Part 164 (1/2)
”Is endless life and happiness despis'd?
Or both wish'd here, where neither can be found?”--_Young_, p 124
EXERCISE XI--PROMISCUOUS
”Because any one of them is placed before a noun or pronoun, as you observe I have done in every sentence”--_Rand's Graht accompany_ is a transitive verb, because it expresses an action which effects the object _me_”--_Gilbert's Gram_, p 94 ”_Intend_ is an intransitive verb because it expresses an action which does not effect any object”--_Ib_, p 93 ”Charles and Eliza were jealous of one another”--_J M Putnam's Gram_, p 44 ”Thus _one another_ include both nouns”--_Ibid_ ”When the antecedent is a child, _that_ is elegantly used in preference to _hom_, or _which_”--_Sanborn's Gram_, p 94 ”He can do no more in words, but make out the expression of his will”--_Bp Wilkins_ ”The form of the first person plural of the irown obsolete”-- _Lowth's Gra those verbs which are becohs for pleasure, the voice of wisdoht's Athens_, p 64 ”The other branch of wit in the thought, is that only which is taken notice of by Addison”--_Kames, El of Crit_, i, 312 ”When any measure of the Chancellor was found fault with”--_Professors' Reasons_, p
14 ”_Whether_ was foration”-- _Murray's Gra words must be taken notice of”--_Priestley's Gram_, p 95 ”In a word, we are afforded much pleasure, to be enabled to bestow our ht's Gra Idle, as every oneand expressing that suether of two or ns of soed in proof of wo the overnment”--_West's Letters to Y L_, p 43 ”What is the import of that command to love such an one as ourselves?”--_Wayland's Moral Science_, p 206 ”It should seeood?”--_Harris's Her bad habits depends upon our consciousness of the misled by a mere name”-- _Campbell's Rhet_, p 168 ”I was refused an opportunity of replying in the latter review”--_Fowle's True English Graenerosity and excellence as Howard displayed!”--_M'Culloch's Gram_, p 39 ”The noun is in the No which acts or is spoken of”--_Ib_, p 54 ”The noun is in the Objective case when it is the na which is the object or end of an action orerased from your memory”--_Mack's Gram_, p 17 ”Pleonasm, is when a superfluous word is introduced abruptly”--_Ib_, p 69
”Man feels his weakness, and to nuthen, or hih_, p 137
EXERCISE XII--TWO ERRORS
”Independent on the conjunction, the sense requires the subjunctive mood”--_Grant's Latin Gran is I your household and personal ornarant, an indispensable duty”--_West's Letters to Y L_, p 58 ”For grown ladies and gentle, draw, or even walk, is now too frequent to excite ridicule”--_Ib_, p 123 ”It is recorded that a physician let his horse bleed on one of the evil days, and it soon lay dead”--_Constable's Miscellany_, xxi 99 ”As to the apostrophe, it was seldoinning of the present century, and then seems to have been introduced by mistake”--_Dr Ash's Gram_, p 23 ”One of the relatives only varied to express the three cases”--_Lowth's Graht of this liquor?”--_Collier's Cebes_ ”Here, all things co with them”--_Collier's Antoninus_, p 103 ”Most coantly left out in the second member”--_Buchanan's Gram_, p ix ”A fair receipt of water, of some thirty or forty foot square”--_Bacon's Essays_, p 127 ”The old know ”--_Burgh's Dignity_, i, 60 ”The pronoun singular of the third person hath three genders”--_Lowth's Gram_, p 21 ”The preposition _to_ is made use of before nouns of place, when they follow verbs and participles of motion”--_Murray's Gra hu the weak sides of men, &c”--_Wayland's Moral Science_, p
284 ”Neither of which are taken notice of by this Grammar”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p 279 ”But certainly no invention is entitled to such degree of ade”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 54 ”The Indians, the Persians, and Arabians, were all fa word is the preposition and the conjunction”-- _Felch's Coing circumstance in these ti any constraint on the organs of speech, or urging them to a more rapid action than they can easily perform in their tender state, must be productive of indistinctness in utterance”--_Ib_, p 35 ”Good articulation is the foundation of a good delivery, in the sa the si”--_Ib_, p 33 ”The offering praise and thanks to God, i a lively and devout sense of his excellencies and of his benefits”--ATTERBURY: _Blair's Rhet_, p 295 ”The pause should not be made till the fourth or sixth syllable”--_Blair, ib_, p 333
”Shenstone's pastoral ballad, in four parts, ant poelish”--_Ib_, p
394 ”What need Christ to have died, if heaven could have contained ienius, nor is it necessary that he should”--_Seattle's Moral Science_, i, 69 ”They were alarmed from a quarter where they least expected”--_Goldsmith's Greece_, ii, 6
”If thouthee in his knotty intrails”--SHAK: _White's Verb_, p 94
EXERCISE XIII--TWO ERRORS
