Part 244 (1/2)
UNDER RULE V--OF WORDS IN PAIRS
”My hopes and fears, joys and sorrows, centre in you”--_Greenleaf or Sanborn cor_ ”This ation”--_Ingersoll cor_ ”Substance is divided into _body_ and _spirit_, into _extended_ and _thinking_”--_Brightland cor_ ”These consonants, [_d_ and _t_,] like _p_ and _b, f_ and _v, k_ and hard _g_, and _s_ and _z_, are letters of the satail nor Cavendish, _has_ passed ain”--_Cultivator cor_ ”The words _whoever_ or _whosoever, whichever_ or _whichsoever_, and _whatever_ or _whatsoever_, are called Conifying profit or disprofit, likeness or unlikeness, govern the dative”--_Bullions cor_
UNDER RULE VI--OF WORDS ABSOLUTE
”Thy rod and thy staff, they coht cor_ ”He saith unto his mother Woman, behold thy son!”--_John_, xix, 26 ”Thou, God, seest o home”--_O B Peirce cor, twice_ ”Now, G
Brown, let us reason together”--_Id_ ”_Mr_ Se 11th, '_The_ objective case denotes the object'”--_Id_ ”Gentlemen, will you always speak as you mean?”--_Id_ ”John, I sold my books to William, for his brothers”--_Id_ ”Walter, and Seth, I will take s, and leave yours”--_Id_ ”Henry, Julia and Jane left their umbrella, and took yours”--_Id_ ”John, harness the horses, and go to the mine for some coal”--_Id_ ”William, run to the store, for a few pounds of tea”--_Id_ ”The king being dead, the parliament was dissolved”--_Chandler cor_
”Cease, fond Nature, cease thy strife, And let uish into life”
--_Pope, Brit Poets_, vi, 317
”Forbear, great man, in arms renown'd, forbear”
--_Hiley's Gram_, p 127
”Eternal sunshi+ne of the spotless n'd”
--_Pope, Brit Poets_, vi, 335
UNDER RULE VII--OF WORDS IN APPOSITION
”We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice,” &c--_Constit of U S_ ”The Lord, the covenant God of his people, requires it”--_A S Mag cor_ ”He, as a patriot, deserves praise”--_Hallock cor_ ”Thomson, the watchmaker and jeweller from London, was of the party”--_Bullions cor_ ”Every body knows that the person here spoken of by the name of '_the Conqueror_,' is William, duke of Normandy”--_L Mur cor_ ”The words _myself, thyself, himself, herself, itself_, and their plurals, _ourselves, yourselves_, and _themselves_, are called Compound Personal pronouns”--_Day cor_
”For who, to du e'er resign'd, Left the war'ring look behind?”--GRAY: _Mur Seq_
UNDER THE EXCEPTIONS CONCERNING APPOSITION
”Smith & _Williams's_ store; Nicholas the emperor's army”--_Day cor_ ”He was named _William the Conqueror_”--_Id_ ”John the Baptist was beheaded”--_Id_ ”Alexander the coppersmith did me _much evil_”--_2 Tim_, iv, 14 ”A nominative in immediate apposition: as, 'The boy _Henry_ speaks'”--_Smart cor_ ”A noun objective can be in apposition with some other; as, 'I teach the boy _Henry_'”--_Id_
UNDER RULE VIII--OF ADJECTIVES
”But he foundat my work, ruddy with health, vivid with cheerfulness; but pale,” &c--DR JOHNSON: _Murray's Sequel_, p 4 ”I looked up, and beheld an inclosure, beautiful as the gardens of paradise, but of a small extent”--HAWKESWORTH: _ib_, p 20 ”_A_ is an article, indefinite, and belongs to '_book_'”--_Bullions cor_ ”The first expresses the rapid er for the co Philip,] was a patriot, attached to his native soil; a prince, true to his subjects, and indignant of their wrongs; a soldier, daring in battle, firer, of every variety of bodily suffering, and ready to perish in the cause he had espoused”--_W Irving_
”For thee, who, mindful of th' unhonour'd dead, Dost in these lines their artless tale relate”
--GRAY: _Mur Seq_, p 258
”Souiltless of his country's blood”
--GRAY: _Enf Sp_, p 245
”Idle after dinner [,] in his chair, Sat a farmer, ruddy, fat, and fair”
--_Murray's Gram_, p 257