Part 241 (2/2)
(1) ”A definition is a _short and lucid_ description of _a thing, or species, according to its nature and properties_”--G BROWN: _Rev David Blair cor_ (2) ”Language, in general, signifies the expression of our ideas by certain articulate sounds, _or written words_, which are used as the signs of those ideas”--_Dr Hugh Blair cor_ (3) ”A word is _one or n of an idea”--_Bullions cor_ (4) ”A word is _one or n of an idea, or of soht”--_Hazen cor_ (5) ”Words are articulate sounds, _or their written signs_, used to convey ideas”--_Hiley cor_ (6) ”A word is _one or _, to represent some idea”--_Hart cor_ (7) ”A word is _one or n of an idea”--_S W Clark cor_ (8) ”A word is a letter or a combination of letters, _a sound or a con of an idea”--_Wells cor_ (9) ”Words are articulate sounds, _or their written signs_, by which ideas are coht cor_ (10) ”Words are certain articulate sounds, _or their written representatives_, used by cons of our ideas”--_Bullions, Lowth, Murray, et al cor_ (11) ”Words are sounds _or written syns of our ideas”--_W Allen cor_ (12) ”Orthography _literally_ _”--_Kirkharaphy_ stands for different things: as, 1 The art or practice of writing words with their proper letters; 2 That part of grammar which treats of letters, syllables, separate words, and spelling]
(13) ”A vowel is a letter which _forms a perfect_ sound _when uttered alone_”--_Inst_, p 16; _Hazen, Lennie, and Brace, cor_ (14-18) ”Spelling is the art of expressing words by their proper letters”--G
BROWN: _Lowth and Churchill cor_; also _Murray, Ing et al_; also _Comly_; also _Bullions_; also _Kirkham and Sanborn_ (19) ”A syllable is _one or le i a word, or part of a word”--_Lowth, Mur, et al, cor_ (20) ”A syllable is a _letter or a combination of letters_, uttered in one complete sound”--_Brit Gram and Buch cor_ (21) ”A syllable is _one or _ a distinct sound, _or what is_ uttered by a single impulse of the voice”--_Kirkham cor_ (22) ”A syllable is so much of a word as _is_ sounded at once, _whether it_ be the whole _or a part_”--_Bullions cor_ (23) ”A syllable is _so many letters_ as _are_ sounded at once; _and is either_ a word, or a part of a word”--_Picket cor_ (24) ”A diphthong is _a_ union of tels _in one syllable_, as in _bear_ and _beat_”--_Bucke cor_ Or: ”A diphthong is _the _ of tels in one syllable”--_Brit Gra consists of tels _put together in_ one syllable; as _ea_ in _beat, oi_ in _voice_”--_Guy cor_ (26) ”A triphthong consists of three vowels _put together in_ one syllable; as, _eau_ in _beauty_”--_Id_ (27) ”But _a_ triphthong is the union of three vowels _in one syllable_”--_Bucke cor_ Or: ”A triphthong is theof three vowels in one syllable”--_British Gram_, p 21; _Buchanan's_, 3 (28) ”What is a noun? A noun is the _na_; as, a man, a boy”--_Brit Gram
and Buchanan cor_ (29) ”An adjective is a word added to _a noun or pronoun_, to describe _the object named or referred to_”--_Maunder cor_ (30) ”An adjective is a word _added_ to a noun _or pronoun_, to describe or define _the object mentioned_”--_R C Smith cor_ (31) ”An adjective is a word _which, without assertion or tiood_ man, _every_ boy”--_Wilcox cor_ (32) ”_An_ adjective is _a word_ added to _a_ noun _or pronoun, and generally expresses a_ quality”--_Mur and Lowth cor_ (33) ”An adjective expresses the quality, _not_ of the noun _or pronoun_ to which it is applied, _but of the person or thing spoken of_; and _it_ enerally be known by _the_ sense _which it thus enteel_ woht cor_ (34) ”An adverb is a word used to modify the sense of _a verb, a participle, an adjective, or an other adverb_”--_Wilcox cor_ (35) ”An adverb is a word _added_ to a verb, _a participle_, an adjective, or an other adverb, to modify _the sense_, or denote some circumstance”--_Bullions cor_ (36) ”A substantive, or noun, is a naiven to _so coht cor_ (37-54) ”_Genders are ard to sex”--_Brown's Inst_, p 35: _Bullions cor_: also _Frost_; also _Perley_; also _Cooper_; also _L Murray et al_; also _Alden et al_; also _Brit Gram, with Buchanan_; also _Fowle_; also _Burn_; also _Webster_; also _Coar_; also _Hall_; also _Wright_; also _Fisher_; also _W Allen_; also _Parker and Fox_; also _Weld_; also _Weld again_ (55 and 56) ”_A_ case, _in grammar_, is the state or condition of a noun _or pronoun_, with respect to _some_ other _word_ in _the_ sentence”--_Bullions cor_; also _Kirkhauish the relations of nouns and pronouns to other words”--_Brown's Inst_, p 36 (58) ”Government is the pohich one _word_ has over an other, _to cause_ it to _assume_ some particular _modification_”--_Sanborn et al cor_ See _Inst_, p 104 (59) ”A simple sentence is a sentence which contains only one _assertion, command, or question_”--_Sanborn et al cor_ (60) ”Declension h the different cases _and numbers_”--_Kirkhaular arrangement of its nuure in which_ two or rees with_ only one of theular verb is _a verb that does not for d_ or _ed_; as, smite, smote, smitten”--_Inst_, p 75 (63) ”A personal _pronoun is a pronoun that shows, by its form, of what person it is_”--_Inst_, p 46
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE IV--OF COMPARISONS
”_Our language abounds_ ues_” Or: ”We abound al_ sounds, than most _nations_”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”A line thus accented has a more spirited air, than _one which takes_ the accent on any other syllable”--_Kareater cereil has still less moderation _than he_”--_Id_ ”Which the enius _was_ far inferior to _theirs_, would have taught them to avoid”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”_As a poetical composition_, however, the Book of Job is not only equal to any other of the sacred writings, but is superior to them all, except those of Isaiah alone”--_Id_ ”On the whole, Paradise Lost is a poem _which_ abounds with beauties of every kind, and _which_ justly entitles its author to _be equalled in_ fame _with_ any poet”--_Id_ ”Most of the French writers coeneral, is not concise; colish writers, whose sentences are er”--_Id_ ”The principles of the Reformation were _too deeply fixed_ in the prince's mind, to be easily eradicated”--_Hume cor_ ”Whether they do not create jealousy and animosity, more than _sufficient to counterbalance_ the benefit derived from them”--_Leo Wolf cor_ ”The Scotch have preserved the ancient character of their music more entire, than _have the inhabitants of_ any other country”--_Gardiner cor_ ”When the time or quantity of one syllable exceeds _that of_ the rest, that syllable readily receives the accent”--_Rush cor_ ”What then can be more obviously true, than that it should be made as just as we can _make it_”--_Dymond cor_ ”It was not likely that they would criminate themselves more than, they could _not_ avoid”--_Clarkson cor_ ”_In_ their understandings _they_ were the most acute people _that_ have ever lived”--_Knapp cor_ ”The patentees have printed it with neat types, and upon better paper than was _used_ formerly”--_John Ward cor_ ”In reality, its relative use is not exactly like _that of_ any other word”--_Felch cor_ ”Thus, _in stead_ of _having to purchase_ two books,--the Grammar and the Exercises,--the learner finds both in one, for a price at _us cor_ ”_They are_ not ih they are less _strictly_ such than the others”--_Bullions cor_ ”We have had, as will readily be believed, _aconversant with the case, than the generality of our readers can be supposed to have had”--_Brit Friend cor_
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE V--OF FALSITIES
”The long sound of _i_ is _like a very quick union_ of the sound of _a_, as heard in _bar_, and that of _e_, as heard in _be_”--_Churchill cor_ ”The orammatical propriety, is _of course an impropriety, and not a true_ ellipsis”--_Priestley cor_ ”_Not_ every substantive, _or noun_, is _necessarily_ of the third person”--_A Murray cor_ ”A noun is in the third person, when the subject is _merely_ spoken _of_; and in the second person, when the subject is spoken _to_; _and_ in the first person, _when it na cor_ ”With us, no nouns are _literally of the_ ender, except the names of male and female creatures”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”_The_ apostrophe is a little nifying that so is shortened: as, '_William's_ hat;'--'the _learn'd_,' for 'the _learned_'”--_Inf S Gra with a vowel coupled with one beginning with a consonant, the indefinite article ing to one and the same noun_; thus, 'Sir Matthew Hale was _a_ noble and iant and nervous writer'”--_Maunder cor_[555] ”_W_ and _y_ are consonants, when they _precede a vowel heard in the same_ syllable: in every other situation, they are vowels”--_L Mur et al cor_ See _Inst_, p 16 ”_The_ is _not varied_ before adjectives and substantives, let thelish_ prepositions, _and es_, are _often_ prefixed to words, in such a manner as to coalesce with them, and to become _parts of the compounds or derivatives thus for of syllables not accented, is _weaker_, but _not_ entirely silent; as in _historian, hood_”--_Rev D Blair cor_ ”_Not every_ word that will overn nouns, pronouns, or participles”--_Kirkham cor_ ”_Most_ verbs do, in reality, express actions; but they are _not_ intrinsically the mere names of actions: _these must of course be nouns_”--_Id_ ”The nominative _denotes_ the actor or subject; and the verb, the action _which is_ performed _or received_ by _this actor or subject_”--_Id_ ”_But_ if only one creature or thing acts, _more than_ one action _irl not only _holds_ her pen badly, but _scowls_ and _distorts_ her features, while she _writes_'”--_Id_ ”_Nor is each of these verbs of the singular nuirl perforular nuree_”--_Id_ ”And when I say, '_Two men walk_,' is it not equally apparent, that _walk_ is plural because it _agrees withthe simple verb in a suppositive sense, and without personal inflection_”--_Beck cor_ ”The possessive case _of nouns, except in instances of apposition or close connexion_, should always be distinguished by the apostrophe”--_Frost cor_ ”'At these proceedings _of_ the Con of the _objective_ case; and '_Cooverned _by this preposition_”--_A Murray cor_ ”Here let it be observed again, that, strictly speaking, _all finite_ verbs have numbers _and_ persons; _and so_ have _nearly all_ nouns _and_ pronouns, _even_ when they refer to irrational creatures and inani the person or _persons_ addressed or spoken to, is in the nominative case independent: _except it be put in apposition with a pronoun of the second person_; as, 'Woe to _you lawyers_;'--'_You_ political _'”--_Frost cor_ ”Every noun, when _used in a direct address and set off by a comma_, becomes of the second person, and is in the nominative case absolute; as, '_Paul_, thou art beside thyself”--_Jaudon cor_ ”Does the conjunction _ever_ join words together? _Yes_; the conjunction _soether, _and sometimes_ sentences, _or certain parts of sentences_”--_Brit Gram cor_; also _Buchanan_ ”Every _noun of the possessive for_ noun, expressed or understood: as, _St
James's_ Here _Palace_ is understood _But_ one _possessive overn an other; as, '_William's father's_ house'”--_Buchanan cor_ ”Every adjective (_with the exceptions noted under Rule_ 9th) belongs to a _noun or pronoun_ expressed or understood”--_L Murray et al cor_ ”_Not_ every adjective qualifies a substantive, expressed or understood”--_Bullions cor_ ”_Not_ every adjective belongs to _a_ noun expressed or understood”--_Ingersoll cor_ ”Adjectives belong to nouns _or pronouns, and serve to_ describe _things_”--_R C Seneral, have no ree with the nouns _to_ which they _relate_”--_Allen Fisk cor_ ”The adjective, _if it denote unity or plurality_, ree with its substantive in number”--_Buchanan cor_ ”_Not_ every adjective and participle, _by a vast s to some noun or pronoun, expressed or understood”--_Frost cor_ ”_Not_ every verb of the infinitive mood, supposes a verb before it, expressed or understood”--_Buchanan cor_ ”_Nor_ has every adverb its verb, expressed or understood; _for some adverbs relate to participles, to adjectives, or to other adverbs_”--_Id_ ”_A conjunction that connects one_ sentence to _an other, is not_ always placed betwixt the two propositions or sentences which _it unites_”--_Id_ ”The words _for all that_, are by noof this phrase for _yet_ or _still_, is neither necessary nor elegant”--_L Murray cor_; also _Dr Priestley_ ”The reader or hearer then understands fro, to an other_ Thus AND _often, very often_, connects one thing with an other thing, _or_ one ith an other word”--_James Brown cor_ ”'Six AND six _are_ twelve' Here it is affirether are_ twelve”--_Id_ ”'John AND his wife _have_ six children' This is an instance _in which_ AND _connects two nominatives in a simple sentence_ It is _not_ here affirmed that John has six children, and that his wife has six _other_ children”--_Id_ ”That 'Nothing can be great which is not right,' is itself a _great falsity_: there are great blunders, great evils, great sins”--_L Murray cor_ ”The highest degree of reverence should be paid to _the oodness_”--_Id_ ”There is in _all_ ”--_L Murray et al cor_ ”Formerly, the noenerally distinguished in practice_, than they now are”--_Kirkham cor_ ”As it respects a choice of words and expressions, _the just_ rules of grammar _may_ materially aid the learner”--_S S Greene cor_ ”_The name of_ whatever exists, or is conceived to exist, is a noun”--_Fowler cor_ ”As _not all_ men are brave, _brave_ is itself _distinctive_”--_Id_
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE VI--OF ABSURDITIES
(1) ”And soether_”--_Dr Blair cor_ (2) ”What nouns frequently _stand together_?” Or: ”What nouns _are_ frequently _used one after an other_?”--_Sanborn cor_ (3) ”Words are derived from _other words_ in various ways”--_Idem et al cor_ (4) ”_The name_ PREPOSITION _is_ derived fronify _before_ and _place_”--_Mack cor_ (5) ”He was _hed at for such conduct”--_Bullions cor_ (6) ”Every _pronos to soersoll cor_ (7) ”If he [Addison] fails in any thing, it is in strength and precision; _the want of_ which renders his ether a proper model”--_Dr Blair cor_ (8) ”Indeed, if Horace _is_ deficient in any thing _his fault_ is this, of not being sufficiently attentive to juncture, _or the_ connexion of parts”--_Id_ (9) ”The pupil is now supposed to be acquainted with the _ten parts_ of speech, and their most usual modifications”--_Taylor cor_ (10) ”I could see, _feel_, taste, and smell the rose”--_Sanborn cor_ (11) ”The _vowels iou are_ sometimes pronounced distinctly in two syllables; as in _various, abstemious_; but not in _bilious_”--_Murray and Walker cor_ (12) ”The diphthong _aa_ generally sounds like _a_ short; as in _Balaa”--_L Mur cor_ (13) ”Participles _cannot be said to be_ 'governed by the article;' for _any_ participle, with _an_ article before it, becomes a substantive, or an adjective used substantively: as, _the learning, the learned_”--_Id_ (14) ”_Fro with _y_ preceded by a consonant, _we_ forent_ nouns, _perfect_ participles, co the _y_ into _i_, and adding _es, ed, er, eth_, or _est_”--_Walker, Murray, et al cor_ (15) ”But _y_ preceded by a vowel, _reed_, in the derivatives above named; as, _boy, boys_”--_L Murray et al cor_ (16) ”But when _the final y_ is preceded by a vowel, it _reed before an_ additional syllable; as, coy, _coyly_”--_Iid_ (17) ”But _y_ preceded by a vowel, _reed_, in _almost all_ instances; as, coy, _coyly_”--_Kirkham cor_ (18) ”Sentences are of _two kinds_, siht cor_ (19) ”The neuter pronoun _it_ may be employed to _introduce a noender: as, '_It_ is _he_:'--'_It_ is _she_;'--'_It is they_;'--'_It_ is the _land_'”--_Bucke cor_ (20 and 21) ”_It is_ and _it was_, are _always singular_; but they _may introduce words of_ a plural construction: as, '_It was_ the _heretics that_ first began to rail'
SMOLLETT”--_Merchant cor_; also _Priestley et al_ (22) ”_W_ and _y_, as consonants, have _each of them_ one sound”--_Town cor_ (23) ”The _word as_ is frequently a relative _pronoun_”--_Bucke cor_ (24) ”_From a series of_ clauses, the conjunction may _sometimes_ be omitted with propriety”--_Merchant cor_ (25) ”If, however, the _two_ members are very closely connected, the comma is unnecessary; as, 'Revelation tells us hoe may attain happiness'”--_L Murray et al cor_ (26-27) ”Theeffectually_, in quick succession, so many different views of the same object”--_Dr Blair cor_; also _L Mur_ (28) ”_pronominal adjectives_ are a kind of _definitives_, which _may either accompany their_ nouns, _or represent them understood_”--_Kirkham cor_ (29) ”_When the no _the idea of plurality, the_ verb or pronoun _ree_ with it in the plural _number_”--_Id et al cor_ (30-34) ”A noun or _a_ pronoun in the possessive case, is governed by the _na possessed_”-- _Brown's Inst_, p 176; _Greenleaf cor_; also _Wilbur and Livingston_; also _Goldsbury_; also _P E Day_; also _Kirkham, Frazee, and Miller_
(35) ”Here the boy is represented as acting: _the word boy_ is therefore in the nominative case”--_Kirkham cor_ (36) ”_Do, be, have_, and _will_, are _sometimes_ auxiliaries, _and sometimes_ principal verbs”--_Cooper cor_ (37) ”_Names_ of _males_ are masculine _Names_ of _females_ are feminine”--_Adaer than yesterday's' Here _to-day's_ and _yesterday's_ are substantives”--_L Murray et al cor_ (39) ”In this example, _to-day's_ and _yesterday's_ are nouns in the possessive case”--_Kirkham cor_ (40) ”An Indian in Britain would be e in the open fields”--_Kaht n of any idea: _apart fro oxen _s _oxen_”--_L Murray cor_ (42) ”All the parts of a sentence should _form a consistent whole_”--_Id et al cor_
(43) ”Full through his neck the weighty falchion sped, Along the pavement rolled the _culprit's_ head”--_Pope cor_
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE VII--OF SELF-CONTRADICTION
(1) ”Though 'The king, _with_ the lords and coular rather than_ a plural verb, the sentence would certainly stand better thus: 'The king, the lords, _and_ the co cor_ (2-3) ”_L_ has a soft liquid sound; as in _love, billow, quarrel_ _This letter_ is sometimes silent; as in _half, task [sic for 'talk'--KTH], psalm_”--_Mur and Fisk cor_; also _Kirkhaularly derived froulars _mean_ and _amend_, are _not_ now, _even_ by polite writers, restricted to the plural nuuished modern authors _often_ say, 'by _this ht cor_ (5) ”A friend exaggerates a man's virtues; an enemy, his crimes”--_Mur cor_ (6) ”The auxiliary _have, or any fors not properly to_ the subjunctive mood _We suppose past facts by the indicative_: as, If I _have loved_, If thou _hast loved_, &c”--_Merchant cor_ (7) ”There is also an i_ both the indicative and the subjunctive _mood_ with the same conjunction; as, '_If_ a one astray,'
&c [This is Merchant's perversion of the text It should be, 'and one of theone_ astray,' as in Matt, xviii 12]”--_Id_ (8) ”The rising series of contrasts _conveys transcendent_ dignity and energy to the conclusion”--_Jaroan or a shriek is instantly understood, as a language extorted by distress, a _natural_ language which conveys a roan or _a_ shriek speaks to the ear with _a_ far uage of distress may be counterfeited by art”--_Dr Porter cor_ (10) ”_If_ these words [_book_ and _pen_] cannot be put together in such a way as will constitute plurality, then they cannot be '_these words_;' and then, also, _one and one_ cannot be _two_”--_James Brown cor_ (11) ”Nor can the real pen and the real book be _added or counted together_ in words, in such a rammar”--_Id_ (12) ”_Our_ is _a personal_ pronoun, of the possessive _case Murray does not_ decline it”--_Mur cor_ (13) ”_This_ and _that_, and their plurals _these_ and _those_, are _often_ opposed to each other in a sentence When _this_ or _that_ is used alone, ie, _without contrast, this_ is _applied_ to _what is_ present or near; _that_, to _what is_ absent or distant”--_Buchanan cor_ (14) ”Active and neuter verbstheir _ih all its variations”--”_Be_ is an auxiliary whenever it is placed before either the perfect _or the imperfect_ participle of an other verb; but, in every other situation, it is a principal verb”--_Kirkham cor_ (15) ”A verb in the imperative mood is _al to a _foreign_ idio with a nominative of the first or third person”--_Id_ (16) ”A personal _pronoun, is a pronoun that shows, by its form, of what_ person _it is_”--”pronouns of the first person do not _disagree_ in person with the nouns they represent”--_Id_ (17) ”Nouns have three cases; _the_ nominative, _the possessive_, and _the_ objective”--”Personal pronouns have, like nouns, _three_ cases; _the_ nominative, _the_ possessive, and _the_ objective”--_Beck cor_ (18) ”In _e _and_ becomes an adverb by its _mere_ application”--_L Murray cor_ (19) ”Some nouns are used only in the plural; as, _ashes, literati, minutiae_ Some nouns _have_ the same _for the inferior parts of speech, there are some _pairs_ or _couples_”--_Rev D
