Part 236 (1/2)

”This would _make it impossible for a noun_, or any other _word_, ever _to be_ in the possessive case”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”A great part of our pleasure arises fro_ the plan or story well conducted”--_Dr

Blair cor_ ”And we have no reason to wonder _that this was_ the case”--_Id_ ”She objected only, (as Cicero says,) to Oppianicus _as_ having two sons by his present wife”--_Id_ ”_The subjugation of_ the Britons by the Saxons, was a necessary consequence of their _calling of_ these Saxons to their assistance”--_Id_ ”What he had there said concerning the Saxons, _that they expelled_ the Britons, and _changed_ the custoe of the country, is a clear and a good reason _why_ our present language _is_ Saxon, rather than British”--_Id_ ”The only material difference between them, _except that_ the one _is_ short and the other _ed, is, that a metaphor _is always explained_ by the words that are connected with it”--_Id et Mur

cor_ ”The description of _Death_, advancing to meet Satan on his arrival”--_Rush cor_ ”Is not the bare fact, _that_ God _is_ the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?”--_Chal upon a new study”--_Beattie cor_ ”The manner _in which_ these _affect_ the copula, is called the imperative _mood_”--_Wilkins cor_ ”We are freed from the trouble, _because_ our nouns _have scarcely any_ diversity of endings”--_Buchanan cor_ ”The verb is rather indicative of the _action as_ being doing, or done, than _of_ the tiuishable”--_Booth cor_ ”nobody would doubt _that_ this _is_ a sufficient proof”--_Caainst the doctrine here maintained, _that_ conscience as well as reason, _is_ a natural faculty”--_Beattie cor_ ”It is one cause _why_ the Greek and English languages _are_ much more easy to learn, than the Latin”--_Bucke cor_ ”I have not been able to make out a solitary instance _in which_ such _has been_ the fact”--_Lib

cor_ ”An _angel_, for's condemnation on the wall, checked their mirth, and filled the_ to escape, aroused the keepers”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”I doubt not, in the least, _that_ this _has_ been one cause of the multiplication of divinities in the heathen world”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Froeneral rule he lays down, _that the verb is_ the parent word of all language”--_Tooke cor_ ”He was accused of being idle” Or: ”He was accused of _idleness_”--_Felch cor_ ”Our ” Or: ”with _the circumstances of his removal_”--_Ed solid fa it”--_Bush cor_ ”What further need was there _that_ an other priest _should rise_?”--_Heb_, vii, 11

UNDER NOTE XI--REFERENCE OF PARTICIPLES

”Viewing them separately, _we experience_ different emotions” Or: ”_Viewed_ separately, _they produce_ different e left_ doubtful, an other objection occurs”--_Id_ ”_As he proceeded_ frorew under his hand”--_Id_ ”But this is still an interruption, and a link of the chain _is_ broken”--_Id_ ”After so,)--Cyrus con to his officers”--_Rollin cor_ ”But it ismade_ in form”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”These would have had a better effect, _had they been_ disjoined, thus”--_Blair and Murray cor_ ”_In_ an i, but one of the vowels _is_ sounded”--_Murray, Alger, et al cor_ ”And _I_ being led to think of both together, my view is rendered unsteady”--_Blair, Mur, and Ja, _we make the action_ habitual” Or: ”_What is_ often _done_, becomes habitual”--_L Murray cor_ ”They remain with us in our dark and solitary hours, no less than when _we are_ surrounded with friends and cheerful society”--_Id_ ”Besides _showing_ what is right, _one ”--_Lowth cor_ ”The former teaches the true pronunciation of words, _and comprises_ accent, quantity, emphasis, _pauses_, and _tones_”--_L Murray cor_ ”_A person , 'You have taken great care indeed'”--_Id_ ”The _word_ preceding and _the word_ following it, are in apposition to each other”--_Id_ ”_He_ having finished his speech, the assembly dispersed”--_Cooper cor_ ”Were the voice to fall at the close of the last line, asit to do_”--_Kirkhaatively the effects of his wrath, _which only deprived_ the them as nouns, _we may explain_ this construction thus”--_Grant cor_ ”These have an active signification, _except_ those which co universal” Or: ”From the _fact that its evidence is not_ universal”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”And this faith will continually grow, _as we acquaint_ ourselves with our own nature”--_Channing cor_ ”Monosyllables ending with any consonant but _f, l_, or _s_, never double the final consonant, _when it is preceded by a single vowel_; except _add, ebb_,” &c--_Kirkha with any consonant except _f, l_, or _s_, do not double the final letter

