tense? |
A48527 | Is it always set before the Verb? |
A48527 | Is not the Subjunctive used sometimes instead of the Imp ● ● ative? |
A48527 | Is the first Verb always the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | Is there no Exception on this Rule? |
A48527 | Is there no exception? |
A48527 | Is there no other Rule for an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | It is a Mood that shews a Reason true or false; as Ego amo, I love; or else asks a Question and doubteth, as, Amas tu, Dost thou love? |
A48527 | May all Adverbs be compared? |
A48527 | May not Gerunds elegantly be turned into Nouns Adjectives? |
A48527 | May not s and u be added to Liquids? |
A48527 | May there not divers cases be put to the same Verb? |
A48527 | May these Verbs have no other Case of the Crime? |
A48527 | Must not the same Way and Method be used when a Latin is to be construed or turned into English, as when an English is given to be made into Latin? |
A48527 | Must one always thus seek out the Nominative Case? |
A48527 | My Neighbours, What do Boys do in the School? |
A48527 | No: For, 1. if a Question be asked; as, Am ● stu? |
A48527 | No; for it governs sometimes an Accusative? |
A48527 | Now we have done with single Letters, I pray, what must he do that will Spell right, and Write true Orthography? |
A48527 | Of old they were wo nt to govern the same Case as the Verb whence they were derived; as, Quid tibi hanc curatio est rem? |
A48527 | Of what Gender are all Nouns of the fifth Declension? |
A48527 | Of what Gender is every Noun that ● ndeth in um? |
A48527 | Of what Gender is every wor ● that d ● th not alter its Termination? |
A48527 | Of what are Gerunds in do governed? |
A48527 | Of what are Gerunds in dum governed? |
A48527 | Of what do Feet consist? |
A48527 | Of what is the Comparative Degree formed? |
A48527 | Of what quantity are words that end in i? |
A48527 | Operae, Custodiae, Copiae, Vigiliae, Excubiae, Curae? |
A48527 | PRopria urbium& oppidorum quae in loco significant,& respondent ad quaestionem, Vbi? |
A48527 | Per quam regulam? |
A48527 | Propria urbium& oppidorum ubi motus ad locum significatur,& ad quaestionem Quo? |
A48527 | Propria urbium& ● ppidorum à loco aut per locum significantia& ad quaestionem, unde aut Quâ? |
A48527 | Purge, Quit, or Assoil? |
A48527 | Q What doth üo make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | Q What if the Present Tense ends in ecto? |
A48527 | Q Why so? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Casus, generis& numeri est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Casûs, Numeri& Personae est haec dictio? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Generis est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus Modi est& Temporis? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus generis sunt omnia pronomina? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus gradus Comparationis est? |
A48527 | Q. Cujus vel quotae declinationis? |
A48527 | Q. D ● es Comparison belong to all Nouns? |
A48527 | Q. Doth Valeo always govern an Ablative Case of the price? |
A48527 | Q. Hatb every Mood and Tense three Persons in both Numbers? |
A48527 | Q. Hath this Rule no Exceptions? |
A48527 | Q. PRopositâ voce quid faciendum est? |
A48527 | Q. QVid est Figura? |
A48527 | Q. Quae est haec particula? |
A48527 | Q. Quae pars orationis est proxima sc? |
A48527 | Q. Quae particula est haec quoque? |
A48527 | Q. Quae particula est haec? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam aliae responsiones aliquando redduntur? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam dicuntur vitia vocis& orationis& quomodo distinguuntu ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam sunt Syntaxeos Figurae quae in Regimine inveniuntu ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quaenam& quot sunt Pronomen Substantiva& Adjectiva? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adjectivum est hoc quoad significationem? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adjectivum est quoad inflexionem? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Adverbium est? |
A48527 | Q. Quale Nomen est quoad Speciem& Figuram? |
A48527 | Q. Quale genus Verbi est hoc? |
A48527 | Q. Quale pronomen est hoc in praelectione tuâ? |
A48527 | Q. Qualis est haec Praepositio? |
A48527 | Q. Quare est Subjunctivi Modi? |
A48527 | Q. Quare est talis Casûs? |
A48527 | Q. Quen ● ● ● Figurae 〈 ◊ 〉 vel spectantur ratione Con ● ● nientiae in partibus declinabilibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quibus casibus inserviunt Praepositiones? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Anastrophe? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Antistolcon, s ● ● Ant ● thesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Aphaeresis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Apocope? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Archai ● mus? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Archaismus in Etymologiâ? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Asyndeton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Ellypsis quae dicitur Figura Syntaxeos in detractione? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Enallage in Etymologiâ? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Enallage, quae est Figura Syntaxeos in immutatione? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Epenthesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hellenismus seu Graecismus in Syntaxi? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hendiadis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Hysteron Proteron sive Hysterologia? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Metathesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Parag ● ge? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Participium? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Pleonasmus? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Polysindeton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Prolepsis seu Praesumptio? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Pronomen? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est S ● noope? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Substantivum Communes seu Apellativum? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Substantivum? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Syllepsis seu Conceptio Laetine dicta? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synchisis seu Hyperbaton? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synecdoche quae ad Hypallagen referri potest? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est Synthesis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est haec particula sc? |
A48527 | Q. Quid est ● ● esis? |
A48527 | Q. Quid sunt Inseperabiles Praep ● sitiones? |
A48527 | Q. Quid sunt participia omnia? |
A48527 | Q. Quo ● ● unt Figurae Etymslogiae? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo Accident is immutatio dici solet? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo comparatur? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo inflectis? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo inflectis? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo spectatur Figura Syntaxeos ratione Convenientiae? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo vocis immutatio dicitur? |
A48527 | Q. Quomodo& quibus Figuris figuratur Syntaxis ratione Convenientiae in partibus indeclimibilibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quot accidunt Participio? |
A48527 | Q. Quot accidunt nomini? |
A48527 | Q. Quot participia veniunt à Verbis Deponentibus? |
A48527 | Q. Quot participia veniunt à Verbis Passivis? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt Figurae Orthographi ●? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt species Participiorum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt species Pronominum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot sunt tempora Participiorum? |
A48527 | Q. Quot up ● ● ces sunt Figurae Syntaxeos? |
A48527 | Q. Quot ● plices sunt Figurae Grammaticae? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est Conceptio seu Syllepsis? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est Pronomen? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est directa Conceptio? |
A48527 | Q. Quotuplex est gradus Comparationis? |
A48527 | Q. Si sit nomen quale nomen est? |
A48527 | Q. Si sit nomen vel Verbum,( nam hae sunt principales partes orationis) quid faciendum est? |
A48527 | Q. Vnde formatur? |
A48527 | Q. Whence is a Participle of the Present Tense formed? |
A48527 | Q. Whence is it formed, and what is the Sign thereof? |
A48527 | Q: Quid est Hypallage quae est altera species Aenallages? |
A48527 | Quare mutatur Consonans vel Vocalis? |
A48527 | Quid gladium demens ● omana stringis in ora? |
A48527 | Quid tibi nos mendice homo tactio est? |
A48527 | Quid tibi nos mendice homo tactio est? |
A48527 | Quis gremio Enceladi doctique Palaemonis adfert Quantum Grammaticus meruit labor? |
A48527 | R. Ad primam, secundam, tertiam,& c. Q. Quomodo s ● is? |
A48527 | R. Est Adverbium, Temporis, Loci, Quantitatis, Qualitatis, Numeri, Negandi, Affirmandi, Demonstrandi, Ordinis,& c. Q. Quot sunt accidentia Adverbio? |
A48527 | R. Est,& c. Q. Quare? |
A48527 | R. Primae, secundae,& c. Q. Vnde dignoscitur declinatio? |
A48527 | R. Quatuor, significatio, Comparatio, species& Figura? |
A48527 | R. Regitura Conjunctione:& cohaereret cum Nominativo,& c. Q. Quare est Infinitivi? |
A48527 | R. ● st M. F. N. C. D. G. Q. Si sit Substantivum Proprium, Quale est Proprium? |
A48527 | Sed haec omnesque Figurae Grammaticales ad Pleonasmum, Ellipsin,& Enallagen reduci possunt, Q. Quid est Prothesis? |
A48527 | Seeing Orthographia teacheth us with what Letters every Syllable and Word are to be writ, what is a Letter? |
A48527 | Some Verbs are said to be Transitive, others Intransitive, how may I know which is which? |
A48527 | Spatium temporis respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quamdiu? |
A48527 | TErminus temporis respondens ad quaestionem factam per Quando, quid sit factum? |
A48527 | Take the Case following the Verb, by asking whom, or what? |
A48527 | Tense? |
A48527 | The Construction of which, of the undeclined Parts of Speech, doth now remain? |
A48527 | The cause, by Quare, Wherefore, for what cause or reason? |
A48527 | The instrument answers to the Question made, by Quocum, With what? |
A48527 | The manner of doing, by Quomodo, How or by what means? |
A48527 | The price of the thing answers to Quanti, For how much, or how great a price? |
A48527 | They are, an, ne, utrum, whether; ne ● ne, anne, whether or no; nonne ▪ is it not so? |
A48527 | To what Impersonals is the Preposition ad properly added? |
A48527 | Under how many Heads may Syntaxis thus divided he considered? |
A48527 | Vapulo, vaeneo, liceo, exulo, fio? |
A48527 | Verba haec simpli ● ia? |
A48527 | Verbalia in io antiquè regebant casum verbi unde derivata erant; ut, Quid tibi hanc curatio est rem? |
A48527 | Vnde componitur? |
A48527 | Vnde derivatur? |
A48527 | WHAT doth Propria quae Maribus contain, and to what part of Grammar doth it belong? |
A48527 | WHAT is the Accidence, and why is it so called? |
A48527 | WHat Part of Grammar is that which teacheth us to make and speak Latin? |
A48527 | WHat doth As in Praesenti contain? |
A48527 | WHat doth Quae genus contain? |
A48527 | WHat is Grammar? |
A48527 | WHat is Prosodia? |
A48527 | What Adjectives are there besides of three terminations that are otherwise declin''d? |
A48527 | What Adjectives govern an Ablative Case, or a Genitive of the thing? |
A48527 | What Adjectives govern an Accusative and sometimes a Genitive or Ablative? |
A48527 | What Adverbs derived an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What Adverbs 〈 ◊ 〉 there of Number? |
A48527 | What Article hath the Doubtful Gender, and what belongs it to? |
A48527 | What Article hath the Epicene Gender? |
A48527 | What Articles hath the Common of three, and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | What Articles hath the Common of two, and what belongs it to? |
A48527 | What Case are plùs, ampliùs, and minùs, joyned to? |
A48527 | What Case do Adverbs govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Gerunds and Supines govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Hem and Apage govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Heus and Ohe govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Participles govern when they are changed into Nouns? |
A48527 | What Case do Participles of Verbs Passives commonly govern? |
A48527 | What Case do Pronouns want? |
A48527 | What Case do Reminiscor, obliviscor, recordor, and memini govern? |
A48527 | What Case do they govern? |
A48527 | What Case do ullus, alius, alter, uter, and neuter lack or want; and how are they declined? |
A48527 | What Case doth Poti ● r govern? |
A48527 | What Case have Gerunds in di sometimes, instead of the Case of their Verbs? |
A48527 | What Case is of the second Person? |
A48527 | What Case is that which is called Octavus Casus? |
A48527 | What Case is that which is called the Rectus Casus? |
A48527 | What Case shall the casual word be, which comes next after the Verb, and answers to the Question, Whom or What, made by the Verb? |
A48527 | What Case will Adverbs of the Comparative and Superlative Degree have? |
A48527 | What Case will Nouns of Diversity govern? |
A48527 | What Case will Participles govern? |
A48527 | What Case, or where then is the Seventh Case? |
A48527 | What Cases do Conjunctions govern, being the next in order? |
A48527 | What Cases do Interjections govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Prepositions govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Prepositions serve to? |
A48527 | What Cases do Proh, ah and vah govern? |
A48527 | What Cases do Substantives govern? |
A48527 | What Cases else may aestimo govern? |
A48527 | What Cases will Paenitet, taedet, miseret, miserescit, pudet, piget, govern? |
A48527 | What Cases will all Nouns of the fisth Declension have in the Plural Number, and what is the Rule? |
A48527 | What Conjunctions do couple like Cases? |
A48527 | What Exceptions are there belonging to the first Declension? |
A48527 | What Exceptions are there under the second Declension? |
A48527 | What Genitives are those? |
A48527 | What Genitives of Nouns Adjectives will Domus only admit of? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What Impersonals govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Neut ● rs are there excepted from the second Special Rule? |
A48527 | What Neuters of Nouns encreasing short are excepted under the third Spec ● al Rule? |
A48527 | What Objections can you make against the foregoing Rule? |
A48527 | What Part of Government doth next follow? |
A48527 | What Participles govern an Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What Particles are there that govern Moods? |
A48527 | What Parts of Speech govern Cases? |
A48527 | What Parts of Syntaxis are we next to examine? |
A48527 | What Prepositions serve to an Accusative and Ablative? |
A48527 | What Pronouns are of the fourth Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns are they that may be of any Person? |
A48527 | What Pronouns be of the first Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns be of the second Declension? |
A48527 | What Pronouns may be added to the fifteen? |
A48527 | What Rule am I to observe concerning the right parting and joyning of Syllables? |
A48527 | What Rules am I principally to observe concerning the Accents? |
A48527 | What Tenses are formed of the Preterperfect Tense of the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the first Declension, what''s the Example, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the fourth Declension, which are the Examples of it, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the second Declension, what are the Examples, and whence proceeds it? |
A48527 | What Terminations hath the third Declension, what are the Examples, and whence comes it ●? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Future Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Present Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterimperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Time doth the Preterpluperfect Tense speak of? |
A48527 | What Verb is that you call the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | What Verbs are excepted from this Rule? |
A48527 | What Verbs are there of this sort? |
A48527 | What Verbs are those that will govern two Accusative Cases after them? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What Verbs of this sort are most to be observed? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the first Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the fourth Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the second Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Vowel is that by which we know the third Conjugation? |
A48527 | What Words are there excepted from this General Rule? |
A48527 | What Words follow the Rule of Proper Names? |
A48527 | What and how many are those Nouns Pentaptots that want the Vocative Case? |
A48527 | What and how many other Exceptions are there wherein the Compound Verbs do differ from the Simple? |
A48527 | What are Prepositions when they are set alone, without any Case serving to them? |
A48527 | What are Supines? |
A48527 | What are peculiarly belonging to the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Affirming? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Chance? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Flatte ● ing? |
A48527 | What are th ● se of Quanti ● y? |
A48527 | What are th ● se 〈 ◊ 〉 a thing not fin ● shed? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Asking and Doubting? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of C ● mparis ● n? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Chusi ● g? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of D ● nying? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Exhorting? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Order? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of Qu ● lity? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of W ● shing? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of gathering together? |
A48527 | What are the Adverbs of 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A48527 | What are the Feminines excepted? |
A48527 | What are the Points and Stops used in Writing and observed in Reading? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of Verbs that belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of them, and which is the Rule? |
A48527 | What are the first sort of those that are deficient in Case called? |
A48527 | What are the four Examples of the four Conjugations? |
A48527 | What are the fourth sort of Defectives in Number? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Adverbs? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Defectives? |
A48527 | What are the next sort of Redundants, and the Rule for declining of them? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of Nouns that do change their Gender and Declension, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of Verbs that belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What are the second sort of those that are deficient in Number? |
A48527 | What are the seventh sort of Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What are the sixth and last sort of Variants, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of Redundants, that, under different Terminations, are of the same Gender and Signification? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of Verbs governing a Dative? |
A48527 | What are the third sort of those that are deficient in Number? |
A48527 | What are these Terminations of the Preterperfect Tense, mi, ni, pi, qui, made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What are these of the fourth Declension called, and why so called? |
A48527 | What are those of Calling? |
A48527 | What are those of Likeness? |
A48527 | What are those of Pa ● ting? |
A48527 | What are those of Sh ● wing? |
A48527 | What become of Prepositions when they govern no Case? |
A48527 | What comes next concerning the Government of Prepositions? |
A48527 | What comes next, or what is the second Part of Syntaxis in the Gorvernment of Words? |
A48527 | What do Gerunds in di depend upon? |
A48527 | What do hic, haec, hoc signifie? |
A48527 | What do the Compounds of nosco make in the Supines? |
A48527 | What do the Great or Capital Letters signifie, when they are writ alone? |
A48527 | What do you mean by Construction? |
A48527 | What do you mean by double Consonants, and how many are there of them? |
A48527 | What do you mean when you say, S, est suae potestatis litera? |
A48527 | What doth dio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth gio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth lo make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth mo make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth no in the Present Tense, make in the Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What doth pio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth psi make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth ri make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth rio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth si make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth the first Part teach? |
A48527 | What doth ti make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth tio make in the Preterperfect? |
A48527 | What doth ui make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth vi make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What doth xi in the Preterperfect Tense make in the Supine? |
A48527 | What ease and benefit doth the considering and reducing of Syntaxis under these particulars produce? |
A48527 | What follows next after the Cases in the Accidence? |
A48527 | What follows next? |
A48527 | What if Actives want the Supines? |
A48527 | What if Verbs Substantive ● and Passives have an Acc ● sative or Dutive Case before them? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in co? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in do? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in go? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in ho? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in ro, how doth the Preterpersect end? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense end in sco? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in cio? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in so? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in to? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in vo? |
A48527 | What if the Present Tense ends in xo? |
A48527 | What if the Preterperfect end in bi, how shall the Supine end? |
A48527 | What if the first Person of the Present Tense end in bo, in Verbs of the third Conjugation? |
A48527 | What if the former word end in a short Vowel, the word following beginning with two Consonants? |
A48527 | What if two Vowels joyned together make but one sound and are spelt at once? |
A48527 | What is Caesura? |
A48527 | What is Case, the next Accident of a Noun? |
A48527 | What is Comparison? |
A48527 | What is Concord, the first of the twelve Parts? |
A48527 | What is Diastole or Ectasis? |
A48527 | What is Eclipsis? |
A48527 | What is Government in Syntaxis? |
A48527 | What is Mood, for we ● ave sp ● ke already of the kinds of Verbs? |
A48527 | What is Number, being the first Accident belonging to a Noun? |
A48527 | What is Orthographia? |
A48527 | What is Person in a Verb? |
A48527 | What is Scanning? |
A48527 | What is Speech, of which you tell me there are eight parts? |
A48527 | What is Sy ● tole? |
A48527 | What is Synaeresis, called also Synecphonesis and Syn ● zesis? |
A48527 | What is Synalaepha? |
A48527 | What is Syntaxis? |
A48527 | What is Time or Quantity, being the third part of Prosodiâ? |
A48527 | What is a Conjunction? |
A48527 | What is a Consonant? |
A48527 | What is a Double, called in Latin Duplex, and how many of them? |
A48527 | What is a Foot? |
A48527 | What is a Gender? |
A48527 | What is a Liquid, and how many Liquids are there? |
A48527 | What is a Mute? |
A48527 | What is a Noun Adjective? |
A48527 | What is a Noun Substantive? |
A48527 | What is a Participle? |
A48527 | What is a Preposition? |
