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Introduction to Latin
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About the Author

Susan C. Shelmerdine is Professor in the Department of Classical Studies at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. She is also the author of Homeric Hymns, available from Focus Publishing.

Reviews

"Shelmerdine has greatly improved an already excellent book... I have always liked the way she explains concepts, such as sentence patterns, subordinate clauses, correlating conjunctions, etc., that other books take for granted; or to put it another way, the book discusses the structure of the Latin sentence as a whole before breaking it down into its individual parts allowing the students (and the teachers!) to really understand how the Romans put words together." - Thomas Kohn, Wayne State University "Shelmerdine's Introduction to Latin is in my judgement the best introductory Latin textbook available at present; I have kept choosing it year by year since it was first published. The book explains key grammatical concepts clearly and gives students plenty of practice with exercises (some of which are drawn directly from Latin authors) and longer reading passages, which provide a gentle transition from very basic narratives at the outset to lightly-edited Latin prose and poetry in the latter portions of the text. Shelmerdine has deliberately avoided burdening the textbook with non-essential information on Roman history and culture, but the study of the language itself and above all the reading passages provide an instructor with ample opportunity to comment on these matters in class." - Christopher Grundke, Dalhousie University Of the First Edition: "This is just the book I've been hoping for: it is intelligently planned and organized, and maintains a good pace without being overwhelming. The exercises are very good and make reasonable sense. Presentation of grammar and syntax is very sound from a linguistic point of view, as well as being very comprehensible to the non-specialist. The exercises are ample, well-designed, and sensible, providing some opportunity for discussion of cultural context. Of particular note are the reading chapters located after every five regular chapters, which are very useful for review and provide valuable supplementary material (but can also be omitted if time limitations so demand.)" - Barbara Weiden Boyd, Bowdoin College Of the First Edition: "A concise, no-nonsense approach that isn't 'over-scripted.' Shelmerdine allows the instructor scope for real teaching and meaningful interaction with students." - Peter O'Brien, Dalhousie University Of the First Edition: "Shelmerdine does make one important break with tradition: her exercises are not exclusively exercises of translation. Many of them consist of identifying cases or other forms underlined in sentences, or in finding the agreements; frequently students are given sentences with an ending left out and invited to supply it. Or again, they will be asked to change perfect verb-forms to the pluperfect, and so on. Such tasks are a staple in the teaching of modern languages, where they have proved their worth. They promote an active engagement with mechanisms of the language, and because each individual problem can be worked in an instant they develop a more instinctive sort of skill than does the slow, laborious job of writing a sentence from scratch... On balance, this book is quite a good one. I have seen no other beginner's manual, of any approach whatever, so very friendly to the student. While urging classicists to follow the lead of the modern languages, I understand that few will be ready to abandon wholly the grammar-translation method by which they were themselves taught and for which their techniques are designed. For those who do not take that step, Introduction to Latin is an excellent choice. In fact, I consider it their best choice wherever students lack basic grammatical knowledge, that is to say in all but the most elite institutions."; - Benjamin Victor, Universite de Montreal [Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2007.09.07]

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