Medical Latin: St. Clair

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MEDICAL LATIN

ST. CLAIR
MEDICAL LATIN

DESIGNED EXPRESSLY FOR

ELEMENTARY TRAINING OF MEDICAL


STUDENTS

IVY

W. T. ST. CLAIR
INSTRUCTOR IN LATIN IN KENTUCKY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND LOUISVILLE MALI

HIGH SCHOOL

PHILADELPHIA
P. BLAKISTON, SON & CO.
IOI2 WALNUT STREET

1897
Copyright, 1896, by P. Blakiston, Son &
Co.

PRESS OF WM. F. FELL Sc CO.,


1220-24 SANSOM ST.,
PHILADELPHIA.
PREFACE

Of late years our schools and colleges have so subordinated


the classical to the scientific —so-called practical studies—that
many students, even those fairly educated, come to the study of
medicine with little or no knowledge of Latin—its technical
language.
Even those fairly conversant with the language know but little
of the special terms and phrases used in medicine, i. e., medical
Latin.
Heretofore, the sessions have been so few and short that the
medical colleges have made no systematic attempt to remedy
the defect, but left the student to pick up what he could, as he
could.
However, since the sessions have been lengthened and four
years required, many faculties have added a Professor of Latin.
This little book, embracing the course given in the Kentucky
School of Medicine, is published in the hope that it may find
favor in the eyes of other teachers, and be of practical use to
the busy medical student.
Not attempting syntax or a large vocabulary, we aim to be
thorough in the fundamental principles upon which the medical
language is built.
A limited vocabulary of important medical words is com-
mitted to memory, lesson by lesson, and upon these words,
phrases and sentences are formed which the student is required
IV PREFACE.

to translate; he is taught also to write in Latin other sentences


constructed upon the same words, and careful attention is given
to the latter practice, which is a thorough-going test of accurate
knowledge.
The prescriptions are to be translated and rewritten with
abbreviations and symbols. I give the verb complete that it
may be convenient for more advanced study or for reference.

Louisville, Ky., December, i8g6


CONTENTS

PAGES
Translating Latin sentences and writing English sentences in Latin
is begun in the first lesson and continued through to the
thirty-second lesson.

Lessons I to IV, 9-13


First declension.—Nouns and adjectives.—Case terminations.—
Phrases.—Predicate nominative.—Construction of a single
sentence.

Lessons V to VII, 13-16


Second declension.—Nouns and adjectives.—Case endings.—
Gender.—Apposition.—Sentences.

Lesson VIII, 17, 18


Adjectives.—Declension.—Agreement.—Use as substantives.

Lessons IX, X, 18-20


Verb.—First conjugation.—Imperative.—How formed and used.

Lesson XI 20-22
Verb continued.—Subjunctive mood.—Form and use.

Lessons XI to XIV, 20-26


Third declension.—Terminations.—Gender.—Verb of the second
conjugation. —Imperative.—Subj unctive.

Lessons XV to XVII, 26-30


Third declension continued. —Verbs of the third conjugation.—
Imperative.—Subjunctive.—Use of “facio” and “fio.”—
Adjectives, third declension.

Lessons XVIII, XIX, 30-33


Fourth declension.—Verbs, fourth conjugation.—Gerundives.
V
VI CONTENTS.

PAGES
Lessons XX to XXII, 34-38
Fifth declension.— Participles.—Ablative absolute. —

Relative
pronoun.

Lessons XXIII, XXIV, 39-42


Comparison of adjectives.—Comparative declined.—Principal
parts of verbs.—Pronouns.

Lessons XXV to XXXII, 42-49


Prescription writing.—Prescriptions wholly in Latin.—Direc-
tions in Latin.—Rewritten with symbols.

Abbreviations, 5°-53
Derivations, 54-57
The Latin Verb 58

Sum ”
and Compounds, •

...
58-62
First Conjugation, Active and Passive, 62-66
Second Conjugation, Active and Passive, .
67-71
Third Conjugation. The o Verbs, 71-80

” “

and 10

Fourth Conjugation, Active and Passive, 80-84


Deponent, Irregular, and Periphrastic Verbs, 84-95
Latin-English Vocabulary, 96-104
English-Latin Vocabulary, 105-113
ERRATA

Page Io.—Lesson II, “


Sonus,” the eighth word in the vocabulary should
be s«nus.

Page 29. —Lesson XVII, “Apices,” the sixth word in the vocabulary should
be apicfs.

Page 31. —Lesson XVIII, Bonam medicinam


“ ”

in the fifth Latin sentence


should be bom? medicine.
Page 38. —Lesson XXII, “Admovendam” in the sixth Latin sentence
should be adraovendwm.
Page 56.—Derivation No. 79, “
saccule, bag ”
should be saccm (dim. of), bag.
Page 57-—Derivation No. 95, “
Varicilla” should be Varicdla.
Page 97. —Vocabulary No. 115, “
Cheirurgus” should be Chirurgus.

viii
MEDICAL LATIN.
\ x

LESSON I.
NAMES AND MEANINGS OF CASES.

No7ninative case—subject
Genitive —of

Dative —to or for


Accusative —object

Vocative —O
‘ ‘

Ablative —from, with, by, in, on.


FIRST DECLENSION.
Vena, a vein.

Nom. Vena, a, the vein Nom. Venge, the veins


Gen. Venge, of the vein Gen. Venarum, of the veins
Dat. Venge, to, for a vein Dat. Venis, to, for the veins
Acc. Venam, a, the vein Acc. Venas, the veins
Voc. Vena, O vein Voc. Venge, 0 veins
Abl. Vena, from, with, in, by, Abl. Venis, in, on, from, with
on a vein. by veins.

VOCABULARY.
1. Water, aqua—ae, f. 5. Spot, macula
2. Capsule, capsula 6. Mass, massa
3. Bandage, fascia 7. Pill, pilula
4. Tongue, lingua 8. Scale, squama
MEDICAL LATIN.

9. Ounce, uncia i4- Minute, minutus —a—uni,


10. White, albus, alba, al- adjective
bum, adjective 15. Strong, validus—a —um
11. Mixture, mistura 16. Chemical, chemicus —a
12. Bitter, amarus —a—um, —um
adjective 17. Good, bonus—a —um.
13. Particle, particula

Translate. —1. Aqua. 2. Linguae. 3. Capsulis. 4. Fasci-


arum, 5. Massam. 6. Squamas. 7. Venis. 8. Pilularum alba-
rum. 9. Particulas minutas. 10. Fasciis validis. n.Unciam
misturae amarae. 12. Misturis chemicis.

Write in Latin. 1. Of a capsule. 2. For the mixture.


3. Of spots. 4. To the tongues. 5. A bandage (object). 6.


On the tongue. 7. With spots on the tongues. 8. For the bit-
ter mixtures. 9. Of minute particles. 10. An ounce (object)

of a good mixture.

LESSON II
EXAMPI.ES.

1. Est tinctura (nominative predicate).—(It) is a tincture.


2. Sunt pilulae (nominative predicate).—(They) are pills.
Remark.—Est and sunt have nominative after them.

3. Est alba mistura (nom. predicate). —It is a white mixture.


4. Mistura (nom. subject) est alba (nom. predicate).—The
mixture is white.
5. Misturas sunt albas.—The mixtures are white.

VOCABULARY.

1. Cell, cella —se, f. 5. Tincture, tinctura


2. Ergot, ergota 6. Yellow, flavus —a—um
3. Formula, formula 7. Very dry, persiccus —a
4. Warm, fervidus —a—um, —um
adjective 8. Sound, sonus —a—um
FIRST DECLENSION. 11

9. It is, est 14- Daily, in die, adverbial


10. They are, sunt phrase
11. Gelatine, gelatina 15. Every hour, omni hora,
12. Gradually, gradatim, ad- adverbial phrase
verb 16. Three times, ter, adverb
13. Hour, hora 17. Drop, gutta.

Translate. —1. Celias. 2. Ergotge. 3. Formularum. 4.


Maculis. 5. Pilulas. 6. Unciarum. 7. Massaalba. 8. Mis-
turge amarge.
9. Aqua est fervida. 10. Fasciae sunt fervida

aqua. 11. Formularum bonarum. 12. Tincturas flavas. 13.


Sunt albae maculae lingua.

Write in Latin. —1. With the tinctures. 2. The cells (ob-


ject), 3. Of yellow scales. 4. By the chemical formula. 5. In
the yellow mixtures. 6. To strong bandages. 7. Minute parti-
cles of ergot in the veins. 8. Warm water (object) for the white
mixture. 9. Of bitter pills. 10. (It) is a mass of very dry scales.
11. (There) are minute spots on the tongue.

LESSON III
EXAMPLES.

1. Pilulae sunt medicina (nom. pred.).—The pills are a medi-


cine.
2. Pilulge sunt amarge (nom. pred.).—The pills are bitter.
3. Miscet medicinas (object).—(He) mixes medicines.
4. Miscent massam (object) aqua.—(They) mix the mass in
water.

VOCABULARY

1. Chemistry, chemia—ge, f. 6. Essence, essentia


2. Woman, femina 7. Morphine, morphina
3. Sick, aegrotus —a—um 8. Ladle, spatula
4. Plenty, copia 9. And, et, conjunction
5. Drachm, drachma 10. Four times, quater, adverb
MEDICAL LATIN.

n. Well, bene, adverb 14. He mixes, miscet


12. Alternate, alternus —a 15. They mix, miscent
—um 16. Medicine, medicina—ae,f.
13. Every other hour, alternis 17. Measure, mensura.
horis, adverbial phrase

Translate. —1. Unciam araarae tincturae. 2. Miscent medi-


cinas in die. 3. Apothecis medicinarum copia est. 4. Miscet
morphinam aqua aegrotae feminae. 5. Drachma essentiae est
copia. 6. Miscent bene medicinas formulis chemiae. 7. Est
copia pilularum aegrotis feminis. 8. Chemia drachmae et unciae
sunt mensurae.

Write in Latin. —1. A drachm (obj.) of morphine. 2. In


minute measures. 3. With a plenty of capsules. 4. With the
strong ladles. 5. There (omit) is a plenty of capsules for the
quinine. 6. (They) mix yellow pills by the formulas. 7. The
particles in the water are yellow and bitter. 8. The spots on
the tongue are white and very dry.

LESSON IV.
EXAMPLES.

1. Tincturae sunt medicine. —The tinctures are medicines.


2. Tincturae sunt medicina.—The tinctures are a medicine.
3. Tincturae sunt amarae (not amara). —The tinctures are
bitter.
Observation.— The adjective must end like its noun.

VOCABULARY.
1. Shop, apotheca —se, f. 5- Hot, calidus —a—um
2. Arnica, arnica 6. Red, ruber, rubra, rubrum
3. Distilled, destillatus —a 7. Quinine, quinina
—um 8. Knowledge, scientia
4. Fracture, fractura 9. Hard, durus—a—um
SECOND DECLENSION.

10. Fluid, fluidus —a—um 14. Small, parvus —a—um


11. Cholera, cholera 15. He has, habet
12. Distress, miseria 16. They have, habent
13. Pulp, pulpa 17. In, on, in, prep, with abl.

Translate. —1. In apotheca sunt misturae. 2. In apothecis


miscent parvas pilulas formulis. 3. Est tinctura arnicae. 4.
Habent copiam medicinarura aegrotis. 5. Miscet massam albarum
et flavarum pilularum formulis chemiae. 6. Fervida aqua et
validae fasciae sunt bonae fracturis. 7. Miscent amaras medicinas
capsulis scientia chemiae.

Write in Latin. —1. Of distilled water. 2. By the hot


mixtures. 3. A drachm (obj.) of tincture of arnica. 4. The
capsules are for the sick woman. 5. The water is hot. 6. The
hot mixture is a good medicine for the sick. 7. By (his) knowl-
edge of chemical formulas he mixes good medicines. 8. In the
capsules is a mixture of bitter medicines.

LESSON V.
SECOND DECLENSION.
Nervus, a nerve.
Nom. Nervus, nerve Nom. Nervi
Gen. Nervi Gen. Nervorum
Dat. Nervo Dat. Nervis
Acc. Nervum Acc. Nervos
Voc. Nerve Voc. Nervi
Abl. Nervo. Abl. Nervis.

VOCABULARY.
1. Doctor, medicus —i, m. 5- Food, cibus
2. Chemist, chemicus —i, m. 6. Scholar, discipulus
3. Syrup, syrupus —i, m. 7. Disease, morbus
4. Learned, doctus —a—um 8. Stimulant, stimulus
14 MEDICAL LATIN.

9. Stomach, stomachus 15. He heals, sanat


10. Not, non, adv. 16. They heal, sanant
11. Suitable, idoneus —a —um
17. Poisoned, venenatus —a
12. Great, magnus —a—um —um
13. Bad, malus —a—um 18. But, sed, conjunction.
14. Diluted, dilutus —a —um

Translate. —1. Syrupus est araarus. 2. Syrupi sunt amari.


3. Stimuli sunt destillati. 4. Discipuli sunt non segroti. 5.
Chemicus doctus habet magnam scientiam chemiae. 6. Medici
sanant morbum stomachi dilute stimulo. 7. Medicus sanat
chemicum amara medicina, non cibo. 8. Capsulis est mistura
idonea malo morbo.

Write in Latin. —1. With strong nerves. 2. The stimu-


lants are poisoned. 3. They do not mix (mix not) diluted
stimulants in food for the sick (plural). 4. In the stomach of
the sick scholar is poisoned food. 5. The learned doctors heal
a disease of the stomach with a good syrup. 6. The doctor
heals diseases of the tongue with diluted medicines. 7. The sick
(plural as noun) do not have (have not) food, but a mixture of
water and bitter stimulants.

LESSON VI.
Second Declension—( Continued ).
Nom. Puer, boy Liber, book Nom. Pueri Libri
Gen. Pueri Libri Gen. Puerorum Librorum
Dat. Puero Libro Dat. Pueri s Libris
Acc. Puerum Li brum Acc. Pueros Libros
Voc. Puer Liber Voc. Pueri Libri
Abl. Puero. Libro. Abl. Pueris, Libris.

VOCABULARY.
1. Joint, articulus —i, m. 3. Pound, libra —ae, f.
2. Surgeon, chirurgus —i, m. 4. Soda, soda —ae, f.
SECOND DECLENSION. 15
5. Settling, subsidentia 12. He prepares, parat
6. Wineglass, cyathus 13. They prepare, parant
7. Pint, octarius 14. Eight, octo
8. Two, duo, numeral adj. 15. Eye, oculus
9. Substance, substantia 16. Man, vir —i
10. Strychnine, strychnia
17. Sticky, lentus —a —um.
11. Exact, exactus —a—um

Translate. —1. Fasciae sunt idoneae. 2. Medicus non habet


fasciam idoneam fracturae. 3. Parant bonos syrupos exacta
formula. 4. Habent venenatos syrupos cyathis. 5. Parant octo
octarios destillatae aquae chirurgo. 6. Medicus parat octouncias
albae misturae morbis linguae. 7. Subsidentia cyatho est vene-
nata. 8. Parat fluidam misturam aegrotis formula chemiae.

Write in Latin. —r. Of the hard joints. 2. The chemists


prepare diluted syrups. 3. The learned surgeons prepare band-
ages for the fractures. 4. The doctor prepares in the wineglass
a good mixture for the nerves. 5. He mixes eight drachms of
morphine in a pint of warm water. 6. The learned chemists
prepare syrups by exact formulas, 7. He prepares a bitter stim-
ulant for the sick woman.

LESSON VII.

Second Declension—( Continued


Nom.
).
P

Nom. Poculum, cup, n. Nom. Pocula


Gen. Poculi Gen. Poculorum
Dat. Poculo Dat. Poculis
Acc. Poculum Acc. Pocula
Voc. Poculum Voc. Pocula
Abl. Poculo. Ahl. Poculis.
VOCABULARY

1. Poison, venenum —i, n. 4. Antidote, antidotum —i,


2. Brown, fuscus —a—um n.
3. Sour, acerbus —a —um 5. Pure, purus —a—um
16 MEDICAL LATIN.

6. Extract, extractum —i, n. 12. Much, many, multus —a


7. Prescription, praescriptum —um
8. Drug, medicamentum 13. Remedy, remedium
9. Druggist, medicamentarius 14. New, novus —a—um
10. Oil, oleum 15. Aconite, aeoniturn
11. Ointment, unguentum 16. Cup, poculum.

EXAMPLES.

Substantia est antidotum.—The substance is an antidote.


1.

Parat substantial!! antidotum—He prepares a substance (as)


2.
an antidote.
Note.—Here antidote is in apposition with substance.

Translate. —1. Mistura est lenta. 2. Syrupus est lentus.


3. Syrupus est lenta mistura. 4. Syrupus est lentum remedium.
5. Parat syrupum remedium (appos.). 6. Quinina est amarum
medicamentum. 7. Multa antidota sunt remedia veneno. 8.
Medici habent extractum puri medicamenti. 9. Vinum poculo
est rubrum sed non acerbura. 10. Medicamentarii parant ung-
uentapueris. 11. Chemicus habet in poculo octo uncias extract!
olei. 12. Prgescripto medici parat segroto puero fuscam mis-
turam remedium (appos.).

Write in Latin. —1. Of a new remedy. 2. In the pure ex-


tract. 3. The druggist prepares remedies by exact prescriptions.
4. There (omit) are many good antidotes for poison. 5. The
learned chemist prepares many prescriptions. 6. In the pre-
scription of the learned doctor there is an extract of aconite.
7. The doctor mixes in the food a bitter drug (as) an antidote
for the poison of the stomach.
ADJECTIVE OF FIRST AND SECOND DECLENSIONS. 17

LESSON VIII.
ADJECTIVE OF FIRST AND SECOND DECLENSIONS.

M F. N.
Nom. Fluidus —a—um, fluid
Gen. Fluidi —se—i
Dat. Fluido —se—o
Acc.- Fluidum —am—um
Voc. Fluide —a—um
Abl. Fluido —a—o.

Nom. Fluidi —ae —a


Gen. Fluidorum —arum —orum
Dat. Fluidis —is—is
Acc. Fluidos —as —a
Voc. Fluidi —ae—a
Abl. Fluidis —is—is.

VOCABULARY.
1. Vinegar, acetum —i, n. 11. Ammonia, ammonia
2. Pleasing, gratus —a—um 12. Camphor, camphora
3. Wax, cera 13. Slight fever, febricula
4. Tear, lacrima 14. Cocaine, cocaina
5. Standard, norma 15. Girl, puella
6. Waxen, ceratus —a —um 16. He gives, dat
7. Squill, scilla 17. They give, dant
8. An acid, acidum 18. Compound, compositus
9. Cinnamon, cinnamomum —a—um.
10. Four, quattuor

Translate. —1. Syrupus scillarum est lentus. 2. Aconitum


est bonum remedium febriculae. 3. Lenta substantia est bonum
remedium. 4. Medicamentarii parant unguenta praescriptis. 5.
Multa medicamenta sunt non grata aegrotis. 6. Chemici sanant
acerbum stomachum composite acido. 7. Dat aegroto pilularn
et cyathum misturae ter in die (aegroto used as noun). & Dat

aegrotae (noun) omni hora quattuor guttas extracti cyatho ttquae.


MEDICAL LATIN.

Write in Latin. i. Of sour vinegar. 2. With four ounces


of a pleasing drug. 3. He prepares an extract of cinnamon


for the ointments. 4. The druggists mix pure drugs for the
medicine. 5. In the wine are four drachms of poison. 6. By
the prescription of the doctor the chemist prepares an ointment
as a remedy. 7. The druggist has an abundance of drugs—the
antidotes of poison. 8. The doctor cures the sick druggist with
aconite—a remedy for many diseases.

LESSON IX.
THE VERB-IMPERATIVE.

Paro, parare, to prepare (first conjugation)


Colo, colare, to strain (first conjugation)
Do, dare, to give (first conjugation)
Macero, macerare, to steep (first conjugation).
Remark. —
Take re from infinitive to form imperative, active :

Para, prepare (thou)


Cola, strain
Da, give
Macera, steep.

NUMERAL ADJECTIVE.

Nom. Unus, una, unum, one


Gen. Uni us, uni us, uni us
Dat. Uni, uni, uni
Acc. Unum, unam, unum
Abl. Uno, una, uno.

VOCABULARY.

1. Ache (pain), antalgia 5. Diphtheria, diphtheria


2. Gout in the hand, cheiragra 6. Dyspepsia, dyspepsia
3 First, primus —a—urn 7. Pale, palidus —a—um
4. Warm, tepidus —a—um 8. Cold, frigidus —a—um
NUMERAL ADJECTIVE.

9. Injury, iniuria 13. Magnesia, magnesia


10. Herb, herba 14. Number, numerus
11. Broken, fractus —a—um 15. Aromatic, aromaticus —a
12. Distinguished, clarus —a —um
—um 16. Nape of the neck, nucha.

Translate.—1. Para fascias et unguenta fracturge. 2. Macera


duram substantiam in calida aqua omni hora. 3. Cola quattuor
uncias syrupi in cyatho gegroto (noun). 4. Da gegrotge (noun)
octo guttas tincturse quater in die. 5. Prgescripto medici para
magnum numerum capsularum diptherise.

Write in Latin. —1. Prepare eight pills in capsules and give


one to (the female) patient every other hour. 2. Steep a pound
of the extract in cold water daily. 3. Prepare a pure stimulant
according to the prescription, and give the boy a wineglass of
the mixture three times daily. 4. Strain eight ounces of the
bitter drug in a pint of warm water. 5. Give to (the male)
patient three times a day an exact measure of the stimulant in a
cup of distilled water. 6. The distinguished doctor gives to
(the female) patient four drops of a compound substance every
other hour.

LESSON X.

Nom. Duo, duae, duo, two, num. adj.


Gen. Duorum, duarum, duorum
Dat. Duobus, duabus, duobus
Acc. Duos, duas, duo
Abl. Duobus, duabus, duobus.

VOCABULARY.
1.To place, loco, locare 4. To relieve, levo, levare
2. He places, they place, lo- 5. To heal, cure, sano, sanare
cat, locant 6. Pore, porus
3. To handle, tracto, tractare 7. Womb, uterus
20 MEDICAL LATIN.

8. Care, cura 15. Shoulder-blade, scapula


9. Shelf, abacus 16. Birthmark, ngevus
10. Cheek, gena 17. Neck, jugulum
11. Arsenic, arsenium 18. Muscle, musculus
12. Liniment, linimentum 19. Corpuscle, corpusculum
13. Skilled, peritus —a—um 20. Muriatic, muriaticus —a
14. Prepared, praeparatus —a —um
—um 21. Membrane, membrana.

Translate.—1. Tractavenena in abaco magna cura. 2. Cola


multas guttas linimenti in poculo fracturae articuli. 3. Leva
miseriam aegrotorum idoneis medicinis. 4. Para linimenta et
unguenta praescriptd cura. 5. Sana venenatam membranam
uteri medicamentis bene praeparatis. 6. Medicamentarius locat
copiam novorum remediorum in abacis apotheca.

Write in Latin. —1. Place the poison medicines in cap-


sules with great care. 2. The druggist handles many poison
drugs daily. 3. Prepare a tincture of arsenic and soda for the
diseases. 4. Prepare the two prescriptions according to the for-
mula of chemistry. 5. He mixes the two drugs and strains well
in one pint of water. 6. Strain two ounces of muriatic acid in
two pints of water. 7. Give one capsule to the patient every
other hour and gradually cure the disease.

LESSON XI
Remark. —For present , subjunctive active, third, singular, change final
,

a of imperative to et.

Paro, para(re) —par(a), paret.


Paret, let him prepare Det, let him give
Sanet, let him cure Locet, let him place
Agitet, let him shake Colet, let him strain.
THIRD DECLENSION. 21

THIRD DECLENSION.
Ren, kidney, masculine.

Nom. Ren Nom. Renes


Gen. Renis Gen. Renium
Dat. Reni Dat. Renibus
Acc. Renem Acc. Renes
Voc. Ren Voc. Renes
Abl. Rene. Abl. Renibus.

VOCABULARY
1. Clear, limpidus —a—um 12. Ferment, fermentum
2. Medicated, medicatus —a 13. Shin-bone, tibia
—um 14. Dispensatory, dispensato-
3. Matter, materia rium
4. Hair, capillus 15. Year, annus
5. Odorous, odoratus —a 16. Porous, rarus —a—um
—um 17. Dyspeptic, dyspepticus
6. Greater brain, cerebrum —a—um
7. Little brain, cerebellum 18. Iron, ferrum
8. Jaw-bone, maxilla 19. Beautiful, pulcher —chra
9. Knee-pan, patella —chrum
10. Limit, terminus 20. To shake, agito, agitare,

11. Oxalic, oxalicus —a—um 1st conj.

Translate. —1. Locet medicamenta in abacis magna cura.


2. Agita bene misturam et daaegrotae duas guttasomni hora. 3.
Medicamentarius paret capsulas arsenii et sodae. 4. Loca mus-
culis unguentum praeparatum formula. 5. Paret bona remedia in
apotheca periti medicamentarii. 6. Colet octo uncias extracti
cinnamomi in duobus octariis destillatse aquae.

Write in Latin. —1. The distinguished physician prepares


many good prescriptions and heals many diseases. 2. Prepare
good stimulants according to the formulas of chemistry. 3. Let
the learned physicians give pleasing prescriptions to the pale
woman. 4. Let the patient heal the dyspeptic stomach with
22 MEDICAL LATIN.

mixtures well prepared. 5. (There) are small particles of water


in the corpuscles of the veins, 6. There is a brown birthmark
on the cheek of the beautiful girl.

LESSON XII.

Third Declension—( Continued ).

Nom. Albumen, albumen, n. Albumina


Gen. Albuminis Albuminum
Dat. Albumini Albuminibus
Acc. Albumen Albumina
Voc. Albumen Albumina
Abl. Albumine. Albuminibus.

Nom. Pelvis, pelvis, f. Pelves


Gen. Pelvis Pelvium
Dai. Pelvi Pelvibus
A cc. Pelvem Pelves
Voc. Pelvis Pelves
Abl. Pelve. Pelvibus.

VOCABULARY.

1. Urine, urina 10. Alum, alumen —inis, n.


2. Rib, costa 11. Nostril, naris —is, f.
3. To drink, poto —are, 1st 12. Thirst, sitis —is, f.

conj. 13. Fever, febris —is, f.


4. To relieve, levo —are, xst 14. Cough, tussis —is, f.
conj. 15. Whooping cough, pertus-
5. Name, nomen —inis, n. sis —is, f.
6. Abdomen, abdomen 16. Second vertebra, axis —is,
—inis, n. m.
7. Orifice, foramen —inis n. 17. Basin, pelvis —is, f.
8. Bearing-down pain, moli- 18. Skin, cutis —is, f.
men —inis, n. 19. Ear, auris —is, f.
9. Twisting pain, tormen 20. With, cum (prep, with
—inis, n. abl.).
THIRD DECLENSION. 23

Translate. —1. Renes iiT abdomine sunt. 2. Tibia sunt

multa parva foramina. 3. Alumen est medicina morbis naris.


4. Morbis renium est albumen in urina. 5. Para octarium purse
aquse siti febris. 6. Medicus level molimina et tormina feminse.
7. Medicamentarius paret linimentum morbis cutis. 8. Tinc-
tura aconiti est bona medicina febri.

Write in Latin. —1. (There) are many veins in the pelvis.


2. (There) are particles of albumen in the boy’s urine. 3. Let
the doctor relieve the cough of the sick boys with a syrup. 4.
According to the prescriptions of the learned doctor prepare
remedies for the kidneys. 5. Many are the pores of the skin
and small the orifices of the shin-bone. 6. Heal the diseases of
the nose with alum and relieve the bearing-down pains of the
pelvis with morphine.