A48527 | What is a Syllable? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Impersonal: and how known in English? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Impersonal? |
A48527 | What is a Verb Personal? |
A48527 | What is a Verb? |
A48527 | What is a Verse? |
A48527 | What is a Vowel? |
A48527 | What is an Accent properly? |
A48527 | What is an Adverb? |
A48527 | What is an Apostrophus, which may be added to the Accents? |
A48527 | What is an Interjection? |
A48527 | What is ci in the Preterperfect Tense made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is di made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is gi made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is it to have the Signification increased or diminished? |
A48527 | What is li made in the Supine? |
A48527 | What is the Adverb abhinc joyned to? |
A48527 | What is the Article of the F. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | What is the Common of two Exception under the first Sp ● cial Rule? |
A48527 | What is the Comparative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Doubtful Exception from this Special Rule? |
A48527 | What is the Example, and how many Terminations hath the fifth Declension? |
A48527 | What is the Figure Diae ● esis or Dialysis? |
A48527 | What is the Forming or Conjugating of a Verb? |
A48527 | What is the Fourth Part of As in Praesenti? |
A48527 | What is the Imperative Mood? |
A48527 | What is the Indicative Mood? |
A48527 | What is the Last Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | What is the Neuter Exception of Nouns not increasing? |
A48527 | What is the Positive Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for Redundant Adjectives? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of Compound Verbs, being the Second Part of As in Praesenti? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of Simple Verbs in io, of the fourth Conjugation, declined like Audio? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in eo, of the second Conjugation, declined like Doceo? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in o, of the first Conjugation, declined like Amo? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for the Preterperfect Tense of all Simple Verbs in o, of the third Conjugation, decli ● ed like Lego? |
A48527 | What is the Rule for those that govern a Genitive? |
A48527 | What is the Rule of Verbs of the Infinitive Mood, and of what are they governed? |
A48527 | What is the Second Observation? |
A48527 | What is the Sign of the Comparative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the Superlative Degree? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Carmen and Versus? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Neutro- passiva, and Neutralia- passiva? |
A48527 | What is the difference between Quid and Quod? |
A48527 | What is the difference between a Noun and a Verb? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fifth Rule of Deficients in Number, and what are the words? |
A48527 | What is the fifth thing belonging to a Pronoun? |
A48527 | What is the first Exception? |
A48527 | What is the first Part in the government of Cases? |
A48527 | What is the first Person? |
A48527 | What is the first Rule of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | What is the first Supine governed of? |
A48527 | What is the forbidding Adverb? |
A48527 | What is the fourth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fourth Exception? |
A48527 | What is the fourth general Rule? |
A48527 | What is the last Exception? |
A48527 | What is the last Rule of Desectives in Number? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the first Rule of Variants? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the first Special Rule, Nomen non cr ● s ● ens? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Insertion, At horum nunc est Deponens? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Aliquando Relativum, aliquando& nomen Adjectivum? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, At sunt quae flexu,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Haec proprium quendam sibi fle ● um,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule, Nil variat facio? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Rule? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of this Verse in the Figurative Syntaxis, Mobile fit fixum si fixum menie subaudis? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of, A lego nata,& c? |
A48527 | What is the meaning of, Haec si componas,& c. the third general Exception of Verbs Compounds that differ from their Simple? |
A48527 | What is the meaning thereof? |
A48527 | What is the next Accident of a Noun after Declension? |
A48527 | What is the next Part of Grammar? |
A48527 | What is the next more usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | What is the second Exception on Praeteritum dat idem? |
A48527 | What is the second Exception? |
A48527 | What is the second Person? |
A48527 | What is the second Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | What is the third Exception? |
A48527 | What is the third Exception? |
A48527 | What is the third Person? |
A48527 | What is the third general Rule for knowing the first syllables? |
A48527 | What is to be observed in the forming of the Preterperfect Tense of Verbs in each Conjugation? |
A48527 | What is to be observed of the Compounds of Cano? |
A48527 | What kind of Rule is this, to wit, Faeminei generis sunt mat ● r, humus,& c? |
A48527 | What kind of Verbs are sum, possum, volo, nolo, malo, edo, fio, fero, feror, for they are not declined as Regular Verbs? |
A48527 | What may a Verb Active be made? |
A48527 | What may a Verb Passive be made? |
A48527 | What may be objected against the said Rule, that is, Propria Foemin ● um? |
A48527 | What mean you by a Degree of Comparison? |
A48527 | What mean you by this? |
A48527 | What more have you to say of this Rule, Omnia Verba acqulsitivè? |
A48527 | What must he first learn that is to make a Verse? |
A48527 | What must we do in th ● se Verbs that want the Future in rus? |
A48527 | What observation do you make of que and u, in spelling? |
A48527 | What observe you of Sum; and some other Verbs? |
A48527 | What observe you of the sound of ti? |
A48527 | What of the foregoing Pa ● ticles use to begin, and what use to follow? |
A48527 | What other Adjectives govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Exceptions have you of a Vowel, not being short, before another in the same word? |
A48527 | What other Exceptions have you, besides this Greek one? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs govern an Ablative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs of this Rule do borrow or vary their Preterperfect Tense? |
A48527 | What other Verbs place will govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What other Verbs require a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What other sort of Verbs may govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | What part of Construction comes in the twelfth and last place? |
A48527 | What part of Government comes next? |
A48527 | What part of Government comes next? |
A48527 | What part of Government falls under the ninth place? |
A48527 | What part of government follows next? |
A48527 | What qu ● ntity are words that end in ys and y? |
A48527 | What quantity are words ending in c? |
A48527 | What quantity are words ending in e? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in as? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in b, d, t? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in es? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in is? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in l? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in n? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in o? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in os? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in r? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in u? |
A48527 | What quantity are words that end in us? |
A48527 | What say you of Communis, alienus, immunis? |
A48527 | What say you of Compos, impos, consors, exors, particeps, potens, impotens,& c? |
A48527 | What say you of Hic, ille and iste, how are they distinguished? |
A48527 | What say you of Mereor? |
A48527 | What say you of Nouns derived of Verbs, or Verbals in i ●? |
A48527 | What say you of Nouns of the Neuter Gender of the second declension? |
A48527 | What say you of Reus, certior, sollicitus, and conscius? |
A48527 | What say you of Verbs which have the force of comparison, or signifie exceeding? |
A48527 | What say you of a and e, before the Tenses in bam and bo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Adverb ne, of forbidding? |
A48527 | What say you of the Case or Rule of the Relative? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Maneo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Pango? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Pasco, belonging to this Rule, Verba haec simplicia? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of Placeo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of claudo, quatio, lavo? |
A48527 | What say you of the Compounds of scalpo, calco, salto? |
A48527 | What say you of the Construction of Pronouns? |
A48527 | What say you of the Government of Prepositions? |
A48527 | What say you of the Penultima of Adjectives in anus, arus, orus, osus, and of Adverbs in atim and itim? |
A48527 | What say you of the Preterperfect Tenses in vi and si? |
A48527 | What say you of the Question and Answer to it? |
A48527 | What say you of the last syllable save one of Adjectives in inus? |
A48527 | What say you of the other Cases of Verbs Passives? |
A48527 | What say you of the second Concord, wherein is the Agreement? |
A48527 | What say you of the third Concord, which may be referred to the second? |
A48527 | What signification have their Participles? |
A48527 | What significations have Gerunds? |
A48527 | What sort of Adjectives govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | What sort of Adjectives govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What sort of Letters are r and y said to be? |
A48527 | What sort of Nouns are those that follow the Rule of Relatives in Construing and Covernment? |
A48527 | What sort of Verbs belong to this Rule? |
A48527 | What sort of Words are used to be added to Comparatives and Superlatives? |
A48527 | What things belong to all the Eight Parts of Speech? |
A48527 | What use do Prepositions chiefly serve to? |
A48527 | What will edo make when it is compounded? |
A48527 | What words are of the fifth sort, and what is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are of the sixth sort of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | What words are of the sourth sort, and what is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are of the third sort, and which is their Rule? |
A48527 | What words are there of the Common of two excepted from the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words are those by which the Question of the instrument, cause, or manner of doing, are answered by? |
A48527 | What words of the Common of two are excepted under this Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words of the Doubtful Gender are excepted from the third Special Rule? |
A48527 | What words of the Doubtful Gender are excepted under the first Special Rule? |
A48527 | What 〈 ◊ 〉 Verbs govern a Genitive Case? |
A48527 | What''s the meaning of the Rule it self? |
A48527 | What, or how many Participles can a Verb Deponent have? |
A48527 | When a Question is asked by a word that may govern divers cases; as, For how much have you bought this Book? |
A48527 | When an Answer is made by one of these Possessives, Meus, tuus, suus noster, vester ▪ as, Whose House is that? |
A48527 | When doth in govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | When doth sub govern an Accusative? |
A48527 | When doth super govern an Accusative Case? |
A48527 | Where do we make use of great Letters? |
A48527 | Where doth the Second Part of Propria quae Maribus, that is, Rules for the declining of Substantives Common, begin? |
A48527 | Where doth the first sort of Nouns, called Defectives, begin, and what are they? |
A48527 | Where shall one find this( re) and( ris) to know the Conjugation by? |
A48527 | Which Pronouns are of the third Declension? |
A48527 | Which and how many are the General Rules? |
A48527 | Which and what is the first part of Speech? |
A48527 | Which are Electives,( viz) such as imply a choice? |
A48527 | Which are the Feet of three syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the Feet of two syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the Interjections of Mirth? |
A48527 | Which are the Root or Principal Tenses in Conjugating of a Verb Active or Neuter? |
A48527 | Which are the common Verbs of Esteeming? |
A48527 | Which are the eleventh sort? |
A48527 | Which are the fifth sort of Verbs governing a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the first 〈 ◊ 〉 in the A ● ● idence? |
A48527 | Which are the fourth sort of Verbs that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the kinds of Diastole in Caesura? |
A48527 | Which are the more worthy Persons? |
A48527 | Which are the most usual sort of Verses? |
A48527 | Which are the ninth sort of them? |
A48527 | Which are the rest of th ● m? |
A48527 | Which are the sixth sort of Verbs that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the special Rules of the last syllables? |
A48527 | Which are the tenth sort of Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are the thirteenth sort of these Verbs, that govern a Dative Case? |
A48527 | Which are those Prepositions that serve to both the Accusative and Ablative? |
A48527 | Which are those Twelve Parts or Heads? |
A48527 | Which are those of Sorrow? |
A48527 | Which are those of dread? |
A48527 | Which is die third Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | Which is the Article of the M. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | Which is the Article of the N. G. and what doth it belong to? |
A48527 | Which is the Eighth Part of As in Praesenti, being the second Rule of Verbs Irregular Variant? |
A48527 | Which is the Ninth Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Seventh Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Sixth Part of As in Praesenti, and what doth it treat of? |
A48527 | Which is the Third Part of Speech? |
A48527 | Which is the eighth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth Rule observable in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth Rule, or fifth sort of Deficients in Number? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the fifth usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the first Rule of the Figurative Syntaxis, and what''s the meaning thereof? |
A48527 | Which is the first irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the first? |
A48527 | Which is the first? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Accident belonging to a Noun? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Rule in the Construction of Substantives? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth Rule or thing to be observed in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the fourth usual sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the last general Rule of knowing the first syllables? |
A48527 | Which is the next Part of Construction or Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the place of the Nominative? |
A48527 | Which is the second Declension of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the second Rule for the declining of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the second Rule of the Figurative Syntaxi ●? |
A48527 | Which is the second Special Rule for the Gender and declining of Nouns Substa ● tives common? |
A48527 | Which is the second irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the seventh general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth Observation or Rule in the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth general Rule? |
A48527 | Which is the sixth sort of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the third Rule for the declining of Adjectives? |
A48527 | Which is the third Rule of the Figurative Syntaxis? |
A48527 | Which is the third irregular Comparison or Exception? |
A48527 | Which is the third usual so ● ● of Verse? |
A48527 | Which is the twelfth sort of them? |
A48527 | Which is your Rule for Verbs governing a Genitive, and what sorts of Verbs are they? |
A48527 | Which of them comes first? |
A48527 | Whose Book is this? |
A48527 | Why are not Adjectives compared when a Vowel comes before Us? |
A48527 | Why are the four first declined, and the four last undeclined? |
A48527 | Why are these called Persons in a Verb? |
A48527 | Why are they called Primitives, and what are they called besides? |
A48527 | Why are they set before the Genders and Declensions? |
A48527 | Why are they so called? |
A48527 | Why can not the Infinitive Mood, or the Verb that follows the Relative or Conjunction, be the Principal Verb? |
A48527 | Why do the Gerunds and Supines belong to the Infinitive Mood? |
A48527 | Why do they say Quî in the Ablative Case? |
A48527 | Why do you leave out the Optative and Potential Mood? |
A48527 | Why do you say commonly, Is there any exception? |
A48527 | Why doth not Comparison belong to a Noun Substantive? |
A48527 | Why doth the Imperative Mood want the first Person singular? |
A48527 | Why is it call''d the Nominative? |
A48527 | Why is it called I ● p ● ● sonal, is it because it wants the Persons? |
A48527 | Why is it called a Participle? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Accusative Case? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Dative Case? |
A48527 | Why is it called the Genitive Case? |
A48527 | Why is that which ends in u, called the latter Supine? |
A48527 | Why is that which ends in um, called the first Supine? |
A48527 | Why is the Ablative called Latinus Casus? |
A48527 | Why may they not be Verbs, seeing they retain their Construction? |
A48527 | Why must these six so agree together? |
A48527 | Why say you most commonly? |
A48527 | Why was a Participle invented? |
A48527 | Why was a Pronoun invented? |
A48527 | With how many Articles is a Noun Substantive declin''d? |
A48527 | Yes; as, Haeccine fieri flagitia? |
A48527 | a Pronoun? |
A48527 | a Verb Common, signifies also like a Verb Passive? |
A48527 | a Verb Personal agrees with its Nominative Case? |
A48527 | an Indicative and a Subjunctive? |
A48527 | and, why is it called so? |
A48527 | and, why is it called so? |
A48527 | of Nouns Irregular, called Redundants, or that have overmuch? |
A48527 | of Pronunciation? |
A48527 | of the undeclined sort? |
A48527 | such as give an answer to the Adversatives? |
A48527 | such as grant somewhat to be said against? |
A48527 | such as lessen the meaning? |
A48527 | such as make Inferenees? |
A48527 | those that couple both Sence and Words? |
A48527 | those that imply a Condition? |
A48527 | those that imply a Difference? |
A48527 | those that imply an Exception? |
A48527 | those which ask a Question? |
A48527 | those which imply a Reason? |
A48527 | those which part the Sence and not the Words? |
A48527 | 〈 ◊ 〉, when we enquire, whether or by whom a Fact was committed; as, An Clodius occide ● i ● 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A16869 | * How can you know this? |
A16869 | * How know you their Genders by their terminations? |
A16869 | * How? |
A16869 | * Of all the fiue kindes which are Transitiues? |
A16869 | * Of what Declension are all Nounes of three Articles? |
A16869 | * Q But are there not some speciall things to be obserued in construing? |
A16869 | * Q Which three are declined with case? |
A16869 | * Q. Doe these form the Co ● paratiue, and the Superlatiue degree of their Positiue, as Adjectiues doe? |
A16869 | * Q. Doth a Substantiue neuer stand before the worde whereof it is gouerned? |
A16869 | * Q. Hath Nemo all the cases in the Singular Number? |
A16869 | * Q. Hath euery Moode& Tense, three Persons in either Number? |
A16869 | * Q. Haue they not alwaies so? |
A16869 | * Q. Haue you any speciall marke to know a Noune Adjectiue by? |
A16869 | * Q. Haue you no moe Prepositions but these? |
A16869 | * Q. Shew me how: for example, if it be a Genitiue case after a Substantiue, how doe you finde it? |
A16869 | * Q. Shew mee how? |
A16869 | * Q. Whereof are these three compounded? |
A16869 | * Quisnam à me pepulit tam gra ● iter fores? |
A16869 | A Participle? |
A16869 | A cano natum praeteritum per üi,& c. Q. Haue you no other speciall rules which are ioyned to this rule; Hac habeo, lateo, salio,& c? |
A16869 | A. Composita à claudo,& c. Q. Giue the meaning? |
A16869 | A. Foure: some wordes of the Masculine, some of the Neuter, some of the Doubtfull, some of the Common, are excepted? |
A16869 | A. Iubeo excipe iussi,& c. Q. Giue the meaning of it? |
A16869 | A. Looke out the principall Verbe? |
A16869 | A. Propria quae maribus tribuuntur,& c. Q What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | A. Tertia praeteritum formabit,& c. Q. Haue these any common ending of the Preterperfect tense, as the Verbs of the first and second Coniugation haue? |
A16869 | A. Venit ne rex? |
A16869 | A. c d Fifteene: as, Ego, tu, sui,& c. Q. Haue all Pronounes all the cases? |
A16869 | All sorts of Verbes which are put acquisitiuely? |
A16869 | And how do these 3. cases end in the plurall number? |
A16869 | And in what tense of a Verbe must you answere? |
A16869 | And may not an Adjectiue also bee the Nominatiue case to the Verbe? |
A16869 | And what case must your casuall worde bee, which commeth next after the Verbe,& answereth to the question, whom or what, made by the Verbe? |
A16869 | And where must your Nominatiue case be set, in making or construing Latine? |
A16869 | Are Deponents and Commons declined like Passiues? |
A16869 | Are Nounes of the Neuter Gender declined like Nounes of the Masculine and Feminine? |
A16869 | Are all Adjectiues of three terminations declined like bonus? |
A16869 | Are all names of Cities the Feminine Gender? |
A16869 | Are ille, ipse, iste, declined alike? |
A16869 | Are no other common Nounes so put? |
A16869 | Are no words excepted from beeing thus declined? |
A16869 | Are none of them declined in your booke? |
A16869 | Are none of these declined in either Number? |
A16869 | Are none of these the Neuter Gender, in the Plurall Number? |
A16869 | Are not Interjections sometimes put absolutely, without case? |
A16869 | Are not Prepositions compared? |
A16869 | Are not Prepositions sometimes made Aduerbes? |
A16869 | Are not some Aduerbs compared? |
A16869 | Are not some of them called Relatiues? |
A16869 | Are not sundry other Prepositions oft vnderstood also, as well as in? |
A16869 | Are there no exceptions from these generall rules of comparing Nounes; that is, from this manner of comparing? |
A16869 | Are there no exceptions from this rule? |
A16869 | Are there no exceptions? |
A16869 | Are there no exceptions? |
A16869 | Are there no moe parts of all your Latine speech but onely eyght? |
A16869 | Are there no other Feminines wanting the Plurall Number? |
A16869 | Are there no other wordes which haue their Cases, as the Relatiue hath? |
A16869 | Are there no speciall terminations of the Nominatiue cases in each Declension, to knovve the Declensions by? |
A16869 | Are there not other Nounes also belonging to this Rule? |
A16869 | Are there not some Verbes which will haue two Accusatiue cases? |
A16869 | Are these in all things declined like unus? |
A16869 | Articles of? |
A16869 | As how, for example? |
A16869 | As how, for example? |
A16869 | As how? |
A16869 | Bonis, what Gender is the word then? |
A16869 | But are all Interjections such imperfect voices? |
A16869 | But hath it not somtimes the signification of the Actiue voyce; and of the Participle of the Present tense? |
A16869 | But haue not is and qui, a seuerall declining? |
A16869 | But haue you not some ending in o, like Ablatiue cases? |
A16869 | But how can you know of what word the Relatiue is gouerned? |
A16869 | But how shall the Gender be knowne in Epicens, and so in all other Appellatiues? |
A16869 | But how will you doe in the Imperatiue Mood, which hath no first Person singular? |
A16869 | But if a Relatiue come betweene two Substantiues of diuerse Genders, with which of them shall it agree? |
A16869 | But if the place, in or at which any thing is done, be a proper name, of the third Declension, or Plurall Number; in what case must it be put? |
