Part 163 (1/2)

EXERCISE II--NOUNS, OR CASES

”Childrens Minds are narrow, and weak, and usually susceptible but of one Thought at once”--_Locke, on Ed_, p 297 ”Rather for Exaht of Tythes_, p xvii ”The reater envy shall he be liable to”--_Walker's Particles_, p 461 ”He orks only for the common welfare is the most noble, and no one, but him, deserves the naot into the carriage, to sit with the an”--_Stone, on Masonry_, p 480

”But, for such footmen as thee and I are, let us never desire to meet with an enemy”--_Bunyan's P P_, p 153 ”One of theical Museu such easy books as Corderius, and solish translation”--_Burgh's Dignity_, Vol i, p

150 ”For my preface was to show the ainst the Quakers”--_Barclay's Works_, Vol i, p 235 ”They signify no ainst Luther”--_Ib_, i, 236 ”To justify Moses his doing obeisance to his father in law”--_Ib_, i, 241 ”Which sort of clauses are generally included between two comma's”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p 306 ”Between you and I, she is but a cutler's wife”--_Goldsland's tient or doer”--_S_ is in the noent, actor, or doer”--_Ib_ ”The actor or doer is considered the na noun”--_Ib_ ”The radical form of the principal verb is made use of”--_Priestley's Graht to be taken notice of by grammarians”--_Ib_, p 30

”I shall not quarrel with the friend of twelve years standing”-- _Liberator_, ix, 39 ”If there were none living but hiainst John”--_Biog Dict, w Lilburne_

”When a personal pronoun isGram_, -- 179 ”The toas taken in a few hours time”--_Goldsmith's Rome_, p 120 ”You must not employ such considerations ratitude's being the law of my nature”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 296 ”Our author's second illustration, is taken froe”--_Ib_, p

301 ”The first subdivision concerning praise being the most pleasant part of devotion, is very just and well expressed”--_Ib_ ”It was a cold thought to dwell upon its disburdening the h all this passage, ofcalculated chiefly for this end, that he ht offer up the praises of the ht and well expressed”--_Ib_, p 297 ”The lish Gras those partake Who hunger, and who thirst, for scribbling sake”

--_Pope, Dunciad_, i, 50

EXERCISE III--ADJECTIVES

”Plumb down he drops ten thousand fathohts, there is y of expression: in the three first, there are several pathetic passages”--_Blair's Rhet_, p

403 ”Learn to pray, to pray greatly and strong”--_The Dial_, Vol ii, p

215 ”The good and the bad genius are struggling with one another”-- _Philological Museum_, i, 490 ”The definitions of the parts of speech, and application of syntax, should be given alston's Gra me”--_Ib_, p 13 ”So difficult it is to separate these two things from one another”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 92 ”Neords should never be ventured upon, except by such whose established reputation gives thee”--_Ib_, p 94 ”The verses necessarily succeed each other”--_O B Peirce's Gram_, p 142 ”They saw that it would be practicable to express, in writing, the whole combinations of sounds which our words require”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 68 ”There are some Events, the Truth of which cannot appear to any, but such whose Minds are first qualify'd by sohtland's Gram_, p

242 ”These Sort of Feet are in Latin called Iambics”--_Fisher's Gram_, p 134 ”And the Words are mostly so disposed, that the Accents may fall on every 2d, 4th, 6th, 8th, and 10th Syllables”--_Ib_, p 135 ”If the verse does not sound well and harers and wohts of the sons of men, as musical instruments, and that of all sorts”--_Ecclesiastes_, ii, 8 ”No people have so studiously avoided the collision of consonants as the Italians”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p 183 ”And these two subjects must destroy one another”--_Ib_, p 42 ”Duration and space are two things in some respects the most like, and in some respects theever affected him so much, as this misconduct of his friend”--_Sanborn's Gra of the several parts of speech on each other”--_Greenleaf's Gra each other, either with or without a conjunction, qualify the same word”--_Bullion's E Gram_, p 75 ”The two chapters which now remain, are by far the most important of any”-- _Student's Manual_, p 293 ”That has been the subject of no less than six negotiations”--_Pres Jackson's Message_, 1830 ”His gravity makes hi an extreme vivid emotion, is not readily produced in perfection but by reiterated impressions”--_Kames, El of Crit_, i, 203 ”Every object appears less than when viewed separately and independent of the series”--_Ib_, ii, 14

