Part 139 (1/2)

”An allegory is the saying one thing, andonly one thing, but having two in view”--_Philological Museuuished, by itssense with any of the personal pronouns, or the word _to_ before it”--_Murray's Graer's_, 13; _Bacon's_, 10; _Couished by its taking an article before it, or by itssense of itself”--_Merchant's Gram_, p 17; _Murray's_, 27; &c ”An Adjectivesense with the addition of the word _thing_: as, a _good_ thing; a _bad_ thing”--_Same Authors_ ”It is seen in the objective case, fro”--_O B Peirce's Gram_, p 44 ”It is seen in the possessive case, fro”--_Ibid_ ”The name man is caused by the adna, of itself, one person as the subject of the two remarks”--_Ib_, p 56 ”_When_, as used in the last line, is a connective, fro that line to the other part of the sentence”--_Ib_, p 59 ”Fro reciprocation”--_Ib_, p

64 ”To allow the use of that liberty”--_Sale's Koran_, p

116 ”The worst effect of it is, the fixing on your mind a habit of indecision”--_Todd's Student's Manual_, p 60 ”And you groan theit off”--_Ib_, p 47 ”I know of nothing that can justify the having recourse to a Latin translation of a Greek writer”--_Coleridge's Introduction_, p 16 ”Hu others act or talk absurdly”--_Hazlitt's Lectures_ ”There are re each other”--_Butler's analogy_, p 150 ”The leaving Caesar out of the coht”--_Life of Cicero_, p 44 ”Of the receiving this toleration thankfully I shall say no hted with Julia's working lace so very well”--_O B Peirce's Gra each two different words that the confusion has arisen”--_Booth's Introd_, p 42 ”aeschylus died of a fracture of his skull, caused by an eagle's letting fall a tortoise on his head”--_Biog Dict_ ”He doubted their having it”--_Felch's Co ourselves clearly understood, is the chief end of speech”--_Sheridan's Elocution_, p 68 ”There is no discovering in their countenances, any signs which are the natural concos of the heart”--_Ib_, p 165 ”Nothing can be more co itself_”--_Ca the for to this”--_Bullions's E

Gram_, p 59

UNDER NOTE IV--DISPOSAL OF ADVERBS

”To this generally succeeds the division, or the laying down the method of the discourse”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 311 ”To the pulling down of strong holds”--_2 Cor_, x, 4 ”Can a e?”--_Brown's Esti expensively and luxuriously destroys health”--_Murray's Graally and te temperately, our health is pro away of the necessity”--_The Friend_, xiii, 157 ”He reco of the whole coory's Dict, w Ventriloquise nu thehtly”--_Churchill's Grararavely lecturing his friend about it”--_Ib_, i, 478 ”For the blotting out of sin”--_Gurney's Evidences_, p 140 ”Fro of water”--_Barclay's Works_, i, 189 ”By the gentle dropping in of a pebble”--_Sheridan's Elocution_, p

125 ”To the carrying on a great part of that general course of nature”--_Butler's analogy_, p 127 ”Then the not interposing is so far froround of complaint”--_Ib_, p 147 ”The bare o of what is used”--_Caether incongruous adverbs is a very common fault”--_Churchill's Gram_, p 329 ”This is a presu froy_, p 186 ”It represents hi unjustly is peculiarly unsuitable”--_Caher thanout of harmonious sounds”--_Kirkhaible and sufficient; and going farther seey_, p 147

”Apostrophe is a turning off froular course of the subject”--_Murray's Gram_, p 348; _Jamieson's Rhet_, 185 ”Even Isabella was finally prevailed upon to assent to the sending out a coate his conduct”--_Life of Colu away of the siers always should co's Poems_, p 585

UNDER NOTE V--PARTICIPLES WITH ADJECTIVES

”Is there any Scripture speaks of the light's being inward?”--_Barclay's Works_, i, 367 ”For I believe not the being positive therein essential to salvation”--_Ib_, iii, 330 ”Our not being able to act an uniforht and care”--_Butler's analogy_, p 122 ”Upon supposition of its being reconcileable with the constitution of nature”--_Ib_, p 128 ”Upon account of its not being discoverable by reason or experience”--_Ib_, p 170 ”Upon account of their being unlike the known course of nature”--_Ib_, p 171 ”Our being able to discern reasons for theives a positive credibility to the history of the universal”--_Ib_, p 175