A16869 | But is the Relatiue alwaies gouerned of the Verbe, which he commeth before? |
A16869 | But may not proper names sometimes haue the Plurall number? |
A16869 | But may not some of these bee found in the Neuter Gender? |
A16869 | But may not this Ablatiue case bee turned into a Datiue? |
A16869 | But some of these kinds of verbs are said to be Transitiue, others Intransitiue: how may I know which are Transitiue, which Intransitiue? |
A16869 | But what Case must Nounes be, which betoken continuall terme of time, without any ceasing or intermission? |
A16869 | But what if the Actiues want the Supines? |
A16869 | But what if the Antecedents bee of the Masculine or Feminine Gender, and none of them of the Neuter; may yet the Relatiue be the Neuter? |
A16869 | But what if these lacke the Supines? |
A16869 | But what if they haue neither of these signes before them? |
A16869 | But when there comes a Nominatiue case betweene the Relatiue and the Verbe; what Case must the Relatiue be then? |
A16869 | But with which of the Antecedents must the Relatiue agree in Gender? |
A16869 | But your booke ads Cuias: is it a Pronoune? |
A16869 | By what rules? |
A16869 | By what wordes may this Ablatiue case be resolued? |
A16869 | Can Hic, ille, iste, and is, be both Demonstratiues& Relatiues? |
A16869 | Can any word be a Nominatiue case to the Verbe, but onely a Noune Substantiue? |
A16869 | Can it neuer haue a Participle of the Future in dus? |
A16869 | Can no Preposition serue to a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | Can not a Verbe Neuter take r, to make it a Passiue, as Actiues doe: as, of Curro by putting to r, to make curror? |
A16869 | Can onely Sum haue a double Datiue case? |
A16869 | Do Coniunctions Copulatiues& Disjunctiues couple nothing else but cases? |
A16869 | Do all of them end either in tus, sus, or xus, in Latine? |
A16869 | Do they all make their Genitiue in ïus, like unus? |
A16869 | Doth the King come? |
A16869 | For the Preterperfect tenses of simple Verbes ending in o, what order is kept? |
A16869 | From a place or by a place, in lesser places; in what case must it be? |
A16869 | Gen. Huius Magistri, of a master,& c. Q. Doth your Vocatiue case in the second Declension end alwaies like the Nominatiue? |
A16869 | Gender? |
A16869 | HAVE you not some other Nounes, of an other kinde of declining then these? |
A16869 | HOW can you knowe what Gender a Noune is of? |
A16869 | HOw ends the Genitiue case singular of the fourth Declension? |
A16869 | HOw ends the Genitiue case singular of the second Declension? |
A16869 | HOw ends the Genitiue case singular of the third Declension? |
A16869 | HOw many Declensions are there of a Pronoune? |
A16869 | HOw many Supines be there? |
A16869 | HOw many chiefe rules are there to knowe what Case the Relatiue must be of? |
A16869 | HOw many generall rules are there belonging to that Chapter of the Genitiue after the Adjectiue? |
A16869 | HOw many* Numbers are there in a Noune? |
A16869 | How are Participles of other tenses declined? |
A16869 | How are Quis and Quid declined? |
A16869 | How are others in m declined? |
A16869 | How are the Participles of the Present tense declined? |
A16869 | How are these compared? |
A16869 | How are these declined? |
A16869 | How are these declined? |
A16869 | How are these to be applyed? |
A16869 | How are they varied in all other Moodes& Tenses? |
A16869 | How by the Genitiue case? |
A16869 | How by their English and Latine together? |
A16869 | How by their English? |
A16869 | How by their Latine? |
A16869 | How can an Infinitiue Moode, or a whole sentence be the Nominatiue case to the Verb? |
A16869 | How can you know by these rules? |
A16869 | How can you know the right Preterperfect tense and rule by those Rules? |
A16869 | How can you know them? |
A16869 | How can you know when Nounes signifie continuall terme of time? |
A16869 | How can you know which are proper names? |
A16869 | How decline you Bonus with the English with it? |
A16869 | How decline you Fas,& the rest of the Singular nūber? |
A16869 | How decline you Quisquis? |
A16869 | How decline you words in u, as Cornu? |
A16869 | How differs it in Latine from the Optatiue and Subiunctiue, seeing that they haue all one termination? |
A16869 | How do their Cōparatiue& Superlatiue degrees end? |
A16869 | How do they make their Preterimperfect tense? |
A16869 | How do you compare these three degrees? |
A16869 | How doe all other Nounes ending in lis, forme the Superlatiue? |
A16869 | How doe the compounds of lego make their Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | How doe these differ one from another? |
A16869 | How doe these end? |
A16869 | How doe they differ in Termination? |
A16869 | How doe they make their Future tense? |
A16869 | How doe they make their Gerunds? |
A16869 | How doe you make their Superlatiue? |
A16869 | How doth it signifie? |
A16869 | How doth it signifie? |
A16869 | How doth your booke diuide the Pronounes? |
A16869 | How end the first Persons Passiue? |
A16869 | How end their Superlatiues? |
A16869 | How endeth it in Latine? |
A16869 | How ends a Verbe Common? |
A16869 | How ends a Verbe Deponent? |
A16869 | How ends a Verbe Passiue? |
A16869 | How ends his Latine? |
A16869 | How ends it in English? |
A16869 | How ends the English of the Participle of the Pretertense? |
A16869 | How ends the Genitiue case singular of the first Declension? |
A16869 | How ends the Latine of the Participle of the Present tense? |
A16869 | How is a Participle declined? |
A16869 | How is a Verbe Neuter Englished? |
A16869 | How is the Gerund in do vsed? |
A16869 | How know you the Imperatiue? |
A16869 | How know you the Optatiue? |
A16869 | How know you the Potentiall Moode? |
A16869 | How know you the Subjunctiue Moode? |
A16869 | How knowe you the Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | How knowe you the Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | How knowe you the Vocatiue case? |
A16869 | How knowe you then when to ioyne them to the Accusatiue case; when to the Ablatiue? |
A16869 | How knowe you when a word may bee fully vnderstood of it selfe? |
A16869 | How many Articles are there? |
A16869 | How many Cases are there? |
A16869 | How many Concords haue you? |
A16869 | How many Coniugations haue Verbs? |
A16869 | How many Declensions of Nounes are there? |
A16869 | How many Genders haue you? |
A16869 | How many I know in any place whether a Verbe Cōmon do signifie Actiuely, or Passiuely? |
A16869 | How many Impersonals require a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | How many Moodes are there? |
A16869 | How many Participles hath a Verbe Common? |
A16869 | How many Participles haue Verbs Actiues&* Neuters, which haue the Supines? |
A16869 | How many Persons are there in Verbs? |
A16869 | How many Prepositions serue to the a Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | How many Pronoune Primitiues are there? |
A16869 | How many Pronoune Substantiues are there? |
A16869 | How many Pronounes Deriuatiues are there? |
A16869 | How many Pronounes are of the first Declension? |
A16869 | How many Pronounes are of the fourth Declension? |
A16869 | How many Pronounes are of the second Declension? |
A16869 | How many Pronounes are there? |
A16869 | How many Rules haue you of Masculines excepted, not increasing? |
A16869 | How many Tenses are there? |
A16869 | How many b Gerunds are there? |
A16869 | How many chiefe exceptions haue you from this Rule? |
A16869 | How many degrees of Comparison are there? |
A16869 | How many examples haue you to decline, and conjugate all perfect Verbs by? |
A16869 | How many exceptions haue you from this rule? |
A16869 | How many exceptions haue you of it? |
A16869 | How many generall kinds are there of them? |
A16869 | How many kind of Pronounes haue you generally? |
A16869 | How many kinde of Personalls are there? |
A16869 | How many kinde of Verbes are there? |
A16869 | How many kindes haue you of them? |
A16869 | How many kindes of Interjections haue you? |
A16869 | How many kindes of proper Feminines haue you belonging to that rule? |
A16869 | How many kindes of proper Masculines haue you belonging to that Rule? |
A16869 | How many of them are declined with case? |
A16869 | How many of these parts are declined? |
A16869 | How many parts then are there of the Latine speech? |
A16869 | How many persons be there? |
A16869 | How many rules are there of them? |
A16869 | How many rules are there of these? |
A16869 | How many rules haue you of Feminines encreasing short? |
A16869 | How many rules haue you of acute, or long Masculines excepted? |
A16869 | How many rules haue you of them? |
A16869 | How many serue to both cases? |
A16869 | How many serue to the Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | How many sorts haue you excepted? |
A16869 | How many sorts haue you of these? |
A16869 | How many sorts of Adiectiues are there? |
A16869 | How many sorts of Deriuatiues haue you? |
A16869 | How many sorts of Noune Substantiues are there? |
A16869 | How many sorts of Nounes haue you? |
A16869 | How many special rules haue you to know the Gender; by the increasing, or not increasing of the Genitiue case? |
A16869 | How many such haue you? |
A16869 | How many things are to be considered, for the right ioyning of words in Construction? |
A16869 | How many things belong to a Noune? |
A16869 | How many things belong to a Pronoune? |
A16869 | How many things may bee the Nominatiue case to the Verbe? |
A16869 | How many waies may Prepositions be changed into Aduerbs? |
A16869 | How many wayes? |
A16869 | How many will haue an Accusatiue case onely? |
A16869 | How many will haue an Accusatiue case with a Genitiue? |
A16869 | How many wordes are of this Person? |
A16869 | How many words are of this Person? |
A16869 | How many words haue you which make the Vocatiue in ●, or in us? |
A16869 | How may these Cases be known asunder? |
A16869 | How may these be knowne asunder? |
A16869 | How may they be knowne asunder? |
A16869 | How may we know Aduerbs? |
A16869 | How say you, I loued or did loue? |
A16869 | How the Datiue? |
A16869 | How the Datiue? |
A16869 | How then ends a Verbe Actiue? |
A16869 | How then haue they these degrees? |
A16869 | How then will you finde out the rule for any word in a sentence to know why it is put in the Genitiue, Datiue, or any other case? |
A16869 | How wi ● h three Articles? |
A16869 | How wil you know of what Declension a Noune is? |
A16869 | How will you come to be perfect in this Verb Sum? |
A16869 | How will you decline these, when they are put in place of a Noune Substantiue? |
A16869 | How will you doe that? |
A16869 | How will you know the Genders in Pronoune Substantiues; as, in Ego, tu, sui? |
A16869 | How will you know what Declension euery Pronoune is? |
A16869 | How will you knowe the Genders in Pronoune Adiectiues? |
A16869 | How will you then seek out the rule for the case, when you haue construed? |
A16869 | How with three terminations? |
A16869 | How, for example? |
A16869 | How? |
A16869 | How? |
A16869 | How? |
A16869 | How? |
A16869 | I meane, a Noune signifying moe then one? |
A16869 | IF it be a proper name, belonging to the female kind, or shee s; what Gender must it be? |
A16869 | IF you haue an English of the Infinitiue Moode, comming after a reason,& shewing a cause of that reason; what must it be put in? |
A16869 | IS the Preposition in, alwaies sette downe vvith hi ● case? |
A16869 | If Prepositions be set alone without any case; whether are they then Prepositions? |
A16869 | If an Adjectiue in the Neuter Gender, bee put alone without a Substantiue; what doth it stand for? |
A16869 | If any other Adjectiues be ioyned vnto them, what case must they be put in? |
A16869 | If it be a Substantiue, what must you looke for next? |
A16869 | If it be a proper name belonging to the male kinde, what Gender is it? |
A16869 | If it be a proper name, what must you looke for then? |
A16869 | If it can not bee so turned, vvhat part of speech is it then? |
A16869 | If many Antecedents of the Singular Number come together with a Coniunction Copulatiue comming between them; what Number must the Relatiue be? |
A16869 | If the Positiue end in r, how must the Superlatiue be formed? |
A16869 | If the Preterperfect tense ende in bi, how must the Supine ende? |
A16869 | If the word be a proper name of a man ending in ïus, how must the Vocatiue end? |
A16869 | If they haue but one termination is any case, as, Foelix, what Gender is that of? |
A16869 | If they haue two terminations, as Tristis and Triste, what Gender are those words of? |
A16869 | If you be asked any Person which you can not tell, what must you doe to finde it? |
A16869 | If your Verbe end in bo in the Present tense, how doth it make the Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | If your word be a proper name of some lesse place, as of a citie or towne,& signifie to a place; in what case must it be put? |
A16869 | In how many things doth the Adjectiue agree with his Substantiue? |
A16869 | In how many things doth the Relatiue agree with his Antecedent? |
A16869 | In how many things? |
A16869 | In how many voyces are these examples b formed? |
A16869 | In what order are the rules placed for all these? |
A16869 | In what order are those rules of the Verbes placed? |
A16869 | In what order doe these rules stand in your booke? |
A16869 | In which words lyeth the speciall example, and force of the rule, to apply them to the rule? |
A16869 | Into how many parts is your Accidence diuided? |
A16869 | Is a hand a Noune? |
A16869 | Is euery word ending in ing, a Participle of the Present tense? |
A16869 | Is it then properly a Participle of the Future in dus, when it signifieth Actiuely? |
A16869 | Is not a perfect readines in this verbe Sum, as necessarie as in any other of the Verbes? |
A16869 | Is one Substantiue or Casuall word the Antecedent alwaies to the Relatiue? |
A16869 | Is the Epicene Gender a Gender properly? |
A16869 | Is there any exception? |
A16869 | Is there no common Noune so put? |
A16869 | Is there no difference in Latine, betweene the Optatiue, Potentiall, and Subjunctiue Moodes? |
A16869 | Is there no exception from that rule? |
A16869 | Is there no exception from that rule? |
A16869 | Is there no exception from this rule? |
A16869 | Is there no exception? |
A16869 | Is there no exception? |
A16869 | Is there nothing else to bee obserued in the Compounds of pario? |
A16869 | Is there yet no further helpe for knowing the seuerall Persons? |
A16869 | Is this alwaies true? |
A16869 | Is this case alwaies set downe with it? |
A16869 | Is this order euer to be kept? |
A16869 | Is your Adjectiue alwaies the same Case, Gender and Number, that the Substantiue is? |
A16869 | Mascula Graecorum,& c? |
A16869 | Masculaite ● verres? |
A16869 | May all Adjectiues be compared? |
A16869 | May it not be ioyned vnto other parts of speech also? |
A16869 | May not Impersonals be turned into Personals? |
A16869 | May not Verbes Neuters haue an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | May not a Relatiue bee the Nominatiue case to the Verbe? |
A16869 | May not a Verbe Passiue be made an Actiue? |
A16869 | May not any Noune or Pronoune be of the first or second Person by the same figure? |
A16869 | May not other Substantiues bee made of the Greeke Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | May not other perfect words also, bee made Interjections? |
A16869 | May not some other be added to them? |
A16869 | May not the Relatiue be the Substantiue to the Adjectiue, as well as it may be the Nominatiue case to the Verb? |
A16869 | May not the rest of the Prepositions be so set after their cases also? |
A16869 | May one word then be of many parts of speech? |
A16869 | May they haue no Case else? |
A16869 | May they not ioyne together diuerse Tenses? |
A16869 | May they not somtimes couple diuerse cases? |
A16869 | May those foure which serue to both cases, haue either an Accusatiue case or an Ablatiue, as we will? |
A16869 | Most vsually after the Verbe, or after the signe of the Verb: as, Amas tu louest thou? |
A16869 | Must it alwaies needs be so made in Latine by quòd, or vt, signifying that? |
A16869 | Must it be alwaies in the Ablatiue? |
A16869 | Must not the same course be taken, when a Latine is to be construed, or turned into English? |
A16869 | Must the Verbe be alwaies the same Number and Person, that the Nominatiue case is? |
A16869 | Must we alwaies thus seeke out the Nominatiue case? |
A16869 | Nomen non crescens? |
A16869 | Number? |
A16869 | Of what Declension are Nounes of three terminations, as Bonus, bona, bonum? |
A16869 | Of what Gender are Nounes of the fift Declension? |
A16869 | Of what is a Participle deriued? |
A16869 | Of what is it formed? |
A16869 | Of what is the Comparatiue degree formed,& how? |
A16869 | Q BVt if your Noune be none of these proper names, but some Appellatiue or common name: hovv must you finde the Rule? |
A16869 | Q How ends a Verbe Neuter? |
A16869 | Q To what question doth it answere? |
A16869 | Q WHat Verbes haue a Nominatiue case after them? |
A16869 | Q WHich is the first part of speech? |
A16869 | Q What Participles haue Verbs Passiues, whose Actiues haue the Supines? |
A16869 | Q What meane you by Inceptiues ending in sco, put for their Primitiues? |
A16869 | Q What signes hath it? |
A16869 | Q Whereto is an Aduerbe ioyned to the Verbs? |
A16869 | Q. Doe all Nounes Participials require a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | Q. Doe these alwaies gouerne an( a) Ablatiue? |
A16869 | Q. Doe these neuer make their Preterperfect tense in ivi? |
A16869 | Q. Doe these serue to any cases? |
A16869 | Q. Doe they euer gouerne an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | Q. Doth Comparison belong to all Nounes? |
A16869 | Q. Giue me your Rules of Masculines vvanting the Singular Number? |
A16869 | Q. HAue you not some Verbs which are called Neuter Passiues? |
A16869 | Q. HHovv vvill you knowe the Supine of a simple Verbe? |
A16869 | Q. Hath euery kinde of Verbe all the foure Participles? |
A16869 | Q. Hath unus the plurall number? |
A16869 | Q. Haue none of those words of the Singular number, all the cases of the Plurall number? |
A16869 | Q. Haue these no number? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you no exceptions from this rule? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you no exceptions? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you no speciall obseruation of any of those Verbes of that rule, vvhich so change the first Vowell into e? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you no speciall obseruation of the compounds of cano? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you not some Datiue cases of Nounes Substantiues, which are vsed Aduerbially; that is, made Aduerbs? |
A16869 | Q. Haue you not some speciall obseruations concerning these two Verbs, Eo and queo? |
A16869 | Q. NOvv that wee haue done with Noune Substantiues, what are wee to come to next? |
A16869 | Q. Nounes Partitiues with Interrogatiues, and certaine Nounes of Number, as these set downe in the booke, and the like; what case doe they require? |
A16869 | Q. Nounes of the Comparatiue degree, with this signe than or by after them, what case will they haue? |
A16869 | Q. VVhat other vvordes haue you belonging to this Rule? |
A16869 | Q. Verbs Impersonals of the Passiue voice, b if they be formed of Verbs Neuters, what case doe they gouerne? |
A16869 | Q. Whence are these borrowed? |
A16869 | Q. Whence is the Superlatiue formed? |
A16869 | Q. Wherein are Pronounes vsed? |
A16869 | Q. Wherein doe they differ from other Verbes? |
A16869 | Q. Whereof may they haue an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | Q. Whereof? |
A16869 | Q. Whereof? |
A16869 | Q. a HOw ends the Genitiue case singular of the fift Declension? |
A16869 | Q. a WHat Adjectiues gouerne a Datiue Case? |
A16869 | Q. a What is the example to decline words of three terminations by? |
A16869 | Q. b Doe not some Superlatiues end in um? |
A16869 | Q. b How many kindes of Participles are there? |
A16869 | Q. b Opus and vsus, when they signifie neede, what case must they haue? |
A16869 | Q. c Doe all words in d us, make the Vocatiue in e? |
A16869 | Q. c How will you decline these? |
A16869 | Seeing you must construe right before you can tell your rule; what order must you obserue in construing of a sentence? |
A16869 | That which onely sheweth a reason true or false: as, Amo, I loue; or else asketh a question: as, Amas tu? |
A16869 | They loued or did loue? |
A16869 | To what end serue these Persons in Pronounes? |
A16869 | To what question doth it answere? |
A16869 | To what question doth it answere? |
A16869 | To what question doth it answere? |
A16869 | To what vse doe Prepositions serue specially? |
A16869 | WHat Adiectiues gouerne an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | WHat Adjectiues gouerne an Ablatiue Case? |
A16869 | WHat Booke doe you learne? |
A16869 | WHat Case must Nounes bee, which betoken part of time? |
A16869 | WHat Case will Gerunds and Supines haue? |
A16869 | WHat Case will a Verbe Passiue haue after him? |
A16869 | WHat Cases are Nounes put in, which signifie space, betweene place and place? |
A16869 | WHat Cases doe Aduerbs gouerne? |
A16869 | WHat Cases doe Interjections require? |
A16869 | WHat Cases doe Pronounes gouern? |
A16869 | WHat Verbes require a Datiue case? |
A16869 | WHat Verbes require a Genitiue case after them? |
A16869 | WHat Verbes require an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | WHat Verbes will haue an Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | WHat are the Rules of Verbes for? |
A16869 | WHat are there moreouer belonging to the Infinitiue Mood? |
A16869 | WHat cases doe Conjunctions gouerne? |
A16869 | WHat cases doe Participles gouerne? |
A16869 | WHat else belongs to a Noune besides Number, Case, Gender, and Declension? |
A16869 | WHat follow next after Genders? |
A16869 | WHat i ● your last part of speech? |
A16869 | WHat is a Case? |
A16869 | WHat is a Coniugation? |
A16869 | WHat is a Gender? |
A16869 | WHat is a Person in a Verbe? |
A16869 | WHat is the fift thing belonging to a Pronoune? |
A16869 | WHat is the meaning of your first special Rule? |
A16869 | WHat is the third Concord? |
A16869 | WHat is then your first Concord? |
A16869 | WHat is your fourth part of speech, vvhich is declined? |
A16869 | WHat is your second Concord betweene? |
A16869 | WHat is your second speciall Rule? |
A16869 | WHat other exceptions haue you, wherein the compound Verbs doe differ from the simple? |
A16869 | WHat rules haue you for Verbes ending in m? |
A16869 | WHat signification hath the first Supine? |
A16869 | WHat words doe you call Diptots? |
A16869 | WHat words doe you call Triptots? |
A16869 | WHere begin your Rules for those which vary their Gender and declining? |
A16869 | WHere begin your rules for Verbs of the thi ● d Coniugation like Lego? |
A16869 | WHere begin your rules for the Heteroclits, called Defectiues? |
A16869 | WHere begins your rule for Adjectiues? |
A16869 | WHere is the Rule for birds, beasts and fishes? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for Supines of Compound Verbes? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for Verbes in or? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for Verbes of the second Coniugation like Doceo? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for Verbes wanting their Preterperfect tenses? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for Verbs which haue two Preterperfect tenses? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for compounds changing the first vowell into i, euery where but in the Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for the Preterperfect tens ● ● of Compound Verbes? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for those which borrowe theire Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | WHere is your Rule for words of the fourth Conjugation, like Audio? |
A16869 | WHether haue Verbes Impersonals any Nominatiue before them, as Personals haue? |
A16869 | WHich are those which you call Aptots? |
A16869 | WHich call you Monoptots? |
A16869 | WHich is the second part of speech? |
A16869 | WHich is the third part of speech? |
A16869 | WHich is your fift part of speech; and the first of those which are vndeclined? |
A16869 | WHich is your second part of speech vndeclined? |
A16869 | WHich is your third part of speech vndeclined? |
A16869 | We haue done with Verbs Personals: to come to Impersonals, how are they declined? |
A16869 | Well; to returne againe to the Rules in order: What cases doe Substantiues gouerne? |