Exceptions Add, ebb, &c”--_Bullions's E Gra, of which this is a partial copy) ”The relation of _Maria as_ being the object of the action, is expressed by the change of the noun _Maria_ to _Mariae]--_Booth cor_ ”In analyzing a proposition, _one ical subject and predicate”--_Andrews and Stoddard cor_ ”In analyzing a siical subject and logical predicate”--_Wells cor_

UNDER NOTE XII--OF PARTICIPLES AND NOUNS

”The _instant discovery of_ passions at their birth, is essential to our well-being”--_Kames cor_ ”I am now to enter on _a consideration of_ the sources of the pleasures of taste”--_Blair cor_ ”The varieties in _the use of_ the _of_ tis, belong to Providence alone”--_Id_ ”_Adherence_ to the partitions, seemed the cause of France; _acceptance of_ the will, that of the house of Bourbon”--_Bolingbroke cor_ ”An other source of darkness in _composition_, is the injudicious introduction of technical words and phrases”--_Ca which, youthe rules, youthese rules, he succeeded”--_Frost cor_ ”_The praise bestowed on him_ was his ruin”--_Id_ ”_Deception_ is not _convincement_”--_Id_ ”He never feared _the loss_ of a friend”--_Id_ ”_The_ er cor_ ”We call it _the_ declining--(or, _the declension_--) _of_ a noun”--_Ingersoll cor_ ”Washi+ngton, however, pursued the sa _of_ any part in the wars of Europe”--_Hall and Baker cor_ ”The following is a note of Interrogation, or _of a_ question: (?)”--_Inf S Gra is a note of Admiration, or _of_ wonder: (!)”--_Id_ ”_The use or omission of_ the article A forms a nice distinction in the sense”--_Murray cor_ ”_The_ placing _of_ the preposition before the word, _which_ it governs, is raceful”--_Churchill cor_ (See _Lowth's Gram_, p 96; _Murray's_, i, 200; _Fisk's_, 141; _Smith's_, 167) ”assistance is absolutely necessary to their recovery, and _the_ retrieving _of_ their affairs”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”Which termination, [_ish_,] when added to adjectives, i of the quality”--_Mur and Kirkhaht _an excess of refineest that the different orders are qualified for different purposes?”--_Ka _of_ time”--_West cor_ ”It requires no nicety of ear, as in the distinguishi+ng of tones, or _the__of_ time”--_Sheridan cor_ ”The _possessive case_ [is that form or state of a noun or pronoun, which] denotes possession, or _the relation of property_”--_S R Hall cor_

UNDER NOTE XIII--PERFECT PARTICIPLES

”Garcilasso was e _spoken_ by the Incas”--_Robertson cor_ ”When an interesting story is _broken_ off in theof Hannibal's elephants _driven_ back by the enemy”--_Id_ ”If Du Ryer had not _written_ for bread, he would have equalled them”--_Formey cor_ ”Pope describes a rock _broken_ off fro to the plain”--_Kames cor_ ”I have written, Thou hast written, He hath or has written; &c”--_Ash and Maltby cor_ ”This was _spoken_ by a pagan”--_Webster cor_ ”But I have _chosen_ to follow the coal”--_Id_ ”And sound sleep thus _broken_ off with _sudden_ alarh to discompose any one”--_Locke cor_ ”This is not only the case of those open sinners before _spoken_ of”--_Leslie cor_ ”Sorammarians have written a very perplexed and difficult doctrine on Punctuation”--_Ensell cor_ ”There hath a pity _arisen_ in me towards thee”--_G Fox Jun cor_ ”Abel is the only e of death”--_De Genlis, Death of Ada sands, _Smit_ with keen heat, the traveller stands”--_Ode cor_

