Part 231 (2/2)
”On me to cast those eyes where _shi+nes_ nobility”
--_Sidney cor_
”Here _are_ half-pence in plenty, for one you'll have twenty”
--_Swift cor_
”Ah, Jockey, ill _advisest_ thou I wis, To think of songs at such a time as this”
--_Churchill cor_
UNDER NOTE I--THE RELATIVE AND VERB
”Thou, who _lovest_ us, wilt protect us still”--_A Murray cor_ ”To use that endearing language, 'Our Father, who _art_ in heaven'”--_Bates cor_ ”Rese the passions that _produce_ these actions”--_Karief, hoof, muff_, &c, which _take s_ to o_ before me, and the children, be able to endure”--_Gen cor_ ”Where is the man who _dares_ affirm that such an action is mad?”--_Dr Pratt cor_ ”The ninth book of Livy affords one of the , that _are_ anywhere to be met with”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”In so, which _are_ our object,” &c--_Id_ ”Of those affecting situations which _make_ man's heart feel for man”--_Id_ ”We see very plainly, that it is neither Osmyn nor Jane Shore that _speaks_”--_Id_ ”It should assume that briskness and ease which _are_ suited to the freedoht to be admitted into the ministry, but such as _are_ truly pious”--_Barclay cor_ ”This letter is one of the best that _have_ been written about Lord Byron”--_Hunt cor_ ”Thus, besides what _were_ sunk, the Athenians took above two hundred shi+ps”--_Goldsmith cor_ ”To have made and declared such orders as _were_ necessary”--_Hutchinson cor_ ”The idea of such a collection of men as _makes_ an army”--_Locke cor_ ”I'm not the first that _has_ been wretched”--_Southern cor_ ”And the faint sparks of it which _are_ in the angels, are concealed from our view”--_Calvin cor_ ”The subjects are of such a nature, as _allows_ room (or, as to _allow_ room) for much diversity of taste and sentiment”--_Dr
Blair cor_ ”It is in order to propose examples of such perfection, as _is_ not to be found in the real examples of society”--_Formey cor_ ”I do not believe that he would amuse himself with such fooleries as _have_ been attributed to hiht_ the chosen seed”--_Milton, P L_, B i, l 8 ”With respect to the vehemence and warmth which _are_ allowed in popular eloquence”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Ambition is one of those passions that _are_ never to be satisfied”--_Hoht_ in Israel”--_Bible cor_ ”Art thou the man of God, that _came_ frorace And wisdom, which alone _are_ truly fair”--_Milton cor_
”What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus _roamst_ the camp alone?”--_Pope cor_
UNDER NOTE II--NOMINATIVE WITH ADJUNCTS
”The literal sense of the words _is_, that the action had been done”--_Dr
Murray cor_ ”The rapidity of his movements _was_ beyond exaether with his Exercises and Key, _has_ nearly superseded every thing else of the kind”--_Murray's Rec cor_ ”The mechanism of clocks and watches _was_ totally unknown”--_Huether with the verb _to be, expresses a state_ of being”--_Cobbett cor_ ”Hence it is, that the profuse variety of objects in soue”--_Kae and ferocity”--_Gardiner cor_ ”One of the fields _makes_ threescore square yards, and the other, only fifty-five”--_Duncan cor_ ”The happy effects of this fable _are_ worth attending to”--_Bailey cor_ ”Yet the glorious serenity of its parting rays, still _lingers_ with us”--_Gould cor_ ”Enough of its form and force _is_ retained to render them uneasy”--_Maturin cor_ ”The works of nature, in this respect, _are_ extreular”--_Pratt cor_ ”No sn words and phrases, _has_ been made by commerce”--_Bicknell cor_ ”The dialect of some nouns _is noticed_ in the notes”--_Milnes cor_ ”It has been said, that a discovery of the full resources of the arts, _affords_ the means of debasement, or of perversion”--_Rush cor_ ”By which means, the order of the words _is_ disturbed”--_Holmes cor_ ”The two-fold influence of these and the others, _requires_ the _verb_ to be in the plural form”--_Peirce cor_ ”And each of these _affords_ employment”--_Percival cor_ ”The pronunciation of the vowels _is_ best explained under the rules relative to the consonants”--_Coar cor_ ”The judicial power