A16869 | What Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | What Adiectiues are of three terminations? |
A16869 | What Aduerbs gouerne a Datiue case? |
A16869 | What Aduerbs require a Genitiue? |
A16869 | What Aduerbs require an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | What Article hath the Common of two? |
A16869 | What Articles hath the Common of three? |
A16869 | What Articles hath the Doubtfull? |
A16869 | What Case doe Reminiscor, obliuiscor, recordor and memini require? |
A16869 | What Case then must that word be, which seemeth in the English to be the Nominatiue case? |
A16869 | What Case vvill Verbes of comparing or exceeding haue? |
A16869 | What Case will Sum haue, when it is put for habeo to haue? |
A16869 | What Case will Verbes haue, which signifie e receiuing, distance or taking away? |
A16869 | What Case, Gender& Number, shall the Adjectiue be, when any of these are his Substantiue? |
A16869 | What Conjunctions doe couple like cases? |
A16869 | What Gender is most worthy in these? |
A16869 | What Genitiue case will they haue? |
A16869 | What Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What Impersonals require a Datiue case? |
A16869 | What Interjections require a Nominatiue case? |
A16869 | What Number and Person must the Verbe be, when a whole sentence, or a peece of a sentence, are the Nominatiue case to the Verbe? |
A16869 | What Participles hath a Verbe Deponent? |
A16869 | What Prepositions are set after their cases? |
A16869 | What Pronounes are of the third declension? |
A16869 | What Tenses are formed of the Preterperfect tense of the Indicatiue Moode? |
A16869 | What Verbes are those? |
A16869 | What Verbes are those? |
A16869 | What Verbes doe especially belong to the rule which haue thus a Datiue case? |
A16869 | What Verbes doe you call Meditatiues? |
A16869 | What Verbes end in or? |
A16869 | What Verbes in o,? |
A16869 | What Verbs end in m? |
A16869 | What a Datiue? |
A16869 | What a Verbe is that? |
A16869 | What a Vocatiue? |
A16869 | What an( a) Accusatiue? |
A16869 | What are all such Adjectiues of three Articles declined like? |
A16869 | What are then the notes or marks in English, to know a Noune Substantiue by? |
A16869 | What are these Primitiues called besides? |
A16869 | What are these called? |
A16869 | What are these called? |
A16869 | What are these terminations, mi, ni, pi, qui, made? |
A16869 | What are these three declined like? |
A16869 | What are they declined like? |
A16869 | What are those Nounes tearmed properly? |
A16869 | What are those declined like? |
A16869 | What belongeth it to? |
A16869 | What belongs it to? |
A16869 | What belongs it to? |
A16869 | What belongs it to? |
A16869 | What booke is that? |
A16869 | What call you a Declension? |
A16869 | What call you the Comparatiue? |
A16869 | What case is Comes here, and why? |
A16869 | What case is virtutis, and why? |
A16869 | What case must the vvorde which signifieth the price which any thing cost, be put into, after Verbes? |
A16869 | What case will Adjectiues haue which signifie desire, knowledge, remembrance, ignorance or forgetting, and the like? |
A16869 | What cases doe Participles gouerne, when they are so changed into Nounes? |
A16869 | What cases doe Verbs require, which are compounded with Prepositions? |
A16869 | What cases doe they serue to? |
A16869 | What cases of the person haue all Verbs Impersonals of the Passiue voice, properly? |
A16869 | What cases will verbs Impersonals haue after them? |
A16869 | What common Nounes, or names of places, signifying in or at a place, are in the same manner put in the Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What differ your Persons in Verbs, from Persons in Nounes and Pronounes? |
A16869 | What difference is there betweene quod and quid? |
A16869 | What doe the compounds of sto make? |
A16869 | What doth a Participle of the Future in rus, signifie or betoken? |
A16869 | What doth a Verbe Personall agree with? |
A16869 | What doth i ● take of a Noune onely, or seuerally? |
A16869 | What doth it belong to? |
A16869 | What doth it belong to? |
A16869 | What doth it betoken or signifie? |
A16869 | What doth it betoken? |
A16869 | What doth it follow? |
A16869 | What doth it take of both of them together? |
A16869 | What else must be made by the Gerund in do? |
A16869 | What for Edo? |
A16869 | What hath it ioyned with it in Latine? |
A16869 | What if it be a Noune of Multitude of the Singular Number? |
A16869 | What if it haue respect to moe things then one? |
A16869 | What if the Adjectiue haue respect but to one thing alone( as to one sentence, or one peece of a sentence) vvhat Gender and number must it be? |
A16869 | What if the sentence be made by the Verbe Actiue, in steed of the Passiue? |
A16869 | What if there be not all these kindes of words in a sentence? |
A16869 | What if these words be put with Substantiues? |
A16869 | What if they belong both to one thing? |
A16869 | What if they haue an Accusatiue case before them, as Infinitiue Moodes haue commonly? |
A16869 | What if you haue moe Verbs then one in a sentence, which of them is the principall Verbe? |
A16869 | What if your Verbe be of the Infinitiue Moode, must it haue a Nominatiue case before it? |
A16869 | What is Comparison? |
A16869 | What is Lo made? |
A16869 | What is Vo made? |
A16869 | What is a Conjunction? |
A16869 | What is a Noune Adjectiue declined with? |
A16869 | What is a Noune Adjectiue? |
A16869 | What is a Noune Substantiue Common? |
A16869 | What is a Noune Substantiue? |
A16869 | What is a Noune? |
A16869 | What is a Participle? |
A16869 | What is a Preposition? |
A16869 | What is a Pronoune? |
A16869 | What is a Tense? |
A16869 | What is a Verbe? |
A16869 | What is an Aduerbe? |
A16869 | What is an Article? |
A16869 | What is an Impersonall? |
A16869 | What is an Interjection? |
A16869 | What is ci made? |
A16869 | What is cio made? |
A16869 | What is d ● o made? |
A16869 | What is di made? |
A16869 | What is do made in the Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | What is gi made? |
A16869 | What is gio made? |
A16869 | What is go made in the Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | What is ho made? |
A16869 | What is it formed of? |
A16869 | What is it formed of? |
A16869 | What is it put after? |
A16869 | What is it to increase or be diminished? |
A16869 | What is li made? |
A16869 | What is mo made? |
A16869 | What is no made in the Preterperfect tense? |
A16869 | What is pio made? |
A16869 | What is po made? |
A16869 | What is psi made? |
A16869 | What is quo turned into? |
A16869 | What is ri made? |
A16869 | What is rio made? |
A16869 | What is ro made? |
A16869 | What is sco made? |
A16869 | What is si made? |
A16869 | What is so made? |
A16869 | What is that, to be put acquisitiuely? |
A16869 | What is the Article of the Neuter Gender? |
A16869 | What is the Epicene Gender declined vvith? |
A16869 | What is the Gerund in dum vsed after? |
A16869 | What is the Indicatiue? |
A16869 | What is the Latine of the Participle of the present tense formed of? |
A16869 | What is the Singular Number? |
A16869 | What is the Superlatiue? |
A16869 | What is the chiefe benefit of this perfect readinesse, in declining and conjugating? |
A16869 | What is the common exception from all Nounes? |
A16869 | What is the common signe to knowe it by? |
A16869 | What is the exception for the Compoundes of Facio? |
A16869 | What is the exception for the compounds of lego? |
A16869 | What is the fift exception? |
A16869 | What is the first Person? |
A16869 | What is the first exception? |
A16869 | What is the first exception? |
A16869 | What is the first exception? |
A16869 | What is the first? |
A16869 | What is the fourth exception? |
A16869 | What is the last exception? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of Mascula in er, seu venter,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of Mascula sunt etiam polysyllaba in n,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of it? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that exception? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule, Haec sed üi mutant in sum,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of that? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the first rule, Foeminei generis si ● hyperdis ● yllab ● n,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the first rule, Mascula dicuntur,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the last rule, Su ● t quae deficiunt,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the second Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the third Rule? |
A16869 | What is the meaning of the third rule, Mascula in er, or,& os,& c? |
A16869 | What is the meaning? |
A16869 | What is the meaning? |
A16869 | What is the meaning? |
A16869 | What is the meaning? |
A16869 | What is the obseruation of the compounds of pasco? |
A16869 | What is the reason of it? |
A16869 | What is the second Person? |
A16869 | What is the second exception? |
A16869 | What is the second exception? |
A16869 | What is the signe of the Comparatiue degree? |
A16869 | What is the signe of the Datiue case? |
A16869 | What is the signe of the Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What is the third Person? |
A16869 | What is the third exception? |
A16869 | What is the vowell of the first Conjugation to know it by? |
A16869 | What is the way to know them? |
A16869 | What is their signe to knowe them by? |
A16869 | What is then the difference betweene a Noune and a Verbe? |
A16869 | What is then the vse of Conjunctions? |
A16869 | What is ti made? |
A16869 | What is tio made? |
A16869 | What is to made? |
A16869 | What is vi made? |
A16869 | What is xi made? |
A16869 | What is your example of the first Declension? |
A16869 | What is your generall rule, when the word going before the Verbe, and the word comming after the Verbe, belong both to one thing? |
A16869 | What is your last exception? |
A16869 | What is your obseruation for the compoundes of Nosco? |
A16869 | What is your obseruation of the Compounds of pario? |
A16869 | What is your rule for all Adiectiues of three terminations, like bonus, a, um? |
A16869 | What is your rule for the Compounds of plico? |
A16869 | What is your rule for the compounds of placeo? |
A16869 | What is your rule for them? |
A16869 | What is your second exception? |
A16869 | What is üi made? |
A16869 | What is üo made? |
A16869 | What is 〈 ◊ 〉 turned into? |
A16869 | What may Participles be changed into? |
A16869 | What may a Verbe Actiue be made? |
A16869 | What may the Adjectiues, dignus, indignus, and contentus, haue in stead of their Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | What may the same Gerund in di be vsed after also? |
A16869 | What may this Supine be turned into? |
A16869 | What mean you by that, when you say, it may indifferently accord with either of them? |
A16869 | What meane you by Apposition, when you say a Preposition is set before in Apposition? |
A16869 | What meane you by Composition, when you say a Preposition is set before in Composition? |
A16869 | What meane you by Concords? |
A16869 | What meane you by Construction? |
A16869 | What meane you by Heteroclits? |
A16869 | What meane you by Mascula nomina in a dicuntur,& c? |
A16869 | What meane you by Personall? |
A16869 | What meane you by a Casuall word? |
A16869 | What meane you by a Datiue of the Dooer? |
A16869 | What meane you by a Person? |
A16869 | What meane you by a degree of Comparison? |
A16869 | What meane you by a thing absolutely, without excesse? |
A16869 | What meane you by absolute? |
A16869 | What meane you by an Introduction of the eyght parts of speech? |
A16869 | What meane you by an oblique case? |
A16869 | What meane you by construe? |
A16869 | What meane you by termination? |
A16869 | What meane you by that rule? |
A16869 | What meane you by that, To increase flat? |
A16869 | What meane you by that, To increase sharp or long? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by that? |
A16869 | What meane you by the Antecedent? |
A16869 | What meane you by the Construction of the eight parts of speech? |
A16869 | What meane you by those words,* In speech? |
A16869 | What meane you, when you say, a Noune Adjectiue is that can not stand by it selfe? |
A16869 | What must the Relatiue haue? |
A16869 | What must the Verbe haue to agree with? |
A16869 | What must you doe here first? |
A16869 | What must you take next? |
A16869 | What next? |
A16869 | What next? |
A16869 | What of a Verbe alone? |
A16869 | What of the fourth? |
A16869 | What of the second? |
A16869 | What of the third? |
A16869 | What other Adjectiues gouerne an Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | What other Adjectiues? |
A16869 | What other Nounes are so put? |
A16869 | What other Verbes besides require a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What other Verbes require a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What other Verbes require an Ablatiue case properly? |
A16869 | What other Verbes yet require a Genitiue case? |
A16869 | What other words are vsed after Verbes, of price, in stead of their Casuall words? |
A16869 | What other? |
A16869 | What others Verbes haue such Cases after them, as they haue before them? |
A16869 | What parts of speech doth it take part of? |
A16869 | What say you then of malum, signifying in a mischiefe, is it not a perfect voice? |
A16869 | What serues this exāple for chiefly? |
A16869 | What signe hath it? |
A16869 | What signe hath it? |
A16869 | What signes hath it? |
A16869 | What signes hath it? |
A16869 | What signes hath it? |
A16869 | What signes hath it? |
A16869 | What signes haue they to know them by? |
A16869 | What signes may it be knowne by? |
A16869 | What signification hath the later Supine? |
A16869 | What signification haue they? |
A16869 | What signifies Cuias? |
A16869 | What signifies it? |
A16869 | What signifieth a Participle of the future in dus? |
A16869 | What signifieth the Infinitiue? |
A16869 | What speaketh the Preterimperfect tense of? |
A16869 | What speciall obseruation haue you in that Rule? |
A16869 | What the Adjectiue? |
A16869 | What then doth that rule of the Pronounes( These Genitiue cases of the Primitiues) teach? |
A16869 | What then? |
A16869 | What three cases are those? |
A16869 | What time doth a Participle of the Preter tense signifie? |
A16869 | What time doth it signifie? |
A16869 | What time doth it signifie? |
A16869 | What time doth it signifie? |
A16869 | What time doth the Present tense speake of? |
A16869 | What time speakes the Future tense of? |
A16869 | What time speakes the Preterperfect tense of? |
A16869 | What time speakes the Preterpluperfect tense of? |
A16869 | What tokens haue such Verbes after them? |
A16869 | What word then must you take first? |
A16869 | What words are of the third Person? |
A16869 | What words are those? |
A16869 | When Participles are thus changed into Nounes, what are they called? |
A16869 | When Sum hath after him a Nominatiue case, and a Datiue; what Case may the Nominatiue be turned into? |
A16869 | When a deed is signified to be done of many, the verb beeing a verb Neuter; what may be done elegantly? |
A16869 | When an English is giuen to be made in Latine, what must you doe first? |
A16869 | When any of these, except a Casuall worde, are the Antecedent, what Gender and Number must the Relatiue be? |
A16869 | When doth Sub gouerne an Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | When doth Super gouerne an Accusatiue? |
A16869 | When doth in, serue to the Accusatiue case? |
A16869 | When in making or construing Latine, there commeth no Nominatiue case between the Relatiue& the Verb, what case must your Relatiue be? |
A16869 | When is a Noune said to increase? |
A16869 | When is that? |
A16869 | When is that? |
A16869 | When is that? |
A16869 | When must Mei, tui, sui, the Genitiue cases of the Primitiues, be vsed? |
A16869 | When must meus, tuus, suus, be vsed? |
A16869 | When the English word that, may be turned into which, what part of speech is it? |
A16869 | When the Nominatiue endeth in us, how must the Vocatiue end? |
A16869 | When two Substantiues come together betokening diuerse things, what case shall the later be? |
A16869 | When two Verbs come together without any Nominatiue case betweene them, vvhat Moode must the latter be? |
A16869 | When you haue a Relatiue, what must you do to find out his Antecedent? |
A16869 | When you haue a question asked, as by any of these Interrogatiues, in what case must you answere? |
A16869 | When you haue an Adjectiue, how will you finde out his Substantiue? |
A16869 | When you haue found out the principall Verbe, what must you doe then? |
A16869 | When you haue the English of the word R ● s, that is, thing, put with the Adjectiue, what may you doe then? |
A16869 | Where are Nostrum and vestrum vsed? |
A16869 | Where are these set downe together? |
A16869 | Where beginne your rules for gouerning words? |
A16869 | Where beginneth the second part? |
A16869 | Where begins your first part, or the Introduction of the eight parts of speech? |
A16869 | Where is that? |
A16869 | Where is the rule for Neuters singular, Feminines Plurall? |
A16869 | Where is the rule for Neuters singular, which are Masculines onely in the Plurall? |
A16869 | Where is the rule for names of trees? |
A16869 | Where is the rule of sharpe or long Commons? |
A16869 | Where is the rule of them? |
A16869 | Where is your Rule for Adiectiues of diuers declinings and endings? |
A16869 | Where is your Rule? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for Commons not increasing? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for Doubtfuls not increasing? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for Feminines Singular, Neuters Plurall? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for Neuters increasing sharpe or long? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for long Doubtfuls? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for the compounds of pungo? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for the compounds of scalpo, calco, salto? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for those Adiectiues, which are declined like Substantiues, with two Articles onely? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for those which are excepted? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for those which are of diuers Terminations, Declining and Gender? |
A16869 | Where is your rule for those which haue diuers terminations in the Nominatiue case, in the same sense and Gender? |
A16869 | Where is your rule of Neuters not increasing? |
A16869 | Where is your rule of short Neuters? |
A16869 | Where is your rule? |
A16869 | Where must the Nominatiue case be placed, if any of these happen? |
A16869 | Where must you finde this re and ris vvhich you speake of? |
A16869 | Whether can a Verbe Deponent or a Verb Common loose r, to be made Actiues? |
A16869 | Whether hath it Number& Person, as other Moodes haue? |
A16869 | Which are Intransitiue? |
A16869 | Which are Intransitives? |
A16869 | Which are the signes of the Ablatiue case? |
A16869 | Which are those English signes, which you must run in your minde, with these terminations? |
A16869 | Which are those other words which are so declined like nuus, hauing the Genitiue case singular in ïus, and the Datiue in i? |
A16869 | Which are those sixe? |
A16869 | Which are those three weake once? |
A16869 | Which are those? |
A16869 | Which are those? |
A16869 | Which are those? |
A16869 | Which be they? |
A16869 | Which call you Verbes of Gesture? |
A16869 | Which call you the most worthy Gender, in things not apt to haue life? |
A16869 | Which do you call Adjectiues of three Articles? |
A16869 | Which doe you account the speediest way of all, to get and keepe these Verbs? |
A16869 | Which is a Noune Substantiue Proper? |
A16869 | Which is the Article of the Feminine Gender? |
A16869 | Which is the Article of the Masculine Gender? |
A16869 | Which is the Plurall number? |
A16869 | Which is the Positiue degree? |
A16869 | Which is the Substantiue of the most worthie Gender? |
A16869 | Which is the first exception? |
A16869 | Which is the first exception? |
A16869 | Which is the first? |
A16869 | Which is the fourth? |
A16869 | Which is the place of the Nominatiue? |
A16869 | Which is the second exception? |
A16869 | Which is the second way? |
A16869 | Which is the third exception? |
A16869 | Which is the third exception? |
A16869 | Which is the third exception? |
A16869 | Which is the third? |
A16869 | Which is your Genitiue case, and why? |
A16869 | Which is your second exception? |
A16869 | Which is your second exception? |
A16869 | Which of these is most specially called a Relatiue? |
A16869 | Why are the rest called vndeclined? |
A16869 | Why are these called Persons? |
A16869 | Why are these sixe called Relatiues? |
A16869 | Why are these so compared? |
A16869 | Why are they called Deriuatiues? |
A16869 | Why are they called Primitiues? |
A16869 | Why are they said to be declined? |
A16869 | Why are they set here before the Genders and Declensions? |
A16869 | Why can none of these be the principall Ve ● be? |
A16869 | Why do they belong to the Infinitiue Mood? |
A16869 | Why do you giue a, for the signe of the Nominatiue case; and the, of the Accusatiue? |
A16869 | Why doe you decline them so? |
A16869 | Why doe you not mention any rules for the Vocatiue? |
A16869 | Why doe you say commonly? |
A16869 | Why doe you say, most commonly set before other parts? |
A16869 | Why doth your booke say, The Adjectiue whether it be a Noune, Pronoune or Participle? |
A16869 | Why is it called a Participle? |
A16869 | Why is it called a Pronoune? |
A16869 | Why is it called an Aduerbe? |
A16869 | Why is it called the Subjunctiue Moode? |
A16869 | Why is it called the* Accidence? |
A16869 | Why is it declned here, being a Noune? |
A16869 | Why is that in u called the later Supine? |
A16869 | Why is that in um called the first Supine? |
A16869 | Why is the order changed by these? |
A16869 | Why must these sixe so agree together? |
A16869 | Why must you construe thus first? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why so? |
A16869 | Why? |
A16869 | Why? |
A16869 | Will these euer haue a Nominatiue case after them? |
A16869 | Will these haue a Genitiue case of all words? |
A16869 | With how many Articles is a Noune Substantiue declined? |
A16869 | YOu saide a Verbe was declined with Moode and Tense: what is a Mood? |
A16869 | You said, that your booke did make seauen Genders: are there not seauen simply? |
A16869 | a Q. Doe your Datiues and Ablatiues plurall, end alwaies in is, in this Declension? |
A16869 | cases be of* diuers Persons, with which of them must the Verbe agree in Person? |
A16869 | dost thou loue? |
A16869 | how manie vndeclined? |
A16869 | how many without? |
A16869 | may it agree with any of them? |
A16869 | or dost thou loue? |
A16869 | what Cases must they be? |
A19338 | (*) D l In what thing do I seeme to thee[ to be] negligent? |
A19338 | (*) How many yeeres ● ast thou? |
A19338 | (*) M. Why doth this verbe Possum, want the Future tense of the Infinitive Moode? |
A19338 | (*) MAy I not goe forth together with my brother? |
A19338 | (*) THou never studiest: when wilt thou be(*) a scholar? |
A19338 | (*) What then should I answer to our master, when hee shall* denie that I writ those things? |
A19338 | (*) Why thither? |
A19338 | (*) art thou never about to returne? |
A19338 | (*) but how old art ● ● ou? |
A19338 | (*) dost thou so contemne a thing unestimable? |
A19338 | (*) how comes it to passe, that he dare commit so much money to thee? |
A19338 | (*) how is it done? |
A19338 | (*) is it not lawfull fo ● ● s, or to us? |
A19338 | (*) was I noted? |
A19338 | (*) weeps thy brother? |
A19338 | (*) what wilt thou doe? |
A19338 | (*) what? |
A19338 | (*) whereto, or what ● eed is there? |
A19338 | (*) whether have I beene noted? |
A19338 | (*) why thither? |
A19338 | (*) why writest them ● or? |
A19338 | * A Doest thou aske from whence I know them? |
A19338 | * A. Doest thou kno ● what the proverbe* meaneth? |
A19338 | * A. Shall I call one l or other companion out of the street? |
A19338 | * ANd art thou returned onely to day from the b farme- house? |
A19338 | * Also doest thou? |
A19338 | * And what, doest thou see? |
A19338 | * Are all risen? |
A19338 | * Are there lice to you? |
A19338 | * Are there witnesse ● to thee? |
A19338 | * At what hour ●? |
A19338 | * At what houre? |
A19338 | * At what play? |
A19338 | * But what hast thou done from that time thou hast risen? |