LESSON XIII.

Third Declension—( Continued ).

Nom. Labor, labor, m. Labores


Gen. Laboris Laborum
Dat. Labori Laboribus
Acc. Laborem Labores
Voc. Labor Labores
Abl. Lahore. Laboribus.
Nom. Lotio, lotion, wash, f. Lotiones
Gen. Lotionis Lotionum
Dat. Lotioni Lotionibus
Acc. Lotionem Lotiones
Voc. Lotio Lotiones
Abl. Lotione. Lotionibus.
Nom. Os, bone, n. Ossa
Gen. Ossis Ossium
Dat. Ossi Ossibus
A cc. Os Ossa
Voc. Os Ossa
Abl. Osse. Ossibus.
24 MEDICAL LATIN.

Misceo, miscere, mix (second conjugation).


Remark.— Take re from present, infinitive : misce, imperative, active,
second, singular.
Moveo, movere, to stir; move, stir (thou) (2d conj.).
Admoveo, admovere, to apply; admove, apply (2d conj.).
Remark. —For present , subjunctive, active, third, singular, add at to im-
perative :

Misce —at, let him mix Move —at, let him stir
Dele —at, let him destroy. Admove —at, let him apply.

VOCABULARY.
1. Bone, os, ossis, n. 13- Fire, ignis —is, m.
2. Sleep, somnus 14. Hair, crinis —is, m.
3. On going to bed, hora 15. Lotion (wash), lotio
somni —onis, f.
4. Seed, semen —inis, n. x6. Solution, solutio —onis, f.
5. Earwax, cerumen —inis, n. 17. Convulsion, convulsio
6. Germ, germen —inis, n. —onis, f.
7. Heat, calor —is, m. 18. Emission, emissio—onis,f.
8. Sweat, sudor —is, m. 19. Inflammation, inflammatio
9. Tumor, tumor —is, m. —onis, f.
10. Labor, labor —is, m. 20. To destroy, deleo —ere
11. Mover, motor —is, m. (2d conj.).
12. Liquid, liquor —is, m.

Translate.—1. In auribus puerorum est cerumen. 2. Chi-


rurgus admoveat ignem tumori. 3. yEgrotus moveat linimentum
bene et hora somni admoveat abdomini. 4. Move solutionem
et da segrotae duas guttas omni hora. 5. Medicamentarius
misceat bonas lotiones morbo pelvis. 6. Medicus deleat ger-
mina morbi bonis prsescriptis. 7. Medicamentarius paret magna
cura lotiones inflammationi in abdomine.

Write in Latin. —1. Many are the diseases of the abdomen


and kidneys. 2. Let the druggist mix the substances and stir
well. 3. Let him mix one ounce of the wash in a wineglass of
water. 4. Mix an ounce of tincture of aconite with two ounces
THIRD DECLENSION. 25

of liniment. 5. Let the sick (man) drink a cup of the bitter


liquid three times a day. 6. Let him apply the liniment to the
inflammation every other hour and destroy the fever.

LESSON XIV.
Third Declension—( Continued ).

Nom. Tres, tres, tria, three, num. adj.


Gen. Trium, trium, trium
Dat. Tribus, tribus, tribus
Acc. Tres, tres, tria
A hi. Tribus, tribus, tribus.
Nom. Pulvis, powder, m. Pulveres
Gen. Pulveris Pulverum
Dat. Pulveri Pulveribus
Acc. Pulverem Pulveres
Voc. Pulvis . Pulveres
A hi. Pulvere. Pulveribus.
Nom. Sulphas, sulphate, m. Sulphates
Gen. Sulphatis Sulphatum
Dat. Sulphati Sulphatibus
Acc. Sulphatem Sulphates
Voc. Sulphas Sulphates
Abl. Sulphate. Sulphatibus.

VOCABULARY.

1. Life (vital principle), an io. Writing pen, calamus


ima n. Fibrous membrane, fascia
2. Quinsy, angina 12. Total loss of mind, amentia

3. Auricle, auricula 13. Wrist, carpus


4. Lump (ball), bulla 14. Gallon, congius
5. Meal (flour), farina 15. Powder paper, chartula
6. Mind (soul), animus 16. Haze, nebula
7. Belly, alvus 17. Inactivity, inertia
8. Cavity (socket), alveolus 18. Pebble (stone), calculus
9. Orifice of rectum, anus 19. Into, in (prep, with acc.).
2 6 MEDICAL LATIN.

Translate. Misceat cura venenatos liquores in abaco me-


i.

dicamentarii, 2. Chirurgus deleat magnum tumorem in utero igne.

3. Aqua non levat sitem febris. 4. Discipulus miscet substan-


tias formula chemise et movet bene. 5. Medicus local pulveres
in capsulis et dat imam segrotse quater in die. 6. Medicus delet
germina morbi parvis pulveribus. 7. Sunt minuti calculi in reni-
bus segroti pueri.

Write in Latin. —1. Mix suitable drugs for fever according


to the prescription. 2. Let him mix three powders in a cup of
the solution and stir well. 3. The druggist mixes a new solu-
tion every other hour. 4. The doctor prepares a good remedy
for the boy’s cough. 5. Let the patient drink a wineglass of the
bitter liquid on going to bed. 6. Relieve the inflammation of
the kidneys with pure water and good food. 7. Prepare an
abundance of alum —a good medicine for diseases of the nose.

LESSON XV.

Third Declension —( Continued).

Nom. Sulphur, sulphur, n. Sulphura


Gen. Sulphuris Sulphurum
Dat. Sulphur! Sulphur!bus
Acc. Sulphur Sulphura
Voc. Sulphur Sulphura
Abl. Sulphure. Sulphuribus.
Mitto, mittere, to send (3d conj.).
Note. —
Imperative, active from mittere : milte, by dropping re as before.
Divido, dividere, divide, divide (thou).
Solvo, solvere, solve, dissolve (thou).
Mitto, mittere, mitte, send (thou).
Note. —

Present , subjunctive is formed by omitting e of imperative and


annexing at.
Mittat, let him send.
Solvat, let him dissolve
Dividat, let him divide.
THIRD DECLENSION. 2 7

VOCABULARY.
1. Mint, mentha 14- Ammonia, ammonia
2. Sugar, saccharum 15. Chlorate, chloras —atis,
3. Potash, potassium m.
4. Grain, granum, 16. Bichlorate, bichloras
5. Minim, minimum —atis, m.
6. Of pepper, piperitus —a 17. Sulphate,sulphas —atis,m.
—urn 18. Acetate, acetas —atis, m.
7. Antimony, antimonium 19. To send, mitto —ere (3d
8. Cardamom, cardamomum conj.)
9. Lip, labium 20. To divide, divide —ere
10. Breast, mamma (3d conj.)
11. Nipple, mamilla 21. To dissolve, solvo —ere
12. Glycerine, glycerinum (3d conj.)
13. Liquorice, glycyrrhiza 22. Sulphur, sulphur —is, n.
Translate. —1. Mitte duos pulveres. 2. Mittat duas libras
sacchari. 3. Divide misturam in tres pulveres. 4. Dividat massam
in minima. 5. Solve unum pulverem in aqua. 6. Sol vat pul-
verem et duo grana potassii in poculo aceti.

Write in Latin. —1. Stir the mass well and divide into
small powders. 2. Dissolve a powder in two ounces of pepper-
mint water. 3. Mix two drachms of sulphur and two grains of
powder. 4. Mix an ounce of bichlorate of sulphur in the mass
and divide into eight powders. 5. Let the druggist send reme-
dies for fever in capsules and powder papers. 6. Let the sick
(man) dissolve two powders in a glass of water and drink on go-
ing to bed.

LESSON XVI.
Note.— The io verbs of the third conjugation insert i before the ending at,
present, subjunctive, active. Imperative, same as other verbs of third conjuga-
tion.

Capio, capere, to take; imp., cape; pres., subj., capiat.


Facio, facere, to make; imp. drops e; fac, make; facial, let
him make.
28 MEDICAL LATIN.

M. F. N. M. F. N.
JVo/n. Hie, haec, hoc, this Hi, hae, haec, these
Gen. Huius, huius, huius Horum, harum, horum
Dat. Huic, huic, huic His, his, his
Acc. Hunc, hanc, hoc Hos, has, haec
Voc. No vocative No vocative
Ahl. Hoc, hac, hoc. His, his, his.

VOCABULARY.

1. Master of his art, magister g. Heart, cor —dis, n.


—tri, m. 10. Flesh, caro —nis, f.
2. On the instant, ex tempore n. Animal, animal —is, n.
3. Time, tern pus —oris, n. 12. After, post (prep.with acc.)
4. Body, corpus —oris, n. 13. Suture, sutura
5. Quantity, quantitas—atis, 14. Elbow-bone, ulna
f. 15. Corpse, cadaver —is, n.
6. Blood, sanguis —inis, n. 16. Kind, genus —eris, n.
7. Cancer, cancer —cri, m. 17. Part, pars —tis, f.
8. Dose, dosis —is, f. 18. Immediately, statim, adv.

Translate. 1. Hoc praescriptum est non idoneum segroto


viro. 2. Medicamentarius faciat multa genera remediorum in


apotheca, 3. Divide quantitatem in exactas doses praescripto.
4. Solve hunc pulverem in cyatho aquae et cape post cibum
(after meals). 5. Caro horum animalium est idoneus cibus viris.
6. Fac multa remedia multis generibus morborum. 7. Cape
multa genera medicinarum parvis dosibus.

Write in Latin. 1. These prescriptions are not suitable for


the sick. 2. Let the druggist send a large quantity of these pow-
ders. 3. Let the sick (woman) divide the medicine into three
parts and take one immediately. 4. In the man’s heart (there)
is a large quantity of blood. 5. This medicine cannot cure can-
cer of the stomach. 6. In this kind of disease let the patient
take a small dose every other hour. 7. In this solution there is
a small quantity of poison.
THIRD DECLENSION. 29

LESSON XVII.

Fiat, let (it) be made; pres., subj., pass, of facio.


Fiant, let (them) be made; pres., subj., pass, of facio—though
usually freely rendered “make.”
Remark.— Observe then this distinction between fac and fiat: fac always
has accusative
case after it; fiat always has nominative case before it.

Fac capsulas, make capsules.


Capsulae fiant, literally, let capsules be made, but usually put,

make capsules.”
Fac pulverem, make a powder.
Pulvis fiat, make a powder, or, let a powder be made.
Fac pulveres (acc. case—object).
Pulveres fiant (nom. case—subject).
Both translated “make powders.”

VOCABULARY.

1. Head, caput —itis, n. 10. System, systema —atis, n.


2. Base of head, occiput n. Base, basis —is, f.
—itis, n. 12. Bile, bibs —is, f.

3. Spoon, cochleare —is, n. 13. Bath, balneum —i, n.


4. Clyster, enema —atis, n. 14. Fat, adeps —ipis, m. and f.
5. Division, partitio—onis, f. 15. Mucilage, mucilago
6. Top, apex —ices, m. —inis, f.
7. First vertebra, atlas —an- 16. Sweet, dulcis —is—e, adj.
tis, m. 17. Mild, mitis —is—e, adj.
8. Microscopic animal, ani- 18. Severe, gravis—is—e, adj.
malculum 19. Such, tabs —is—e, adj.
9. Symptom, symptoma
—atis, n.

Nom. Cochleare, spoon, n. Cochlearia


Gen. Cochlearis Cochlearium
Dat. Cochleari Cochlearibus
Acc. Cochleare Cochlearia
Voc. Cochleare Cochlearia
Abl. Cochleari. Cochlearibus.
MEDICAL LATIN

Nom. Enema, clyster, n. Enemata


Gen. Enematis Enematum
Dat. Enemati Enematibus
Acc. Enema Enemata
Voc. Enema Enemata
Abl. Enemate. Enematibus.
M. F. N. M. F. N.
Nom. Tabs —is—e, such Tales —es —ia
Gen. Tabs —is—is Talium —ium—ium
Dat. Tab —i—i Talibus —ibus—ibus
Acc. Talem —em—e Tales —es—ia
Voc. Tab's —is—e Tales —es —ia
Abl. Tab —i—i. Talibus —ibus—ibus.
Translate. —1. Ossa multorum animabum sunt magna. 2.
Multae tales pilulae fiant. 3. JEgrota capiat cochleare dulcis so-
lutionis statim post cibum. 4. Fac exactam partitionem quanti-
tatis et para magnum numerum tabum pulverum. 5. Haec sunt
symptomata mitis febris et aconitum est bona medicina. 6. Ex-
acta partitio fiat et mitte tres tales pulveres.
Write in Latin. —1. Let the patient take three drops of the
bitter solution three times a day. 2. Let many such remedies
be made for severe diseases. 3. Arsenic is the base of the drugs
for this mild disease. 4. Take two pills and a spoonful of the
syrup on going to bed. 5. This is a symptom of poisoned blood
in the system. 6. Spots on the skin are symptoms of a severe
disease.

LESSON XVIII.
FOURTH CONJUGATION VERB.

Haurio, haurire, to drink.


Partio, partire, to divide.
Deglutio, deglutlre, to swallow.
Note.—Drop re from infinitive and
,
ive have :

Hauri, drink, imp.


Parti, divide, imp.
Degluti, swallow, imp.
FOURTH DECLENSION. 31
Note. —Add at to imperative, and we have :

Hauriat, let him drink.


Partial, let him divide.
Deglutiat, let him swallow.

FOURTH DECLENSION.
Nom. Abortus, abortion, m. Abortus
Gen. Abortus Abortuum
Dat. Abortui Abortibus
Ace. Abortum Abortus
Voc. Abortus Abortus
Abl. Abortu. Abortibus.
VOCABULARY.

1. Pepper, piper —is, n. 12. Cerebral, cerebralis —is


2. Cayenne pepper, capsicum —e
—i, n. 13. Chloroform, chloroformum
3. Mouth, os, oris, n. 14. Congestion, congestio
4. Bladder, vesica —se, f. —onis, f.
5. Vagina, vagina 15. Scar, cicatrix —id’s, m.
6. Smallpox, variola 16. Bark (cork), cortex —ids,
7. Carbon, carbo —onis, m. m. and f.
8. Carbonate, carbonas 17. Indigestion, cruditas
—atis, m. —atis, f.
9. Poultice, cataplasma 18. Disgrace, dedecus —oris,
—atis, n. Norn. Par, par,
10. Catarrh, catarrhus —i, m. par, adj.
19. Equal
11. Cathartic, catharticus —a Gen. Paris, par-
—um is, paris.

Translate. —1. AEgrota partiat massam in ties pares partes


et deglutiat unam alternis horis. 2. Cruditati hauri parvam
quantitatem flavae misturae ter in die post cibum, 3. Parti
medicinam ip decern partes et degluti unam somni hora. 4.
Misce exactam mensuram arsenii et aluminis in solutione, 5.
Atgrotus deglutiat tres guttas tincturae aconiti —bonam medi-
cinam miti febri. 6. Misce in duobus octariis aquae partes com-
positae misturae et move bene.
32 MEDICAL LATIN.

Write in Latin. —i. Mix large and small doses according


to the prescriptions. 2. Let the patient mix one powder in a
spoonful of water and swallow on going to bed. 3. Apply warm
poultices to the head and relieve the inflammation. 4. In the
powders are equal quantities of white and brown drugs. 5.
Make a mild solution and mix one part of the solution in three
parts of wine. 6. Let a good wash be made for diseases of the
nose. 7. In this disease there are symptoms of a severe conges-
tion of the brain.

LESSON XIX.
GERUNDIVES.
Note.— First anil second conjugations add ndus to imperative to form
gerundive :

Para —ndus—a—um, (one) to be prepared.


Misce —ndus —a—um, (one) to be mixed.
Note. Third conjugation adds ndus to imperative, and

if an io verb
inserts i before e :

Mitte —ndus —a —um, (one) to be sent.


Solve —ndus—a —um, (one) to be dissolved.
Capie —ndus —a—um, (one) to be taken.
Note.— Fourth conjugation adds endus to imperative :

Parti —endus—a—um, one to be divided.


(Third Declension.)
Nom. Comes, companion, m. Comites
Gen. Comitis Comitum
Dat. Comiti Comitibus
Acc. Comitem Comites
Voc. Comes Comites
Abl. Comite. Comitibus.
Fourth Declension.')
(.

Nom. Victus, victuals, m. Victus


Gen. Victus Victuum
Dat. Victui Victibus
Acc. Victum Victus
Voc. Victus Victus
Abl. Victu. Victibus.
GERUNDIVES. 33

VOCABULARY.

1. Chloride, chloridum 11. Abscess, abscessus—us, m.


2. Bruised, contussus —a 12. Flux, fluxus —us, m.
—um 13. Intercourse, coitus —us,
3. Plan, consilium m.
4. Bloody, cruentus —a—um 14. Joint, artus —us, m. ’

5. Condensation, condensa- 15. Victuals, victus —us, m.


tio —onis, f. 16. Sex, sexus —us, m.
6. Companion, comes —itis, 17. Unborn child, foetus —us,
m. and f. m.
7. Filter, colum 18. Draught, haustus —us, m.
8. Contagious, contagiosus 19. Projection, processus —us,
—a —um m.
9. Whole (entire), totus —a 20. "Paste, gustus —us, m.
—um, adj. 21. Childbirth, partus —us, m.

10. Common, communis —is 22. Slipping forward, prolap-

—e, adj. sus —us, m.

Translate. —1. Massa fiat dividenda in xx pilulas. 2. Pul-


vis fiat partiendus in xv chartulas. 3. Hoc pnescriptum est
parendum magna cura. 4. Medicime huius praescripti suntmis-
cendte bene. 5. Hoc est symptoma fluxus et morbus est sanan-
dus idoneis medicinis. 6. Partu sunt graves antalgiae in toto
corpore feminarum. 7. Foetus aegrotae feminae est delendus
abortu. 8. Sana gravem abscessum artu disci puli manus.

Write in Latin. —1. Catarrh of the stomach and slipping


forward of the womb are severe diseases. 2. The victuals of the
patient are to be prepared with much care. 3. The mass is to
be divided into three pills and one to be taken at once. 4. This
solution is not pleasing to the taste of the patient. 5. Let two
ounces of a mild liniment be made and applied on the skin of
the entire hand. 6. (There) are symptoms of much bile in the
system. 7. Mix well these quantities in two pints of common
water and divide into three equal parts. 8. Let the sick man
dissolve the powder in a spoonful of water and take a dose on
going to bed.
34 MEDICAL LATIN.

LESSON XX.

FIFTH DECLENSION.
Nom. Dies, day, m. Dies
Gen. Diei Dierum
Dat. Diei Diebus
Ace. Diem Dies
Voc. Dies Dies
Abl. Die. Diebus.
Note. —All nouns of this declension are feminine except dies; no neuters.
For present, subjunctive passive add ur to present subjunctive active
, ,
, ,
:

Paretur, let it be prepared.


Misceatur, let it be mixed.
Mittatur, let it be sent.
Capiatur, let it be taken.
Partiatur, let it be divided.
Note.—Insert n between a and t for third , plural. These forms always
take the nominative case.

EXAMPLES.

i. Una pilula capiatur bora somni.—Let one pill be taken on


going to bed.
2. Dosis partiatur in duas partes. —Let the dose be divided
into two parts.
3. Pulveres solvantur in pura aqua.—Let the powders be dis-
solved in pure water.
VOCABULARY.

1. Sense of feeling, sensus 6. Sense of touch, tactus


—us, m. —us, m.
2. Seen of hearing, auditus 7. Duct, ductus —us, m.
—us, m. 8. Pulse, pulsus —us, m.
3. Sense of sight, visus 9. Hand, manus —us, f.
—us, m. 10 Countenance, voltus
4. Sense of smell, olfactus —us, m.
—us, m. 11. Decay, caries —ei, f.
5. Sense of taste, gustus 12. Wasting (leanness), macies
—us, m. —ei, f.
VERBS OF THE FIRST CONJUGATION. 35
13. Baldness, calvities —ei, f. 18. Twice, bis, adv.
14. Grayness of hair, canities, 19. Teaspoon, cochleare par-
—ei, f. vum
15. Madness, rabies —ei, f. 20. Sight (view), conspectus
16. Appearance, species —ei,f. —us, in.

17. Hope, spes —ei, f. 21. Age, setas —atis, f.

Translate. —1. Parva quantitas solutionis capiatur bis in die.


2. Exacta partitio quantitatis fiat (pass, meaning) et magnus
numerus pulverum mittatur. 3. Multa genera medicinarum par-
entur in capsulis et chartulis. 4. Cancer stomachi et multi
morbi sanentur his medicamentis. 5. Symptomatibus huius gen-
eris parvum cochleare misturse capiatur omni hora. 6. Pares
partitiones medicamentorum misceantur et moveantur bene.

Write in Latin. —1. Let two powders be dissolved in com-


mon water and drunk on going to bed. 2. Destroy the sense of
feeling and cure the slipping forward of the womb. 3. In the
pale countenance of the patient are symptoms of a severe dis-
ease. 4. Grayness of the hair is a symptom of age. 5. Let
the germs of disease be destroyed by well prepared solutions.
6. Let a mass be well mixed to be prepared in small doses. 7.
Let two such doses be taken on going to bed.

LESSON XXI.

VERBS OF THE FIRST CONJUGATION.


Principal Parts.
Present Present Perfect First
Indicative. Infinitive. Indicative. Supine.
Levo levare levavi levatum
Sano sanare sanavi sanatum
Poto potare potavi potatum
Paro parare paravi paratum
Do dare dedi datum.
36 MEDICAL LATIN.

(Adjective, Third Declension.)


Singular.
M. F. N.
Nom. Absens —ens —ens", absent
Gen. Absentis —tis—tis
Dat. Absenti —ti—ti
Acc. Absentem —tem—ens
Voc. Absens —ens —ens
Abl. Absente —te—te.

Plural.
Nom. Absentes —tes —tia
Gen. Absentium —tium—tium
Dat. Absentibus —tibus—tibus
Acc. Absentes —tes —tia
Voc. Absentes —tes—tia
Abl. Absentibus —tibus—tibus.
Note.— The perfect, passive participle is formed by changing m of the
supine to s:
Levatus —a—um, having been relieved.
Sanatus —a—um, having been cured.
Datus —a —um, having been given.
Note.— This participle is used "with nouns in the ablative case, forming the
ablative absolute construction, and agrees with its noun in gender, number,
and case.
EXAMPLES.

Solutione parata. —The solution having been prepared.


Pilulis paratis.—The pills having been prepared.
Morbo sanato. —The disease having been cured.
Pulveribus datis.—The powders having been given.

VOCABULARY.

1. Organ, organum —i, n. 5. Finger-nail, unguis —is,f.


2. Entrance, introitus —us, 6. Foot, pes, pedis, m.
m. 7. Vital organ, viscus —eris,
3. Ulcer, ulcus —eris, n. n.
4. Dizziness, vertigo —inis, 8. Wound, vulnus —eris, n.
f. 9. Temple, tempus —oris, n.
VERBS OF THE SECOND CONJUGATION. 37

10. Foreskin, praeputium 16. Softening, mollities —ei,f.


11. Tendon, tendo —inis, m. 17. Fetid matter, sanies —ei,
12. Opium, opium f.
13. Edge, acies —ei, f. 18. Itch, scabies —ei, f.
14. Face, facies —ei, f. 19. Filth, colluvies —ei, f.
15. Stammering, balbuties 20. Absent, absens, adj.

—ei, f.
Translate. —1. Medicina parata, dosis capiatur alternis horis
in die. 2. Prolapsu uteri levato, aegrota sol vat album pulverem
in poculo vini et potet somni hora. 3. Hac dose data, mitis
stimulus fiat et cochleare parvum hujus detur aegroto omni hora.
4. Da duo grana morphinae viro statim et admove calidum cata-
plasma vulneri capite. 5. Praescripto dato medicamentario,
misceat imam dosem et mittat hanc statim. 6. Massa fiat divi-
denda in x pulveres: unus solvendus in cochleari parvo commu-
nis aquae et capiendus post cibum. 7. Omnibus dosibus datis
et febre levata, medicus paret mitem stimulum idoneum huic
morbo. 8. Parti medicamentum in minima et solve unum min-
imum et duo grana opii in octario dulcis syrupi.

LESSON XXII.
RELATIVE PRONOUNS.

Qui, quae, quod, who, which, what.


Nom. Qui, quae, quod Qui, quae, quae
Gen. Cuius, cuius, cuius Quorum, quarum, quorum
Dat. Cui, cui, cui Quibus, quibus, quibus
Acc. Quem, quam, quod Quos, quas, quae
Voc. No vocative No vocative
Abl. Quo, qua, quo. Quibus, quibus, quibus.

VERBS OF THE SECOND CONJUGATION.


Principal Parts.
Present Present Perfect First
Indicative. Infinitive. Indicative. Supine.
Deleo delere delevi deletum
Misceo miscere miscui mixtum
Moveo movere movi mo turn.
38 MEDICAL LATIN.

EXAMPLES.

Germinibus morbi deletis.—Germs of diseasehaving been de-


stroyed.
Liquore bene moto. —The liquor having been well stirred.
Sulphate quininae mixto cum extracto opii.—Sulphate of qui-
nine having been mixed with extract of opium.

VOCABULARY.
1. Large, ampins—a—um 9. Manner, mos, moris, m.
2. Or, vel, conjunction 10. Half an hour, semihora,
3. Tablespoon, cochleare adv. ph.
magnum vel amplum n. Night, nox, noctis, f.
4. Rainy, pluvialis —is —e 12. And, que, conj.

5. Rain-water, aqua pluvialis 13. In the morning, mane, adv.


6. Middle, medius —a —um 14. Night and morning, nocte
7. Dessertspoon, cochleare maneque
medium 15. Fever being absent, febre
8. Equal, sequalis —is—e absente.
Translate. —1. Dulcis syrupus fiat, cuius cochleare medium
capiendum in cyatho communis aquae semihora post cibum. 2.
Fac solutionem in qua cochleare magnum pulveris opii bene
movendum. 3. Misce tres uncias muriatici acidi cum parva
quantitate aceti, in quo move tres flavos pulveres. 4. Aegrota
capiat tres guttas amarge solutionis in cochleare magno dulcis
vini nocte maneque. 5. Mitte rnedicinam in una magna char-
tula, hsec partienda in octo gequales partes quarum duse capien-
dte uno tempore. 6. Fac cataplasma harum trium substanti-
arum admovendam abscessui carpo.

Write in Latin. —1. Bicarbonate of soda is a good remedy


for acid in the stomach. 2. Let the druggist strain well the
water in which there are microscopic animals. 3. Water having
been mixed with vinegar for the thirst of fever, let (it) be given
to the patient in small quantities. 4. Send alum as a remedy
for diseases of the nose according to the physician’s prescription.
5. These are the remedies which the doctor gives to the patient,
fever being absent. 6. Suitable medicineshaving been prepared
for the kidneys, let the patient take an exact dose.
VERBS OF THE THIRD CONJUGATION. 39

LESSON XXIII.

VERBS OF THE THIRD CONJUGATION.


Principal Parts.
Present Present Perfect First
Indicative. Infinitive. Indicative. Supine.
Dico, dicere, dixi, dictum, to say
Addo, addere, addidi, additum, to add
Infundo, infundere, infudi, infusum, to pour in
Divido, dividere, divisi, divisum, to divide
Mitto, mittere, misi, missum, to send
Solvo, solvere, solvi, solutum, to dissolve
Facio, facere, feci, factum, to make
Capio, capere, cepi, captum, to take.

Adjectives.