”An Organ is the best of all other ue_, p 94

”Let such teach others who themselves excel, And censure freely who have written well”--_Pope, on Crit_, l 15

EXERCISE IV--pronOUNS

”You had musty victuals, and he hath holp to eat it”--SHAK: _Joh Dict, w Victuals_ ”Soues, do hiss me into madness”--_Beauties of Shak_, p 68 ”When a letter or syllable is transposed, it is called METATHESIS”--_Adam's Lat

Grainning of a word, it is called PROSTHESIS”--_Ib_ ”If a letter or syllable be taken fro of a word, it is called APHaeRESIS”--_Ib_ ”We can examine few, or rather no Substances, so far, as to assure ourselves that we have a certain Knowledge of htland's Gram_, p 244 ”Who do you dine with?”--_Fisher's Gram_, p 99 ”Who do you speak to?”--_Shakspeare_ ”All the objects of prayer are calculated to excite the most active and vivid sentiments, which can arise in the heart of man”--_Adams's Rhet_, i, 328 ”It has been my endeavour to furnish you with the most useful materials, which contribute to the purposes of eloquence”--_Ib_, ii, 28 ”All paraphrases are vicious: it is not translating, it is co”--_Formey's Belles-Lettres_, p 163 ”Did you never bear false witness against thy neighbour?”--SIR W DRAPER: _Junius_, p 40 ”And they shall eat up thine harvest and thy bread: they shall eat up thy flocks and thine herds”--_Jer_, v, 17 ”He was the spiritual rock who miraculously supplied the wants of the Israelites”-- _Gurney's Evidences_, p 53 ”To cull from the mass of ht to be most employed”-- _Rarossest and most infamous calumnies which ever was uttered”--_Merchant's Gram Key_, p

198 ”STROMBUS, i m A shell-fish of the sea, that has a leader who Plin”--_Ainsworth's Dict_, 4to ”Whomsoever will, let him come”--MORNING STAR: _Lib_, xi, 13 ”Thy oords have convinced me (stand a little more out of the sun if you please) that thou hast not the least notion of true honour”--_Fielding_ ”Whither art going, pretty Annette? Your little feet you'll surely wet”--_L M Child_ ”Metellus, who conquered Macedon, was carried to the funeral pile by his four sons, one of which was the praetor”--_Kennett's Roman Ant_, p 332 ”That not a soldier which they did not know, shouldthem”-- _Josephus_, Vol v, p 170 ”The Neuter Gender denotes objects which are neither males nor females”--_Murray's Gram_, 8vo, p 37 ”And hence it is, that the most important precept, which a rhetorical teacher can inculcate respecting this part of discourse, is negative”--_Adams's Rhet_, ii, 97 ”The meanest andof heaven, one of the children of the Most High”-- _Scougal_, p 102 ”He shall sit next to Darius, because of his wisdom, and shall be called Darius his cousin”--_1 Esdras_, iii, 7 ”In 1757, he published his 'Fleece;' but he did not long survive it”--_L Murray, Seq_, p 252

