Table of contents for Latin grammar / Dirk Panhuis.


Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog
Note: Electronic data is machine generated. May be incomplete or contain other coding.


Counter
PART 1. Alphabet and Phonology
Chapter 1. Alphabet and Phonology (§ 1-9)                       3
Alphabet: § 1                                     3
Phonological system: § 4                          4
Quantity of syllables: § 7                       6
Word stress or spoken accent: § 9                 8
PART 2. Morphology
Chapter 2. The Word (§ 10-16)                                  11
Chapter 3. The Noun (§ 17-31)                                  16
General concepts: § 17                           16
First or a-declension: § 22                      18
Second or o-declension: § 24                     18
Third or consonant/i-declension: § 26            19
Fourth or u-declension: § 29                     21
Fifth or e-declension: § 31                      22
Chapter 4. The Adjective (§ 32-45)                             23
Adjectives of the first group: a- and o-declensions: § 32  23
Adjectives of the second group: third or
consonant/i-declension: § 35                  24
Degrees of comparison: § 39                      25
Numerals: § 43                                   27
Chapter 5. The Adverb (§ 46-51)                                29
Chapter 6. The Pronoun (§ 52-71)                               32
Personal pronouns: § 52                          32
Possessive pronouns: § 55                        33
Demonstrative pronouns: § 57                     34
Relative pronouns: § 63                          37
Interrogative pronouns: § 69                     38
Indefinite pronouns: § 70                        39
Correlative pronouns: § 71                       40
Chapter 7. The Verb (§ 72-114)
Concepts: §72                                    41
Conjugations and stems: § 72 41
Tenses: § 77 42
Moods: § 78 43
Voices: § 79 44
Person, number, and gender: § 80 44
Characteristics of tenses and moods: § 83        45
Five paradigms: § 89                             47
Periphrastic conjugation: § 100                  58
Deponent and semi-deponent verbs: § 101          58
Irregular verbs: § 104                           59
Esse: § 104 59
Posse: § 105 60
Ferre: § 106 61
Velle, nolle, malle: § 107 61
Fieri: § 108 62
Ire: § 109 63
Defective verbs: § 110                           63
Chapter 8. The Preposition (§ 115-21)
Definition: § 115                                65
Prepositions governing both the accusative and
the ablative: § 119                            65
Prepositions governing the accusative: § 120     66
Prepositions governing the ablative: § 121       67
PART 3. Semantics and Syntax of the Cases
Chapter 9. Semantics and Syntax of the Cases (§ 122-78)
Introduction: § 122                              71
Nominative: § 123                                71
Vocative: § 124                                  71
Genitive: § 125                                  72
Genitive as constituent of the noun phrase: § 125 72
Genitive as constituent of the sentence: § 132 74
Dative: § 136                                    75
Accusative: § 146                                79
Ablative: § 162                                  82
Synopsis of the use of the cases: § 178          86
PART 4. Syntax and Semantics of the Sentence and Its Parts
Chapter 10. The Sentence (§ 179-91)
Sentence structure: § 179                        91
Sentence analysis: § 182                         92
Function: § 184                                 9(
Semantic role: § 187                            9;
Form: § 189                                     91
Level: § 190                                    9E
Chapter 11. The Predicate (§ 192-238)
Definition and terminology: § 192              10C
Agreement with the subject: § 195              101
Active and passive voices: § 205               103
Tenses: § 210                                  10;
Moods and sentence types: § 224                113
Modality: § 224 113
Declarative sentence: § 225 114
Interrogative sentence: § 228 115
Volitive sentence: § 232 117
Concession: § 237 119
Synopsis: § 238 119
Chapter 12. The Subject (§ 239-47)
Definition: § 239                              12(
Case and agreement: § 241                      12(
Form of the subject: § 244                     12(
Predicates without subject: § 247              122
Chapter 13. The Object (§ 248-84)
Definition and terminology: § 248              122
Predicates with a subject and one object: § 249  122
Predicates with a subject and two objects: § 260  12ý
Predicates without a subject and with two
objects: § 263                               12S
Predicates with various constructions: § 264   13(
Infinitive clause and sequence of tenses: § 266  13(
Nominative with an infinitive: § 272           132
Indirect statement: § 273                      132
Indirect command or prohibition: § 274         132
Indirect question and sequence of tenses: § 275  13z
Dependent clause in indirect statement,
command, or question: § 281                  13(
Reference in direct and indirect speech: § 284  131
Chapter 14. Predicativum (§ 285-92)
Chapter 15. Adverbials (§ 293-357)
Definition: § 293                              142
Adverb and adverb phrase: § 296                142
Noun, noun phrase, and prepositional phrase: § 297  14z
Seven finite clauses with conjunction: § 326   154
Time: § 326 154
Cause and reason: § 329 155
Concession: § 331 -156
Comparison: § 333 157
Condition: § 335 158
Purpose: § 340 159
Result: § 343 160
Synopsis of the use of the conjunction cum: § 345 161
Synopsis of the use of the conjunction ut: § 346 161
Sequence of tenses in the subjunctive: § 347 162
Ablative absolute: § 349                        162
Supine in -um: § 355                            166
Gerund phrase and gerundive constructi n: § 356  166
Chapter 16. The Attribute (§ 358-74)                          169
Level and definition: § 358                     169
Agreeing attributes: § 359                      169
Dominant participle: § 363                      172
Apposition: § 364                               173
Noun in the genitive: § 365                     173
Other attributes: § 366                        174
Relative clause: § 367                          174
PART 5. Textlinguistics
Chapter 17. Context (§ 375-81)                                181
Text in context: § 375                          181
Functions in the text: § 378                    183
Chapter 18. Word Order (§ 382-95)                             185
Communicative perspective: theme-rhem : § 382  185
Normal word order in the sentence: § 384        187
Emotive and special word order: § 390           193
Place of the verb: § 393                        194
Chapter 19. Stylistics (§ 396-463)                            197
Introduction: § 396                            197
Rhetorical period: § 397                        197
Figures of speech: § 403                        199
Chapter 20. Metrics (§ 464-75)                                215
Latin metrical feet: § 464                     215
Latin versification schemes: § 466              215
Dactylic hexameter: § 466 215
Dactylic nentmPeter- 8 474 971



Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Latin language Grammar