Singular.
M. F. N.
Nom. Idem, eadem, idem, the same
Gen. Eiusdem, eiusdem, eiusdem
Dat. Eidem, eidem, eidem
Acc. Eundem, eandem, idem
Voc. No vocative
Abl. Eodem, eadem, eodem.
Plural.
M. F. N
Nom. Eidem, eaedem, eadem
Gen. Eorundem, earundem, eorundem
Dat. Eisdem, eisdem, eisdem
Acc. Eosdem, easdem, eadem
Voc. No vocative
Abl. Eisdem, eisdem, eisdem.

VOCABULARY.
1. As directed, more dicto 5. Intestine, intestinum
2. Back, dorsum —i, n. 6. Long, longus —a—um
3. Dorsal, dorsalis —is—e 7. Broad, latus —a —um
4. Nose, nasus —i, m. 8. Third, tertius —a—um
40 MEDICAL LATIN.

9. Rectum (straightgut), rec- 13. Febrile, febrilis —is—e


tum 14. Skull, cranium
10. Art, ars, artis, f. 15. Two bundAd, ducenti
11. Thigh, femur —oris, n. —ae—a.
12. Femoral, femoralis—is —e

COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES.
Positive. Comparative. Superlative.
M. F. N. M. F. N. M F. N.
Longus —a —um Longior —or—us Longissimus —a —um
Latus —a—um Latior —or—us Latissimus —a—um
Mitis —is—e Mitior —or—us Mitissimus —a—um
Dulcis —is—e Dulcior —or—us Dulcissimus —a—um
Parvus —a—um Minor —or—us Minimus —a —um
Magnus—a—um Major —or—us Maximus —a—um.
Translate. 1. Atlas et axis sunt vertebrae sed non ossa capi-

tis. 2. Bona praescripta denturaegroto et dyspepticus stomachus


sanetur bene praeparatis medicinis. 3. Pulvere bene soluto in
poculo aquae pluvialis, cape more dicto. 4. Sunt multi morbi
quos scientia medici et bonae medicinae non sanant (can not
cure). 5. Musculi qui sunt longissimi, sunt non latissimi. 6.
Minimum est minima mensura chemia. 7. In abdomine sunt
magna intestina multaque parva organa. 8. In cranio sunt
ossa octo, in corpore ducenta. 9. Admove maximum cataplasma
dorsalibus musculis et date mitissimam dosem medicinae. to.
Rectum est tertia pars magni intestini.

LESSON XXIV.
DECLENSION OF COMPARATIVE DEGREE.
Singular.
M. F. N.
Nom. Mitior, mitior, raitius
Gen. Mitioris, mitioris, mitioris
Dat. Mitiori, mitiori, mitiori
Ace. Mitiorem, mitiorem, mitius
Voc. Mitior, mitior, mitius
Abl. Mitiore, mitiore, mitiore.
VERBS OF THE FOURTH CONJUGATION. 41
Plural.
M. F. N.
Nom. Mitiores, miliores, mitiora
Gen. Mitiorum, mitiorum, mitiorum
Dat. Mitioribus, mitioribus, mitioribus
Acc. Mitiores, mitiores, mitiora
Voc. Mitiores, mitiores, mitiora
Abl. Mitioribus, mitioribus, mitioribus.

VERBS OF THE FOURTH CONJUGATION.


Principal Parts.
Present Present Perfect First
Indicative. Infinitive. Indicative. Supine.
Partio, partlre, partivi, partitum, to divide
Scio, scire, scivi, scitum, to know
Audio, audlre, audivi, auditum, to hear.

IRREGULAR ADJECTIVE COMPARED.


Positive. Comparative. Superlative.
Bonus —a—um Melior, melior, melius Optimus —a—um
Mains —a—um Peior, peior, peius Pessimus —a—um
Multus —a —um Plus Plurimus —a —um
Note.— The superlative is often translated “
very."

EXAMPLES.

1. Optimus vir.—A very good man.


2. Gravissima febris. —A very severe fever.
3. Plurima genera febrium. —Very many kinds of fevers.

VOCABULARY.

1. Vehicle, vehiculum 6. Forehead, frons —tis, f,


2. Poison, hemlock, conium 7. Useful, utilis —is—e
3. Egg, ovum 8. Coal-black, ater, atra,
4. Eyelash, cilium at rum
5. Yolk of egg, vitellus 9. Together, simul
42 MEDICAL LATIN.

10. Ginger, zingiber—eris, n 15. Preparation, praeparatio


11. As much as you choose, —on is, f.
quantum vis 16. Part of external ear, helix
12. Fever being present, ad- —icis, f.
stante febre 17. Leg, crus —ris, n.
13. Liver, hepar —atis, n. 18. Death, mors —tis, m.
14. Draught, haustus —us, m. 19. Clinical,clinicus —a—uni.

Write in Latin. —1. The bone of the forehead is part of the


skull. 2. For febrile diseases quinine and aconite are the best reme-
dies. 3. Mix an ounce of tincture of aconite with four ounces
of chloroform liniment; let the same be stirred together well and
applied to the skin. 4. In the cavity of the jawbone there is a very
minute membrane. 5. Cancer of the liver, stomach, or kidneys
is a very serious disease. 6. Give the patient a draught of the
mild extract every other hour. 7. Mix a liquid preparation of
tincture of acetate of iron and let the patient take as directed.
8. Fever being present, let the patient take larger doses of the
bitter solution. 9. Fever being absent, give the patient as
much of the liquid medicine as you choose. 10. Let the white
and yellow powders be stirred well together in a glass of distilled
water and taken on going to bed.

LESSON XXV.

The word “prescription” is derived from “prae,” before,


and “scribo,” to write.
A simple prescription contains a single ingredient. A com-
pound prescription contains two or more ingredients.
Officinal formulae are published in the pharmacopoeias, and
medicine prepared according to these formulae are kept ready
made in drug stores.
Extemporaneous or magistral formulae are composed by the
physician for the occasion. “Magistral” is derived from

magister,” master of his art.
A compound prescription consists of: 1. The heading. 2.
PRESCRIPTION WRITING. 43

Names and quantities of ingredients. 3. Direction to com-


pounder. 4. Direction to patient. 5. Date and signature.
In primitive life, prescriptions were begun with prayer, and
the sign of the chief of gods—Jupiter—was placed at the
head of the prescription. Now the heading of a prescription is
R —a symbol composed of the initial letter of recipe and the

sign of Jupiter.
The names and quantities of ingredients are written in Latin:
( a ) The basis or principal drug. ( b ) Auxiliary or adjuvant to

aid the action of the basis. (<r) Corrective to correct or modify


its action. (d ) Vehicle to give proper form and taste to the
whole. After the name of each ingredient place symbols de-
noting the quantity required. Direction to dispenser is in Latin.
Direction to patient begins with “S” or Sig “
; from “signa,”

mark.
These are the symbols: C., congius, a gallon; O., octarius, a
pint; 5> uncia, ounce; 3, drachma, a drachm; gr., granum or
grana, grain or grains; minimum, a minim or of a
drachm.
The number of ounces, drachms, and grains is expressed by
the Roman letters, i, ii, iii, iv, v, etc.
Fractions are indicated by the arabic characters: Gr. a
quarter of a grain; but is expressed by the symbol “ss,” an
abbreviation of semissis, a half; 53s, a half ounce one ounce;

and a half is sesuncia; two and a half,




ii cum semisse ;

three and a half, “iii cum semisse.”


Cum, with, is a preposition followed by the ablative case.
In simple formulae the names of ingredients go in the accusa-
tive case. In compound formulae the names of ingredients go
in the genitive case, and quantity in the accusative.
The Roman numeral i at the end is generally written j.


MEDICAL LATIN.

LESSON XXVI.

READING LESSONS.
(1) Recipe ;
Pulveris digitalis, tria grana
Pulveris glycyrrhizae, viginti grana.
Misce. Haec quantitas est dividenda in tres pulveres. Exactissima par-
titio fiat.
(2) Recipe:
Pulveris opii, drachmas duas
Zinci acetatis, uncias duas.
Misce. Fiat pulvis.
SlGNA. —Cuius solve drachmam in octario calidae aquae. Tnice in more
dicto.

(3) Recipe :

Sarsaparillae radicis,
Zingiberis radicis contusae,.
. ana, sesunciam
Sassafras radicis concisae, unciam.
Coque leni igne in quattuor octariis fontanae aquae ad semissem consump-
tionem.

(4) Recipe :
Opii pulveris, grana duo
Acidi tannici, semissem drachmam
Sacchari albi, unam drachmam.

Misce et divide in duodecem pulveres.

(5) Recipe :

Quininae sulphatis, grana duo


Extracti enonymi, granum unum cum semisse.
Oleoresinae piperis, minimum unum.
Fac pilulam et mitte nuraero xxiv tales.
SlGNA. —Aegrota capiat unam ex his (of these) ter quaterve in die statim
post cibum.

LESSON XXVII.
(6) Recipe :
Extract! quassiae fluidi unciam
Aquae, , uncias duas.
Misce. Unum magnum cochleare cum magno cochleari calidae aquae
adhuc tepidum iniciendum.
READING LESSONS. 45

(7) Recipe :

Extract! opii, grana quinque


Plumbi acetatis, grana duodecem
Olei theobromae, quantum sufficiat.
Misce. Fiant suppositoria decern.
Unum inserendum in rectum quaque tertia hora.

(8) Recipe:
Extract! hydrastidis, grana decern
Zinci sulphatis, grana duo cum semisse
Olei theobromae, drachmam semissem.
Misce et divide in decern Bougias.
Una inserenda nocte raaneque.

(9) Recipe:
Plumbi acetatis,
Tincturae opii, ana, unciara
Aquae, . . . ; .ad octarium.
Misce. Lotio fiat.
Habe partes madidas lotione.

(10) Recipe:
Zinci sulphatis, grana tria
Aluminis, grana sex
Aquae rosae, uncias duas.
Misce. Fac collyrium.
Signa.—Slilla tres guttas in oculum bis in die.

LESSON XXVIII.
(n) Recipe:
Potassiibitartratis, drachmas duas
Olei limonis, minima quinque
Aquae bullientis quantum sufficiat, ad uncias viginti.
Misce. Fiat potus capiendus statim.

(12) Recipe:
Pulveris sennse,
Pulveris glycyrrhizae, ana, uncias duas
....

Pulveris foeniculi,
Sulphuris loti, ana, unciam
Pulveris sacchari albi, uncias sex.
Misce et pulve bene.
Signa. —Unum parvum cochleare sumendum nocte maneque.
46 MEDICAL LATIN

(13) Recipe:
Quininse hydrobromatis grana decern
Alcoholis, minima octo
Mucilaginis amyli, drachmas duas
Aquae quantum sufficiat, ...
ad semiunciam.
Misce et fiat enema.
Totum statim iniciendum.
(14) Recipe:
Olei terebinthinae, unciam semissem
Olei ricini, sesunciam
Ovum, unum
Aquae fervidae, uncias quattuordecim.
Misce. Fiat enema.
Totum gradatim in rectum iniciendum.
(15) Recipe:
Bismuth! subcarbonatis, unciam
Extracti opii, grana duo
Glycerin!,
Aquae, ana , uncias duas.
Misce. Fiat enema.
Duo magna cochlearia ter in bebdomada inicienda.

LESSON XXIX.
(16) Recipe :

Guiaci ligni rasi, unciam unam


Sassafras radicis, sesunciam
Aquae destillatse, libras duas.
Coque leni igne ad unam libram ; sub finem coctionis adde duas drach
mas contusae radicis glycyrrhizae et cola.
zF.grotus capiat tria parva cochlearia ter in die.
(17) Recipe :

Antimonii potassii tartratis, ....


semisse granum
Aquae purse, unciam.
Misce et da statim aegrotae haustum et repete post duas boras, si ventricu-
lus non antea reiecerit emeticum, vel si alvus non fuerit laxata.
(i8) Recipe:
Spiritus ammoniae aromatici, .... drachmas duas
Liquoris ammonise acetatis, .... uncias quattuor
Tinctune opii, drachmam
Aquae pimentae, uncias quattuor.
Misce et divide in quattuor haustus, quorum unus potest usurpari, si
pulsus languescat, vel pustulae subsiderint.
READING LESSONS. 47

(19) Recipe :
Pulveris ialapae compositae, ....
unciam
Potassii bitartratis, uncias duas.
Misce.
Eiusdem aegrotus capiat cochleare parvum nocte maneque donee anasarca
videatur curari, dein prescribe pilulas ferri compositas quarum duoe
ter in die sumendae sunt.

LESSON XXX.
(20) Recipe :
Emplastri galbani compositi, .... sesunciam
Resinae, uncias duas.
With Symbols:
R. Emplastri galbani compositi, . . 3 iss
Resinae, 3 ij.
Misce. Fiat emplastrum extendendum super alutam, quo pedes post ped-
iluvium involvantur.
(2i) Recipe:
Corticis cinchonae, sesunciam
Magnesiae sulphatis, uncias duas
Aquae purae, octarios duos.
With Symbols:
R Corticis cinchonae,
. 5 iss
Magnesiae sulphatis, ij
Aquae purae, O.ij.
Coque per sextam partem horae in vase leviter clause, et cola liquorem
adhuc calentem; sub finem coquendi (of cooking), adde duas uncias syrupi
absinthii.

(22) Recipe:
Balsami copaibae drachmas tres
Misturae acaciae, . .
; drachmas sex
Liquoris potassae, drachmam unam cum semisse
Syrupi aurantii, sesunciam
Aquae destillatae, uncias quattuor cum semisse.
With Symbols:

R. Balsami copaibae, 3 iij


Misturae acaciae, vj
Liquoris potassae, g iss
Syrupi aurantii, 5 iss
Aquae destillatae, 3 ivss.
Misce. /Egrota capiat duo vel tria magna cochlearia quaque quarla bora.
48 MEDICAL LATIN.

LESSON XXXI.
(23) Recipe:
[Basis) Liquoris ammonii ace-
tatis, drachmam unam
( Adjuvant ) Vini antimonii, .... drachmas quattuor cum semisse
( Corrective ) Tincturae cardamomi

composite, ....
drachmam unam
( Vehicle ) Aquae menthae piperite, sesunciam.
With Symbols :

]!«;. Liquoris ammonii acetatis, . .

Vini antimonii g ivss


Tincturae cardamomi composite,
Aquae menthae piperite, £ iss.
. .
.

Fiat mistura.
Signa. —Parvum cochleare huius sumendum in cyatho aqua omni semi-
hora.

(24) Recipe:
Extracti colocynthidis compositi, .
. drachmam unam
Hydrargyri chloridi raids, grana duo
With Symbols :

R. Extracti colocynthidis com-


positi,
Hydrargyri chloridi mitis, gr. ij. . .
.

Fiat massa, in pilulas duodecem dividenda.


Signa.—Aigrotus capiat duas mane et postea duas, si alvus sex horis
deiecerit non satis.

LHSSON XXXII.
(25) Recipe :

Vitellos ovorum, numero duos


Olei amygdalae amarae guttas quinque
Tere bqne simul et adde gradatim :

Olei morrhuse, uncias octo


Glycerini, uncias duas
Acidi phosphoric! diluti, unciam imam
Vini Xerici quantum sufficiat, . ad unum octarium.
Fiat emulsio.
Signa. —yEgrotus capiat eiusdem magnum cochleare ter in die post cibum.
READING LESSONS. 49

Abbreviated ;
R. Vitell. ov., . No. ij
Ol. amygd. am., gtt. v
Tere bene simul et add. grad. :
01. morrh., 3 viij
G1y c - ,?ij
Ac. phos. dil.,
Vin. Xer. q. s. ad O.j.
F. emuls.
S.—Ejus. cap. aeg. coch. mag. t. i. d. post cib.

(26) Recipe :

Quininae sulphatis, grana sexdecem


Strychniae sulphatis, grani duas quintas partes


Acidi hydrochlorici diluti, minima octoginta
Tincturse zingiberis, drachmas duas
Tincturae cardamomi compositae, . . drachmas duas cum semisse
Syrupi, uncias duas
Aquae, unciam et duas drachmas.
Misce. Fiat mistura.
SlGNA.—Cape unum magnum cochleare post quemque cibum.
Abbreviated :

R. Quin, sulphat., gr. xvj


Strych. sulphat., gr. £
Acid, hydrochlor. dil., . . . nplxxx
Tr. zz., gij
Tr. card, comp., gijss
sy f ->

5'J
Acb> 5 *-SU
M. F. mist.
S.—Cap. u. mag. coch. p. q. c.
ABBREVIATIONS.

Latin. Abbreviations. English.


1. Absente febre, ....
absent, febr., . . fever being absent
2. Abstractum, ..... abst., an abstract

3. Acidum, acid., an acid


4. Ad, ad, to, up to
5. Ad libitum, adlib., .... at pleasure
6. Addeor addatur, . . . add., add
7. Adstante febre, . . . . adst. febr., . . . fever being present
8. Alternis horis, altern. hori.s, . . every other hour
9. Ampulla, ampull., .... a large bottle
10. Ana, aa, of each
11. Aqua adstricta, ....
aq. adst., . , ice
12. Aqua bulliens, .... aq. bull., . . . boiling water
13. Aqua communis, . . . aq. com., . . .
common water
14. Aqua destillata, ...
aq. dest., . . .
distilled water
15. Aqua fontana, aq. font., . , , spring water
16. Aqua fervens, aq. ferv., . . . hot water
17. Aqua pluvialis, ....
aq. pluv., , . . rain water
18. Aqualis, pertaining to water
19. Bene, well
20. Bis in die, bis in d., ... twice a day
21. Bulliat, bulliant, . . . bull., let boil
22. Cape, capiat, cap., take, let take
23. Capsula, caps., ....
a capsule
24. Ceratum, cerat., ....
a cerate
25. Charta, chart., ....
a paper (medicated)
26. Chartula, chart., ....
a powder paper
27. Cibus, cib., food
28. Cochleare magnum vel coch. mag. vel
amplum, amp., a tablespoon
29. Cochleare medium, . coch. med. . .
a dessertspoon
30. Cochleare parvum, . . . coch. parv., . . a teaspoon
ABBREVIATIONS. 51
Latin. Abbreviations. English.
31. Cola, col., strain
32. Colatus —a—um, . . . col. strained
33. Collutorium, .... collut., ....
a mouth wash
34. Collyrium, collyr., .
. . .
an eye-wash
35. Compositus, co. velcomp., .compound
36. Confectio, conf., a confection
37. Congius, C., a gallon

38. Cortex, cort, .


. . . bark, peel
39. Cuius, cui., of which
40. Cum,
"

c. with
41. Cyathus, cyath., , . . . a wineglass

42. Decoctum, decoc ,


. . . . a decoction
43. Dilute, dil. dilute (verb)
44. Dilutus, dil., diluted
45. Dimidius, dim., one-half
4>. Dividatur in partes d. in p. aeq., . . let it be divided into equal
sequales, parts
47. Divide, d. vel div., . . divide
48. Dividendus, dividend., . . , (one) to be divided
49. Dosis, dos a dose
50. Eiusdem, eiusd., .... of the same
51. Electuarium, elect., .... an electuary
52. Emplastrum, emp., a plaster

53. Enema, enem., . . . .


a clyster

54. Extende supra, ....


exten. sup., . . spread upon
55. Extractum, ex., an extract

56. Fac, fiat, fiant, .


. . . f., make, let be made
57. Fac pilulas duodecem, f. pil. xii, . .
. make 12 pills
58. Fiat haustus, . ... f. h. ,
: . make a draught
59. Fiat mistura, f. m., .... make a mixture
60. Filtra, fib, filter (verb)
61. Filtrum, fib, a filter

62. Fluidus, fb vel f., . .


. . fluid
63. Fotus, fot. a fomentation
64. Frustillatim, frust., in small pieces
65. Gargarisma, garg., a gar gl fi
66. Glycerinum, glyc. a glycerine
67. Gutta —£e, gtt., . ...
a drop or drops
68. Guttatim, guttat., , . . .
drop by drop
69. Haustus, haust., . . . . a draught
70. Hora, h. vel hor., . . an hour
on going to bed
71. Hora somni, h. s., ... .

72. In die, in d., daily


52 MEDICAL LATIN.

Latin. Abbreviations. English.


73. Infusum, inf. an infusion
74. Iniectio, ini., injection
75. Instar, inst ,
.... like (with gen. case)
76. lulepus, iul. a julep
77. Lac, milk
78. Lagena, lagen., .... bottle
79. Libra, lb., pound
80. Linteum, lint., lint
81. Liquor, liq., a solution

82. Lotio, lot., a wash


83. Magnus, mag., large
84. Mane, in the morning
85. Mane primo, man. prim., .
. early in the morning
86. Manipulus, man., a handful ....

87. Mica panis, mica pan., . a crumb of bread .

88. Minimum, a minim

89. Misce, m. mix


90. Mistura, mist., a mixture

91. Mitte, mitt., send


92. More dicto, . . . . mor. diet, .as directed . .

93. Mucilago, mucil., a mucilage ....

Nocte maneque, . . noct. maneque, , night and morning


94. .

95. Nox, night


96. Numero, no., in number
97. Octarius, O., a pint
98. Oleum, ol., oil
99. Omni hora, omn. hor., . . every hour

100. Ovum, ov. an egg


101. Pannus linteus, ....pann. lint., . linen cloth .

102. Pars, . part

103. Partes sequales, , . . p. seq.,


.
equal parts ....

104. Parvus, parv. small


105. Pediluviura, a foot-path
106. Pencillium camelinum, pencil, cam., . . a camel’s-hair pencil
107. Per fistulam vitream, . per fist. vitr., . through a glass tube
108. Post cibum, post cib., after meals . . .

109. Prseparatus, ppt. prepared


no. Pro re nata, p. r. n., . . . .as required
•III. Pul vis, pulv.,'..... a powder
112. Quantum sufificiat, . . q. s., sufficient quantity
113. Quaqua hora, . . . . q. h. every hour
114. Quantum vis, . .
.
. q. v. as much as you choose
115. Quorum, quor., ....
of which
abbreviations.

Latin. Abbreviations. English.


116. Quotidie, quotid., ....
daily
117. Reductum, reduct., .... reduced
118. Saturatus, sat., saturated
119. Scatula, scat., . . . , . a pill box
120. Semidrachma, .... semidr., ....
a half drachm
121. Semihora, semih., ....
half an hour
122. Semissis, ss., a half
123. Sesuncia, sesc. an ounce and a half
124. Signa, s. vel sig., . . mark (verb)
125. Simul, sim., together
126. Sine, without
127. Solutio, sol., .... solution
128. Solutus, solv., ....
dissolved
129. Solve, solv., dissolve
130. Spiritus spr., a spirit
131. Statim, stat. immediately
132. Suppositorium, ....
suppos., .... a suppository
133. Syrupus, syr., a syrup
134. Talis, tab, .... such or like
Ter in die, t. i. d., . three times a day
135. . . .

136. Tere bene simul, . . t. b. sim., . . . rub well together


137. Tinctura, tinct. vel tr., . .a tincture
trit. a triturate
138. Triturata,
139. Trochiscus, troch., .... atroche
140. Unguentum, ungt., ointment
X41. Vehiculum, . ... vehic., ....
a menstrum

142. Vinum, vin., wine


143. Vitello ovi solutus, . .
v. o. s., . . , . dissolved in yolk of egg
144. Vitellus, vit., yolk of an egg
145. Zingiber, zz., ginger.
DERIVATIONS.

Latin. English. Derived from


I. Abdomen— inis, n., abdomen, .
abdo, abdere, abdidi, abditum,
to hide
. .

abortion, aborior, aboriri, abortus sum, to


2. Abortus —us, m., . . .
f

f rise from a losing game


.
.

3. Acetum —i, n., . . vinegar, ....


aceo, acere, acui, to be sour
4. Albumen —inis, n., . albumen, ....
albus, white
foster-child, alo, alere, alui, altum or alitum,
5. Alumnus —i, m., . . . .

to nourish
6. Alveolus —i, m., . . cavity, socket, , . alvus (dim. of), belly

7. Animal —is, m ,
. . animal, ...
. anima, vital principle

microscopic ani-
8. Animalculum—i,n., animal (dim. of), animal
mal,
,

....

9. Apparatus—us, m., . apparatus, ad, for; paratus, ready


. . .

Auditus —us, m.,


audio, audire, audivi, auditum,
10. . hearing, .
to hear
. .
.

II. Auricula —ae, f., . . little, external ear, auris (dim. of), ear
bene, well; volo, velle, volui,
12. Benevolus —a —um, . well-wishing, .
to wish
bovine, pertain- bos, ox
13. Bovidus —a—um,
(

[ ing to ox, . .

is, n., cado, cadere, cecidi, casum, to


14. Cadaver —
. corpse,
.

fall in battle
....

15. Calculus —i, m ,


. . pebble, stone, . . calx (dim. of), lump of lime
16. Capsula—ae, f., . . capsule, .... capsa (dim. of), a box
carpo, carpere, carpsi, carptum,
17. Carpus—i, m., . . . wrist, . . . .
to pluck

black snake-root, cimex,


bug; fugo, fugare, fu-
18. Cimicifuga —

x, f., .
gavi, fugatum, to rout
i_

19. Codicillus —i, m., . writing-tablet, . codex (dim. of), a block


.

20. Compositus —a together; pono, ponere,


—urn, ....’.
composite, . . cum, posui, positum, to place
21. Concors —dis, . . . harmonious, . . cum, with ; cor, heart
cum, together; gradior, gradi,
22. Congressus —us, m., copulation, . .
gressus sum, to walk
DERIVATIONS. 55
Latin. English. Derived from
23. Corpusculum —i, n., corpuscle, . . .
corpus (dim. of), body
crasso, crassare, crassatum, to
24. Crassamentum—i,n., clot,
thicken
m., dis, apart; fero, ferre, tuli, la-
25. Dilator—is, . . dilator, . .
. .

tum, to bear
26. Diurnus —a —um, .
daily, dies, day
27. Diuturnus —a—um, lasting, . diu, long (in time)
28. Dulcamara—se, f., . bitter-sweet, . . dulcis, sweet; amarus, bitter
29. Duritia—ae, f., . . hardness, .
.... durus, hard
erigo, erigere, erexi, erectum, to
30. Erector —is, m., . . erector, . . .
rise
ex, out of; ens (old participle of
31. Essentia—x, f., . .essence, . . .
esse), being
ex, out of; tendo, tendere, te-
32. Extensor —

is, m., . extensor, . . tendi, tensum or tentum, to


stretch
33. Filiolus —i, m., . . little boy, .... filius (dim. of), son
34. Fissura—se, f., . . . fissure, findo, findere,fidi, fissum, to split
flecto, flectere, flexi, flexum, to
35. Flexor—is, m., . .bender, .
.
.

bend
36. Fluxus —us, m., . . flux, f fluo, fluere, fluxi, fluxum, to
flow
feo (perf. part, of obs. verb), to
37. Foetus —us, m., . . unborn child, generate

38. Foramen —inis, n., . orifice, .


foro, forare, foravi, foratum, to
pierce
.
. .

39. Funiculus —i, m., umbilical


funis, rope
. cord, .
.

Fusus —a—um, . . melted, fused, . fundo, fundere, fudi, fusum, to


40.
pour
41. Humanus—a—urn, pertaining to man, homo, man, mankind
.

