See also:BENNETT, See also:CHARLES See also:EDWIN (1858- ) , See also:American classical See also:scholar, was See also:born on the 6th of See also:April 1858, in See also:Providence, Rhode See also:Island. He graduated from See also:- BROWN
- BROWN, CHARLES BROCKDEN (1771-181o)
- BROWN, FORD MADOX (1821-1893)
- BROWN, FRANCIS (1849- )
- BROWN, GEORGE (1818-188o)
- BROWN, HENRY KIRKE (1814-1886)
- BROWN, JACOB (1775–1828)
- BROWN, JOHN (1715–1766)
- BROWN, JOHN (1722-1787)
- BROWN, JOHN (1735–1788)
- BROWN, JOHN (1784–1858)
- BROWN, JOHN (1800-1859)
- BROWN, JOHN (1810—1882)
- BROWN, JOHN GEORGE (1831— )
- BROWN, ROBERT (1773-1858)
- BROWN, SAMUEL MORISON (1817—1856)
- BROWN, SIR GEORGE (1790-1865)
- BROWN, SIR JOHN (1816-1896)
- BROWN, SIR WILLIAM, BART
- BROWN, THOMAS (1663-1704)
- BROWN, THOMAS (1778-1820)
- BROWN, THOMAS EDWARD (1830-1897)
- BROWN, WILLIAM LAURENCE (1755–1830)
Brown University in 1878 and also studied at Harvard (1881-1882) and in See also:Germany (1882-1884). He taught in secondary See also:schools in See also:Florida (1878-1879), New See also:York (1879-1881), and See also:Nebraska (1885-1889), and became See also:professor of Latin in the University of See also:Wisconsin in 1889, of classical See also:philology at Brown University in 1891, and of Latin at Cornell University in 1892. His syntactical studies, notably various papers on the subjunctive, are based on a statistical examination of Latin texts and are marked by a fresh See also:system of nomenclature; he ranks as one of the leaders of the " New American School " of syntacticians, who insist on a preliminary re-examination of all available data. Of See also:great importance are his advocacy of " quantitative " See also:reading of Latin See also:verse and his Critique of Some See also:Recent Subjunctive Theories in vol. ix. (1898) of Cornell Studies in Classical Philology, of which he was an editor. Bennett's Latin See also:Grammar (1895) is the first successful See also:attempt in See also:America to adopt the method of the brief, scholarly Schulgrammatik. Besides the Latin See also:classics commonly read in secondary courses and other See also:text-books in " Bennett's Latin See also:Series," he edited See also:Tacitus's Dialogus de Oratoribus (1894), and See also:Cicero's De Senectute (1897) and De Amicitia (1897). He wrote, with See also:George P. See also:Bristol, The Teaching of See also:Greek and Latin in Secondary Schools (1900), and The Latin See also:Language (1907), and with See also:- WILLIAM
- WILLIAM (1143-1214)
- WILLIAM (1227-1256)
- WILLIAM (1J33-1584)
- WILLIAM (A.S. Wilhelm, O. Norse Vilhidlmr; O. H. Ger. Willahelm, Willahalm, M. H. Ger. Willehelm, Willehalm, Mod.Ger. Wilhelm; Du. Willem; O. Fr. Villalme, Mod. Fr. Guillaume; from " will," Goth. vilja, and " helm," Goth. hilms, Old Norse hidlmr, meaning
- WILLIAM (c. 1130-C. 1190)
- WILLIAM, 13TH
William See also:Alexander See also:Hammond translated The Characters of See also:Theophrastus (1902).
End of Article: BENNETT, CHARLES EDWIN (1858- )
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