”That they may be turned into the passive participle in _dus_ is no decisive argu passive”--_Grant's Lat Gra then _absent_ from the Corinthians”--_Kirkharadually weaker, until it finally dies away into silence”--_Ib_, p 32

”Not without the author's being fully aware”--_Ib_, p 84 ”Being witty out of season, is one sort of folly”--_Sheffield's Works_, ii 172 ”Its being generally susceptible of a er evidence”--_Ca such rarely enhanceth our opinion, either of their abilities or of their virtues”--_Ib_, p 162 ”Which were the ground of our being one”--_Barclay's Works_, i, 513 ”But theyintransitive”--_Murray's Graree of our persuasion of a thing's being possible”--_Churchill's Gra idle, and dishonest too, Was that which caus'd his utter overthrow”--_Tobitt's Gram_, p 61

UNDER NOTE VI--COMPOUND VERBAL NOUNS

”When it denotes being subjected to the exertion of another”--_Booth's Introd_, p 37 ”In a passive sense, it signifies being subjected to the influence of the action”--_Felch's Co abandoned by our friends is very deplorable”--_Golds attacked by the Macedonians”--_Ib_, ii, 97 ”In progress of ti connected with certain conditions of fortune”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 135

”Our beingus to a settled y_, p 121 ”The chancellor's being attached to the king secured his crown; The general's having failed in this enterprise occasioned his disgrace; John's having been writing a long time had wearied him”--_Murray's Graersoll's_, 46; _Fisk's_, 83; _and others_ ”The sentence should be, 'John's having been writing a long tiht's Gra observed”--_Murray's Key_, ii, 195 ”Hebeen corrected for his faults; The boy's having been corrected is shaer's Grareater the difficulty of re remembered is to the attainment of the ultimate end”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p 90 ”If the parts in the composition of si compounded would make no odds”--_Ib_, p 65

”Circumstances, not of such importance as that the scope of the relation is affected by their being known”--_Ib_, p 379 ”A passive verb expresses the receiving of an action or the being acted upon; as, 'John is beaten'”--_Frost's El of Grae, na diversified by Genders”--_Buchanan's Gra been slandered is no fault of Peter”--_Frost's El of Gra justified”--_Williaets intrepidity, ie lessens fear”--_Butler's analogy_, p 112 ”It is, not being affected so and so, but acting, which for satisfied of the truth of the apparent paradox”--_Ca einal and pri”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 132; _Jamieson's_, 140; _Murray's Gram_, 337; _Kirkha employed,” &c--_Hiley's Gra saved from punishment”--_Gurney's Evidences_, p 124 ”To sub led by the Spirit”--_Barclay's Works_, i, 542

UNDER NOTE VII--PARTICIPLES FOR INFINITIVES, &C

”Teaching little children is a pleasant e or co their divine Author”--_Reforht point out so retrenched”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 206 ”Never atte the pathetic too's Reader_, p 132 ”Nor of the necessity which there is for their being restrained in the what God coh it proceeds fro the nostrils does not so entirely prevent resonance”--_Music of Nature_, p 484 ”Yet they absolutely refuse doing so”--_Harris's Her hi thenified by the na well for the tiy_, p 198 ”The co that part by itself”--_Dr Adam, Rom Antiq_, p v ”To suilt upon ourselves”--_Kirkhareat injustice to that illustrious orator to bring his genius down to the sao ill, often hurts more than to be sure they do”--_Beauties of Shak_, p 203

”This is called straining a metaphor”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 150; _Murray's Gra manners to the poe entirely confined to that part of time which he has chosen, deprives hies of the same action”--_Murray's Gra all superfluities, and pruning the expression”-- _Blair's Rhet_, p 94; _Jamieson's_, 64; _Murray's Gra thus exempted is further apparent”--_West's Letters_, p 40 ”Her situation in life does not allow of her being genteel in every thing”--_Ib_, p 57 ”Provided you do not dislike being dirty when you are invisible”--_Ib_, p 58 ”There is now an i acquainted with her title to eternity”--_Ib_, p 120 ”Discarding the restraints of virtue, is islature prohibits opening shop of a Sunday”--_Ib_, p 66 ”To atteht”--_O B Peirce's Gra a pause of a second in duration, or less”--_Ib_, p 280 ”The rule which directs putting other words into the place of it, is wrong”--_Ib_, p 326 ”They direct calling the specifying adjectives or adnames adjective pronouns”-- _Ib_, p 338 ”Willia court”--_Frost's El of Gra that Milton ical Museu differently, discover a base mind”--_Murray's Key_, p 206; _Bullions's E Graard and acting indifferently, discover a base mind”--_Weld's Gram, Improved Edition_, p 59 ”You have proved beyond contradiction, that acting thus is the sure way to procure such an object”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p 92