42. Homunculus —i, m., dwarf, homo (dim. of), man


43. Inertia—x, f., . . . inactivity, .in, without; ars, art, activity . .

44. Labor —is, m., . parturition,


. .. . labor, labi, lapsus sum, to slip
small cavity in
45. Lacuna —se, f., osseous tissue,
lacus, lake

46. Levator —is, m., . lifter, levo, levare, levavi, levatum, to


.

lift
L

T u 1 • ) little lobe, a
47- Lobulus 1, m., . | lobu]ej ’ lobus, a lobe
_

48. Mamilla—;C, f., . . nipple, mamma (dim. of), breast

lower jaw-bone, mando, mand£re, mandi, man-


49. Mandibulum —i, n., .
sum, to chew
glutton, mando, mandere, mandi, man-
50. Mando—onis, m., .
....

sum, to chew
mala (augmented from), cheek-
51. Maxilla—se, f., . .jaw-bone, . . .
bone
56 MEDICAL LATIN.

Latin. English. Derived from


52. Medicina—se, . . medicine, , , . medeor, raederi, to heal
53. Medulla se. f., —
. . narrow, medius, middle
misceo, miscere, miscui, mix-
54. Mistura —

se, f,, . . mixture, . .


tum or mistum, to mix
bearing-down molior, moliri, molitus sum, to
55- Molimen —inis, n., pain, ..
. struggle
56. Moribundus —a ( in agony of morior, mori, mortuus sum, to
—um, death, . die
[

.... . .

57. Mortalis —is—e, .


. mortal, mors, death
moveo, movere, movi, motum,
58. Motor —

is, m., . . . mover, . . . .

to move
59. Musculus —i, m., . . muscle, .... mus (dim. of), mouse
60. Nucleolus —i, m., . primary nucleus, . nucleus (dim. of), kernel
61. Nucleus—i, m., . . kernel, nux, nut
62. Occiput —itis, n., . base of head, . . ob, opposite; caput, head
63. Orbita— se, f., ...
eye-socket, . . . orbis, circle
64. Ovarium —i, n., . .
egg-basket, ovary, ovum, egg
65. Ovulum —i, n., . . little egg, ....
ovum (dim. of), egg
pario, parere, peperi, partum, to
66. Partus —us, m., .
. child-birth, . .
bring forth
pila (dim. of), a ball, “play-
67. Pilula —

se, m., . . . pill, ball”


network of plecto, plectere, plexi or plexui,
68. Plectus—us, m.,
nerves, plexum, to weave
.

. . .

poto, potare, potavi, potatum or


69. Potus —us, m., . a drinking, . .
potum, to drink
f

(
.

pro, forward ; cedo, cedere, ces-


70. Processus —us, m., . projection, . .
si, cessum, to go
I

pro, forward; labor, labi, lap-


71. Prolapsus —us, m., . slipping forward, sus sum, to slip
72. Puella— se, f., . . . girl, puer (dim. of), boy
pulse, pello, pellere, pepuli, pulsum,
73. Pulsus—us, m., . . .
. . .
to drive

se, f., complaint, queror, queri, questus sum, to


74. Querimonia —

.
. .
complain
75. Roseola —

se, f., .
. rose-rash, ....
rosa (dim. of), rose
roto, rotare, rotavi, rotatum, to
76. Rotator—is, m., .roller, . . . .
turn
77. Rotundus —a —um, round, rota, wheel ; roto, to turn
78. Rubeola —se, f., .
. measles, ....
ruber, red
79. Sacculus —i, m., . . little sack, . . . saccule, bag
80. Sapientia —se, f., . . wisdom, ....
sapiens, wise
81. Scutellaria as, f.,—
.
skull-cap, .... scutum, shield
82. Semen —inis, n., . . seed, sero, serere, sevi, satum, to sow
83. Senectus —utis, f., . old age, senility, . senex, old
DERIVATIONS. 57
Latin. English. Derived from
sentio, sentlre, sensi, sensum, to
84. Sensus—us, m., .perception,

\
feel
. . .

I
85. Silica—ae, f., ...
oxide of silicon, . silex, flint
ae, f., stringo, stringere, strinxi, stric-
86. Strictura —
. . stricture, tum, to bind
. .
.

87. Sutura— ae, f., .


. . suture, suo, suere, sui, sutum, to stitch
tango, tangfire, tetigi, tactum,
88. Tactus —us, m., . . sense of touch, .

to touch
teneo, tenere, tenui, tentum, to
89. Tenaculum —i, n., . small hook, . .

hold
tendo, tendere, tetendi, tensum
90. Tensor —is, m., . . stretcher, . .
.

or tentum, to stretch
place for warm
91. Tepidarium —i, n., bath, ....
tepidus, luke-warm
tingo, tingere, tinxi, tinctum, to
92. Tinctura —re, f., . . tincture, .
. .

moisten
twisting pain, torqueo, torquere, torsi, tortum,
93. Tormen —inis, n., . .

to twist
94. Tumor—is, m., . . tumor, tumeo, tumere, to swell
95. Varicilla—ae, f., . .
chicken-pox, . . varix (dim. of), pimple
96. Variola ae, f.,

. . . small-pox, varus (dim. of), blotch


veho, vehfere, vexi, vectum, to
97. Vehiculum —i, n., . vehicle, . . . .

carry
little belly,
98. Ventriculus —i, m.,
stomach, . .
venter (dim. of), belly
verto, vertfere, verti, versum, to
99. Vertebra— ae, f., .
. vertebra, ,
.
.
turn
place where out-
loo. Yestibulum —i, n., garments are vestis, garment
taken off upon
entering house,
101. Vinosus —a—um, .
given to drink, .
. vinum, wine
102. Visas—us, m., . . sense of sight, . , video, videre,vidi, visum, to see.
THE LATIN VERB.

Esse, to be.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Sum,

Indicative.
Present.
Singular. Plural.
1. Sura, I am Sumus, we are
2. Es, thou art Estis, you are
3. Est, he, she, it is Sunt, they are.
Imperfect.
1. Eram, I was 1. Eramus, we were
2. Eras, thou wast 2. Eratis, you were
3. Erat, he was 3. Erant, they were.
Future.
1. Ero, I shall be x. Erimus, we shall be
2. Eris, thou wilt be 2, Eritis, you will be
3. Erit, he will be 3. Erunt, they will be.
Perfect.
1. Fui, I have been 1.Fuimus, we have been
2. Fuisti, thou hast been 2.Fuistis, you have been
3. Fuit, he has been 3. Fuerunt or —ere, they
been.
Pluperfect.
x. Fueram, I had been 1. Fueramus, we had been
2. Fueras, thou hadst been 2. Fueratis, you had been
3. Fuerat, he had been 3. Fuerant, they had been.
THE LATIN VERB. 59

Future Perfect.
i. Fuero, I shall have been i. Fuerimus, we shall have been
2. Fueris, thou wilt have been 2 Fueritis, you will have been
3. Fuerit, he will have been Fuerint, they will have been.

Subjunctive.
Present.
1. Sim, I may be 1. Simus, we may be
2. Sis, thou mayst be 2. Sitis, you may be
3. Sit, he, she, it may be 3. Sint, they may be.
Imperfect.
1. Essem, I might be 1. Essemus, we might be
2. Esses, thou might’st be 2. Essetis, you might be
3. Esset, he might be 3. Essent, they might be.
Perfect.
1. Fuerim, I may have been Fuerimus, we may have been
2. Fueris, thou mayst have Fueritis, you may have been
been Fuerint, they may have been.
3. Fuerit, he may have been
Pluperfect.
1. Fuissem, I might have 1. Fuissemus, we might have
been been
2. Fuisses, thou might’st have 2, Fuissetis, you might have
been been
3. Fuisset, he might have 3. Fuissent, they might have
been been

Imperative.

Present.
Es, be thou Este, be ye.
Future.
Esto, thou shalt be Estote, ye shall be
Esto, he shall be Sunto, they shall be.
Infinitive
Present. Perfect.
Esse, to be. Fuisse, to have been
MEDICAL LATIN.

Future.
Futurum esse, to be about to be
Participle.

Future.
Futurus —a—um, about to be.
Remark. —Sometimes fore is used instead of futurum esse in future in
finitive.

COMPOUNDS OF SUM.
Pres. hid. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Possum, posse, potui, to be able
Prosum, prodesse, profui, to profit.

Indicative.
Present, I am able, etc. Present, I profit, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Possum possumus Prosum prosumus
Poles potestis Prodes prodestis
Potest possunt. Prodest prosunt.

Imperfect, I was able, etc. Itnperfect, I was profiting, etc


Poteram poteramus Proderam proderamus
Poteras poteratis Proderas proderatis
Poterat poterant. Proderat proderant.
Future, I shall be able, etc. Future, I shall profit, etc.
Potero poterimus Prodero proderimus
Poteris poteritis Proderis proderitis
Poterit poterunt. Proderit proderunt.
Perfect, I have been able, etc Perfect, I have profited, etc.
Potui potuimus Profui profuimus
Potuisti potuistis Profuisti profuistis
Potuit potuerunt or —ere. Profuit profuerunt or
—ere.

Pluperfect, 1 had been able, etc. Pluperfect, I had profited, etc


Potueram potueramus Profueram profueramus
Potueras potueratis Profueras profueratis
Potuerat potuerant. Profuerat profuerant.
COMPOUNDS OF SUM.

Future Perfect, I shall have Future Perfect, I shall have


been able, etc. profited, etc.
Potuero potuerimus Profuero profuerimus
Potueris potueritis Profueris profueritis
Potuerit potuerint. Profuerit profuerint.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may be able, etc. Present, I may profit, etc
Possim possimus Prosim prosimus
Possis possitis Prosis prositis
Possit possint. Prosit prosint.
Imperfect,
I might be able, etc. Imperfect, I might profit, etc.
Possem possemus Prodessem prodessemus
Posses possetis Prodesses prodessetis
Posset possent. Prodesset prodessent.
Perfect, I may have been Perfect, I may have profited,
able, etc. etc.
Potuerim potuerimus Profuerim profuerimus
Potueris potueritis Profueris profueritis
Potuerit potuerint. Profuerit profuerint.
Pluperfect, I might have been Pluperfect, I might have profi-
able, etc. ted, etc.
Potuissem potuissemus Profuissem profuissemus
Potuisses potuissetis Profuisses profuissetis
Potuisset potuissent. Profuisset profuissent.

Imperative.
Present.
Prodes, profit thou prodeste, profit ye.
Future.
Prodesto, thou shalt profit prodestote, ye shall profit
Prodesto, he shall profit prosunto, they shall profit.

Infinitive.
Present.
Posse, to be able. Prodesse, to profit
62 MEDICAL LATIN.

Perfect.
Potuisse, to have been able. Profuisse, to have profited.
Future.
Profuturum esse, to be about to profit.

Participle.
Future.
Profuturus, about to profit.

FIRST CONJUGATION—ACTIVE
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.
Sano, sanare, sanavi, sanatum, to heal.

SYNOPSIS.
Remark. —Sanare less re leaves Sana, present stem, upon which are formed
nine tenses in the active voice, viz. :

1. Pres., ind., sano, I heal


2. Pres., subj., sanem, I may heal
3. Pres., imp., sana, heal thou
4. Pres., part., sanans, healing
5. Pres., inf., sanare, to heal
6. Imperfect, ind., sanabam, I was healing
7. Imperfect, subj., sanarem, I might heal
8. Put., ind., sanabo, I shall heal
9. Gerund, sanandi, of healing.

Remark.—Sanavi less i leaves sanav, perfect stem, and has six tenses, viz.:
1. Perf., ind., sanavi, I have healed
2. Perf., subj., sanaverim, I may have healed
3. Perf., inf., sanavisse, to have healed
4. Plupf, ind., sanaveram, I had healed
5. Fluff., subj., sanavissem, I might have healed
6. Put.perf., ind., sanavero, I shall have healed.
FIRST CONJUGATION—ACTIVE. 63
Remark.—Sanatum less um leaves sanat, supine stem, and has four tenses,
viz. :

1. ist sup., sanatum, to heal


2. 2d sup., sanatu, to heal, to be healed
3. Fut., part., sanaturus —a—um, about to heal
4. Fut., inf, sanaturum esse, to be about to heal.

Indicative.
Present, I heal, etc. Imperject, I was healing, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Sano sanamus Sanabam sanabamus
Sanas sanatis San abas san abatis
Sanat sanant. Sanabat sanabant.
Future, I shall heal, etc. Perfect, I have healed, etc.
Sanabo sanabimus Sanavi sanavimus
Sanabis sanabitis Sanavisti sanavistis
Sanabit sanabunt. Sanavit sanaverunt or
—ere.
Pluperfect, I had healed, etc, Future Perfect, I shall have
healed, etc.
Sanaveram sanaveramus Sanavero sanaverimus
Sanaveras sanaveratis Sanaveris sanaveritis
Sanaverat sanaverant. Sanaverit sanaverint.

Subjunctive.
Present I may heal, etc.
, Imperfect I might heal, etc.
,

Sanem sanemus Sanarem sanaremus


Sanes sanetis Sanares sanaretis
Sanet sanent. Sanaret sanarent.
Perfect, I may have healed, Pluperfect, I might have healed,
etc. etc.
Sanaverim sanaverimus Sanavissem sanavissemus
Sanaveris sanaveritis Sanavisses sanavissetis
Sanaverit sanaverint. Sanavisset sanavissent.
64 MEDICAL LATIN.

Imperative.

Present.
Sana, heal thou sanate, heal ye.
Future.
Sanato, thou shalt heal sanatote, ye shall heal
Sanato, he shall heal sananto, they shall heal.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Sanare, to heal. Sanavisse, to have healed.

Future.
Sanaturum esse, to be about to heal.

Participle.
Present. Future.
Sanans —tis, healing. Sanaturus —a—um, about to
heal.

Gerund.
Gen. Sanandi, of healing Acc. Sanandum, healing
Dat. Sanando, to or for Abl. Sanando, by healing,
healing
Supine.
Acc. Sanatum, to heal AM. Sanatu, to heal, be healed.

FIRST CONJUGATION-PASSIVE.
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf Perf. hid.
Sanor, sanari, sanatus sum, to be healed.

SYNOPSIS.
Remark.— The stem sanav doesnot occur in the passive. On the present stem,
sana, are formed eight tenses in the passive. On the supine stem, sanat, are
formed eight tenses in the passive.
FIRST CONJUGATION PASSIVE. 65
Eight upon sana are :

1. Pres., ind., sanor, I am healed


2. Pres., subj., saner, I may be healed
3. Pres., imp., sanare, be thou healed
4. Pres., inf., sanari, to be healed
5. Imperfect, ind., sanabar, I was healed
6. Imperfect, subj., sanarer, I might be healed
7. Put. ind. sanabor, I shall be healed
, ,

8. Gerundive, sanandus —a—urn (one), to be healed

Eight upon sanat are :

1. Perf., part., sanatus —a—um, having been healed


2. Perf., ind., sanatus sum, I have been healed
3. Perf., subj., sanatus sim, I may have been healed
4. Plupf., ind., sanatus eram, I had been healed
5. Plupf. subj., sanatus essem, I might have been healed
6. Put. perf., ind., sanatus ero, I shall have been healed
7. Perf., inf., sanatum esse, to have been healed
8. Put., inf, sanatum iri or fore, to be about to be healed.

Indicative.
Present, I am healed, etc. Imperfect, I was healed, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Sanor sanamur Sanabar sanabamur
Sanaris or sanamini Sanabaris or sanabamini
—re —re
Sanatur sanantur. Sanabatur sanabantur.

Future, I shall be healed, etc. Perfect I


,
have been healed, etc,
Sanabor sanabimur Sanatus sum sanati sumus
Sanaberis or sanabimini Sanatus es sanati estis
—re
Sanabitur sanabuntur. Sanatus est sanati sunt.
66 MEDICAL LATIN

Pluperfect I had been healed,


, Future Perfect I shall have
,

etc. been healed, etc. -

Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.


Sanatus eram sanati eramus Sanatus ero sanati erimus
Sanatus eras sanati eratis Sanatus eris sanati eritis
Sanatus erat sanati erant. Sanatus erit sanati erunt.

Subjunctive.
Present I may be healed, etc.
,
Imperfect I might be healed,
,

etc.
Saner sanemur Sanarer sanaremur
Saneris or sanemini Sanareris or sanaremini
—re —re
Sanetur sanentur. Sanaretur sanarentur.

Perfect I, may have been Pluperfect I might have been


,

healed, etc, healed, etc.


Sanatus sim sanati simus Sanatus essem sanati essemus
Sanatus sis sanati sitis Sanatus esses sanati essetis
Sanatus sit sanati sint. Sanatus esset sanati essent.

Imperative.

Present.
Sanare, be thou healed sanamini, be ye healed.
Future.
Sanator, thou shalt be healed
Sanator, he shall be healed sanantor, they shall be healed.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Sanari, to be healed. Sanatum esse, to have been
healed.
Future.
Sanatum iri, to be about to be healed.

Participle.
Perfect. Gerundive.
Sanatus, healed, having been Sanandus, healed (one), to be
healed. healed.
SECOND CONJUGATION —ACTIVE. 67

SECOND CONJUGATION-ACTIVE.
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.
Misceo, miscere, miscui, mixtum or mistum, to mix.

SYNOPSIS.

Present stem, misce, has nine tenses :

1.Pres., ind., misceo, I mix


2. Pres., subj., misceam, I may mix
3. Pres., imp., misce, mix thou
4. Pres.,part., miscens, mixing
5. Pres., inf., miscere, to mix
6. Imperfect, ind., miscebam, I was mixing
7. Imperfect, subj., miscerera, I might mix
8. Fut., ind., miscebo, I shall mix
9. Gerund, miscendi, of mixing.
Remark. —Perfect stem , miscu, has six tenses :

1.Perf., ind., miscui, I have mixed


2. Perf., subj., miscuerim, I may have mixed
3. Perf., inf., miscuisse, to have mixed
4. Plupf, ind., miscueram, I had mixed
5. Plupf., subj., miscuissem, I might have mixed
6. Put. perf., ind., miscuero, I shall have mixed.
Remark. —Supine stem, mixt, has four tenses :

1. supine, mixtum,
ist to mix
2. 2d supine, mixtu, to mix, be mixed
3. Fut., part., mixturus, about to mix
4. Fut., inf., mixturum esse, to be about to mix.
68 MEDICAL LATIN.

Indicative.
Present I mix, etc.
,
Imperfect, I was mixing, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Misceo miscemus Miscebam miscebamus
Misces miscetis Miscebas miscebatis
Miscet miscent. Miscebat miscebant.
Future, I shall mix, etc. Perfect, I have mixed, etc.
Miscebo miscebimus Miscui miscuimus
Miscebis miscebitis Miscuisti miscuistis
Miscebit miscebunt. Miscuit miscuerunt or
—ere.
Pluperfect, I had mixed, etc. Future Perfect, I shall have
mixed, etc.
Miscueram miscueramus Miscuero miscuerimus
Miscueras miscueratis Miscueris miscueritis
Miscuerat miscuerant. Miscuerit miscuerint.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may mix, etc. Imperfect, I might mix, etc.
Misceam misceamus Miscerem misceremus
Misceas misceatis Misceres misceretis
Misceat misceant. Misceret miscerent.
Perfect I
, may have mixed, etc. Pluperfect, I might have mixed,
etc.
Miscuerim miscuerimus Miscuissem miscuissemus
Miscueris miscueritis Miscuisses miscuissetis
Miscuerit miscuerint. Miscuisset miscuissent.
Imperative.

Present.
Misce, mix thou miscete, mix ye.
Future.
Misceto, thou shalt mix miscetote, ye shall mix
Misceto, he shall mix miscento, they shall mix.
Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Miscere, to mix. Miscuisse, to have mixed.
SECOND CONJUGATION —PASSIVE. 69
Future.
Mixturum esse, to be about to mix.

Participle.

Present. Future.
Miscens, mixing. Mixturus, about to mix.

Gerund.

Gen. Miscendi, of mixing Acc. Miscendum, mixing


Dat. Miscendo, for mixing Abl. Miscendo, by mixing.

Supine.

Acc. Mixtum, to mix Abl. Mixtu, to mix, be mixed.

SECOND CONJUGATION—PASSIVE.
Principal Parts.

Pres. Jnd. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.


Misceor, misceri, mixtus sum.

Remark. —Perfect stem miscu, drops out. On present stem,


, misce, eight
tenses are made.
On supine stem, mixt, eight tenses are made.

SYNOPSIS.

Tenses oti present stem, misce:

1. Pres., ind., misceor, I am mixed


2. Pres., subj., miscear, I may be mixed
3. Pres., imp., miscere, be thou mixed
4. Pres., inf., misceri, to be mixed
5. fmperfect, ind., miscebar. I was mixed
6. Imperfect, subj., raiscerer, I might be mixed
7. Fut., ind., miscebor, I shall be mixed
8. Gerundive, miscendus —a—um (one), to be mixed.
MEDICAL LATIN.

Tenses on supine stem mixt:


,

1. Perf., part., mixtus, having been mixed


2. Perf., ind., mixtus sum, I have been mixed
3. Perf., subj., mixtus sim, I may have been mixed
4. Plupf, ind., mixtus eram, I had been mixed
5. Plupf., subj., mixtus essem, I might have been mixed
6. Put. perf., ind., mixtus ero, I shall have been mixed
7. Perf., inf., mixtum esse, to have been mixed
8. Put., inf., mixtum iri or fore, to be about to be mixed.

Indicative.
Present, I am mixed, etc. Imperfect, I was mixed, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Misceor miscemur Miscebar miscebamur
Misceris or miscemini Miscebaris or miscebamini
—re —re
Miscetur miscentur. Miscebatur miscebantur.
Future, I shall be mixed, etc. Perfect, I have been mixed, etc.
Miscebor miscebimur Mixtus sum mixti sumus
Misceberis or miscebimini Mixtus es mixti estis
—re
Miscebitur miscebuntur. Mixtus est mixti sunt.
Pluperfect, I had been mixed, Future Perfect, I shall have
etc. been mixed, etc.
Mixtus eram mixti eramus Mixtus ero mixti erimus
Mixtus eras mixti eratis Mixtus eris mixti eritis
Mixtus erat mixti erant. Mixtus erit mixti erunt.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may be mixed, etc. Imperfect, I might be mixed, etc.
Miscear misceamur Miscerer misceremur
Miscearis or misceamini Miscereris or misceremini
—re —re
Misceatur misceantur. Misceretur miscerentur.
THIRD CONJUGATION —ACTIVE. 71

Perfect, I may have been Pluperfect I might have been


,

mixed, etc. mixed, etc.


Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Mixtus sim mixti simus Mixtus essem mixti essemus
Mixtus sis mixti sitis Mixtus esses mixti essetis
Mixtus sit mixti sint. Mixtus esset mixti essent.

Imperative.

Present.
Miscere, be thou mixed miscemini, be ye mixed.
Future.
Miscetor, thou shalt be mixed
Miscetor, he shall be mixed miscentor, they shall be mixed.

Infinitive,
Present. Perfect.
Misceri, to be mixed. Mixtum esse, to have been
mixed.
Future.
Mixtum iri, to be about to be mixed.

Participle.

Perfect. Gerundive.
Mixtus, mixed, having been Miscendus, mixed, worthy to be
mixed. mixed.

THIRD CONJUGATION-ACTIVE.
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.
Divide, dividere, divisi, divisum, to divide.

Remark.—Dividere less ere, divid, present stem, has nine tenses. Divisi less
i, divis, perfect stem, has six tenses. Divisum less um, divis, supine stem, has
four tenses. .
72 MEDICAL LATIN.

SYNOPSIS.
Present stem, nine tenses :

1. Pres., ind., divide, I divide


2. Pres., subj., dividam, I may divide
3. Pres., imp., divide, divide thou
4. Pres., part., dividens, dividing
5. Pres., inf, dividere, to divide
6. Imperfect, ind., dividebam, I was dividing
7. Imperfect, subj., dividerem, I might divide
8. Put., ind., dividam, I shall divide
9. Gerund, dividendi, of dividing.

Perfect stem six tenses


,
:

1. Perf., ind., divisi, I have divided


2. Perf., subj., diviserim, I may have divided

3. Perf., inf., divisisse, to have divided


4. Fluff, ind., diviseram, I had divided
5. Fluff., subj., divisissem, I might have divided
6. Fut. perf., ind., divisero, I shall have divided.
Supine stem, four tenses :

1. 1st sup., divisum, to divide


2. 2d sup., divisu, to divide, be divided
3. Ftd., part., divisurus, about to divide
4. Fut., inf., divisurum esse, to be about to divide.

Indicative.
Present, I divide, etc. Imperfect I was dividing, etc,
,

Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.


Divide dividimus Dividebam dividebamus
Dividis dividitis Dividebas dividebatis
Dividit dividunt. Dividebat dividebant.

Future I shall divide, etc.


, Perfect, I have divided, etc.
Dividam dividemus Divisi divisimus
Divides dividetis Divisisti divisistis
Dividet divident. Divisit diviserunt or
—ere.
THIRD CONJUGATION ACTIVE. 73
Pluperfect, I had divided, Future Perfect, I shall have
etc. divided, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Diviseram diviseramus Divisero diviserimus
Diviseras diviseratis Diviseris diviseritis
Diviserat diviserant. Diviserit diviserint.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may divide, etc. Imperfect, I might divide, etc.
Dividam dividamus Dividerem divideremus
Dividas dividatis Divideres divideretis
Dividat dividant. Divideret dividerent.

Perfect ,
I may have divided, Pluperfect I might have
,

etc. divided, etc.


Diviserim diviserimus Divisissem divisissemus
Diviseris diviseritis Divisisses divisissetis
Diviserit diviserint. Divisisset divisissent.

Imperative.

Present.
Divide, divide thou dividite, divide ye.

Future.
Dividito, thou shalt divide dividitote, ye shall divide
Dividito, he shall divide dividunto, they shall divide.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Dividere, to divide. Divisisse, to have divided.

Future.
Divisurum esse, to be about to divide.

Participle.
Present. Future.
Dividens, dividing. Divisurus, about to divide.
MEDICAL LATIN.

Gerund
Gen. Dividendi, of dividing Ace. Dividendum, dividing
Dat. Dividendo, for dividing Abl. Dividendo, by dividing.

Supine.

Ace. Divisum, to divide Abl. Divisu, to divide, be di-


vided.

THIRD CONJUGATION-PASSIVE.
Principal Parts.

Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.


Divider, dividi, divisus sum.

Remark.—Present, active of rnitto is mittere. Present, infinitive,


infinitive,
passive of mitto is mitti. Present, infinitive active of capio is capere. Pres-
ent, infinitive, passive of capio is capi.

SYNOPSIS.

Present stem, divid, has eight tenses :

1.Pres., ind, divider, I am divided


2. Pres., subj., dividar, I may be divided
3. Pres., imp., dividere, be thou divided
4. Pres., inf., dividi, to be divided
5. fmperfect, ind., dividebar, I was divided
6. fmperfect, subj., dividerer, I might be divided
7. Put., ind., dividar, I shall be divided
8. Gerundive, dividendus —a—um, divided, worthy to be
divided.
Eight tenses of supine stem :

1. Perf., part., divisus —a —um, having been divided


2. Perf., ind., divisus sum, I have been divided
3. Perf., subj., divisus sim, I may have been divided
4. Plupf., ind., divisus eram, I had been divided
5. Plupf., subj., divisus essem, I might have been divided
6. Put. perf., ind., divisus ero, I shall have been divided
7. Perf., inf., divisum esse, to have been divided
8. Put., inf., divisum iri or fore, to be about to be divided.
THIRD CONJUGATION—PASSIVE. 75
Indicative.
Present, I am divided, etc. Imperfect, I was divided, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Divider dividimur Dividebar dividebamur
Divideris or dividimini Dividebaris or dividebamini
—re —re
Dividitur dividuntur. Dividebatur dividebantur.
Future, I shall be divided, etc. Perfect, I have been divided,
etc.
Dividar dividemur Divisus sum divisi sumus
Divideris or dividemini Divisus es divisi estis
—re
Dividetur dividentur. Divisus est divisi sunt.