A19338 | * But what ● ● are doth thy bro ● ● er, or doth he goe 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A19338 | * C. Do ye then so dine early? |
A19338 | * Canst thou say it? |
A19338 | * Cicero: but Master, whither shall we* goe? |
A19338 | * Doe you then r permit us that wee may play? |
A19338 | * Doest thou then remember them? |
A19338 | * Dost thou hold it? |
A19338 | * FOr what cause art thou so* joyfull? |
A19338 | * For other matters, hath he done his l businesse* well* according to his mind? |
A19338 | * H. Thou hast hitte the nayle on the head; but what should I doe? |
A19338 | * H. Who shall helpe thee in the buying? |
A19338 | * HAst thou good store of bread? |
A19338 | * Hast thou beene at the schoole to day? |
A19338 | * Hast thou committed any thing to memorie? |
A19338 | * Hast thou not beene to day? |
A19338 | * Hath, or doth thy father? |
A19338 | * Have all risen? |
A19338 | * How great a part is there of them? |
A19338 | * How great store of wine is there to you? |
A19338 | * How many are there of them, who are away frō home so many yeares, being tossed in the meane time, by divers chances, by so many* dangers? |
A19338 | * How many parts hath this b speech? |
A19338 | * How* knewest thou* that he had changed his e counsell concerning his f going? |
A19338 | * How[ canst thou] come so soone? |
A19338 | * I Saw thee not to day a in the assembly,* what meaneth that? |
A19338 | * I am already i prepared, now let us go: But is[ your] father at home? |
A19338 | * I was present, but where wast thou? |
A19338 | * IS thy father come to this dais a market? |
A19338 | * Is it drunke nothing in the meane while? |
A19338 | * Is it lawfull to goe forth? |
A19338 | * Is it lawfull to goe ● orth? |
A19338 | * Is it lawfull? |
A19338 | * Is not my eye red unto mee? |
A19338 | * Is shee? |
A19338 | * Is thy brother at home? |
A19338 | * It can scarsely be, that all* should refuse? |
A19338 | * Knowest thou my sisters husband? |
A19338 | * L. Hast thou ever read Virgils o* moretum? |
A19338 | * MAster may I speake a word or two? |
A19338 | * MAy ● go abroad? |
A19338 | * Master, what will you? |
A19338 | * May I have leave to goe home? |
A19338 | * N. Where then[ is he?] |
A19338 | * Nothing more? |
A19338 | * Nothing more? |
A19338 | * Of what walnuts dost thou speak? |
A19338 | * Ought I* to give thee an account? |
A19338 | * P. Doth it please thee that we talke a little r now at our leisure? |
A19338 | * P. Is not this whole houre free for[ our] drinking? |
A19338 | * P. b Wherefore? |
A19338 | * Shouldest thou have done evill for[ thy]* mind sake? |
A19338 | * Therefore how? |
A19338 | * Therefore wh ● dost thou cry out so? |
A19338 | * Therefore what hast thou profited? |
A19338 | * Therefore what was the chiefe cause? |
A19338 | * Therefore why? |
A19338 | * Thou hast scarcely entered the Schoole,* and doest thou already speake of play? |
A19338 | * Thou providest well f for thy selfe, which hast a* regard of the time: but what[ doth] thy father? |
A19338 | * Three h ● lfe pence:* but[ how much hast] thou? |
A19338 | * To the end* to dwell there? |
A19338 | * V. Have we then* leave to play? |
A19338 | * V. Therefore what doest thou prepare ● o doe? |
A19338 | * WAst thou present at morning prayer? |
A19338 | * WAst thou present to day* at the sermon? |
A19338 | * WEnt thy father so away without my knowledge, that I could not speake with him? |
A19338 | * WHat is the matter, that I see thee so f sad? |
A19338 | * WHat meaneth it, that thou hast c been away this whole weeke? |
A19338 | * WHat* dwelling place hast thou? |
A19338 | * WHen dost thou expect the returne of thy father? |
A19338 | * WHen returnedst thou from home? |
A19338 | * WHy art thou so a jocund? |
A19338 | * WHy doest thou laugh? |
A19338 | * Was none set over you, whilest you did breake your fast? |
A19338 | * Went hee on foot, or ● n horse- backe? |
A19338 | * What and I will? |
A19338 | * What is done? |
A19338 | * What is it? |
A19338 | * What of that booke- seller h that goeth about from market to market? |
A19338 | * What shall I gain by that? |
A19338 | * What so? |
A19338 | * What t store of wine have you? |
A19338 | * What will this to it selfe? |
A19338 | * When ● s hee to returne? |
A19338 | * Where should I aske? |
A19338 | * Whether nothing more? |
A19338 | * Which( nounes) are to be declined to day? |
A19338 | * Why doest thou a cry out so oft? |
A19338 | * Why so? |
A19338 | * Why then dost thou exclaime so? |
A19338 | * Why then hast thou done it? |
A19338 | * Why thither? |
A19338 | * Wilt thou Honoratus r give s an example* for thy honours sake? |
A19338 | * Would I perswade thee to deceive thy father? |
A19338 | * a HAst thou gotten thy lesson without booke? |
A19338 | * a WHen wilt thou goe home? |
A19338 | * and what hast thou committed to memorie, or what dost thou remember? |
A19338 | * are to you? |
A19338 | * art thou returned? |
A19338 | * as I otherwhere had,& c. s whether or no? |
A19338 | * before the fift( houre)* whether have the rest risen now? |
A19338 | * broughtest thou him not? |
A19338 | * comest thou? |
A19338 | * doest thou not remember that our master is* wo nt to say to us so oft,* that it is God alone which teacheth good things? |
A19338 | * dost thou covet to goe forth? |
A19338 | * dost thou shew me? |
A19338 | * e Verily, thou* knew it long since H. Who f could be ignorant of that, which is so g vulgar? |
A19338 | * elected t canst thou helpe me? |
A19338 | * fearedst thou? |
A19338 | * for cause of what matter? |
A19338 | * from whence ● ast thou knowne his? |
A19338 | * from whence, how? |
A19338 | * g how fell that out? |
A19338 | * had he come? |
A19338 | * had ● t fallen out? |
A19338 | * hast thou left it? |
A19338 | * hast thou not age enough and wisedome* for that matter? |
A19338 | * hast thou not asked leave of going forth? |
A19338 | * hast thou not heard? |
A19338 | * hast thou not? |
A19338 | * have you lice? |
A19338 | * he hath numbred it? |
A19338 | * how many years old is he? |
A19338 | * how much did it cost? |
A19338 | * how much of grapes? |
A19338 | * how much, what store? |
A19338 | * how much? |
A19338 | * how oft doth any one that? |
A19338 | * i And these thus farre: but k whose words are these? |
A19338 | * i MAster may not I and* my cousin goe home? |
A19338 | * is he to goe with thee? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull for m ● to goe forth? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull for me? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull for 〈 ◊ 〉 to goe forth? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull to goe abroad? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull? |
A19338 | * is it lawfull? |
A19338 | * is it not lawfull for me to,& c. s What need hast thou to goe forth? |
A19338 | * is whatsoever is contrary to Gods word a sinne? |
A19338 | * it was sit downe( of them) i when rose they? |
A19338 | * of how much did it stand? |
A19338 | * or hast thou returned emptie? |
A19338 | * oughtest thou to doe evill? |
A19338 | * reason, g is he in health? |
A19338 | * recoveredst thou it? |
A19338 | * so very little store? |
A19338 | * that thing? |
A19338 | * that we are forbidden* to speake a low among our selves? |
A19338 | * thou comming againe hither hast brought? |
A19338 | * to his,& c.* ascendest thou? |
A19338 | * understand you all these things? |
A19338 | * unprepared to the schoole to morrow x shall we doe? |
A19338 | * us to prattle, or talke, d why? |
A19338 | * v Master have I not sayd well? |
A19338 | * what dost thou play the Philosopher even so? |
A19338 | * what else can I? |
A19338 | * what else should be lawfull? |
A19338 | * what gaine shall I make? |
A19338 | * what good hast thou done then? |
A19338 | * what hadst thou gone thither? |
A19338 | * what herbs hast thou gathered at length? |
A19338 | * what houre hast thou ● isen? |
A19338 | * what is a more pleasant message? |
A19338 | * what is that needfull? |
A19338 | * what matter is there to thee? |
A19338 | * what meaneth this so soda ● ne change ▪ diddest thou not speake even now b of play? |
A19338 | * what need is to thee of money? |
A19338 | * what needeth thy diligence, or helpe? |
A19338 | * what the moretum? |
A19338 | * what the pudding made of milke, cheese and herbs do? |
A19338 | * what then? |
A19338 | * what thither? |
A19338 | * what thither? |
A19338 | * what thither? |
A19338 | * what thither? |
A19338 | * what will it to it selfe? |
A19338 | * what will this to it selfe? |
A19338 | * what( sayest thou) at length? |
A19338 | * what? |
A19338 | * when hast thou returned? |
A19338 | * whether dost thou interpret? |
A19338 | * whether is any sicke? |
A19338 | * whether or no saidest thou not? |
A19338 | * whether will you any thing? |
A19338 | * whither? |
A19338 | * who had the assembly, or who made the sermon? |
A19338 | * who is a more pleasant messenger then of the grace of God, which Christ hath brought us by the Gospell? |
A19338 | * who is a tailour to thee? |
A19338 | * who taught thee those things? |
A19338 | * why doest thou hold thy peace? |
A19338 | * why doest thou not buy? |
A19338 | * why dost thou trouble mee? |
A19338 | * why hadst thou gone forth? |
A19338 | * why hast thou not tarried? |
A19338 | * why should I not beleeve it? |
A19338 | * why so not? |
A19338 | * why tooke he not himself home? |
A19338 | * will give my diligence, or do my be ● ●(*) Is it not lawfull for ● e to goe forth? |
A19338 | * will you also your stickings to bee noted? |
A19338 | * with what disease did shee labour? |
A19338 | * ● earch, or picke[ our] garments to us* what is this? |
A19338 | A But whither goest thou now? |
A19338 | A Hath he written nothing to you in the meane* time? |
A19338 | A How long hath he been away? |
A19338 | A Therefore what should he doe who hath no hope in Christ? |
A19338 | A What if thy father have sayled into l Brittaine for* m trafick? |
A19338 | A What saith[ thy] mother? |
A19338 | A Where I pray thee? |
A19338 | A c Were it not better after supper? |
A19338 | A † Went he not to Paris this summer? |
A19338 | A* Who can doe amisse who hath placed all his hope in God? |
A19338 | A. C. WIlt thou repeate thy lesson with me? |
A19338 | A. Did ● ● thou not thinke y that I asked of thee thy drinking in ea ● nest? |
A19338 | A. Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | A. Doest thou not know c that we are forbidden to buy any fruits? |
A19338 | A. Doest thou so alwaies? |
A19338 | A. Dost thou aske? |
A19338 | A. Doth it so seeme to thee? |
A19338 | A. Doth not thy father give thee? |
A19338 | A. Hadst thou[ it] at length? |
A19338 | A. Hast thou thought what Art* already may like thee especially? |
A19338 | A. I verely beleeve it, and he wil keep him* still: but when will he returne? |
A19338 | A. Knowest thou no ● our f scholasticall lawes? |
A19338 | A. Knowest thou not wherefore? |
A19338 | A. Knowest thou not? |
A19338 | A. Oh thou little foole, and doest thou talke in the meane time? |
A19338 | A. Shall I change my shooes? |
A19338 | A. Thou also Bernard, farewell: but tell mee, I pray thee, how much money* thou hast need of? |
A19338 | A. Thou hast not bought it a ill, i ● is good, but thou hast not b folded it* well ▪ hast thou parchment? |
A19338 | A. Wast thou present when he went? |
A19338 | A. Wh ● t[ did] he? |
A19338 | A. Wilt thou* that I shall be thy companion? |
A19338 | A. bb From what time? |
A19338 | A. c By whom? |
A19338 | A. c What ● ● serie doth* trouble thee? |
A19338 | A. c Whereto? |
A19338 | A. d What wouldest thou then? |
A19338 | A. r Why so? |
A19338 | ARe those b pens to be sold which thou carryest about? |
A19338 | AT* what a clocke rose thou to day? |
A19338 | And what* hath our speech had, which the t Monitor could* v have found fault with, if be chance( as he is wo nt) he had* watched us* out of wiles? |
A19338 | And* did he deliver it[ thee?] |
A19338 | Answer now, why hast thou not brought bread from home? |
A19338 | Are all these things true? |
A19338 | Are all things true, which thou* tellest mee? |
A19338 | Are not the father and mother contained under the name of a parent? |
A19338 | Are you lousie? |
A19338 | Art thou so secure? |
A19338 | As much:* e but for how much art thou* f boarded daily? |
A19338 | Aske[ thy] school- fellowes: for if* every one should aske me concerning matters* d spoken of me openly, I pray thee, when would there be an end? |
A19338 | At what a clocke? |
A19338 | B There is nothing, neither more safe, nor more certaine then this; but what time doest thou thinke that he may* be gone unto c fitly? |
A19338 | B Therfore* my good Florence tell me, what shall I doe? |
A19338 | B What is that? |
A19338 | B What* f preface shall I use then? |
A19338 | B Why not? |
A19338 | B Why should I buy[ it?] |
A19338 | B* Hoe, wretch, wretch that I am, what shall I do? |
A19338 | B* Who can judge otherwise? |
A19338 | B. Askedst thou nothing of him? |
A19338 | B. Callest thou me ● oole then? |
A19338 | B. Canst thou* lend mee some? |
A19338 | B. Doe I s affirme this to my selfe? |
A19338 | B. Doest thou aske where they are, as if c indeed I ought to keepe them d for thee? |
A19338 | B. Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | B. Doest thou not know r how to mingle it? |
A19338 | B. Doest thou s laugh at me? |
A19338 | B. Hast thou asked leave? |
A19338 | B. Hast thou not a chamber to thy selfe? |
A19338 | B. Hast thou* none? |
A19338 | B. I know* well enough ▪ but why doth he command? |
A19338 | B. I will doe it M. What wilt thou say to them? |
A19338 | B. O what* c a good turne shalt thou doe mee? |
A19338 | B. Peradventure that is the cause: but what then? |
A19338 | B. Shew it me: I acknowledge it aa mine: where hast thou found it? |
A19338 | B. Thou doest well, but what doest thou p iudge? |
A19338 | B. Thou now speakest friendly, but when shall I restore them? |
A19338 | B. Thou sayest well, but r who amongst many doth that? |
A19338 | B. Vpon what place? |
A19338 | B. WHither a goest thou now alone? |
A19338 | B. WIlt thou b breake thy fast with mee? |
A19338 | B. WIlt thou[ that] we repeat together? |
A19338 | B. Wherefore camest thou not unto his Inne after dinner? |
A19338 | B. Wherefore? |
A19338 | B. Wherfore sayest thou the name of a man? |
A19338 | B. Wilt thou answer concerning meats? |
A19338 | B. Wilt thou that I speake to my father that he may send for thee? |
A19338 | B. Yea doest thou aske? |
A19338 | B. a I will verely: but what kinde of repeating shal we use? |
A19338 | B. a WHy doth not Peter come into the schoole? |
A19338 | B. b Why should I not have heard? |
A19338 | B. d Why doest thou marvell so much? |
A19338 | B. i Master, what? |
A19338 | B. p Is it not then lawfull to play? |
A19338 | B. wilt thou* lend it me? |
A19338 | B. xx If thou hadst premeditated[ them] how doest thou poure so plainely y Castalian* streames, what new fury is this? |
A19338 | Because there wa ● no body at our house who could give me ▪ L. But why doest thou not take it? |
A19338 | But Christ commandeth f evill to be recompensed with good? |
A19338 | But I pray thee tell[ me] was there a frequent c auditory? |
A19338 | But I pray thee what doe we thinke vpon? |
A19338 | But I pray thee what need is there that the monitour know that? |
A19338 | But are there not others, of the same accent? |
A19338 | But by what h tokens durst he give it thee? |
A19338 | But goe to, let us returne to our purpose: of whom hast thou bought this Terence? |
A19338 | But hast thou brought nothing* else? |
A19338 | But my Paul hear[ mee:] o doth not the worship of GOD p containe all these things? |
A19338 | But say, I pray thee,* hath thy father given thee no money? |
A19338 | But tell me r in earnest, canst thou doe so great matters? |
A19338 | But tell me* I pray thee, hast thou any meate? |
A19338 | But tell mee plainly k what were those medicines? |
A19338 | But that I may returne to the matter, didst thou* reprove[ me] in good earnest, for that I had asked no money of my father? |
A19338 | But that we may come to the matter, what wilt thou doe with k that money? |
A19338 | But to the matter, wilt thou go forth now? |
A19338 | But u tell[ mee] uu what doth[ thy] x Tutor need thy* helpe? |
A19338 | But u what is* the cause? |
A19338 | But what do the l chances and perils of other men comfort me? |
A19338 | But what doest thou perswade[ me] concerning my breakefast? |
A19338 | But what doest thou thinke concerning this p our conference? |
A19338 | But what doest thou? |
A19338 | But what g meanest thou? |
A19338 | But what if the correction be unjust? |
A19338 | But what is fortune? |
A19338 | But what meanest thou? |
A19338 | But what* time* hath his father i appointed him? |
A19338 | But what? |
A19338 | But what[ is] this? |
A19338 | But when wilt thou bring better quils? |
A19338 | But when wilt thou give[ them] me? |
A19338 | But whence hadst thou those pease? |
A19338 | But wherfore doest thou aske that? |
A19338 | But whether can any good thing be made of two evils? |
A19338 | But who shall teach me those words? |
A19338 | But why doe we* defer to goe to heare the lesson? |
A19338 | But why doest thou* extoll me being* unworthy, with so great praises? |
A19338 | But why hast thou y omitted the Participle z present of the verbe Possum, seeing it is in use, ● otens potentis? |
A19338 | But* doest thou not thinke that I have spoken sufficiently concerning the vintages? |
A19338 | By what right are our lawes guided? |
A19338 | By what right? |
A19338 | C I have all which thou hast f numbred, besides Cato, Terence, and g Tullies Epistles; for why should I have bookes which are not read in our forme? |
A19338 | C Sayest thou peradventure? |
A19338 | C To what end( I pray thee) c[ doth it] that? |
A19338 | C Why so I pray thee? |
A19338 | C what? |
A19338 | C. A question* unmeet for a man; for who wold spare wine here? |
A19338 | C. And e what understood ● thou* of those letters? |
A19338 | C. And* knewest thou[ them] all? |
A19338 | C. At least what* come to[ thy] memory? |
A19338 | C. But doest thou not heare* that we are called to supper? |
A19338 | C. But goe to; tell mee in earnest, have I not* intertained thee sumptuously? |
A19338 | C. But how much of every one? |
A19338 | C. But what books hast thou? |
A19338 | C. But* I pray thee what was[ his] conclusion? |
A19338 | C. D. WHen wilt thou dine? |
A19338 | C. Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | C. Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | C. Doest thou judge so, O thou severe judge? |
A19338 | C. Doest thou thinke r that all the guests were delighted with that* strange excesse of expence? |
A19338 | C. F. IS there nothing that a we may repeate to[ our] Master? |
A19338 | C. From whence wilt thou have afterwards? |
A19338 | C. From whence? |
A19338 | C. From ● hence are they d dated? |
A19338 | C. Hast not thou thy selfe heard them* very oft of our Preacher? |
A19338 | C. Hast thou a* made[ thy] excuse to the master? |
A19338 | C. Hast thou brought* store? |
A19338 | C. Hast thou h turned it already? |
A19338 | C. Hast thou not heard it ▪* very often? |
A19338 | C. Hoe,(*) thou troublest me: wilt thou any thing? |
A19338 | C. How couldest thou remember so many? |
A19338 | C. How knowest thou the day? |
A19338 | C. How long hath thy mother beene sicke? |
A19338 | C. How? |
A19338 | C. How? |
A19338 | C. I doubt* not thereof, but by whose* helpe? |
A19338 | C. I had forgotten[ them] C. Art thou wo nt* so to forget[ thy] breakefast, or[ thy] drinking? |
A19338 | C. I know not certainly, peradventure to morrow, but wherefore dost thou aske* that? |
A19338 | C. It doth* not now come to my minde;[ yet] I say, what* good doth it to talke? |
A19338 | C. Nothing more? |
A19338 | C. O i thou foolish[ boy] what sayest thou? |
A19338 | C. Of whom boughtest thou them? |
A19338 | C. Of whom therefore? |
A19338 | C. Oh what is this? |
A19338 | C. Sayest thou so? |
A19338 | C. What booke 〈 ◊ 〉 doest thou seeke? |
A19338 | C. What day? |
A19338 | C. What did he answer thee? |
A19338 | C. What hindreth? |
A19338 | C. What if my Vncle o will that wee* tarry* the latter wedding day? |
A19338 | C. What is that? |
A19338 | C. What remedies did he use in curing thy mother? |
A19338 | C. What then? |
A19338 | C. What † wouldest thou know c concerning it? |
A19338 | C. What* concerneth it me to know? |
A19338 | C. What, dost thou think* that I care? |
A19338 | C. What? |
A19338 | C. When receivedst thou them? |
A19338 | C. When receivedst thou them? |
A19338 | C. When to be gg repeated? |
A19338 | C. When was that? |
A19338 | C. When? |
A19338 | C. Who brought th ● m? |
A19338 | C. Who brought[ them?] |
A19338 | C. Who c cured her? |
A19338 | C. Who is he? |
A19338 | C. Who shall bring it? |
A19338 | C. Why art thou so curious an asker of questions? |
A19338 | C. Why did''st thou d dissemble? |
A19338 | C. Why doe we then* tarry? |
A19338 | C. Why doest thou exclaime so? |
A19338 | C. Why dost thou not go unto our ● aster? |
A19338 | C. Why* wentest thou abroad? |
A19338 | C. Yea, the f greatest: but what g wouldest thou doe? |
A19338 | C. b Wilt thou lend me? |
A19338 | C. ll Doth it seeme so to thee? |
A19338 | C. ● here hadst thou left it? |
A19338 | C.* And what hearbs hast thou gathered? |
A19338 | C.* At what of the clocke? |
A19338 | C.* Hath she b recovered? |
A19338 | C.* How knowest thou these things? |
A19338 | C.* I am very seldome present · D. How art thou f excused? |
A19338 | C.* I know[ how] to read, to write, to speak Latine, at least meanly:(*) dd what need I so much knowledge? |
A19338 | C.* It may suffice thee, if I shall* make one for the present: c are they new? |
A19338 | C.* May we not therefore utter z any word in English? |
A19338 | C.* Not without cause: but n for how much? |
A19338 | C.* Of what disease* was she sick? |
A19338 | C.* Shall wee have some good thing* provided against Supper? |
A19338 | C.* There is no cause that thou shouldest give me[ thanks:] but hadst thou used it sufficiently? |
A19338 | C.* What good doe those? |
A19338 | C.* What good will that doe? |
A19338 | C.* What must* the Moretum[ do:] shall we not at least taste of it? |
A19338 | C.* What then? |
A19338 | C.* Where was thy father in the meane time? |
A19338 | C.* Whereto wentest thou thither? |
A19338 | C.* c Whereto? |
A19338 | C.* z But at what* time returnedst thou into the schoole? |
A19338 | CAnst thou not a lend me* some mone ● N. How much doest thou b desire? |
A19338 | CAperone from whence commest thou? |
A19338 | Colognerius,& c. FRom whence dost a thou returne? |
A19338 | Concerning what matter wilt thou propound[ them?] |
A19338 | Concerning what matter? |
A19338 | Corderius: wilt thou that I t go to call them? |
A19338 | Cujus est hic liber? |
A19338 | D But what do we think? |
A19338 | D Hast thou never read, I have seene l[ him] to live in hope, who was about to die? |
A19338 | D Hopest thou then for nothing? |
A19338 | D I indeed doe praise thee: but goe to, tell me in good earnest, is the a probation of our forme b done? |
A19338 | D In what chapter? |
A19338 | D Since † what time art thou made a y smattering divine? |
A19338 | D Therefore what is to bee done? |
A19338 | D Thou saydest even now that we were to trust only* in adversity:* what doest thou account* adversitie? |
A19338 | D What are u those(*) I pray thee? |
A19338 | D What if I shall not understand the place h by selfe? |
A19338 | D What if thou shalt bee present with me? |
A19338 | D What is done? |
A19338 | D What[ saying] I pray thee? |
A19338 | D Who f exempted thee? |
A19338 | D Why not? |
A19338 | D Why so? |
A19338 | D With what weapons? |
A19338 | D dd What the* probation? |
A19338 | D f What good will that doe? |
A19338 | D g What if I did hope? |
A19338 | D x What, that they doe also mock at admonitions? |
A19338 | D z Are then the lessons had now a in earnest? |
A19338 | D(*) have then all the i children of the Senators such a priviledge? |
A19338 | D* And where are they found? |
A19338 | D* Under what captain? |
A19338 | D. A. WIlt thou* write me out[ my] lesson? |
A19338 | D. But when aa commanded he? |
A19338 | D. But(*) what do we linger to betake our selves into the* schoole? |
A19338 | D. D. N. P. At what* a clock began he? |
A19338 | D. Doth it please you to heare me? |
A19338 | D. E. WHither doest thou a make hast? |
A19338 | D. For hee alone is the searcher of the hearts, but(*) what then? |
A19338 | D. Hoe thou fine little m dainty boy, hast thou now n* so learned a mouth? |
A19338 | D. How understandest thou* this? |
A19338 | D. I am forgetfull: what should I doe? |
A19338 | D. It is flesh, but what flesh? |
A19338 | D. It may be, but( I pray you) goe on to teach mee: what doth this Noune signifie in English? |
A19338 | D. Master, doe you permit then, that I z may be away? |
A19338 | D. O wretch, hast thou eaten them? |
