Janua linguarum, or an easie and compendious method and course for the
attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. Wherein are Latine
sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words
of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated,
except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation
of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive
words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the
supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the
Latine.
Dublin Core
Title
Janua linguarum, or an easie and compendious method and course for the
attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. Wherein are Latine
sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words
of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated,
except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation
of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive
words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the
supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the
Latine.
attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. Wherein are Latine
sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words
of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated,
except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation
of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive
words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the
supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the
Latine.
Creator
William Bathe
Source
STC (2nd ed.) 14472
Publisher
R. Young, George Lathum
Identifier
108
Collection
Citation
William Bathe, “Janua linguarum, or an easie and compendious method and course for the
attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. Wherein are Latine
sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words
of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated,
except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation
of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive
words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the
supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the
Latine.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/2887.
attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. Wherein are Latine
sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words
of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated,
except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation
of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive
words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the
supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the
Latine.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/2887.