Part 124 (1/2)

”To use that endearing language, Our Father, who is in heaven”--_Bates's Doctrines_, p 103 ”Rese the passions that produceth these actions”--_Karief, hoof, muff_, &c which takes _s_ to oeth before me and the children be able to endure”-- _Gen_ xxxiii, 14 ”Where is the man who dare affirm that such an action is mad?”--_Werter_ ”The ninth book of Livy affords one of the , that is any where to be met with”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 360 ”In so, which is our object,” &c--_Ib_, p 349 ”Of those affecting situations, which makes man's heart feel for man”--_Ib_, p

464 ”We see very plainly, that it is neither Osmyn, nor Jane Shore, that speak”--_Ib_, p 468 ”It should assume that briskness and ease, which is suited to the freedoht to be admitted into the ministry, but such as is truly pious”--_Barclay's Works_, iii, 147 ”This letter is one of the best that has been written about Lord Byron”--_Hunt's Byron_, p 119 ”Thus, besides as sunk, the Athenians took above two hundred shi+ps”--_Goldsmith's Greece_, i, 102 ”To have made and declared such orders as was necessary”--_Hutchinson's Hist_, i, 470 ”The idea of such a collection of men as make an army”--_Locke's Essay_, p 217 ”I'm not the first that have been wretched”--_Southern's In Ad_, Act 2 ”And the faint sparks of it, which is in the angels, are concealed from our view”--_Calvin's Institutes_, B i, Ch 11 ”The subjects are of such a nature, as allow room for much diversity of taste and sentiment”--_Blair's Rhet, Pref_, p 5 ”It is in order to propose examples of such perfection, as are not to be found in the real examples of society”--_Formey's Belles-Lettres_, p

16 ”I do not believe that he would amuse himself with such fooleries as has been attributed to hihtst the chosen seed”--_O B Peirce's Gram_, p 238 ”With respect to the vehemence and warmth which is allowed in popular eloquence”-- _Blair's Rhet_, p 261 ”Ambition is one of those passions that is never to be satisfied”--_Ho_, p 36 ”Thou wast he that leddest out and broughtest in Israel”--_2 Samuel_, v, 2; and _1 Chron_, xi, 2 ”Art thou the s_, xiii, 14

”How beauty is excell'd by race And wisdom, which alone is truly fair”--_Milton_, B iv, l 490

”What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus range the camp alone?”--_Pope, Il_, x, 90

UNDER NOTE II--NOMINATIVE WITH ADJUNCTS

”The literal sense of the words are, that the action had been done”--_Dr

Murray's Hist of Lang_, i, 65 ”The rapidity of his movements were beyond exaether with his Exercises and Key, have nearly superseded every thing else of the kind”--EVAN'S REC: _Murray's Gram_, 8vo, ii, 305 ”The mechanism of clocks and watches were totally unknown”--HUME: _Priestley's Graether with the verb _to be_, express states of being”--_Cobbett's Eng Gram_, -- 190 ”Hence it is, that the profuse variety of objects in soue”--_Kames, El of Crit_, i, 266 ”Such a clatter of sounds indicate rage and ferocity”--_Music of Nature_, p 195 ”One of the fields make threescore square yards, and the other only fifty-five”--_Duncan's Logic_, p 8 ”The happy effects of this fable is worth attending to”--_Bailey's Ovid_, p x ”Yet the glorious serenity of its parting rays still linger with us”--_Gould's Advocate_ ”Enough of its form and force are retained to render them uneasy”--_Maturin's Sermons_, p 261 ”The works of nature, in this respect, is extreular”--_Dr Pratt's Werter_ ”No sn words and phrases have been made by commerce”--_Bicknell's Gram_, Part ii, p 10 ”The dialect of some nouns are taken notice of in the notes”--_Milnes, Greek Gram_, p

255 ”It has been said, that a discovery of the full resources of the arts, afford the means of debasement, or of perversion”--_Rush, on the Voice_, p xxvii ”By which means the Order of the Words are disturbed”--_Holmes's Rhet_, B i, p 57 ”The twofold influence of these and the others require the asserter to be in the plural form”--_O B Peirce's Gram_, p 251

”And each of these afford employment”--_Percival's Tales_, Vol ii, p

175 ”The pronunciation of the vowels are best explained under the rules relative to the consonants”--_Coar's Gram_, p 7 ”The judicial power of these courts extend to all cases in law and equity”--_Hall and Baker's School Hist_, p 286 ”One of you have stolen my money”--_Rational Humorist_, p 45 ”Such redundancy of epithets, instead of pleasing, produce satiety and disgust”--_Kaed, that a compliance with the rules of Rhetoric, tend to cramp the mind”--_Hiley's Gram_, 3d Ed, p 187 ”Each of these are presented to us in different relations”--_Hendrick's Gram_, 1st Ed, p 34 ”The past tense of these verbs, _should, would, ht, could_, are very indefinite with respect to time”--_Bullions, E Gram_, 2d Ed, p 33; 5th Ed, p