”In consequence of this, much time and labor are unprofitably expended, and a confusion of ideas introduced into the mind, which, by never so wise a method of subsequent instruction, it is very difficult completely to re a naturalabout an entire revolution, in its most essential parts”--_Sheridan's Elocution_, p 170 ”'Thou who loves us, will protect us still:' here _who_ agrees with _thou_, and is nominative to the verb loves”--_Alex Murray's Granifies action; the Passive, suffering, or being the object of an action”--_Adam's Latin Gra no such thing”--_Walker's Particles_, p 252 ”_That_ may be used as a pronoun, an adjective, and a conjunction, depending on the office which it performs in the sentence”--_Kirkha property of the church of Christ from all other antichristian assemblies or churches”--_Barclay's Works_, i, 533 ”My lords, the course which the legislature formerly took with respect to the slave-trade, appears to overnment and your lordshi+ps”--BROUGHAM: _Antislavery Reporter_, Vol ii, p 218 ”We speak that we do know, and testify that we have seen”--_John_, iii, 11 ”This is a consequence I deny, and remains for him to prove”--_Barclay's Works_, iii, 329 ”To back this, He brings in the Authority of Accursius, and Consensius Romanus, to the latter of which he confesses hi for this Doctrine”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p
343 ”The compound tenses of the second order, or those in which the participle present is made use of”--_Priestley's Gram_, p 24 ”To lay the accent always on the same syllable, and the same letter of the syllable, which they do in coh the converting the _w_ into a _v_ is not so co the _v_ into a _w_”--_Ib_, p 46 ”Nor is this all; for by means of accent, the times of pauses also are rendered quicker, and their proportions more easily to be adjusted and observed”--_Ib_, p 72 ”Byupon syllables that have no accent: or prolonging the sounds of the accented syllables, beyond their due proportion of time”--_Ib_, p 76 ”Taunt him with the license of ink; if thou thou'st him thrice, it shall not be amiss”--SHAK: _Joh Dict, w
Thou_ ”The eye that mocketh at his father, and despiseth to obey his mother, the ravens of the valley shall pick it out, and the young eagles shall eat it”--_Prov_, xxx, 17 ”Copying, orothers, is the death of arts and sciences”--_Spurzheiree of perfection, as to surprise all his acquaintance”--_Ensell's Graone”--_Buchanan's E Syntax_, p 155 ”_Many_ is pronounced as if it rote _manny_”--_Dr Johnson's Gram, with Dict_, p 2
”And as the music on the waters float, Some bolder shore returns the soften'd note”
--_Crabbe, Borough_, p 118
EXERCISE XIV--THREE ERRORS
”It appears that the Te, because these Tilesit”--_Johnson's Gram Com_, p 281
”It was co returns for several of the boroughs within their counties”--_Brown's Estimate_, Vol
ii, p 132 ”The conjunction _as_ when it is connected with the pronoun, such, many, or same, is sometimes called a relative pronoun”--_Kirkham's Gram, the Compend_ ”Mr Addison has also much harmony in his style; more easy and smooth, but less varied than Lord Shaftesbury”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 127; _Ja all the sa; which is remarkable in French versification”--_Kames, El of Crit_, Vol ii, p 104 ”Adjectives qualify or distinguish one noun fro Gram_, p 13 ”The words _one, other_, and _none_, are used in both numbers”--_Kirkham's Gram_, p 107 ”A compound word is made up of two or more words, usually joined by an hyphen, as summer-house, spirit-less, school-master”--_Blair's Gra neords by composition which nearly resembles others in use before; as, _disserve_, which is too much like _deserve_”--_Priestley's Gra the limits in the least, will scarce be pardoned”--_Sheridan's Lect_, p 119 ”What other are the foregoing instances but describing the passion another feels”--_Kames, El of Crit_, i, 388 ”'Two and three are five' If each _substantive_ is to be taken separately as a subject, then 'two _is_ five,'
and 'three _is_ five'”--_Goodenow's Gram_, p 87 ”The article _a_ joined to the simple _pronoun other_ makes _it_ the compound _another_”-- _Priestley's Gram_, p 96 ”The _word another_ is composed of the indefinite _article prefixed_ to the _word other_”--_Murray's Gras that were formerly expressed by another person, we often ”--_Ib_, p 191 ”Dropping one l prevents the recurrence of three very near each other”--_Churchill's Graenitive cases succeed each other; as, 'John's wife's father'”--_Dalton's Grah rarely, two nouns in the possessive case i form: 'My friend's wife's sister'”--_Murray's Gram_, p 45
EXERCISE XV--MANY ERRORS
”Nuular and Plural: and coly to its application, the distinction between theures of Words, are co e, _which_ is different fro”--_Murray's Graures of words, are co einal and pri”--_Blair's Rhet_, p