Pluperfect, I had been divided, Future Perfect, I shall have been


etc. divided, etc.
Divisus eram divisi eramus Divisus ero divisi erimus
Divisus eras divisi eratis Divisus eris divisi eritis
Divisus erat divisi erant. Divisus erit divisi erunt.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may be divided, etc. Imperfect, I might be divided,etc.
Dividar dividamur Dividerer divideremur
Dividaris dividamini Dividereris or divideremini
—re
Dividatur dividantur. Divideretur dividerentur.

Perfect, I may have been di- Pluperfect I might have been


,

vided, etc. divided, etc.


Divisus sim divisi simus Divisus essem divisi essemus
Divisus sis divisi sitis Divisus esses divisi essetis
Divisus sit divisi sint. Divisus esset divisi essent.

Imperative.

Present.
Dividere, be thou divided dividimini, be ye divided.
Future.
Dividitor, thou shalt be divided
Dividitor, he shall be divided dividuntor, they shall be divided.
76 MEDICAL LATIN,

Infinitive.
Presetit. Perfect.
Dividi, to be divided. Divisum esse, to have been
divided.
Future.
Divisum iri, to be about to be divided.

Participle.
Perfect. Gerundive.
Divisus, divided, having been Dividendus, divided, worthy to
divided. be divided.

THIRD CONJUGATION-ACTIVE AND PASSIVE.


The io Verbs. “

Remark.— The io verbs of the third conjugation form the present, in-

finitive, active in ere, and the present, infinitive, passive in i.

Principal Parts. .

Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.


Capio, capere, cepi, captum, to take.
Remark.— The six tenses in the active voice formed upon the perfect stem,
cep are regular. The four in the active, and the eight in the passive, upon
,

the supine stem, capt, are regular. Those formed upon the present stem, cap
(capere less ere), are as folloivs ;

SYNOPSIS-ACTIVE.

1. Fres., ind., capio, I take


2. Pres., subj,, capiam, I may take
3. Fres., imp., cape, take thou
4. Pres., part., capiens, taking
5. Pres., inf., capere, to take
6. Imperfect, ind., capiebam, I was taking
7. Imperfect, subj., caperem, I might take
8. Put., ind., capiam, I shall take
9. Gerund, capiendi, of taking.
THIRD CONJUGATION ACTIVE AND PASSIVE. 77

PASSIVE.
1. Pres., ind., capior, I am taken
2. Pres., subj., capiar, I may be taken
3. Pres., imp., capere, be thou taken
4 Pres., inf., capi, to be taken
5. Imperfect, ind., capiebar, I was taken
6. Imperfect, subj., caperer, I might be taken
7. Fut., ind., capiar, I shall be taken
8. Gerundive, capiendus —a —um, taken, worthy to be taken.

Indicative.
Present, I take, etc. Imperfect, I was taking, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Capio capimus Capiebam capiebaraus
Capis capitis Capiebas capiebatis
Capit capiunt. Capiebat capiebant.

Future, I shall take, etc. Perfect, I have taken, etc.


Capiam capiemus Cepi cepimus
Capies capietis Cepisti cepistis
Capiet capient. Cepit ceperuntor —ere.

Pluperfect, I had taken, etc. Future Perfect, I shall have


taken, etc.
Ceperam ceperamus Cepero ceperimus
Ceperas ceperatis Ceperis ceperitis
Ceperat ceperant. Ceperit ceperint.

Subjunctive.
Present I may take, etc.
, Imperfect, I might take, etc.
Capiam capiamus Caperem caperemus
Capias capiatis Caperes caperetis
Capiat capiant. Caperet caperent.
78 MEDICAL LATIN.

Perfect, I may have taken, etc. Pluperfect, I might have taken


etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Ceperim c #eperimus Cepissem cepissemus
Ceperis ceperitis Cepisses cepissetis
Ceperit ceperint. Cepisset cepissent.

Imperative.
Present.
Cape, take thou capite, take ye.
Future.
Capito, thou shalt take capitote, ye shall take
Capito, he shall take capiunto, they shall take.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Capere, to take. Cepisse, to have taken.
Future.
Capturum esse, to be about to take.

Participle.
Present. Future.
Capiens, taking. Capturus, about to take.

Gerund.
Gen. Capiendi, of taking Acc. Capiendum, taking
Dat. Capiendo, for taking Abl. Capiendo, by taking.

Supine.
Acc. Captum, to take Abl. Captu, to take, be taken.

PASSIVE.
Indicative.
Present, I am taken, etc. Imperfect I was taken, etc.
,

Capior capimur Capiebar capiebamur


Caperis or capimini Capiebaris or capiebamini
—re —re
Capitur capiuntur. Capiebatur capiebantur.
THIRD CONJUGATION—ACTIVE AND PASSIVE. 79

Future, I shall be taken, etc. Perfect ,


I have been taken, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural,
Capiar capiemur Captus sum capti sumus
Capieris or capiemini Captus es capti estis
—re
Capietur capientur. Captus est capti sunt.
Pluperfect, I had been taken, Future Perfect, I shall have
etc. been taken, etc.
Captus eram capti eramus Captus ero capti erimus
Captus eras capti eratis Captus eris capti eritis
Captus erat capti erant. Captus erit capti erunt.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may be taken, etc. Imperfect, I might be taken, etc.
Capiar capiamur Caperer caperemur
Capiaris or capiamini Capereris or caperemini
—re —re
Capiatur capiantur. Caperetur caperentur.

Perfect, I may have been taken, Pluperfect , I might have been


etc, taken, etc.
Captus sim capti simus Captus essem capti essemus
Captus sis capti sitis Captus esses capti essetis
Captus sit capti sint. Captus esset capti essent.

Imperative.

Present.
Capere, be thou taken capimini, be ye taken.
Future.
Capitor, thou shalt be taken
Capitor, he shall be taken capiuntor, they shall be taken.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Capi, to be taken. Captum esse, to have been taken.
Future.
Captum iri, to be about to be taken.
MEDICAL LATIN.

Participle.
Perfect. Gerundive.
Captus, taken, having been Capiendus, taken, worthy to be
taken. taken.

FOURTH CONJUGATION-ACTIVE.
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres.Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.
Haurio, haurlre, hausi, haustum, to drink.
Remark.—Plaurire less re, hauri, is the present stem. Hausi less i, haus, is
the perfect stem. Haustum less um, haust, is the supine stem.

SYNOPSIS.
Present system :

1.Pres., ind., haurio, I drink


2. Pres., subj., hauriam, I may drink
3. Pres., imp., hauri, drink thou
4. Pres., part., hauriens, drinking
5. Pres., inf., haurire, to drink
6. Imperfect, ind., hauriebam, I was drinking
7. Imperfect, subj., haurirem, I might drink
8. Put., ind., hauriam, I shall drink
9. Gerund, hauriendi, of drinking.
Perfect system:
1. Perf., ind., hausi, I have drunk
2. Perf., subj., hauserim, I may have drunk
3. Perf., inf., hausisse, to have drunk
4. Fluff, ind., hauseram, I had drunk
5. Fluff, subj., hausissem, I might have drunk
6. Put. perf., ind., hausero, I shall have drunk.
Supine system :

1. 1st sup., haustum, to drink


2. 2d sup., haustu, to drink, be drunk
3. Put., part., hausturus, about to drink
4. Put., inf., hausturum esse, to be about to drink.
FOURTH CONJUGATION—ACTIVE.

Indicative.
Present, I drink, etc. Imperfect, I was drinking, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Haurio haurimus Hauriebam hauriebamus
Hauris hauritis Hauriebas hauriebatis
Haurit hauriunt. Hauriebat hauriebant.

Future, I shall drink, etc. Perfect, I have drunk, etc.


Hauriam hauriemus Hausi hausimus
Hauries haurietis Hausisti hausistis
Hauriet haurient. Hausit hauserunt or
—ere.

Pluperfect, I had drunk, etc. Future Perfect, I shall have


drunk, etc.
Hauseram hauseramus Hausero hauserimus
Hauseras hauseratis Hauseris hauseritis
Hauserat hauserant. Hauserit hauserint.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may drink, etc. Pnperfect, I might drink, etc.
Hauriam hauriamus Haurirem hauriremus
Haurias hauriatis Haurires hauriretis
Hauriat hauriant. Hauriret haurirent.

Perfect, I may have drunk, Pluperfect I might have


,

etc. drunk, etc.


Hauserim hauserimus Hausissem hausissemus
Hauseris hauseritis Hausisses hausissetis
Hauserit hauserint. Hausisset hausissent.

Imperative.

Present.
Hauri, drink thou hauri te, drink ye.
Future.
Haurito, thou shalt drink hauritote, ye shall drink
Haurito, he shall drink hauriunto, they shall drink.
82 MEDICAL LATIN.

Infinitive..
Present. Perfect.
Haurire, to drink. Hausisse, to have drunk.
Future.
Hausturum esse, to be about to drink.

Participle.

Present. Future.
Hauriens, drinking. Hausturus, about to drink.

Gerund.
Gen. Hauriendi, of drinking Acc. Hauriendum, drinking
Dat. Hauriendo, for drinking Abl. Hauriendo, by drinking.

Supine.

Acc. Haustum, to drink Abl. Haustu, to drink, be


drunk.

FOURTH CONJUGATION-PASSIVE.
Principal Parts.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Haurior, haurlri, haustus sum.

SYNOPSIS.
Eight tenses upon hauri:
r. Pres., ind., haurior, I am drunk
2. Pres., subj., hauriar, I may be drunk
3. Pres., imp., haurlre, be thou drunk
4. Pres., inf., haurlri, to be drunk
5. Imperfect, ind., hauri ebar, I was drunk
6. Imperfect, sttbj., haurirer, I might be drunk
7. Put., ind., hauriar, I shall be drunk
8. Gerundive, hauriendus —a—um, drunk, worthy to be
drunk.
FOURTH CONJUGATION—PASSIVE. 83
Eight tenses made upon haust:
1. Perf., part., haustus, drunk, having been drunk
2. Perf., ind., haustus sum, I have been drunk
3. Perf., subj., haustus sim, I may have been drunk
4. Fluff., ind., haustus eram, I had been drunk
5. Fluff, subj., haustus essem, I might have been drunk
6. Fut. perf., ind., haustus ero, I shall have been drunk
7. Perf., inf., haustum esse, to have been drunk
8. Fut., inf., haustum iri or fore, to be about to be drunk.

Indicative.
Present, I am drunk, etc. Imperfect, I was drunk, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Haurior haurimur Hauriebar hauriebamur
Hauriris or haurimini Hauriebaris hauriebamini
—re or —re
Hauritur hauriuntur. Hauriebatur hauriebantur.
Future, I shall be drunk, Perfect, I have been drunk,
etc. etc.
Hauriar hauriemur Haustus sum hausti sumus
Haurieris or hauriemini Haustus es hausti estis
—re
Haurietur haurientur. Haustus est hausti sunt.

Pluperfect, I had been drunk, Future Perfect, I shall have


etc. been drunk, etc.
Haustus eram hausti eramus Haustus ero hausti erimus
Haustus eras hausti eratis Haustus eris hausti eritis
Haustus erat hausti erant. Haustus erit hausti erunt.

Subjunctive.
Present, I may be drunk, etc. Imperfect, I might be drunk,
etc.
Hauriar hauriamur Haurirer hauriremur
Hauriaris or hauriamini Haurireris or hauriremini
—re —re
Hauriatur hauriantur. Hauriretur haurirentur.
84 MEDICAL LATIN.

Perfect, I may have been Pluperfect, I might have been


drunk, etc. drunk, etc.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Haustus sim hausti simus Haustus essem hausti essemus
Haustus sis hausti sitis Haustus esses hausti essetis
Haustus sit hausti sint. Haustus esset hausti essent.

Imperative.
4
Present.
Haurire, be thou drunk haurimini, be ye drunk. •

Future.
Hauritor, thou shalt be drunk
Hauritor, he shall be drunk hauriuntor, they shall be drunk.

Infinitive.
Present. Perfect.
Hauriri, to be drunk. Haustum esse,to have been drunk.
Future.
Haustum iri, to be about to be drunk.

Participle.
Perfect. Gerundive.
Haustus, drunk, having been Hauriendus, drunk, worthy to be
drunk. drunk.

DEPONENT VERBS.
Remark. —Deponent verbs have regular passiveforms with active meanings.

FIRST CONJUGATION.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Jnd.
Conar, conari, conatus sum, to try.

EXAMPLES.
Conatur, he tries.
Conetur, let him try, he may try.
Conatus, having tried.
Conatus est, he has tried.
DEPONENT VERBS, 85
Remark.— These verbs have the regular passive meaning for the gerundive.
They omit the future, infinitive form, conatum iri, and substitute the regular
future, infinitive, active, conaturum esse. They have five other active forms,
viz.:
Pres., part., conans, trying
Put., part., conaturus, about to try
Gerund, conandi, of trying
ist sup., conatum, to try
2d sup., conatu, to try, be tried.

SECOND CONJUGATION.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Vereor, vereri, veritus sum, to fear.

FOURTH CONJUGATION.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Potior, potiri, potitus sum, to obtain.
Remark.—In the above three conjugations, the present, infinitive ends in ari,
eri, and Iri respectively.

THIRD CONJUGATION—“ O” Verbs.


Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Utor, uti, usus sum, to use.


IO ”
Verbs.

Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.


Morior, mori, mortuus sum, to die.
Remark. —In the present infinitive in this conjugation, the r is absent (be-
forethe final vowel). Compare —

Inf. Act. Inf. Pass.


Mittere, mitti.
Solvere, solvi.
86 MEDICAL LATIN.

IRREGULAR VERBS.
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind.
Volo, velle, volui, to wish, be willing
Nolo, nolle, nolui, to be unwilling
Malo, malle, malui, to prefer.

ACTIVE VOICE.

Indicative.
Present.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Volo volumus Nolo nolumus
Vis vultis Nonvis nonvultis
Vult volunt. Nonvult nolunt.
Sing. Plural.
Malo malumus
Mavis mavultis
Mavult malunt.
Imperfect.
Volebam volebamus Nolebam nolebamus
Volebas volebatis Nolebas nolebatis
Volebat valebant. Nolebat nolebant.

Malebam malebamus
Malebas malebatis
Malebat malebant.
Future.
Volam volemus Nolam nolemus
Voles voletis Noles noletis
Volet volent. Nolet nolent.

Malam malemus
Males maletis
Malet rnalent.
IRREGULAR VERBS. 87
Perfect.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Volui voluimus Nolui noluimus
Voluisti voluistis Noluisti noluistis
Voluit voluerunt or Noluit noluerunt or
—ere. —ere.

Sing. Plural.
Malui maluimus
Maluisti maluistis
Malui t maluerunt or —ere.
Pluperfect.
Volueram volueramus Nolueram nolueramus
Volueras volueratis Nolueras nolueratis
Voluerat voluerant. Noluerat noluerant.
Malueram malueramus
Malueras malueratis
Maluerat maluerant.
Future Perfect.
Voluero voluerimus Noluero noluerimus
Volueris volueritis Nolueris nolueritis
Voluerit voluerint. Noluerit noluerint.

Maluero maluerimus
Malueris malueritis
Maluerit maluerint.

Subjunctive.

Present.
Velim velimus Nolim nolimus
Velis velitis Nolis nolitis
Velit velint. Nolit nolint.

Malim malimus
Malis malitis
Malit malint.
88 MEDICAL LATIN

Imperfect.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Vellem vellemus Nollem nollemus
Velles velletis Nolles nolletis
Vellet vellent, Nollet nollent.
Sing. Plural.
Mallem mallemus
Malles malletis
Mallet mallent.
Perfect.
Voluerirn voluerimus Noluerim noluerimus
Volueris volueritis Nolueris nolueritis
Voluerit voluerint. Noluerit noluerint.
Maluerim maluerimus
Malueris malueritis
Maluerit maluerint.
Pluperfect.
Voluissem voluissemus Noluissem noluissemus
Voluisses voluissetis Noluisses noluissetis
Voluisset voluissent. Noluisset noluissent.
Maluissem maluissemus
Maluisses maluissetis
Maluisset maluissent.
Imperative.

Present.
Noli, be thou unwilling nolite, be ye unwilling.
Future.
Nolito, thou shall be unwilling
Nolito, he shall be unwilling nolunto, they shall be unwilling

Infinitive.
Present.
Velle. Nolle. Malle.
IRREGULAR VERBS. 89
Perfect.
Voluisse. Noluisse. Maluisse.

Participle.

Present.
Volens. Nolens.

IRREGULAR VERBS-(Continued).
Pres. Ind. Pres. Inf. Perf. Ind. Supine.
Eo, Ire, ivi, itum, to go
Fero, ferre, tuli, latum, to bear.

Indicative.
Present.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Eo imus Fero ferimus
Is itis Fers fertis
It eunt. Fert ferunt.
Ijnperfect.
Ibam ibamus Ferebam ferebamus
Ibas ibatis Ferebas ferebatis
Ibat ibant. Ferebat ferebant.
Future.
Ibo ibimus Feram feremus
Ibis ibitis Feres feretis
Ibit ibunt. Feret ferent.

Perfect.
Ivi ivimus Tuli tulimus
Ivisti ivistis Tulisti tulistis
Ivit iverunt or Tnlit tulerunt or
—ere. —ere.
90 MEDICAL LATIN.

Pluperfect.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Iveram iveramus Tuleram tuleramus
Iveras iveratis Tuleras tuleratis
Iverat iverant. Tulerat tulerant.

Future Perfect.
Ivero iverimus Tulero tulerimus
Iveris iveritis Tuleris tuleritis
Iverit iverint. Tulerit tulerint.

Subjunctive.
Present.
Earn eamus Feram feramus
Eas eatis Feras feratis
Eat eant. Ferat ferant.

Imperfect.
Irem iremus Ferrem ferremus
Ires iretis Ferres ferretis
Iret irent. Ferret ferrent.

Perfect.
Iverim iverimus Tulerim tulerimus
Iveris iveritis Tuleris tuleritis
Iverit iverint. Tulerit tulerint.

Pluperfect.
Ivissem ivissemus Tulissem tulissemus
Ivisses ivissetis Tulisses tulissetis
Ivisset ivissent. Tulisset tulissent.

Imperative.

Present.
I, go thou ite, go ye. Fer, bear thou ferte, bear ye.
IRREGULAR VERBS. 91

Future.
Ito, thou shalt go Ferto, thou shalt bear
Ito, he shall go Ferto, he shall bear
Itote, ye shall go Fertote, ye shall bear
Eunto, they shall go. Ferunto, they shall bear.

Infinitive.
Present.
Ire, to go. Ferre, to bear.

Perfect.
Ivisse, to have gone. Tulisse, to have borne.

Future.
Iturum esse, to be about to Laturum esse, to be about to
g°- bear.

Participle.

Present.
lens, going. Ferens, bearing.

Future.
Iturus, about to go. Laturus, about to bear.

Gerund.
Gen. Eundi, of going Gen. Ferendi, of bearing
Dat. Eundo, for going Dat. Ferendo, for bearing
Acc. Eundum, going Acc. Ferendum, bearing
Abl. Eundo, by going. Abl. Ferendo, by bearing.

Supine.

Acc. Itum, to go. Acc. Latum, to bear.


Abl. Itu, to go. Abl. Latu, to bear, be borne.
92 MEDICAL LATIN.

PASSIVE VOICE.
Feror, to be borne, passive of fero.
Fio, to be made, to become, passive of facio.
Remark. —For entire active voice of facio, see capio. Except present, ini
perative, active, second, singular, which omitsfinal e : fac ; otherwise regular

Indicative.

Present.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Feror ferimur Fio fimus
Ferris or ferimini Fis fitis
—re
Fertur feruntur. Fit fiunt.
Imperfect.
Ferebar ferebamur Fiebam fiebamus
Ferebaris or ferebamini Fiebas fiebatis
—re
Ferebatur ferebantur. Fiebat fiebant.
Future.
Ferar feremur Fiam fiemus
Fereris or feremini Fies fietis
—re
Feretur ferentur. Fiet fient.

Perfect.
Latus sum lati sumus Factus sum facti sumus
Latus es lati estis Factus es facti estis
Latus est lati sunt. Factus est facti sunt.
Pluperfect.
Latus eram lati eramus Factus eram facti eramus
Latus eras lati eratis Factus eras facti eratis
Latus erat lati erant. Factus erat facti erant.
Future Perfect.
Latus ero lati erimus Factus ero facti erimus
Latus eris lati eritis Factus eris facti eritis
Latus erit lati erunt. Factus erit facti erunt.
IRREGULAR VERBS. 93

Subjunctive.

Present.
Sing. Plural. Sing. Plural.
Ferar feramur Fiam fiamus
Feraris or feramini Fias fiatis
—re
Feratur ferantur. Fiat fiant.

Imperfect.
Ferrer ferremur Fierem fieremus
Ferreris or ferremini Fieres fieretis
—re
Ferretur ferrentur. Fieret fierent.

Perfect.
Latus sim lati simus Factus sim facti simus
Latus sis lati sitis Factus sis facti sitis
Latus sit lati sint. Factus sit facti sint.

Pluperfect.
Latus essem lati essemus Factus essem facti essemus
Latus esses lati essetis Factus esses facti essetis
Latus esset lati essent. Factus esset facti essent.

Imperative.

Present.
Ferre ferimini. Fi fite.

Future.
Fertor Fito fitote
Fertor feruntor. Fito fiunto.

Infinitive.
Present.
Ferri. Fieri.
94 MEDICAL LATIN.

Perfect.
Latum esse. Factum esse.
Future.
Latum iri. Futurum esse or fore.

Participle.

Perfect.
Latus. Factus.

Gerundive.
Ferendus. Faciendus.

PERIPHRASTIC CONJUGATION.
Remark. The active voice is formed by annexing forms of sum to th,

future, active participle, and the passive voice is formed by annexingforms o


,

y
sum to the gerundive.

SYNOPSIS-ACTIVE

Indicative.
Pres., sanaturus sum, I am going to heal
Imperfect, sanaturus eram, I was going to heal
Fut., sanaturus ero, I shall be going to heal
Perf., sanaturus fui, 1 have been going to heal
Plupf., sanaturus fueram, I had been going to heal
Fut., perf., sanaturus fuero, I shall have been going to heal.

Subjunctive.

Pres., sanaturus sim, I may be going to heal


Imperfect, sanaturus essem, I might be going to heal
Perf., sanaturus fuerim, I may have been going to heal
Plupf., sanaturus fuissem, I might have been going to heal.

Infinitive.
Pres., sanaturum esse, to be going to heal
Perf., sanaturum fuisse, to have been going to heal.
PERIPHRASTIC CONJUGATION. 95

PASSIVE VOICE.
Indicative.
Fres., sanandus sum, I have to be healed
Imperfect, sanandus eram, I had to be healed
Fut., sanandus ero, I shall have to be healed
Perf., sanandus fui, I have had to be healed
Fluff, sanandus fueram, I had had to be healed
Fut., perf., sanandus fuero, I shall have had to be healed

Subjunctive.
Fres., sanandus sim, I may have to be healed
Imperfect, sanandus essem, I might have to be healed
Perf., sanandus fuerim, I may have had to be healed
Fluff., sanandus fuissem, I might have had to be healed.

Infinitive.
Fres., sanandum esse, to have to be healed
Perf., sanandum fuisse, to have had to be healed.
LATIN-ENGL1SH VOCABULARY.

1. Abacus —i, m., shelf, bench 31. Amentia —se, f., total loss of
2. Abdomen —inis, n., abdomen mind
3. Abscessus —us, m., abscess 32. Ammonia —se, f., ammonia
4. Absens —tis, adj., absent 33. Ammonium —i, n., ammonium
5. Absinthium —i, n., wormwood 34. Amplus —a—um, adj., large,
6. Acacia —se, f., acacia great
7. Acerbus —a —um, adj., sour 35. Amygdala —se, f., almond
8. Acetas —atis, m., acetate 36. Amylum —i, n., starch
9. Acetum —i, n., vinegar 37. Ana, adv., of each
10. Acidum —i, n., acid 38. Anasarca —se, f., water in the
11. Acies —ei, f., edge flesh
12. Aconitum —i, n., aconite 39. Angina —se, f., quinsy
13. Ad (prep, with acc.), to or for 40. Anima —se, f, vital principle
14. Addo, addfere, addidi, additum, 41. Animal —is, n., animal
to add 42. Animalculuift —i, n microscopic
,

15. Adeps —ipis, m., fat animal


16. Adhuc, adv., while, as yet 43. Animus —i, m., life, mind
17. Adstans —tis, adj., present 44. Annus —i, m., year
18. /Egrotus —a—um, adj., sick 45. Antalgia —se, f., pain, ache
19. —is—e, adj., equal 46. Antea, adv., before
20. —atis, f., age 47. Antidotum —i, n., antidote
21. Agito, agitare, agitavi, agitatum, 48. Antimonium —i, n., antimony
to shake 49. Anus —i, m., orifice of rectum
22. Albumen —inis, n., albumen 50. Apex —icis, m., top
23. Albus —a—um, adj., white 51. Apotheca —se, f., shop
24. Alcohol —is, m., alcohol 52. Aqua —se, f., water
25. Alternus —a—um, adj., alter- 53. Arnica —se, f., arnica
nate 54. Aromaticus —a—um, aromatic
26. Alumen —inis, n., alum 55. Ars —tis, f., art, skill
27. Aluta —se, f., thin leather 56. Arsenium —i, n., arsenic
28. Alveolus —i, m., cavity, socket 57. Articulus —i, m., joint
29. Alvus 5, f., belly

58. Artus —us, m., joint


30. Amarus —a—um, adj., bitter 59. Ater, atra, atrum, coal-black
LATIN-ENGLISH VOCABULARY.
97
60. Atlas —antis, m., first vertebra 95- Capsula —se, f., capsule
61. Audio, audlre, audivi, auditum, 96. Caput —ids, n., head
to hear 97. Carbo —onis, m., charcoal car-
62. Auditus —us, m., sense of hear- bon
ing 98. Carbonas —atis, m., carbonate
63. Aurantium —i, n., orange 99. Cardamomum —i, n., cardamom
64. Auricula —re, f., auricle 100. Caries —ei, f., decay
65. Auris —is, f., ear 101. Caro —nis, f., flesh
66. Axis —is, m., second vertebra 102. Carpus —i, m., wrist

67. Balbuties —ei, f., stammering 103. Cataplasma —atis, n., poultice
68. Balneum —i, n., bath 104. Catarrhus —i, m., catarrh
69. Balsamum —i, n., balsam 105. Catharticus —a—um, adj., ca-
70. Basis —is, f., base thartic
71. Bene, adv., well 106. Celia —se, f., cell
72. Bichloras —atis, m., bichlorate 107. Cera —se, f., wax
73. Bilis —is, m., bile 108. Ceratus —a—um, adj., waxen
74. Bis, adv., twice 109. Cerebellum —i, n., the little
75. Bismuthum —i, n., bismuth brain
76. Bitartras —atis, m., bitartrate no. Cerebralis —is-e, adj., cere-
77. Bonus —a—um, adj., good bral
78. Bougia —se, f., bougie 111. Cerebrum —i, n., larger brain
79. Bulla —m, f., lump, ball 112. Cerumen —inis, ear-wax
80. Bullio, bullire, bullivi, bullitum, 113. Chartula —se, f., powder-paper
to boil 114. Cheiragra —se, f., gout in the
81. Cadaver —is, n., corpse hand
82. Cado, cadere, cecidi, casum, to 115. Cheirurgus —i, m., surgeon
fall 116. Chemia —se, f., chemistry
83. Calamus —i, m., writing-pen 117. Chemicus —a—um, adj.,
84. Calculus —i, m., pebble, stone chemic
85. Caleo, calere, calui, to be 118. Chemicus —i, m., chemist
warm 119. Chloras —atis, m., chlorate
86. Calidus —a—um, adj., hot 120. Chloridum —i, n., chloride

87. Calor —is, m., heat 121. Chloroformum —i, n., chloro-
88. Calvities —ei, f., baldness form
89. Camphora —ae, f., camphor 122. Cholera —se, f., cholera

90. Cancer —cri, m., cancer 123. Cibus —i, m., food
91. Canities —ei, f., grayness of 124. Cicatrix —icis, f., scar
hair 125. Cilium —i, n., eyelash
92. Capillus —i, m., hair of the 126. Cinchona —se, f., cinchona
head X27. Cinnamomum —i, n., cinnamon
93. Capio, capfere, cepi, captum, to 128. Clams —a—um, adj., distin-
take guished
94. Capsicum —i, n., Cayenne 129. Claudo, claudfere, clausi, clau-
pepper sum, to close

9
98 MEDICAL LATIN.

