Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-rkxrd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T19:00:31.941Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 April 2011

Eleanor Dickey
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Anna Chahoud
Affiliation:
Trinity College, Dublin
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbot, F. F. 1907. ‘The use of language as a means of characterization in Petronius’, CPh 2: 43–50.Google Scholar
Achard, G. (ed.) 1989. Rhétorique à Herennius. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.
Adams, J. N. 1971. ‘A type of hyperbaton in Latin prose’, PCPhS n.s. 17: 1–16.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1972a. ‘On the authorship of the Historia Augusta’, CQ n.s. 22: 186–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1972b. ‘The language of the later books of Tacitus’ Annals', CQ n.s. 22: 350–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1972c. ‘Latin words for “woman” and “wife”’, Glotta 50: 234–55.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1973a. ‘The substantival present participle in Latin’, Glotta 51: 116–36.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1973b. ‘Two Latin words for “kill”’, Glotta 51: 280–92.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1973c. ‘The vocabulary of the speeches in Tacitus' historical works’, BICS 20: 124–44.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1974a. ‘On the semantic field “put – throw” in Latin’, CQ n.s. 24: 142–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1974b. ‘The vocabulary of the later decades of Livy’, Antichthon 8: 54–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1974c. ‘Were the later books of Tacitus' Annals revised?’, RhM 117: 323–33.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1975. ‘The Latin of the Vindolanda writing tablets’, BICS 22: 20–4.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1976a. The Text and Language of a Vulgar Latin Chronicle (Anonymus Valesianus II). London: Institute of Classical Studies.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1976b. ‘A typological approach to Latin word order’, IF 81: 70–99.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1977a. The Vulgar Latin of the Letters of Claudius Terentianus (P. Mich. viii, 467–72) (Publications of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Manchester 23). Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1977b. ‘The linguistic unity of the Historia Augusta’, Antichthon 11: 93–102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1977c. ‘The vocabulary of the Annales regni Francorum’, Glotta 55: 257–82.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1978a. ‘Conventions of naming in Cicero’, CQ n.s. 28: 145–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1978b. ‘Two unexplained misspellings in Claudius Terentianus: Greek interference in Egyptian Latin?’, ZPE 31: 135–7.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1980. ‘Anatomical terminology in Latin epic’, BICS 27: 50–62.Google ScholarPubMed
Adams, J. N. 1981a. ‘A Type of Sexual Euphemism in Latin’, Phoenix 35: 120–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1981b. ‘Ausonius, Cento nuptialis 101–131’, SIFC 53: 199–215.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1982a. The Latin Sexual Vocabulary. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1982b. ‘Anatomical terms transferred from animals to humans in Latin’, IF 87: 90–109.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1982c. ‘Anatomical terms used pars pro toto in Latin’, Proceedings of the African Classical Association 16: 37–45.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1983a. ‘An epigram of Ausonius (87, p. 344 Peiper)’, Latomus 42: 95–109.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1983b. ‘Martial 2.83’, CPh 78: 311–15.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1983c. ‘Words for “prostitute” in Latin’, RhM 126: 321–58.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1983d. ‘Language’, in Bowman, A. K. & Thomas, J. D., Vindolanda: The Latin Writing Tablets (Britannia Monograph Series 4), London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, pp. 72–4.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1984. ‘Female speech in Latin comedy’, Antichthon 18: 43–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1989. ‘Medieval Latin and the Carolingian reforms’ (review article on R. Wright, Late Latin and Early Romance, Liverpool 1982), LCM 14: 14–16 and 34–48.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1990a. ‘The Latinity of C. Novius Eunus’, ZPE 82: 227–47.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1990b. ‘The uses of necoi’, Glotta 68: 230–55.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1991a. ‘Some neglected evidence for Latin habeo with infinitive: the order of the constituents’, TPhS 89: 131–96.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1991b. ‘The uses of necoii’, Glotta 69: 94–123.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1992a. ‘British Latin: the text, interpretation and language of the Bath curse tablets’, Britannia 23: 1–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1992b. ‘The origin and meaning of Lat. veterinus, veterinarius’, IF 97: 70–95.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1993. ‘The generic use of mula and the status and employment of female mules in the Roman world’, RhM 136: 35–61.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1994a. Wackernagel's Law and the Placement of the Copula esse in Classical Latin. Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society (Suppl. Vol. 18).Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1994b. ‘Wackernagel's Law and the position of unstressed personal pronouns in Classical Latin’, TPhS 92: 103–78.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1994c. ‘Latin and Punic in contact? The case of the Bu Njem ostraca’, JRS 84: 87–112.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1995a. Pelagonius and Latin Veterinary Terminology in the Roman Empire. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1995b. ‘The language of the Vindolanda writing tablets: an interim report’, JRS 85: 86–134.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1996. ‘Interpuncts as evidence for the enclitic character of personal pronouns in Latin’, ZPE 111: 208–10.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1999a. ‘Nominative personal pronouns and some patterns of speech in Republican and Augustan poetry’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), pp. 97–133.
Adams, J. N. 1999b. ‘The poets of Bu Njem: language, culture and the centurionate’, JRS 89: 109–34.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2003a. Bilingualism and the Latin Language. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2003b. ‘The new Vindolanda writing-tablets’, CQ n.s. 53: 530–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2003c. ‘Petronius and new non-literary Latin’, in Herman and Rosén (2003), pp. 11–23.
Adams, J. N. 2003d. ‘“Romanitas” and the Latin language’, CQ n.s. 53: 184–205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2005a. ‘Neglected evidence for female speech in Latin’, CQ n.s. 55: 582–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2005b. ‘The Bellum Africum’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 73–96.
Adams, J. N. 2005c. ‘The accusative + infinitive and dependent quod-/quia-clauses: the evidence of non-literary Latin and Petronius’, in Kiss, S., Mondin, L. and Salvi, G. (edd.), Latin et langues romanes: études de linguistique offertes à József Herman à l'occasion de son 80ème anniversaire. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, pp. 195–206.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 2007. The Regional Diversification of Latin, 200 BC–AD 600. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N. forthcoming. Non-Standard Latin. Cambridge University Press.
Adams, J. N. and Brennan, P. M. 1990. ‘The text at Lactantius, De mortibus persecutorum 44. 2 and some epigraphic evidence for Italian recruits’, ZPE 84: 183–6.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. and Deegan, M. 1992. ‘Bald's Leechbook and the Physica Plinii’, Anglo-Saxon England 21: 87–114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, J. N., Janse, M., and Swain, S. (edd.) 2002. Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Word. Oxford University Press.CrossRef
Adams, J. N., Lapidge, M., and Reinhardt, T. 2005. ‘Introduction’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 1–36.
Adams, J. N. and Mayer, R. G. (edd.) 1999a. Aspects of the Language of Latin Poetry (Proceedings of the British Academy 93). Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Adams, J. N. 1999b. ‘Introduction’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), pp. 1–18.
Adcock, F. E. 1956. Caesar as Man of Letters. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ahlberg, A. W. 1906. Durative Zeitbestimmungen im Lateinischen. Lund: Ohlsson.Google Scholar
Ahlberg, A. W. 1911. ‘De traiectionis figura ab antiquissimis prosae scriptoribus Latinis adhibita’, Eranos 11: 88–106.Google Scholar
Albrecht, M. 1964. Die Parenthese in Ovids Metamorphosen und ihre dichterische Funktion. Hildesheim: Olms.Google Scholar
Albrecht, M. 1983. Meister römischer Prosa von Cato bis Apuleius. 2nd edn, Heidelberg: Lambert and Schneider.Google Scholar
Albrecht, M. 2003. Cicero's Style: A Synopsis Followed by Selected Analytic Studies (Mnemosyne Suppl. 245). Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, W. B. 1927. Review of Hofmann (1926), CR 41: 90.
Astin, A. E. 1978. Cato the Censor. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Atherton, C. 2005. ‘Lucretius on what language is not’, in Frede and Inwood (2005), pp. 101–38.
Aurigemma, S. 1941. ‘Due epigrafi riminesi’, Epigraphica 3: 13–22.Google Scholar
Austin, P. and Bresnan, J. 1996. ‘Non-configurationality in Australian aboriginal languages’, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 14: 215–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, R. G. 1960. P. Vergili Maronis Aeneidos liber quartus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Austin, R. G. 1971. Aeneidos liber primus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Axelson, B. 1945. Unpoetische Wörter: Ein Beitrag zur Kenntnis der lateinischen Dichtersprache. Lund: H. Ohlssons Boktryckeri.Google Scholar
Bagordo, A. 2001. Beobachtungen zur Sprache des Terenz: Mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der umgangssprachlichen Elemente. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bagordo, A. 2002. ‘Dichtung und Philologie bei Accius am Beispiel seiner Gräzismen und Calquen’, in Faller and Manuwald (2002), pp. 39–49.
Baier, Th. (ed.) 2004. Studien zu Plautus'Poenulus. Tübingen: Narr.
Bailey, C. 1947. Lucretius: De rerum natura libri sex. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Bain, D. 1976. Review of Fantham (1972), CPh 71: 367–8.
Bain, D. 2007. ‘Low words in high places: sex, bodily functions, and body parts in Homeric epic and other higher genres’, in Finglass, P. J., Collard, C. and Richardson, N. J. (edd.), Hesperos: Studies in Ancient Greek Poetry Presented to M. L. West on his Seventieth Birthday. Oxford University Press, pp. 40–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldarelli, B. 2004. Accius und die vortrojanische Pelopidensage. Paderborn: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Banniard, M. 1992. Viva voce: communication écrite et communication orale du ive au ixe siècle en occident latin. Paris: Institut des Études Augustiniennes.Google Scholar
Barnwell, P. S. 1991. ‘Epistula Hieronimi de gradus Romanorum: an English school book’, Historical Research 64: 77–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barwick, K. 1964. Charisius: Ars grammatica. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. 1995. The Emergence and Development of SVO Patterning in Latin and French: Diachronic and Psycholinguistic Perspectives. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. 2000. Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin and French. Berlin and New York: de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. 2001. ‘Syntactic innovation in Latin poetry? The origin of the Romance adverbial formation in -ment(e)’, in Orbán, A. P. and Poel, M. G. M. (edd.), Ad litteras: Latin Studies in Honour of J. H. Brouwers. Nijmegen University Press, pp. 29–43.Google Scholar
Bauer, B. L. M. 2003. ‘The adverbial formation in mente in Vulgar and Late Latin: a problem in grammaticalization’, in Solin et al. (2003), pp. 439–457.
Beall, S. M. 1999. ‘Aulus Gellius 17.8: composition and the gentleman scholar’, CPh 94: 55–64.Google Scholar
Beare, W. 1964. The Roman Stage. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Becher, F. 1888. ‘Über den Sprachgebrauch des Caelius’, Jahresbericht über die Königliche Klosterschule zu Ilfeld von Ostern 1887 bis Ostern 1888 (Nordhausen: Kirchners Buchdruckerei): 1–41.Google Scholar
Beck, H. and Walter, U. 2001. Die frühen römischen Historikeri. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Beck, R. 1975. ‘Encolpius at the cena’, Phoenix 29: 270–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, D. C. 1987. ‘Word-order change in progress: the case of Slovene and Serbo-Croat and its relevance for Germanic’, Journal of Linguistics 23: 269–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benveniste, E. 1958. ‘Les verbes délocutifs’, in Hatcher, G. and Selig, K. L. (edd.), Studia philologica et litteraria in honorem L. Spitzer, Bern: Francke, pp. 57–63 (reprinted as Chapter 23 of Problèmes de linguistique générale, Paris 1966).
Bergmüller, L. 1903. Einige Bemerkungen zur Latinität des Iordanes. Augsburg: Pfeiffer.Google Scholar
Bertocchi, A. 1989. ‘The role of antecedents of Latin anaphors’, in Calboli, G. (ed.), Subordination and Other Topics in Latin. Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp. 441–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bettini, M. 1982. ‘Vel Vibe di Veio e il re Amulio’, MD 6: 163–8.Google Scholar
Beyerle, F. 1952. ‘Das frühmittelalterliche Schulheft von Ämterwesen’, Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, germanische Abteilung 69: 1–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biber, D. 1988. Variation across Speech and Writing. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bischoff, B. 2004. Katalog der festländischen Handschriften des neunten Jahrhunderts ii. Laon – Paderborn. Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz.Google Scholar
Bischoff, B. and Lapidge, M. (edd.) 1994. Biblical Commentaries from the Canterbury School of Theodore and Hadrian. Cambridge University Press.
Biville, F. 1999. ‘Niveaux et états de langue chez les grammairiens latins’, in Petersmann and Kettemann (1999), pp. 541–51.
Biville, F. 2003. ‘Familia vero – babae babae!…(Satyricon 37,9): exclamations et interjections chez Pétrone’, in Herman and Rosén (2003), pp. 37–57.
Blaise, A. 1954. Dictionnaire latin-français des auteurs chrétiens. Turnhout: Brepols.Google Scholar
Blank, D. 2005. ‘Varro's anti-analogist’, in Frede and Inwood (2005), pp. 210–38.
