Part 237 (2/2)
”Justice must punish the rebellious deed; Yet punish so _that_ pity shall exceed”--_Dryden cor_
UNDER NOTE VIII--IMPROPER ELLIPSES
”THAT, WHOSE, and AS, relate either to persons or _to_ things” Or better:--”relate _as well_ to persons _as to_ things”--_Sanborn cor_ ”WHICH and WHAT, as adjectives, relate either to persons or _to_ things”
Or better:--”relate to persons _as well as to_ things”--_Id_ ”Whether of a public or _of a_ private nature”--_J Q Ada both_ the public and _the_ private wrongs”--_Id_ ”I ht extract, both from the Old and _from the_ New Testament, numberless examples of induction”--_Id_ ”Many verbs are used both in an active and _in a_ neuter signification” Or thus: ”Many verbs are used _in both_ an active and _a_ neuter signification”--_Lowth, Mur, et al, cor_ ”Its influence is likely to be considerable, both on the morals and _on the_ taste of a nation”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”The subject afforded a variety of scenes, both of the awful and _of the_ tender kind”--_Id_ ”Restlessness of mind disqualifies us both for the enjoyment of peace, and _for_ the perfor cor ”prono the properties both of pronouns and _of_ adjectives”--_Mur et al cor ”pronominal adjectives_ have the nature both of the adjective and _of_ the pronoun”--_Frost cor_ Or: ”[pronominal adjectives] partake of the properties _of both_ adjectives _and_ pronouns”--_Bucke's Gram_, p 55 ”pronominal adjectives are a kind of co the nature both of pronouns and _of_ adjectives”--_Nutting cor_ ”Nouns are used either in the singular or _in the_ plural nuular or _the_ plural number”--_David Blair cor_ ”The question is not, whether the noht to follow the particles THAN and AS; but, whether these particles are, in such particular cases, to be regarded as conjunctions or _as_ prepositions”--_Calish, many verbs are used both as transitives and _as_ intransitives”--_Churchill cor_ ”He sendeth rain both on the just and _on the_ unjust”--See _Matt_, v, 45 ”A foot consists either of two or _of_ three syllables”--_David Blair cor_ ”Because they participate the nature both of adverbs and _of_ conjunctions”--_L Murray cor_ ”Surely, Roht neither to be omitted, nor _to_ pass without notice”--_Duncan cor_ ”Their language frequently amounts, not only to bad sense, but _to nonsense_”--_Kirkham cor_ ”Hence arises the necessity of a social state to , of his nobler faculties”--_Sheridan cor_ ”Whether the subject be of the real or _of the_ feigned kind”--_Dr H Blair cor_ ”Not only was liberty entirely extinguished, but arbitrary poas_ felt in its heaviest and ht”--_Id_ ”This rule is _also_ applicable both to verbal Critics and _to_ Grammarians”--_Hiley cor_ ”Both the rules and _the_ exceptions of a language e”--_Id_
CHAPTER X--PREPOSITIONS
CORRECTIONS UNDER THE NOTES TO RULE XXIII
UNDER NOTE I--CHOICE OF PREPOSITIONS
”You have bestowed your favours _upon_ thepersons”--_Swift corrected_ ”But, to rise _above_ that, and overtop the crowd, is given to few”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”This [also is a good] sentence [, and] gives occasion _for_ no h Cicero endeavours to give some reputation _to_ the elder Cato, and those ere his _conteive some _favourable account_ of the elder Cato,” &c--_Dr Blair cor_ ”The change that was produced _in_ eloquence, is beautifully described in the dialogue”--_Id_ ”Without carefully attending to the variation which they make _in_ the idea”--_Id_ ”All _on_ a sudden, you are transported into a lofty palace”--_Hazlitt cor_ ”Alike independent of one _an other_” Or: ”Alike independent _one of an other_”--_Campbell cor_ ”You will not think of the on independently _of_ each other”--_Channing cor_ ”Though we say to _depend on, dependent on_, and _dependence on_, we say, _independent of_, and _independently of_”--_Churchill cor_ ”Independently _of_ the rest of the sentence”--_Lowth's Gram_, p 80; _Buchanan's_, 83; _Bullions's_, 110; _Churchill's_, 348[545] ”Because they stand independent _of_ the rest of the sentence”--_Allen Fisk cor_ ”When a substantive is joined with a participle, in English, independently _of_ the rest of the sentence”--_Dr Adam cor_ ”CONJUNCTION coo_, to join”--_Merchant cor_ ”How different _from_ this is the life of Fulvia!”