This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
the end of the | 10 |
on the other hand | 8 |
as a matter of | 7 |
at the end of | 7 |
at the beginning of | 7 |
the man i sing | 6 |
one of the most | 6 |
the author of the | 6 |
inversion of the phrase | 6 |
a matter of course | 6 |
arms and the man | 6 |
the beginning of the | 6 |
seems to have been | 6 |
and the man i | 6 |
at a time when | 5 |
for the sake of | 5 |
the fact that the | 5 |
varying of the pause | 5 |
in so far as | 5 |
the inversion of the | 5 |
in the fifth book | 5 |
it is difficult to | 4 |
as early as b | 4 |
as we shall see | 4 |
first lines of the | 4 |
to be found in | 4 |
i come now to | 4 |
i am now to | 4 |
of the sixth book | 4 |
a member of the | 4 |
it is upon the | 4 |
vergil seems to have | 4 |
the conclusion of the | 4 |
singular and plural numbers | 4 |
of the same nature | 4 |
the varying of the | 4 |
i am apt to | 4 |
it may well be | 4 |
is not to be | 4 |
the second and third | 4 |
we are told by | 4 |
am apt to think | 4 |
has a wonderful effect | 4 |
it would have been | 4 |
more concise than the | 4 |
line it is upon | 4 |
at the same time | 4 |
one of the first | 4 |
in the second line | 4 |
as we have seen | 4 |
in one dull line | 4 |
that it is a | 4 |
in the second book | 4 |
in the case of | 4 |
come now to the | 4 |
that the poet had | 3 |
is the reason why | 3 |
the first syllable of | 3 |
are to be found | 3 |
of the new poets | 3 |
if this be true | 3 |
it is well to | 3 |
years of his life | 3 |
of the fourth eclogue | 3 |
of the allusio verborum | 3 |
in point of fact | 3 |
of what i am | 3 |
nothing can be more | 3 |
the fact that vergil | 3 |
sound to the sense | 3 |
in her lap to | 3 |
in the spring of | 3 |
of the second foot | 3 |
the following are examples | 3 |
to do with the | 3 |
of the heroic age | 3 |
thuriferis panchaia pinguis arenis | 3 |
to have been written | 3 |
the generality of readers | 3 |
and at the same | 3 |
we are not told | 3 |
could hardly have been | 3 |
by means of a | 3 |
the tendencies of the | 3 |
in the midst of | 3 |
is to be found | 3 |
rotis summas levibus pellabitur | 3 |
in the first book | 3 |
first syllable of the | 3 |
to the common measure | 3 |
upon the first syllable | 3 |
it may be proper | 3 |
the singular and plural | 3 |
of the english language | 3 |
the queen of love | 3 |
the beginning of a | 3 |
but it may be | 3 |
that is the reason | 3 |
contrary to the common | 3 |
may well have been | 3 |
he could hardly have | 3 |
it would be a | 3 |
in the first place | 3 |
of the second and | 3 |
the auxiliary verb is | 3 |
her lap to rest | 3 |
when he wrote the | 3 |
to take notice of | 3 |
may be proper to | 3 |
the third book of | 3 |
to begin with the | 3 |
how is the verse | 3 |
in the same place | 3 |
the passage in homer | 3 |
concise than the latin | 3 |
in the third book | 3 |
the georgics and the | 3 |
the form of a | 3 |
seems to be the | 3 |
after the battle of | 3 |
at the age of | 3 |
the verse would have | 3 |
as well as the | 3 |
but it is not | 3 |
totaque thuriferis panchaia pinguis | 3 |
of which i have | 3 |
is upon the first | 3 |
the ideals of the | 3 |
summas levibus pellabitur undas | 3 |
if we may believe | 3 |
third book of the | 3 |
there seems to be | 3 |
the sound to the | 3 |
to the memory of | 3 |
recubans sub tegmine fagi | 3 |
the soft idalian grove | 2 |
people that on earth | 2 |
in his first book | 2 |
in any one of | 2 |
syrian branch of the | 2 |
horrid helms high on | 2 |
we have in this | 2 |
to take off his | 2 |
and that it is | 2 |
temple to venus genetrix | 2 |
it appears that the | 2 |
influence in behalf of | 2 |
in the work of | 2 |
we shall see presently | 2 |