Blänsdorf, J. 1995. Fragmenta poetarum Latinorum. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Blänsdorf, J. 2000. ‘Livius Andronicus und die Anverwandlung des hellenistischen Dramas in Rom’, in Manuwald (2000), pp. 145–56.
Blase, H. 1896. ‘Amabo’, ALL 9: 485–7, with Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 10 (1898): 137.Google Scholar
Bodel, J. P. 1984. ‘Freedmen in the Satyricon of Petronius’. Diss. Univ. of Michigan.
Böhm, R. G. 1979. ‘Caelius bei Cicero, ad Fam. VIII.14.2.4’, Quaderni di Storia 10: 273–83.Google Scholar
Boldt, H. 1884. De liberiore linguae Graecae et Latinae collocatione verborum capita selecta. Göttingen: Stephan Geibel & Co.Google Scholar
Bolkestein, A. M. 1998. ‘Between brackets: (some properties of) parenthetical clauses in Latin. An investigation of the language of Cicero's letters’, in Risselada, R. (ed.), Latin in Use: Amsterdam Studies in the Pragmatics of Latin (Amsterdam Studies in Classical Philology 8). Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben, pp. 1–17.Google Scholar
Bolkestein, A. M. 2001. ‘Random scrambling? Constraints on discontinuity in Latin noun phrases,’ in Moussy (2001), pp. 245–58.
Bömer, A. 1897–9. Die lateinischen Schülergespräche der Humanisten. Berlin: J. Harrwitz Nachfolger.Google Scholar
Bömer, F. 1969–86. P. Ovidius Naso: Metamorphosen. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Bonfante, G. 1936. ‘Los elementos populares en la lengua de Horacio’, Emerita 4: 209–47 (= Bonfante 1994, pp. 60–95).Google Scholar
Bonfante, G. 1937. ‘Los elementos populares en la lengua de Horacio’, Emerita 5: 17–88 (= Bonfante 1994, pp. 95–159).Google Scholar
Bonfante, G. 1994. La lingua parlata in Orazio. Venosa: Oanna.Google Scholar
Bonnet, M. 1890. Le latin de Grégoire de Tours. Paris: Hachette.Google Scholar
Boucherie, A. 1867. Cinq formules rhythmées et assonancées du viie siècle. Montpellier and Paris: F. Seguin & Franck.Google Scholar
Bourciez, J. 1929. Le ‘sermo cotidianus’ dans les satires d'Horace. Bordeaux: Feret.Google Scholar
Bowman, A. K., Thomas, J. D. and Adams, J. N. 1990. ‘Two letters from Vindolanda’, Britannia 21: 33–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyce, B. 1991. The Language of the Freedmen in Petronius' Cena Trimalchionis (Mnemosyne Suppl. 117). Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Boyle, A. J. 2006. An Introduction to Roman Tragedy. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Braun, F. 1988. Terms of Address. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braune, W., Helm, K. and Ebbinghaus, E. A. 1969. Althochdeutsches Lesebuch. Tübingen: Niemeyer.Google Scholar
Brink, C. O. 1963. Horace on Poetry i. Prolegomena to the Literary Epistles. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brink, C. O. 1971. Horace on Poetry ii. The ‘Ars poetica’. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Briscoe, J. 1981. A Commentary on Livy: Books xxxiv–xxxvii. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Briscoe, J. 2005. ‘The language and style of the fragmentary Republican historians’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 53–72.
Briscoe, J. 2008. A Commentary on Livy: Books38–40. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Brown, P. M. 1993. Horace: Satires i. Warminster: Aris & Phillips.Google Scholar
Brown, R. D. 1987. Lucretius on Love and Sex: A Commentary on De rerum natura iv, 1030–1287 with Prolegomena, Text, and Translation. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Brown, V. 1972. The Textual Transmission of Caesar's Civil War. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Brown, W. 2002. ‘When documents are destroyed or lost: lay people and archives in the early Middle Ages’, Early Medieval Europe 11: 337–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, W. 2007. ‘Conflict, letters, and personal relationships in the Carolingian formulae collections’, Law and History Review 25: 323–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brugnoli, G. 1993. ‘Caesar grammaticus’, in Poli (1993) ii, pp. 585–97.
Brunhölzl, F. 1990. Histoire de la littérature latine du Moyen Âge. Louvain-La-Neuve: Brepols.Google Scholar
Brunot, F. 1933. Histoire de la langue française: des origines à 1900 vi. Paris: Colin.Google Scholar
Buonomo, L. M. 1997. ‘Introduzione alla lettura delle opere di Giordane’, in Silvestre, M. L. and Squillante, M. (edd.), Mutatio rerum:letteratura, filosofia, scienza tra tardo antico e altomedioevo: Atti del Convegno di studi, Napoli 25–26 novembre 1996. Naples: La Città del Sole, pp. 115–69.Google Scholar
Burg, F. 1888. De M. Caelii Rufi genere dicendi. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Butler, H. E. and Owen, A. S. (edd.) 1914. Apuleius: Apologia sive pro se de magia liber. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Cabisius, G. 1985. ‘Social metaphor and the atomic cycle in Lucretius’, CJ 80: 109–20.Google Scholar
Calboli, G. 1978. Marci Porci Catonis oratio pro Rhodiensibus. Bologna: Pàtron.
Calboli, G. 1986. ‘Nota di aggiornamento’, in Norden, E. (ed.), La prosa d'arte antica dal vi secolo a. C. all'età della rinascenza, trans. Campana, B. Heinemann. Rome: Salerno Editrice, pp. 971–1185.Google Scholar
Calboli, G. (ed.) 1993. Rhetorica ad Herennium. 2nd edn, Bologna: Pàtron.
Calboli, G. 1996. ‘The accusative as a default case’, in Rosén, H. (ed.), Aspects of Latin: Papers from the Seventh International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics. Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachwissenschaft, pp. 423–36.Google Scholar
Calboli Montefusco, L. 1972. ‘Sviluppo del valore funzionale e semantico di porro dalla fase arcaica a Lucrezio’, Maia 24: 247–60.Google Scholar
Callebat, L. 1968. Sermo cotidianus dans les Métamorphoses d'Apulée. Université de Caen.Google Scholar
Callebat, L. 1998. Langages du roman latin (Spudasmata 71). Hildesheim: Olms.Google Scholar
Campanile, E. 1976. ‘La latinizzazione dell'osco’, in Scritti in onore di G. Bonfante. Brescia: Paideia, pp. 109–20.Google Scholar
Canali, L. 1966. ‘Osservazioni sul corpus cesariano’, Maia 18: 115–37.Google Scholar
Cancik, H. 1978. ‘Die republikanische Tragödie’, in Lefèvre, E. (ed.), Das römische Drama. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, pp. 308–47.Google Scholar
Caplan, H. (ed.) 1954. [Cicero]: Ad C. Herennium de ratione dicendi (Rhetorica ad Herennium). London: Heinemann and Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Cardona, G. R. 1976. Introduzione all'etnolinguistica. Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Cardona, G. R. 1987. Introduzione alla sociolinguistica. Turin: Loescher.Google Scholar
Casaceli, F. 1976. Lingua e stile in Accio. Palermo: Palumbo.Google Scholar
Castagna, L. 1992. ‘Lessico “dotto” in Pacuvio: alcuni possibili esempi’, in Aricò, G. (ed.), Atti del iv seminario di studi sulla tragedia romana (Palermo 23–26 marzo 1992) (Quaderni di cultura e di tradizione classica 10). Università di Palermo, pp. 73–88.Google Scholar
Catrein, C. 2003. Vertauschte Sinne – Untersuchungen zur Synästhesie in der römischen Dichtung. Munich: Saur.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavarzere, A. 1983. Marcus Caelius Rufus: Lettere (Cic. Fam. l. viii). Brescia: Paideia.Google Scholar
Cavarzere, A. (ed.) 2007. Cicerone: Lettere ai familiari. Milano: Rizzoli.
Cavazza, F. 1985–. Aulo Gellio: Le notti attiche (Prosatori di Roma). Bologna: Zanichelli.Google Scholar
Cèbe, J.-P. 1972–99. Varron: Satires Ménippées. Édition, traduction et commentaire. 13 vols. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Cellarius, C. 1755. C. Iulii Caesaris Commentarii de bello Gallico et civili cum utriusque supplementis ab A. Hirtio vel Oppio adiectis. Leipzig: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Chafe, W. L. and Tannen, D. 1987. ‘The relation between written and spoken language’, Annual Review of Anthropology 16: 383–407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charpin, F. 1978–91. Lucilius: Satires. 3 vols. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Chassignet, M. 1986. Caton: Les Origines (fragments). Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Chaumartin, F.-R. 2002. Sénèque: tragédiesiii. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Christensen, A. S. 2002. Cassiodorus, Jordanes and the History of the Goths. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.Google Scholar
Citroni, M. 1975. M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton liber primus: Introduzione, testo, apparato critico e commento. Firenze: La Nuova Italia.Google Scholar
Clackson, J. and Horrocks, G. 2007. The Blackwell History of the Latin Language. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Clark, H. H. 1996. Using Language. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, S. 1753. C. Julii Caesaris quae extant accuratissime cum libris editis et MSS optimis collata, recognita et correcta. London: Tonson and Watts.Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. 1994. A Commentary on Virgil: Eclogues. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Coleman, K. M. 1988. Statius: Siluae iv. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Coleman, K. M. 1999. ‘Mythological figures as spokespersons in Statius’ Siluae', in Angelis, F. and Muth, S. (edd.), Im Spiegel des Mythos: Bilderwelt und Lebenswelt – Lo specchio del mito: immaginario e realtà (Palilia 6). Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, pp. 67–80.Google Scholar
Coleman, K. M., Diggle, J., Hall, J. B. and Jocelyn, H. D. (edd.) 1992. F. R. D. Goodyear: Papers on Latin Literature. London: Gerald Duckworth & Co.
Coleman, R. 1971. ‘The origin and development of Latin habeo + infinitive’, CQ n.s. 21: 215–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. 1976. ‘Further observations on habeo + infinitive as an exponent of futurity’, CQ n.s. 26: 151–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coleman, R. 1977. Vergil: Eclogues. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Coleman, R. 1991. ‘Latin prepositional syntax in Indo-European perspective’, in Coleman, R. (ed.), New Studies in Latin Linguistics. Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp. 323–38.Google Scholar
Coleman, R. 1999a. ‘Poetic diction, poetic discourse and the poetic register’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), 21–93.
Coleman, R. 1999b. ‘Vulgarism and normalization in the Regula Sancti Benedicti’, in Petersmann and Kettemann (1999), pp. 345–56.
Colgrave, B. and Mynors, R. A. B. 1969. Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Collard, C. 1978. ‘Colloquial expressions in Euripides’ (review of Stevens 1976), CR n.s. 28: 224–6.Google Scholar
Collard, C. 2005. ‘Colloquial language in tragedy: a supplement to the work of P. T. Stevens’, CQ n.s. 55: 350–86 (with unpublished addendum kindly provided by author).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collart, J. 1954. Varron grammairien latin. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Collinge, N. E. 1953. ‘The mental equation factor in “aberrant” syntax in Greek and Latin’, G&R 66: 130–9.Google Scholar
Colonna, G. 1980, ‘Graeco more bibere: l'iscrizione della Tomba 115 dell'Osteria dell'Osa’, in Archeologia Laziale 3: 51–55 (reprinted in Italia ante Romanum imperium: Scritti di antichità etrusche, italiche e romane (1958–1998), Pisa and Rome 2005, pp. 1827–33).Google Scholar
Comber, M. R. 1976. ‘Parenthesis in Tacitus’, RhM 119: 181–4.Google Scholar
Conington, J. and Nettleship, H. 1893. The Satires of A. Persius Flaccus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Conrat, M. 1908. ‘Ein Traktat über romanisch-fränkisches Ämterwesen aus einer Vatikanischen Handschrift mitgeteilt’, Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, germanische Abteilung 29: 239–60.Google Scholar
Conso, D. 1996. ‘L'oralité fictive des inscriptions funéraires latines’, in Les structures de l'oralité en latin (Colloque du Centre Alfred Ernout, Université de Paris iv, 2, 3, 4 juin 1994). Paris: Presses de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne, pp. 291–304.Google Scholar
Constans, L.-A. 1936. Cicéron: correspondance III. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Corbett, P. B. 1962. ‘On two items of colloquial usage in the Bellum Hispaniense’, Eranos 60: 74–9.Google Scholar
Cordier, A. 1939. Études sur le vocabulaire épique dans L'Enéide. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Cortelazzo, M. and Zolli, P.1979–88. Dizionario etimologico della lingua italiana. Bologna: Zanichelli.