CHAPTER VIII--ADVERBS

CORRECTIONS UNDER THE NOTES TO RULE XXI

UNDER NOTE I--THE PLACING OF ADVERBS

”_Not_ all that is favoured by good use, is proper to be retained”--_L

Murray corrected_ ”_Not_ everything favoured by good use, is on that account worthy to be retained”--_Campbell cor_ ”Most men dream, but _not_ all”--_Beattie cor_ ”By hasty composition, we shall _certainly_ acquire a very bad style”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”The co on _only_ one point of rese _once_ had some considerable object set before us”--_Id_ ”The positive seeree” [543]--_Adaenitive _only_ is used”--_Iid_ ”This blunder is said to have _actually_ occurred”--_Smith cor_ ”But _not_ every man is called James, nor every woman, Mary”--_Buchanan cor_ ”Crotchets are employed for _nearly_ the same purpose as the parenthesis”--_Churchill cor_ ”There is a _still_ greater impropriety in a double comparative”--_Priestley cor_ ”We often have occasion to speak of ti sentence cannot _possibly_ be understood”--_Id_ ”The words enerally_ be separated froenerally_ have the accent on the penulties, with respect to voices, eneral, constructed _differently_ froinally_ contrived to express compendiously, in one word, what must otherwise have required two or more”--_Id_ ”But it is so, _only_ when the expression can be converted into the regular form of the possessive case”--_Id_ ”'Enter _boldly_,' says he, 'for here too there are Gods'”--_Harris cor_ ”For none _ever_ work for so little a pittance that sowick cor_ ”For sinners also lend to sinners, to receive _again_ as much”--_Bible cor_ Or, as Campbell has it in his version:--”_that they may_ receive as much _in return_”--_Luke_, vi, 34 ”They ht”--_L Murray cor_ ”If he _speaks but_ to display his abilities, he is unworthy of attention”--_Id_

UNDER NOTE II--ADVERBS FOR ADJECTIVES

”_Upward_ reeable than motion _doard_”--_Dr

Blair cor_ ”There are but two _possible_ ways of justification before God”--_cox cor_ ”This construction sounds rather _harsh_”--_Mur and Ing cor_ ”A clear conception, in the ular_ and well-forreat hearer of

Attalus, Sotion, Papirius, Fabianus, of whoe cor_ ”It is only the _frequent_ doing of a thing, that makes it a custom”--_Leslie cor_ ”Because W R takes _frequent_ occasion to insinuate his jealousies of persons and things”--_Barclay cor_ ”Yet _frequent_ touching ear gold”--_Shak cor_ ”Uneducated persons frequently use an _adverb_ when they ought to use an _adjective_: as, 'The country looks _beautifully_;' in stead of _beautiful_” [544]-- _Bucke cor_ ”The adjective is put _absolute_, or without its substantive”--_Ash cor_ ”A noun or _a_ pronoun in the second person, may be put _absolute_ in the nominative case”--_Harrison cor_ ”A noun or _a_ pronoun, when put _absolute_ with a participle,” &c--_Id and Jaudon cor_ ”A verb in the infinitivepart of the sentence”--_Wilbur and Liv cor_ ”At land, I e'”--_Cowley cor_ ”But he can discover no better foundation for any of theil”--_Kames cor_

UNDER NOTE III--HERE FOR HITHER, &C

”It is reported, that the _governor_ will come _hither_ to-overnor_ will come _hither_ to-morrow”--_Id_ ”To catch a prospect of that lovely land _whither_ his steps are tending”--_Maturin cor_ ”Plautus oing with that Vulcan shut up in a horn; that is, with a _lantern_ in his hand”--_Adae we intended to return _thither_ in a few days”--_Anon cor_ ”Duncan coht”--_Churchill's Gra _hither_ last week”--See _J M Putnam's Gram_, p

129

UNDER NOTE IV--FROM HENCE, &C