German Primer

Portada
D. Appleton & Company, 1873 - 126 páginas

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Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 5 - The Mastery of Languages ; or, the Art of Speaking Foreign Tongues Idiomatically.
Página 4 - With an Appendix, containing the Cardinal and Ordinal Numbers, and full Paradigms of the Regular and Irregular, Auxiliary, Reflective, and Impersonal Verbs, by JL Jewett.
Página 8 - German word, several hundred synonymes, together with a Classification and Alphabetical List of the Irregular Verbs, and a Dictionary of German Abbreviations. The foreign words, likewise, which have not been completely...
Página 8 - The aim of the distinguished author of this work has been to embody all the valuable results of the most recent investigations in a German lexicon, which might become not only a reliable guide for the practical acquisition of the language, but one which would not forsake the student in the higher walks of his pursuits, to which its treasure
Página 3 - At once the simplest and most complete Grammar of the French language. To the pupil the effect is almost as if he looked into a map, so well-defined is the course of study as explained by M. de Fivas.
Página 8 - Germanized, and which often differ in pronunciation and inflection from such as are purely native, have been designated by particular marks. The vocabulary of foreign words, which now act so important a part, not only in scientific works, but in the best classics, reviews, journals, newspapers, and even in conversation, has been copiously supplied from the most complete and correct sources. It is believed that in the terminology of chemistry, mineralogy, the practical arts, commerce, navigation,...
Página 4 - ... well as efficiently by exercises, which teach the principles successively involved more clearly than any abstract language can. They give a conversational, and therefore a practically nseful, knowledge of the language ; the student is made constantly to apply what he learns.
Página 4 - Gramman have been before the public so long and have had their merits so generally acknowledged, that it is unnecessary to enter into any detailed description of their peculiarities or lengthy argument in their favor. Suffice it to say, that they are founded in nature, and follow the same course that a child pursues in first acquiring his native tongue.
Página 8 - By GJ ADLER, AM, Professor of the German Language and Literature in the University of New York. One elegant large 8vo vol., 1,400 pages.

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