Coseriu, E. 1980. ‘“Historische Sprache” und “Dialekt”’, in Göschel, J., Ivić, P. and Kehr, K. (edd.), Dialekt und Dialektologie: Ergebnisse des internationalen Symposions ‘Zur Theorie des Dialekts’ Marburg/Lahn, 5.–10. September 1977. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner, pp. 106–22.Google Scholar
Couilloud, M.-T. 1974. Les monuments funéraires de Rhénée (Exploration archélogique de Délos faite par l'École Française d'Athènes 30). Paris: Boccard.Google Scholar
Courtney, E. 1990. P. Papini Stati Silvae. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Courtney, E. 1993. The Fragmentary Latin Poets. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Courtney, E. 1999. Archaic Latin Prose. Atlanta: Scholars Press.Google Scholar
Courtney, E. 2001. A Companion to Petronius. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Croke, B. 1987. ‘Cassiodorus and the Getica of Jordanes’, CPh 82: 117–34.Google Scholar
Cucchiarelli, A. 2001. La satira e il poeta: Orazio tra Epodi e Sermones. Pisa: Giardini.Google Scholar
Cugusi, P. 1983. Evoluzione e forme dell'epistolografia latina. Rome: Herder.Google Scholar
Cugusi, P. 1998. ‘L'epistola ciceroniana: strumento di comunicazione quotidiana e modello letterario’, Ciceroniana 10: 163–89.Google Scholar
Daheim, J. and Blänsdorf, J. 2003. ‘Petron und die Inschriften’, in Herman and Rosén (2003), pp. 95–107.
Dahlén, E. 1964. Études syntaxiques sur les pronoms réfléchis pléonastiques en latin. Gothenburg: Almqvist & Wiksells.Google Scholar
Dahlmann, H. 1935. ‘Caesars Schrift über die Analogie’, RhM 84: 258–75.Google Scholar
Dahlstrom, A. 1987. ‘Discontinuous constituents in Fox’, in Kroeber and Moore (1987), pp. 53–73.
Dammer, R. 2001. Diomedes grammaticus. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier.Google Scholar
Damon, C. 1997. The Mask of the Parasite: A Pathology of Roman Patronage. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Dangel, J. 1995. Accius: œuvres (fragments). Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Davisius, J. 1727. C. Julii Caesaris et Auli Hirtii quae extant omnia. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Degenhart, H. 1877. De auctoris Belli Hispaniensis elocutione et fide historica. Würzburg: Stuber.Google Scholar
Melo, W. D. C. 2007a. Review of Devine and Stephens (2006), Lingua 117: 1483–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melo, W. D. C. 2007b. The Early Latin Verb System: Archaic Forms in Plautus, Terence, and Beyond. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sutter, M. 1986. ‘A theory of word order within the Latin noun phrase, based on Cato's De agri cultura’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature and Roman Historyiv. Brussels: Latomus, pp. 151–83.Google Scholar
Deufert, M. 1996. Pseudo-Lukrezisches im Lukrez: Die unechten Verse in Lukrezens De rerum natura. Berlin and New York: de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Devine, A. M. and Stephens, L. D. 2006. Latin Word Order: Structured Meaning and Information. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Devoto, G. 1940. Storia della lingua di Roma. Bologna: Cappelli.Google Scholar
Dickey, E. 2002. Latin Forms of Address. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Diels, H. 1922. ‘Lukrezstudien v’, Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse: 46–59.
Diggle, J. 2005. ‘Tibullus 2.1.45–6 and “amplificatory pleonasm”’, CQ n.s. 55: 642–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dihle, A. 1957. ‘Analogie und Attizismus’, Hermes 85: 170–205.Google Scholar
Dionisotti, A. C. 1982. ‘From Ausonius’ schooldays? A schoolbook and its relatives', JRS 72: 83–125.Google Scholar
Diouron, N. 1999. Pseudo-César: Guerre d'Espagne. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. 1960. Greek Word Order. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Drexler, H. 1935. ‘Parerga Caesariana’, Hermes 70: 203–34.Google Scholar
Druhan, D. R. 1938. The Syntax of Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America.Google Scholar
Dubois, J. 1969. ‘Les évêques de Paris des origines à l'avènement de Hugues Capet’, Bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de Paris et de l'Île-de-France 96: 33–97.Google Scholar
Dubois, J. 1995. ‘Importunus (2)’, in Baudrillart, A., Meyer, A. d. and Aubert, R. (edd.), Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiquesxxv. Paris: Letouzey et Ané, p. 963.Google Scholar
Duby, G. and Ariès, P. 1987. A History of Private Life. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Duchesne, L. 1910. Fastes épiscopaux de l'ancienne Gaule ii. L'Aquitaine et les Lyonnaises. Paris: Fontemoing.Google Scholar
Eckhardt, K. A. 1969. Pactus Legis Salicae. Hanover: Hahn.Google Scholar
Eden, P. T. 1962. ‘Caesar's style: inheritance versus intelligence’, Glotta 40: 74–117.Google Scholar
Eden, P. T. 1984. Seneca: Apocolocyntosis. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Enßlin, W. 1949. Des Symmachus Historia Romana als Quelle für Jordanes (Sitzungsberichte der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse, Jahrgang 1948, Heft 3). Munich: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Erasmo, M. 2004. Roman Tragedy: Theatre to Theatricality. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Erasmus, D. 1533. Familiarium colloquiorum opus, ab autore postremum diligenter recognitum, emendatum et locupletatum, adiectis novis aliquot colloquijs. Basle: J. Froben.Google Scholar
Erhardt, L. 1886. ‘Rezension zu Jordanis et Getica [Mommsen, 1882] und Jordanis de origine actibusque Getarum [Holder, 1882]’, GGA 17: 669–708.Google Scholar
Ernout, A. 1923. ‘Tempore puncto’, RPh 47: 152–63.Google Scholar
Ernout, A. 1954. Aspects du vocabulaire latin. Paris: Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Ernout, A. 1957. ‘Le vocabulaire poétique’, in Ernout, A., Philologicaii. Paris: Klincksieck, pp. 66–86.Google Scholar
Faller, A. 1949. ‘Sprachliche Interpretation zum Bellum Hispaniense’. Diss. Freiburg.
Faller, S. and Manuwald, G. (edd.) 2002. Accius und seine Zeit (Identitäten und Alteritäten 13), Würzburg: Ergon-Verlag.
Fantham, E. 1972. Comparative Studies in Republican Imagery. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Ferri, R. 2008. ‘Il latino dei Colloquia scholica’, in Bellandi, F. and Ferri, R. (edd.), Aspetti della scuola nel mondo romano. Amsterdam: Hakkert, pp. 111–78.Google Scholar
Fiehler, R., Barden, B., Elstermann, M. and Kraft, B. 2004. Eigenschaften gesprochener Sprache. Tübingen: Narr.Google Scholar
Flobert, P. 1975. Les verbes déponents latins des origines à Charlemagne. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Fögen, T. 2000. Patrii sermonis egestas: Einstellungen lateinischer Autoren zu ihrer Muttersprache. Ein Beitrag zum Sprachbewusstsein in der römischen Antike. Munich and Leipzig: Saur.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foucault, J. A. 1964. ‘L'hyperbate du verbe’, RPh 38: 59–69.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. 1989. ‘Lucretius and Politics’, in Barnes, J. and Griffin, M. (edd.), Philosophia togata. Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 120–50.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. 1997. ‘Virgilian narrative: (a) story-telling’, in Martindale, C. (ed.), pp. 259–70.
Fowler, D. 2000. ‘The didactic plot’, in Depew, M. and Obbink, D. (edd.), Matrices of Genre. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, pp. 205–19.Google Scholar
Fowler, D. 2002. Lucretius on atomic motion: A Commentary on De rerum natura, Book Two, Lines 1–332. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fowler, H. W. and Fowler, F. G. 1995. Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English. 9th edn rev. D. Thompson, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1928. Iktus und Akzent im lateinischen Sprechvers. Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1954. ‘Urbem quam statuo vestra est’, Glotta 33: 157–9.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1956. ‘Eine Form römischer Kriegsbulletins’, Eranos 54: 189–94.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1960. Elementi plautini in Plauto (augmented translation of Plautinisches in Plautus (Berlin 1922) by F. Munari). Florence: La Nuova Italia.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1964. Kleine Beiträge zur klassischen Philologie. Rome: Storia e Letteratura.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 1968. Leseproben aus Reden Ciceros und Catos. Rome: Storia e Letteratura.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. 2007. Plautine Elements in Plautus (translation of Plautinisches im Plautus (Berlin 1922) by T. Drevikovsky and F. Muecke). Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Frede, D. and Inwood, B. (edd.) 2005. Language and Learning: Philosophy of Language in the Hellenistic Age. Cambridge University Press.CrossRef
Frede, M. 1978. ‘Principles of Stoic grammar’, in Rist, J. M. (ed.), The Stoics. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, pp. 27–75.Google Scholar
Freudenburg, K. 1993. The Walking Muse: Horace on the Theory of Satire. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Frobenius, R. 1910. Die Syntax des Ennius. Nördlingen: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Fruyt, M. and Orlandini, A. 2008. ‘Some cases of linguistic evolution and grammaticalisation in the Latin verb’, in Wright (2008), pp. 230–7.
Funaioli, H. 1907. Grammaticae Romanae fragmenta. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Funck, A. 1893. ‘Die lateinischen Adverbia auf -im, ihre Bildung und ihre Geschichte’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 8: 77–114.Google Scholar
Gaide, F. 2001. ‘A propos des intéractions verbales dans les théatre de Plaute’, in Moussy (2001), pp. 959–68.
Galdi, G. 2004. Grammatica delle iscrizioni latine dell'impero (province orientali): morfosintassi nominale. Rome: Herder.Google Scholar
Galdi, G. 2008. ‘Evidence for late usage of the moods in the works of Jordanes’, in Wright (2008), pp. 321–7.
Galdi, G. forthcoming. ‘Les indications locales chez Jordanes à la lumière d'une nouvelle approche méthodologique’, in Lenoble, M., Longrée, D. and Bodelot, C. (edd.), forthcoming. De linguae Latinae usu: Actes du 13e Colloque international de linguistique latine, Bruxelles et Liège, 4–9 avril 2005. Leuven and Paris: Peeters.
Garcea, A. 2002. ‘L'interaction épistolaire entre dialogue in absentia et in praesentia chez Cicéron’, in Bolkestein, A. M., Kroon, C., Pinkster, H., Remmelink, W. and Risselada, R. (edd.), Theory and Description in Latin Linguistics: Selected Papers from the Eleventh International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics, Amsterdam June 24–29, 2001. Amsterdam: Gieben, pp. 123–38.Google Scholar
Garcea, A. (ed.) 2003a. Colloquia absentium: studi sulla comunicazione epistolare in Cicerone. Turin: Rosenberg & Sellier.
Garcea, A. 2003b. ‘Rispondere con ordine alle lettere: una funzione di quod nell'epistolario di Cicerone’, in Garcea (2003a), pp. 73–99.
Garcea, A. 2005. Cicerone in esilio: l'epistolario e le passioni (Spudasmata 103). Hildesheim: Olms.Google Scholar
Garcea, A. and Lomanto, V. 2004. ‘Gellius and Fronto on loanwords and literary models: their evaluation of Laberius’, in Holford-Strevens, L. and Vardi, A. (edd.), The Worlds of Aulus Gellius. Oxford University Press, pp. 41–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garmonsway, G. N. (ed.) 1939. Ælfric's Colloquy (2nd edn 1947). London: Methuen.
Geigenmüller, P. 1908. Quaestiones Dionysianae de vocabulis artis criticae. (Dissertatio inauguralis.) Leipzig: Typis Roberti Noske Bornensis.Google Scholar
Gibson, B. 2006. Statius: Silvae 5. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gils, L. 2003. ‘Narrative techniques compared in discourse and correspondence’, in Garcea (2003a), pp. 47–72.
Giunta, F. and Grillone, A. 1991. Iordanis De origine actibusque Getarum (Fonti per la storia d'Italia 117). Rome: Istituto Palazzo Borromini.Google Scholar
Givón, T. 2001. Syntax. 2 vols. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins.Google Scholar
Glück, J. J. and Maurach, G. 1972. ‘Punisch in Plautinischer Metrik,’ Semitics 2: 93–126.Google Scholar
Goduinus, J. 1678. C. Julii Caesaris quae extant. Paris: Petri le Petit.Google Scholar
Goetsch, P. 1985. ‘Fingierte Mündlichkeit in der Erzählkunst entwickelter Schriftkulturen’, Poetica 17: 202–18.Google Scholar
Goetz, G. (ed.). 1892. Corpus glossariorum Latinorum iii. Hermeneumata Pseudodositheana, accedunt hermeneumata medicobotanica vetustiora. Leipzig: Teubner.
Goetz, G. (ed.) 1923. Corpus glossariorum Latinorum i. De glossariorum Latinorum origine et fatis. Leipzig: Teubner.
Goldberg, S. M. 2000. ‘Cicero and the work of tragedy’, in Manuwald (2000), pp. 49–59.
Goodyear, F. R. D. 1969. ‘More notes on the Iohannis of Corippus’, BICS 16: 16–21, 27–8 (= K. M. Coleman et al. 1992, pp. 85–91).Google Scholar
Goodyear, F. R. D. 1982. ‘On the character and text of Justin's compilation of Trogus’, Proceedings of the African Classical Association 16: 1–24 (= K. Coleman et al. 1992, pp. 210–33).Google Scholar
Görler, W. 1982. ‘Beobachtungen zu Vergils Syntax’, Würzburger Jahrbücher für die Altertumswissenschaft 8: 69–81.Google Scholar
Görler, W. 1985. ‘Eneide: la lingua’, Enciclopedia Virgiliana 2: 262–78.Google Scholar
Görler, W. 1999. ‘Rowing strokes: tentative considerations on “shifting” objects in Virgil and elsewhere’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), pp. 269–86.