Blair cor_ (20) ”Concerning the pronominal adjectives, that may, _or_ may not, represent _their nouns_”--_O B Peirce cor_ (21) ”The _word a_ is in a few instances employed in the sense of a preposition; as, 'Sio _to_ fishi+ng”--_Weld cor_ (22) ”So, _too_, verbs _that are commonly_ transitive, are used intransitively, when they have no object”--_Bullions cor_
(23) ”When first young Maro, in his boundless n'd”--_Pope cor_
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE VIII--OF SENSELESS JUMBLING
”_There are two nuuish nouns as _signifying either_ one _thing_, or many of the same kind”--_Dr H Blair cor_ ”Here James Monroe is addressed, he is spoken to; _the name_ is _therefore_ a noun of the second person”--_Mack cor_ ”The nulish_ verb can _seldom_ be ascertained until its nominative is known”--_Enifyingwith it in _either_ nuard to the i _the idea of_ unity or plurality”--_Lowth et al
cor_ ”To _form_ the present _tense_ and _the_ past imperfect of our _active_ or neuter _verbs_, the auxiliary _do, and its preterit did, are sometimes_ used: _as_, I _do_ now love; I _did_ then love”--_Lowth cor_ ”If these _be_ perfectly committed _to memory, the learner_ will be able to take twenty lines for _his second_ lesson, and _the task_ enerally sounded in the same manner _as if it were tch_: as in _Charles, church, cheerfulness_, and _cheese_ But, _in Latin or Greek_ words, _ch is_ pronounced like _k_: as in _Chaos, character, chorus_, and _chimera_ _And_, in _words_ derived frorin, chicanery_, and _chaise_”--_Bucke cor_ ”Some _nouns literally_ neuter, are _ure of speech”--_L Murray et al cor_ ”In the English language, words eneral heads: the _sorts, or chief classes, of words_, are usually ter cor_ ”'Mercy is the true badge of nobility' _nobility_ is a _coender, and objective case; and is governed by _of_”--_Kirkhah_, or _has_ the sound of _f_, as in _laugh_”--_Town cor_ ”Many _nations_ were destroyed, and as es or dialects were lost and blotted out froes contain a greater number of moods than others, and _each_ exhibits _its own as_ forms _peculiar to itself_”--_L Murray cor_ ”A SIMILE is a sienerally introduced by _like, as_, or _so_”--_Id_ See _Inst_, p
233 ”The word _what_ is sometimes improperly used for the conjunction _that_”--_Priestley, Murray, et al, cor_ ”Brown _ the _absurd_ principles of preceding works, in relation to the gender of pronouns”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”The noent of_ the action”--_Wm Beck cor_ ”Primitive _words_ are those which _are not forht cor_ ”Insound before a single consonant with _e_ final; as _in thine, strive_: except in _give_ and _live_, which are short; and in _shi+re_, which has the sound of long _e_”--_L Murray, et al cor_ ”But the person or thing _that is_frequently_ absent, and _perhaps_ in ht more_ necessary, that _the third person_ should be ender”--_Lowth, Mur, et al, cor_ ”_Both vowels of every diphthong were_, doubtless, originally _vocal_ Though in many instances _they are_ not _so_ at present, _the_ combinations _in which one only is heard_, still retain the nauished from others_ by the term _improper_”--_L Mur, et al cor_ ”_Moods are different for, action, or passion, _in some particular_ manner”--_Inst_, p 33; _A Mur cor_ ”The word THAT is a demonstrative _adjective, whenever_ it is followed by a _noun_ to which it refers”--_L Mur cor_
”The _guilty soul by Jesus wash'd_, Is future glory's deathless heir”--_Fairfield cor_
UNDER CRITICAL NOTE IX--OF WORDS NEEDLESS
”A knowledge of grammar enables us to express ourselves better in conversation and in writing”--_Sanborn cor_ ”And hence we infer, that there is no dictator here but use”--_Ja and pronunciation”--_Town cor_ ”The ion, may be relied on with confidence”--_Merchant cor_ ”Shalt thou build me _a_ house to dwell in?”
Or: ”Shalt thou build _a_ house for me to dwell in?”--_Bible cor_ ”The house was deemed polluted which was entered by so abandoned a woman”--_Dr