--_Addison cor_ ”LOVED is a participle or adjective, derived _from_ the word _love_”--_Ash cor_ ”But I would inquire _of_ him, what an office is”--_Barclay cor_ ”For the capacity is brought _into_ action”--_Id_ ”In this period, language and taste arrive _at_ purity”--_Webster cor_ ”And, should you not aspire _to_ (or _after_) distinction in the _republic_ of letters”--_Kirkhaues, and _into_ prisons”--_Luke_, xxi, 12 ”_He_ that is kept fro _into_ a ditch, is as truly saved, as he that is taken out of one”--_Barclay cor_ ”The best _of_ it is, they are but a sort of French Hugonots”--_Addison cor_ ”These last ten examples are indeed of a different nature _from_ the former”--_R Johnson cor_ ”For the initiation of students _into_ the principles of the English language”--_Ann Rev
cor_ ”Richelieu profited _by_ every circubroke cor_ ”In the naer life”--_Merchant's Key_, p 185 Or better: ”In _naer life”--_L Murray cor_ ”In order to the carrying _of_ its several parts into execution”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”His abhorrence _of_ the superstitious figure”--_Priestley_ ”Thy prejudice _against_ my cause”--_Id_ ”Which is found _in_ every species of liberty”--_Huion _on_ the north of Jericho”--_Milular nouns coupled _by_ AND require a verb _or_ pronoun in the plural”--_Lennie cor_
”Books should to one of these four ends conduce, _To_ wisdoht, or use”--_Denham cor_
UNDER NOTE II--TWO OBJECTS OR MORE
”The Anglo-Saxons, however, soon quarrelled _a_ themselves for precedence”--_Const Misc cor_ ”The distinctions _a_ the principal parts of speech are founded in nature”--_Webster cor_ ”I think I now understand the difference between the active verbs and those _which are_ passive _or_ neuter”--_Ingersoll cor_ ”Thus a figure including a space _within_ three lines, is the real as well as nouish between an imperfect phrase _and_ a simple sentence, _and between a simple sentence_ and a compound sentence”--_Lowth, Murray, et al, cor_ ”The Jews are strictly forbidden by their law to exercise usury _towards one an_ other”--_Sale cor_ ”All the writers have distinguished the _themselves_”--_Addison cor_ ”This expression also better secures the syste cor_ ”When two or more _infinitives_ or clauses _are connected disjunctively as the subjects of an affirular”--_Jaudon cor_ ”Several nouns or pronouns together in the same case, require a comma _after_ each; [except the last, which reater point]”--_David Blair cor_ ”The difference between _one vowel and an other_ is produced by opening the ue in a different manner for each”--_Churchill cor_ ”Thus feet co pronounced with a sensible interval between _one foot and an other_, make a more lively impression than can be ree ienerally a_ three or more”--_R C S_ several objects”--_Levizac cor_
UNDER NOTE III--OMISSION OF PREPOSITIONS
”This would have been less worthy _of_ notice”--_Churchill cor_ ”But I passed it, as a thing unworthy _of_ my notice”--_Werter cor_ ”Which, in compliment to me, perhaps you may one day think worthy _of_ your attention”--_Bucke cor_ ”To think this s ladies of your very elegant establishe”--_Jefferson cor_ ”It is worthy _of_ notice, that our mountains are not solitary”--_Id_ ”It is _about_ one hundred feet _in_ dia a hill a quarter or half _of_ ato _an_ awful dissolution, whose issue _it_ is not given _to_ huht to scan”--_Id_ ”It was of a spheroidical form, _about_ forty feet _in_ diameter at the base, and had been _about_ twelve feet _in_ altitude”--_Id_ ”Before this, it was covered with trees of twelve inches _in_ diameter; and, round the base, _there_ was an excavation of five feet _in_ depth and _five in_ width”--_Id_ ”Then thou _rapes _to_ thy fill, at thine own pleasure”--_Bible cor_ ”Then he brought ate of the outward sanctuary”--_Id_ ”They will bless God, that he has peopled one half _of_ the world with a race of freemen”--_Webster cor_ ”_Of_ what use can these words be, till theiris known?”--_Town cor_ ”The tents of the Arabs now are black, or _of_ a very dark colour”--_The Friend cor_ ”Theymen”--_Kirkham cor_ ”The pronoun THAT is frequently applied to persons as well as _to_ things”--_Merchant cor_ ”And '_who_' is in the same case that '_ stone, apparently about four feet _in_ diameter”--_The Friend cor_ ”Pliny informs us, that this stone was _of_ the size of a cart”--_Id_ ”Seneca was about twenty years of age in the fifth year of Tiberius, when the Jeere expelled _fro a letter which would have undeceived me”--_Haorth cor_ ”If the problem can be solved, we may be pardoned _for_ the inaccuracy of its demonstration”--_Booth cor_ ”The army must of necessity be the school, not of honour, but _of_ effeminacy”--_Dr Brown cor_ ”Afraid of the virtue of a nation in its opposing _of_ bad measures:”
or,--”in its _opposition to_ bad_of_ them in various ways, so as to forht be excused _fro any more notice of it”--_Watson cor_ ”Watch therefore; for ye know not _at_ what hour your Lord _will_ come”--_Bible cor_ ”Here, not even infants were spared _from_ the sword”--_M'Ilvaine cor_ ”To preventaside to _false_ modes of worshi+p”--_John Allen cor_ ”God expelled thearden of Eden”--_Burder cor_ ”Nor could he refrain _froonies of his ranting _to_ him _of_ any neers”--_Duncan cor_ ”That the laws of the censors have banished hiraded _from_ his office _in_ any other way”--_Barclay cor_ ”To all _to_ who”--_Hutchinson cor_ ”On the 1st _of_ August, 1834”--_Brit Parl
cor_
”Whether you had not some time in your life Err'd in this point _on_ which you censure him”--_Shak cor_
UNDER NOTE IV--OF NEEDLESS PREPOSITIONS
”And the apostles and elders caether to consider this matter”--_Barclay cor_; also _Acts_ ”Adjectives, in our language, have neither case, _nor_ gender, nor number; the only variation they have, is comparison”--_Buchanan cor_ ”'It is to you that I ae;' that is, 'To you am I indebted;' or, 'It is you to whom I am indebted'”--_Sanborn cor_ ”BOOKS is a _coender”--_Ingersoll cor_ ”BROTHER'S is a coender, and possessive case”--_L Murray cor_ ”VIRTUE'S is a coender,] and possessive case”--_Id_ ”When the authorities on one side greatly preponderate, it is vain to oppose the prevailing usage”--_Campbell and Murray cor_ ”A captain of a troop of banditti, had aRo its verbal poe have added the TO and other signs of exertion”--_Booth cor_ ”Some of these situations are termed CASES, and are expressed by additions to the noun, _in stead of_ separate words:” or,--”_and not by_ separate words”--_Id_ ”Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and bon his head like a bulrush?”--_Bacon cor_ Compare _Isa_, lviii, 5 ”And this first emotion comes at last to be awakened by the accidental _in stead of_ the necessary antecedent”--_Wayland cor_ ”About the saation of the Moors was coht and the darkness”--_Burder cor_ ”Notwithstanding this, we are not against outward significations of honour”--_Barclay cor_ ”Whether these words and practices of Job's friends, _ought_ to be our rule”--_Id_ ”Such verb cannot admit an objective case after it”--_Lowth cor_ ”For which, God is now visibly punishi+ng these nations”--_C Leslie cor_ ”In this respect, Tasso yields to no poet, except Hoyrics on the ancient English liberty”--_Hume cor_ ”Their efforts seeeneral afterwards”--_Id_
UNDER NOTE V--THE PLACING OF THE WORDS
”But how short _of_ its excellency are my expressions!”--_Baxter cor_ ”_In_ his style, there is a remarkable union _of_ harmony with ease”--_Dr
H Blair cor_ ”It disposes _of_ the light and shade _in_ the_e”--_Id_ ”_For_ brevity, Aristotle too holds an e didactic writers”--_Id_ ”In an introduction, correctness _of_ expression should be carefully studied”--_Id_ ”_In_ laying down a s _to study_ precision”--_Id_ ”Which shallthat is one, whole, and entire”--_Id_ ”At the same time, there are _in_ the Odyssey soed” Or: ”At the saed _that_ there are so books, however, there are beauties _of_ the tragic kind”--_Id_ ”These forrew troublesome”--_Kames, El of Crit_, ii, 44 ”When she has e-d'elire to her friends”--_Ib_, ii, 46 ”Let us endeavour to establish to ourselves an interest in him who holds _in_ his hand the reins of the whole creation”--_Spectator cor_; also _Kalish poetry, is that of eight syllables”--_David Blair cor_ ”To introduce as great a variety _of_ cadences as possible”-- _Jamieson cor_ ”He addressed _to_ them several exhortations, suitable to their circumstances”--_L Murray cor_ ”Habits _of_ temperance and self-denial_to_ practice the rules prescribed”--_Id_ ”But these parts ether, as to make _upon_ the mind the impression _of_ one object, not of many”--_Blair and Mur cor_ ”Errors _with_ respect to the use of _shall_ and _will_, are souished writers”--_N Butler cor_
CHAPTER XI--PROMISCUOUS EXERCISES
CORRECTIONS OF THE PROMISCUOUS EXAMPLES