atque rotis summas levibus | 2 |
but we may at | 2 |
greeks did endless sorrows | 2 |
the reader cannot but | 2 |
the common pronunciation of | 2 |
the anger of achilles | 2 |
the subject of the | 2 |
regain the blissful seat | 2 |
the study of the | 2 |
a few have accepted | 2 |
he published the georgics | 2 |
in the fourth line | 2 |
the son of jove | 2 |
the english is almost | 2 |
leges pretio atque refixit | 2 |
metaphysical processes of thought | 2 |
haec fuisse et esse | 2 |
raise storms at thy | 2 |
find a new meaning | 2 |
et mulcere dedit fluctus | 2 |
in the light of | 2 |
is a kind of | 2 |
fruit of that forbidden | 2 |
and wave your tops | 2 |
heads triumphant death his | 2 |
changing the common pronunciation | 2 |
after the peace of | 2 |
which had to be | 2 |
then did the roaring | 2 |
warn us that his | 2 |
laxas sciret dare jussus | 2 |
fact that the poet | 2 |
et surrentini litoris ara | 2 |
on their heads they | 2 |
warble as ye flow | 2 |
to the very end | 2 |
of this monosyllable collocation | 2 |
creed in the first | 2 |
it was not till | 2 |
is no occasion to | 2 |
it is to be | 2 |
in the manner of | 2 |
the verse and the | 2 |
assiduis terram insectabere rastris | 2 |
atmosphere in which aeneas | 2 |
gardens on the esquiline | 2 |
aged oak uprears his | 2 |
despite his devotion to | 2 |
level of the tides | 2 |
that vergil did not | 2 |
a trace of the | 2 |
humbled all my heart | 2 |
we may learn from | 2 |
could he have been | 2 |
sciret dare jussus habenas | 2 |
castor et gemelle castoris | 2 |
from the beginning to | 2 |
and under open sky | 2 |
but now ye strangers | 2 |
such manner as to | 2 |
the fruit of that | 2 |
on land and sea | 2 |
of the georgics and | 2 |
that the verse is | 2 |
and that is the | 2 |
si vero viciam que | 2 |
instance of this kind | 2 |
if he had writ | 2 |
assigned to this period | 2 |
the first and ninth | 2 |
poem is not a | 2 |
a new meaning in | 2 |
the stile of homer | 2 |
the adapting the sound | 2 |
numen adorant sub coelo | 2 |
verses contrary to the | 2 |
is there any thing | 2 |
deis sibi esse facta | 2 |
assonantia syllabarum or rhyme | 2 |
of the golden age | 2 |
the conclusion of this | 2 |
after the death of | 2 |
give you to level | 2 |
v a student of | 2 |
the syrian branch of | 2 |
of the roman people | 2 |
triumphant death his dart | 2 |
the dedication of the | 2 |
the founder of the | 2 |
but there is no | 2 |
in his description of | 2 |
end of the second | 2 |
the poet of the | 2 |
the student of vergil | 2 |
they chanted loud and | 2 |
that the body of | 2 |
syllables in the latin | 2 |
him humbled all my | 2 |
opus foret volare sive | 2 |
hominum rex et mulcere | 2 |
book of the aeneid | 2 |
bare he in his | 2 |
biggest born of earth | 2 |
to the study of | 2 |
whither lies your way | 2 |
that the auxiliary verb | 2 |
are told by the | 2 |
and safely to regain | 2 |
it is not easy | 2 |
vero viciam que seres | 2 |
apibus quanta experientia parcis | 2 |
also seems to have | 2 |
in mind that the | 2 |
sing to the lord | 2 |
does it not appear | 2 |
that it is the | 2 |
it would be difficult | 2 |
from any thing else | 2 |
the battlefield of pharsalia | 2 |
messianic hopes of the | 2 |
mind the fact that | 2 |
gemelle castor et gemelle | 2 |
a little of the | 2 |
would be difficult to | 2 |
of that forbidden tree | 2 |
on the road to | 2 |
all the beauties of | 2 |
ruris opaci falce premes | 2 |
instances of the same | 2 |
that warble as ye | 2 |
in this respect than | 2 |
genus qui ducis olympo | 2 |
canerem reges et proelia | 2 |
strength of the english | 2 |
particles que and et | 2 |
are told that he | 2 |
in behalf of vergil | 2 |
et esse cognitissima ait | 2 |
have taken notice of | 2 |
