Part 229 (1/2)

UNDER NOTE VIII--ADJECTIVES CONNECTED

”It breaks forth in its _highest, etic_, and _most impassioned_ strain”--_Kirkharossest_ sort of railing”--_Barclay cor_ ”To receive that _higher and eneral_ instruction which the public affords”--_J O Taylor cor_ ”If the best things have the _best and most perfect_ operations”--_Hooker cor_ ”It becaant, the _richest_ and es”--_Bucke cor_ ”But the _principal and most frequent_ use of pauses, is, to mark the divisions of the sense”--_Blair cor_ ”That every thing belonging to ourselves is _the best and the most perfect_”-- _Clarkson cor_ ”And to instruct their pupils in the _best and h_ manner”--_School Committee cor_

UNDER NOTE IX--ADJECTIVES SUPERADDED

”The Father is figured out as a _venerable old_ man”--_Brownlee cor_ ”There never was exhibited _an other such_ hostly assurance”--_Id_ ”After the _first three_ sentences, the question is entirely lost”--_Spect cor_ ”The _last four_ parts of speech are commonly called particles”--_Al Murray cor_ ”The _last two_ chapters will not be found deficient in this respect”--_Todd cor_ ”Write upon your slates a list of the _first ten_ nouns”--_J Abbott cor_ ”We have a few remains of _two other_ Greek poets in the pastoral style, Moschus and Bion”--_Blair cor_ ”The _first nine_ chapters of the book of Proverbs are highly poetical”--_Id_ ”For, of these five heads, only the _first two_ have any particular relation to the subli sounds of the _last two_ syllables give a ludicrous air to the whole”--_Kames cor_ ”The _last three_ are arbitrary”--_Id_ ”But in the _sentence_, 'She hangs the curtains,' _hangs_ is an _active-transitive_ verb”--_Coement of _active-transitive, active-intransitive_, passive, and neuter verbs, are properly understood”--_Id_ ”These _last two lines_ have an e construction”--_Rush cor_ ”God was provoked to drown them all, but Noah and _seven other_ persons”--_Wood cor_ ”The _first six_ books of the aeneid are extremely beautiful”--_Foriven”--_Murray cor_ ”A few years _e of a subjunctive for cor_ ”Some define them to be verbs devoid of the _first two_ persons”--_Crombie cor_ ”In _an other such_ Essay-tract as this”--_White cor_ ”But we fear that not _an other such_cor_ ”_O for an other such_ sleep, that I ht see _an other such_ man!” Or, to preserve poetic ht see _An other such_ h but in a dream_!”--_Shak cor_

UNDER NOTE X--ADJECTIVES FOR ADVERBS

”_The_ is an article, relating to the noun _balreeably_ to Rule 11th”--_Co to the noun _reeably_ to Rule 11th”--_Id_ ”To whoood”--_Goldsantly_” Or: ”He writes _with reance_”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”John behaves _very civilly_ (or, _with true civility_) to all men”--_Id_ ”All the sorts of words hitherto considered, have each of the, even when taken _separately_”--_Beattie cor_ ”He behaved himself _conformably_ to that blessed exaraceful”-- _Clarendon cor_ ”The Queen having changed her ministry, _suitably_ to her wisdom”--_Swift cor_ ”The assertions of this author are _more easily_ detected”--_Id_ ”The characteristic of his sect allowed hily_ than that”--_Bentley cor_ ”If one author had spoken _more nobly_ and _loftily_ than an other”--_Id_ ”Xenophon says _expressly_”-- _Id_ ”I can never think so very _meanly_ of hi them, of all their unGodly deeds, which they have _impiously_ committed”--_Bible cor_ ”I think it very _ably_ written” Or: ”I think it written _in a_ very n e, which it represents _in a_ lively _reeably_ to this, we read of na blotted out of God's book”--_Burder et al cor_ ”_Agreeably_ to the law of nature, children are bound to support their indigent parents”--_Paley_ ”Words taken _independently_ of their ender”--_Maltby cor_

”Conceit in weakest bodies _strongliest_ works”--_Shak cor_

UNDER NOTE XI--THEM FOR THOSE

”Though he was not known by _those_ letters, or the nas” Better: ”In a gig, or _soeworth cor_ ”When cross-examined by _those_ lawyers”--_Same_ ”As the custom in _those_ cases is”--_Same_ ”If you _had_ listened to _those_ slanders”--_Sa stories about _those_ fairies; but, to the best ofin _them_”--_Same_ ”And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles, than the testimony of _those_ old Pharisees?”--_Hibbard cor_