Gow, A. S. F. 1932. ‘Diminutives in Augustan poetry’, CQ 26: 150–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gowers, E. 1993. ‘Horace, Satires 1. 5: an inconsequential journey’, PCPhS 39: 48–66.Google Scholar
Grandgent, C. H. 1907. An Introduction to Vulgar Latin. Boston: D. C. Heath & Co.Google Scholar
Grevisse, M. 1993. Le bon usage: grammaire française. 13th edn recast by A. Goosse. Paris: Duculot.Google Scholar
Grube, G. M. A. 1952. ‘Thrasymachus, Theophrastus, and Dionysius of Halicarnassus’, AJPh 73: 251–67.Google Scholar
Gruen, E. S. 1992. Culture and National Identity in Republican Rome. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Grünewald, C. 1912. Die Satzparenthese bei den zehn attischen Rednern (Beiträge zur historischen Syntax der griechischen Sprache 19). Würzburg: C. Kabitzsch.Google Scholar
Guarducci, M. 1995. Epigrafia greca. 4 vols. 2nd edn, Rome: Istituto Poligrafico dello Stato.Google Scholar
Gundlach, W. 1892. Epistolae aevi Merowingici (Monumenta Germaniae Historica Epistolae iii). Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Gwara, S. (ed.) 1996. Latin Colloquies from Pre-Conquest Britain. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
Gwara, S. (ed.) 2002. ‘The Hermeneumata pseudodositheana, Latin oral fluency, and the social function of the Cambro-Latin dialogues called De raris fabulis’, in Lanham, C. D. (ed.), Latin Grammar and Rhetoric: From Classical Theory to Medieval Practice. London and New York: Continuum, pp. 109–38.
Gwara, S. and Porter, D. W. (edd. and trans.) 1997. Anglo-Saxon Conversations: The Colloquies of Ælfric Bata. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press.
Haffter, H. 1934. Untersuchungen zur altlateinischen Dichtersprache. Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Hakamies, R. 1951. Étude sur l'origine et l'evolution du diminutif latin et sa survie dans les langues romanes (Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae 71.1). Helsinki: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia.Google Scholar
Håkanson, L. 1969. Statius' Silvae: Critical and Exegetical Remarks with Some Notes on theThebaid. Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup.Google Scholar
Hale, K. 1983. ‘Walpiri and the grammar of non-configurational languages’, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 1: 5–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, L. G. H. 1998. ‘Ratio and Romanitas in the Bellum Gallicum’, in Welch, K. and Powell, A. (edd.), Julius Caesar as Artful Reporter: The War Commentaries as Political Instruments. London: Duckworth, pp. 11–43.Google Scholar
Halla-aho, H. 2009. The Non-literary Latin Letters: A Study of their Syntax and Pragmatics (Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum 124). Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica.Google Scholar
Halsall, G. 2003. Warfare and Society in the Barbarian West, 450–900. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hannappel, H. and Melenk, H. 1984. Alltagssprache: Semantische Grundbegriffe und Analysebeispiele. Munich: Wilhelm Fink.Google Scholar
Hanssen, J. S. Th. 1951. Latin Diminutives: A Semantic Study. Bergen: John Grieg.Google Scholar
Happ, H. 1967. ‘Die lateinische Umgangssprache und die Kunstsprache des Plautus’, Glotta 45: 60–104.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. 1994. Virgil: Aeneid Book ix. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (ed.) 1990. Oxford Readings in Vergil's Aeneid. Oxford University Press.
Harrison, S. J. 1991. A Commentary on Vergil: Aeneid 10. Oxford University Press.
Harrison, S. J. 2007. Generic Enrichment in Virgil and Horace. Oxford University Press.CrossRef
Hartmann, M. 2005. Die frühlateinischen Inschriften und ihre Datierung. Bremen: Hempen.Google Scholar
Harvey, R. A. 1981. A Commentary on Persius. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Haugen, E. 1966. ‘Dialect, language, nation’, American Anthropologist 68: 922–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Havers, W. 1911. Untersuchungen zur Kasussyntax der indogermanischen Sprachen. Straßburg: Karl J. Trubner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Havet, L. 1898. ‘Salveto’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 10: 287–89.Google Scholar
Havet, L. 1905. ‘La mise en relief par disjonction’, in Mélanges Nicole. Geneva: Kündig & fils, pp. 225–32.Google Scholar
Heinze, R. 1897. T. Lucretius Carus: De rerum natura Buch iii. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Heinze, R. 1924. Review of Diels (1923), Deutsche Literaturzeitung für Kritik der internationalen Wissenschaft 45: 38–49.Google Scholar
Helttula, A. 1987. Studies on the Latin Accusative Absolute (Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum 81). Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica.Google Scholar
Hendrickson, G. L. 1906. ‘The De analogia of Julius Caesar: its occasion, nature, and date, with additional fragments’, CPh 1: 97–120.Google Scholar
Heraeus, W. 1902. ‘Die römische Soldatensprache’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 12: 255–80.Google Scholar
Heraeus, W. 1937. ‘Die Sprache des Petronius und die Glossen’, in Hofmann, J. B. (ed.), Kleine Schriften von Wilhelm Heraeus zum 75. Geburtstag am 4. Dezember 1937. Heidelberg: C. Winter, pp. 52–150.Google Scholar
Hering, W. 1963. Die Recensio der Caesarhandschriften. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag.Google Scholar
Herman, J. 2000. Vulgar Latin, trans. Wright, R.. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press.Google Scholar
Herman, J. 2003. ‘Notes syntaxiques sur la langue de Trimalcion et de ses invités’, in Herman, and Rosén, (edd.), pp. 139–46.
Herman, J. and Rosén, H. (edd.) 2003. Petroniana: Gedenkschrift für Hubert Petersmann. Heidelberg: C. Winter.
Herren, M. W. 1995. ‘Vergil the Grammarian: a Spanish Jew in Ireland?’, Peritia 9: 51–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herren, M. W. 2004. ‘The “Cosmography” of Aethicus Ister: speculations about its date, provenance, and audience’, in Bihrer, A. and Stein, E. (edd.), Nova de veteribus: Mittel- und neulateinische Studien für Paul Gerhard Schmidt. Munich: Saur.Google Scholar
Heubner, C. 1916. De Belli Hispaniensis commentario quaestiones grammaticae. Berlin: Ebering.Google Scholar
Highet, G. 1998. ‘Petronius's dinner speakers’, in Ball, R. J.. (ed.), The Unpublished Lectures of Gilbert Highet. New York: Lang, pp. 119–34.Google Scholar
Hine, H. M. 2005. ‘Poetic influence on prose: the case of the younger Seneca’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 211–37.
Hofmann, J. B. 1926. Lateinische Umgangssprache. 1st edn, Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. 1936. Lateinische Umgangssprache. 2nd edn, Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Hofmann, J. B. 1951. Lateinische Umgangssprache. 3rd edn, Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Holford-Strevens, L. 2003. Aulus Gellius: An Antonine Scholar and his Achievement. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, T. R. 1923. The Roman Republic. 3 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Holtze, W. 1868. Syntaxis Lucretianae Lineamenta. Leipzig: O. Holtze.Google Scholar
Hopkinson, N. 2000. Ovid: Metamorphoses, Book xiii. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Horsfall, N. M. 1995. A Companion to the Study of Virgil. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Housman, A. E. 1919. ‘Notes on Martial’, CQ 13: 68–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, P. 1980. A Commentary on Book One of the Epigrams of Martial. London: Athlone Press.Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. 1998. Cicero's Correspondence: A Literary Study. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Hutchinson, G. O. 2006. Propertius: Elegies Book iv. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Innes, D. C. 1988. ‘Cicero on tropes’, Rhetorica 6: 307–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iordache, R. 1973. ‘Elementos vulgares en la obra de Iordanes’, Helmantica 24: 117–34.Google Scholar
Iordache, R. 1983. ‘L'interrogative indirecte dans les œuvres de Jordanès’, Živa Antika 33: 149–64.Google Scholar
Iordache, R. 1986. ‘L'emploi des adverbes “quatenus”, “hactenus”, “protinus” et “tenus” dans les œuvres de Jordanes’, Atti dell'Accademia di Scienze, Lettere e Belle Arti di Palermo 5: 331–52.Google Scholar
Iordache, R. 1992. ‘Remarques sur la subordonnée temporelle à l’époque classique et à l'époque tardive, chez Jordanes', Linguistica 33: 31–60.Google Scholar
Jakobi, R. 1996. Die Kunst der Exegese im Terenzkommentar des Donat. Berlin: de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. 1969. The Tragedies of Ennius: The Fragments Edited with an Introduction and Commentary (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries 10). 2nd edn, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Jocelyn, H. D. 1972. ‘The poems of Quintus Ennius’, in Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welti.2: 987–1026.CrossRef
Jocelyn, H. D. 1979. ‘Vergilius Cacozelus (Donatus Vita Vergilii 44)’, in Cairns, F. (ed.), Papers of the Liverpool Latin Seminarii (ARCA 3). Liverpool: F. Cairns, pp. 67–142.Google Scholar
Jones, J. C. 1906. ‘Simul, simulac und Synonyma’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 14: 89–104.Google Scholar
Jong, M. 1998. ‘Imitatio morum: the cloister and clerical purity in the Carolingian world’, in Frassetto, M. (ed.), Medieval Purity and Piety: Essays on Medieval Clerical Celibacy and Religious Reform. New York: Garland, pp. 49–80.Google Scholar
Jonge, C. C. 2008. Between Grammar and Rhetoric: Dionysius of Halicarnassus on Language, Linguistics and Literature (Mnemosyne Suppl. 301). Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joos, M. 1967. The Five Clocks (with an introduction by Albert H. Marckwardt). New York: Harcourt, Brace and World (original publication 1962 (Bloomington, Indiana): Publication 22 of the Indiana University Research Center in Anthropology, Folklore, and Linguistics).Google Scholar
Kaimio, J. 1979. The Romans and the Greek Language (Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum 64). Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica.Google Scholar
Kalén, H. 1939. Studia in Iordanem Philologica. Uppsala: Lundequist.Google Scholar
Kalinka, E. 1929. Berichte überCäsars und seiner Fortsetzer Schriften(1898–1928) (Bursians Jahresberichte Suppl. 224). Leipzig: Reisland.Google Scholar
Kappelmacher, A. 1916. ‘Iordanis’, in Paulys Real-Encyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft, ed. G. Wissowa, W. Kroll et al., Stuttgart: J. B. Metzler, 1894–1972. IX: 1908–29.Google Scholar
Karlsson, K. 1981. Syntax and Affixation: The Evolution of MENTE in Latin and Romance. Tübingen: Niemeyer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karsten, H. T. 1912–13. Commenti Donatiani ad Terenti fabulas scholia genuina et spuria. Leiden: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
Katz, J. T. 1998. ‘Testimonia ritus Italici: male genitalia, solemn declarations, and a new Latin sound law’, Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 118: 183–217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenney, E. J. 1970. ‘In parenthesis’, CR n.s. 20: 291.Google Scholar
Kenney, E. J. 1971. Lucretius: De rerum natura Book iii. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kenyon, J. S. 1948. ‘Cultural levels and functional varieties of English’, College English 10.1: 31–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kindstrand, J. F. 1976. Bion of Borysthenes: A Collection of the Fragments with Introduction and Commentary. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Kircher-Durand, C. 2002. ‘Les dérivés en -nus, -na, -num’, in Kircher-Durand, C. (ed.), Création lexicale: la formation des noms par dérivation suffixale (= Grammaire fondamentale du latinix). Leuven and Paris: Peeters, pp. 125–84.Google Scholar
Kiss, K. É. (ed.) 1995. Discourse Configurational Languages. Oxford University Press.
Kiss, S. 2005. ‘Anaphore et coordination dans les textes latins tardifs’, in Calboli, G. (ed.), Papers on Grammar ix. Nemo te lacrimis decoret neque funera fletu faxit. Cur? Volitas viva per ora virum: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics (Bologna 9–14 June 2003). Rome: Herder, pp. 571–6.Google Scholar
Kißel, W. 1990. Aulus Persius Flaccus: Satiren. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Klotz, A. 1910. Cäsarstudien nebst einer Analyse der strabonischen Beschreibung von Gallien und Britannien. Leipzig and Berlin: Teubner.Google Scholar
Klotz, A. 1927a. C. Iuli Caesaris commentarii iii: Commentarii Belli Alexandrini, Belli Africi, Belli Hispaniensis. Accedunt C. Iuli Caesaris et A. Hirti fragmenta. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Klotz, A. 1927b. Kommentar zum Bellum Hispaniense. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Knobloch, J. (ed.) 1961–. Sprachwissenschaftliches Wörterbuch. Heidelberg: C. Winter.
