Part 228 (1/2)
UNDER NOTE I--OF THE CASE DOUBTFUL
”I had no knowledge of _any connexion_ between them”--_Col Stone cor_ ”To pro_, as _to be_ the actors of it ourselves” (That is, ”_For us_ to pro_ as _for us_ to be the actors of it _ourselves_”)--_Murray cor_ ”It_in_ ourselves”--_Blair and Murray cor_ ”_Because there has not_ been exercised a competent physical power for their enforceisl cor_ ”PUPILAGE, _n_ The state of a _pupil_, or scholar”--_Dictionaries cor_ ”Then the other _part_, being the _definition, would include_ all verbs, of every description”--_Peirce cor_ ”John's _friendshi+p for eshi+p_”--or, ”Williaed his whole demeanour”--_Id_ ”Willia_, was the cause of the interest he felt”--_Id_ ”_To be_ but one as of conscience”--_Tupper cor_ ”As for _the opinion that it is_ a close translation, I doubt not that many have been led into that error by the shortness of it”--_Pope cor_ ”All presus, o upon _the_ supposition that they are compounded, and _therefore_ discerptible”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”This argues rather _that they are_ proper names”--_Churchill cor_ ”But ratification itself_, is that which excites our resentment?”--_Campbell cor_ ”Under the common notion, _that it is_ a system of the whole poetical art”--_Blair cor_ ”Whose _want of_ time, or _whose_ other circumstances, forbid _them to become_ classical scholars”--_Lit Jour cor_ ”It would _prove hie” Or: ”It would preclude the notion _that he was e”--_Phil
Mu cor_ ”For _heresy_, or under pretence _that they are_ heretics or infidels”--_Oath cor_ ”We _ the Object of religious adoration”--_Rel World cor_ ”To say nothing of Dr _Priestley, as being_ a strenuous advocate,” &c--_Id_ ”_Through the agency of Ada_ their public head” Or: ”_Because Adaainst _the existence of_ any such reater instance of a _ a blockhead”--_Spect cor_ ”We may insure or promote _ill make it_ a happy state of existence to ourselves”--_Gurney cor_ ”_Since it often undergoes_ the same kind of unnatural treatment”--_Kirkham cor_ ”Their _apparent_ foolishness”--”Their _appearance of foolishness_”--or, ”_That they appear_ foolishness,--is no presuainst this”--_Butler cor_ ”But what arises fro offences; ie, from their _liability_ to be perverted”--_Id_ ”And he _went_ into _the_ house _of_ a certain man named Justus, one that _worshi+ped_ God”--_Acts cor_
UNDER NOTE II--OF FALSE IDENTIFICATION
”But _popular_, he observes, is an auous word”--_Blair cor_ ”The infinitive mood, a _phrase, or a sentence_, is often _made the subject of_ a verb”--_Murray cor_ ”When any person, in speaking, introduces his name _after the pronoun I_, it is _of_ the first person; as, 'I, James, of the city of Boston'”--_R C Smith cor_ ”The name of the person spoken to, is _of_ the second person; as, 'Ja _merely_ spoken of, or about, is _of_ the third person; as, 'James has come'”--_Id_ ”The passive verb _has no object, because_ its subject or nominative always represents _what is acted upon_, and the _object_ of a verb must needs be in the _objective_ case”--_Id_ ”When a noun is in the nominative to an active verb, it _denotes_ the actor”--_Kirkha for the name of_ the person _or persons_ coersoll cor_ ”The first person is that _which denotes the speaker_”--_Brown's Institutes_, p 32 ”The conjugation of a verb is _a regular arrangehout the ht cor_ ”The first person is _that which denotes_ the speaker _or writer_”--G BROWN: for the correction of _Parker and Fox, Hiley_, and _Sanborn_ ”The second person is _that which denotes the hearer, or the person addressed_”--_Id_: for _the same_ ”The third person is _that which denotes the person or thing merely_ spoken of”--_Id_: for _the saular; WE, _of_ the first person, plural”--_Mur et al cor_ ”THOU is _of_ the second person, singular; YE or You, _of_ the second person, plural”--_Iid_ ”HE, SHE, or IT, is _of_ the third person, singular; THEY, _of_ the third person, plural”--_Iid_ ”The nominative case _denotes_ the actor, _and is the_ subject of the verb”--_Kirkham cor_ ”John is the actor, therefore _the noun_ JOHN is in the nominative case”--_Id_ ”The actor is always _expressed_ by the nominative case, _unless the verb be passive_”--_R C Smith cor_ ”The noent or actor”--_Mack cor_ ”_In _ each name, tell the part of speech”--_John Flint cor_ ”_Of_ what number is _boy_?
