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Goodwin's Greek Grammar. Revised and Enlarged Edition for 1879.

It states general principles clearly and distinctly, with special regard to those who are preparing for college.

It excludes all detail which belongs to a book of reference, and admits whatever will aid a pupil in mastering the great principles of Greek Grammar.

The sections on the Syntax of the Verb are generally condensed from the author's larger work on the Greek Moods and Tenses. (See below.)

It contains a brief statement of the author's new classification of conditional sentences, with its application to relative and temporal sentences, which appears now for the first time in an elementary form.

It contains a catalogue of irregular verbs, constructed entirely with reference to the wants of beginners.

All forms are excluded (with a few exceptions) which are not found in the strictly classic Greek before Aristotle.

White's First Lessons in Greek. Prepared to accompany Goodwin's Greek Grammar.

A series of Greek-English and English-Greek Exercises, taken mainly from the first four books of Xenophon's Anabasis, with Additional Exercises on Forms, and complete Vocabularies. The Lessons are carefully graded, and do not follow the order of arrangement of the Grammar, but begin the study of the verb with the second Lesson, and then pursue it alternately with that of the remaining parts of speech. It contains enough Greek Prose Composition for entrance into any college. Leighton's Greek Lessons. Prepared to accompany Goodwin's Greek Grammar.

A progressive series of exercises (both Greek and English), mainly selected from the first book of Xenophon's Anabasis. The exercises on the Moods are sufficient, it is believed, to develop the general principles as stated in the Grammar. Goodwin & White's First Four Books of the Anabasis. Goodwin's Greek Reader contains the first and second books of the Anabasis. Also, selections from Plato, Herodotus, and Thucydides; being the full amount of Greek Prose required for admission at Harvard University. Goodwin's Selections from Xenophon and Herodotus contains tho first four books of the Anabasis, the greater part of the second book of the Hel lenica of Xenophon, and extracts from the sixth, seventh, and eighth books of Herodotus.

Anderson's First Three Books of Homer's Iliad.

Goodwin's Greek Moods and Tenses. Gives a plain statement of the principles which govern the construction of the Greek Moods and Tenses,— the most important and the most difficult part of Greek Syntax.

F. D. Allen's Prometheus of Eschylus.

Tarbell's Orations of Demosthenes.

Flagg's Public Harangues of Demosthenes.

Tyler's Selections from the Greek Lyric Poets.

Seymour's Selections from Pindar and the Bucolic Poets.
Whiton's Select Orations of Lysias.

White's dipus Tyrannus of Sophocles.

F. D. Allen's Medea of Euripides.

Sidgwick's Introduction to Greek Prose Composition.

White's Schmidt's Rhythmic and Metric of the Classical Lan

guages.

Liddell & Scott's Greek-English Lexicons. Abridged and Unabridged. A Full Descriptive Catalogue mailed on application.

GINN & HEATH, Publishers, Boston, New York, and Chicago.

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