        item: #1 of 3
          id: 15364
      author: Sargeaunt, John
       title: Society for Pure English Tract 4 The Pronunciation of English Words Derived from the Latin
        date: None
       words: 16047
      flesch: 71
     summary: It would seem therefore, if the word is to have a special sense, that it must be focused in the idea of something that both wavers and skirmishes, and this suggests another word which caught our eye in the dictionary, that is BRANGLE It is defined in the _N.E.D._ as 'a brawl, wrangle, squabble' and marked _obsolete_. But _u_, _au_, _eu_ were, as usual, exceptions, as _tumulus_, _Aufidus_, _Eutychus_.
    keywords: alias; antepenultima; century; consonants; course; english; examples; exceptions; following; french; greek; latin; milton; penultima; pronounced; pronunciation; protagonist; quantities; quantity; rule; sense; sound; stems; stress; syllable; use; vowel; words
       cache: 15364.txt
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        item: #2 of 3
          id: 16923
      author: Paxson, Susan
       title: A Handbook for Latin Clubs
        date: None
       words: 23950
      flesch: 88
     summary: Of a Latin Club, as of most school work, it may be said that _usus est optimus magister_, and especially applicable in this connection are the words of Horace: _Dimidium facti, qui coepit_. A Christmas Hymn _Alfred Dommett_ Roman Girl's Song _Mrs. Hemans_ Capri _Walter Taylor Field_ Palladium _
    keywords: alfred; ancient; book; caesar; chap; charles; chautauqua; cicero; city; clara; classics; clement; davis; day; days; discoveries; education; english; erskine; est; gods; greeks; guhl; h.w; history; horace; iii; inge; italy; john; johnston; koner; lanciani; latin; life; light; literature; magazine; martial; new; pages; poetical; ralph; readings; rodolfo; roman; rome; school; society; stearns; thee; thou; translation; vergil; vol; william; works; world; york
       cache: 16923.txt
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        item: #3 of 3
          id: 17548
      author: Benson, William
       title: Letters Concerning Poetical Translations And Virgil's and Milton's Arts of Verse, &c.
        date: None
       words: 16486
      flesch: 82
     summary: with his blank Verse by himself (as indeed he ought to be in many other respects, for he certainly has no Companion) this Dispute about the Excellency of _blank_ Verse, and even the Preference of it to _rhym'd_ To discover which of these two Passages is the most concise, it is not sufficient to shew, that there are two whole _English_ Lines, and but one Line and three Parts of another in the _Latin_.
    keywords: beginning; ear; english; example; following; foot; homer; kind; language; latin; letter; line; man; manner; milton; monosyllables; passage; pause; pit; poetry; pope; rhyme; second; sir; sound; stile; syllables; thing; translation; verse; versification; virgil; words; æneid
       cache: 17548.txt
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