Knox, P. E. 1986. ‘Adjectives in -osus in Latin poetic diction’, Glotta 64: 90–101.Google Scholar
Koehler, A. 1877. ‘De auctorum Belli Africani et Belli Hispaniensis Latinitate’, Acta Seminarii Philologici Erlangensis 1: 367–476.Google Scholar
Koenen, L. 1970. ‘Die “laudatio funebris” des Augustus für Agrippa auf einem neuen Papyrus (P.Colon. inv. nr. 4701; H. Volkmann gewidmet)’, ZPE 5: 217–83.Google Scholar
Kollmann, E. D. 1975. ‘The infinitive in Latin hexameter poetry’, Glotta 53: 281–91.Google Scholar
Konjetzny, W. 1907. ‘De idiotismis syntacticis in titulis latinis urbanis (C.I.L. Vol. VI.) conspicuis’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 15: 297–351.Google Scholar
Krebs, J. P. and Schmalz, J. H. 1905–7. Antibarbarus der lateinischen Sprache: nebst einem kurzen Abriss der Geschichte der lateinischen Sprache und Vorbemerkungen über reine Latinität. 2 vols. 7th edn, Basle: Schwabe.Google Scholar
Krenkel, W. 1970. Lucilius: Satiren. 2 vols. Berlin: Akademie Verlag and Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Kroeber, P. D., and Moore, R. E. (edd.) 1987. Native American Languages and Grammatical Typology. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Linguistics Club.
Kroll, W. (ed.) 1913. M. Tullii Ciceronis Orator. Berlin: Weidmann.
Kroll, W. 1927. ‘Die Sprache des Sallust’, Glotta 15: 280–305.
Krusch, B. 1888. Fredegarii et aliorum chronica. Vitae Sanctorum. Hanover: Hahn.Google Scholar
Krusch, B. 1910. ‘Der Staatsstreich des fränkischen Hausmeiers Grimoald I’, in Historische Aufsätze Karl Zeumer zum 60. Geburtstag als Festgabe dargebracht von Freunden und Schülern. Weimar: Böhlau, pp. 411–38.Google Scholar
Kruschwitz, P. and Halla-aho, H. 2007. ‘The Pompeian wall inscriptions and the Latin language: a critical reappraisal’, Arctos 41: 31–49.Google Scholar
Kühnast, L. 1872. Die Hauptpunkte der livianischen Syntax. Berlin: Weber.Google Scholar
Labov, W. 1966. The Social Stratification of English in New York City. Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.Google Scholar
Labov, W. 2001. Principles of Linguistic Change ii. Social Factors (Language in Society 29). Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Laguna, G. 1992. Estacio: Silvas iii. Introducción, edición crítica, traducción y comentario. Madrid: Fundación Pastor de Estudios Clásicos.Google Scholar
Landfester, M. 1997. Einführung in die Stilistik der griechischen und lateinischen Literatursprachen. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Landgraf, G. 1878. De Ciceronis elocutione in orationibus Pro P. Quinctio et Pro Sex. Roscio Amerino conspicua. Diss. Würzburg: Stuber.Google Scholar
Landgraf, G. 1893. ‘Der Dativus commodi und der Dativus finalis mit ihren Abarten’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 8: 39–76.Google Scholar
Landgraf, G. 1914. Kommentar zu Ciceros Rede Pro Sex. Roscio Amerino. 2nd edn, Leipzig and Berlin: Teubner.Google Scholar
Lapidge, M. 1984. ‘Gildas's education’, in Dumville, D. and Lapidge, M. (edd.), Gildas: New Approaches. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, pp. 27–50.Google Scholar
Lapidge, M. 1986. ‘Latin learning in Dark Age Wales: some prolegomena’, in Evans, D. E., Griffith, J. G. and Jope, E. M. (edd.), Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Celtic Studies. Oxford: Cranham Press, pp. 91–107.Google Scholar
Lapidge, M. 2006. The Anglo-Saxon Library. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lapp, F. 1965. De Callimachi Cyrenaei tropis et figuris (Dissertatio inauguralis). Bonn: Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität.Google Scholar
Latham, R. E. (ed.) 1975. Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources, Fascicle 1. London: Oxford University Press for the British Academy.
Laurand, L. 1938. Études sur le style des discours de Cicéron. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Lausberg, H. 1998. Handbook of Literary Rhetoric. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Lebek, W. D. 1970. Verba prisca: Die Anfänge des Archaisierens in der lateinischen Beredsamkeit und Geschichtsschreibung (Hypomnemata 25). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebreton, J. 1901. Études sur la langue et la grammaire de Cicéron. Paris: Hachette.Google Scholar
Leeman, A. D. 1963. Orationis ratio: The Stylistic Theories and Practice of the Roman Orators, Historians and Philosophers. Amsterdam: Hakkert.Google Scholar
Lehmann, C. 1991. ‘The Latin nominal group in a typological perspective’, in Coleman, R. (ed.), New Studies in Latin Linguistics. Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp. 203–32.Google Scholar
Lehmann, P. G. J. 1922. Die Parodie im Mittelalter. Munich: Drei Masken.Google Scholar
Leiwo, M. 2002. ‘From contact to mixture: bilingual inscriptions from Italy’, in Adams, J. N.et al. (2002), pp. 168–94.
Leiwo, M. 2009. ‘Imperatives and other directives in the letters from Mons Claudianus’, in Evans, T. and Obbink, D. (edd.), The Language of the Papyri. Oxford University Press, pp. 97–119.Google Scholar
Lennartz, K. 1994. Non verba sed vim: Kritisch-exegetische Untersuchungen zu den Fragmenten archaischer römischer Tragiker. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Teubner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lennartz, K. 1995–6. ‘Zur ‘Wortabbildung’ in der archaischen römischen Tragödie’, Glotta 73: 168–207.Google Scholar
Lennartz, K. 2003. ‘Zu Sprachniveau und Stilbildung in der republikanischen Tragödie: unter besonderer Berücksichtigung sondersprachlicher und volkssprachlicher Elemente. Mit einem Anhang zu den Hiatstellen’, Glotta 79: 83–136.Google Scholar
Leo, F. 1913. Geschichte der römischen Literatur i. Die archaische Literatur. Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Letessier, P. 2000. ‘La salutatio chez Plaute: adaptation ludique d'un rituel social’, Lalies 20: 151–64.Google Scholar
Letta, C. 1996. ‘I culti di Vesuna e di Valetudo tra Umbria e Marsica’, in Bonamente, G. and Coarelli, F. (edd.), Assisi e gli Umbri nell'antichità: Atti del Convegno internazionale, Assisi 18–21 dicembre 1991. Assisi: Minerva, pp. 318–39.Google Scholar
Leumann, M. 1947. ‘Die lateinische Dichtersprache’, Museum Helveticum 4: 116–39 (reprinted in Kleine Schriften, Zürich and Stuttgart: Artemis Verlag 1959, pp. 131–56; Italian translation, with additional notes, in Lunelli (1980), pp. 131–78).Google Scholar
Leumann, M. 1977. Lateinische Laut- und Formenlehre. Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Lietzmann, H. 1905. Fünf Festpredigten Augustins in gereimter Prosa. Bonn: Marcus and Weber.Google Scholar
Lindsay, W. M. 1903. Nonii Marcelli De conpendiosa doctrina. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Lindsay, W. M. 1907. Syntax of Plautus. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lindsay, W. M. 1929. M. Val. Martialis Epigrammata. 2nd edn, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lipsius, J. 1611. Opera omnia quae ad criticam proprie spectant. Antwerp: Officina Plantiniana.Google Scholar
Lodge, G.1924–33. Lexicon Plautinum. 2 vols. Leipzig: Teubner.
Löfstedt, B. 1961. Studien über die Sprache der langobardischen Gesetze: Beiträge zur frühmittelalterlichen Latinität. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, B. 1965. Der hibernolateinische Grammatiker Malsachanus. Lund: Håkan Ohlsson.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, E. 1911. Philologischer Kommentar zur Peregrinatio Aetheriae: Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der lateinischen Sprache. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, E. 1936. Vermischte Studien zur lateinischen Sprachkunde und Syntax. Lund: Gleerup.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, E. 1950. Coniectanea: Untersuchungen auf dem Gebiet der antiken und mittelalterlichen Latinität. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksells.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, E. 1956. Syntactica: Studien und Beiträge zur historischen Syntax des Lateins. 2 vols. 2nd edn, Lund: Gleerup.Google Scholar
Löfstedt, L. 1966. Les expressions du commandement et de la défense en latin et leur survie dans les langues romanes. Helsinki: Société Néophilologique.Google Scholar
Lomanto, V. 1993. ‘Due divergenti interpretazioni dell'analogia: la flessione dei temi in -u- secondo Varrone e secondo Cesare’, in Poli (1993) II, pp. 643–85.
Lomanto, V. 1994–5. ‘Cesare e la teoria dell'eloquenza’, Memorie della Accademia delle Scienze di Torino, Classe di Scienze Morali, Storiche e Filologiche 5th ser. 18–19: 3–127.
Lorenzo, J. L. 1976. El valor de los preverbios en Jordanes. Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca.Google Scholar
Luiselli, B. 1976. ‘Sul De summa temporum di Iordanes’, Romanobarbarica 1: 83–134.Google Scholar
Lundström, S. 1982. Ein textkritisches Problem in den Tusculanen. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Lunelli, A. (ed.) 1980. La lingua poetica latina. Bologna: Pàtron.
Lyne, R. O. A. M. 1987. Further Voices in Vergil's Aeneid. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lyne, R. O. A. M. 1989. Words and the Poet. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
McCartney, E. S. 1920. ‘Fore-runners of the Romance adverbial suffix’, CPh 15: 213–29.Google Scholar
McGushin, C. 1977. C. Sallustius Crispus: Bellum Catilinae. A Commentary. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Mack, D. 1937. Senatsreden und Volksreden bei Cicero. Würzburg: Triltsch.Google Scholar
Madvig, J. N. 1856. A Latin Grammar for the Use of Schools, trans. G. Woods. 3rd edn, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Madvig, J. N. 1873. Adversaria criticaii. Copenhagen: Gyldendal.Google Scholar
Malcovati, H. (ed.) 1967. Imperatoris Caesaris Augusti operum fragmenta. Turin: Paravia.
Malcovati, H. 1976. Oratorum Romanorum fragmenta liberae rei publicae. 2 vols. 4th edn, Turin: Paravia.Google Scholar
Maltby, R. 1979. ‘Linguistic characterisation of old men in Terence’, CPh 74: 136–47.Google Scholar
Maltby, R. 2007. ‘The distribution of imagery by plays and characters in Terence’, in Kruschwitz, P., Ehlers, W.-W. and Felgentreu, F. (edd.), Terentius poeta. Munich: Beck, pp. 143–65.Google Scholar
Mann, J. C. 1971. ‘Spoken Latin in Britain as evidenced in the inscriptions’, Britannia 2: 218–24.CrossRef
Mannheimer, I. 1975. Sprachliche Beziehungen zwischen Alt- and Spätlatein. Diss. Zürich: Juris Druck.Google Scholar
Mansfeld, J. 1995. ‘Insight by hindsight: intentional unclarity in presocratic proems’, BICS 42: 225–32.Google Scholar
Manuwald, G. (ed.) 2000. Identität und Alterität in der frührömischen Tragödie (Identitäten und Alteritäten 3). Würzburg: Ergon-Verlag.
Manuwald, G. 2001. Fabulae Praetextae: Spuren einer literarischen Gattung der Römer (Zetemata 108). Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Manuwald, G. 2003. Pacuvius summus tragicus poeta: Zum dramatischen Profil seiner Tragödien. Munich and Leipzig: Saur.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mariotti, I. 1960. Studi luciliani. Florence: La Nuova Italia.Google Scholar
Marouzeau, J. 1921. ‘Pour mieux comprendre les textes latins (Essai sur la distinction des styles)’, RPh 2nd ser. 45: 149–93.Google Scholar
Marouzeau, J. 1922. L'ordre des mots dans la phrase latine i. Les groupes nominaux. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Marouzeau, J. 1938. L'ordre des mots dans la phrase latine ii. Le verbe. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Marouzeau, J. 1949. L'ordre des mots dans la phrase latine iii. Les articulations de l'énoncé. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Marouzeau, J. 1954. Traité de stylistique latine. 3rd edn, Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Martin, J. 1974. Antike Rhetorik: Technik und Methode (Handbuch der Altertumswissenschaft 2, 3). Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Martindale, C. A. (ed.) 1997. The Cambridge Companion to Virgil. Cambridge University Press.CrossRef
Martindale, J. R. 1992. The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire iii. AD 527–641. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marx, F. (ed.) 1894. Incerti auctoris De ratione dicendi ad C. Herennium libri iv [M. Tulli Ciceronis Ad Herennium libri vi]. Leipzig: Teubner.
Marx, F. 1904–5. C. Lucilii carminum reliquiae. 2 vols. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Marx, F. 1909. ‘Die Beziehungen des Altlateins zum Spätlatein’, Neue Jahrbücher für das klassische Altertum 12: 434–48.Google Scholar
Marx, F. (ed.) 1923. Incerti auctoris De ratione dicendi ad C. Herennium libri iv (M. Tulli Ciceronis scripta quae manserunt omnia i). Leipzig: Teubner.
