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Greek-English Pages [60]
:
THE
ENGLISH, DIOXYSIAN,
AND HELLENIC
PRONUNCUTIONS OF GREEK,
COXSIDEEELC IN EEFERENCE TO SCHOOL
AND
COLLEGE USE.
ALEXANDER
J.
ELLIS,
B.A., F.E.S., F.S.A., F.C.P.S., F.C.P., VICK-PBESIDENT (FUKMEELY PRESIDENT) OF THE PHILOLOGICAL SOCIETY, AND PORMERLY
SCHOLAR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
;
LID
VAN DE MAATSCHAPPY DER
XEUliRLAND.SCllE LliTTERKUXDE TE LBYDEX.
LONDON C. F.
HODGSON &
SON,
1,
GOUGH SQUARE,
FLEET STREET.
1876.
Price Three Shillings.
—
—
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
PRACTICAL HINTS
on the
QUANTITATIVE PRO-
OF LATIN, for the use of Classical Teachers and 1874. Small 8vo. pp. xvi., 132. Macmillan & Co. 4«. 6^.
NUNCIATION Linguists. cloth.
" Mr. Ellis has here given, in a re\'ised and enlarged form, the substance of a paper read at the College of Preceptors, when, as he says in his Preface, he had an audience of classical teachers, who, during an address of unexampled length (nearly two hours and a half), listened with that attention which only great practical interest in the subject could command.' sincerely hope that this book may be received by teachers both at the Universities and at Schools in the same spirit. No Englishman has so good a claim to be heard on all questions of pronunciation as Mr. Ellis (which ihas, and the interest of this special point of Latin pronunciation once understood makes the Greek intelligible also) is not merely antiquarian."—^i^7i