Part 32 (1/2)

”And the latter must evidently be so too, or, at least, cotemporary, with the act”--_Ib_, p 60 ”Thefor five years”--_Ib_, p 77 ”I shall not take up ti their scruples”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 320 ”In several of the chorusses of Euripides and Sophocles, we have the same kind of lyric poetry as in Pindar”--_Ib_, p 398 ”Until the States_ the hu its excressences, after it has been neglected”--_Webster's Essays_, p 26

”Where conviction could be followed only by a bigotted persistence in error”--_Ib_, p 78 ”All the barons were entitled to a seet in the national council, in right of their baronys”--_Ib_, p 260 ”Soe of arithmetic is necessary for every lady”--_Ib_, p 29 ”Upon this, [the systeht-errantry”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 374 ”The subject is, the atchievene and his Peers, or Paladins”--_Ib_, p 374

”Aye, aye; this slice to be sure outweighs the other”--_Blair's Reader_, p 31 ”In the co_

The phrase signifies, a good going, a prosperous passage, and is equivalent to _farewell_”--_Webster's Dict_ ”Good-by, _adv_--a contraction of _good be with you_--a fa farewell”--See _Chal, and did not so ood bye to you”--_Blair's Reader_, p 16 ”It no longer recals the notion of the action”--_Barnard's Graood-sense ive, divine”--_Pope, Ess on Crit_

EXERCISE XI--MIXED ERRORS

”The practices in the art of carpentry are called planeing, sawing, , &c”--_Blair's Reader_, p 118 ”With her left hand, she guides the thread round the spindle, or rather round a spole which goes on the spindle”--_Ib_, p 134 ”Much suff'ring heroes next their honours clai verven, and head purging dill”--SPENSER: _ib, w Head_ ”An, in old English, signifies _if_; as, '_an_ it please your honor'”--_Webster's Dict_ ”What, then, was the moral worth of these renouned leaders?”--_M'Ilvaine's Lect_, p 460 ”Behold how every forence of the benevolent”--_Ib_, p

411 ”Reptiles, bats, and doleful creatures--jackalls, hyenas, and lions--inhabit the holes, and caverns, and marshes of the desolate city”--_Ib_, p 270 ”ADAYS, _adv_ On or in days; as, in the phrase, now _adays_”--_Webster's Dict_ ”REFEREE, one to who is referred; TRANSFERREE, the person to whom a transfer is hts who built a hospital at Jerusale, was the institutor and first grandDict_ ”I had a purpose now to lead our many to the holy land”--SHAK: _in Johnson's Dict_ ”He turned their heart to hate his people, to deal subtilly with his servants”--_Psalms_, cv, 25 ”In Dryden's ode of Alexander's Feast, the line, '_Faln, faln, faln, faln_,' represents a gradual sinking of the mind”--_Kames, El of Crit_, Vol ii, p 71 ”The first of these lines is marvelously nonsensical”--_Jamieson's Rhet_, p 117 ”We have the nicely chiseled forms of an Apollo and a Venus, but it is the same cold marble still”--_Christian Spect_, Vol viii, p 201 ”Death waves his hty wand and paralyses all”--_Bucke's Gram_, p 35 ”Fear God Honor the patriot Respect virtue”--_Kirkha Governour of Judea, and Herod being Tetrarch of Galilee”--_Ib_, p 189

See _Luke_, iii, 1 ”AUCTIONEER, _n s_ The person that es an auction”--_Johnson's Dict_ ”The earth put forth her primroses and days-eyes, to behold hi a compound of _man_, is _musselmans_ in the plural”--_Lennie's Gra thenity_, Vol i, p 147 ”John was forced to sit with his arms a kimbo, to keep them asunder”--ARBUTHNOT: _Joh Dict_ ”To set the arms a kimbo, is to set the hands on the hips, with the elbows projecting outward”--_Webster's Dict_ ”We almost uniformly confine the inflexion to the last or the latter noun”--_Maunder's Gram_, p 2 ”This is all souls day, fellows! Is it not?”--SHAK: _in Joh Dict_ ”The english physicians ht”--_Johnson's Dict_ ”There is a certain number of ranks allowed to dukes, marquisses, and earls”--PEACHAM: _ib, w Marquis_

