Part 234 (2/2)
Smith cor_ ”It is however to be doubted, whether this Greek idiom ever has _obtained_, or _ever_ will obtain, extensively, in English”--_Nutting cor_ ”Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we _do_?”--_Murray cor_ ”Who delivers his sentiht to be _delivered_ in order to move and persuade”--_Kirkham cor_
UNDER NOTE X--DO, USED AS A SUBStitUTE
”And I would avoid it altogether, if it could be _avoided_” Or: ”I would avoid it altogether, if _to avoid_ it _were practicable_”--_Ka of his wounds, is truly heroic; and _it_ ht _to which it can be raised_ by a single expression”--_Id_ ”Successive i deeper and deeper ie can”--_Id_ ”Besidesa deeper i”--_Id_ ”Yet a poet, by the force of genius alone, _her than a public speaker _can_” Or:--”than _can_ a public speaker”--_Blair cor_ ”And the very sao so far as they have _gone_, should have induced theo farther”--_Priestley cor_ ”The pupil should commit the first section _to memory_ perfectly, before he _atterammar”--_Bradley cor_ ”The Greek _ch_ was pronounced hard, as_pronounce it_ in _chord_”--_Booth cor_ ”They pronounce the syllables in a different manner from what they _adopt_ (or, in a _manner different_ from _that which_ they _are accustoive hiiven_”--_Scott cor_ ”I do not say, as sobroke cor_ ”If he suppose the first, he _ Christ in his inward appearance, as the Jews of old _despised_ him in his outward [advent]”--_Id_ ”That text of Revelations must not be understood as he _understands_ it”--_Id_ ”Till thethe noun is so familiar to him that he can _parse_ it readily”--_R C S the same course _that_ Roht even on this ground to be avoided; _and it_ easily _may be_, by a different construction”--_Churchill cor_ ”These two languages are now pronounced in England as no other nation in Europe _pronounces thehton cor_ ”Gerbroke, Murray, et al, cor_
UNDER NOTE XI--PRETERITS AND PARTICIPLES
”The beggars themselves will be _broken_ in a trice”--_Swift cor_ ”The hoop is _hoisted_ above his nose”--_Id_ ”And _his_ heart was _lifted_ up in the ways of the Lord”--_2 Chron_, xvii, 6 ”Who sin so oft have mourned, Yet to temptation _run_”--_Burns cor_ ”Who would not have let them _appear_”--_Steele cor_ ”He would have had you _seek_ for ease at the hands of Mr Legality”--_Bunyan cor_ ”Frohter, of the glen”--_Spenser cor_ ”The man has _spoken_, and _he_ still speaks”--_Ash cor_ ”For you have but _mistaken_ me all this while”--_Shak cor_ ”And will you _rend_ our ancient love asunder?”--_Id_ ”Mr Birney has _pled_ (or _pleaded_) the inexpediency of passing such resolutions”--_Liberator cor_ ”Who have _worn_ out their years in such most painful labours”--_Littleton cor_ ”And in the conclusion you were _chosen_ probationer”--_Spectator cor_
”How she was lost, _ta'en_ captive, ainst him set that should her save”--_Bunyan cor_
UNDER NOTE XII--OF VERBS CONFOUNDED
”But Moses preferred to _while_ away his time”--_Parker cor_ ”His face shone with the rays of the sun”--_John Allen cor_ ”Whobroke cor_ ”And when he _had sat down_, his disciples came unto hiee kindled_ a fire in the ether, Peter sat down a them”--_Id_ ”So, after he had washed their feet, and had taken his gar down again_,'] he said _to_ them, _Do_ ye _knohat I have done to you?”--_Id_ ”Even as I also overcame, and _sat_ doith my Father in his throne”--_Id_ Or: (rather less literally:) ”Even as I _have overco_ with h priest, who _sitteth_ on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens”--_Id_ ”And _is now sitting_ at the right hand of the throne of God”--_Id_ ”He _set_ on foot a furious persecution”-- _Payne cor_ ”There _lieth_ (or _lies_) an obligation upon the saints to help such”--_Barclay cor_ ”There let hi but row upon it”--_Morse cor_ ”Who had _laid_ out considerable suuish thehteous _flee_ and are safe”--_Barclay cor_ ”He _rose_ froarments”--_Id_ ”Whither--_oh!_ whither--shall I _flee_?”--_L Murray cor_ ”_Fleeing_ froe”--_Id_ ”The sign that should warn his disciples to _flee_ fro ruin”-- _Keith cor_ ”In one she _sits_ as a prototype for exact imitation”--_Rush cor_ ”In which some only bleat, bark, mehinny_, and bray, a little better than others”--_Id_ ”Who represented to hi _affected_ with such unmanly fears”--_Rollin cor_ ”Thou _sawest_ every action” Or, faht, thou _taughtest_, or _taught_, he or she taught”--_Coar cor_ ”Valerian was taken by Sapor and _flayed_ alive, A D 260”--_Lempriere cor_ ”What a fine vehicle _has_ it now become, for all conceptions of the mind!”--_Blair cor_ ”What _has_ become of so many productions?”--_Volney cor_ ”What _has_ becoes of abundance and of life?”--_Keith cor_ ”The Spartan admiral _had_ sailed to the hellespont”--_Goldsed about him”--_Id_ ”Cyrus _had_ arrived at Sardis”--_Id_ ”Whose year _had_ expired”--_Id_ ”It _ht_ better have been, 'that faction which,'” Or; ”'That faction which,' _would_ have been better”--_Murray's Grareat nation”--_Murray and Ingersoll cor_ ”And here we _enter_ the region of ornaraceful parenthesis which follows, _ht_ far better have been avoided” ”Who forced him under water, and there held him until _he was drowned_”--_Hist
