Books by Gilbert Lawall

Athenaze: An Introduction to Ancient Greek, Book 1 - Teacher's Handbook

by Maurice Balme, Gilbert Lawall

Designed to accompany the corresponding student's textbook, this volume contains the full English translations of all exercises. The Athenaze course aims to promote the fluent reading of ancient Greek through a series of exercises, grammatical explanations and essays on culture and history.

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Athenaze: An Introduction to Ancient Greek (Workbook I)

by Luigi Miraglia, Gilbert Lawall, James F. Johnson

Combining the best features of traditional and modern methods, Athenaze: An Introduction to Ancient Greek, 2/e provides a unique course of instruction that allows students to read connected Greek narrative right from the beginning and guides them to the point where they can begin reading complete classical texts. New to this second edition, Student Workbooks for Books I and II include self-correcting exercises, cumulative vocabulary lists, periodic grammatical reviews, and additional readings.

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The Phaedra of Seneca (Latin Edition)

by Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Gilbert Lawall, Sarah Lawall, Gerda Kunkel

Illustrated rapid reader. Book includes an analysis of the play, vocabulary, study questions, stage directions, and a new translation of the Hippolytus by Euripides.

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Athenaze Book 1 Revised Edition: An Introduction to Ancient Greek

by James Morwood, Maurice Balme, Gilbert Lawall

Combining the best features of traditional and modern methods, Athenaze: An Introduction to Ancient Greek 3/e, provides a unique, bestselling course of instruction that allows students to read connected Greek narrative right from the begining and guides them to the point where they can begin reading complete classical texts. Carefully designed to hold students' interest, the course begins in Book I with a fictional narrative about an Attic farmer's family placed in a precise historical context (423-431 B.C.). This narrative, interwoven with tales from mythology and the Persian Wars, gradually gives way in Book II to adapted passages from Thucydides, Plato, and Herodotuc and ultimately to excerpts of the original Greek of Bacchylides, Thucudides, and Aristophanes' Acharnians. Essays on relevant aspects of ancient Greek culture and history are also woven throughout.

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