”The sun upon the calht as thee”--_Prior_

EXERCISE V--VERBS

”The want of connexion here, as well as in the description of the prodigies that accompanied the death of Caesar, are scarce pardonable”--_Kames, El

of Crit_, Vol i, p 38 ”The causes of the original beauty of language, considered as significant, which is a branch of the present subject, will be explained in their order”--_Ib_, Vol ii, p 6 ”Neither of these two Definitions do rightly adjust the Genuine signification of this Tense”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p 280 ”In the earnest hope that they may prove as beneficial to other teachers as they have to the author”--_John Flint's Gra the manner in which the pupil should be required to classify”--_Ib_, p 3 ”_Qu_ in English words are equivalent to _kw_”--_Sanborn's Gram_, p 258 ”_Qu_ has the power of _kw_, therefore quit doubles the final consonant in for its preterite”--_Ib_, p 103 ”The word pronoun or substantive can be substituted, should any teacher prefer to do it”--_Ib_, p 132

”The three angles of a right-angled triangle were equal to two right angles in the days of Moses, as well as now”--GOODELL: _Liberator_, Vol xi, p

4 ”But noo paces of the vilest earth is rooh”--_Beaut of Shak_, p 126 ”Latin and French, as the World now goes, is by every one acknowledged to be necessary”--_Locke, on Ed_, p 351 ”These things, that he will thus learn by sight, and have by roat in his Memory, is not all, I confess, that he is to learn upon the Globes”--_Ib_, p 321

”Henry: if John shall meet me, I will hand him your note”--_O B Peirce's Gram_, p 261 ”They pronounce the syllables in a different manner from what they do at other times”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 329 ”Cato reave hies is small The Compasses is broken”--_Fisher's Gram_, p 95 ”Prepare thy heart for prayer, lest thou temptest God”--_Life of Luther_, p 83 ”That a soldier should fly is a sha”--_Adam's Lat Graether”--_Woodworth's Gram_, p 27

”Interjections are words used to express some passion of the mind; and is followed by a note of ad said, If he be alone, there is tidings in his mouth”--_2 Samuel_, xviii, 25 ”The opinions of the few must be overruled, and submit to the opinions of the many”--_Webster's Essays_, p 56 ”One of the principal difficulties which here occurs, has been already hinted”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 391 ”With milky blood the heart is overflown”--_Thomson, Castle of Ind_ ”No man dare solicit for the votes of hiz nabors”--_Webster's Essays_, p 344 ”Yet they cannot, and they have no right to exercise it”--_Ib_, p 56 ”In order to make it be heard over their vast theatres”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 471 ”Sometimes, however, the relative and its clause is placed before the antecedent and its clause”--_Bullions, Lat Grareat Anna! whom three realms obey, Does sometimes counsel take--and sometimes tea”

--_Kames, El of Crit_, i, 321

EXERCISE VI--PARTICIPLES

”On the other hand, the degrading or vilifying an object, is done successfully by ranking it with one that is really low”--_Ka objects by means of comparison, proceeds fro the affection will also contribute tosyllables in a high or a low tone”--_Ib_, ii, 77 ”The crowding into one period or thought different figures of speech, is not less faulty than crowding metaphors in that ht to do a thing; and to condeht not to do it”--_Burlamaqui, on Law_, p 39 ”To be provoked that God suffers overn the word in his stead”--_Secker_ ”Let every subject be well understood before passing on to another”--_Infant School Graotted_ is apt to lead to an erroneous accentuation of the word on the second syllable”--_Churchill's Gra the man to serve was an act of tyranny”--_Webster's Essays_, p 54 ”One of the greatestalritten in rhyme”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 469 ”Horace entitles his satire 'Serher than prose put into nu the naked, co the afflicted, yield more pleasure than we receive from those actions which respect only ourselves”--_Murray's Key_, 8vo, p 238 ”But e atteo a step beyond this, and inquire what is the cause of regularity and variety producing in our n is extremely i with propriety, his being free of the two former faults see carried away by that torrent of false and frivolous taste”--_Ib_, p 12 ”When we are unable to assign the reasons of our being pleased”--_Ib_, p 15 ”An adjective will notit to a noun”--_Sanborn's Gra inverted?”--_Ib_, p 71