University of Virginia record February, 1911 | ||
For Undergraduates.
German 1A: Beginners may take this course. Elementary grammar
and prose-composition; special training in pronunciation and simple conversational
German; reading of about 600 pages of German prose, with
conversational exercises and composition work in free reproduction, based
on texts read. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 1-2. Cabell Hall.
Students entering in January, with one to two years of preliminary
training in German, may profitably register for German 1A, and will be
given credit for the work of the first term, on the successful completion
of the remaining two terms.
German 2B: Course 1A (or its equivalent) prerequisite.—Review
of German grammar; Deutschland in Wort and Bild (Schweitzer's Deutsches
Lesebuch für Quarta und Tertia); the Roman and the Novelle (Storm,
Keller, Sudermann); the German drama (Schiller, Hebbel, Hauptmann);
conversational exercises and composition work in free reproduction, based
on texts read, throughout the session. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 10-11.
Cabell Hall.
Students entering in January, with three years or more of preliminary
training in German, may profitably register for German 2B, and will
receive full credit for the course by successfully completing the work of
the second and third terms of the current session, and that of the first
term in the session next ensuing.
English Language 1B: English Literature 1A (or its equivalent)
prerequisite.—Old English: Smith's Old English Grammar and Reader.
Middle English: Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Old and Middle English
Literature: Lectures on the history and development of English Literature
from its beginning to 1400, with collateral reading. History of English:
Lectures on the history of the English Language; Greenough and Kittredge's
Words and their Ways in English Speech. Monday, Wednesday,
Friday, 9-10. Cabell Hall.
University of Virginia record February, 1911 | ||