CLASSICAL. 



vocabularies. Thus the book serves as Grammar, xercise book, and 

 Vocabulary. Where possible, the Grammar has been simplified ; the 

 ordinary ten declensions are reduced to three, which correspond to the 

 first three in Latin ; and the system of stems is adopted. A general 

 Vocabulary, and Index of Greek words, completes the work. 



Peile (John, M.A.) AN INTRODUCTION TO GREEK 

 AND LATIN ETYMOLOGY. By JOHN PEILE, M. A., Fellow 

 and Assistant Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge, formerly 

 Teacher of Sanskrit in the University of Cambridge. 8vo. IGJ. 6d. 



These Philological Lectures are the result of Notes made during the 

 author's reading during the last three or four years. These Notes were 

 put into the shape of lectures, delivered at Chrisfs College, during the last 

 May term, as one set in the ' ' Intercollegiate " list. They are now printed 

 with some additions and modifications, but substantially as they were 

 delivered. 



Plato. THE REPUBLIC OF PLATO. Translated into English, 

 with an Analysis and Notes, by J. LL. DAVIES, M.A.,and D. J. 

 VAUGHAN, M.A. Third Edition, with Vignette Portraits of Plato 

 and Socrates, engraved by JEENS from an Antique Gem. i8mo. 

 4s. 6d. 



An introductory notice supplies some account of the life of Plato, and 

 the translation is preceded by an elaborate analysis. " The translators 

 have," in the judgment of the Saturday Review, "'produced a book which 

 any reader, whether acquainted with the original or not, can peruse with 

 pleasure as well as profit." 



Plautus (Ramsay). THE MOSTELLARIA OF PLAU- 



TUS. With Notes Critical and Explanatory, Prolegomena, and 

 Excursus. By WILLIAM RAMSAY, M.A., formerly Professor of 

 Humanity in the University of Glasgow. Edited by Professor 

 GEORGE G. RAMSAY, M.A., of the University of Glasgow. Svo 

 14s. 



