Janua linguarum, or An easie and compendious method and course for the attaining all tongues, especially the Latine. : Wherein are Latine sentences one thousand foure hundred, containing all the more usuall words of the Latine tongue, simple and compound, scarce any word being iterated, except for the supplying the sense sometimes. With the English translation of them, and an alphabeticall dictionary, containing not the primitive words onely, but also each particle in the sentence. To which is added the supplement of Tim. Poole, together with an index of the English before the Latine.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Bathe, William, 1564-1614.
Edition:The eighth edition, more compleat than the former, by the care and study of Th. Horne.
Imprint:London, : Printed by R. Young, and are sold by George Lathum, at the signe of the Bishops head in Pauls Church-yard, 1634.
Description:1 online resource ([2]+ leaves.)
Language:Latin
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11837452
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Latin language t.p. has title: Janua linguarum, sive Methodus & ratio compendiaria & facilis ad omnes linguas, ad Latinam verò maximè viam aperiens
Other authors / contributors:Welde, William.
Horne, Thomas, 1610-1654.
Poole, Timothy.
Notes:Reproduction of original in the British Library.
Fragments: E3:2[151] has Latin title page only; E4:1[50c] is English t.p. only.
A collection of proverbs in Latin, originally compiled by William Bathe with Spanish translations. The English translation is by William Welde. Cf. STC.
STC (2nd ed.) 14472
Early English books tract supplement interim guide Harl. 5974