• Home
  • Gramm / Exer / Vocab
    • Greek Grammar >
      • Main presentation
      • Preface
      • Index of Contents
      • Index of Grammatical Terms
      • Sample pages
    • Latin Grammar >
      • Main presentation
      • Preface
      • Index of Contents
      • Index of Grammatical Terms
      • Sample pages
    • Books of Exercises >
      • Main presentation
      • Preface (Latin)
      • Preface (Greek)
      • Index of Contents (Latin)
      • Index of Contents (Greek)
      • Sample pages (Latin)
      • Sample pages (Greek)
      • Partial Key (Latin)
      • Partial Key (Greek)
    • Books of Vocabulary >
      • Main presentation
      • Greek
      • Latin
  • Modern Texts in Ancient Greek and Latin
    • "Sherlock Holmes" in Classical Greek
    • "Don Camillo" in Classical Greek
    • "The Little Prince" in Ancient Greek
    • "The Importance of Being Earnest" in Ancient Greek and Latin
    • Akropolis World News: News in Classical Greek
  • Texts in Ørberg style
  • Other material
    • Exercises based on texts
    • Russell Anthology texts
    • Handouts for other works
  • More...
    • Guide to available material for teaching Greek and Latin
    • Greek and Latin Texts with Vocabulary and Commentary (by Geoffrey Steadman)
    • About me
    • Contact
Classical Greek: A New Grammar – Latin: A New Grammar

Latin: A New Grammar
Latin grammar taught and explained, with examples

Picture

A new grammar for both absolute beginners and students who already have a sound knowledge of the language but need to revise and enhance it.


Title:                         Latin: A New Grammar
Subtitle:                    Latin grammar taught and explained, with examples
ISBN:                        978-0-9571387-2-8
Number of pages:    343 (plus 5 blank pages for notes at the end)
Printed by:                CreateSpace  (South Carolina, USA)
Printed in:                 South Carolina (USA), United Kingdom and continental Europe



The publication of this book may raise this question:       Is it a grammar or a textbook?

The answer is very simple: it is a grammar, as the title says. It is not supposed to be a textbook like for instance Wheelock's Latin, Reading Latin, Oxford Latin Course, etc.

The question has arisen from the fact that it is written in a peculiar way, as if talking to the student, and the explanation is really simple: some years ago, during my period teaching Greek and Latin at the University of Oxford (2003-2007), I conceived the idea of writing two new language courses, one for Greek and one for Latin, but further ahead I decided to write a grammar for each language rather than a textbook. Nevertheless, as I still had that "language course" idea, I have ended up writing a grammar that may have some kind of "teaching flavour" in the way it is explained. I would define it as a grammar explained as if it were a course textbook.

Although in the corresponding sub-pages of this site you can find more concrete information on the characteristics of the book, I would like to offer here a summary of them (this is the same information that can be seen on the back cover of the book):

• ALL NECESSARY GRAMMAR: With complete explanations, removing the need for the student to consult a larger or more advanced grammar after the
   initial stages.
• CLEAR EXPLANATIONS: Grammar explained as if hearing the teacher’s voice from the whiteboard, with additional class-style comments included where
   necessary.
• CLEAR STRUCTURE: Division into different blocks for the nominal system, the verbal system, syntax of cases and syntax of clauses, and internal
   subdivisions in each of these blocks for a completely clear presentation.
• BASIC VOCABULARY: List of the most useful terms that follow a given scheme after it has been presented: nouns, adjectives, verbs, etc.
• USE OF ORIGINAL AUTHORS: Combination of made-up examples, which allows the adaptation of any sentence to an easy level when necessary, and
   sentences taken from classical authors for more advanced students.
• APPENDICES: Covering idiomatic expressions (both verbal and non-verbal expressions) and words easily confused (also both verbal and non verbal
   forms).
• EXERCISES IN AN ADDITIONAL BOOK: Allowing the grammar itself to be kept to a more reasonable size and price, ideal for those who want only the
   grammar for consultation.
• WHOLE GRAMMATICAL INDEX: All the grammatical terms relating to accidence and syntax (functions, types of verbs, kinds of subordinates, different
   uses of participles, etc.), alphabetically presented at the end of the book.
• INDEX OF LATIN GRAMMATICAL WORDS: Lists all Latin words used in presenting and explaining grammatical functions and usage.

FREE PDF COPY

The printed book is available ONLY through Amazon at a low price, but you can download it as a pdf here for free. Please observe the usual terms that accompany any Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License, which means, among other things, that you may not attribute this work or part of it to another author and that you may not use it for commercial purposes.

                                    Links for the cover (a screenshot of the whole front and back cover) and for the text itself (in pdf format):

                                    For the cover         (a screenshot)      click  HERE
                                    For the text itself    (a pdf)                  click  HERE



Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.