31 ”The power of the words, which are said to govern this mood, are distinctly understood”--_Chandler's Grath, the fated terht, and lo! the God appears”

--_Dr Lowth, on ”the Genealogy of Christ”_

”Variety of Nu”

--_Brightland's Gram_, p 170

UNDER NOTE III--COMPOSITE OR CONVERTED SUBJECTS

”Many are the works of huranted to the same man”--_Johnson, Adv to Dict_ ”To lay down rules for these are as inefficacious”--_Dr Pratt's Werter_, p 19 ”To profess regard, and to act _differently_, discover a base mind”--_Murray's Key_, ii, p 206 See also _Bullions's E Graht of wonder things great, new, and admirable, extremely please the e, _according as_ are used in a manner which is very common”--_Webster's Philosophical Gram_, p 183 ”A _cause de_ are called a preposition; _a cause que_, a conjunction”--DR WEBSTER: _Knickerbocker_, 1836 ”To these are given to speak in the name of the Lord”--_The Friend_, vii, 256

”While _wheat_ has no plural, _oats_ have seldoular”--_Cobbett's E Gram_ -- 41 ”He cannot assert that _ll_ are inserted in _fullness_ to denote the sound of _u_”--_Cobb's Review of Webster_, p 11 ”_ch_ have the power of _k_”--_Gould's Adam's Gram_, p 2 ”_ti_, before a vowel, and unaccented, have the sound of _si_ or _ci_”--_Ibid_ ”In words derived frorin, chicanery_, and _chaise, ch_ are sounded like _sh_”--_Bucke's Gram_, p 10 ”But in the word _schism, schismatic_, &c, the _ch_ are silent”--_Ibid_ ”_Ph_ are always sounded like _f_, at the beginning of words”--_Bucke's Gram_ ”_Ph_ have the sound of _f_ as in _philosophy_”--_Webster's El Spelling-Book_, p 11 ”_Sh_ have one sound only as in _shall_”--_Ib_ ”_Th_ have two sounds”--_Ib_ ”_Sc_ have the sound of _sk_, before _a, o, u_, and _r_”--_Ib_ ”Aw, have the sound of _a_ in hall”--_Bolles's Spelling-Book_, p vi ”Ew, sound like _u_”--_Ib_ ”Ohen both sounded, have the sound of _ou_”--_Ib_ ”Ui, when both pronounced in one syllable sound like _wi_ in _languid_”--_Ib_

”_Ui_ three several Sorts of Sound express, As _Guile, rebuild, Bruise_ and _Recruit_ confess”

--_Brightland's Gram_, p 34

UNDER NOTE IV--EACH, ONE, EITHER, AND NEITHER

”When each of the letters which co_, p 22 ”As neither of us deny that both Horeat beauties”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 21 ”Yet neither of them are remarkable for precision”--_Ib_, p 95 ”How far each of the three great epic poets have distinguished themselves”--_Ib_, p

427 ”Each of these produce a separate agreeable sensation”--_Ib_, p 48

”On the Lord's day every one of us Christians keep the sabbath”--_Tr of Irenaeus_ ”And each of thee of purity and holiness”--_Hope of Israel_, p 81 ”Were either of these nized?”--_Foster's Report_, i, 96 ”Whilst neither of these letters exist in the Eugubian inscription”--_Knight, on Greek Alph_, p 122 ”And neither of them are properly termed indefinite”--_Wilson's Essay on Gram_, p 88 ”As likewise of the several subjects, which have in effect each their verb”--_Lowth's Gram_, p 120 ”Sons are used”--_Alex Murray's Gram_, p 21

”And as neither of these manners offend the ear”--_Walker's Dict, Pref_, p 5 ”Neither of these two Tenses are confined to this signification only”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p 339 ”But neither of these circumstances are intended here”--_Tooke's Diversions_, ii, 237 ”So that all are indebted to each, and each are dependent upon all”--_Am Bible Society's Rep_, 1838, p 89 ”And yet neither of them express any more action in this case than they did in the other”--_Bullions, E Gram_, p 201 ”Each of these expressions denote action”--_Hallock's Gram_, p 74 ”Neither of these moods seem to be defined by distinct boundaries”--_Butler's Practical Gram_, p 66 ”Neither of these solutions are correct”-- _Bullions, Lat Gran of case at all”--_Fowler's E Gram_, 8vo, 1850, --217

”Each in their turn like Banquo's monarchs stalk”--_Byron_

”And tell what each of them by th'other lose”--_Shak, Cori_, iii, 2