130. Clinicus —a—um, adj.,clinical 159- Copaiba —ae, f., copaiba


13 1.Cocaina —ae, f., cocaine 160. Copia —se, f., abundance, plenty
132. Cochleare —is, n., a spoon 161. Coquo, coquere, coxi, coctum,
133. Cochleare magnum vel amplum, to boil
tablespoon 162. Cor —dis, n., heart
134. Cochleare medium, dessertspoon 163. Corpus —oris, n., body
135. Cochleare parvum, teaspoon 164. Corpusculum —i, n., corpuscle
136. Coctio —onis, f., boiling 165. Cortex —icis, m. and f., bark
137. Coitus —us, m., sexual inter- 166. Costa —se, f., rib
course 167. Cranium —i, n., skull
138. Colluvies —ei, f., filth 168. Crinis —is, m., hair
139. Collyrium —i, n., eye-wash 169. Cruditas —atis, m., indigestion
140. Colo, colare, colavi, colatum, to 170. Cruentus —a—urn, adj., bloody
filter, strain 171. Crus —ris, n., leg
141. Colocynthis —idis, f., colo- 172. Cum, prep, with abb, with
cynth 173. Cura —ae, f., care
142. Colum —i, n., a filter 174. Curo, curare, curavi, curatum,
143. Comes —itis, m. and f., com- to cure
panion 175. Cutis —is, f., skin
144. Communis —is—e, adj., com- 176. Cyathus —i, m., wineglass
mon 177- Decern, ind. num. adj., ten
145. Compositus —a—um, adj., 178. Dedecus —oris, n., disgrace
compound 179. Deglutio, deglutlre, to swallow
146. Concido, concidfere, concidi, 180. Deicio, deicere, deieci, deiec-
concisum, to cut up tum, to throw up
147. Condensatio —onis, f., conden- 181. Dein, adv., then
sation 182. Deleo, delere, delevi, deletum,
148. Congestio —onis, f., congestion to destroy
149. Congius —i, m., gallon 183. Destillatus —a—um, distilled
150. Conium —i, n., poison hem- 184. Dies —ei, m. and f., day
lock 185. Dico, dicere, dixi, dictum, to
151. Conor, conafi, conatus sum, to name, say
attempt (dep.) 186. Digitalis —is, f., fox-glove
152. Consilium —i, n., plan 187. Dilutus —a—um, adj., dilute
153. Conspectus —us, m., view, 188. Diphtheria ae, f., diphtheria

sight 189. Discipulus —i, m., scholar


154. Consumptio —onis, f., con- 190. Dispensatorium —i, n., dispen-
sumption satory
155. Contagiosus —a—um, adv., X91. Divide, dividere, divisi, divisum,
contagious to divide
156. Contundo, contundSre, contudi, 192. Do, dare, dedi, datum, to give
contusum, to pound, crush 193. Doctus —a—um, learned
157. Contusus—a —um, adj.,crushed 194. Donee, conj., until
158. Convulsio —onis, f., convulsion 195. Dorsalis —is—e, adj., dorsal
LATIN-ENGLISH VOCABULARY. 99

196. Dorsum —i, n., back 232. Femur —oris, n., thigh
197. Dosis —is, f., dose 233. Ferina —ae, f., flesh of wild
198. Drachma —ae, f., drachm animals
199. Ducenti —ae—a, num. adj., two 234. Fermentura —i, n., ferment
hundred 235. Fero, ferre, tuli, latum, to bear
200. Ductqs —us, m., duct 236. Ferrum —i, n., iron
201. Dulcis —is—e, adj., sweet 237. Fervidus —a—um, adj warm ,

202. Duo —ae—o, num. adj., two 238. Filtro, filtrare, filtravi, filtratum,
203. Duodecim, ind. num. adj., to filter
twelve 239. Filtrum —i, n., a filter
204. Duodeviginti, ind. num. adj., 240. Finis —is, m., end
eighteen 241. Flavus —a—um, adj., yellow
205. Durus —a—um, adj , hard 242. P'luidus —a—um, adj., fluid
206. Dyspepsia —ae,f.,adj.,dyspepsia 243. Fluxus —us, m., flux
207. Dyspepticus —a —um, dyspeptic 244. Foeniculum —i, n., fennel
208. Emeticum —i, n., emetic 245. Foetus —us, m , unborn child
209. Emissio —onis, f., emission 246. Fontanus —a —um, adj., foun-
210. Emplastrum —i, n., plaster tain, of fountain
211. Emulsio —onis, f., emulsion 247. Foramen —inis, n., orifice
212. Enema —atis, n., clyster 248. Formula —ae, f., formula
213. Eo, ire, ivi, itum, to go 249. Fractura —ae, f., fracture
214. Ergota —ae, f., ergot 250. Fractus —a —um, adj., broken
215. Essentia —ae, f., essence 251. Frigidus —a —um, adj., cold
216. Et, conj., and 252. Frons —tis, f., brow
217. Euonymus —i, m., the plant 253. Fuscus —a —um, adj., brown
wahoo 254. Galbanum —i, n., galbanum
218. Exactus —a—um, adj., exact 255. Gelatina —ae, f, gelatine
219. Exprimo, exprimere, express!, 256. Gena —ae, {., cheek
expressum, to drop, press out 257. Genus —eris, n., kind
220. Ex tempore, upon the moment 258. Germen —inis, n., germ
221. Extendo, extendSre, extendi, 259. Glycerinum —i, n., glycerine
extensum, to apply, spread 260. Glycyrrhiza —ae, f., liquorice
222. Extractum —i, n., extract 261. Gradatim, adv., gradually
223. Facies —ei, f., face 262. Granum —i, n., grain
224. Facio, facere, feci, factum, to 263. Gratus —a—um, pleasing
make 264. Gravis —is—e, adj., heavy,
225. Farina —ae, f., meal, flour severe
226. Fascia —ae, f., fibrous mem- 265. Guaiacum —i, n., guaiacum
brane, bandage 266. Gustus —us, m., sense of taste
227. Febricula —ae, f., slight fever 267. Gutta —ae, f., drop
228. Febrilis —is—e, adj., febrile 268. Ifabeo, habere, habui, habitum,
229. Febris —is, f., fever to have, to keep
230. Femina —ae, f., woman 269. Flaurio, haurlre, hausi, haus-
231. Femoralis —is—e, adj., femoral tum, to drink
MEDICAL LATIN.

270. Haustus —us, m., draught 303. Latus —a—um, adj., broad
271. Hebdomada —se, f., week 304. Laxatus a—um, adj., loosened

272. Helix —icis, f., external ear 305. Laxo, laxare, laxavi, laxatum,
273. Hepar —atis, n., liver to relax
274. Herba —se, f., herb 306. Lenis —is—e, adj., gentle
275. Hie, hsec, hoc, this 307. Lentus —a —um, adj., sticky
276. Homo —inis, m., man, man- 308. Leviter, adv., slightly
kind 309. Levo, levare, levavi, levatum, to
277. Hora —se, f., hour relieve
278. Hydrargyrum —i, n., quick- 3x0. Liber —bri, m., book
silver 3x1. Libra —se, f., pound
279. Hydrastis —idis, f., golden seal 312. Lignum —i, n., wood
280. Hydrobromas —atis, m., hydro- 313. Limon —is, f., lemon
bromate 314. Limpidus —a—um, adj., clear
281. Hydrochloricus —a—um, adj., 315. Lingua —se, f., tongue
hydrochloric 316. Linimentum —i., n., liniment
282. Hydrophobia —se, f., hydro- 317. Liquor —is, m., fluid, liquid
phobia 318. Loco, locare, locavi, locatum,
283. lalapa —se, f., jalap to place
284. Idem, eadem, idem, adj., the 319. Longus —a—um, adj., long
same 320. Lotio —onis, f., wash, lotion
285. Idoneus —a—um, adj., suitable 321. Lotus —a—um, adj., washed
286. Ignis —is, m., fire 322. Macero, macerare, maceravi,
287. In, prep, with abl., in, on maceratum, to soak
288. In, prep, with acc., into 323. Macies —ei, f., wasting
289. In die, adv. ph., daily 324. Macula se, f., spot

290. Inertia —se, f., inactivity 325. Madidus —a—um, adj., wet
291. Inflammatio —onis, f., inflam- 326. Magister —tri, m., master
mation 327. Magnesia —se, f., magnesia
292. Inicio, inicSre, inieci, iniectum, 328. Magnus —a—um, adj., large
to inject 329. Malo, malle, malui, to prefer
293. Iniuria —se, f., injury 330. Malus —a—um, adj., bad
294. Insero, insere, inserui, insertum, 331. Mamilla —se, f., nipple
to introduce 332. Mamma —se, f., breast
295. Intestinum —i, n., intestine 333. Mane, adv., in the morning
296. Introitus —us, m., entrance 334. Manus —us, f., hand
297. Involve, involvfere, involvi, 5n- 335. Massa —se, f., mass
volutum, to wrap up 336. Materia —se, f., matter
298. lugulum —i, n., neck 337. Maxilla —se, f., jaw-bone
299. Labium —i, n., lip 338. Medicamentarius —i, m., drug-
300. Labor —is, m., labor gist
301. Lacrima —se, f., tear 339. Medicamentum —i, n., drug
302. Languesco, languescSre, to be 340. Medicatus —a—um, adj., medi-
faint cated
LATIN-ENGLISH VOCABULARY.

341. Medicina ae, f., medicine


376. Nomen —inis, n., name


342. Medicinus —a—um, adj., me 377. Non, adv., not
dicinal 378. Norma ae, f., standard

343. Medicus —i, in., physician, 379- Novem, ind. num. adj.,nine
doctor 380. Novus —a—um, adj., new
344. Medius —a—um, adj., middle 381. Nox, noctis, f., night
345. Membrana ae, f., membrane

382. Nucha —se, f., nape of the neck


346. Mens —tis, f., mind 383. Numerus —i, m., number
347. Mensura —se, f., measure 384. Occiput —itis, n., base of the
348. Mentha —06, f., mint head
349. Minimum —i, n., minim 385. Octaginta, ind. num. adj.,eighty
350. Minutus —a—um, adj., minute 386. Octarius —i, m., pint
351. Misceo, miscere, miscui, mix- 387. Octo, num. adj., eight
turn or mistum, to mix 388. Oculus —i, m., the eye
352. Miseria ae, f., distress

389. Odoratus —a—um, adj., per-


353. Mistura se, {., mixture

fumed
354. Mitis —is—e, adj., mild 390. Oleum —i, n., oil
355. Mitto, mittere, misi, missum, to 391. Oleoresina —ae, {., oleoresin
send 392. Olfactus —us, m., sense ofsemll
356. Molimen —inis, n., bearing- 393. Omnis —is—e, adj., all
down pain 394. Opium —i, n., opium
357. Mollifies —ei, f., softening 395. Organum —i, n., organ
358. Morbus —i, m., disease 396. Os, oris, n., mouth
359. Morior, mori, mortuus sum, to 397. Os, ossis, n., bone
die 398. Ovum —i, n., egg
360. Morphina se, f., morphine

399. Oxalicus —a—um, adj., oxalic


361. Morrhua —ae, f., morrhua 400. Pallidus —a—um, adj., pale
362. Mors —tis, m., death 401. Par, par, par; gen., paris, adj.,
363. Mos, moris, m., manner equal
364. Motor —is, m., mover 402. Paro, parare, paravi, paratum,
365. Moveo, movere, movi, motum, to prepare
to stir 403. Pars —tis, f., part
366. Mucilago —inis, f., mucilage 404. Particula —ge, f., particle
367. Multus —a—um, adj., much 405. Partitio —onis, f., division
368. Muriaticus —a—um, adj., mu- 406. Partus —us, m., birth, partu-
riatic rition
369. Musculus —i, m., muscle 407. Parvus —a—um, adj., small
370. Naevus —i, m., birthmark 408. Patella —ae, knee-pan
371. Naris —is, f., nostril 409. Pediluvium —i, n., foot-bath
372. Nasus —i, m., nose 4x0. Pelvis —is, f., pelvis, basin
373. Nebula —se, f., haze 4x1. Per, prep, with acc., through
374. Nervus —i, m., a nerve 412. Peritus —a—um, adj., skilled
375. Nolo, nolle, nolui, to be un- 413. Persiccus —a—um, adj., very
willing dry
102 MEDICAL LATIN.

414. Pertussis —is, f., whooping- 443- Puer —i, m., boy
cough 444. Pulcher —chra—chrum, adj.,
415. Pes, pedis, m., foot beautiful
416. Phosphoricus —a—um, adj., 445. Pulpa —ae, f., pulp
phosphoric 446. Pulsus —us, m., pulse
417. Pilula —se, f., pill 447. Pulvis —eris, m., powder
418. Pimenta —se, f., allspice 448. Purus —a—um, adj., pure
419. Piper —is, n., pepper 449. Pustula —se, f., pustule
420. Piperatus —a—um, adj., pep- 450. Quantitas —atis, f., quantity
pery, of pepper 451. Quantum vis, as much as you
421. Plumbum —i, n., lead please
422. Pluvialis —is—e, adj., rainy, of 452. Quartus —a—um, adj., fourth
rain 453- Quassia —se, f., quassia
423. Poculum —i, n., cup 454. Quater, adv., four times
424. Poms —i, m., pore 455. Quattuor, ind. num. adj., four
425. Possum, posse, potui, to be able 456. Quattuordecim, ind. num. adj.,
426. Post, prep, with acc., after fourteen
427. Potassa —se, f., caustic potash 457. Que, conj., and
428. Potassium —i, n., kalium or 458. Qui, quse, quod, who, which,
potash what
429. Potior, potiri, potitus sum, to 459- Quindecim, ind. num. adj.,
gain possession of fifteen
430. Poto, potare, potavi, potatum, to 460. Quinina —as, f., quinine
drink 461. Quinque, ind. num. adj., five
431. Potus —us, m., draught 462. Quisque, quseque, quidque, adj.,
432. Prseparatio —onis, f., prepara- each, every
tion 463. Rabies —ei, f., madness
433. Prseparatus —a—um, adj., pre- 464. Radix —icis, f., root
pared 465. Rado, radere, rasi, rasum, to
434. Prseputium —i, n., foreskin shave, trim
435. Prsescribo, prsescribere, prse- 466. Rarus —a—um, adj., porous
scripsi, prsescriptum, to pre- 467. Rasus —a—um, adj., shaved,
scribe trimmed
436. Prsescriptio —onis, f., prescrip- 468. Recipio, recipere, recepi, recep-
tion tum, to take
437. Prsescriptum —i, n., prescrip- 469. Rectum —i, n., straight gut
tion 470. Reicio, reic6re, reieci, reiectum,
438. Primus —a—um, adj., first to throw back
439. Processus —us, m., projection 471. Remedium —i, n., remedy
440. Prolapsus —us, m., slipping 472. Repeto, repetere, repetivi, repe-
forward titum, to repeat
441. Prosum, prodesse, profui, to 473. Resina —se, f., resin
profit 474. Ricinus —i, f., castor-oil plant
442. Puella —se, f., girl 475. Rosa —se, f., rose
LATIN-ENGLISH VOCABULARY.

476. Roseola —ae, f., rose-rash 512. Spes —ei, f., hope
477. Ruber —bra—brum, adj., red 513. Spiritus —us, m., spirits
478. Saccharum —i, n., sugar 514. Squama —ae, f., scale
479. Sanguis —inis, m., blood 515. Statim, adv., immediately
480. Sanies —ei, f., fetid matter 516. Stillo, stillare, stillavi, stillatum,
481. Sano, sanare, sanavi, sanatum, to drop
to heal, cure 517. Stimulus —i, m., stimulant
482. Sanus —a—um, adj., sound 518. Stomachus —i, m., stomach
483. Sarsaparilla —ae, f., smilax 519. Strychnia —as, f., strychnine
484. Sassafras, ind. n., spleenwort 520. Sub, prep, with acc., toward
485. Satis, adv., enough, sufficient under
486. Scabies —ei, f., itch 521. Subcarbonas —atis, m., subcar-
487. Scapula —ae, f., shoulder-blade bonate
488. Scientia as, f., skill, knowl-

522. Subsidentia ae, f., sediment,


edge settling
489. Scilla —ae, f., squill 523. Subside, subsidere, subsedi, sub-
490. Sed, conj., but sessum, to subside
491. Semen —inis, n., seed 524. Substantia —ae, f., substance
492. Semissis —is—e, adj., half 525. Sudor —is, ra., sweat
493. Senna —se, f., senna 526. Sufficio, sufficere, suffeci, suffec-
494. Sensus —us, m., sense of feel- tum, to suffice
ing 527. Sulphas —atis, m., sulphate
495. Septem, ind. num. adj., seven 528. Sulphur —is, n., sulphur
496. Septemdecim, ind. num. adj., 529. Sum, esse, fui, to be
seventeen 530. Sumo, sumere, sumpsi, sump-
497. Sesuncia —ae, f., ounce and a tum, to take
half 531. Super, supra, prep, with acc.,
498. Sex, ind. num. adj., six upon, over
499. Sexdecim, ind. num. adj., six- 532. Suppositorium —i, n., supposi-
teen tory
500. Sextus—a—um,orum, adj., sixth 533. Sutura —ae, f., suture
501. Sexus —us, m., sex 534. Symptoma —atis, n., symptom
502. Si, conj., if 535. Syrupus —i, m., syrup
5°3- Signo, signare, signavi, signa- 536. Systema —atis, n., system
tum, to mark 537. Tactus —us, m., sense of touch
504. Simul, adv., together 538. Tabs —is—e, adj., such
505. Sitis —is, f., thirst 539. Tannicus —a—um, adj., tannic
506. Soda —ae, f., soda 540. Tartras —atis, m., tartrate
507. Solutio —onis, f., solution 541. Tempus —oris, n., time, temple
508. Solve, solvfire, solvi, solution, 542. Tendo, tendere, tetendi, tensum
to dissolve or tentum, to spread, apply
509. Somnus —i, m., sleep 543. Tendo —inis, m., tendon
510. Spatula —ae, f., ladle 544. Tepidus —a —um, adj., warm
511. Species —ei, f., appearance 545. Ter, adv., three times
104 MEDICAL LATIN.

546. Terebinthina —se, f., terebin- 572. Utor, uti, usus sum, to use
thina 573- Vagina —se, f., vagina
f
547. Terminus —i, m., limit 574. Validus —a—um, adj., strong
548. Tero, terere, trivi, tritum, to rub 575. Variola se, f., small-pox

549. Tertius —a—um, num, adj., 576. Vas, vasis, n., vessel
third 577- Vehiculum —i, n., vehicle
550. Theobroma —se, f., food of the 578. Vel, ve, conj., or
gods 579. Vena —se, f., vein
551. Tibia —se, f., shin-bone 580. Venenatus —a—um, adj., poi-
552. Tinctura —se, f., tincture soned
553. Tormen —inis, n., twisting pain 581. Venenum —i, n., poison
554. Totus —a—um, adj., entire 582. Ventriculus —i, m., stomach
555. Tracto, tractare, tractavi, tracta- 583. Vereor, vereri, veritus sum, to
tum, to handle fear
556. Tredecim, ind. num. adj., thir- 584. Vertigo —inis, f., vertigo, dizzi-
teen ness
557. Tres, tres, tria, num. adj., three 585. Vesica —se, f., bladder
558. Tumor —is, m., tumor 586. Victus —us, m., victuals
559. Tussis —is, f., cough 587. Videor, videri, visus sum, to
560. Ulcus —eris n., ulcer seem (dep.)
561. Ulna —se, f., elbow-bone 588. Viginti, ind. num. adj., twenty
562. Uncia —se, f., ounce 589. Vinum —i, n., wine
563. Undecim, ind. num. adj., eleven 590. Vir —i, m., m|n
564. Undeviginti, ind. num. adj., 591. Viscus —eris, n., viscera
nineteen 592. Visus —us, m., sense of sight
565. Unguentum —i, n., ointment 593. Vitellus —i, m., yolk of egg
566. Unguis —is, f., finger-nail 594. Volo, velle, volui, to wish, be
567. Unus —a—um, num. adj., one willing
568. Urina —se, f., urine 595. Vulnus —eris, n., wound
569. Usurpo, usurpare, usurpavi, 596. Vultus —us, m., countenance
usurpatum, to take 597. Xericus —a—um, adj., Sherry
570. Uterus —i, m., womb 598. Zincum —i, n., zinc
571. Utilis —is—e, useful 599. Zingiber —is, n., ginger.
ENGL1SH-LATIN VOCABULARY.

1. Abdomen, abdomen —inis, n. 31. Aromatic, aromaticus —a—um,


2. Abscess, abscessus —

us, m. adj.
3. Absent, absens —tis, adj. 32. Arsenic, arsenicum —i, n.
4. Abundance, copia —

x, f. 33. Art, ars, artis, f.


5. Acacia, acacia —

x, f. 34. As much as you please, quantum


6. Acetate, acetas —atis, m. vis
7. Ache, antalgia —

x, f. 35. As yet, adhuc, adv.


8. Acid, acidum —i, n. 36. Attempt, Conor, conari, conatus
9. Aconite, aconitum —i, n. sum (dep.)
10. Add, addo, addere, addidi, addi- 37. Auricle, auricula —m, f.
tum 38. Back, dorsum —i, n.
11. After, post, prep, with acc. 39. Bad, malus —a—um, adj.
12. Age, oetas —atis, f. 40. Baldness, calvities —ei, f.
13. Albumen, albumen —inis, n. 41. Ball, bulla —ae, f.
14. Alcohol, alcohol —is, m. 42. Balsam, balsamum —i, n.
15. All, omnis —is—e, adj. 43. Bandage, fascia —

x, f.
16. Allspice, pimenta —

x, f. 44. Bark, cortex —icis, m.


17. Almond, amygdala x, f.

45. Base, basis —is, f.


18. Alternate, alternus —a—um, 46. Base of head, occiput —itis, n.
adj. 47. Basin, pelvis —is, f.
19. Alum, alumen —inis, n. 48. Bath, balneum —i, n.
20. Am, to be, sum, esse, fui 49. Bear, fero, ferre, tuli, latum
21. Am able, possum, posse, potui 50. Beautiful, pulcher —chra
22. Ammonia, ammonia —se, f. —chrum, adj.
23. Ammonium, ammonium —i, n. 51. Before, antea, adv.
24. And, et, conj. 52. Belly, alvus —i, f.
25. Animal, animal —is, n. 53. Bench, abacus —i, m.
26. Antidote, antidotum —i, n. 54. Bichlorate, bichloras —atis, m.
27. Antimony, antimonium —i, n. 55. Bile, bilis —is, m.
28. Appearance, species —ei, f. 56. Birth, partus —us, m.
29. Apply, extendo, extendere, ex- 57. Birthmark, nsevus —i, m.
tendi, extensum 58. Bismuth, bismuthum —i, n.
30. Arnica, arnica —ae, f. 59. Bitartrate, bitartras —atis, m.
MEDICAL LATIN.

60. Bitter, amarus —a—um, adj. 99- Chemistry, chemia —se, f.


61. Bladder, vesica —se, f. 100. Chlorate, chloras —atis,m.
62. Blood, sanguis —inis, m. 101. Chloride, chloridum —i,n.
63. Bloody, cruentus —a—um, adj. 102. Chloroform, chloroformum —i,
64. Body, corpus —oris, n. n.
65. Boil, bullio, bullire, bullivi, 103. Cholera, cholera —se, f.
bullitum 104. Cinchona, cinchona —se, f.
66. Boil, coquo, coquere, coxi, coc- 105. Cinnamon, cinnamomum —i,n.
tum 106. Clear, limpidus —a—um, adj.
67. Boiling, coctio —onis, f. 107. Clinical, clinicus —a—um,adj.
68. Bone, os, ossis, n. 108. Close, claudo, claudfire, clausi,
69. Book, liber, libri, m. clausum
70. Bougie, bougia —se, f. X09. Clyster, enema —atis, n.
71. Bowel, rectum —i, n. no. Coal-black, ater, atra, atrum,
72. Boy, puer —i, m. adj.
73. Brain (larger), cerebrum—i, n. in. Cocaine, cocaina —se, f.
74. Brain (smaller), cerebellum—i,n. 112. Cod-fish, morrhua —se, f.

75. Breast, mamma—se, f. 113. Cold, frigidus —a—um, adj.


76. Broad, latus —a—um, adj. 114. Colocynth, colocynthis —idis, f.
77. Broken, fractus —a —um, adj. 115. Common, communis —is—e,
78. Brow, frons —tis, f. adj.
79. Brown, fuscus —a—um, adj. 116. Companion, comes —ids, m.
80. But, sed, conj. 117. Compound, compositus —a
81. Camphor, camphora —se, f. —um, adj.
82. Cancer, cancer —cri, m. 118. Condensation, condensatio
83. Capsule, capsula —se, f. —onis, f.
84. Carbonate, carbonas —atis, m. 119. Congestion, congestio —onis, f.
83. Cardamom, cadamomum —i,n. 120. Consumption, consumptio
86. Care, cura —se, f. onis, f.

87. Castor-oil plant, ricinus —i, f. 121. Contagious, contagiosus —a


88. Catarrh, catarrhus —i, m. —um, adj.
89. Cathartic, catharticus —a—um, 122. Convulsion, convulsio —onis, f.
adj. 123. Copaiba, copaiba —se, f.
90. Caustic potash, potassia —se, f. 124. Corpse, cadaver —is, n.
91. Cavity, alveolus —i, m. 125. Corpuscle, corpusculus —i, m.
92. Cayenne pepper, capsicum —i, 126. Cough, tussis —is, f.
n. 127. Countenance, facies —ei, f.
93. Cell, cella —se, f. 128. Crush, contundo, contundere,
94. Cerebral, cerebralis —is—e, adj. contudi, contusum
95. Charcoal, carbo —onis, m. 129. Crushed, contusus —a—um,
96. Cheek, gena —se, f. adj.
97. Chemic, chemicus —a—um, 130. Cup, poculum —i, n.
adj. 131. Cure, euro, curare, curavi, cura-
98. Chemist, chemicus —i, m. tum
ENGLISH-LAT1N VOCABULARY.

132. Cure, sano, sanare, sanavi, sa- 164. Drop, stillo, stillare, stillavi,
natum stillatum
133. Cut up, concido, concidere, con- 165. Drug, medicamentum —i, n.
cidi, cisum 166. Druggist, medicamentarius —i,
134. Daily, in die, adv. ph. m.