Why?”--_Id_ ”_Of_ what number is _pens_? Why?”--_Id_ ”The speaker is _denoted by_ the first person; the person spoken to _is denoted by_ the second person; and the person or thing spoken of is _denoted by_ the third person”--_Id_ ”What nouns are _of the_ ender? _The naender”--_Id_ ”An interjection is a _word that is utteredor_ sudden emotion of the mind”--_G Brown's Grammars_
CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE VII; OF OBJECTIVES
UNDER THE RULE ITSELF--OF THE OBJECTIVE IN FORM
”But I do not remember _whom_ they were for”--_Abbott cor_ ”But if you can't help it, _whom_ do you complain of?”--_Collier cor_ ”_Whoeworth cor_ ”I have plenty of victuals, and, between you and _ in a corner”--_Day cor_ ”The upper one, _whoh Hunt cor_ ”And to poor _us, thy_ enmity _is_ most capital”--_Shak cor_ ”Which, thou dost confess, _'twere_ fit for thee to use, as _them_ to clai of thee, it is my more dishonour, than _thee_ of the_ of them”--_Id_ ”There are still a feho, like _thee_ and _ but water”--_Gil Bias cor_ ”Thus, 'I _shall_ fall,'--'Thou _shalt_ love thy neighbour,'--'He _shall_ be rewarded,'--express no resolution on the part of _me, thee_, or _hinified by the nominatives, I, Thou, He_”--_Lennie and Bullions cor_ ”So saucy with the hand of _her_ here--what's her name?”--_Shak cor_ ”All debts are cleared between you and _me_”--_Id_ ”Her price is paid, and she is sold like _thee_”--HARRISON'S _E Lang_, p 172 ”Search through all the_eras_ of Greece”--_Dr
Brown cor_ ”The fauished”--_The Friend cor_ ”It will do well enough for you and _eworth cor_ ”The public will soon discriminate between him who is the sycophant, and _him_ who is the teacher”--_Chazotte cor_ ”We are still s to”--_Locke cor_ ”What do you call it? and _to who?”--_Collier cor_ ”He had received no lessons from the _Socrateses_, the _Platoes_, and the _Confuciuses_ of the age”--_Haller cor_ ”I cannot tell _whom_ to compare them to”--_Bunyan cor_ ”I see there was soood ht themselves into the hands and house of I do not knohoreat deal of difference between Mr Cotton and _us_”--_Hutch Hist cor_ ”So you must ride on horseback after _us_”--_Mrs Gilpin cor_ ”A separation must soon take place between our minister and _s, you, and _me_”--_Shak cor_ ”To _whom_? to thee? What art thou?”--_Id_ ”That they should always bear the certain marks _of him from whom_ they came”--_Bp Butler cor_
”This life has joys for you and _me_, And joys that riches ne'er could buy”--_Burns cor_
UNDER THE NOTE--OF TIME OR MEASURE
”Such as almost every child, ten years old, knows”--_Town cor_ ”_Four _ will carry any industrious scholar, of ten or twelve years _of age_, coe_ ht to speak as correctly, as Cicero did before the Roman senate”--_Webster cor_ ”A lad about twelve years old, as taken captive by the Indians”--_Id_ ”Of nothing else _than_ that individual white figure of five inches _in length_, which is before hiht or ten years _of age_ are with great difficulty made to understand any of its principles?”--_Guy cor_ ”Where language three centuries old is eallows be allows _fifty cubits high_ be made”--_Bible cor_ ”I say to this child, nine years old, 'Bring s it , and nine feet wide:' that is, _the floor was_ long _to_ the extent of twelve feet, and wide _to the extent_ of nine feet”--_Merchant cor_ ”The Goulah people are a tribe of about fifty thousand _in strength_” Or: ”The Goulah people are a tribe about fifty thousand strong”--_Examiner cor_
CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE VIII; NOM ABSOLUTE
”_He_ having ended his discourse, the asse young, they deceivedto co present, he would not tell what he knew”--_Ib_ ”The child is lost; and _I_, whither shall I go?”--_Ib_ ”_O_ happy _we!_ surrounded with so s”--_Ib_ ”'_Thou_ too! Brutus, my son!' cried Caesar, overcome”--_Ib_ ”_Thou!_ Maria! and so late! and who is thy companion?”--_Mirror cor_ ”Hoiftly our time passes away! and ah! _we_, how little concerned to improve it!”--_Greenleaf's False Syntax, Graraces we display, _Thou_, only _thou_, directing all our way”--_Pope, Dunciad_
CHAPTER IV--ADJECTIVES
CORRECTIONS UNDER THE NOTES TO RULE IX
UNDER NOTE I--OF AGREEMENT
”I a”--_Sherlock cor_ ”I have not been to London _these_ five years”--_Webster cor_ ”_Verbs of this kind_ are more expressive than their radicals”--_Dr Murray cor_ ”Few of us would be less corrupted than kings are, e, like them, beset with flatterers, and poisoned with _those_ vermin”--_Kames cor_ ”But it seeenious labours”--_R Randos of that kind_”--_Swift cor_ ”For _things of this sort_ are usually joined to the most noted fortune”--_Bacon cor_ ”The nature of _those_ riches and _that_ long-suffering, is, to lead to repentance”--_Barclay cor_ ”I fancy _it is this_ kind of Gods, _that_ Horace ht days, they are prohibited fro the skin”--_Hope of Is cor_ ”Besides, he had _but a small quantity of_ provisions left for his army”--_Goldshts than _those_ of anities?”--_Murray's Sequel_, p 115 ”It _distinguishes_ still s of the forood tidings of the reign shall be published through all the world”--_Campbell cor_ ”_These_ twenty years have I been with thee”--_Gen cor_ ”In _this_ kind of expressions, soht _this_ kind of excesses indicative of greatness”--_Hunt cor_ ”_This_ sort of fellows _is_ very numerous” Or thus: ”_Fellows of this sort_ are very numerous”--_Spect
cor_ ”Whereas _ive account of their faith” Or: ”Whereas _these ive account of their faith”--_Barclay cor_ ”But the question is, whether _those are_ the words”--_Id_ ”So that _expressions of this sort_ are not properly optative”--_R Johnson cor_ ”Many things are not _such as_ they appear to be”--_Sanborn cor_ ”So that _all_ possible means are used”--_For laws, Which for _these_ nineteen years we have let sleep”--_Shak cor_
”They could not speak, and so I left the”--_Shak cor_
UNDER NOTE II--OF FIXED NUMBERS