A19338 | D. P.* MAy I be permitted to bee away at two of the clocke? |
A19338 | D. Wh ● not the whole? |
A19338 | D. What day d receivedst thou letters? |
A19338 | D. What did[ thy] Letters containe besides? |
A19338 | D. What fortune k dost thou tell me[ of?] |
A19338 | D. What is needfull? |
A19338 | D. What l* a pleasure shouldest thou doe me? |
A19338 | D. What shall I answer now? |
A19338 | D. What then? |
A19338 | D. What wilt thou? |
A19338 | D. Whe ● ther fresh or salt? |
A19338 | D. Wherfore? |
A19338 | D. Whether fat or leane? |
A19338 | D. Who commanded? |
A19338 | D. Why not? |
A19338 | D. o Wilt thou any thing? |
A19338 | D. r Why so? |
A19338 | D. t Haue many returned already? |
A19338 | D.* Could not thy mother give thee[ thy] dinner, before the returne of[ thy] father from the Senate house? |
A19338 | D.* How is the schoole? |
A19338 | D.* Spakest thou not these words, The e event of play is doubtfull? |
A19338 | D.* We thanke you most courteous Master:* will you any thing* else? |
A19338 | D.* What meaneth this? |
A19338 | DOest thou know what a clocke it is? |
A19338 | DOest thou write in good earnest, or* doest thou play the foole? |
A19338 | DOst thou not remember* that I lent thee paper of late? |
A19338 | Did he not* put it into his booke before? |
A19338 | Do I not satisfie[ my] master? |
A19338 | Doest thou complaine? |
A19338 | Doest thou not* remember the divine precept of Peter the Apostle? |
A19338 | Dost thou now* remember[ those things] which are to be aa repeated at three of the clocke? |
A19338 | Doth it not shame thee to come into the schoole without bookes? |
A19338 | Doth it please you, that about supper time, I doe the same l concerning the other actions of this day? |
A19338 | E F. G. FRancis what dost thou? |
A19338 | E. Certainly the praise and honour* thereof, is due* to our heavenly Father alone: but what doe we now? |
A19338 | E. F. WHy doest thou not write? |
A19338 | E. For whose cause? |
A19338 | E. H ● ● much,[ hast thou] I pray thee? |
A19338 | E. Had he never commended thee? |
A19338 | E. How old then? |
A19338 | E. I goe to supper: b what thou? |
A19338 | E. Oh foole, therefore doest thou esteeme the reward by the price of the thing? |
A19338 | E. Therefore doe yee never speake in English? |
A19338 | E. Therefore what wilt thou doe? |
A19338 | E. Thirteene as I have* heard of my mother:(*) but thou? |
A19338 | E. What if he cōmend thee ▪ that thou maist be beaten* the oftner? |
A19338 | E. What sayest thou? |
A19338 | E. What then? |
A19338 | E. What then? |
A19338 | E. Whatthen? |
A19338 | E. c What concerneth it me? |
A19338 | E. d From whence dost thou gather this? |
A19338 | E. e What[ do] the maids? |
A19338 | E. u For what cause came hee? |
A19338 | E. z Will yee that we say againe, to a confirme[ our] memorie? |
A19338 | E.(*) What do ye with the family? |
A19338 | E.* But how old is thy brother? |
A19338 | E.* What meaneth he by this so* often commendation? |
A19338 | Experience( as it is said commonly) is the d mistresse of things, hast thou[ it?] |
A19338 | F Hoe, what remaineth? |
A19338 | F I say, what is the matter? |
A19338 | F In what then? |
A19338 | F In what,* in theft? |
A19338 | F Master,* i may I speake a word or two unto you? |
A19338 | F Therefore doest thou know* what to doe? |
A19338 | F What d remedy will you ● inde for this e evill? |
A19338 | F What then? |
A19338 | F What[ did your] master, when he saw you p feasting thus? |
A19338 | F Where was it done? |
A19338 | F Whom doest thou suspect? |
A19338 | F Why should I not remember? |
A19338 | F eighteen Italian m crownes which they call now Pistolets G. Why doth he not n inhabit it rather? |
A19338 | F i What †( pray thee) can they alledge? |
A19338 | F m Ah,* thou mayest not so greatly disquiet thy selfe; who were present with thee? |
A19338 | F ▪ What dost thou write? |
A19338 | F* An unhappy breakfast to thee: but what? |
A19338 | F. But how* are wee come so quickly, and m without any wearinesse unto the schoole? |
A19338 | F. But what[ did] he? |
A19338 | F. But when wilt thou o goe againe to the schoole? |
A19338 | F. But when wilt thou restore it? |
A19338 | F. For how much hast thou dined? |
A19338 | F. G. WHere hast thou a taken meat to day? |
A19338 | F. Go to: because* we have now exercised our mindes sufficiently, wilt thou also exercise thy body,* for thy healths sake? |
A19338 | F. How? |
A19338 | F. I doe p remember that well, but q how shall hee know this? |
A19338 | F. I hav ● written now my side: a but thou? |
A19338 | F. I pray thee what[ didst] thou in the meane time? |
A19338 | F. I see enough e what ones they are: how many wilt thou give me for a farthing? |
A19338 | F. In what place? |
A19338 | F. Master, why say you that? |
A19338 | F. Michael* God save thee also, what a clock is it? |
A19338 | F. Therfore why diddest thou aske? |
A19338 | F. Well done, but wither goest thou now? |
A19338 | F. What didst thou there? |
A19338 | F. What doest thou feare? |
A19338 | F. What else? |
A19338 | F. What hindred thee? |
A19338 | F. What l expresse charge* doest thou tell me of? |
A19338 | F. What other thing k could I had bought? |
A19338 | F. What saist thou, six? |
A19338 | F. What then y besides? |
A19338 | F. What, wast thou not present? |
A19338 | F. What[ dictates]? |
A19338 | F. What[ did][ thy] father? |
A19338 | F. When returnedst thou from thence? |
A19338 | F. Why doest thou call me backe? |
A19338 | F. b Indeed is he at hand? |
A19338 | F. d I( as I hope) shall remember it* carefully, will you any thing besides? |
A19338 | F. k Verily, as thou hearest of mee G. l For how much doth he let it? |
A19338 | F.* How I pray you were ye catched? |
A19338 | F.* Let me see them: ah how soft* are they? |
A19338 | F.* Men live* after one way at Paris, after another at Geneva: but there is no need of so many words, l wilt thou give twelve? |
A19338 | F.* thou then recite it? |
A19338 | F.[ It is] most deare, but what* t wouldest thou doe? |
A19338 | FRom whence commest thou? |
A19338 | FRom whence commest thou? |
A19338 | FRom whence commest thou? |
A19338 | FRom whence commest thou? |
A19338 | FRom whence commest thou? |
A19338 | FRom whence doest thou bring that little coat? |
A19338 | FRom whence dost thou come? |
A19338 | FRom whence* cam''st thou even now? |
A19338 | FRom whence* dost thou return? |
A19338 | FRō whence dost thou returne so a blowing? |
A19338 | For we speaking dayly, say thus;* Whose booke is this? |
A19338 | For what c use? |
A19338 | From whence came hee? |
A19338 | From whence hast thou gotten it? |
A19338 | Furthermore, wouldest thou abuse thine owne things? |
A19338 | G But from whence knowest thou these things? |
A19338 | G Hoe, p nothing? |
A19338 | G I see no evill to be in this y dissembling:* Dost thou expound it evilly? |
A19338 | G Oh my Ambrose, how much hast thou g reviued me this day, with this h message concerning* the state of Britain? |
A19338 | G What businesse* haddest thou there? |
A19338 | G What doth* hinder me to sell my things? |
A19338 | G What freedome doest thou meane? |
A19338 | G What if I had hurt[ thee?] |
A19338 | G What is that? |
A19338 | G p And that idolatry* is driven out? |
A19338 | G* Sayest thou, that the Gospell is now in o Britaine? |
A19338 | G* What[ cause] is there then, that wee doubt any more? |
A19338 | G. Alasse, what a reward? |
A19338 | G. And hast thou observed the places? |
A19338 | G. And what diddest thou in the meane time? |
A19338 | G. But for how much doth hee hire p that strange house? |
A19338 | G. But what do we, being unmindfull of this dayes taske? |
A19338 | G. But why* did she stay thee so long? |
A19338 | G. By what* token wilt thou that I aske it? |
A19338 | G. Couldest thou not t deferre thy businesse? |
A19338 | G. Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | G. Doest thou know certainly that it is my brother? |
A19338 | G. Fo ● how much then? |
A19338 | G. For three halfe pence, or thereabout, but thou for ho ● much? |
A19338 | G. From whence commest thou now? |
A19338 | G. Goe to( that we may u end at length) I pray thee uu say, dost thou know where thou x wilt be to morrow? |
A19338 | G. H. WIlt thou remain in a this ignorance? |
A19338 | G. Have you had[ your] reward already? |
A19338 | G. Hoe, hath he* no house of his owne? |
A19338 | G. How knowest thou? |
A19338 | G. I would know also where* thou wilt lie? |
A19338 | G. In what house doth he dwel? |
A19338 | G. Therefore for how much? |
A19338 | G. Therefore what is it? |
A19338 | G. Therfore what f hindred[ thee] that thou g returnedst not sooner? |
A19338 | G. Thou doest, n as it becommeth a godly o childe: but is it not time that we should goe into the p schoole? |
A19338 | G. What businesse hast thou with thy brother? |
A19338 | G. What fruits? |
A19338 | G. What if our master* come in the meane time? |
A19338 | G. What other things doe we? |
A19338 | G. What should I doe? |
A19338 | G. What then after? |
A19338 | G. What wilt thou do then? |
A19338 | G. What wilt thou doe? |
A19338 | G. What wilt thou? |
A19338 | G. What word? |
A19338 | G. Where hast thou dined? |
A19338 | G. Where is he? |
A19338 | G. Where wilt thou sup? |
A19338 | G. Where* sawest thou him? |
A19338 | G. Wherefore sayest thou this? |
A19338 | G. Whether doth it become a boy to bee so troublesome? |
A19338 | G. Who cals me? |
A19338 | G. Who contends? |
A19338 | G. Why dost thou adde, if the Lord shall permit? |
A19338 | G. Will you any thing* else? |
A19338 | G. a What shal I take heed of to my self? |
A19338 | G. b I had beene sent for of my father, but who are the victors? |
A19338 | G. d What? |
A19338 | G. wilt thou[ that] we repeate together? |
A19338 | G.* And I also but whether shall be x conquered? |
A19338 | G.* For how much then? |
A19338 | G.* Let me alone:* why art thou troublesome to mee? |
A19338 | G.* Vpon what cause? |
A19338 | G.* What, I pray thee? |
A19338 | G.* Whereof doth the danger appeare? |
A19338 | G.* Why should I not? |
A19338 | GRatian, thou seemest to me n somwhat sad: o what is the matter? |
A19338 | Go to, let us repeate, but whether shall beginne? |
A19338 | Go to, thou thy selfe lead him* home, and shew* carefully to[ his] mother,* how hee is: make haste, why doest thou lo ● ter? |
A19338 | Goe to: what* doubt is that u I pray thee? |
A19338 | H. Ah d slow[ fellow] thou e meditatest no other thing(*) but play: are there not 3 hours free* on wednesdayes and saturdayes? |
A19338 | H. But what? |
A19338 | H. By what meanes? |
A19338 | H. Couldest thou not k detract yesterday an houre and a halfe from thy play, or at least one onely houre? |
A19338 | H. For how much hast thou bought a queare? |
A19338 | H. For how much? |
A19338 | H. For what t use? |
A19338 | H. How? |
A19338 | H. I have mixed it enough: what might I doe besides? |
A19338 | H. I have pressed it so that it is almost dry, what will it be at length? |
A19338 | H. I. IAmes? |
A19338 | H. I. WIlt thou repeat with me? |
A19338 | H. In what matter? |
A19338 | H. Is it good? |
A19338 | H. Oh see how black it is? |
A19338 | H. Oh, it is enough now: what b is this lavish spending? |
A19338 | H. Onely unthankfull? |
A19338 | H. Thou k remembrest well: for so our master hath l often told us: but wilt thou not any other thing? |
A19338 | H. Thou sayest well, therefore n why diddest thou not buy[ some]? |
A19338 | H. What businesse hast thou? |
A19338 | H. What doest thou prepare to write? |
A19338 | H. What dost thou bring from thence? |
A19338 | H. What hast thou bought for us? |
A19338 | H. What if you should y dictate it to me? |
A19338 | H. What shall I doe then? |
A19338 | H. What shall* these things further me to the ll profit of[ my] studies? |
A19338 | H. What* diddest thou feare? |
A19338 | H. When wilt thou* send y them? |
A19338 | H. When? |
A19338 | H. Whereto? |
A19338 | H. Wkat evill should it bee, if wee should confer now betweene our selves, concerning that matter? |
A19338 | H. Wonderfulll who i hath taught thee to choose so wisely? |
A19338 | H. a Is it good? |
A19338 | H. d So little? |
A19338 | H. q What the fruits? |
A19338 | H. s What cause* hast thou to go forth? |
A19338 | H.(*) Why hast thou not written them yesterday? |
A19338 | H.* For how much hast thou bought it? |
A19338 | H.* O foole, couldest thou not taste? |
A19338 | H.* Out, how* sparingly hast thou i made provision of meate for us? |
A19338 | H.* y Hold it neerer: is there not enough? |
A19338 | HAst thou a sharpened my penne? |
A19338 | HAst thou bought a pen- knife as thou wouldst of late? |
A19338 | HAst thou good inke? |
A19338 | HAst thou heard the clock? |
A19338 | HAst thou not a pen- knife? |
A19338 | HAst thou praied* at all to day at home? |
A19338 | HAst thou then n met with Peter to day? |
A19338 | HAst thou two or three pens? |
A19338 | HAve yee obtained* leave to play? |
A19338 | HOe, Gerarde? |
A19338 | HOw much money hast thou? |
A19338 | HOw(*) old art thou? |
A19338 | Hast thou* none then? |
A19338 | Have I not spoken truly? |
A19338 | Have yee not* many? |
A19338 | Have yee repeated now? |
A19338 | He is* told in vaine:[ it is] a ● if a tale were told to a deafe[ man] B* Why so? |
A19338 | Hoe foolish[ boy] canst thou not x mingle it well, with thy pen? |
A19338 | Hoe, what was l the cause? |
A19338 | How can I urge my father? |
A19338 | How doe I ● buse it? |
A19338 | How doe we abuse it? |
A19338 | How doth shee* use thee? |
A19338 | How durst thou goe forth* so early,& that* without asking leave of our master? |
A19338 | How durst thou then buy peares? |
A19338 | How knowest thou? |
A19338 | How knowest thou? |
A19338 | How many ff will you say every one? |
A19338 | How many sheetes hast thou? |
A19338 | How many sheets were there? |
A19338 | How much cost it? |
A19338 | How much then? |
A19338 | How much then? |
A19338 | How shall that* bee? |
A19338 | How? |
A19338 | How? |
A19338 | I Alasse begun? |
A19338 | I If they heare not the ministers* of the word of God and their owne pastours, how doest thou thinke* that it can bee that they* can heare us? |
A19338 | I Marvell greatly from whence thou* now commest? |
A19338 | I Thou shouldest have come sooner: what didst thou? |
A19338 | I What say the countrey men in this so great k plenty? |
A19338 | I Yea indeed didst thou hope for † a reward? |
A19338 | I b Now eight daies ago: for what other thing should be done? |
A19338 | I* Have you great* plenty of wine? |
A19338 | I. Didst thou thinke now to have stopped[ my] mouth? |
A19338 | I. Whither* is he gone? |
A19338 | I. cc At what time should I(*) have written them? |
A19338 | IN what kind of play hast thou exercised thy selfe to day? |
A19338 | IS a thy father gone away? |
A19338 | IS it lawfull t to requi ● e evill u with evill? |
A19338 | If I q defend my cause, what evill doe I? |
A19338 | If I shall pardon thee? |
A19338 | If any h seeke you, what shall I say unto him? |
A19338 | If ye shall doe so, our master will love you as his little m sweet- hearts: doe you not see how hee loveth good children and studious? |
A19338 | In truth I doe believe it: but what cause should I had brought? |
A19338 | In what businesse? |
A19338 | In what chapter? |
A19338 | In what thing* I pray thee? |
A19338 | Is hee rich? |
A19338 | Is it not evill to tread bread* under thy feet? |
A19338 | Is it not lawfull, to use the* kindnesse of[ our] parents? |
A19338 | Is it not time to breake thy fast? |
A19338 | Is it not time* to goe into the common hall to the singing of the Psalmes? |
A19338 | Is it not ● ● ough that I have repeated alone? |
A19338 | Is not the l commandement of the Lord* equall concerning m both? |
A19338 | Is there great store of flesh in the market? |
A19338 | It is the chiefest wisedome, to* make a shew of foolishnesse* in fit place;* hast thou not learned these things? |
A19338 | It is* very well: dost thou know therefore what is need to be done? |
A19338 | It was divers and manifold,* but I pray thee, z what doth it* concerne thee to know? |
A19338 | L, If no message bee more pleasant then of money brought unto us, what then is the Gospell of Christ? |
A19338 | L. But a how may I* know them? |
A19338 | L. But the mothers thēselves are in the* fault: for why doe they love us so f tenderly? |
A19338 | L. But why doest thou aske that? |
A19338 | L. For what cause then* was he not there longer? |
A19338 | L. Goe to, i with what countenance was his comming accepted of[ his, or thy] father? |
A19338 | L. Hee grant, that we q may alwayes use this benefit well* to his owne glorie: But tell[ us] I pray you, of what gender is Follis? |
A19338 | L. How knowest thou that? |
A19338 | L. I also heard* the same at our house of countrey[ men]* which brought us wheat? |
A19338 | L. I also* have sometimes heard it; but* what need have* students of so much* meate? |
A19338 | L. In the meane time wilt thou repeate with me? |
A19338 | L. Neither yet therefore* art thou free from y negligence: for why dost thou not z aske* to borrow other- where? |
A19338 | L. Not all therefore? |
A19338 | L. S. HAst thou done thine a office? |
A19338 | L. There is no doubt, but what meanest thou? |
A19338 | L. Therefore what hindreth now, that thou mayest not require especially of a most* q courteous man,&* r most loving towards thee, as doth appeare? |
A19338 | L. Thou art f over curious what g wilt thou? |
A19338 | L. Truly as I hope it sh ● ll not hurt p to trie: but where shall I r ● st? |
A19338 | L. What doest thou then? |
A19338 | L. What eause b was there? |
A19338 | L. What ee if he shall returne f later? |
A19338 | L. What else? |
A19338 | L. What fell out at length? |
A19338 | L. What if hee will not give[ leave?] |
A19338 | L. What l moreover? |
A19338 | L. What shall I doe then? |
A19338 | L. When sometimes you say to some of us,* where is* the bellowes? |
A19338 | L. Where then? |
A19338 | L. Wherefore* went[ thy] brother? |
A19338 | L. Whither d went he? |
A19338 | L. You say the k truth: but what may I answer unto him, when hee l complaines against me m of the space of[ so] long time in getting* learning? |
A19338 | L.* How therefore can wee know? |
A19338 | L.* None P. Therefore what did he b report? |
A19338 | L.* Returned he all alone? |
A19338 | L.* There is no cause that tho ● shouldest doe it, for c such a little matter ▪ But I pray thee tell mee, why hast thou no ● brought[ bread]?] |
A19338 | L.* What was done after? |
A19338 | L.* Whereto? |
A19338 | L.* Who then returned with him? |
A19338 | L.* Why should I not know? |
A19338 | L.* 〈 ◊ 〉 M. Goe to, i suffer[ thee]: hast thou breathe ● enough? |
A19338 | LAmbert y stay thy pase a little, whither a hastest thou? |
A19338 | LEnd me thy Virgil for two daies, a if that may be done(*) without any hinderance to thee? |
A19338 | M In what part? |
A19338 | M ▪ How long? |
A19338 | M ▪ How much? |
A19338 | M ▪ I confesse it; but notwithstanding, wha ● wilt thou doe with that money? |
A19338 | M. At what a clocke? |
A19338 | M. At what time? |
A19338 | M. But when doest thou hope* that thou shalt receive money? |
A19338 | M. But where hast thou left it? |
A19338 | M. Doe I n exact[ an account?] |
A19338 | M. Doest thou come so prepared, that thou mayest wrest from mee that, which is k committed to me alone, and that from[ our] master? |
A19338 | M. Dost thou l goe on to trifle? |
A19338 | M. Doth the condition which I offered,* any thing please you? |
A19338 | M. Even b untill supper.. S. Who have given verses? |
A19338 | M. For how much hast thou bought it? |
A19338 | M. For how much then? |
A19338 | M. For what b fashion of writing? |
A19338 | M. Hast thou done thy duty h well? |
A19338 | M. Hoe, wherefore so quickly? |
A19338 | M. How can d that be? |
A19338 | M. How many pounds are there? |
A19338 | M. How many z poore doest thou thinke* there are in this city, which doe live onely with barly bread neither yet unto the* full? |
A19338 | M. How much doest thou thinke[ a it] to waigh? |
A19338 | M. How much time doe you require? |
A19338 | M. How then c commeth it to passe that thou writest so badly now? |
A19338 | M. I have not a bought S. What hindred? |
A19338 | M. I have taught thee p this at other times: doest thou not q keepe it in* memory? |
A19338 | M. In what play shall wee exercise our selves? |
A19338 | M. Indeed I know that certainly, I beleeve it faithfully, and confesse it truely, but what* meanest thou? |
A19338 | M. Is hee alone? |
A19338 | M. Knowest thou not that sentence of the Wiseman? |
A19338 | M. Moreover[* wee pray] privately, as oft as* wee take meate, as oft as* wee goe to bed, as oft as wee* rise g from bed: are not these sufficient? |
A19338 | M. N. WHen wilt thou* goe home? |
A19338 | M. No way h was hard to mee[ my] returne into the Citie was so pleasant: what doest thou aske? |
A19338 | M. Oh e foole doest thou not see[ it] to bee leane? |
A19338 | M. Proceedest thou to be troublesome? |
A19338 | M. Shall I commit my backe unto thy(*) fidelitie? |
A19338 | M. Take it, but I pray thee how wilt thou restore it so quickly? |
A19338 | M. There ● ore how great thanks* ought wee to give to e God in so great* plenty of good thing ● what praises to* utter to him? |
A19338 | M. Therefore what remaineth? |
A19338 | M. Therefore why dost thou not use it? |
A19338 | M. Therfore only to our friends? |
A19338 | M. Therfore why answeredst thou so? |
A19338 | M. Thou askest f fondly: what is the use of g papers, but to write? |
A19338 | M. To what end did he q speake of such things? |
A19338 | M. To what end? |
A19338 | M. Well done quoth he; but where wast thou? |
A19338 | M. What I pray thee? |
A19338 | M. What day? |
A19338 | M. What doest thou with them* who have no care,* except that they may fulfill their lusts? |
A19338 | M. What dost thou aske? |
A19338 | M. What fearest thou? |
A19338 | M. What hast thou bought? |
A19338 | M. What hath he said? |
A19338 | M. What if I shall tary with thee? |
A19338 | M. What if peradventure I shall neede? |
A19338 | M. What if shee will not give[ it]? |
A19338 | M. What if thou* make me two or three pens? |
A19338 | M. What if thy father send for thee? |
A19338 | M. What is it* then? |
A19338 | M. What is it? |
A19338 | M. What is the cause? |
A19338 | M. What need is there to use a preface of honour betweene us? |
A19338 | M. What saiest thou? |
A19338 | M. What sayd he t ● thee? |
A19338 | M. What then doest thou thinke to doe now? |
A19338 | M. What then? |
A19338 | M. What then? |
A19338 | M. What wilt thou doe at home? |
A19338 | M. What x if[ the will] of God shall be one, the wil of thy father another? |
A19338 | M. What? |
A19338 | M. When o didst thou send Letters? |
A19338 | M. When* came he? |
A19338 | M. When? |
A19338 | M. Where* else haue I been? |
A19338 | M. Who can doubt[ of it?] |
A19338 | M. Why art thou rr so curious? |
A19338 | M. Why doest thou aske this? |
A19338 | M. Why dost thou marvell? |
A19338 | M. Why gave he thee more then thou o hadst requested? |
A19338 | M. Why hast thou not provided al these things f in time? |
A19338 | M. Why not? |
A19338 | M. Why sayest thou that? |
A19338 | M. Why so? |
A19338 | M. Why then didst thou seeme to doubt? |
A19338 | M. Why then doest thou aske so* earnestly? |
A19338 | M. Wilt that I o speake in one word? |
A19338 | M. Wilt thou never f take heed to thy selfe of that g impostor? |
A19338 | M. Wilt thou that I x bring thee home? |
A19338 | M. With what[ purpose] then? |
A19338 | M. Yea doest thou g laugh? |
A19338 | M. d Whose fault is it then? |
A19338 | M. hath c thy brother written nothing? |
A19338 | M. k What doest thou aske that? |
A19338 | M. l Who is this saluter? |
A19338 | M. m Goe to, let us goe forward: what have you to repeat n at noone? |
A19338 | M. o Nothing besides? |
A19338 | M. p What, doth[ my] table, or* diet please you? |
A19338 | M. q What[ flesh?] |
A19338 | M. r Say once and in good earnest, and as it were with an angry minde: O friend, what wilt thou? |
A19338 | M. what[ did] he, when hee found thee d well, e besides[ his] hope? |
A19338 | M. x What shall I heare? |
A19338 | M. z What wilt thou conclude at length? |
A19338 | M. ● know not(*) C. Doest thou not know? |
A19338 | M.* Doest thou then goe on to bee r stubborne? |
A19338 | M.* Give over f if thou hearest mee G. Truly I heare willingly, and* I doe obey thee, for who can refuse so h faithfull counsell? |
A19338 | M.* How knowest thou this? |
A19338 | M.* Onely then to our brethren? |
A19338 | M.* To what end serveth that? |
A19338 | M.* What then? |
A19338 | M.* c Be it so: but* what course shall wee hold? |
A19338 | M.** r I am satisfied for that, but what doest thou answer concerning[ thy] mocking? |
A19338 | M.[ Wee have] prayed, and g indeed our schoolemaster being present, but where wast thou? |
A19338 | MAster may I go forth? |
A19338 | MAster(*) may we not go to the barbar? |