tibi haec fuisse et | 2 |
their heads triumphant death | 2 |
and the fruit of | 2 |
as can possibly be | 2 |
the fourth thing to | 2 |
end of the poem | 2 |
quo sidere terram vertere | 2 |
of varying the pause | 2 |
so that the english | 2 |
the time when the | 2 |
sed haec prius fuere | 2 |
this is of course | 2 |
and smooth the seas | 2 |
then mounted on his | 2 |
instances of this nature | 2 |
and it would be | 2 |
of the flood arose | 2 |
in which aeneas had | 2 |
aeneid ought to warn | 2 |
mixt alliteration in the | 2 |
and skims the watry | 2 |
the two first lines | 2 |
but that is not | 2 |
and heroes to the | 2 |
mortal taste brought death | 2 |
to raise storms at | 2 |
to the soft idalian | 2 |
of another learned foreigner | 2 |
is come into the | 2 |
his first book of | 2 |
a passage of this | 2 |
upon the last syllable | 2 |
of the same kind | 2 |
in the two last | 2 |
and ten low words | 2 |
ix materialism in the | 2 |
the strength of the | 2 |
the literature of the | 2 |
that this line is | 2 |
found in the third | 2 |
and regain the blissful | 2 |
on the bay of | 2 |
makes the reader see | 2 |
their heads they bear | 2 |
the poem is not | 2 |
the great father of | 2 |
example or two of | 2 |
of the single alliteratio | 2 |
but i might have | 2 |
to produce more examples | 2 |
fuisse et esse cognitissima | 2 |
viii last days at | 2 |
did endless sorrows bring | 2 |
soon after the peace | 2 |
fourth thing to be | 2 |
we are told that | 2 |
steeds he flies in | 2 |
seems to be no | 2 |
materialism in the service | 2 |
julius caesar in the | 2 |
i will now shew | 2 |
in the service of | 2 |
syllable of the second | 2 |
nothing to do with | 2 |
so far as it | 2 |
days at the garden | 2 |
the second is a | 2 |
his radiant carr he | 2 |
the reason why he | 2 |
that it may be | 2 |
the latin language is | 2 |
without leaving a trace | 2 |
i will produce an | 2 |
the mixt alliteration in | 2 |
the souls of many | 2 |
when the great father | 2 |
italian and lavinian coast | 2 |
in the paradise lost | 2 |
et sonitu terrebis aves | 2 |
brutus and cassius in | 2 |
olympo et surrentini litoris | 2 |
there is no reason | 2 |
be assigned to this | 2 |
seems not to have | 2 |
mounted on his radiant | 2 |
is indeed one of | 2 |
faith admit that all | 2 |
breathe soft or loud | 2 |
strength to the verse | 2 |
rapt by his steeds | 2 |
some of his epigrams | 2 |
in these two lines | 2 |
much more concise than | 2 |
it is a particular | 2 |
passage of this nature | 2 |
a student of philosophy | 2 |
the st syllable of | 2 |
what seems to be | 2 |
of catullus and calvus | 2 |
had not yet been | 2 |
roaring waves their rage | 2 |
to music and sung | 2 |
it may be said | 2 |
may be said to | 2 |
nature had to be | 2 |
end of the line | 2 |
the level of the | 2 |
vergil had no love | 2 |
it is at present | 2 |
and ye that warble | 2 |
and all our woe | 2 |
at the time when | 2 |
reader cannot but perceive | 2 |
by his steeds he | 2 |
the fact that there | 2 |
of these poems had | 2 |
of brutus and cassius | 2 |
of the very few | 2 |
in the third line | 2 |
the aeneid are at | 2 |
in the autumn of | 2 |
foedere certo et premere | 2 |
lines of the iliad | 2 |
but a few of | 2 |
true of all the | 2 |
julius caesar is still | 2 |
cultus habendo sit pecori | 2 |
seems to point to | 2 |
eastern provinces from the | 2 |
dedication of the ciris | 2 |
end of the republic | 2 |
georgics and the aeneid | 2 |
in the spirit of | 2 |
the language of the | 2 |
as fast as possible | 2 |
oft creep in one | 2 |
the question of authenticity | 2 |
a few years later | 2 |
in the days of | 2 |
to be expected of | 2 |
in such manner as | 2 |
the roaring waves their | 2 |
that there is no | 2 |