Mathisen, R. W. 1999. Ruricius of Limoges and Friends: A Collection of Letters from Visigothic Gaul. Liverpool University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matthews, P. 2007. Oxford Concise Dictionary of Linguistics. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Maurach, G. 1995. Lateinische Dichtersprache. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Mayer, R. 1981. Lucan: Civil War viii. Warminster: Aris & Phillips.Google Scholar
Mayer, R. 2001. Tacitus: Dialogus de oratoribus. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Meisterfeld, R. 2000. ‘Die unbestimmte Bestimmung: zur Entstehung des unbestimmten Artikels in den romanischen Sprachen’, in Staib, B. (ed.), Linguistica Romanica et Indiana: Festschrift für Wolf Dietrich. Tübingen: Narr, pp. 303–33.Google Scholar
Melville, A. D. 1992. Statius: Thebaid. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Menge, H., Burkard, T. and Schauer, M. 2000. Lehrbuch der lateinischen Syntax und Semantik. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Menk, E. A. 1925. The Position of the Possessive Pronoun in Cicero's Orations. Diss. Univ. of Iowa, Grand Forks, ND: Normanden Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Mercier, J. 1614. Nonii Marcelli nova editio. Additus est libellus Fulgentii de prisco sermone et notae in Nonium et Fulgentium. Paris: Perier, and Sedan: Iannon (reprinted Leipzig: Teubner 1826).Google Scholar
Merrill, F. R. 1972. Plautus: Mostellaria. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Merrill, W. A. 1907. T. Lucreti Cari De rerum natura libri sex. New York: American Book Company.Google Scholar
Metzger, M.D. 1974. ‘Marius Victorinus and the substantive infinitive’, Eranos 72: 65–70.Google Scholar
Meusel, H.1887–93. Lexicon Caesarianum. Berlin: Weber.
Meyer, P. 1867. Review of Boucherie (1867), Revue Critique d'Histoire et de Littérature 2: 344–50.Google Scholar
Meyer, W. 1904. ‘Die Legende des h. Albanus des Protomartyr Angliae in Texten vor Beda’, Abhandlungen der königlichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, philosophisch-historische Klasse, n.s. 8: 3–81.
Mierow, C. C. 1915. Jordanes: The Origin and Deeds of the Goths. 2nd edn, Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Mierow, C. C. 1922–3. ‘Some remarks on the literary technique of the Gothic historian Jordanes’, Classical Weekly 16: 140–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mignot, X. 1969. Les verbes dénominatifs latins. Paris: Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Mignot, X. 1981. ‘Salutare en latin, “saluer” en français sont-ils bien des verbes délocutifs?’, BSL 76: 327–44.Google Scholar
Minyard, J. D. 1978. Mode and Value in De Rerum natura: A Study in Lucretius' Metrical Language(Hermes Einzelschriften 39). Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Mitsis, P. 1994. ‘Committing philosophy to the reader: didactic coercion and reader autonomy in De rerum natura’, in Schiesaro, A., Mitsis, P. and Strauss, J. Clay (edd.), Mega nepios: il destinatario nell'epos didascalico (MD 31), pp. 111–28.
Möbius, A. 1830. C. Julii Caesaris Commentarii de bello civili. Accedunt libri de bello Alexandrino Africano et Hispaniensi. Hanover: Hahn.Google Scholar
Mohrmann, C. 1958. ‘Saint Augustin écrivain’, Recherches Augustiniennes 1: 43–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mommsen, T. 1882. Iordanis Romana et Getica (Monumenta Germaniae Historica v.1). Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Mommsen, T. 1893. ‘Zur Geschichte der Caesarischen Zeit’, Hermes 28: 599–618.Google Scholar
Morgan, L. 1997. ‘“Levi quidem de re…” Julius Caesar as tyrant and pedant’, JRS 87: 23–40.Google Scholar
Morus, S. F. N. 1780. C. Iulii Caesaris Commentarii de bello Gallico et civili. Accedunt libri De bello Alexandrino, Africano et Hispaniensi e recensione Francisci Oudendorpii. Leipzig: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Moussy, C. (ed.) 2001. De lingua Latina novae quaestiones: Actes du xe Colloque international de linguistique latine, Paris-Sèvres, 19–23 avril 1999. Leuven: Peeters.
Mras, K. 1953. ‘St Patricius als Lateiner’, Anzeiger der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse 90: 99–113.Google Scholar
Mueller, L. 1888. Noni Marcelli Compendiosa doctrina. Leipzig: Teubner.
Müller, R. 1997. Sprechen und Sprache: Dialoglinguistische Studien zu Terenz. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Müller, R. 2001. Sprachbewußtsein und Sprachvariation im lateinischen Schrifttum der Antike (Zetemata 111). Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Müller-Lancé, J. 1992. ‘Die Funktion vulgärlateinischer Elemente in den Satiren des Horaz am Beispiel von sat. 2,5’, in Iliescu, M. and Marxgut, W. (edd.), Latin vulgaire – latin tardif iii: Actes du iiième Colloque internationale sur le latin vulgaire et tardif. Innsbruck, 2–5 septembre 1991. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer, pp. 243–54.Google Scholar
Munro, H. A. J. 1928. T. Lucreti Cari De rerum natura libri sex II. Explanatory notes. 4th edn, London: George Bell & Sons.Google Scholar
Murray, J. A. H. 1888. A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles I. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Myers-Scotton, C. 2006. Multiple Voices: An Introduction to Bilingualism. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Mynors, R. A. B. 1990. Virgil: Georgics. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Neilson, W. A. and Knott, T. A. (edd.) 1934. Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language. 2nd edn, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster.
Nisbet, R. G. 1923. ‘Voluntas fati in Latin syntax’, AJPh 44: 27–43.Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. and Rudd, N. 2004. A Commentary on Horace: Odes Book iii. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Nodes, D. J. 2009. ‘The organization of Augustine's Psalmus contra partem Donati’, in Vigiliae Christianae 63: 390–408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norberg, D. 1943. Syntaktische Forschungen auf dem Gebiete des Spätlateins und des frühen Mittellateins. Uppsala: A.-B. Lundequistska Bokhandeln.Google Scholar
Norberg, D. 1944. Beiträge zur spätlateinischen Syntax. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksells.Google Scholar
Norberg, D. 1964. ‘Quelques remarques sur les lettres de Frodebert et d'Importun’, RFIC 92: 295–303.Google Scholar
Norberg, D. 1968. Manuel pratique de latin médiéval. Paris: Picard.Google Scholar
Norden, E. 1899. Die antike Kunstprosa. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Nowottny, W. 1965. The Language Poets Use. London and Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Athlone.Google Scholar
Oberlinus, I. I. 1805. C. I. Caesaris De bello Gallico et civili. Accedunt libri De bello Alexandrino, Africano et Hispaniensi e recensione Francisci Oudendorpii. Leipzig: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Oberlinus, I. I. 1819. C. Iulii Caesaris Commentarii De bello Gallico et civili. Accedunt libri De bello Alexandrino, Africano et Hispaniensi e recensione Francisci Oudendorpii. Leipzig: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, R. M. 1965. A Commentary on Livy: Books 1–5. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
O'Hara, J. J. 1996. True Names: Vergil and the Alexandrian Tradition of Etymological Wordplay. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
O'Hara, J. J. 1997. ‘Virgil's style’, in C. Martindale (1997), pp. 241–58.
Olcott, G. N. 1898. Studies in the Word Formation of the Latin Inscriptions. Rome: Sallustian Typography.Google Scholar
Oldfather, W. A. and Bloom, G. 1927. ‘Caesar's grammatical theories and his own practice’, CJ 22: 584–602.Google Scholar
Orinsky, K. 1923. ‘Die Wortstellung bei Gaius’, Glotta 12: 83–100.Google Scholar
Orlandini, A. 2003. ‘Valde bella est (Cic. Att. 4. 6. 4): étude sur un adverbe polysémique dans la correspondance de Cicéron’, in Garcea (2003a), pp. 140–56.
Otto, A. 1890. Die Sprichwörter und sprichwörtlichen Redensarten der Römer. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Oudendorp, F. 1737. C. Julii Caesaris De bellis Gallico et civili Pompejano nec non A. Hirtii, aliorumque De bellis Alexandrino, Africano, et Hispaniensi commentarii. 2 vols. Leiden: Luchtmans and Rotterdam: Beman.Google Scholar
Palmén, E. 1958. ‘Die lateinischen pronominalen Ortsadverbien in Kasusbedeutung’, Arctos n.s. 2: 104–42.Google Scholar
Palmer, F. R. 1994. Grammatical Roles and Relations. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Panciera, M. D. 2007. ‘Plautonic amabo: when men say “please” in Plautus’, http://www.apaclassics.org/AnnualMeeting/07mtg/abstracts/panciera.pdf (accessed 3 February 2008).
Panhuis, D. G. J. 1982. The Communicative Perspective in the Sentence: A Study of Latin Word Order. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paschoud, F. and Wirz, C. 2007. ‘Emplois de l'ablatif absolu dans l’Histoire Auguste et Suétone', in Bonamente, G. and Brandt, H. (edd.), Historiae Augustae Colloquium Bambergense (Historiae Augustae Colloquia 10). Bari: Edipuglia, pp. 295–303.Google Scholar
Pascucci, G. 1950. ‘Lingua e stile dell'Hispaniense’, Studi Urbinati di Storia, Filosofia e Letteratura 24: 191–217.Google Scholar
Pascucci, G. 1965. Bellum Hispaniense: introduzione, testo critico e commento. Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Pascucci, G. 1973. ‘Interpretazione linguistica e stilistica del Cesare autentico’, in Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welti.3: 488–522.Google Scholar
Pasquali, G. 1927. ‘Lingua latina dell'uso’, RFIC 5: 244–50 (reprinted in Pagine stravaganti, Florence: Sansoni 1968 ii, pp. 329–35).Google Scholar
Pearce, T. E. V. 1966. ‘The enclosing word order in the Latin hexameter’, CQ n.s. 16: 140–71, 298–320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peglau, M. 2000. ‘Virtutes und vitia in der älteren römischen Tragödie’, in Braun, M., Haltenhoff, A. and Mutschler, F.-H. (edd.), Moribus antiquis res stat Romana: Römische Werte und römische Literatur im 3. und 2. Jh. v. Chr. Munich and Leipzig: Saur, pp. 141–67.Google Scholar
Penney, J. H. W. 1999. ‘Archaism and innovation in Latin poetic syntax’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), pp. 249–68.
Perpillou, L. 1996. Recherches lexicales en grec ancien. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Perrot, J. 1994. ‘Liberté et contrainte dans l'ordre des mots: la régulation syntaxique des variations en latin et en hongrois’, Techniques et Méthodologies Modernes Appliquées à l'Antiquité 1: 11–32.Google Scholar
Peter, H. 1914. Historicorum Romanorum reliquiae I. 2nd edn, Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Petersmann, H. 1977. Petrons urbane Prosa: Untersuchungen zu Sprache und Text. Vienna: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Petersmann, H. 1999. ‘The language of early Roman satire: its function and characteristics’, in Adams and Mayer (1999a), pp. 289–310.
Petersmann, H. and Petersmann, A. 1991. Die römische Literatur in Text und Darstellung i: Republikanische Zeiti: Poesie. Stuttgart: Reclam.Google Scholar
Petersmann, H. and Kettemann, R. (edd.) 1999. Latin vulgaire – latin tardif v: Actes du ve Colloque international sur le latin vulgaire et tardif, Heidelberg 5–8 septembre 1997. Heidelberg: C. Winter.
Pinkster, H. 1987. ‘The pragmatic motivation for the use of subject pronouns in Latin: the case of Petronius’, in Études de linguistique générale et de linguistique latine offertes en hommage à Guy Serbat par ses collègues et ses élèves (Bibliothèque de l'information grammaticale). Paris: Société pour l'Information Grammaticale, pp. 369–79.Google Scholar
Pinkster, H. 2005a. ‘The language of Pliny the Elder’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 239–56.
Pinkster, H. 2005b. ‘Changing patterns of discontinuity in Latin’ (handout from conference paper presented at 13th International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics, Brussels, 2005) http://www.harmpinkster.nl/index.php?section=22 (accessed September 2007).
Pirson, J. 1910. ‘Pamphlets bas latins du vii siècle’, in Mélanges de philologie romane et d'histoire littéraire offerts à M. Maurice Wilmotte, Prof. à l'univ. de Liège, à l'occasion de son 25e anniversaire d'enseignement. Paris: H. Champion, pp. 485–522.Google Scholar
Pizzani, U. 1993. ‘La cultura filosofica di Cesare’, in Poli (1993) i, pp. 163–89.