cor_
”I _would_ much rather be myself the slave, And wear the bonds, than fasten them on him”--_Cowper cor_
UNDER NOTE XIII--WORDS THAT EXPRESS TIME
”I _finished_ my letter _before_ my brother arrived” Or: ”I _had finished_ my letter _when_ my brother arrived”--_Kirkham cor_ ”I _wrote_ before I received his letter”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Froth_ introduced a the suits not the Doctor's context] ”I am not of opinion that such rules _can be_ of much use, unless persons _see_ them exemplified” Or:--”_could be_,”
and ”_saw_”--_Id_ ”If we _use_ the noun itself, we _say_, (or _must say_,) 'This composition is John's'” Or: ”If we _used_ the noun itself, we _should say_,” &c--_L Murray cor_ ”But if the assertion _refer_ to so that is not_ supposed to be _always the same_, the past tense must be preferred:” [as,] ”They told hi_ by”--_Luke and L Murray cor_ ”There is no particular intimation but that I _have continued_ to work, even to the present moment”--_R W Green cor_ ”Generally, as _has been_ observed already, it is but hinted in a single word or phrase”--_Cae _has been_ already illustrated”--_Id_ ”As was observed _before_”--_Id_ Or: ”As _has been_ observed _already_”--_Id_ ”It _has been_ said already in general _terms_”--_Id_ ”As I hinted _before_”--_Id_ Or: ”As I _have hinted already_”--_Id_ ”What, I believe, was hinted once _before_”--_Id_ ”It is obvious, as _was_ hinted formerly, that this is but an artificial and arbitrary connexion”--_Id_ ”They _did_ anciently a great deal of hurt”-- _Bolingbroke cor_ ”Then said Paul, I knew not, brethren, that he _was_ the high priest”--See _Acts_, xxiii, 5; _Webster cor_ ”Most prepositions originally _denoted_ the _relations_ of place; and _from these_ they _were_ transferred, to denote, by siift was but a poor offering, _in coreat_ estate”--_L Murray cor_ ”If he should succeed, and obtain his end, he _would_ not be the happier for it” Or, better: ”If he _succeed_, and _fully attain_ his end, he will not be the happier for it”--_Id_ ”These are torrents that swell to-day, and _that will_ have spent themselves by to-morrow”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Who have called that wheat _on one day_, which they have called tares _on the next_”--_Barclay cor_ ”He thought it _was_ one of his tenants”--_Id_ ”But if one went unto them from the dead, they _would_ repent”--_Bible cor_ ”Neither _would_ they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead”--_Id_ ”But it is while men _sleep_, that the arch-enemy always _sows_ his tares”--_The Friend cor_ ”Crescens would not _have failed_ to _expose_ him”--_Addison cor_
”Bent _is_ his bow, the Grecian hearts to wound; Fierce as he _moves_, his silver shafts resound”--_Pope cor_
UNDER NOTE XIV--VERBS OF COMMANDING, &C
”Had I coht hard of it”--_G
B_ ”I found him better than I expected to _find_ him”--_L Murray's Gram_, i, 187 ”There are several smaller faults which I at first intended to _enumerate_”--_Webster cor_ ”Antithesis, therefore, e, in order to strengthen the impression which we intend that any object _shall_ irl said, if her ht have been well long ago”--_Priestley et al cor_ ”Nor is there the least ground to fear that we _shall here_ be cramped within too narrow limits”--_Campbell cor_ ”The Romans, flushed with success, expected to _retake_ it”--_Hooke cor_ ”I would not have let _fall_ an unseasonable pleasantry in the venerable presence of Misery, to be entitled to all the wit that ever Rabelais scattered”--_Sterne cor_ ”We expected that he _would arrive_ last night”--_Brown's Inst_, p 282 ”Our friends intended to _meet_ us”--_Ib_ ”We hoped to _see_ you”--_Ib_ ”He would not have been allowed to _enter_”--_Ib_
UNDER NOTE XV--PERMANENT PROPOSITIONS
”Cicero ood”--_G B_ ”I observed that love _constitutes_ the wholethat one _gains_ nothing by being a good man”--_Voltaire cor_ ”I have already told you, that I _aentleman”--_Fontaine cor_ ”If I should ask, whether ice and water _are_ two distinct species of things”--_Locke cor_ ”A stranger to the poem would not easily discover that this _is_ verse”--_Murray's Gram_, 8vo, i, 260 ”The doctor affirmed that fever always _produces_ thirst”--_Brown's Inst_, p 282 ”The ancients asserted, that virtue _is_ its oard”--_Ib_ ”They should not have repeated the error, of insisting that the infinitive _is_ a mere noun”--_Tooke cor_ ”It was observed in Chap
III, that the distinctive OR _has_ a double use”--_Churchill cor_ ”Two young gentlemen, who have made a discovery that there _is_ no God”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p 206
CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE XVIII; INFINITIVES
INSTANCES DEMANDING THE PARTICLE TO
”William, please _to_ hand me that pencil”--_Smith cor_ ”Please _to_ insert points so as to make sense”--_P Davis cor_ ”I have known lords _to_ abbreviate almost half of their words”--_Cobbett cor_ ”We shall find the practice perfectly _to_ accord with the theory”--_Knight cor_ ”But it would tend to obscure, rather than _to_ elucidate, the subject”--_L