135. Day, dies —ei, f. 167. Duct, ductus —us, m.


136. Death, mors —tis, m. 168. Dyspepsia, dyspepsia —se, f.
137. Decay, caries —ei, f. 169. Dyspeptic, dyspepticus —a
138. Dessertspoon, cochleare medium —um, adj.
139. Destroy, deleo, delere, delevi, 170. Ear, auris —is, f.
deletum 171. Ear-wax, cerumen —inis, n.
140. Die, morior, mori, mortuus sum 172. Edge, acies —ei, f.
141. Dilute, dilutus —a—um, adj. 173. Egg, ovum —i, n.
142. Diphtheria, diphtheria —se, f. 174. Eight, octo, ind. num. adj.
143. Disease, morbus —i, m. 175. Eighteen, duodeviginti, ind.
144. Disgrace, dedecus —oris, n. num. adj.
145. Dispensatory, dispensatorium 176. Eighty, octoginta, ind. num. adj.
—i, n. 177- Elbow-bone, ulna —se, f.
X46. Dissolve, solvo, solvere, solvi, 178. Eleven,undecim, ind. num. adj.
solutum 179. Emetic, emeticum —i, n.
147. Distilled, destillatus —a—um, 180. Emission, emissio —onis, f.
adj. 181. Emulsion, emulsio —onis, f.
148. Distinguished, clarus —a—um, 182. End, finis —is, m.
adj. 183. Enema, enema —atis, n.
149. Distress, miseria —se, f. 184. Enough, satis, adv.
150. Divide, divide, dividere, divisi, 185. Entire, totus —a —um, adj.
divisum 186. Entrance, introitus us, m.

151. Divide, partio, partire, partivi, 187. Equal, sequalis —is—e, adj.
partitum 188. Equal, par, par, par; gen.,
152. Division, partitio —onis, f. paris, adj.
153. Dizziness, vertigo —inis, f. 189. Ergot, ergota —ae, f.
154. Doctor, medicus —i, m. 190. Essence, essentia —se, f.
155. Dorsal, dorsalis —is—e, adj. 191. Every, quisque, quseque, quid-
156. Dose, dosis —is, f. que, adj.
157. Drachm, drachma —se, f. 192. Exact, exactus —a—um, adj.
158. Draught, haustus —us, m. 193. External ear, helix —icis, f.
159. Draught, potus —us, m. 194. Extract, extractum —i, n.
160. Drink, haurio, haurlre, hausi, 195. Eye, oculus —i, m.
haustum 196. Eyelash, cilium —i, n.
161. Drink, poto, potare, potavi, 197. Eye->vash, collyrium —i, n.
potatum 198. Face, facies —ei, f.
162. Drop, gutta —se, f. 199. Faint (to be), languesco, lan-
163. Drop, exprirao, exprimere, ex- guescere, langui
press!, expressum 200. Fall, cado, cadere, cecidi, casum
MEDICAL LATIN.

201. Fat, adeps —ipis, m 237- Fourth, quartus —a—um, adj.


202. Fear, vereor, vereri, veritus sum 238. Four times, quater, adv.
(dep.) 239. Fox-glove, digitalis —is, f.
203. Febrile, febrilis —is—e, adj. 240. Fracture, fractura —se, f.
204. Femoral, femoralis —is—e, adj. 241. Gain possession of, potior, po-
205. Fennel, foeniculum —i, n. tiri, potitus sum (dep.)
206 Ferment, fermentum —i, n. 242. Galbanum, galbanum —i, n.
207. Fetid matter, sanies —ei, f. 243. Gallon, congius —i, m.
208. Fever, febris —is, f. 244. Gelatine, gelatina —se, f.
209. Fever (slight), febricula —se, f. 245. Gentle, lenis —is—e, adj.
210. Fibrous membrane, fascia —se, f. 246. Germ, germen —inis, n.
211. Fifteen, quindecim, ind. num. 247. Ginger, zingiber —is, n.
adj. 248. Girl, puella —se, f.
212. Filter, colum —i, n. 249. Give, do, dare, dedi, datum
213. Filter, filtrum —i, n. 250. Glycerine, glycerinum —i, n.
214. Filter, colo, colare, colavi, co- 251. Go, eo, Ire, ivi, itum
latum 252. Golden seal, hydrastis —idis, f.
215. Filter, filtro, filtrare, filtravi, 253. Good, bonus —a—um, adj.
filtratum 254. Gout in the hand, cheiragra
216. Filth, colluvies —ei, f. —se, f.
217. Finger-nail, unguis —is, m. 255. Gradually, gradatim, adv.
2x8. Fire, ignis —is, m. 256. Grain, granum —i, n.
219. First, primus —a—um, adj. 257. Grayness of hair, canities —ei, f.
220. First vertebra, atlas —antis, ra. 258. Great, amplus —a—um, adj.
221. Five, quinque, ind. num. adj. 259. Great, magnus —a—um, adj.
222. Flesh, caro, carnis, f. 260. Guaiacum, guaiacum —i, n.
223. Flesh of wild animals, ferina 261. Hair, crinis —is, m.
—se, f. 262. Hair of the head, capillus —i,
224. Fluid, fluidus —a—um, adj. m.

225. Fluid, liquor —is, m. 263. Half, semissis —is—e, adj.


226. Flux, fluxus —us, m. 264. Hand, manus —us, f.
227. Food, cibus —i, m. 265. Handle, tracto, tractare, trac-
228. Food of the gods, theobroma tavi, tractatum
—se, f. 266. Hard, durus —a—um, adj.
229. Foot, pes, pedis, m. 267. Have, habeo, habere, habui,
230. Foot-bath, pediluvium i, n.

habitum
231. For, ad, prep, with acc. 268. Haze, nebula—se, f.
232. Foreskin, prseputium —i, n. 269. Head, caput —itis, n.
233. P'ormula, formula —se, f. 270. Heal, sano, sanare, sanavi, sa-
234. Fountain, fontanus —a—um, natum
adj. 271. Hear, audio, audlre, audivi,
235. Four, quattuor, ind. num. adj. auditum
236. Fourteen, quattuordecim, ind. 272. Heart, cor, cordis, n.
num. adj. 273. Heat, calor is, m.
-
ENGLISH-LATIN VOCABULARY.

274. Herb, herba —re, f. 311. Learned, doctus —a—um, adj.


275. Hope, spes —ei, f. 312. Learned, peritus —a—um, adj.
276. Hot, calidus —a—um, adj. 313. Leg, crus, cruris, n.
277. Hot, fervidus —a—um, adj. 314. Lemon, limon —is, f.
278. Hour, hora —re, f. 315. Life, anima —re, f.
279. Hydrobromate, hydrobromas 316. Life, animus —i, m.
—atis, m. 317. Life, vita —re, f.
280. Hydrochloric, hydrochloricus 318. Limit, terminus —i, m.
—a—um, adj. 319. Liniment, linimentum —i, n.
281. Hydrophobia, hydrophobia 320. Lip, labia —re, f.
—re, f. 321. Liquid, liquor —is, m.
282. If, si, conj. 322 Liquor, liquor —is, m.
283. Immediately, statim, adv. 323. Liquorice, glycyrrhiza —re, f.
284. In or on, in, prep, with abl. 324 Liver, hepar —atis, n.
285. Inactivity, inertia —re, f. 325. Long, longus —a—um, adj.
286. Indigestion, cruditas —atis, m. 326. Loosened, laxatus —a—um,
287. Inflammation, inflammatio adj.
—onis, f. 327. Lotion, lotio —onis, f.
288. Inject, inicio, inicere, inieci, in- 328. Lump, bulla —re, f.
iectum 329. Madness, rabies —ei, f.
289. Injury, iniuria —re, f. 330. Magnesia, magnesia —re, f.
290. Intercourse, coitus —us, m. 331. Make, facio, facere, feci, factum
291. Intestine, intestinum —i, n. 332. Man, vir —i, m.
292. In the morning, mane, adv. 333. Mankind, homo —inis, m.
293. Into, in, prep, with acc. 334. Manner, mos, moris, m.
294. Introduce, insero, inserere, in- 335. Mark, signo, signare, signavi,
serui, insertum signatum
295. Iron, ferrum —i, n. 336. Mass, massa —re, f.
296. Itch, scabies —ei, f. 337. Master of his art, magister —tri,
297. Jalap, ialapa —re, f. m.

298. Jaw-bone, maxilla —re, f 338. Matter, materia —re, f.


299. Joint, articulus —i, m. 339. Meal, farina —re, f.
300. Joint, artus —us, m. 340. Measure, mensura —re, f.
301. Keep, habeo, habere, habui, 341. Medicated, medicatus —a—um,
habitum adj.
302. Kind, genus —eris, n. 342. Medicinal, medicinus —a—um,
303. Knee-pan, patella —re, f. adj.
304. Know, scio, scire, scivi, scitum 343. Medicine, medicina —re, f.
305. Knowledge, scientia —re, f. 344. Membrane, membrana —re, f.
306. Labor, labor —is, m. 345. Mercury, hydrargyrum —i, n.
307. Ladle, spatula —re, f. 346. Microscopic animal, animal-
308. Large, amplus —a—um, adj. culum —i, n.
309. Large, magnus —a—um, adj. 347. Middle, medius —a —um, adj.
310. Lead, plumbum —i, n. 348. Mild, mitis —is—e, adj.
MEDICAL LATIN.

349- Mind, animus —i, m. 388. Or, vel, ve, conj.


350. Mind, mens —tis, f. 389. Orange, aurantium —i, n.
351. Minim, minimum —i, n. 390. Organ, organum —i, n.
352. Mint, mentha ae, f.

391. Orifice, foramen —inis, n.


353. Minute, minutus —a —um, adj. 392. Orifice of rectum, anus —i, m.
354. Mix, misceo,, miscere, miscui, 393. Ounce, uncia —ae, f.
mixtum or mistum 394. Ounce and a half, sesuncia—ae,
355. Mixture, mistura ae, f.

f.
356. Morphine, morphina ae, f.

395. Over, super, prep, with acc.


357. Morrhua, morrhua ae, f. —

396. Oxalic, oxalicus —a —um, adj.


358. Mouth, os, oris, n. 397. Pain, antalgia —ae, f.
359. Mover, motor —is, m. 398. Pain (bearing-down), molimen
360. Much, multus —a—um, adj. —inis, n.
361. Mucilage, mucilago—inis, f. 399. Pain (twisting), tormen —inis,
362. Muriatic, muriaticus —a —um, n.
adj. 400. Pale, pallidus —a—um, adj.
363. Muscle, musculus —i, m. 401. Part, pars —tis, f.
364. Name, nomen —inis, n. 402. Particle, particula— ae, f.
365. Name, dico, dicere, dixi, dictum 403. Parturition, partus —us, m.
366. Nape of the neck, nucha— ae, f. 404. Pebble, calculus —i, m.
367. Neck, iugulum —i, n. 405. Pelvis, pelvis —is, f.
368. Nerve, nervus —i, m. 406. Pepper, piper —is, n.
369. New, novus —a —um, adj. 407. Perfumed, odoratus —a—um,
370. Night, nox, noctis, f. adj.
371- Nine, novem, ind. num. adj. 408. Phosphoric, phosphoricus -—a
372. Nineteen, undeviginti, ind. num. —um, adj.
adj. 409. Physician, medicus —i, m.
373. Nipple, mamilla ae, f.

410. Pill, pilula ae, f.


374. Nose, nasus —i, m. 411. Pint, octarius —i, m.


375. Nostril, naris —is, f. 412. Place, loco, locare, locavi, loca-
376. Not, non, adv. *tum
377. Number, numerus —i, m. 413. Plan, consilium —i, n.
378. Of each, ana, with gen. 414. Plaster, emplastrum i, n.

379. Of pepper, piperitus —a— um, 415. Pleasing, gratus —a—um, adj.
adj. 416. Plenty, copia —ae, f.
380. Of rain, pluvialis —is—e, adj. 417. Poison (hemlock), conium —i,
381. Oil, oleum —i, n. n.

382. Ointment, unguentum —i, n. 418. Poison, venenum —i, n.


383. Oleoresin, oleoresina —ae, f. 419. Poisoned, venenatus —a—um,
384. On, in, prep, with abl. adj.
385. On, super, supra, prep, with 420. Pore, porus —i, m.
acc. 421. Porous, rarus a—um, adj.

386. One, unus —a —um, adj. 422. Potash, kalium or potassium —i,
387. Opium, opium —i, n.
ENGLISH-LATIN VOCABULARY.

423. Poultice, cataplasma —atis, n. 457. Root, radix —icis, f.


424. Pound, contundo, contundere, 458. Rose, rosa —se, f.
contudi, contusum 459. Rose-rash, roseola —se, f.
425. Pound, libra —se, f. 460. Rub, tero, terfere, trivi, tritum
426. Powder, pulvis —eris, m. 461. Same, idem, eadem, idem, adj.
427. Powder paper, chartula —se, f. 462. Say, dico, dicere, dixi, dictum
428. Prefer, malo, malle, malui 463. Scale, squama —se, f.
429. Preparation, prseparatio —onis, 464. Scar, cicatrix —icis, f.
f. 465. Scholar, discipulus —i, m.
430. Prepare, paro, parare, paravi, 466. Second vertebra, axis —is, m.
paratum 467. Sediment, subsidentia —se, f.
431. Prepared, paratus—a—um,adj. 468. Seed, semen —inis, n.
432. Prepared, prseparatus —a —um, 469. Seem, videor, videri, visus sum
adj. (dep.)
433. Prescribe, prsescribo, prsescrib- 470. Sen, sen —se, f.
6re, prsescripsi, prsescriptum 471. Send, mitto, mittfire, misi, mis-
434. Prescription, prsescriptio —onis, sum
f. 472. Sense of feeling, sensus —us,m.
435. Prescription, prsescriptum —i, 473. Sense of hearing, auditus —us,
n. m.
436. Present, adstans —tis, adj. 474- Sense of sight, visus —us, m.
437. Profit, prosum, prodesse, profui 475. Sense of smell, olfactus —us, m.
438. Projection, processus —us, m. 476. Sense of taste, gustus —us, m.
439. Pulp, pulpa —se, f. 477. Sense of touch, tactus —us, m.
440. Pulse, pulsus —us, m. 478. Settling, subsidentia —se, f.
441. Pure, purus —a—um, adj. 479. Seven, septem, ind. num. adj.
442. Pustule, pustula —se, f. 480. Seventeen, septemdecim, ind.
443. Quantity, quantitas —atis, f. num. adj.
444. Quassia, quassia —se, f. 481. Severe, gravis —is—e, adj.
445. Quicksilver,hydrargyrum —i, n. 482. Sex, sexus —us,m.
446. Quinine, quinina —se, f. 483. Shake, agito, agitare, agitavi,
447. Quinsy, angina —se, f. agitatum
448. Rainy, pluvialis —is—e, adj. 484. Shave, rado, radere, rasi, rasum
449. Rectum, rectum —

5, n. 485. Shaved, rasus —a—um, adj.


450. Red, ruber —bra—brum, adj. 486. Shelf, abacus —i, m.
451. Relax, laxo, laxare, laxavi, 487. Sherry, Xericus —a—um, adj.
laxatum 488. Shin-bone, tibia —se, f.
452. Relieve, levo, levare, levavi, 489. Shop, apotheca —se, f.
levatum 490. Shoulder-blade, scapula —se, f.
453. Remedy, remedium —i, n. 491. Sick, segrotus —a—um, adj.
454. Repeat, repeto, repet6re, repe- 492. Sight, conspectus —us, m.
tivi, repetitum 493. Six, sex, ind. num. adj.
455. Resin, resina —se, f. 494. Sixteen, sexdecim, ind. num.
456. Rib, costa —se, f. adj.
MEDICAL LATIN.

495. Sixth, sextus —a —um, num. 532. Subside, subside, subsidere, sub-
adj. sedi, subsessum
496. Skill, scientia —ae, f. 533. Substance, substantia —

ae, f.
497. Skilled, peritus —a—um, adj. 534. Such, talis —is —e, adj.
498. Skin, cutis —is, f. 535. Suffice, sufficio, sufficere, suf-
499. Skull, cranium —i, n. feci, suffectum
500. Sleep, somnus —i, m. 536. Sufficient, satis, adv.
501. Slightly, leviter, adv. 537. Sugar, saccharum —i, n.
502. Slipping forward, prolapsus 53B. Suitable, idoneus —a—um, adj.
—us, m. 539. Sulphate, sulphas —atis, m.
503. Small, parvus —a—um, adj. 540. Sulphur, sulphur —is, n.
504. Small-pox, variola —ae, f. 541. Suppository, suppositorium —i,
505. Smilax, sarsaparilla —se, f. n.
506. Soak,macero, macerare, macer- 542. Surgeon, chirurgus —i, m.
avi, maceratum 543. Suture, sutura ae, f.

507. Soda, soda ae, f.


544. Swallow, deglutio, deglutire,


508. Softening, mollities —ei, f. deglutivi, deglutitum
509. Solution, liquor —is, m. 545. Sweat, sudor —is, m.
510. Solution, solutio —onis, f. 546. Sweet, dulcis —is—e, adj.
5x1. Sound, sanus —a—um, adj. 547. Symptom, symptoma —atis, m.
512. Sour, acerbus —a—um, adj. 548. Syrup, syrupus —i, n.
513. Spirits, spiritus —us, m. 549. System, systeraa —atis, m.
514. Spleenwort, sassafras, ind., n. 550. Tablespoon, cochleare magnum
515. Spoon, cochleare —is, n. vel amplum
516. Spot, macula —ae, f. 551. Take, capio, capere, cepi, cap-
517. Spread, extendo, extendere, ex- tum
tendi, extensum 552. Take, recipio, recipere, recepi,
518. Squill, scilla —ae, f. receptum
519. Stammering, balbuties —ei, f. 553. Take, sumo, sumere, surapsi,
520. Standard, norma —se, f. sumptum
521. Starch, amylum —i, n. 554. Take, usurpo, usurpare, usur-
522. Sticky, lentus —a—um, adj. pavi, usurpatum
523. Stimulant, stimulus —i, m. 555. Tannic, tannicus —a—um, adj.
524. Stir, moveo, movere, movi, mo- 556. Tartrate, tartras —atis, m.
tum 557- Tear, lacrima ae, f.

525. Stomach, stomachus —i, m. 558. Teaspoon, cochleare parvum


526. Stomach, ventriculus —i, m. 559. Temple, tempus —oris, n.
527. Stone, calculus —i, m. 560. Ten, decern, ind. num. adj.
528. Strain, colo, colare, colavi, co- 561. Tendon, tendo —inis, m.
latum 562. Terebinthina, terebinthina —se,
529. Strong, validus —a—um, adj. f.
530. Strychnine, strychnia —ae, f. 563. Then, dein, adv.
531. Subcarbonate, subcarbonas 564. Thigh, femur —oris, n.
—atis, m. 565. Thin leather, aluta ae,

f.
ENGLISH-LATIN VOCABULARY. 113

566. Third, tertius —a—um, adj. 603. Victuals, victus —us, m.


567. Thirst, sitis —is, f. 604. View, conspectus —us, m.
568. Thirteen, tredecim, ind. num. 605. Vinegar, acetum i, n.

adj. 606. Viscera, viscus —eris, n.


569. This, hie, hsec, hoc, adj. 607. Vital principle, vita —se, f.
570. Three, tres, tres, tria, num. adj. 608. Wahoo (a plant), euonymus
571. Three times, ter, adv. —i, ni.
572. Through, per, prep, with acc. 609. Warm, tepidus a—um, adj.

573. Throw up, reicio, reiefere, reieci, 610. Warm (to be), caleo, calere,
reiectum calui
574. Time, tempus —oris, n. 611. Wash, lotio—onis, f.
575. Tincture, tinctura —se, f. 612. Washed, lotus —a—um,adj.
576. To, for, ad, prep, with acc. 613. Wasting, macies —ei, f.
577. Together, simul, adv. 614. Water, aqua —se, f.
578. Tongue, lingua —se, f. 615. Water in flesh, anasarca —se, f.
579. Top, apex —icis, m. 616. Wax, cera —se, f.
580. Total loss of mind, amentia 617. Waxen, ceratus —a—um, adj.
—se, f. 618. Week, hebdomada —se, f.
581. Toward, sub, prep, with acc. 619. Well, bene, adv.
582. Tumor, tumor —is, m. 620. Wet, madidus —a—um, adj.
583. Twelve,duodecim,ind.num.adj. 621. While, adhuc, adv.
584. Twenty, viginti, ind. num. adj. 622. White, albus—a —um, adj.
585. Twice, bis, adv. 623. Who, which, what, qui, quse,
586. Two, duo —se—o, num. adj. quod, rel. pro.
587. Two hundred, ducenti —se—a, 624. W hooping-cough, pertussis —is,
num. adj. f.
588. Ulcer, ulcus —eris, n. 625. Wine, vinum —i, n.
589. Unborn child, foetus —us, m. 626. Willing (to be), volo, velle,
590. Until, donee, conj. volui
591. Unwilling (to be), nolo, nolle, 627. Wineglass, cyathus —i, n.
nolui 628. With, cum, prep, with abl.
592. Upon, super, supra, prep, with 629. Woman, femina —se, f.
acc. 630. Womb, uterus —i, m.
593. Upon the instant, ex tempore 631. Wood, lignum —i, n.
594. Urine, urina —se, f. 632. Wormwood, absinthium —i, n.
595. Use, utor, uti, usus sum (dep.) 633. Wound, vulnus —eris, n.
596. Useful, utilis —is—e, adj. 634. Wrap up, involve, involvere,
597. Vagina, vagina —se, f. involvi, involutum
598. Vehicle, vehiculum —i, n. 635. Wrist, carpus —i, m.
599. Vein, vena —se, f. 636. Writing-pen, calamus—i, m.
600. Vertigo, vertigo —inis, f. 637. Year, annus—i, m.
601. Wry dry, persiccus —a —um, 638. ’Yellow, flavus —a—um, adj.
adj. 639. Yolk of egg, vitellus —i, m.
602. Vessel, vas, vasis, n. 640. Zinc, zincum —i, n.
Catalogue No. 8. December, 1896.

CLASSIFIED SUBJECT
CATALOGUE
OF

MEDICAL BOOKS
AND

Books on Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy,


Chemistry, Hygiene, Etc., Etc.,
PUBLISHED BY

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■®5“ SEE NEXT PAGE FOR SUBJECT INDEX.

Gould’s Dictionaries, Page 8.


SUBJECT INDEX.

4QT" Any books not on this Catalogue we will furnish a price


for upon-application.

SUBJECT. PAGE SUBJECT. PAGE


Alimentary Canal (see Surgery) 19 Miscellaneous 14
Anatomy 3 Nervous Diseases 14
Anesthetics 3 Nose 20
Autopsies (see Pathology) 16 Nursing 15
Bandaging (see Surgery) 19 Obstetrics.. 16
Brain 4 Ophthalmology 9
Chemistry 4 Osteology (see Anatomy) 3
Children, Diseases of 6 Pathology 16
Clinical Charts 6 Pharmacy 16
Compends ...

22, 23 Physical Diagnosis 17


Consumption (see Lungs) 12 Physical Training (see Miscel-
Deformities 7 laneous) 14
Dentistry 7 Physiology 18
Diagnosis 17 Poisons (see Toxicology) 13
Diagrams (see Anatomy, page Popular Medicine 10
3, and Obstetrics, page 16). Practice of Medicine 18
Dictionaries 8 Prescription' Books 18
Diet and Food (see Miscella- Railroad Injuries (see Nervous
neous) 14 Diseases) 14
Dissectors 3 Refraction (see Eye) 9
Domestic Medicine 10 Rheumatism 10
Ear 8 Sanitary Science 11
Electricity 9 Skin 19
Emergencies (see Surgery) 19 Spectacles (see Eye) 9
Eye 9 Spine (see Nervous Diseases) 14
Fevers 9 Students' Compends 22, 23
Gout 10 Surgery and Surgical Dis-
Gynecology 21 eases 19
Headaches 10 Syphilis 21
Heart 10 Technological Books 4
Histology 10 Temperature Charts 6
Hospitals (see Hygiene) 11 Therapeutics 12
Hygiene... 11 Throat 20
Insanity 4 Toxicology 13
Journals 11 U. S. Pharmacopoeia 16
Kidneys 12 Urinary Organs 20
Latin, Medical (see Miscella- Urine 20
neous and Pharmacy) 14, 16 Venereal Diseases 21
Lungs 12 Veterinary Medicine 21
Massage 12 Visiting Lists, Physicians'.
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Medical Jurisprudence 13 Water Analysis (see Chemis-
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M ilk Analysis(see Chemistry) Women, Diseases of.
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4 21

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,
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ANATOMY.
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,

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NERVOUS DISEASES.
BEEVOR. Diseases of the Nervous System and their Treat-
ment. In Press.
GOWERS. Manual of Diseases of the Nervous System. A
Complete Text-Book. 2d Edition, Revised, Enlarged, and in many
parts Rewritten. With many new Illustrations. Two volumes.
Vol. I. Diseases of the Nerves and Spinal Cord. $3.00
Vol. II. Diseases of the Brain and Cranial Nerves; General and
Functional Disease. $4.00
GOWERS. Syphilis and the Nervous System, $1.00
GOWERS. Diagnosis of Diseases of the Brain. 2d Edition.
Illustrated. fi.50
GOWERS. Clinical Lectures. A New Volume of Essays on the
Diagnosis, Treatment, etc., of Diseases of the Nervous System. $2.00
GOWERS. Epilepsy and Other Chronic Convulsive Diseases.
2d Edition. In Press.
HORSLEY. The Brain and Spinal Cord. The Structure and
Functions of. Numerous Illustrations. $2.50
MEDICAL BOOKS. 15

OBERSTEINER. The Anatomy of the Central Nervous Or-


gans. A Guide to the Study of their Structure in Health and Dis-
ease. 198 Illustrations. I5.50
ORMEROD. Diseases of the Nervous System. 66 Wood En-
gravings. $1.00
OSLER. Cerebral Palsies of Children. A Clinical Study. $2.00
OSLER. Chorea and Choreiform Affections. $2.00
PAGE. Injuries of the Spine and Spinal Cord. In their Surgical
and Medico-legal Aspects. 3d Edition. Preparing.
PAGE. Railroad Injuries. With Special Reference to Those of the
Back and Nervous System. $2.25
THORBURN. Surgery of the Spinal Cord. Illustrated. $4.00
WATSON, Concussions. An Experimental Study of Lesions Aris-
ing from Severe Concussions. Paper cover, fi.oo
WOOD. Brain Work and Overwork. .40

NURSING.
Special Catalogue of Books for Nurses sent free upon application.
BROWN. Elementary Physiology for Nurses. In Press.
CANFIELD. Hygiene of the Sick-Room. A Book for Nurses and
Others. Being a Brief Consideration of Asepsis, Antisepsis, Disinfec-
tion, Bacteriology, Immunity, Heating and Ventilation, and Kindred
Subjects for the Use of Nurses and Other Intelligent Women. $1.25
CULLINGWORTH. A Manual of Nursing, Medical and Sur-
gical. 3d Edition with Illustrations. .75
CULLINGWORTH. A Manual for Monthly Nurses. 3d Ed. .40
CUFF. Lectures to Nurses on Medicine. 25 Illustrations. $1.00
DOMVILLE. Manual for Nurses and Others Engaged in At-
tending the Sick. 8th Edition. With Recipes for Sick-room Cook-
ery, etc. .75
FULLERTON. Obstetric Nursing. 40 Ills. 4th Ed. $1.00
FULLERTON. Nursing in Abdominal Surgery and Diseases
of Women. Comprising the Regular Course of Instruction at the
Training-School of theWomen’s Hospital, Philadelphia. 2d Edition.
70 Illustrations. $1.50
HUMPHREY. A Manual for Nurses. Including General
Anatomy and Physiology, Management of the Sick-Room, etc. 15th
Edition. Illustrated. fi.oo
SHAWE. Notes for Visiting Nurses, and all those Interested
in the Working and Organization of District, Visiting, or
Parochial Nurse Societies. With an Appendix Explaining the
Organizationand Working of Various Visiting and District Nurse So-
cieties, by Helen C. Jknks, of Philadelphia. $1.00
STARR. The Hygiene of the Nursery. Including the General
Regimen and Feeding of Infants and Children, and theDomestic Man-
agement of the OrdinaryEmergencies of Early Life, Massage, etc. 5th
Edition. 25 Illustrations. Just Ready. $1.00
TEMPERATURE CHARTS. For Recording Temperature, Res-
piration, Pulse, Day of Disease, Date, Age, Sex, Occupation,
Name, etc. Put up in pads of fifty. Each .50
VOSWINKEL. Surgical Nursing, in Illustrations. $1.00
*** Special Catalogue of Books on Nursing free upon application.
16 SUBJECT CATALOGUE.