Plessis, F. and Lejay, P. 1911. Œuvres d'Horace. Paris: Hachette.Google Scholar
Plummer, C. (ed.) 1896. Venerabilis Baedae Historiam ecclesiasticam gentis Anglorum Historiam abbatum, Epistolam ad Ecgberctum una cum Historia abbatum auctore anonymo…recognovit Carolus Plummer. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Poccetti, P. 1983. ‘In margine all'iscrizione osca Ve 110’, Incontri Linguistici 7: 45–51.Google Scholar
Poccetti, P. 1993a. ‘Aspetti e problemi della diffusione del latino in area italica’, in Campanile, E. (ed.), Caratteri e diffusione del latino in area italica. Pisa: Giardini, pp. 73–96.Google Scholar
Poccetti, P. 1993b. ‘Teorie grammaticali e prassi della latinitas in Cesare’, in Poli (1993) II, pp. 599–641.
Polheim, K. 1925. Die lateinische Reimprosa. Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Poli, D. (ed.) 1993. La cultura in Cesare. 2 vols. Rome: Il Calamo.
Pötter, H. 1932. Untersuchungen zum Bellum Alexandrinum und Bellum Africanum. Leipzig: Noske.Google Scholar
Powell, J. G. F. 1984. Review of Panhuis (1982), CR n.s. 34: 75–7.
Powell, J. G. F. 1988. Cicero: Cato Maior de senectute. Edited with an introduction and commentary (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries 28). Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Powell, J. G. F. 2005. ‘Cicero's adaptation of legal Latin in the De legibus’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge and Adams (2005), pp. 117–50.
Powell, J. G. F. and Paterson, J. (edd.) 2004. Cicero the Advocate. Oxford University Press.CrossRef
Prosdocimi, A. 1990. ‘Vetter 243 e l'imperativo latino tra (con)testo e paradigma’, in Maetzke, G. (ed.), La civiltà dei Falisci: Atti del xv Convegno di Studi Etruschi e Italici, Civita Castellana-Forte Sangallo 28–31 maggio 1987. Florence: Olschki, pp. 291–326.Google Scholar
Questa, C. 1995. Titi Macci Plauti cantica. Urbino: QuattroVenti.Google Scholar
Questa, C. 2007. La metrica di Plauto e di Terenzio. Urbino: QuattroVenti.Google Scholar
Quirk, R., Greenbaum, S., Leech, G. and Svartvik, J. 1985. A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Rambaud, M. 1966. L'art de la déformation historique dans les commentaires de César. 2nd edn, Paris: Les Belles Lettres.Google Scholar
Rambaud, M. 1969. ‘César et l’Épicurisme d'après les “Commentaires”', in Actes du viiie congrès de l'Association Guillaume Budé. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, pp. 411–35.Google Scholar
Razzolini, L. 1879. Petrarca: De viris illustribus vitaeii. Bologna: Gaetano Romagnoli.Google Scholar
Rawson, E. 1979. ‘L. Cornelius Sisenna and the early first century bc’, CQ n.s. 29: 327–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinhardt, T. 2008. ‘Epicurus and Lucretius on the origins of language’, CQ n.s. 58: 127–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinhardt, T., Lapidge, M. and Adams, J. N. (edd.) 2005. Aspects of the Language of Latin Prose (Proceedings of the British Academy 129). Oxford University Press.CrossRef
Ribbeck, O. 1871. Scaenicae Romanorum poesis fragmenta i. Tragicorum Romanorum Fragmenta. 2nd edn, Leipzig (reprinted Hildesheim 1962).Google Scholar
Ribbeck, O. 1873. Scaenicae Romanorum poesis fragmenta ii. Comicorum Romanorum Fragmenta. 2nd edn, Leipzig 1873 (reprinted Hildesheim 1962).Google Scholar
Richter, W. 1977. Caesar als Darsteller seiner Taten. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Ricottilli, L. 2003. ‘Hofmann e il concetto della lingua d'uso’, Introduction to Hofmann–Ricottilli (3rd edn), 9–69.
Riese, A. 1865. Varro: Saturarum Menippearum reliquiae. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Riionheimo, H. 2007. Muutoksen monet juuret – Oman ja vieraan risteytyminen Viron inkerinsuomalaisten imperfektinmuodostuksessa (The Multiple Roots of Change: Mixing Native and Borrowed Influence in the Past Tense Formation by Ingrian Finns) (Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seuran Toimituksia 1107). Helsinki: SKS.Google Scholar
Risicato, A. 1950. Lingua parlata e lingua d'arte in Ennio. Messina: Editrice Universitaria.Google Scholar
Risselada, R. 1993. Imperative and Other Directive Expressions in Latin. Amsterdam: Gieben.Google Scholar
Rix, H. 1991. Etruskische Texte. Tübingen: Narr.Google Scholar
Rix, H. 1993. Review of La civiltà dei Falisci: Atti del xv Convegno di Studi etruschi ed italici, Firenze 1990, Kratylos 38: 83–87.
Rix, H. 2002. Sabellische Texte. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Roesch, S. 2005. ‘L’échec des clôtures du dialogue dans les comédies de Plaute', in Calboli, G.. (ed.), Papers on Grammar ix. Nemo te lacrimis decoret neque funera fletu faxit. Cur? Volitas viva per ora virum: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Colloquium on Latin Linguistics (Bologna 9–14 June 2003). Rome: Herder, pp. 921–32.Google Scholar
Roesch, S. 2008. ‘Les débuts de dialogues dans la comédie et la tragédie latines’, in Commencer et finir: débuts et fins dans les littératures grecque, latine et néolatine. Actes du colloque organisé le 29 et 30 septembre 2006 par l'Université Jean Moulin-Lyon 3 et l'ENS-LHS. Lyons: CERGR, pp. 207–22.Google Scholar
Roncali, R. 1989. Seneca: l'apoteosi negata. Venice: Marsilio.Google Scholar
Rönsch, H. 1875. Itala und Vulgata: Das Sprachidiom der urchristlichen Itala und der katholischen Vulgata unter Berücksichtigung der römischen Volkssprache. 2nd edn, Marburg: N. G. Elwert.Google Scholar
Roschatt, A. 1883. Über den Gebrauch der Parenthesen in Ciceros Reden und rhetorischen Schriften. Erlangen: Universitäts-Buchdruckerei von Junge.Google Scholar
Roschatt, A. 1884. ‘Über den Gebrauch der Parenthesen in Ciceros Reden und rhetorischen Schriften’, Acta Seminarii Erlangensis 3: 189–244.Google Scholar
Rosén, H. B. 1992. ‘“Having” in Petronius’, in Tournoy, G. and Sacré, T. (edd.), Pegasus devocatus: studia in honorem C. Arri Nuri sive Harry C. Schnur (Supplementa humanistica Lovanensia vii). Leuven University Press, pp. 101–17.Google Scholar
Rosén, H. B. 1999. Latine loqui: Trends and Directions in the Crystallization of Classical Latin. Munich: Fink.Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. 1969. Style and Tradition in Catullus. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruckdeschel, F. 1910. Archaismen und Vulgarismen in der Sprache des Horaz. Diss. Munich: Straub.Google Scholar
Russell, D. A. (ed.) 1964. ‘Longinus’: On the Sublime. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Russell, D. A. 2001. Quintilian: The Orator's Education. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Sarhimaa, A. 1999. Syntactic Transfer, Contact-Induced Change, and the Evolution of Bilingual Mixed Codes: Focus on Karelian-Russian Language Alternation (Studia Fennica Linguistica 9). Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society.Google Scholar
Sato, S. 1990. ‘Chrodebert concéda-t-il le premier privilège épiscopal pour Saint-Martin de Tours? Une problématique méconnue’, in Lepelley, C. and Sot, M. (edd.), Haut Moyen-Age: culture, éducation et sociétaé. Études offertes à Pierre Riché. Nanterre: Publidix and LaGarenne-Colombes: Erasme.Google Scholar
Sblendorio Cugusi, M. T. 1982. M. Porci Catonis orationum reliquiae. Turin: Paravia.Google Scholar
Scafoglio, G. 2006. L'Astyanax di Accio: saggio sul background mitografico, testo critico e commento dei frammenti (Collection Latomus 295). Brussels: Latomus.Google Scholar
Scaliger, J. J. 1655. Marci Manilii Astronomicon a Josepho Scaligero ex vetusto codice Gemblacensi infinitis mendis repurgatum. Strasbourg: Bockenhoffer.Google Scholar
Schaffner-Rimann, J. 1958. Die lateinischen Adverbien auf -tim. Winterthur: Keller.Google Scholar
Schibel, W. 1971. Sprachbehandlung und Darstellungsweise in römischer Prosa: Claudius Quadrigarius, Livius, Aulus Gellius. Amsterdam: Grüner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schierl, P. 2006. Die Tragödien des Pacuvius: Ein Kommentar zu den Fragmenten mit Einleitung, Text und Übersetzung (Texte und Kommentare 28). Berlin: de Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schiesaro, A. 1984. ‘“Nonne vides” in Lucrezio’, MD 13: 143–57.Google Scholar
Schiffrin, D., Tannen, D. and Hamilton, H. E. (edd.) 2001. The Handbook of Discourse Analysis. Malden, Mass. and Oxford: Blackwell.
Schmal, S. 2001. Sallust. Hildesheim: Olms.Google Scholar
Schmitt, J. 1913. De parenthesis usu Hippocratico, Herodoteo, Thucydideo, Xenophonteo. Greifswald: A. Hartmann.Google Scholar
Schneider, R. 1905. Bellum Africanum. Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Schneider, W. C. 2000. ‘Vom Salz Ciceros’, Gymnasium 107: 497–518.
Schuchardt, H. E. M. 1866. Der Vokalismus des Vulgärlateins. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Schünke, E. 1906. De traiectione coniunctionum et pronominis relativi apud poetas Latinos. Kiel: Lüdtke and Martens.Google Scholar
Schwyzer, E. 1939. Die Parenthese im engern und im weitern Sinne (Abhandlungen der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse 6). Berlin: de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Seel, O. 1935. Hirtius: Untersuchungen über die pseudocaesarischen Bella und den Balbusbrief. Leipzig: Dieterich.Google Scholar
Serbat, G. 1975. ‘Les temps du verbe en latin’, REL 53: 367–405.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 1965. Cicero's Letters to Atticusii. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 1977. Cicero: Epistulae ad familiaresi. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 1983. ‘Cicero and early Latin poetry’, ICS 8: 239–49.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 1989. ‘More corrections and explanations of Martial’, AJPh 110: 131–50.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 1993. Martial: Epigrams. 3 vols. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Shackleton Bailey, D. R. 2003. Statius: Silvae. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. R. 2002. ‘History, romance, love, and sex in Gregory of Tours’ Decem libri historiarum', in Mitchell, K. and Wood, I. N. (edd.), The World of Gregory of Tours. Leiden: Brill, pp. 395–418.Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. R. 2004. ‘Intentions and audiences: history, hagiography, martyrdom, and confession in Victor of Vita's Historia persecutionis’, in Merrills, A. (ed.), Vandals, Romans and Berbers: New Perspectives on Late Antique Africa. Aldershot: Ashgate, pp. 271–90.Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. R. 2005. ‘Gregory of Tours and poetry: prose into verse and verse into prose’, in Reinhardt, Lapidge, and Adams (2005), pp. 303–19.
Shanzer, D. R. 2008. ‘Some treatments of sexual scandal in (primarily) later Latin epistolography’, in Heilen, S. and Kirstein, R. (edd.), In Pursuit of Wissenschaft: Festschrift für William M. Calder III zum 75. Geburtstag. Hildesheim: Olms, pp. 393–414.Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. R. 2009. ‘Hisperic faminations’, in Galloway, A. S. and Yeager, R. F. (edd.), Through a Classical Eye: Transcultural and Transhistorical Visions in Medieval English, Italian, and Latin Literature in Honour of Winthrop Wetherbee. University of Toronto Press, pp. 44–68.Google Scholar
Shanzer, D. R. and Wood, I. N. 2002. Letters and Selected Prose of Avitus of Vienne. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharpe, R. 2002. ‘Martyrs and local Saints in Late Antique Britain’, in Thacker, A. and Sharpe, R. (edd.), Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West. Oxford University Press, pp. 75–154.Google Scholar
Shorey, P. 1910. ‘A Greek analogue of the Romance adverb’, CPh 5: 83–96.Google Scholar
Siebenborn, E. 1976. Die Lehre von der Sprachrichtigkeit und ihren Kriterien: Studien zur antiken normativen Grammatik. Amsterdam: Grüner.Google Scholar
Siewierska, A. 1984. ‘Phrasal discontinuity in Polish’, Australian Journal of Linguistics 4: 57–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sihler, E. G. 1912. C. Julius Caesar. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Simpson, J. A. and Weiner, E. S. C. 1989. The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd edn, Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Sinclair, P. 1994. ‘Political declensions in Latin grammar and oratory, 55 bce–ce 39’, Ramus 23: 92–109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skard, E. 1970. ‘Hyperbaton bei Cornelius Nepos’, Symbolae Osloenses 45: 67–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skutsch, O. 1985. The Annals of Q. Ennius. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Smith, C. C. 1983. ‘Vulgar Latin in Roman Britain: epigraphic and other evidence’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.29.2: 893–948.Google Scholar
Smith, M. S. 1975. Petronius: Cena Trimalchionis. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Sneyders de Vogel, K. 1927. ‘Quelques remarques sur les lettres échangées entre Frodebert et Importun’, in Mélanges de philologie et d'histoire offert a M. Antoine Thomas par ses élèves et ses amis. Geneva: Slatkine, pp. 417–25.Google Scholar
Solin, H., Leiwo, M. and Halla-aho, H. (edd.) 2003. Latin vulgaire – latin tardif vi: Actes du vie Colloque international sur le latin vulgaire et tardif, Helsinki 29.8.–2.9.2000. Hildesheim: Olms.