A19338 | MAster* I have no paper left to write:* will you give[ me] a book? |
A19338 | MAster* may I goe forth? |
A19338 | MAster* may I speak unto you a word or two? |
A19338 | MAster, what shall we a repeat to morrow in the morning? |
A19338 | MAster, will you* lend me some money? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I go forth by your leave? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I go forth? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I go forth? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I go home to morrow? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I goe to[ my] m Tutor? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I have leave to go forth? |
A19338 | MAster,* may I speake a word or two? |
A19338 | MAster,* may a I have a few[ words?] |
A19338 | MAster,* may wee have leave to goe forth? |
A19338 | MAy* I have leave to goe forth? |
A19338 | Master have I satisfied you? |
A19338 | Master will you any thing? |
A19338 | Master will you have any thing? |
A19338 | Master will you then that wee beginne even* presently? |
A19338 | My mother d gave me e a sextance that I should f buy me[ peares] against my drinking: what evill have I done, if I have obeyed my mother? |
A19338 | N Correct this nature;* I meane this* fault of nature: what hath the saying of our Cato* done thee good? |
A19338 | N When shall that be? |
A19338 | N* At what of the clocke? |
A19338 | N. Have you not in your* chest? |
A19338 | N. I confesse it, but we are wo nt* usually to aske our familiars so,( even as we aske, how doe yee:) c how stand your matters? |
A19338 | N. I haue not so man ● D. How many then? |
A19338 | N. O. a DOst thou then go into the country? |
A19338 | N. Of whom e asked he leave* to goe forth? |
A19338 | N. What day? |
A19338 | N. When is c he to returne into the Citie? |
A19338 | N. Where is it? |
A19338 | N. Whither? |
A19338 | N. Whither? |
A19338 | N. Who came to call for[ him?] |
A19338 | N. Why dost thou not aske? |
A19338 | N. Why not rather of the g schoolemaster? |
A19338 | N. With whom? |
A19338 | N. cc When Is he to returne? |
A19338 | N. d* When art thou to go? |
A19338 | N. f Dost thou then leave me so? |
A19338 | N.(*) Wilt thou never returne? |
A19338 | N.* O what a heavy parting[ is this?] |
A19338 | N.* What need have you now of meat? |
A19338 | N.* Whereto? |
A19338 | N.* Why not? |
A19338 | No body? |
A19338 | No man can doubt* of this, for who doth gather good fruits and ripe, but e he eateth also of the best? |
A19338 | Nothing else? |
A19338 | O Capusius, what doest thou(*) muse with thy selfe? |
A19338 | O Charles b art thou* there? |
A19338 | O Gassine what thinkest thou? |
A19338 | O How thinkest thou? |
A19338 | O If thou love me so greatly,( as thou saist) why l hast not thou thy selfe excused me? |
A19338 | O Macarde, I a congratulate* thy returne, when returnedst thou from the countrey? |
A19338 | O Therfore what should* become of us, except God t should pardon easily? |
A19338 | O Tityrus, who c sittest downe under the d covert of the* broad mulbery tree, e Wilt thou be here alone, so merry and so f carelesse? |
A19338 | O What is that? |
A19338 | O What remaineth,* then? |
A19338 | O What then? |
A19338 | O What* then? |
A19338 | O What? |
A19338 | O Why dost thou aske that? |
A19338 | O how are ye bound to the heavenly father, who e hath given you such a father in the earth? |
A19338 | O † Did no man excuse me when the † bill was called? |
A19338 | O † Why then did ● t thou h note[ me?] |
A19338 | O* in what wordes, with what workes may we u glorifie thy name worthily enough O Lord? |
A19338 | O. Dost thou aske? |
A19338 | O. Dost thou* not remember the verse out of Horace to this purpose? |
A19338 | O. Hast thou ● aluted him* already? |
A19338 | O. Oh, dost thou deny* me so small a thing? |
A19338 | O. Sayest thou so? |
A19338 | O. Thou doest well: from whence hast thou had them? |
A19338 | O. d From whence wilt thou proove(*) this? |
A19338 | O. f Indeed this is a true sentence: but g who among many doth not lie? |
A19338 | O. y Dost thou even so? |
A19338 | OH we are a dismissed to play, hast thou not heard? |
A19338 | OH yee boyes, what doe yee here? |
A19338 | Of what n sort? |
A19338 | Oh thou most learned of our forme,* u whom may I call thee? |
A19338 | Ol ● ver* what meaneth this? |
A19338 | One k is enough* for me ▪ l but why wilt thou sell it? |
A19338 | P But( that[ wee may turne] to the matter) r in what townes( I pray thee) s stayedst thou t for the cause of thy study? |
A19338 | P Ho, g to gad home so oft? |
A19338 | P My Stephen † art thou in good health? |
A19338 | P Sawest thou not that great beast? |
A19338 | P Therefore I will not stay thee any longer: but g when may we talk more* at leisure? |
A19338 | P We e try this by experience almost(*) every houre: but,* I pray thee, what* didst thou in thy Italy? |
A19338 | P What cities k sawest thou especially? |
A19338 | P Whither* I pray thee? |
A19338 | P a And what b † newes sawest thou in so many most famous townes? |
A19338 | P* Why resolvedst thou to goe thither? |
A19338 | P. Alas a little basket,(*) for thee the ● alone? |
A19338 | P. And I would see it* in the space of one day: But what h doest thou? |
A19338 | P. And what* hast thou brought now returning hither? |
A19338 | P. Arboris exes ● e truncus, in Virgil Doest thou not see here manifestly both the Gender and l the Accent? |
A19338 | P. Are they s torne? |
A19338 | P. Are they x made ready? |
A19338 | P. Are ye many who* desire to go? |
A19338 | P. Art thou not wo nt to say, and to heare of thy schoole- fellowes;* I have need of paper, inke, money, and the* like? |
A19338 | P. Art thou u so very a child that thou uu oughtest not to be attentive, x to heare the word of God? |
A19338 | P. At what a clocke? |
A19338 | P. At what a clocke? |
A19338 | P. Beleeve me, I doe not aske thee therfore, that I may utter it: for what good should it doe me? |
A19338 | P. Boyes, is it true? |
A19338 | P. Brought he thee* no letters? |
A19338 | P. But b what* matter c of contending dost thou require? |
A19338 | P. But d thou? |
A19338 | P. But hast thou no meate? |
A19338 | P. But hoe, when will you be* here againe? |
A19338 | P. But is there any who will goe forth with thee? |
A19338 | P. But now enough concerning[ thy] returne: let us now doe another thing:(*) hast thou been mindfull of thy promise? |
A19338 | P. But that I hold not thee longer, t canst thou cause that I may talke with thy brother* a word or two? |
A19338 | P. But what will you doe walking? |
A19338 | P. But where wast thou? |
A19338 | P. But* Who is thy tailour? |
A19338 | P. But* c why didst not thou tarry also? |
A19338 | P. By what k right* then doe I owe it? |
A19338 | P. By what signe? |
A19338 | P. By what* meanes wilt thou* move him? |
A19338 | P. Came shee not* on horse- back? |
A19338 | P. Doest thou know* that he hath need? |
A19338 | P. Doest thou not beleeve* that it paineth mee still? |
A19338 | P. Doest thou not i lye? |
A19338 | P. Doest thou then know all the use of the Latine tongue? |
A19338 | P. Dost thou answer mee no other thing? |
A19338 | P. Doth he aske nothing concerning the Catechisme? |
A19338 | P. Doth it not raine also? |
A19338 | P. For in the mean while thou wouldest lose much time, and it would grieve thee, when thou(*) hadst returned: do I not say true? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou beene y alwayes* imployed in gathering grapes? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou c put them into thy booke? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou gained any thing? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou k prayed to God? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou money to buy q others? |
A19338 | P. Hast thou* dispatched thy businesse? |
A19338 | P. Have yee not a gi ● le? |
A19338 | P. Hee l adviseth passing well for you: but at what* hours is he wo nt to doe that? |
A19338 | P. Ho, what is it? |
A19338 | P. Hoe Nomen- clator, are these victors this weeke? |
A19338 | P. Hoe, where is that our friendship? |
A19338 | P. How are we gluttons? |
A19338 | P. How doth he? |
A19338 | P. How doth hee deceive him? |
A19338 | P. How is it to be exercised? |
A19338 | P. How know yee? |
A19338 | P. How knowest thou? |
A19338 | P. How knowest thou? |
A19338 | P. How knowest thou? |
A19338 | P. How knowest thou? |
A19338 | P. How long? |
A19338 | P. How many hogs heads have you filled? |
A19338 | P. How much doest thou owe him? |
A19338 | P. How much time have you* a spent in the whole worke? |
A19338 | P. How much wilt thou* receive of mee? |
A19338 | P. How ripe are* they? |
A19338 | P. I confesse it doth not appeare: what then? |
A19338 | P. I doe remember it: therefore wilt thou[ that] wee* repeat l the scond booke of morall disticks? |
A19338 | P. In what matter? |
A19338 | P. In what thing? |
A19338 | P. In what things doth hee exercise you? |
A19338 | P. In what tongue? |
A19338 | P. Indeed thou promisest very well, but how wilt thou performe[ thy] promises? |
A19338 | P. Is hee a skilfull* workman? |
A19338 | P. Is it not commanded of God, that we obey our parents? |
A19338 | P. Is it not very far? |
A19338 | P. Is the usher* come? |
A19338 | P. Is there another who will goe forth? |
A19338 | P. It may be that I have heard them; but r what dost thou? |
A19338 | P. It may be, but goe to;* what cause was there, q why thou committedst nothing to memorie? |
A19338 | P. My Stephanio,(*) God save thee: from whence com ● mest thou(*) so early? |
A19338 | P. No body? |
A19338 | P. O Iohn thou m hast come in very fit time: n art thou well? |
A19338 | P. O i knave couldest thou not? |
A19338 | P. O p my little heart, how* v goodly a thing it is to be wise? |
A19338 | P. O well done, what is it? |
A19338 | P. O well done, who sent thee unto mee? |
A19338 | P. Of what Gender[ is] Liber? |
A19338 | P. Of whom askedst thou leave? |
A19338 | P. Quid o ● us est? |
A19338 | P. Sayest thou[ so?] |
A19338 | P. Sayest thou[ so?] |
A19338 | P. Sith you are brethren, why have you not o common inke at home in a p pot? |
A19338 | P. Tell the doctor of the first forme, that he may send some one h of his[ fellows] M. What if he will not send? |
A19338 | P. Thence it commeth to passe that the head- masters themselves, doe complaine sometimes of such ss under- masters: But t what doe we? |
A19338 | P. There is no marvell, sith that hee hath beene sicke so long, so grievously; but hath hee sent nothing to thee? |
A19338 | P. Therefore I will expect; hoping in the meane time: but what if* thou shalt have no overplus? |
A19338 | P. Therefore Quintilian said most truly: a* These same things do sticke more stifly, which are wo ● se:* Dost thou remember? |
A19338 | P. Therefore what hast thou deserved? |
A19338 | P. Therefore what shall I do? |
A19338 | P. Therefore* how many? |
A19338 | P. Thou commest* in due time:* what newes bringest thou? |
A19338 | P. Thou hast answered well; but who taught thee the u use of speaking? |
A19338 | P. Thou sayest g this alwayes: what hindreth[ thee?] |
A19338 | P. To whom dost thou owe this Proverb? |
A19338 | P. Truely very wel by the goodnesse of God: but when o returnedst thou from home? |
A19338 | P. Vnto what use? |
A19338 | P. Was not the labour of the journey g troublesome to thee? |
A19338 | P. Well done, what a clocke is it? |
A19338 | P. What are* these? |
A19338 | P. What busines hath hee? |
A19338 | P. What businesse hast thou? |
A19338 | P. What c grieveth him? |
A19338 | P. What compelleth thee? |
A19338 | P. What d skilleth it? |
A19338 | P. What day shall f that be? |
A19338 | P. What did I? |
A19338 | P. What did I? |
A19338 | P. What didst thou read? |
A19338 | P. What didst thou then? |
A19338 | P. What didst thou? |
A19338 | P. What do ye at home? |
A19338 | P. What doe I desire more? |
A19338 | P. What doth he c report especially concerning thy father? |
A19338 | P. What heare you concerning her? |
A19338 | P. What hindreth? |
A19338 | P. What if he deceive[ you?] |
A19338 | P. What if he would not* lend me? |
A19338 | P. What if hee z deceive? |
A19338 | P. What if there shall bee* no scraps? |
A19338 | P. What if thou deceive me? |
A19338 | P. What if thou write to his father himselfe concerning* the state of our schoole? |
A19338 | P. What is done* after? |
A19338 | P. What is it? |
A19338 | P. What need* is there now? |
A19338 | P. What quinces? |
A19338 | P. What sayest thou? |
A19338 | P. What shall I do then? |
A19338 | P. What then? |
A19338 | P. What then? |
A19338 | P. What then? |
A19338 | P. What then? |
A19338 | P. What then? |
A19338 | P. What was the cause? |
A19338 | P. What wilt thou do? |
A19338 | P. What wilt thou then? |
A19338 | P. What wilt thou? |
A19338 | P. What words doth[ shee] use? |
A19338 | P. What* hindreth? |
A19338 | P. What* reward shall I give this Physician for[ his] labour? |
A19338 | P. What* s ● little[ a basket] for two? |
A19338 | P. What* service didst thou performe unto her? |
A19338 | P. What* then? |
A19338 | P. What[ did thy] mother? |
A19338 | P. What[ did][ thy] mother? |
A19338 | P. What[ doth][ thy] brother? |
A19338 | P. What[ is] that? |
A19338 | P. What[ said] hee? |
A19338 | P. When came he? |
A19338 | P. When doest thou hope* that he will come? |
A19338 | P. When g mettest thou with him? |
A19338 | P. When is shee m to be married? |
A19338 | P. When o commanded he? |
A19338 | P. When shee returneth, what saith shee to thee? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou a returne hither? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou buy those things which thou hast g decreed? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou dispatch all these things? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou f returne? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou q repay it? |
A19338 | P. When wilt thou returne home? |
A19338 | P. When(*) rose thou? |
A19338 | P. When* wast thou away? |
A19338 | P. When* were they gathered? |
A19338 | P. Where are they? |
A19338 | P. Where are thy d fellowes? |
A19338 | P. Where are[ the knives] which thou haddest? |
A19338 | P. Where dwelleth he? |
A19338 | P. Where in England? |
A19338 | P. Where is he? |
A19338 | P. Where is he? |
A19338 | P. Where is he? |
A19338 | P. Where is it? |
A19338 | P. Where sawest thou him? |
A19338 | P. Where* sawest thou him? |
A19338 | P. Where? |
A19338 | P. Wherefore did hee tarry? |
A19338 | P. Wherefore would God* have it so? |
A19338 | P. Wherefore? |
A19338 | P. Wherefore? |
A19338 | P. Whereto? |
A19338 | P. Whereto? |
A19338 | P. Whereto? |
A19338 | P. Wherfore? |
A19338 | P. Whither must thou goe? |
A19338 | P. Whither will ye goe forth? |
A19338 | P. Whither* wouldest thou go? |
A19338 | P. Whither? |
A19338 | P. Whither? |
A19338 | P. Who are they? |
A19338 | P. Who are witnesses? |
A19338 | P. Who awaked thee? |
A19338 | P. Who served you? |
A19338 | P. Who shall bee[ thy] r helper to buy[ them?] |
A19338 | P. Who should gainsay it? |
A19338 | P. Who writ it? |
A19338 | P. Who* I pray thee? |
A19338 | P. Who* told thee so quickly? |
A19338 | P. Why before the* time? |
A19338 | P. Why doest thou hide it from me? |
A19338 | P. Why doest thou not adde also, how good? |
A19338 | P. Why doth your father cc take so much labour in teaching you? |
A19338 | P. Why h didst thou it not? |
A19338 | P. Why hast thou not* brought him in? |
A19338 | P. Why have yee not* told my wife[ of it?] |
A19338 | P. Why have you never asked me* of this? |
A19338 | P. Why not rather of me? |
A19338 | P. Why not? |
A19338 | P. Why not? |
A19338 | P. Why so? |
A19338 | P. Why so? |
A19338 | P. Why then didst thou contrary even now? |
A19338 | P. Why to the Barbar? |
A19338 | P. Why to the tailour? |
A19338 | P. Why will ye go so quickly? |
A19338 | P. Why* askedst thou not leave to goe forth? |
A19338 | P. Why* hast thou not brought him? |
A19338 | P. Why* wen ● he not home? |
A19338 | P. Why* wentest thou forth? |
A19338 | P. Why* wentest thou home? |
A19338 | P. Will hee not sup* at home, at your house? |
A19338 | P. Wilt thou heare our f talke? |
A19338 | P. Wilt thou never come f earely to the schoole? |
A19338 | P. Wilt thou then p conceale th ● s fact? |
A19338 | P. Yea dost thou doubt? |
A19338 | P. Yea thou( as I thinke) dost not care to rise, doe I not say true? |
A19338 | P. a Hee ought not to goe forth without my commandement: but this[ is] nothing to thee: who shall give you ● your] drinking? |
A19338 | P. a* In truth I do write in earnest, for why should I abuse the time? |
A19338 | P. aa Who is there which doth not feele it now, sith it is so* bitter? |
A19338 | P. b Peradventure thou wouldest* take the c repulse O* In truth l beleeve it: goe to, e I do not aske it* as a gift: at least wilt thou lend it me? |
A19338 | P. b* For what matter? |
A19338 | P. c What a thing is this? |
A19338 | P. c What if that thou now say all alone? |
A19338 | P. d But durst not thou* tell me of it? |
A19338 | P. e Doest thou promise in good* sooth* that thou wilt doe thy dutie hereafter? |
A19338 | P. e What shall I get* thereby? |
A19338 | P. e Whereto? |
A19338 | P. g will you heare? |
A19338 | P. h Wherfore? |
A19338 | P. h Why goe ye together so oft? |
A19338 | P. i What? |
A19338 | P. k have I lyed? |
A19338 | P. l And not also, that we may live soberly and justly? |
A19338 | P. l For what cause broughtest thou not it? |
A19338 | P. l How far hence is your farme? |
A19338 | P. m From whence tooke he his* text? |
A19338 | P. n For what cause? |
A19338 | P. n What cause mooveth thee? |
A19338 | P. n[ Out of] what Chapter? |
A19338 | P. o Why so? |
A19338 | P. p But thy mother, where is shee? |
A19338 | P. s How would I* that I had been present? |
A19338 | P. s Thou art wo nt so: but what didst thou* in the rest of the time? |
A19338 | P. z Are your vintages finished? |
A19338 | P. z Why to the Shoo maker? |
A19338 | P.(*) Thou art over- early;* who awaked thee? |
A19338 | P.(*) What cause is there? |
A19338 | P.(*) Whereto? |
A19338 | P.(*) Whereto? |
A19338 | P.(*) Why(*) doth thy brother weep? |
A19338 | P.* And wast thou present alwaies? |
A19338 | P.* Askedst thou him not when he will come to the schoole againe? |
A19338 | P.* At what a clocke then wilt thou goe unto him? |
A19338 | P.* At what a clocke? |
A19338 | P.* By whom? |
A19338 | P.* Call me hither the five publike Monitours, whom c I have chosen yesterday for this moneth: knowest thou not? |
A19338 | P.* Doest thou also sleepe againe? |
A19338 | P.* Doest thou see any thing? |
A19338 | P.* Dost thou thus play the Philosopher? |
A19338 | P.* For what cause? |
A19338 | P.* Goe thy way, foole: dost thou thinke i him to bee so impudent that he* dare resist? |
A19338 | P.* Hast thou no bread left? |
A19338 | P.* Hast thou no other businesse? |
A19338 | P.* Hast thou witnesses? |
A19338 | P.* How so soone? |
A19338 | P.* How wilt thou prove[ this?] |
A19338 | P.* I beleeve, thou art more willingly in the kitchen than in the schoole; b[ is it] not so? |
A19338 | P.* Is any one sick? |
A19338 | P.* What cause hast thou to go forth? |
A19338 | P.* What do they? |
A19338 | P.* What hast thou then deserved? |
A19338 | P.* What meaneth this? |
A19338 | P.* What need hast thou of money? |
A19338 | P.* What need hath hee of thee? |
A19338 | P.* What stuffe hast thou to make it on? |
A19338 | P.* What, nothing? |
A19338 | P.* What[ is] that? |
A19338 | P.* Where should I aske? |
A19338 | P.* Whereto? |
A19338 | P.* Whereto? |
A19338 | P.* Whereto? |
A19338 | P.* Whereto? |
A19338 | P.* Who preached? |
A19338 | P.* Who told thee? |
A19338 | P.* Why shouldest thou not, sith thou hast satisfied me? |
A19338 | P.* Why so? |
A19338 | P.* Why wentest thou forth? |
A19338 | P.* Why wentest thou thither? |
A19338 | P.* a How is the skie? |
A19338 | P.* b What need is there of that? |
A19338 | P.* o what then? |
A19338 | P.* v Wherefore should it not please mee? |
A19338 | P.*(*) what hindreth(*) that thou mayest not goe? |
A19338 | P.*[ This] t was to be added, that I know, or that I remember D. Wherefore? |
A19338 | Pa. a Neverthelesse thou mayest not b devoure so, after the manner of* hogs: e doth it[ not] shame thee anything? |
A19338 | Pa.(*) Wonderfull, how* mellow? |
A19338 | Pa.* Expect a little, tell me r before what thou hast against thy drinking? |
A19338 | Pa.* Tell me then what is it? |
A19338 | Passing well thanks be to God, but how doest thou? |
A19338 | Q t What doth it profit me to have[ a chamber?] |
A19338 | Q. Thou advisest[ me] well: what shall I say to them? |
A19338 | Q. k Whereto? |
A19338 | R Dost thou not beleeve that, which is* confessed of all? |
A19338 | R Nothing: for what canst thou expect more from them, who* know not the true God? |
A19338 | R Was not his comming yy grievous to thee? |
A19338 | R What need is there then of[ any] rr testimonies? |
A19338 | R Why x doest thou aske that? |
A19338 | R Yea, art thou* so subject to thy mother? |
A19338 | R d Thou askest that foolishly; as if indeed I have stolen it? |
A19338 | R* When? |
A19338 | R* Why can I not? |
A19338 | R. At what time will it be ended? |
A19338 | R. But that wee may returne to our* former speech, q what hast thou given to the boy who found thy penknife? |
A19338 | R. Did shee her selfe* tell thee what to write? |
A19338 | R. For how much? |
A19338 | R. From whence* fell it? |
A19338 | R. Hast thou bought? |
A19338 | R. Hoe, what sayest thou? |
A19338 | R. How much hast thou bought? |
A19338 | R. How* gottest thou it againe? |
A19338 | R. In whose name? |
A19338 | R. MAster, g doth it please you to hear my excuse? |
A19338 | R. Of what d sort? |
A19338 | R. Therefore what doest thou care for? |
A19338 | R. Thou* didst well, for so he will restore more willingly at other times, if he shall finde any thing: but what if thou hadst lost it? |
A19338 | R. Truly it is good: e unto what use hast thou bought it? |
A19338 | R. What d a clocke is it? |
A19338 | R. What did the letters containe? |
A19338 | R. What doth he there? |
A19338 | R. What newes hearest thou there? |
A19338 | R. What then? |
A19338 | R. What then? |
A19338 | R. When went he? |
A19338 | R. When wilt thou restore[ it]? |
A19338 | R. When wilt thou then visit us againe, that wee may heare this thing of thee? |
A19338 | R. When* will he returne? |
A19338 | R. Whither a makest thou hast? |
A19338 | R. Whither? |
A19338 | R. Who doth doubt? |
A19338 | R. Who hath taught thee k this? |
A19338 | R. Why dost thou not* b put thy father in minde concerning this matter? |
A19338 | R. Why not? |
A19338 | R. Why wast thou not present with vs i at noone? |
A19338 | R. Why* leftest thou it? |
A19338 | R. b Nothing? |
A19338 | R. m by what occasion? |
A19338 | R. u What then shall be done concerning thee? |
A19338 | R.(*) God himselfe turne away that: but dost thou heare the clocke? |
A19338 | R.* From whence couldest thou prove this? |
A19338 | R.* Hast thou told what a clock it is? |
A19338 | R.* How should I know? |
A19338 | R.* What wentest thou forth? |
A19338 | R.* Whereto? |
A19338 | R.* Whereto? |
A19338 | R.* Wouldest thou have taken it so patiently? |
A19338 | REturnest thou c now at length from the market? |
A19338 | S Doest thou aske? |
A19338 | S Doest thou heare o the signe to be given to supper? |
A19338 | S That I may confesse n the truth,* it did please my taste marvellously: for* of what sort saiest thou* that this our wine is? |
A19338 | S Therfore why didst thou x resist me? |
A19338 | S What cause should I † have alleadged? |
A19338 | S What doth hinder thee? |
A19338 | S What grievous? |
A19338 | S What[ saith] that n heathen author of the morall distichs? |
A19338 | S With what hope dost thou* indure[ them?] |
A19338 | S Yea, dost thou doubt? |
A19338 | S k* Even as to my father: for what doest thou thinke? |
A19338 | S* Doest thou thinke then that I doe nothing else, d whilst[ my] father is away? |
A19338 | S. And n peradventure the remedies are divers: but what is more easie than to trie that which o I said unto thee? |
A19338 | S. But let vs returne to the purpose: have ye not a bailiffe which* l ● oketh to your busines at the countrey? |
A19338 | S. But when is thy mother k to returne? |
A19338 | S. But yet c is it a grievous disease? |
A19338 | S. Doest ● hou* remember it? |
A19338 | S. Dost thou aske? |
A19338 | S. For how much pawned he it? |
A19338 | S. From whence then hath hee ss taken so many* t goodly sentences? |
A19338 | S. From whence* sent she letters unto thee? |
A19338 | S. Have you not prayed, as wee are wo nt? |
A19338 | S. How did[ his] father* permit him? |
A19338 | S. In what busines? |
A19338 | S. In what thing? |
A19338 | S. Into whether eye hath it fallen? |
A19338 | S. Is it g the crowne? |
A19338 | S. Is this the life of souldiers? |