OBSTETRICS.
BAR. Antiseptic Midwifery. The Principles of Antiseptic Meth-
ods Applied to Obstetric Practice. Authorized Translation by
Henry D. Fry, m.d., with an Appendix by the Author. $1.00
CAZEAUX AND TARNIER. Midwifery. With Appendix by
Mund4. The Theory and Practice of Obstetrics, including the Dis-
eases of Pregnancy and Parturition, Obstetrical Operations, etc.
8th Edition. Illustrated by Chromo-Lithographs, Lithographs, and
other full-page Plates, seven of which are beautifully colored, and
numerous Wood Engravings. Cloth, $4,50; Full Leather, $5.50
DAVIS. A Manual of Obstetrics. Being a Complete Manual for
Physicians and Students. 2d Edition. 16 Colored and other Plates
and 134 other Illustrations. $2.00
LANDIS. Compend of Obstetrics. 5th Edition, Revised by Wm.
H. Wells, Assistant Demonstrator of Clinical Obstetrics, Jefferson
Medical College. With many Illustrations, 80; Interleaved, $1.25.
SCHULTZE. Obstetrical Diagrams. Being a series of 20 Col-
ored Lithograph Charts, Imperial Map Size, of Pregnancy and Mid-
wifery, with accompanying explanatory (German) text illustrated
by Wood Cuts. 2d Revised Edition.
Price in Sheets, $26.00 ; Mounted on Rollers, Muslin Backs, $36.00
STRAHAN. Extra-Uterine Pregnancy. The Diagnosis and
Treatment of Extra-Uterine Pregnancy. ,75
WINCKEL. Text-Book of Obstetrics, Including the Pathol-
ogy and Therapeutics of the Puerperal State. Authorized
Translation by J. Clifton Edgar, a.m., m.d. With nearly 200 Illus-
trations. Cloth, $5.00 ; Leather, $6.00
FULLERTON. Obstetric Nursing. 4th Ed. Illustrated. $1.00
SHIBATA. Obstetrical Pocket-Phantom with Movable Child
and Pelvis. Letter Press and Illustrations. $i.co

PATHOLOGY.
BLACKBURN. Autopsies. A Manual of Autopsies Designed for
the Use of Hospitals for the Insane and other Public Institutions.
Ten full-page Plates and other Illustrations. $1.25
BLODGETT. Dental Pathology. By Albert N. Blodgett,
m.d., late Professor of Pathology and Therapeutics, Boston Dental
College. 33 Illustrations. $1.25
GILLIAM. Pathology. A Hand-Book for Students. 47 Ulus. .75
HALL. Compend of General Pathology and Morbid Anatomy.
91 very fine Illustrations. .80; Interleaved, $1.25
VIRCHOW. Post-Mortem Examinations. A Description and
Explanation of the Method of Performing Them in the Dead House
of the Berlin Charity Hospital, with Special Reference to Medico-
Legal Practice. 3d Edition, with Additions. .75

PHARMACY.
Special Catalogue 0/ Books on Pharmacy sent free upon application.
COBLENTZ. Manual of Pharmacy. A New and Complete
Text-Book by the Professor in the New York College of Pharmacy.
2d Edition, Revised and Enlarged. 437 Illustrations. $3.50
MEDICAL BOOKS. 17

BEASLEY. Book of 3100 Prescriptions. Collected from the


Practice of the Most Eminent Physicians and Surgeons—English,
French, and American. A Compendious History of the Materia
Medica, Lists of the Doses of all the Officinal and Established Pre-
parations, an Index of Diseases and their Remedies. 7th Ed. $2.00
BEASLEY. Druggists’ General Receipt Book. Comprising
a Copious Veterinary Formulary, Recipes in Patent and Proprietary
Medicines, Druggists’ Nostrums, etc.; Perfumery and Cosmetics,
Beverages, Dietetic Articles and Condiments, Trade Chemicals,
Scientific Processes, and an Appendix of Useful Tables. 10thEdi-
tion, Revised. $2.00
BEASLEY. Pocket Formulary. A Synopsis of the British and
Foreign Pharmacopoeias. Comprising Standard and Approved
Formula for the Preparations and Compounds Employed in Medical
Practice, nth Edition. $2.00
PROCTOR. Practical Pharmacy. Lectures on Practical Phar-
macy. With Wood Engravings and 32 Lithographic Fac-simile
Prescriptions. 3d Edition, Revised, and with Elaborate Tables of
Chemical Solubilities, etc. $3.00
ROBINSON. Latin Grammar of Pharmacy and Medicine.
2d Edition. With elaborate Vocabularies. $1.75
SAYRE. Organic Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy. An
Introduction to the Study of the Vegetable Kingdom and the Vege-
table and Animal Drugs. Comprising the Botanical and Physical
Characteristics, Source, Constituents, and Pharmacopeial Prepar-
ations. With Chapters on Synthetic Organic Remedies, Insects
Injurious to Drugs, and Pharraacal Botany. A Glossary and 543
Illustrations, many of which are original. $4.00
SCOVILLE. The Art of Compounding. A Text-Book for the
Student and a Reference Book for the Pharmacist. $2.50
STEWART. Compend of Pharmacy. Based upon Reming- “

ton’s Text-Book of Pharmacy.” 5th Edition, Revised in Accord-


ance with the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, 1890. Complete Tables of
Metric and English Weights and Measures. .80; Interleaved, fi.25
UNITED STATES PH ARMACOPCEIA. 1890. 7th Decennial
Revision. Cloth, $2.50 (postpaid, $2.77) ; Sheep, $3.00 (postpaid,
$3.27); Interleaved, $4.00 (postpaid, $4.50); Printed on one side of
page only, unbound, $3.50 (postpaid, $3.90).
Select Tables from the U. S. P. (1890). Being Nine of the Most
Important and Useful Tables, Printed on Separate Sheets. Care-
fully put up in patent envelope. .25
WHITE AND WILCOX. Materia Medica, Pharmacy, Phar-
macology, and Therapeutics. 3d American Edition. Revised
by Reynold W. Wilcox, m.d., ll.d. Cloth, $2 75; Leather, $3.25
POTTER. Hand-Book of Materia Medica, Pharmacy, and
Therapeutics. 600 Prescriptions and Formulae. 5th Edition.
Cloth, $4.00; Sheep, $5.00
*** Special Catalogue of Books on Pharmacy free upon application.

PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS.
TYSON. Hand-Book of Physical Diagnosis. For Students and
Physicians. By the Professor of Clinical Medicine in the University
of Pennsylvania. Ulus. 2d Ed., Improved and Enlarged. $1.25
MEMMINGER. Diagnosis by the Urine. 23 Ulus. $1.00
18 SUBJECT CATALOGUE.

PHYSIOLOGY,
BRUBAKER. Compend of Physiology. 8th Edition, Revised
and Enlarged. Illustrated. .80; Interleaved, $1.25
KIRKE. Physiology. (14th Authorized Edition. Dark-Red Cloth.)
A Hand-Book of Physiology. 14th Edition, Revised and Enlarged.
By Prof. W. D Halliburton, of Kings College, London. 661
Illustrations, some of which are printed in colors. Just Ready.
Cloth, $3.25; Leather, $4.00
LANDOIS. A Text-Book of Human Physiology, Including
Histology and Microscopical Anatomy, with Special Reference to
the Requirements of Practical Medicine. 5th American, translated
from the 9th German Edition, with Additions by Wm. Stirling,
m.d.,d.sc. 845 Ulus., many of which are printed in colors. In Press.
STARLING. Elements of Human Physiology. 100 Ills. $1.00
STIRLING. Outlines of Practical Physiology. Including
Chemical and Experimental Physiology, with Special Reference to
Practical Medicine. 3d Edition. 289 Illustrations. $2.00
TYSON. Cell Doctrine. Its History and Present State. $1.50
YEO. Manual of Physiology. A Text-Book for Students of
Medicine. By Gerald F. Yko, m.d., f.r.c.s. 6th Edition. 254
Illustrations and a Glossary. Cloth, $2. 50 Leather, $3.00
;

PRACTICE.
BEALE. On Slight Ailments; their Nature and Treatment.
2d Edition, Enlarged and Illustrated. $1.25
CHARTERIS. Practice of Medicine. 6th Edition. $2.00
FOWLER. Dictionary of Practical Medicine. By various
writers. An Encyclopaedia of Medicine. Clo.,$3.oo; Half Mor. $4 00
HUGHES. Compend of the Practice of Medicine. 5th Edition,
Revised and Enlarged.
Part I. Continued, Eruptive, and Periodical Fevers, Diseases of the
Stomach, Intestines, Peritoneum, Biliary Passages, Liver, Kid-
neys, etc., and General Diseases, etc.
Part II. Diseases of the Respiratory System, Circulatory System,
and Nervous System; Diseases of the Blood, etc.
Price of each part, .80; Interleaved, $1.25
Physician’s Edition. In one volume, including the above two
parts, a Section on Skin Diseases, and an Index. 5th Revised,
Enlarged Edition. 568 pp. Full Morocco, Gilt Edge, $2. 25
ROBERTS. The Theory and Practice of Medicine. The
Sections on Treatment are especially exhaustive, gth Edition,
with Illustrations. Cloth, $4.50; Leather, $5.50
TAYLOR. Practice of Medicine. Cloth, $2.00; Sheep, $2.50
TYSON. The Practice of Medicine. By James Tyson, m.d.,
Professor of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania.
A Complete Systematic Text-book with Special Reference to Diag-
nosis and Treatment. Illustrated. 8vo. Just Ready.
Cloth, $5.50 ; Leather, $6 50 Half Russia, $7.50
;

PRESCRIPTION BOOKS.
BEASLEY. Book of 3100 Prescriptions. Collected from the
Practice of the Most Eminent Physicians and Surgeons—English,
French, and American. A Compendious History of the Materia,
Medica, Lists of the Doses of all Officinal and Established Prepara-
tions,and an Index of Diseasesand their Remedies. 7th Ed. £2.00
MEDICAL BOOKS. 19

BEASLEY. Druggists’ General Receipt Book. Comprising


a Copious Veterinary Formulary, Recipes m Patent and Proprie-
tary Medicines, Druggists’ Nostrums, etc. ; Perfumery and Cos-
metics, Beverages, Dietetic Articles and Condiments, Trade Chem-
icals, Scientific Processes, and an Appendix of Useful Tables.
10th Edition, Revised. $2.00
BEASLEY. Pocket Formulary. A Synopsis of the British and
Foreign Pharmacopoeias. Comprising Standard and Approved
Formulae for the Preparations and Compounds Employed in Medical
Practice, nth Edition. Cloth, $2.00
PEREIRA. Prescription Book. Containing Lists of Terms,
Phrases, Contractions, and Abbreviations Used in Prescriptions, Ex-
planatory Notes, Grammatical Construction of Prescriptions, etc.
16th Edition. Cloth, .75 Tucks, $t.oo
;

WYTHE. Dose and Symptom Book. The Physician’s Pocket


Dose and Symptom Book. Containing the Doses and Uses of all
the Principal Articles of the Materia Medica and Officinal Prepara-
tions. 17th Ed. Cloth, .75; Leather, with Tucks and Pocket, $1.00
SKIN.
BULKLEY, The Skin in Health and Disease. Illustrated. .40
CROCKER. Diseases of the Skin. Their Description, Pathol-
ogy, Diagnosis, and Treatment, with Special Reference to the Skin
Eruptions of Children. 92 Ulus. 2d Edition. Enlarged. $4-50
IMPEY. Leprosy. 37 Plates. 8vo. $3-5°
VAN HARLINGEN. On Skin Diseases. A Practical Manual
of Diagnosis and Treatment, with special reference to Differential
Diagnosis. 3d Edition, Revised and Enlarged. With Formulae
and 60 Illustrations, some of which are printed in colors. $2.75

SURGERY AND SURGICAL DIS-


EASES.
CAIRD AND CATHCART. Surgical Hand-Book. 5 th Edition,
Revised. 188 Illustrations. Full Red Morocco, $2.50
DEAVER. Appendicitis, Its Symptoms, Diagnosis, Pathol-
ogy, Treatment, and Complications. Elaborately Illustrated
with Colored Plates and other Illustrations. Just Ready. Cloth, $3.50
DEAVER. Surgical Anatomy. With 200 Illustrations, Drawn by a
Special Artist from Directions made for the Purpose. In Preparation.
DULLES. What to Do First in Accidents and Poisoning.
4th Edition. New Illustrations. jfi.oo
HACKER. Antiseptic Treatment of Wounds, Introduction to
the, According to the Method in Use at Professor Billroth’s Clinic,
Vienna. With a Photo-engraving of Billroth in his Clinic. .50
HEATH. Minor Surgery and Bandaging 10th Ed Revised
and Enlarged. 158 Illustrations, 62 Formulae, Diet List, etc $1.25
HEATH. Injuries and Diseases of the Jaws. 4th Edition.
187 Illustrations. $4 50
HEATH. Lectures on Certain Diseases of the Jaws. 64IIIUS-
trations. Boards, .50
HORW1TZ. Compend of Surgery and Bandaging, including
Minor Surgery, Amputations, Fractures, Dislocations, Surgical Dis-
eases, and the Latest Antiseptic Rules, etc., with Differential Diagno-
sis and Treatment. $th Edition, very much Enlarged and Rear-
ranged. 167 Illustrations, 98 Formulae. Clo., .80; Interleaved, $ 1.25
20 SUBJECT CATALOGUE.

JACOBSON. Operations of Surgery. Over 200 Illustrations.


Cloth, $3.00 ; Leather, $4.00
JACOBSON. Diseases of the Male Organs of Generation.
88 Illustrations. $6.00
MACREADY. A Treatise on Ruptures. 24 Full-page Litho-
graphed Plates and Numerous Wood Engravings. Cloth, $6.00
MAYLARD, Surgery of the Alimentary Canal. 27 Full Page
Plates and 117 other Illustrations. Just Ready. #7-50
MOULLIN. Text-Book of Surgery. With Special Reference to
Treatment. 3d American Edition. Revised and edited by John B.
Hamilton, m.d., ll.d.. Professor of the Principles of Surgery and
Clinical Surgery, Rush Medical College, Chicago. 623 Illustrations,
over 200 of which are original, and many of which are printed in
colors. Handsome Cloth, $6.00; Leather, $7.00
The aim to make this valuable treatise practical by giving special

attention to questions of treatment has been admirably carried out.


Many a reader will consult the work with a feeling of satisfaction that
his wants have been understood, and that they have been intelligently
met.” —The American Journal 0/ MedicalScience.
PORTER. Surgeon’s Pocket-Book. 3d Ed. Lea. Cover, $2.00.
SMITH. Abdominal Surgery. Being a Systematic Description of
all the Principal Operations. 224 Ulus. 5th Ed. 2 Vols. Clo., $10.00
SWAIN. Surgical Emergencies. Fifth Edition. Cloth, $1.75
VOSWINKEL. Surgical Nursing, m Illustrations. $1.00
WALSHAM. Manual of Practical Surgery. 5th Ed., Re-
vised and Enlarged. With 380 Engravings. Clo.,$2.75; Lea., $3.25
WATSON. On Amputations of the Extremities and Their
Complications. 250 Illustrations. $5.50

THROAT AND NOSE (see also Ear)*


COHEN. The Throat and Voice. Illustrated. ,40
HALL. Diseases of the Nose and Throat. Two Colored
Plates and 59 Illustrations. $2.50
HUTCHINSON. The Nose and Throat. Including the Nose,
Naso-Pharynx, Pharynx, and Larynx. Illustrated by Lithograph
Plates and 40 other Illustrations 2d Edition. In Press.
MACKENZIE. The Pharmacopoeia of the London Hospital
for Diseases of the Throat. 5th Edition, Revised by Ur. F,
G. Harvey. $1.00
McBRIDE. Diseases of the Throat, Nose, and Ear. A Clinical
Manual. With colored Ulus from original drawings. 2d Ed. $6.00
MURRELL. Chronic Bronchitis and its Treatment. (Author-
ized Edition.) A Clinical Study. $1.50
POTTER. Speech and its Defects. Considered Physiologically,
Pathologically, and Remedially. $1.00
WOAKES. Post-Nasal Catarrh and Diseases of the Nose
Causing Deafness. 26 Illustrations. $1.00

URINE AND URINARY ORGANS.


ACTON. The Functions and Disorders of the Reproductive
Organs in Childhood, Youth, Adult Age, and Advanced Life,
Considered in their Physiological, Social, and Moral Relations.
8th Edition. $1.75
MEDICAL BOOKS. 21

ALLEN. Albuminous and Diabetic Urine. Ulus. $2.25


BROCKBANK. Gall Stones. Just Ready. $2.25
BEALE. One Hundred Urinary Deposits. On eight sheets,
for the Hospital, Laboratory, or'Surgery. Paper, $2.00
HOLLAND. The Urine, the Gastric Contents, the Common
Poisons, and the Milk. Memoranda, Chemical and Microscopi-
cal, for Laboratory Use. Illustrated and Interleaved. 5th Ed. $1.00
LEGG. On the Urine. 7th Edition, Enlarged. Ulus. $1.00
MEMMINGER. Diagnosis by the Urine. 23 Ulus. $1.00
MOULLIN. Enlargement of the Prostate. Its Treatment and
Radical Cure. Illustrated. $i-So
THOMPSON. Diseases of the Urinary Organs. 8th Ed. $3.00
TYSON. Guide to Examination of the Urine. For the Use of
Physicians and Students. With Colored Plate and Numerous Illus-
trations engraved on wood. 9th Edition, Revised. J1.25
VAN NUYS. Chemical Analysis of Healthy and Diseased
Urine, Qualitative and Quantitative. 39 Illustrations. $1.00

VENEREAL DISEASES.
COOPER. Syphilis. 2d Edition, Enlarged and Illustrated with
20 full-page Plates. $5.00
GOWERS. and the Nervous System.
Syphilis
JACOBSON. Diseases of the Male Organs of Generation. 88
Illustrations. $6.00

VETERINARY.
ARMATAGE. The Veterinarian’s Pocket Remembrancer.
Being Concise Directions for the Treatment of Urgent or Rare Cases,
Embracing Semeiology, Diagnosis, Prognosis, Surgery, Treatment,
etc. 2d Edition. Boards, .00
BALLOU. Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology. 29 Graphic
Illustrations. .80; Interleaved, $i. 25
TUSON. Veterinary Pharmacopoeia. Including the Outlines of
Materia Medica and Therapeutics. 5th Edition. #2.25

WOMEN, DISEASES OF.


BYFORD (H. T.). Manual of Gynecology. With 234 Illustra-
tions, many of which are from original drawings. $2 50
BYFORD (W. H.). Diseases of Women. 4th Edition. 306
Illustrations. Cloth, $2.00; Leather, $2.50
DUHRSSEN. A Manual of Gynecological Practice. 105
Illustrations. J1.50
LEWERS. Diseases of Women. 146 Ulus. 3d Edition. $ 2.00
WELLS. Compend of Gynecology. Ulus. .80; Interleaved, $1.25
WIliCKEL. Diseases of Women. Translated by special authority
of Author, under the Supervision of, and with an Introduction by,
Theophilus Parvin, m.d. 152 Engravings on Wood. 3d Edition,
Revised. - In Preparation.
FULLERTON. Nursing in Abdominal Surgery and Diseases
of Women. 2d Edition. 70 Illustrations. $1.50
22 SUBJECT CATALOGUE.

COMPENDS.
From The Southern Clinic.
We know of no series of books issued by any house that so fully

meets our approval as these ? Quiz-Compends ?. They are well ar-


ranged, full, and concise, and are really thebest line of text-books that
could be found for either student or practitioner.”

BLAKISTON’S ? QUIZ-COMPENDS?
The Best Series of Manuals for the Use of Students.
Price of each. Cloth, .80. Interleaved, for taking Notes, $1.25.
4®=* These Compends are based on the most popular text-books
and the lectures of prominent professors, and are kept constantly re-
vised, so that they may thoroughly represent the present state of the
subjects upon which they treat.
The authors have had large experience as Quiz-Masters and
attaches of colleges, and are well acquainted with the wants of students.
They are arranged in the most approved form, thorough and
concise, containing over 6oo fine illustrations, inserted wherever they
could be used to advantage.
4® Can be used by students of any college.
*

They contain information nowhere else collected in such a


condensed, practical shape. Illustrated Circular free.
No. i. POTTER. HUMAN ANATOMY. Fifth Revised and
Enlarged Edition. Including Visceral Anatomy. Can be used
with either Morris’s or Gray’s Anatomy. 117 Illustrations and 16
Lithographic Plates of Nerves and Arteries, with Explanatory
Tables, etc. By Samuel O. L. Potter, m.d., Professor of the
Practice of Medicine, Cooper Medical College, San Francisco ; late
A. A. Surgeon, U. S. Army.
No. 2. HUGHES. PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. Parti. Fifth
Edition, Enlarged and Improved. By Daniel E. Hughes,m.d,,
Physician-in-Chief, Philadelphia Hospital, late Demonstrator of
Clinical Medicine, Jefferson Medical College, Phila.
No. 3. HUGHES. PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. Part II,
Fifth Edition, Revised and Improved. Same author as No. 2.
No. 4. BRUBAKER. PHYSIOLOGY. Eighth Edition, with
new Illustrations and a table of Physiological Constants. Enlarged
and Revised. By A. P. Brubaker, m.d., Professor of Physiology
and General Pathology in the Pennsylvania College of Dental
Surgery ; Demonstrator of Physiology, Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia.
No. 5. LANDIS. OBSTETRICS. Fifth Edition. By Henry G.
Landis, m.d. Revised and Edited by Wm. H. Wells, m.d..
Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics, Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia. Enlarged. 47 Illustrations.
No. 6. POTTER. MATERIA MEDICA, THERAPEUTICS,
AND PRESCRIPTION WRITING. Sixth Revised Edition
(U. S. P. 1890). By Samuel O. L. Potter, m.d.. Professor of
Practice, Cooper Medical College, San Francisco ; late A. A. Sur-
geon, U. S. Army.
MEDICAL BOOKS. 23

?
QUIZ-COMPENDS ?—Continued.
No. 7. WELLS. GYNECOLOGY. A New Book. By Wm.
H. Wells, m.d., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics, Jefferson
College, Philadelphia. Illustrated. Just Ready.
No. 8. FOX AND GOULD. DISEASES OF THE EYE AND
REFRACTION. Second Edition. Including Treatment and
Surgery. By L. Webster Fox, m.d , and George M. Gould,
m.d. With 39 Formulae and 71 illustrations.
No. 9. HORWITZ. SURGERY, Minor Surgery, and Bandag-
ing. Fifth Edition, Enlarged and Improved. By Orville
Horwitz, b.s., m.d. .Clinical Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery
and Venereal Diseases in Jefferson Medical College ; Surgeon to
Philadelphia Hospital, etc. With 98 Formulae and 71 Illustrations.
No. 10. LEFFMANN. MEDICAL CHEMISTRY. Fourth
Edition. Including Urinalysis, Animal Chemistry, Chemistry of
Milk, Blood, Tissues, the Secretions, etc. By Henry Lkffmann,
m.d.. Professor of Chemistry in Pennsylvania College of Dental
Surgery and in the Woman’s Medical College, Philadelphia.
No. 11. STEWART. PHARMACY. Fifth Edition. Based upon
Prof. Remington’s Text-Book of Pharmacy. By F. E. Stewart,
m.d., ph.g., late Quiz-Master in Pharmacy and Chemistry, Phila-
delphia College of Pharmacy; Lecturer at Jefferson Medical
College. Carefully revised in accordance with the new U. S. P.
No. 12. BALLOU. VETERINARY ANATOMY AND PHY-
SIOLOGY. Illustrated. By Wm.R. Ballou, m.d., Professor
of Equine Anatomy at New York College of Veterinary Surgeons ;
Physician to Bellevue Dispensary, etc. 29 graphic Illustrations.
No. 13. WARREN. DENTAL PATHOLOGY AND DEN-
TAL MEDICINE. Second Edition, Illustrated. Containing
all the most noteworthy points of interest to the Dental Student
and a Section on Emergencies. By Geo. W. Warren, d.d.s..
Chief of Clinical Staff, Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery,
Philadelphia.
No. 14. HATFIELD. DISEASES OF CHILDREN. Second
Edition. Colored Plate. By Marcus P. Hatfield, Profes-
sor of Diseases of Children, Chicago Medical College.
No. 15. HALL. GENERAL PATHOLOGY AND MORBID
ANATOMY, gi Illustrations. By H. Newberry Hall, ph.g.,
m.d., Professor of Pathology and Med. Chem., Chicago Post-
Graduate Medical School; Mem. Surgical Staff, Illinois Charit-
able Eye and Ear Infirmary; Chief of Ear Clinic, Chicago Med.
College.
Price, each, Cloth, .80. Interleaved, for taking Notes, $1.25.
Handsome Illustrated Circular sent free upon application.
In preparing, revising, and improving Blakiston’s Quiz-Com- ?

pends ?
the particular wants of the student have always been kept in
mind.
Careful attention has been given to the construction of each sentence,
and while the books will be found to contain an immense amount of
knowledge in small space, they will likewise be found easy reading;
there is no stilted repetition of words ; the style is clear, lucid, and dis-
tinct. The arrangement of subjects is systematic and thorough there ;

is a reason for every word. They contain over 600 illustrations.


Tyson’s
Practice of
Medicine,
A Text-Book of the Practice of Medi-
cine. With Special Reference to Diagnosis
and Treatment. By James Tyson, m. d.,
Professor of Clinical Medicine in the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Hos-
pital of the University and to the Philadelphia
Hospital; Fellow of the College of Physicians
of Philadelphia, etc.

With Many Useful Illustrations.


Octavo. n8o Pages.
Cloth, $5.50; Sheep, $6.50; Half Russia, $7.50.

Dr. Tyson’s qualifications for writing such a work are


unequaled. It is really the outcome of over thirty years’
experience in teaching and in private and hospital practice.
As a teacher he has, while devoting himself chiefly to clini-
cal medicine, occupied several important chairs, an experi-
ence that has necessarily widened his point of view and
added weight to his judgment.
As an author Dr. Tyson has been more than usually suc-
cessful, and by his book on Examination of Urine,” many

thousands of which have been sold, has become known


throughout the English-speaking world. The success of this
little book lies in the fact that it is concise, simple, direct,
broad. It furnishes the desired information and then stops.
The same style has been largely used in the present work,
and must be appreciated by the busy man and student.
Descriptive circular and sample pages upon application.

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