Comparative French-English studies, grammatical and idiomatic, being a 2nd, entirely re-written, ed. of French exercises for middle and upper forms, adapted to The student's comparative French grammar |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aller apples at twelve o'clock avez Avez-vous begin believe best better books bring call country datif différence y a-t-il English est-ce est-il êtes-vous father fear fin iss first French friend give God forbid going gone good good for nothing great half heure homme hope horse j'ai JOHN BUNYAN know know nothing language last leave leçon little look made make master mean meddle meet mind money monsieur morning nearly never o'clock one's order pair of boots parler passer people pity plain truth play préposition Pronoms proposition subordonnée Qu'est-ce read reç receive remember return seen send side out sight soon speak spoken stand stay Subjonctif succeed take taken thing think thou time to-day to-morrow told town vend verbes voulez-vous wait walk want weather whole wine wish word work worse worth wrong year
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 101 - Hé, bonjour, monsieur du Corbeau Que vous êtes joli! que vous me semblez beau! Sans mentir, si votre ramage Se rapporte à votre plumage, Vous êtes le phénix des hôtes de ces bois.
Seite 129 - Well, my boy, you seem to want nothing at all, so I shall not give you money to make you want anything. But were you ever at school ? B. No, sir; but daddy says I shall go after harvest.
Seite 101 - It is indeed a mighty city/ replied he; 'we know not how long it has existed, and our ancestors were on this subject as ignorant as ourselves.' Five centuries afterwards, as I passed by the same place, I could not perceive the slightest vestige of the city. I demanded of a peasant, who was gathering herbs upon its former site, how long it had been destroyed. ' In sooth, a strange question/ replied he. ' The ground here has never been different from what you now behold it.
Seite 127 - At length a little boy in a neighbouring field, seeing the affair, ran across where the road made a turn, and, getting before the horse, took him by the bridle, and held him till his owner came up. Mr. L. looked at the boy, and admired his ruddy, cheerful countenance. " Thank you, my good lad ! " said he, " you have caught my horse very cleverly.
Seite 101 - I passed one day by a very ancient and wonderfully populous city, and asked one of its inhabitants how long it had been founded. " It is indeed a mighty city," replied he ; " We know not how long it has existed, and our ancestors were on this subject as ignorant as ourselves.
Seite 129 - B- Then I do as well as I can ; I work on, and never think of it. Mr. L. Are you not dry sometimes, this hot weather ? B. Yes, but there is water enough. Mr. L. Why, my little fellow, you are quite a philosopher.
Seite 129 - What do you do when it rains? B. If it rains very hard I get under the hedge till it is over. Mr. L. What do you do when you are hungry before it is time to go home? B. I sometimes eat a raw turnip. Mr. L. But if there are none?
Seite 129 - ... errands, and that is as good as play, you know. Mr. L. Well ; but you could buy apples or gingerbread at the town, I suppose, if you had money ? B.
Seite 56 - Il est une déesse inconstante, incommode, Bizarre dans ses goûts , folle en ses ornements , Qui paraît, fuit, revient, et naît en tous les temps: Protée était son père, et son nom est la Mode.
Seite 129 - I don't mind it much, for my mammy gives me a pie now and then, and that is as good. Mr. L. — Would you not like a knife to cut sticks ? B. — I have one, — here it is, — brother Tom gave it me. Mr. L. — Your shoes are full of holes, — don't you want a better pair? B. — I have a better pair for Sundays.