UNDER NOTE VIII--PARTICIPLES AFTER BE, IS, &C

”Irony is expressing ourselves in a hts”--_Murray's Gram_, p 353; _Kirkha andthe reverse of what that expression would represent”--_O B Peirce's Gra the proper signification of a word or sentence to quite the contrary”--_Fisher's Gra ourselves contrary to e reat Measure delivering their own Compositions”--_Buchanan's Grahtly the words of the language”--_Jamieson's Rhet_, p 59 ”But the lish quantity”--_Walker's Key_ p 17 ”When there is no affinity, the transition fro a very wide step”-- _Ca time to attempt further to illustrate it”--_Ib_, p 79 ”This is leaving the sentence too bare, andit to be, if not nonsense, hardly sense”--_Cobbett's Gra more labours from every privateone hbours, and another for ourselves?”--_Ib_, p 200 ”Is it not charging God foolishly, e give these dark colourings to hu the cross as a disciple of Jesus Christ, but snatching at it like a partizan of Swift's Jack”--_Ib_, p 175 ”What is Spelling? It is co letters to form syllables and words”--_O B Peirce's Gra such letters to co? (1) It is describing the nature, use, and powers of words”--_Ib_, pp 22 and 192 (2) ”For parsing is describing the words of a sentence as they are used”--_Ib_, p 10 (3) ”Parsing is only describing the nature and relations of words as they are used”--_Ib_, p

11 (4) ”Parsing, let the pupil understand and re them in their offices and relations as they are”--_Ib_, p 34 (5) ”Parsing is resolving and explaining words according to the rules of gra a word, re its various relations and qualities, and its grammatical relations to other words in the sentence”--_Ib_, p 325 (7) ”For parsing a word is enu its various properties and relations _to the_ sentence”--_Ib_, p 326 (8) ”Parsing a noun is telling of what person, nurammatical relations in a sentence with respect to other words”--_Ingersoll's Gra all its properties and relations”--_Ibid_ (10) ”Parsing is resolving a sentence into its elehway of the righteous is, departing from evil”--_O B Peirce's Gra truth should be re the veil of error”--_Ib_, p 377

”Punctuation is dividing sentences and the words of sentences, by pauses”--_Ib_, p 280 ”Another fault is using the preterimperfect _shook_ instead of the participle _shaken_”--_Churchill's Graer's Gra to his notion, is leading a sensual life, and exposing ones self to the strongest te the question, and therefor requires no answer”--_For ourselves to reduce every thing to the narrow ersoll's_, 199 ”What is vocal language? It is speaking; or expressing ideas by the hu-Book_, p 7

UNDER NOTE IX--VERBS OF PREVENTING

”The annulling power of the constitution prevented that enact a law”--_O B Peirce's Gra brief”--_Ib_, p 365 ”This close prevents their bearing forward as nominatives”--_Rush, on the Voice_, p 153 ”Because this prevents its growing drowzy”--_Formey's Belles-Lettres_, p 5 ”Yet this does not prevent his being great”--_Ib_, p 27 ”To prevent its being insipid”--_Ib_, p 112 ”Or whose interruptions did not prevent its being continued”--_Ib_, p 167 ”This by noalso punishments”--_Wayland's Moral Science_, p 123 ”This hinders not their being also, in the strictest sense, punishments”--_Ibid_, ”The noiseheard”--_Goldsmith's Greece_, Vol i, p 118 ”He endeavoured to prevent its taking effect”--_Ib_, i, 128 ”So sequestered as to prevent their being explored”--_West's Letters_, p 62 ”Who prevented heratossed about by every wind of doctrine”--_Ib_, p 123 ”After the infir his part of official duty”--_Religious World_, ii, 193 ”To prevent splendid trifles passing for matters of importance”--_Ka hiood purpose”--_Beattie's Moral Science_, i, 146 ”The want of the observance of this rule, very frequently prevents our being punctual in our duties”--_Student's Manual_, p 65 ”Nothing will prevent his being a student, and his possessing the means of study”--_Ib_, p 127 ”Does the present accident hinder your being honest and brave?”--_Collier's Antoninus_, p 51 ”The e is oether”--_Fowle's Gram_, p 34 ”A pronoun is used for or in place of a noun--to prevent repeating the noun”--_Sanborn's Gram_, p 13