Part 148 (2/2)
”Liberal, not lavish, is kind nature's hands”--_Ib_, p 196
”They fall successive and successive live”--_Ib_, p 213
LESSON III--ANY PARTS OF SPEECH
”A figure of Etyy is the intentional deviation in the usual forure of Syntax is the intentional deviation in the usual construction of a word”--_Ib_, 213
”Synecdoche is putting the na for a part or a part for the whole”--_Ib_, 215 ”Apostrophe is turning off froular course of the subject to address so pupils will perfor interest and facility, and will unconsciously gain, in a little tie than he can acquire by a drilling of several years in the usual routine of parsing”--_Ib, Preface_, p iv ”A few Rules of construction are e”--_Ibide, which can be thought of, or spoken of, is a noun”--_Ib_, p 18; _Abridged Ed_, 19 ”A dot, rese our period, is used between every word, as well as at the close of the verses”--_W Day's Punctuation_, p
16; _London_, 1847 ”Casting types in matrices was invented by Peter Schoeffer, in 1452”--_Ib_, p 23 ”On perusing it, he said, that, so far frouilt, it positively established his innocence”--_Ib_, p 37 ”By printing the _nominative_ and _verb_ in _Italic_ letters, the reader will be able to distinguish thelance”--_Ib_, p 77 ”It is well, no doubt, to avoid using unnecessary words”--_Ib_, p 99 ”Meeting a friend the other day, he said to ?'”--_Ib_, p 124 ”John was first denied _apples_, then he was promised _them_, then he was offered _them_”--_Lennie's Gram_, 5th Ed, p 62 ”He was denied admission”--_Wells's School Gram_, 1st Ed, p 146 ”They were offered a pardon”--_Pond's Murray_, p 118; _Wells_, 146 ”I was this day shown a new potatoe”--DARWIN: _Webster's Philos Gram_, p 179; _Imp Gram_, 128; _Frazee's Gram_, 153; _Weld's_, 153 ”Nouns or pronouns which denote ender”--_S S Greene's Grarees of comparison--the positive, comparative, and superlative”--_Ib_, p 216; _First Les_, p 49 ”The first two refer to direction; the third, to locality”--_Ib, Gr_, p 103 ”The following are some of the verbs which take a direct and indirect object”--_Ib_, p 62 ”I was not aware of his being the judge of the Supreme Court”--_Ib_, p 86 ”An indirect question may refer to either of the five elements of a declarative sentence”--_Ib_, p 123 ”I a present_”--_Ib_, p 169 ”We left on Tuesday”--_Ib_, p 103
”He left, as he told me, before the arrival of the steamer”--_Ib_, p
143 ”We told him _that he must leave_ = We told him _to leave_”--_Ib_, p 168 ”Because he was unable to persuade the ust”--_Ib_, p 172 ”He _left_, and _took_ his brother with hi any thing, is called the indicative ”--_Weld's Gram_, 2d Ed, p 72; _Abr Ed_, 59 ”This took place at our friend Sir Joshua Reynold's”--_Weld's Gra lady's e will be the subject of another paper”--_Ib_, 150; or 154 ”Very little ti a treaty with the bookseller”--_Ib_, 150; or 154
”My father is not now sick, but if he _was_ your services would be welcoin to write or speak, we ought previously to fix in our minds a clear conception of the end to be aith of days are in her right hand, and in her left hand riches and honor”--_Bullions's analytical and Practical Grammar_, 1849, p 59 ”The active and passive present express different ideas”--_Ib_, p 235 ”An _I in which only one of the vowels are sounded”--_Fowler's E Grain of the words are to be sought in the Latin”--_Ib_, --120 ”What sort of an alphabet the Gothic languages possess, we knohat sort of alphabet they require, we can determine”--_Ib_, --127 ”The Runic Alphabet whether borrowed or invented by the early Goths, is of greater antiquity than either the oldest Teutonic or the Moeso-Gothic Alphabets”--_Ib_, --129
”Common to the Masculine and the Neuter Genders”--_Ib_, --222 ”In the Anglo-Saxon _his_ was common to both the Masculine and Neuter Genders”--_Ib_, --222 ”When time, number, or dimension are specified, the adjective follows the substantive”--_Ib_, --459 ”Nor pain, nor grief, nor anxious fear Invade thy bounds”--_Ib_, --563 ”To Brighton the Pavilion lends a _lath and plaster_ grace”--_Ib_, --590 ”Froiven but one person, the THIRD”--_D C Allen's Grauard and cherish Even the ard dreamer--I”--_Home Journal_
EXAMPLES FOR PARSING
PRAXIS XIII--SYNTACTICAL
_In the following Lessons, are exemplified most of the Exceptions, some of the Notes, andRules of Syntax; to which Exceptions, Notes, or Observations, the learner may recur, for an explanation of whatsoever is difficult in the parsing, or peculiar in the construction, of these exaher a bird flies, _the_ her a Christian soars above the world, _the_ safer are his comforts”--_Sparke_
”_In_ this point of view, and _with_ this explanation, _it_ is supposed by soe contains _a_ few Impersonal Verbs; that is, _verbs_ which declare the existence of some action or state, but _which_ do not refer to any ani, or any determinate particluar subject”--_L Murray's Grareat landholder possesses _a_ hundred _times_ the property that is necessary for the subsistence of a family; and each landlord has perhaps _a_ hundred families dependent on him for subsistence”--_Webster's Essays_, p 87
”_It_ is as possible to become _pedantick_ by fear of pedantry, as to be _troublesome_ by ill timed civility”--_Johnson's Rambler_, No 173
”_To_ commence _author, is_ to claim praise; and no race”--_Ib_, No 93
”_For_ ministers to be silent in the cause of Christ, _is_ to renounce it; and to fly _is_ to desert it”--SOUTH: _Crabb's Synonymes_, p 7
”Such instances she much _the sublime_ depends upon a just selection of circureat care every circu _in the least_ upon _the _, alters the tone of the ereat poet and philosopher, _the_ more _he_ contemplated the nature of the Deity, _found_ that _he_ waded _but the_ more out of his depth, and that _he_ lost _hi an end to it”--_Addison_ ”_Odin, which_ in Anglo-Saxon was _Woden_, was the supre to the Jupiter of the Greeks”--_Webster's Essays_, p 262
”Because confidence, that _char in the intercourse”--_Opie, on Lying_, p 146
”Objects of hearing ether, as also _of_ taste, _of_ smell, and _of_ touch: but the chief _fund_ of coht”--_Kames, El of Crit_, Vol ii, p 136
”The various relations of the various Objects exhibited by this (I mean relations of _near_ and _distant, present_ and _absent, same_ and _different, definite_ and _indefinite_, &c) made it necessary that _here there_ should not be one, but many pronouns, such as _He, This, That, Other, Any, Some_, &c”--_Harris's Hermes_, p 72
”Mr Pope's Ethical Epistles _deserve_ to be nal honour, _as_ a _model_, next to _perfect, of_ this kind of poetry”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 402
”The knowledge _of why_ they so exist, must be the last act of favour _which_ time and toil will bestow”--_Rush, on the Voice_, p 253
”_It_ is unbelief, and _not faith, that_ sinks the sinner into despondency--Christianity disowns such characters”--_Fuller, on the Gospel_, p 141
”That God created the universe, [and] that men are accountable for their actions, _are frequently ”