A19338 | S. Neverthelesse follow thou me ●* r heardest thou not? |
A19338 | S. Nothing more? |
A19338 | S. O the m immeasurable goodnesse of God,* who loveth us so dearly ▪ P.* Is not mine eye very red? |
A19338 | S. Sayest, thou, to pledge? |
A19338 | S. Thou remembrest well: who is the authour? |
A19338 | S. To play an houre and a halfe, and i then* k to betake my selfe againe to[ my] study M. Wilt thou l that I be* thy play- fellow? |
A19338 | S. Vntill what time? |
A19338 | S. What are yee about to say? |
A19338 | S. What c hindreth him? |
A19338 | S. What did the other d formes? |
A19338 | S. What doest thou repeat? |
A19338 | S. What doth she f in the countrey? |
A19338 | S. What e pot- herbs are in your* orchard? |
A19338 | S. What especially? |
A19338 | S. What if she be not at home? |
A19338 | S. What is it? |
A19338 | S. What is* it? |
A19338 | S. What part then? |
A19338 | S. What sayest thou? |
A19338 | S. What then? |
A19338 | S. What will he doe? |
A19338 | S. When went shee into the countrey? |
A19338 | S. Who h hath given thee that counsell? |
A19338 | S. Who shall weigh it? |
A19338 | S. Why not? |
A19338 | S. Why so? |
A19338 | S. Will yee not say by q courses one after another? |
A19338 | S. Will you l any other thing? |
A19338 | S. Wilt thou[ that] I looke into it? |
A19338 | S. Yea truly both unthankfull and evill: but whether could he pawne thy thing* c without advising with thee? |
A19338 | S. d What doest thou feare where nothing is to be feared? |
A19338 | S. d What doth paine thee? |
A19338 | S. e What, all[ thy] head? |
A19338 | S. l Mayest thou goe when m it pleaseth thee? |
A19338 | S. ll Why should I not bee willing? |
A19338 | S.* From whence should he restore it? |
A19338 | S.* How can I but beleeve it, who* have had experience of such trouble so oft? |
A19338 | S.* How knowest thou that? |
A19338 | S.* What disease is it? |
A19338 | S.* What need is there then r of* your mothers labour? |
A19338 | Sayest thou so? |
A19338 | Shall we abuse this y leisure? |
A19338 | Should I* t base fellow, feast with so great men? |
A19338 | Shouldest thou not make water* when thou breakest thy fast? |
A19338 | T Canst thou prove these things out of* Gods word? |
A19338 | T Is it a sinne k in a Christian? |
A19338 | T Is it not enough to requite good with good? |
A19338 | T What did Christ in that kinde? |
A19338 | T What do f those? |
A19338 | T What doe they to[ their] enemies? |
A19338 | T What is the divine law? |
A19338 | T What is to be done then? |
A19338 | T Wherefore? |
A19338 | T Why not? |
A19338 | T f At what houre? |
A19338 | T* And[ doe they] no more? |
A19338 | T* Is it then a sin whatsoever is contrary to the word of God? |
A19338 | T. But thou doctour, from whence hast thou learned this? |
A19338 | T. But what shall wee handle? |
A19338 | T. Hoe knave( quoth[ ● hee]) when wilt thou be in the schoole? |
A19338 | T. How can I forget? |
A19338 | T. I am not ignorant of it: but can not men bestow one onely houre f in divine matters? |
A19338 | T. I desire rather f out of Cato P. Why? |
A19338 | T. In what then wilt thou bee a helper unto us? |
A19338 | T. Oh how great thankes doe yee* deservedly owe to God, who hath given unto you so great abundance of all things? |
A19338 | T. V. WHy dost thou not write? |
A19338 | T. What desire I rather, than to* contend with thee, aa peaceably concerning our studies? |
A19338 | T. What if I shall confesse it? |
A19338 | T. What if you* shew them my g repentance? |
A19338 | T. What is that? |
A19338 | T. What wouldest thou m besides? |
A19338 | T. Why so? |
A19338 | T. Why so? |
A19338 | T. Yea, xx I hope better:* will you any thing? |
A19338 | T. c What kinde of trees are there? |
A19338 | T. f Shall I begin? |
A19338 | T. x What will I be then? |
A19338 | T.* From whence u have you such plenty? |
A19338 | T.* How commeth that to passe? |
A19338 | T.* Solomon p wilt thou then heare us? |
A19338 | T.* Why, at length? |
A19338 | T.* Wretch that I am, what shall I doe? |
A19338 | THou then( as I heare) art to depart to morrow? |
A19338 | T[ It is]* very good counsell y of a sudden:* how much shall z this be a more commodious to me? |
A19338 | Tell mee, dost thou not expect, i that thy father should come Tortly into this city? |
A19338 | That I might hea ● e thee a little to talk ● in latine;* for I rejoyce that thou learne ● ● well: for how much hast thou bought thi ● paper? |
A19338 | That is naturall to al: who doth deny it? |
A19338 | That which I have said is true, and[ to speake] the truth is not to trifle: why doest thou reprehend mee n undeservedly? |
A19338 | The first Scholar of the Victors, the Master,[ and] the a Nomen- clator MAster wilt thou give[ mee][ my] reward? |
A19338 | The issue of the matter is in the hand of the Lor ●: but what shall it hurt us to try? |
A19338 | Therefore b what wouldest thou doe? |
A19338 | Therefore k wilt thou restore me that which I lent? |
A19338 | Therefore what doest thou perswade me* to doe? |
A19338 | Therefore what wilt thou e any more? |
A19338 | Therefore why sayst thou that? |
A19338 | Therefore wilt thou doe what I desire? |
A19338 | Thou hast spoken all these things a truly; but thou hast pretermitted one thing, which is a singular benefit of God, doest thou know what it is? |
A19338 | Thou ▪* advisest[ me] well: is he in hi ● d study? |
A19338 | To conclude, there was such* a abundance of all meats, that the table it self could scarse b hold thē ▪ c But doest thou aske? |
A19338 | To whom besides? |
A19338 | Truly wee all are evill, but I am not worse* than thou: doth then no man laugh unlesse he ●* laugh at some one? |
A19338 | V. As seldome as I can: but what o is done? |
A19338 | V. Because my mother was away from home A. Therfore who gave thee[ thy] drinking? |
A19338 | V. Because( as thou sayest) the* discourse is long, tell me first, at what* a clocke* they sate downe? |
A19338 | V. But I pray thee, what was the last act of the* Comoedie? |
A19338 | V. Did they all* k sit conveniently? |
A19338 | V. From whence was l that fetched? |
A19338 | V. Hast thou c finished it? |
A19338 | V. Hath he much n of the same sort? |
A19338 | V. Is this to bee asked? |
A19338 | V. Knowest thou[ them?] |
A19338 | V. Never l in very deed: but that we may returne to the purpose, Master,* will you suffer us m to goe forth without the citie? |
A19338 | V. S. So long whilest I goe to change my* pantofles wit ● shooes ▪ M. Where wilt thou that I tarry fo ● thee? |
A19338 | V. Should I ● ● ● fuse ● ● ● fuse? |
A19338 | V. Therfore what x[ doe] we? |
A19338 | V. Thou knowst not what* cause there was of so great a feast? |
A19338 | V. Well done: what after? |
A19338 | V. Were there no g sauces? |
A19338 | V. Were there no women? |
A19338 | V. What besides? |
A19338 | V. What businesse hadst thou? |
A19338 | V. What did hee grant? |
A19338 | V. What did thy u brother[ † thy] cousin germane? |
A19338 | V. What proverbe doest thou* meane? |
A19338 | V. What t if hee will answer u any thing against[ it]? |
A19338 | V. What taske? |
A19338 | V. What then doest thou q perswade me to doe? |
A19338 | V. What then? |
A19338 | V. What was the end of dinner? |
A19338 | V. What* notes? |
A19338 | V. What? |
A19338 | V. What? |
A19338 | V. What[ did] you in the meane time, who had* served at the Table? |
A19338 | V. What[ did][ her] sonne? |
A19338 | V. Where was[ o our] Master in the meane time? |
A19338 | V. Wherein doe I seeme to thee to neglect d them? |
A19338 | V. Wherfore? |
A19338 | V. Wherfore? |
A19338 | V. Whither? |
A19338 | V. Who awaked thee? |
A19338 | V. Who granted it? |
A19338 | V. Who shall bebin? |
A19338 | V. Why so x so remote? |
A19338 | V. Why wilt thou not* warme thy selfe in the hot- house? |
A19338 | V. Why* should I take heed? |
A19338 | V. d Wherefore? |
A19338 | V. f* But what didst thou from the time that thou rose out of bed? |
A19338 | V. i At what a clocke* did they rise? |
A19338 | V.* Are the rest risen already? |
A19338 | V.* But where sattest thou? |
A19338 | V.* Do they not stir thee up somtime? |
A19338 | V.* Drank they not in the meane time? |
A19338 | V.* How should I but know it, when as our master doth so d oft* beate upon the causes* thereof unto us? |
A19338 | V.* In what place did our master sit? |
A19338 | V.* May I then returne unto my p seat? |
A19338 | V.* Wentest thou not to raise them up? |
A19338 | V.* What good doth so great abundance and diversitie of meates? |
A19338 | V.* What meaneth this? |
A19338 | V.* What, for a whole day? |
A19338 | V.[ Were there] none besides? |
A19338 | V.[* Was there] no fish? |
A19338 | VVHere hast thou bin to day after dinner? |
A19338 | WHat a hath[ thy] mother given thee b against thy drinking? |
A19338 | WHat doest thou a muse on here alone? |
A19338 | WHat doest thou? |
A19338 | WHat dost thou reade? |
A19338 | WHat dost thou? |
A19338 | WHat hast thou done with a my rule? |
A19338 | WHat hast thou done* these fifteene daies? |
A19338 | WHat saiest thou a concerning the penknife, which* I bought thee* now three days ago, is it* a good one? |
A19338 | WHat trees are there in your a orchard? |
A19338 | WHat was done in the* schoole at a three of the clock? |
A19338 | WHat* speech hadst thou even now with our master? |
A19338 | WHat, have you thought sufficiently of that which we* had speech of betweene us* of late? |
A19338 | WHen wilt thou a* go again into the school? |
A19338 | WHere are thy walnuts? |
A19338 | WHere c endedst thou thy narration before dinner? |
A19338 | WHere hast thou been g of late? |
A19338 | WHere is Martin? |
A19338 | WHere is Peter? |
A19338 | WHere is thy brother? |
A19338 | WHere is thy father now? |
A19338 | WHere* is thy eldest brother now? |
A19338 | WHither goest thou now? |
A19338 | WHither goest thou so* a speedily? |
A19338 | WHither* goest thou? |
A19338 | WHo are the victors this weeke? |
A19338 | WHy camest thou no sooner? |
A19338 | WHy didst thou p scatter pease here? |
A19338 | WHy doest thou not restore me[ my] booke? |
A19338 | WHy dost thou laugh* all alone? |
A19338 | WHy hast thou not played with us to day? |
A19338 | WHy wast thou a away to day in the morning? |
A19338 | WHy wast thou not present at s this daies Sermon? |
A19338 | WHy* ought we to heare the Gospel diligently? |
A19338 | WIlt thou buy this girdle? |
A19338 | WIlt thou come to make water? |
A19338 | WIlt thou come with me? |
A19338 | WIlt thou give me* but one penne? |
A19338 | WIlt thou lend me thy Terence? |
A19338 | WIlt thou* a do me an especial favour? |
A19338 | WIth what money hast thou bought this booke? |
A19338 | Was there then* no venison? |
A19338 | Were there not other bookes like? |
A19338 | What a one is that parke? |
A19338 | What aa hast thou done in the market? |
A19338 | What boy s doth send t angellick sounds from[ his] mouth? |
A19338 | What bringest thou from thence? |
A19338 | What busines hast thou in the haven? |
A19338 | What businesse hast thou? |
A19338 | What businesse* had ● ● thou beneath? |
A19338 | What care I? |
A19338 | What cause is there? |
A19338 | What did hee in the meane time? |
A19338 | What did they? |
A19338 | What did you prattle? |
A19338 | What diddest thou feare? |
A19338 | What doe I not owe unto him, who o hath given mee all things? |
A19338 | What doe fooles think concerning fortune? |
A19338 | What doe thy two schoole- fellows? |
A19338 | What doest thou aske me? |
A19338 | What doest thou marvell? |
A19338 | What dost thou answer to this? |
A19338 | What dost thou doubt? |
A19338 | What dost thou need, quoth he? |
A19338 | What doth he there? |
A19338 | What doth hee answer? |
A19338 | What flesh hast thou brought us against to morrow? |
A19338 | What h reward doe yee require then? |
A19338 | What hast tho ● to write? |
A19338 | What hast thou deserved thereupon? |
A19338 | What if I s ● al ● find none? |
A19338 | What if the Master himselfe should write unto thy father? |
A19338 | What if thou shouldest allay it with vinegar? |
A19338 | What if[ it be] arrived already? |
A19338 | What is foolishnesse? |
A19338 | What is it? |
A19338 | What is that? |
A19338 | What need was there[ to adde that?] |
A19338 | What pleaseth it you to* command? |
A19338 | What remaineth but that thou a pray to God, and b proceed diligently in[ thy] c purpose? |
A19338 | What sayest thou,* live? |
A19338 | What shal I do in th ● meane time? |
A19338 | What shall we doe? |
A19338 | What should I answer? |
A19338 | What should I had written, unlesse shee had y told me? |
A19338 | What should I repeat? |
A19338 | What then doth hinder[ him,] that he doth not m* allow thee money? |
A19338 | What then? |
A19338 | What then? |
A19338 | What then? |
A19338 | What thou write? |
A19338 | What thy supper? |
A19338 | What unto the schoole? |
A19338 | What will you give me? |
A19338 | What will you now? |
A19338 | What wilt thou b that I doe? |
A19338 | What wilt thou expect? |
A19338 | What wilt thou give me? |
A19338 | What wilt thou give, if I shall sow[ them] for thee? |
A19338 | What wilt thou? |
A19338 | What wilt thou[ that] I doe? |
A19338 | What* hindreth? |
A19338 | What* then? |
A19338 | What, I pray thee? |
A19338 | What? |
A19338 | What? |
A19338 | What[ did] the rest? |
A19338 | What[ doth your] hostesse? |
A19338 | What[ is] that,* I pray thee? |
A19338 | What[ saith] r our Paul? |
A19338 | What[ sentences?] |
A19338 | When came hee? |
A19338 | When m therefore? |
A19338 | When then? |
A19338 | When? |
A19338 | When? |
A19338 | Where hadst thou gotten money? |
A19338 | Where sawest thou him? |
A19338 | Where then? |
A19338 | Where was[ your] host? |
A19338 | Where wast thou when the a accounts were given? |
A19338 | Where were they? |
A19338 | Where? |
A19338 | Where? |
A19338 | Where? |
A19338 | Wherefore didst thou not keep them rather to play? |
A19338 | Wherefore? |
A19338 | Whether shall begin? |
A19338 | Which way is hee to make his journey? |
A19338 | Who a sent thee thither? |
A19338 | Who c permitted thee to goe forth? |
A19338 | Who can bee good, but by the grace of God? |
A19338 | Who gave it thee? |
A19338 | Who hath taught you? |
A19338 | Who heard thee? |
A19338 | Who is wo nt d to raise thee up? |
A19338 | Who knoweth not? |
A19338 | Who then shall* k impute it to me for a fault, if I shall aske any thing of friends either to lend or to borrow? |
A19338 | Who were present? |
A19338 | Whom doth he speake unto? |
A19338 | Whom* could I have hoped so rr ready to answer me? |
A19338 | Why a hast thou not it? |
A19338 | Why askest thou this? |
A19338 | Why before the houre? |
A19338 | Why camest thou not sooner into the schoole, as thou a ● t wo nt a* for most part? |
A19338 | Why didst not thou thy selfe take? |
A19338 | Why doe we not say, hic arbor, c like as hic labor? |
A19338 | Why doest thou admonish mee of that thing? |
A19338 | Why doest thou enquire so* earnestly? |
A19338 | Why doest thou not t admonish[ him] oft? |
A19338 | Why hast thou not brought? |
A19338 | Why hast thou not given ee a signe? |
A19338 | Why hast thou not restored them? |
A19338 | Why not? |
A19338 | Why not? |
A19338 | Why not? |
A19338 | Why not? |
A19338 | Why not? |
A19338 | Why should I doe* so? |
A19338 | Why so quickly? |
A19338 | Why so? |
A19338 | Why so? |
A19338 | Why so? |
A19338 | Why then doest thou aske so* earnestly? |
A19338 | Why then doest thou not* speake to thy father? |
A19338 | Why then saiedst thou, If so bee that* luck had served? |
A19338 | Why then( wilt thou say) is he so severe openly? |
A19338 | Why wouldest thou not? |
A19338 | Will ● e then[ have] all things proper to himselfe? |
A19338 | Will* you then looke for us there? |
A19338 | With what countenance* did our master receive thee? |
A19338 | With* what, thinkest thou,* but with mine owne? |
A19338 | [ It is] † no marvell: as there is h much flesh, so there are many who eat flesh daily: but what kindes of flesh sawest thou especially? |
A19338 | [ Our] l family did gather them* when we made wine · P. What kindes of such like fruits* have you? |
A19338 | a ARt thou prepar''d to give an account of thy study? |
A19338 | a HAst thou beene to day in the market? |
A19338 | a HAst thou not many bookes? |
A19338 | a HAst thou used my penknife enough? |
A19338 | a IS* thy brother come from Lions? |
A19338 | a Knowest thou our masters † nature? |
A19338 | a LEwes,* why art thou sad? |
A19338 | a REmembrest thou not that[ our master is wo nt to admonish us so often, of flying b lewd companions? |
A19338 | a WHat newes hast thou? |
A19338 | a WHen is Blasius to returne? |
A19338 | a hast thou it not? |
A19338 | a in good earnest? |
A19338 | a makest thou hast? |
A19338 | a wast thou in the market to day? |
A19338 | a what hast thou done? |
A19338 | a what wouldest thou doe? |
A19338 | a whether hast thou any newes? |
A19338 | a whether is it good? |
A19338 | a ● ry out so? |
A19338 | aa Who is to bee found? |
A19338 | aa behold now you are catched, doe yee not confesse it? |
A19338 | also wherefore doth it want the Participle in Rus? |
A19338 | answered hee? |
A19338 | are there not six hundreth matters, which* scholars have need of? |
A19338 | b D. We are wo nt so* usually in summer: but[ when dine] yee? |
A19338 | b Dost thou not remember the word of our master? |
A19338 | b Whence is that suspition risen to thee? |
A19338 | b some of the hogsheads c dost thou not thinke it? |
A19338 | b whereto, or to what end? |
A19338 | b whether or no? |
A19338 | bb may it not be lawfull for us? |
A19338 | but a what meanest thou? |
A19338 | but o what doth hinder? |
A19338 | but what didst thou? |
A19338 | c But hast thou d pronounced* already the e context of thy lesson, against to morrow morning? |
A19338 | c What maketh it matter to me, or what have I to doe with that? |
A19338 | c doth the common ● ort so? |
A19338 | c hast thou received letters? |
A19338 | c is it a sore disease? |
A19338 | c is it done? |
A19338 | c troubleth, or paineth him, or where i ● he sicke? |
A19338 | c wh ● t thithe ●? |
A19338 | c what a matter is that, or what is that? |
A19338 | c what a one was* is it done? |
A19338 | c what care I for that? |
A19338 | c what money hath he given thee? |
A19338 | c what trees? |
A19338 | c what wine? |
A19338 | c why didst not thou stay? |
A19338 | c without thy privity, or thee not being asked counsell of, or not having told thee? |
A19338 | c would it not be better? |
A19338 | came he rot to mee? |
A19338 | canst thou thinke* that he did permit him? |
A19338 | d But thou, durst thou not? |
A19338 | d G.* Knowest thou not that the people are now busie in gathering their grapes? |
A19338 | d O foole doest thou aske? |
A19338 | d Therefore what wouldest thou? |
A19338 | d What didst thou? |
A19338 | d gave hee it willingly? |
A19338 | d houre is it? |
A19338 | d how forg ● ● f ● ll am I which remembred not this? |
A19338 | d not sooner? |
A19338 | d what did thy supper coll? |
A19338 | d what doth ake unto you? |
A19338 | d when goest thou? |
A19338 | dd S. e What gaine wilt thou make? |
A19338 | dd what say you of the probation? |
A19338 | did he lye at your house? |
A19338 | did he not † wax exceeding angry? |
A19338 | didst thou nothing besides? |
A19338 | doest thou not feele the cold? |
A19338 | doest thou? |
A19338 | dost thou thinke* z that I am touched with lesse griefe? |
A19338 | doth hee answer? |
A19338 | doth hee speake Latine* already? |
A19338 | doth it not become? |
A19338 | doth shee* looke to nothing? |
A19338 | e Art thou not any thing ashamed? |
A19338 | e Why thither? |
A19338 | e but thou for ▪ how much? |
A19338 | e doe they speake Latine? |
A19338 | e for what purpose? |
A19338 | e how much benefit? |
A19338 | e wilt thou? |
A19338 | f And hast thou done it well? |
A19338 | f D. Hadst thou not rather* that it were,* veale or* mutton? |
A19338 | f shall I not begin? |
A19338 | f what doth that profi? |
A19338 | f wilt thou? |
A19338 | g is hee well? |
A19338 | g meanest thou? |
A19338 | g spakest thou with him? |
A19338 | g why should I not hope? |
A19338 | h meanest thou? |
A19338 | h oft, or more then once* what thou shalt do? |
A19338 | h tell me why? |
A19338 | hast thou not brought d it? |
A19338 | have ye not them also? |
A19338 | how canst thou live there? |
A19338 | how is it declined? |
A19338 | i G. Doth he then let his own house[ and] hire* another mans? |
A19338 | i Why? |
A19338 | i may come in a short[ space?] |
A19338 | i may have a word, or two? |
A19338 | if thou didst nothing, c wast thou not idle? |
A19338 | is it now begun? |
A19338 | is not that to laugh? |
A19338 | it? |
A19338 | k Doe I lie? |
A19338 | k hast thou not remembred it? |
A19338 | k when will she returne? |
A19338 | l Canst thou? |
A19338 | l S. m What thou, wilt thou not goe n to get the vintage? |
A19338 | l diddest not thou thy selfe? |
A19338 | l how far is your village distant from hence ▪(*) hast thou not remembred thy promise? |
A19338 | m what dost thou? |
A19338 | n Wherefore? |
A19338 | n Will you any thing besides? |
A19338 | n art thou in good health? |
A19338 | n from what Chapter, or in what Chapter? |
A19338 | n whereto? |
A19338 | o Have ye nothing besides? |
A19338 | o What cause was there? |
A19338 | o What? |
A19338 | o camest thou? |
A19338 | o sendest thou? |
A19338 | o what matter is it? |
A19338 | or gave he thee any money? |
A19338 | or why may I not be willing? |
A19338 | or why should it not be lawfull? |
A19338 | oughtest thou to goe forth without my commandement? |
A19338 | p but where is thy mother? |
A19338 | p may we not play then? |
A19338 | p will you? |
A19338 | profited thee? |
A19338 | q Is it not then lawfull to utter any word at that time? |
A19338 | q Of what sort, or of what kinde? |
A19338 | q What were the fruits? |
A19338 | q from whence provest thou that? |
A19338 | q may no word bee spoken then? |
A19338 | q ● rom whence? |
A19338 | r dost thou not heare? |
A19338 | r what meanest thou? |
A19338 | s C. What should I have done there longer? |
A19338 | t Indeed canst thou not remember a word? |
A19338 | t are many returned? |
A19338 | t what speakest thou, or what meanest thou, or what matter makes that? |
A19338 | t whither are we gone? |
A19338 | thee? |
A19338 | thy trifles? |
A19338 | to pray: doest thou not remember it? |
A19338 | twentie pence? |
A19338 | u whence is it? |
A19338 | uu what need hath thy Tutor of thy helpe? |
A19338 | was not your chamber locked? |
A19338 | was there* no wine? |
A19338 | we take? |
A19338 | what a* remedy hast thou* ministred to my griefe? |
A19338 | what dost thou desire g moreover? |
A19338 | what more honest? |
A19338 | what more pleasant? |
A19338 | what nothing? |
A19338 | what other thing doe I g aske of thee? |
A19338 | what should I eat? |
A19338 | what* rest could we have? |
A19338 | what, if I should aske some great thing? |
A19338 | what? |
A19338 | when returned he* from the country? |
A19338 | where and when shall I finde such a friend? |
A19338 | where are they fedde? |
A19338 | where is master Philip? |
A19338 | where was shee? |
A19338 | whereupon(*) doe I seeme to thee(*)[ so] wretched? |
A19338 | wherfore returned not he unto the schoole with you? |
A19338 | whether d of repeating* Tullies Epistles? |
A19338 | whether, d* such as grow commonly about the cities, or wilde? |
A19338 | whether[ is it] the h forepart of the head, or the hinder part of the head? |
A19338 | who* gave them thee? |
A19338 | why doest thou follow me every where? |
A19338 | wilt thou then have of the g greater? |
A19338 | wilt thou(*) lye idle here alone? |
A19338 | wilt thou* lend[ me]? |
A19338 | x askest thou, enquirest thou? |
A19338 | x what may we say? |
A19338 | x what shall bee done, or what then? |
A19338 | y saiest thou so indeed? |
A19338 | yea truly, it was most a pleasant: but why doest thou aske that? |
A19338 | yea was I indeed a master? |
A19338 | z doe they learne now? |
A19338 | z how long? |
A19338 | z what hast thou to doe? |
A19338 | z when hast thou returned? |
A19338 | z why wilt thou go? |
A19338 | † I x they teach, they reade, theywrite, they repeate D. These are general and dayly things, but what is done in our forme? |
A19338 | † art thou very well? |
A19338 | † had said? |
A19338 | † o HOw is it that thou p hast returned so quickly to day frō thy uncle, r especially sith there q hath been a feast? |
A19338 | † shew or relate to me c concerning the feast † doest ● hou covet ▪ or desire to know? |
A19338 | ● A west thou my booke? |
A19338 | ● Q Wilt thou that I tell thee* summarily? |
A19338 | ● What wilt thou doe now? |
A19338 | ● ut that is a greater by much, that above my chamber there is a very large b common chamber, where wares are kept? |
A19338 | 〈 ◊ 〉 c Hath he given thee any money? |
A19338 | 〈 ◊ 〉 ● herefore take these two, when wit thou ● ● store them? |