

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Croatia.
Don't let grammar stand in the way of your learning Latin Are you starting to learn Latin and looking for an easy grammar book? Are you a student trying to understand the English grammar terms used in your Latin textbook? Are you a Latin language teacher who is tired of spending class time teaching English grammar? Are you a parent looking for a Latin grammar book to support your kids learning Latin? Learn Latin with this proven method The 7th edition of the popular O&H Study Guide Series makes Latin language learning easier by teaching Latin grammar from the point of view of a language you already speak, English. This concise English grammar book for beginning students of Latin introduces basic grammar. Each chapter is divided into two sections: first explaining how a grammar point works in English and then how it works in Latin taking you step-by-step from English to Latin. This easy-to-follow Latin grammar book is designed to be used as study guide for adult, high-school and college students learning Latin. Why choose the popular O&H Study Guides to help you learn Latin? Paperback edition of 170 Pages, Series: O&H Study Guides 5.8 X 0.5 X 8.8 Size, published by The Olivia & Hill Press 3rd Edition Individual chapters for each grammar point explained in English and in Latin context, many examples Smart study tips, how-to learn vocabulary, how-to memorize verb conjugations, and much more Online review book with answer key to assess your own progress Correlations to your Latin textbook Published On: 2007-06-01 Review: Great resource - I started studying Latin on my own and had a lot of difficulty with the explanations of the grammar. This book is really great it's very concise and has all the information you need. Review: A handy reference for reviewing Latin from high school days ... - A handy reference for reviewing Latin from high school days or college days. I took two years of Latin in high school. The first year we had to learn the vocabulary and grammar rules. The second year (with a different instructor) we didn't have to memorize anything. We looked up rules and vocabulary as needed--and I needed a lot. Then I started college and the other students (about 7) all had more Latin in high school than I had. All had more than two years. I struggled and tried hard but couldn't compete with the others in class, but the instructor, knowing how limited my background was and how hard I tried, passed me. The second year in college, instead of teaching Cicero as the catalog required, the instructor that year taught Livy, whose Latin was much harder than Cicero's, and so I withdrew from the course. (Today a college instructor could not deviate so radically from the catalog. Today students have rights!)






| Best Sellers Rank | #187,471 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #166 in Grammar Reference (Books) #368 in Foreign Language Instruction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 237 Reviews |
Y**A
Great resource
I started studying Latin on my own and had a lot of difficulty with the explanations of the grammar. This book is really great it's very concise and has all the information you need.
P**R
A handy reference for reviewing Latin from high school days ...
A handy reference for reviewing Latin from high school days or college days. I took two years of Latin in high school. The first year we had to learn the vocabulary and grammar rules. The second year (with a different instructor) we didn't have to memorize anything. We looked up rules and vocabulary as needed--and I needed a lot. Then I started college and the other students (about 7) all had more Latin in high school than I had. All had more than two years. I struggled and tried hard but couldn't compete with the others in class, but the instructor, knowing how limited my background was and how hard I tried, passed me. The second year in college, instead of teaching Cicero as the catalog required, the instructor that year taught Livy, whose Latin was much harder than Cicero's, and so I withdrew from the course. (Today a college instructor could not deviate so radically from the catalog. Today students have rights!)
D**S
Helps to link understanding between languages
I bought this for my son who is studying Latin. I had the Spanish version in college, and it really helped me to understand how Spanish works compared to English (OK, I actually speak American!). Highly recommended for language learners (the version for whatever language you are learning).
M**D
English Grammar for Students of Latin
Found this one essential to reviewing basic English grammar,and like that it is geared to students of Latin. Grammar is important in the study of Latin, and a review of Englsh Grammar helps, especially because it seems the schools no longer really teach grammar. I found this very helpful.
B**T
Excellent book. I should have bought it sooner.
Just what I needed.
A**R
This is a recommended book on my first-year Latin class list
This is a recommended book on my first-year Latin class list. I like the division of the material in question/format (What is a verb? What is a subject? What is the Past tense?) because it simplifies a student's search, enabling him/her to find the answer/explanation quickly. The explanations are very clear, target the essential points and exemplify them by means of clear sentences immediately below. The students also find its concise, clear and exhaustive approach very helpful.
J**N
Used as class preparation
I found this book excellent in helping the student to understand the dynamics of Latin grammar as they compared to English grammar. The book really kills per se two birds with one stone since it is laid out in such a fashion where the English grammatical concept is discussed and then right alongside, the concept in Latin is presented. I used this book to prepare my lessons for both my jr. high introductory classes and high school level Latin, and in fact, I followed and taught the presentations as they are laid out in the book. I believe it gave the students a way to connect something new (Latin) with something they already were familiar with (English grammar) thus facilitating learning the Latin. You will not be disappointed.
J**I
which was a disappointment.
I sent this book to my child. He said a lot of the pages were filled in on some of the worksheets, which was a disappointment.
K**R
welll orgainsided sections and thorough
excellent help for those of us who struggle with the finer points of grammar
M**.
What would I have done without it?
I have recently started studing Latin with no previous knowledge of the language. In the 1960/70s the trend was not to teach English Grammar, I am not sure how we were supposed to learn it, according to the teaching doctrines of the time "you will know when it is wrong". This is all very well for your mother tongue, but when you come to learn a foreign language, any language, you must know the basics. This book has them! Explained in a clear, precise manner, with examples even I could understand. If like me, your English Grammar is not up to scratch and you are thinking of learning Latin (which is addictive, believe me!) you cannot go wrong with this book.
T**R
Very useful Latin book
I have found this book immensely helpful in my study of Latin, and it has helped my English Grammar as well! It explains things very nicely and is a good support text to a Latin class or primary text for a self-study course, it is not a stand alone book but it is a very useful one.
M**D
An excellent book for Latin students
An excellent book for Latin students, delivered in good order and quickly. Just one caution for UK students - the case order, for nouns for example, is that followed in the United States and different from that used in the UK. This is not, however, too much of a problem.
T**.
Some critical items not covered well
I have several of the other books in the series, but I think this one is less useful than e.g. French, German, Spanish. I found it particularly annoying that the English conditional and subjunctive are barely mentioned, given that these are fundamental to understanding what the Latin uses of the subjunctive *mean* in English. Still, many people (mostly native speakers of English) have no concept of English grammar, and this can be helpful in learning Latin grammar.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago