Part 237 (1/2)
UNDER NOTE I--OF TWO TERMS WITH ONE
”The first proposal was essentially different _from_ the second, and inferior _to it_”--_Inst_ ”A neuter verb _expresses_ the state _which_ a subject is in, without acting upon _any other thing_, or being acted upon by an other”--_A Murray cor_ ”I answer, You _ht to _do_ so”--_Todd cor_ ”ORACLE, _n_ Any person _from whom_, or place _at which_, certain decisions are obtained”--_Webster cor_ ”Fored”--_Lyttelton cor_ ”I have _been_, and _I still_ pretend to be, a tolerable judge”--_Sped cor_ ”Are we not lazy in our duties, or _do we not_ make a Christ of them?”--_Baxter cor_ ”They may not express that idea which the author intends, but some other which only resembles _it_, or is _akin_ to it”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”We ht to read the eye”--_Ib_ ”Coht to possess”--_Sedgwick cor_ ”He is rammar_ than they are”--_L
Murray cor_ ”He was more beloved _than Cinthio_, but [he was] not so ed, that the four gospels are as old _as tradition, and even_ older?”--_Campbell's Rhet_, p
207 ”The court of chancery frequently ates and _disar along side of her shi+p, entered it without seeing _her_, or being seen by her”--_Goldsmith cor_ ”_Into_ candid uest_”--_L Murray cor_ ”_There are_ ns _in which_ we may succeed, _to our ultimate ruin_”--_Id_ ”_From_ many pursuits _in which_ we embark with pleasure, _we are destined to_ land sorrowfully”--_Id_ ”They _gain_ much _more_ than I, by this unexpected event”--_Id_
UNDER NOTE II--OF HETEROGENEOUS TERMS
”Athens saw the_ her acadeot his past _achievements_, nor _do we_ despair of his future success”--_Duncan cor_ ”Herbeen shattered, or _had_ crumbled into dust”--_Journal cor_ ”Competition is excellent; _it is_ the vital principle in all these things”--_Id_ ”Whether provision should, or _should_ not, be ency”--_Ib_ ”That our Saviour was divinely inspired, and _that he was_ endued with supernatural powers, are positions that are here taken for granted”--_L Mur cor_ ”It would be e their extent by explanatory notes and observations, than _to sweep_ away our ancient landmarks and _set_ up others”--_Id_ ”It is certainly e superfluities by occasional notes and observations, than _to disorganize_ or _greatly alter_ a syste established”--_Id_ ”To have only one tune, or measure, is not much better than _to have_ none at all”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Facts too well known and _too_ obvious to be insisted on”--_Id_ ”In proportion as all these circumstances are happily chosen, and _are_ of a sublieneral, and _be_ divested of circu _but commendation_”--_L Mur
cor_ ”I cannot but think its application soatives _standing_ in the sa, destroy each other, and leave the sense affirmative”--_Maunder cor_ ”Slates are _thin plates of stone_, and _are often_ used to cover _the_ roofs of houses”--_Webster cor_ ”Every ht to feel al for the power he possesses”--_Translator of De Stael cor_ ”They very seldom trouble themselves with _inquiries_, or _make any_ useful observations of their own”--_Locke cor_
”We've both the field and honour won; _Our foes_ are profligate, and run”--_S Butler cor_
UNDER NOTE III--IMPORT OF CONJUNCTIONS
”THE is sometimes used before adverbs in the coree”--_Lennie, Bullions, and Brace cor_ ”The definite article THE is frequently applied to adverbs in the coree”--_Lowth Murray, et al, cor_ ”Conjunctions usually connect verbs in the same mood _and_ tense” Or, more truly: ”Verbs connected by _a conjunction, are_ usually in the same mood _and_ tense”--_Sanborn cor_ ”Conjunctions connect verbs in the same style, and usually in the same mood, tense, _and_ form” Or better: ”Verbs connected by _a conjunction_, are usually _of_ the same mood, tense, _and_ form, _as well as_ style”--_Id_ ”The ruins of Greece _or_ Roreatness”--_P E Day cor_ ”It is not improbably, _that in inally”--_Priestley cor_ ”I cannot doubt that these objects are really what they appear to be”--_Kames cor_ ”I question not _that_ my reader will be as much pleased with it”--_Spect cor_ ”It is ten to one _that_them”--_Id_ ”I doubt not _that_ such objections as these will be made”--_Locke cor_ ”I doubt not _that_ it will appear in the perusal of the following sheets”--_Buchanan cor_ ”It is not improbable, that in time these different constructions maybe appropriated to different uses”--_Priestley cor_ ”But to forget _and_ to remember at pleasure, are equally beyond the power of man”--_Idler cor_ ”The noative _or_ i-tree, s?”--_Bible cor_ ”Whose characters are too profligate _for_ theof them _to_ be of any consequence”--_Swift cor_ ”You, that are a step higher than a philosopher, a divine, yet have too race and wit to be a bishop”--_Pope cor_ ”The tere”--_Robertson cor_ ”This pause is but seldom, _if_ ever, sufficiently dwelt upon” Or: ”This pause is seldom _or never_ sufficiently dwelt upon”--_Gardiner cor_ ”There would be no possibility of any such thing as human life _or_ human happiness”--_Bp
Butler cor_ ”The multitude rebuked them, _that_ they should hold their peace”--_Bible cor_
UNDER NOTE IV--THE CONJUNCTION THAN
”A_else than_ a short co _but_ a short co no other dictator here _than_ use”--_Murray's Gralish, _than_ by supplying the first or _the_ second person plural”--_Buchanan cor_ ”Cyaxares was no sooner _on_ the throne, _than_ he was engaged in a terrible war”--_Rollin cor_ ”Those classics contain little else _than_ histories of murders”--_Am Mu cor_ ”Ye shall not worshi+p any other _than_ God”--_Sale cor_ ”Their relation, therefore, is not otherwise to be ascertained, _than_ by their place”--_Caained his point”--_Burder cor_ ”And all the modern writers on this subject, have done little else _than_ translate them”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”One who had no other aim _than_ to talk copiously and plausibly”--_Id_ ”We can refer it to no other cause _than_ the structure of the eye”--_Id_ ”No ly an act of vision”--_Kames cor_ ”We find no more in its composition, _than_ the particulars now mentioned”--_Id_ ”_He does not pretend_ to say, that it _has_ any other effect _than_ to raise surprise”--_Id_ ”No sooner was the princess dead, _than_ he freed himself”--_Dr S Johnson cor_ ”OUGHT is an imperfect verb, for it has no modification besides this one”--_Priestley cor_ ”The verb is palpably nothing else _than_ the tie”--_Neef cor_ ”Does heopposed to polytheism or atheism?”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Is itopposed to polytheism or atheis that of which any one is ignorant, _than_ by ersoll's Grae: Dr Johnson cor_ ”O fairest flower, no sooner blown _than_ blasted!”--_Milton cor_ ”Architecture and gardening cannot otherwise entertain the s”--_Ka else _than_ nouns”--_Brit Gra else than to be mended”--_S Butler cor_
UNDER NOTE V--RELATIVES EXCLUDE CONJUNCTIONS
”To prepare the Jews for the reception of a prophet htier than _himself, a teacher_ whose shoes he was not worthy to bear”--_Anon, or Mur cor_ ”Has this word, which represents an action, an object after it, on which _the action_ terminates?”--_Osborne cor_ ”The stores of literature lie before him, from which he may collect for use reat advantages of this graht be enumerated”--_Greenleaf cor_ ”The custoht, is said to have been introduced about the tiislator”--_Jamieson cor_ ”The fundamental rule _for_ the construction of sentences, _the rule_ into which all others ht be resolved, undoubtedly is, to communicate, in the clearest and most natural order, the ideas which we mean to _express_”--_Blair and Jaular character, who behaved so ill that he was put in prison”--_L Murray cor_ ”He discovered in the youth soreeable qualities which to him holly unaccountable”--_Id_ ”An e _of_ peculiar moment has been said, on which ish_ to fix the hearer's attention” Or: ”An e has been said _which is_ of peculiar moment, _and_ on which ish_ to fix the hearer's attention”--_Blair and Murray cor_ ”But we have duplicates of each, agreeing in _ different impressions on the ear,”--_Murray cor_
UNDER NOTE VI--OF THE WORD THAT
”It will greatly facilitate the labours of the teacher, _and_, at the same time, it will relieve the pupil _froaged in the exercises just raround _on which_ a participle and _an_ auxiliary are allowed to forround _on which_ the voices, ue”--_L
Murray cor_ ”The five examples last mentioned, are corrected on the sa _thean at the death of Trajan, and lasted till Rome was taken by the Goths”--_Gould cor_ ”The introduction to the duodecimo edition is retained in this voluinal introduction to the Grammar is retained in the first voluree in person with its subject or_ noersoll cor_ ”The personal pronoun 'THEIR' is plural for the same reason _for which_ 'WHO' is plural”--_Id_ ”The Sabellians could not justly be called Patripassians, in the same sense _in which_ the Noetians were so called”--_R Adam cor_ ”This is one reason _e pass over such s that it contains little or no ”--_L Murray cor_ ”The first place _at which the two_ arht of each other, was on the opposite banks of the river Apsus”--_Goldsave him the first book for his perusal”--_Campbell cor_ ”Peter will sup at the time _at which_ Paul will dine”--_Fosdick cor_ ”Peter will be supping _when_ Paul will enter”--_Id_ ”These, _while_ they may serve as ive ht upon the principles of this book”--_Id_
”Time was, like thee, they life _possess'd_, And time shall be, _when_ thou shalt rest”--_Parnell cor_
UNDER NOTE VII--OF THE CORRESPONDENTS
”Our ross nor excessively refined”--_Murray's Key_, ii, 165 ”A neuter verb expresses neither action _nor_ passion, but being, or a state of being”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”The old books are neither English grae”--_Id_ ”The author is apprehensive that his work is not yet _so_ accurate and _so_ much simplified as it may be”--_Kirkham cor_ ”The writer could not treat some _topics so_ extensively as [it] was desirable [to treat them]”--_Id_ ”Which would be a ree of huulate _it_”--_L Murray cor_ ”No undertaking is so great or difficult, _that_ he cannot direct _it_”--_Duncan cor_ ”It is a good which depends _neither_ on the will of others, nor on the affluence of external fortune”--_Harris cor_ ”Not only his estate, _but_ his reputation too, has suffered by his ersoll cor_ ”Neither do they extend _so_ far as ined at first view”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”There is no language so poor, but _that_ it _has_ (or, _as not to have_) two or three past tenses”--_Id ”So_ far as this systeether arbitrary in its origin”--_Id_ ”I have not _such_ command of these convulsions as is necessary” Or: ”I have not _that_ command of these convulsions _which_ is necessary”--_Spect cor_ ”Conversation with such _as_ (or, _those who_) know no arts _that_ polish life”--_Id_ ”And which cannot be _either_ very lively or very forcible”--_Jaive proper names to rivers”--_Dr Murray cor_ ”In the utter overthrow of such _as_ hate to be reformed”--_Barclay cor_ ”But still so reatly injures the uniforone to _such a_ height of extravagance, as to assert,”
&c--_Id_ ”A teacher is confined, not more than a merchant, and probably not _so_ iven him, neither in this world, _nor_ in the world to coiven him, _either_ in this world, _or_ in the world to couine _as_ to hope”--_Swift cor_ ”For the torrent of the voice left neither tians, to shape the words properly”--_Sheridan cor_ ”That heout tootoo little”--_Id_ ”I have retained only such _as_ appear y”--_Littleton cor_ ”He is a man both prudent and industrious”--_P E Day cor_ ”Conjunctions connect either words or sentences”--_Brown's Inst_, p 169
”Such silly girls _as_ love to chat and play, Deserve no care; their time is throay”--_Tobitt cor_
”Vice is a htful mien, _That_ to be hated _she_ but needs be seen”--_Pope cor_