”How could you chide the young good natur'd prince, And drive him from you with so stern an air”

--ADDISON: _ib, w Good_, 25

EXERCISE XII--MIXED ERRORS

”In reading, every appearance of sing-song should be avoided”--_Sanborn's Grahly acquainted with the inflexions of the verb”--_Ib_, p 53 ”The preterite of _read_ is pronounced _red_”--_Ib_, p 48 ”Hunity”--_Ib_, p

15 ”What is intricate un powder, A D 1280”--_Ib_, p 277 ”On which ever e lay the emphasis”--_Murray's Gram_, 8vo, p 243; 12mo, p 195 ”Each of the leaders was apprized of the Roman invasion”--_Nixon's Parser_, p 123

”If I say, 'I _gallopped_ froallopped_ ton to Holloway;' it is transitive”--_Churchill's Gra a part one day in seven”--_The Friend_, Vol iv, p 240 ”The pro reprobated this act”--_Webster's Essays_, p 196 ”There are five compound personal pronouns, which are derived fro to some of their cases the syllable _self_; as, my-self, thy-self, him-self, her-self, it-self”--_Perley's Gram_, p 16 ”Possessives, my-own, thy-own, his-own, her-own, its-own, our-own, your-own, their-own”--_Ib, Declensions_ ”Thy man servant and thy maid servant may rest, as well as thou”--_Sanborn's Grale?”--_Ib_, p 220 ”In the days of Joru of Israel, flourished the prophet Elisha”--_Ib_, p 148 ”In the days of Joru of Israel, Elisha, the prophet flourished”--_Ib_, p 133 ”Lodgable, _a_

Capable of affording a temporary abode”--_Webster's Octavo Dict_--”Win me into the easy hearted man”--_Johnson's Quarto Dict_ ”And then to end life, is the same as to dye”--_Milnes's Greek Gra hectors who pretend to honour without religion, think the charge of a lie a blot not to be washed out but by blood”--SOUTH: _Joh Dict_ ”His gallies attending him, he pursues the unfortunate”--_Nixon's Parser_, p 91 ”This cannot fail toour assent”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p 117 ”When he coive it such a definition as its connection with the sentence ett's Expositor_, p vii ”Learn to distil from your lips all the honies of persuasion”--_Adaust and abhorrence against the Americans”--_Ib_, ii, 300 ”Where prejudice has not acquired an uncontroled ascendency”--_Ib_, i, 31 ”The uncontrolable propensity of his mind was undoubtedly to oratory”--_Ib_, i, 100 ”The Brutus is a practical coues and the orator”--_Ib_, i, 120

”The oratorical partitions are a short elementary compendium”--_Ib_, i, 130 ”You shall find hundreds of persons able to produce a crowd of good ideas upon any subject, for one that can e”--_Ib_, i, 169 ”In this lecture, you have the outline of all that the whole course will comprize”--_Ib_, i, 182 ”He would have been stopped by a hint fro out of the record”--_Ib_, i, 289 ”To tell them that which should befal them in the last days”--_Ib_, ii, 308 ”Where all is present, there is nothing past to recal”--_Ib_, ii, 358 ”Whose due it is to drink the brieance”--_Law and Grace_, p 36

”There, from the dead, centurions see hie_

”With seed of woes ed”--SIDNEY: _Joh Dict_

”Our legions are brimful, our cause is ripe”--SHAKSPEARE: _ib_

PART II

ETYMOLOGY

ETYMOLOGY treats of the different parts of speech, with their classes and modifications

The _Parts of Speech_ are the several kinds, or principal classes, into which words are divided by grammarians

_Classes_, under the parts of speech, are the particular sorts into which the several kinds of words are subdivided