| 1803 - 456 pages
...of learning a language ; for languages are only to be learned by rote, and a man who does not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule or grammar, ialls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| John Locke - 1812 - 492 pages
...of learning a language ; for languages are only to be learned by rote; and a man, who does not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| John Locke - 1823 - 504 pages
...learning a language ; for languages are only to be learned by rote ; and a man, who does not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule of grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| 1829 - 188 pages
...language. For languages are only to be learned " by rote ; and a man who does not speak " English and Latin perfectly by rote, so that " having thought...the thing he would speak " of, his tongue of course, without thought of " rule, or grammar, falls into the proper expression " and idiom of that language,... | |
| Allison Wrifford - 1831 - 198 pages
...of learning a language; for languages are only to be learned by rote; and a man, who doe« not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| 1839 - 636 pages
...of learning a language; for languages are only to be learned by rote; and a man, who does not spenk English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| Sallust - 1857 - 378 pages
...languages are only to be learned by rote ; and a man who does not speak English and Latin perfeotly by rote, so that having thought of the thing he would speak of, his tongue, of course without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| Sallust, James Hamilton - 1860 - 336 pages
...a language. For languages are only to be learned by rote ; and a man who does not speak English and Latin perfectly by rote, so that having thought of...the thing he would speak of, his tongue, of course without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1864 - 874 pages
...learning a language ; for languages are only to be learned by rote ; and a man, who does not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having...the thing he would speak of, his tongue of course, without thought of rule or grammar, falls into the proper expression and idiom of that language, does... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1864 - 906 pages
...learning a language ; for languages are only to be learned by rote ; and a man, who does not speak English or Latin perfectly by rote, so that having thought of the thing he would speak oí his tongue of course, without thought of rulo or grammar, falls into the proper expression and... | |
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