of these courts _extends_ to all cases in law and equity”--_Hall and Baker cor_ ”One of you _has_ stolen my money”--_Humorist cor_ ”Such redundancy of epithets, in stead of pleasing, _produces_ satiety and disgust”--_Kaed, that a compliance with the rules of Rhetoric, _tends_ to cramp the mind”--_Hiley cor_ ”Each of these _is_ presented to us in different relations”--_Hendrick cor_ ”The past tense of these verbs, (_should, would, ht, could_,) _is_ very indefinite with respect to time”--_Bullions cor_ ”The power of the words which are said to govern this mood, _is_ distinctly understood”--_Chandler cor_
”And now, at length, the fated terht, and lo! the God appears”
--_Lowth cor_
”Variety of nus_”
--_Brightland cor_
UNDER NOTE III--COMPOSITE OR CONVERTED SUBJECTS
”Many are the works of huranted to the same man”--_Johnson cor_ ”To lay down rules for these, _is_ as inefficacious”--_Pratt cor_ ”To profess regard and act _injuriously, discovers_ a base ht of wonder things great, new, and admirable, extremely _pleases_ theas_' _is_ used in a manner which is very common”--_Webster cor_ ”A CAUSE DE, _is_ called a preposition; A CAUSE QUE, a conjunction”--_Webster cor_ ”To these _it is_ given to speak in the name of the Lord”--_The Friend cor_ ”While _wheat_ has no plural, _oats has_ seldoular”--_Cobbett cor_ ”He cannot assert that _ll_ (ie, _double Ell_) _is_ inserted in _fullness_ to denote the sound of _u_”--_Cobb cor_ ”_Ch_, in Latin, _has_ the power of _k_”--_Gould cor_ ”_Ti_, before a vowel, and unaccented, _has_ the sound of _si_ or _ci_”--_Id_ ”In words derived frorin, chicanery_, and _chaise, ch is sounded_ like _sh_”--_Bucke cor_ ”But, in the _words schism, schisinning of words, _is_ always sounded like _f_”--_Bucke cor_ ”_Ph has_ the sound of _f_ as in _philosophy_”--_Webster cor_ ”_Sh has_ one sound only, as in _shall_”--_Id_ ”_Th has_ two sounds”--_Id_ ”_Sc_, before _a, o, u, or r, has_ the sound of _sk_”--_Id_ ”_Aw has_ the sound of _a_ in _hall_”--_Bolles cor_ ”_Ew sounds_ like _u_”--_Id_ ”_Ohen both _vowels are_ sounded, _has_ the _power_ of _ou in thou_”--_Id_ ”_Ui_, when both _vowels are_ pronounced in one syllable, _sounds_ like _wi short, as_ in _languid_”--_Id_
”_Ui_ three _other sounds at least expresses_, As _who hears_ GUILE, REBUILD, and BRUISE, _confesses_”
--_Brightland cor_
UNDER NOTE IV--EACH, ONE, EITHER, AND NEITHER
”When each of the letters which compose this word, _has_ been learned”--_Dr Weeks cor_ ”As neither of us _denies_ that both Horeat beauties”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Yet neither of them _is_ rereat epic poets _has_ distinguished _hireeable sensation”--_Id_ ”On the Lord's day, every one of us Christians _keeps_ the sabbath”--_Tr of Iren cor_ ”And each of thee of purity and holiness”--_Hope of Is cor_ ”_Was_ either of these nized?”--_Foster cor_ ”Whilst neither of these letters _exists_ in the Eugubian inscription”--_Knight cor_ ”And neither of them _is_ properly termed indefinite”--_Dr Wilson cor_ ”As likewise of the several subjects, which have in effect _their several verbs_:” or,--”_each of which has_ in effect _its own verb_”--_Lowth cor_ ”Sons _is_ used”--_A Mur cor_ ”And as neither of these manners _offends_ the ear”--_J Walker cor_ ”Neither of these two tenses _is_ confined to this signification only”--_R Johnson cor_ ”But neither of these circumstances _is_ intended here”--_Tooke cor_ ”So that all are indebted to each, and each _is_ dependent upon all”--_Bible Rep cor_ ”And yet neither of them _expresses_ any more action in this case, than _it_ did in the other”--_Bullions cor_ ”Each of these expressions _denotes_ action”--_Hallock cor_ ”Neither of these moods _seems_ to be defined by distinct boundaries”--_Butler cor_ ”Neither of these solutions _is_ correct”--_Bullions cor_ ”Neither _bears_ any sign of case at all”--_Fowler cor_
”Each in _his_ turn, like Banquo's monarchs, _stalks_” Or:-- ”_All_ in _their_ turn, like Banquo's monarchs, _stalk_”--_Byron cor_
”And tell what each _doth_ by _the_ other lose”--_Shak cor_