great father of the | 2 |
helms high on their | 2 |
a balmy cloud with | 2 |
had good reason to | 2 |
more instances of the | 2 |
seems to have written | 2 |
am taking notice of | 2 |
and carthage was the | 2 |
the direful spring of | 2 |
but it was the | 2 |
in an english line | 2 |
chanted loud and clear | 2 |
the fact that he | 2 |
made it possible for | 2 |
but it has been | 2 |
of the golden bay | 2 |
at the warlike sound | 2 |
and whither lies your | 2 |
the mount of revelations | 2 |
wheels along the level | 2 |
the assonantia syllabarum or | 2 |
may learn from the | 2 |
the pageant of heroes | 2 |
did the roaring waves | 2 |
heroes to the main | 2 |
an instance of this | 2 |
take off his great | 2 |
english is almost one | 2 |
ought to warn us | 2 |
ubi tot simois correpta | 2 |
it was he who | 2 |
the first lines of | 2 |
for the republican cause | 2 |
ye that warble as | 2 |
a time when the | 2 |
experience of the roman | 2 |
and now is come | 2 |
some aged oak uprears | 2 |
there is no occasion | 2 |
safely to regain your | 2 |
be said to be | 2 |
the beginning to the | 2 |
indeed one of the | 2 |
the last line of | 2 |
warlike sound of trumpets | 2 |
except in so far | 2 |
the bay of naples | 2 |
there is nothing in | 2 |
facti de nomine byrsam | 2 |
the service of poetry | 2 |
letters concerning poetical translations | 2 |
atque hominum rex et | 2 |
adapting the sound to | 2 |
death his dart shook | 2 |
now is come into | 2 |
high on their heads | 2 |
him to the soft | 2 |
fixit leges pretio atque | 2 |
is almost one third | 2 |
vi epigram and epic | 2 |
was apt to be | 2 |
is owing to the | 2 |
and before him humbled | 2 |
low words oft creep | 2 |
at their shady lodge | 2 |
you to level priam | 2 |
the collocation of words | 2 |
set to music and | 2 |
is not easy to | 2 |
words oft creep in | 2 |
in the story of | 2 |
te caesar olympo et | 2 |
the sake of the | 2 |
the wit of man | 2 |
taste brought death into | 2 |
he flies in open | 2 |
the close of the | 2 |
which to the greeks | 2 |
the last six books | 2 |
mixing the singular and | 2 |
that the english is | 2 |
carthage was the name | 2 |
which i have said | 2 |
three or four lines | 2 |
the death of caesar | 2 |
in the same manner | 2 |
virgile et les origines | 2 |
he seems to have | 2 |
what is a rapid | 2 |
cremona and mantua were | 2 |
the picture of the | 2 |
the battle of philippi | 2 |
the passage in the | 2 |
publication of the eclogues | 2 |
the publication of the | 2 |
member of the circle | 2 |
there is a new | 2 |
was one of the | 2 |
bear in mind that | 2 |
rex et mulcere dedit | 2 |
the common pause in | 2 |
on his radiant carr | 2 |
you will meet with | 2 |
to the temptation of | 2 |
montis insuper altos imposuit | 2 |
leaving a trace of | 2 |
use of the particles | 2 |
come into the blissful | 2 |
he in his hose | 2 |
the eastern provinces from | 2 |
waves their rage compose | 2 |
the claims of art | 2 |
to the lord with | 2 |
i would suggest that | 2 |
body of the poem | 2 |
one in the english | 2 |
so long as he | 2 |
common pronunciation of words | 2 |
of a later day | 2 |
into the blissful field | 2 |
i am taking notice | 2 |
even the names of | 2 |
the classical ideals of | 2 |
assumed the toga virilis | 2 |
carried with them the | 2 |
and why he so | 2 |
the english language is | 2 |
of the syrian branch | 2 |
the nature of the | 2 |
the body of the | 2 |
him the most high | 2 |
the civil wars which | 2 |
who came with it | 2 |
last syllable of the | 2 |
of the neapolitan bay | 2 |
a student at athens | 2 |
was a student at | 2 |
taught the new generation | 2 |
two first lines of | 2 |
the beginning of it | 2 |
written many years later | 2 |
both by the same | 2 |
