Part 266 (1/2)
”_O_ letthere's no end
_O_ let _
XLII They oftener employ ANTIQUATED WORDS and modes of expression; as,
1 ”_Withouten_ that, would come _an_ heavier bale”
--_Thoe, _Save_ sleep and play, who ht at all”
--_Id_
3 ”Not one _eftsoons_ in vieas to be found”
--_Id_
4 ”To nu here, _An_ useless were, and eke _an_ endless task”
--_Id_
5 ”Of clerks good plenty here you _mote espy_”
--_Id_
6 ”But these I _passen_ by with nameless numbers _moe_”
--_Id_
THE END OF APPENDIX FOURTH
INDEX TO THE GRAMMAR OF ENGLISH GRAMMARS
[Asterise _of the Grammar is directly referred to_: Obs _or_ N _before a numeral, stands for_ Observation _or_ Observations, _or for_ Note _or_ Notes _of the text_: R _after a reference, stands for_ RULE _The small letter_ n, _with an asterisk or other mark affixed to it, relates to a_ footnote _with such mark in the Grammar Occasionally_, t, m, _or_ b, _or_ u, _or_ l, _accompanies a reference, to indicate the_ top, middle, _or_ bottoe referred to Few abbreviations are erammatical terms The Index is not intended to supersede the use of the_ Table of Contents, _which stands after the Preface It is occupied wholly with the matter of the_ Grammar _proper; hence there are in it no references to the_ Introduction Historical and Critical, _which precedes the didactic portion of the work In the Table before-ra to praxis, to exa of exercises_
A
A, lett, names itself --its plur
--sounds properly its own --nu --diphthongs beginning with, --triphth do
--its true sound to be carefully preserved at end of words, _A_, as prep, or prefix --before part, in _ing_
_A_ and _an_, in Gr derivatives
_A_ or _an_, art, see _An, A_
_Abbreviations_, frequent in writt lang
--rule of punct for
C, M, D, &c, as numerals, see _Letters_
Needless abbreviations, to be avoided
_Able, ible_, class of adjectives in, nu; difficulty with resp to the prop fors --application of _able_ to nouns, its propriety doubtf
--_Able_ or _ible_, prop application of, how far determined from Lat
ety in, how formed from different roots,