UNDER NOTE XII--THIS AND THAT

”Hope is as strong an incentive to action, as fear: _that_ is the anticipation of good, _this_ of evil”--_Inst_, p 265 ”The poor want soes which the rich enjoy; but we should not therefore account _these_ happy, and _those_ aret, fearfully, Sought cohastly look each one, _That_ to her sire, _this_ to her son”--_Scott cor_

”Six youthful sons, as ian shades; _Those_ by Apollo's silver boere slain, _These_ Cynthia's arrows stretch'd upon the plain”--_Pope cor_

”Me back to youth, _this_ on to age”--_Pope, on Man_

UNDER NOTE XIII--EITHER AND NEITHER

”Theseuenerically distinct”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”A thousand other deviations may be made, and still _any_ of _the accounts_ may be correct in principle; for _all_ these divisions, and their technical terms, are arbitrary”--_R

W Green cor_ ”Thus it appears, that our alphabet is deficient; as it has but seven vowels to represent thirteen different sounds; and has no letter to represent _any_ of five simple consonant sounds”--_Churchill cor_ ”Then _none_ of these five verbs can be neuter”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”And the _assertor_[534] is in _none_ of the four already mentioned”--_Id_ ”As it is not in any of these four”--_Id_ ”See whether or not the word comes within the definition of _any_ of the other three simple cases”--_Id_ ”No one of the ten was there”--_Frazee cor_ ”Here are ten oranges, take _any one_ of them”--_Id_ ”There are three enerally be supplied; inclination, practice, and association”--_Rippingha heads”--_Fowler cor_ ”Now a sentence may be analyzed in reference to _any_ of these four classes”--_Id_

UNDER NOTE XIV--WHOLE, LESS, MORE, AND MOST

”Does not all proceed froulates _all the_ departer relates to Theseus _all the_ particulars”--_Ld Kas in the English language”--_Ash cor_ ”The Redcross Knight runs through _all the_ steps of the Christian life”--_Spect cor_ ”There were not _fewer_ than fifty or sixty persons present”--_Mills and Merchant cor_ ”Greater experience, and _a_ ination, and chasten the manner of expression”--_Blair and Murray cor_ ”By which e, _rather_ than oratory, _has_ become the principal requisite”--_Blair cor_ ”No _fewer_ than seven illustrious cities disputed the right of having given birth to the greatest of poets”--_Lempriere cor_ ”Temperance, _rather_ thanmany diseases”--_Murray cor_ ”I do not suppose, that we Britons _are hbours”--_Id_ ”In which, he _says_, he has found no _fewer_ than twelve untruths”--_Barclay cor_ ”The several places of rendezvous were concerted, and _all the_ operations _were_ fixed”--_Huid opinions, _all the_ sectaries concurred”--_Id_ ”Out of whose modifications have been made _nearly all_ complex modes”--_Locke cor_ ”The Chinese vary each of their words on no _fewer_ than five different tones”--_Blair cor_ ”These people, though they possess _brighter_ qualities, are not so proud as he is, nor so vain as she”--_Murray cor_ ”It is certain, _that_ we believe _our own judgeh inquiry into the _things_”--_Brightland cor_ ”As well as the whole course and _all the_ reasons of the operation”--_Id_ ”Those rules and principles which are of _the greatest_ practical advantage”--_Newman cor_ ”And _all_ curse shall be _no more_”--_Rev

cor_--(See _the Greek_) ”And death shall be _no more_”--_Id_ ”But, in recompense, we have _pleasanter_ pictures of ancient reater nues in America, since the British army landed on our shores, than it had suffered before, in the period of three centuries”--_Webster cor ”All the_ conveniences of life are derived from mutual aid and support in society”--_Ld Kames cor_

UNDER NOTE XV--PARTICIPIAL ADJECTIVES

”To such as think the nature of it deserving _of_ their attention”--_Bp

Butler cor_ ”In all points,_of_ the approbation of their readers”--_Keepsake cor_ ”But to give way to childish sensations, was unbeco extracts are deserving _of_ the serious perusal of all”--_The Friend cor_ ”No inquiry into wisdo _of_ attention”--_Bulwer cor_ ”The opinions of illustrious reat consideration”--_Porter cor_ ”And resolutely keep its laws Uncaring _for_ consequences” Or:--”_Not heeding_ consequences”--_Burns cor_ ”This is an ite _of_ more attention”--_Goodell cor_