Catonis Disticha moralia, et Lilii Monita paedagogica; or, Cato's Moral distichs, and Lily's Paedagogical admonitions for the use of schools: with the following improvements, in a method entirely new, viz. The words of the author placed according to their grammatical construction, in the lower part of the page, and those of more than two syllables accented, to shew the right pronunciation. An alphabetical vocabulary of all the words, shewing their parts of speech and signification. The themes of the verbs, with their government. A table of scanning, containing all the possible variations of hexameter and pentameter scanned. Lastly, the rhetorical figures are placed at the bottom of each page as they occur. / By John Stirling, D.D.
| Other author | Cato, Dionysius. |
| Other author | Stirling, John, -1777, editor. |
| Format | Electronic |
| Publication Info | Philadelphia : Printed by Joseph James, in Chesnut-Street, [1787] |
| Description | xii, 1 unnumbered page, 14-61 pages, 1 unnumbered page ; 17 cm(12mo) |
| Supplemental Content | Evans Digital Edition |
| Subjects |
| Uniform title | Catonis disticha. |
| Series | Early American imprints. First series ; no. 20263. ^A478749 |
| General note | Erroneously attributed to Dionysius Cato. |
| General note | Advertised in: Dodsley, Robert. The oeconomy of human life, Philadelphia, 1787 (Evans 20337). |
| References | Evans 20263 |
| Other forms | Microform version available in the Readex Early American Imprints series. |
| Reproduction note | Electronic text and image data. [Chester, Vt. : Readex, a division of Newsbank, Inc., 2002-2004. Includes files in TIFF, GIF and PDF formats with inclusion of keyword searchable text. (Early American imprints. First series ; no. 20263). |
| Genre/form | Readers. |