Part 38 (1/2)

”Which _cuts_ are reckoned aranting a _permit_”--”Feel darts and charms, _attracts_ and fla off of the _come_, or sprout”--_Mortimer_ ”And thou hast talk'd of _sallies_ and _retires_”--_Shak_

”For all that else did come, were sure to fail; Yet would he further none, but for _avail_”--_Spenser_

4 Participles _ of real happiness”--_Crabb_ ”For the _crying_ of the poor and the _sighing_ of the needy, I will arise”--_Bible_ ”Surely the _churning_ of _ of the nose bringeth forth blood; so the _forcing_ of wrath bringeth forth strife”--_Prov_, xxx, 33 ”_Reading, writing_, and _ciphering_, are indispensable to civilized _ and _pere of the _past_ comes next”--_Hermes_, p 113 ”I a_, vii, 10

”Here's--a si-in_ for one s-in_?

O Ceremony, show me but thy worth”--_Id_

5 Adverbs made nouns: ”In these cases we exas”--_L'Estrange_ ”If a point or _noere extended, each of them would contain within itself infinite other points or _nows_”--_Hermes_, p 101 ”The _why_ is plain as way to parish church”--_Shak_ ”'Tis Heaven itself that points out _an hereafter_”--_Addison_ ”The dread of _a hereafter_”--_Fuller_ ”The murmur of the deep _amen_”--_Sir W Scott_ ”For their _whereabouts_ lieth in a hts_, p 14 Better: ”Their _whereabout_ lieth,” or, ”Their _whereabouts lie_,” &c

”Bid theh unkind; Thou losest _here_, a better _where_ to find”--_Shak_

6 Conjunctions made nouns: ”The _if_, which is here employed, converts the sentence into a supposition”--_Blair's Rhet_ ”Your _if_ is the only peacemaker; much virtue is in _if_”--_Shak_

”So his Lordshi+p decreed with a grave solemn tone, Decisive and clear, without one _if_ or _but_-- That whenever the Nose put his spectacles on, By daylight or candlelight--Eyes should be shut”--_Cowper_

7 Prepositions made nouns: ”O, not like me; for mine's beyond _beyond_”--_Shakspeare: Cy is _further than beyond_; beyond any thing that desire can be said to be beyond”--_Singer's Notes_ ”You whirled them to the back of _beyont_ to look at the auld Roman camp”--_Antiquary_, i 37

8 Interjections or phrases made nouns: ”Come away from all the _lo-heres_!

and _lo-theres_!”--_Sermon_ ”Will cuts him short with a '_What then_?'”--_Addison_ ”With _hark_ and _whoop_, and wild _halloo_”--_Scott_ ”And made a _pish_ at chance and sufferance”--_Shak_

”A single look then'd _oh_”--_Lloyd_

CLassES

Nouns are divided into two general classes; _proper_ and _common_ I A _proper noun_ is the naroup; as, _Adam, Boston_, the _Hudson_, the _Romans_, the _Azores_, the _Alps_

II A _cos or things; as, _Beast, bird, fish, insect,--creatures, persons, children_

The particular classes, _collective, abstract_, and _verbal_, or _participial_, are usually included aeneris_ is also called common

1 A _collective noun_, or _noun of ether; as, _Council, , committee, flock_

2 An _abstract noun_ is the name of some particular quality considered apart from its substance; as, _Goodness, hardness, pride, frailty_

3 A _verbal_ or _participial noun_ is the na; and is formed from a verb, like a participle, but e_ of the wicked is short”--_Job_, xx, 5

4 A thing _sui generis_, (i e, _of its own peculiar kind_,) is souished, not as an individual of a species, but as a sort by itself, without plurality in either the noun or the sort of thing; as, _Galvanish the influence of an article, a proper name sometimes acquires the ie;”

that is, _the great orator_ ”Many _a fiery Alp_;” that is, _high volcanicapplication of famous names; a Solomon for a wise man, a Croesus for a rich man, a Judas for a traitor, a Demosthenes for an orator, and a Homer for a poet”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p

326

”Consideration, like an angel, ca Adam_ out of him”--_Shak_

OBS 2--A common noun, with the definite article before it, sometimes becomes proper: as, _The Park; the Strand; the Gharmel; the Downs; the United States_