Staaff, E. 1896. Le suffixe -arius dans les langues romanes. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Stefenelli, A. 1962. Die Volkssprache im Werk des Petron, im Hinblick auf die romanischen Sprachen. Vienna and Stuttgart: Wilhelm Braumüller.Google Scholar
Steinthal, H. 1890. Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaft bei den Griechen und Römern mit besonderer Rücksicht auf die Logik. Erster Teil. 2nd edn, Berlin: Dümmler.Google Scholar
Stevens, P. T. 1937. ‘Colloquial expressions in Euripides’, CQ 31: 182–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, P. T. 1945. ‘Colloquial expressions in Aeschylus and Sophocles’, CQ 39: 95–105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, P. T. 1976. Colloquial Expressions in Euripides (Hermes Einzelschriften 38). Wiesbaden: Steiner.Google Scholar
Stevenson, W. H. (ed.). 1929. Early Scholastic Colloquies. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Stotz, P. 1996. Handbuch zur lateinischen Sprache des Mittelaltersiii. Lautlehre. Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Streckenbach, G. 1970. ‘Paulus Niavis, “Latinum ydeoma pro novellis studentibus” – ein Gesprächsbüchlein aus dem letzten Viertel des 15. Jahrhunderts [i]’, Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch 6: 152–91.Google Scholar
Streckenbach, G. 1972. ‘Paulus Niavis, “Latinum ydeoma pro novellis studentibus” – ein Gesprächsbüchlein aus dem letzten Viertel des 15. Jahrhunderts [ii]’, Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch 7: 187–242.Google Scholar
Streckenbach, G. 1975. ‘Das “Manuale scolarium” und das “Latinum ydeoma pro novellis studentibus” des Paulus Niavis’, Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch 10: 232–69.Google Scholar
Suerbaum, W. (ed.) 2002. Handbuch der lateinischen Literatur der Antike i. Die archaische Literatur von den Anfängen bis Sullas Tod: Die vorliterarische Periode und die Zeit von 240 bis 78 v. Chr. Munich: Beck.
Svennung, J. 1935. Untersuchungen zu Palladius und zur lateinischen Fach- und Volkssprache. Uppsala: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Swain, S. 2002. ‘Bilingualism in Cicero? The evidence of code-switching’, in Adams et al. (2002), pp. 128–67.
Sznycer, M. 1967. Les passages puniques en transcription latine dans le ‘Poenulus’ de Plaute. Paris: Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Szövérffy, J. 1970. Weltliche Dichtungen des lateinischen Mittelalters: Ein Handbuch i. Von den Anfangen bis zum Ende der Karolingerzeit. Berlin: Erich Schmidt.Google Scholar
Tandoi, V. 1974. ‘Donato e la Lupus di Nevio’, in Puccioni, G. (ed.), Poesia latina in frammenti: miscellanea filologica. Genoa: Università di Genova, Istituto di Filologia Classica e Medievale, pp. 263–73.Google Scholar
Tarrant, R. J. 1998. ‘Parenthetically speaking (in Virgil and other poets)’, in Knox, P. and Foss, C. (edd.), Style and Tradition: Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Teubner, pp. 141–57.Google Scholar
Thesleff, H. 1967. Studies in the Styles of Plato (Acta philosophica Fennica 20). Helsinki: Societas Philosophica Fennica.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. 1988. Virgil: Georgics, Books 3–4. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. 2000. ‘A trope by any other name: “Polysemy,” ambiguity and significatio in Virgil’, Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100: 381–407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R. F. 2006. ‘Horace and Hellenistic poetry’, in Harrison, S. J. (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Horace. Cambridge University Press, pp. 50–62.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. 2009. ‘Homeric masquerade: politics and poetics in Horace's Apollo’, in Athanassaki, L., Martin, R. P., and Miller, J. F. (edd.), Apolline Politics and Poetics. Athens: Hellenic Ministry of Culture, pp. 329–52.Google Scholar
Thomason, S. G. 2001. Language Contact: An Introduction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, C. R. (trans.) 1965. The Colloquies of Erasmus. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. A. W. 1936. A Glossary of Greek Birds. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Till, R. 1935. Die Sprache Catos (Philologus Suppl. 28.2). Leipzig: Dieterich (= 1968, La lingua di Catone, trans. C. De Meo, Rome: Ateneo).Google Scholar
Townend, G. B. 1978. ‘The fading of Memmius’, CQ n.s. 28: 267–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Traina, A. 1999. Forma e suono. 2nd edn, Bologna: Pàtron.Google Scholar
Traina, A., Neri, C., Oniga, R. and Pieri, B. 2002. Stilistica latina (augmented translation of H–S, ‘Stilistik’). Bologna: Pàtron.Google Scholar
Tzamali, E. 2000. ‘Zum Gebrauch der präpositionalen Umschreibungen bei Herondas’, C&M 51: 119–28.Google Scholar
Väänänen, V. 1956. ‘La préposition latine DE et le génitif: une mise au point’, Revue de Linguistique Romane 20: 1–20 = Recherches et récréations latino-romanes. Naples 1981: 89–119.Google Scholar
Väänänen, V. 1966. Le latin vulgaire des inscriptions pompéiennes. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag.Google Scholar
Väänänen, V. 1981. Introduction au latin vulgaire. 3rd edn, Paris: Klincksieck.Google Scholar
Väänänen, V. 1982. Introduzione al latino volgare. Bologna: Pàtron.Google Scholar
Vahlen, J. 1903. Ennianae poesis reliquiae. 2nd edn, Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Dam, H.-J. 1984. P. Papinius Statius: Silvae Book ii. A Commentary. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Hout, M. J. P. 1999. A Commentary on the Letters of M. Cornelius Fronto. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Vannini, G. 2007. Petronius 1975–2005: bilancio critico e nuove proposte (Lustrum 49). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Verlinsky, A. 2005. ‘Epicurus and his predecessors on the origin of language’, in Frede and Inwood (2005), pp. 56–100.
Vetter, E. 1953, Handbuch der italischen Dialekte. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Vollmer, F. 1898. P. Papinii Statii Silvarum libri. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Vossius, G. J. 1677. Duo tractatus aurei, unus de historicis Latinis, alter de historicis Graecis, nunc denuo subtractis prioribus exemplaribus eruditorum desiderio restituti. Frankfurt: Moewald.Google Scholar
Wackernagel, J. 1928. Vorlesungen über Syntax mit besonderer Berücksichtigung von Griechisch, Lateinisch und Deutschii. 2nd edn, Basle: Birkhäuser.Google Scholar
Wallach, B. P. 1976. Lucretius and the Diatribe against the Fear of Death: De rerum natura iii 830–1094. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Walstra, G. J. J. 1962. Les cinq épitres rimées dans l'appendice des formules de Sens: Codex Parisinus Latinus 4627, fol. 27v-29r. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Warmington, E. H. 1967. Remains of Old Latin. 4 vols. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Watson, L. and Watson, P. 2003. Martial: Select Epigrams. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Watson, P. 1985. ‘Axelson revisited: The selection of vocabulary in Latin poetry’, CQ n.s. 35: 430–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, P. 2002. ‘The originality of Martial's language’, Glotta 78: 222–57.Google Scholar
Way, A. G. 1955. Caesar: Alexandrian, African and Spanish Wars. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Weissenborn, W. and Müller, H. J. 1965. Titi Livi Ab urbe condita libri. Vol. VI.1. 6th edn, Berlin: Weidmann.Google Scholar
Werner, F. 1908. Die Latinität der Getica des Jordanis. Leipzig and Halle: Selle.Google Scholar
Wessner, P. (ed.) 1902–8. Aeli Donati quod fertur Commentum Terenti. Accedunt Eugraphi Commentum et Scholia Bembina. 3 vols. Leipzig: Teubner.
West, D. A. 1964. ‘Two notes on Lucretius’, CQ n.s. 14: 94–102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whatmough, J. 1938. Review of Hofmann (1936), CPh 33: 320–2.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, L. P. 1959. ‘The language of Virgil and Horace’, CQ n.s. 9: 181–92 (reprinted in Harrison 1990, pp. 413–28).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, G. 1968. Tradition and Originality in Roman Poetry. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Williams, R. D. 1960. Aeneidos liber quintus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Wills, J. 1996. Repetition in Latin Poetry. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Winterfeld, P. K. R. 1905. ‘Hrotsvits literarische Stellung’, Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen 114: 25–75 at 58–62.Google Scholar
Wisse, J., Winterbottom, M. and Fantham, E. 2008. M. Tullius Cicero De oratore libri iii v. A Commentary on Book iii, 96–230. Heidelberg: C. Winter.Google Scholar
Wolanin, H. (1999), ‘Aulus Gellius and Vulgar Latin’, in Petersmann and Kettemann (1999), pp. 497–503.
Wölfflin, E. 1879. Lateinische und romanische Komparation. Erlangen: A. Deichert (= Wölfflin 1933, pp. 126–92).Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1880. ‘Über die Latinität des Afrikaners Cassius Felix’, Sitzungsberichte der königlichen Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-philologische und historische Classe, pp. 381–432 (= Wölfflin 1933, pp. 193–224).
Wölfflin, E. 1886. ‘Der substantivierte Infinitiv’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 3: 70–91.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1892a. ‘Minucius Felix: Ein Beitrag zur Kenntnis des afrikanischen Lateins’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 7: 467–84.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1892b. ‘Zur Konstruktion von clam’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 7: 278–9.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1893. ‘Ennius und das Bellum Hispaniense’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 8: 596–7.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1898. ‘Zur Differenzierung der lat. Partikeln’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 10: 367–76.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1900. ‘Zur Latinität des Jordanes’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 11: 361–8.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1902. ‘Sprachliches zum Bellum Hispaniense’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 12: 159–71.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1908. ‘Die Sprache des Claudius Quadrigarius’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 15: 10–22.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. 1933. Ausgewählte Schriften, ed. Meyer, G.. Leipzig: Dieterich.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. and Meader, C. L. 1900. ‘Zur Geschichte der Pronomina demonstrativa’, Archiv für lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik. Leipzig: Teubner. 11: 369–93.Google Scholar
Wölfflin, E. and Miodonski, A. 1889. C. Asini Polionis De bello Africo commentarius. Leipzig: Teubner.Google Scholar
Wood, I. N. 1994. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450–571. London and New York: Longman.Google Scholar
Woodman, A. J. and Martin, R. H. 1996. The Annals of Tacitus: Book 3 (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries 32). Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wooten, C. W. 1987. Hermogenes' On Types of Style: Translated by Cecil W. Wooten. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Wright, R. (ed.) 2008. Latin vulgaire – latin tardif viii: Actes du viii colloque internationale sur le latin vulgaire et tardif (Oxford 6–9 sept. 2006). Hildesheim: Olms.
Wyld, H. C. 1920. A History of Modern Colloquial English. London: Fisher Unwin.Google Scholar
Wyld, H. C. 1934. The Best English: A Claim for the Superiority of Received Standard English (Society for Pure English Tract xxxix). Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. 1980. ‘Horace's Liber sermonum: the structure of ambiguity’, Arethusa 13: 59–77.Google Scholar
Zetzel, J. E. G. 2005. Marginal Scholarship and Textual Deviation. London: Institute of Classical Studies.Google Scholar
Zeumer, K. 1881. ‘Über die älteren fränkischen Formelsammlungen’, Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft für ältere deutsche Geschichtskunde 6: 11–115.Google Scholar
Zeumer, K. 1886. Formulae Merowingici et Karolini aevi (Monumenta Germaniae Historica Legum Sectio v). Hanover: Hahn.Google Scholar
Zevi, F. 1991. ‘L'edilizia privata e la casa del Fauno’, in Zevi, F. (ed.), Pompei. Naples: Guida, pp. 64–89.Google Scholar
Zillinger, W. 1911. Cicero und die altrömischen Dichter. Diss. Würzburg: Straudenraus.Google Scholar
Zimmerer, M. 1937. Der Annalist Qu. Claudius Quadrigarius. Diss. Munich.Google Scholar
Zwierlein, O. 1986. L. Annaei Senecae tragoediae. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Edited by Eleanor Dickey, University of Exeter, Anna Chahoud, Trinity College, Dublin
  • Book: Colloquial and Literary Latin
  • Online publication: 04 April 2011
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511763267.027
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Edited by Eleanor Dickey, University of Exeter, Anna Chahoud, Trinity College, Dublin
  • Book: Colloquial and Literary Latin
  • Online publication: 04 April 2011
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511763267.027
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Edited by Eleanor Dickey, University of Exeter, Anna Chahoud, Trinity College, Dublin
  • Book: Colloquial and Literary Latin
  • Online publication: 04 April 2011
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511763267.027
Available formats
×