alliteration in the first | 2 |
classical ideals of the | 2 |
to warn us that | 2 |
in the first line | 2 |
friend of catullus and | 2 |
caesar olympo et surrentini | 2 |
sound of trumpets loud | 2 |
one of the very | 2 |
be that as it | 2 |
it is a kind | 2 |
seems to date from | 2 |
of which there is | 2 |
radiant carr he rides | 2 |
and horrid helms high | 2 |
in the form of | 2 |
of his own people | 2 |
qui foedere certo et | 2 |
during those years of | 2 |
for the first time | 2 |
i beg leave to | 2 |
the details of the | 2 |
the spirit of homer | 2 |
and wheels along the | 2 |
he assumed the toga | 2 |
uprears his reverend head | 2 |
religious experience of the | 2 |
to be much more | 2 |
be able to make | 2 |
and gave their bodies | 2 |
father of the flood | 2 |
from a passage in | 2 |
that as it may | 2 |
syllable of the d | 2 |
aut venistis ab oris | 2 |
whose mortal taste brought | 2 |
and what an effect | 2 |
the circle of maecenas | 2 |
the poem to vergil | 2 |
for there is nothing | 2 |
on the question of | 2 |
to italy and the | 2 |
the greek and latin | 2 |
found in the aeneid | 2 |
takes the form of | 2 |
from whence it appears | 2 |
for the most part | 2 |
a theme worthy of | 2 |
one of the finest | 2 |
in three or four | 2 |
of the dark ages | 2 |
the warlike sound of | 2 |
or two of the | 2 |
of the passage in | 2 |
vergil was then twenty | 2 |
tuos te caesar olympo | 2 |
mentioned in my former | 2 |
he must have had | 2 |
we do not know | 2 |
flies in open day | 2 |
oak uprears his reverend | 2 |
to the greeks did | 2 |
et inde tot per | 2 |
like that of lucretius | 2 |
may well be a | 2 |
death into the world | 2 |
throws up the reins | 2 |
his steeds he flies | 2 |
despite the fact that | 2 |
what an effect this | 2 |
beginning to the end | 2 |
along the level of | 2 |
the verse is not | 2 |
to regain your native | 2 |
to become a poet | 2 |
in a balmy cloud | 2 |
tot simois correpta sub | 2 |
of the aeneid was | 2 |
the last syllable of | 2 |
some fifteen years before | 2 |
the peace of brundisium | 2 |
it is not unlikely | 2 |
by the author of | 2 |
skims the watry way | 2 |
i mantua dives avis | 2 |
phrase de qua ambigitur | 2 |
st syllable of the | 2 |
a man of very | 2 |
cum canerem reges et | 2 |
quibus aut venistis ab | 2 |
by the civil wars | 2 |
what i am taking | 2 |
and ought to be | 2 |
before he assumed the | 2 |
off his great head | 2 |
last days at the | 2 |
over their heads triumphant | 2 |
this has a wonderful | 2 |
be much more concise | 2 |
the following are instances | 2 |
a passage in milton | 2 |
qui cultus habendo sit | 2 |
artful way of varying | 2 |
majesty and strength to | 2 |
must have been a | 2 |
molemque montis insuper altos | 2 |
from time to time | 2 |
x recubans sub tegmine | 2 |
which of these two | 2 |
ii school and war | 2 |
to whom the poem | 2 |
i have spent many | 2 |
in the very first | 2 |
ten low words oft | 2 |
regain your native shores | 2 |
in mind the fact | 2 |
is not unlikely that | 2 |
instance of this monosyllable | 2 |
they had never had | 2 |
surrentini litoris ara vocat | 2 |
that at the warlike | 2 |
xiii the circle of | 2 |
to say that the | 2 |
vergil wrote the georgics | 2 |
at the conclusion of | 2 |
we happen to know | 2 |
will now shew you | 2 |
branch of the school | 2 |
may faith admit that | 2 |
did not occur to | 2 |
opaci falce premes umbras | 2 |
brought death into the | 2 |
the father of the | 2 |
the scanning conclusive rhyme | 2 |
before him humbled all | 2 |
find a more fitting | 2 |
to be sure the | 2 |
the changing the common | 2 |
creep in one dull | 2 |
apt to think mr | 2 |
with a full rhyme | 2 |
whence it appears that | 2 |
the greeks did endless | 2 |