The Grammar of English Grammars by Goold Brown (read books for money TXT) 📖
- Author: Goold Brown
- Performer: -
Book online «The Grammar of English Grammars by Goold Brown (read books for money TXT) 📖». Author Goold Brown
Abstract numbers, synt. of the phraseology used in speaking of, ("Twice two IS four," or "Twice two ARE four")
Absurd or incompatible expressions, to be avoided
Absurdities of expression, Crit. N. concerning
Acatalectic, when a line is said to be
Accent and quantity, critical observations on
Accent, difficulty with respect to the import of the word —various definitions of, cited —Accent, confounded by some with emphasis —defined, as commonly understood —chief or primary and secondary —Accent, by what regulated —compared with emphasis —as affected by do. —is distinct from quantity —as understood by DR. JOH. —SHERID. teachings concerning; mostly adopted by MURR. —what lett. of a word receives the mark of —stress on a monosyl. more properly emphasis than —Accents, more than one on a word —DR. ADAM'S view of
Accentuation, modern, of Gr. and Lat. words, by what regulated; SANCTIUS'S rule for, new vers. of
According to, as to, resolved. Accordingly, whether may be said for the questionable according
Accusative before infin., in Lat. and Gr., of what reckoned the subject —whether the construc. can in general be imitated in Eng. —who adopt the Lat. doctrine of —what our nearest approach to the Lat. construc. of
Active, in reference to verbs, in what sense may be used
Active-transitive verb, defined
—Act.-trans. verbs gov. obj. case
—place of agent and object in respect to
—Act.-trans. verb, or part., has some noun or pron. for its object
—with two words in appos. ("Proclaim THEE KING,")
—with do., neither in appos. nor connected by conjunc., ("I paid HIM
the MONEY,")
—with redund. me, thee, you
—should not be used without an object
—should not assume a governm. incompatible with its signif.
Active-intransitive verb, defined
—Act.-intrans. verb, with prep. and its object, put in the pass.
form
—in pass. form with neut. signif. ("I AM COME,")
—should not be used transitively
Addison, undeservedly criticised by BLAIR, for his frequent use of that, as a relative
Addition, enumeration, of numbers, by what number of the verb to be expressed
Address, ordinary fashion of, in Eng., the plur. numb. —has introduced the anomal. compound yourself —Address, direct, nom. absol. by —terms of, your Majesty, your Highness, &c., in what construc. used —general usage of, in Fr.; in Span., Portug., or Germ.
ADJECTIVES, Etymol. of —Classes of, named and defined —Modifications of —Comparison of, reg.; by adverbs; irreg. —Adjectives in able and ible, (see Able, Ible.) —Adjectives, number of, in Eng. —how have been otherwise called —how distinguished from nouns —other parts of speech may become —MURR., on nouns assuming the nature of —whether nouns plur. can assume the character of —Adjectives that cannot be compared —that are compared by means of adverbs —(See Comparison, Comparative Deg., and Superlative Deg.) —Adjectives requiring the article the —denoting place or situation, comparison of —become adverbs —use of, for adv., improper —with prep., ellipt., equivalent to adv. —poet., for nouns —do., for adverbs —Adjectives, Synt. of —do., in what consists —to what relate —substituted ellipt. for their abstr. nouns —relate to nouns or pronouns understood —used with def. art., ellipt., as nouns —two or more before a noun, order of —two, joined by hyphens —denoting unity or plurality, how agree with their nouns —connected, position of —differing in numb., connected without repetition of noun ("ONE or more letters,") —much, little, &c., preceded by too, how, &c., taken substantively —Adjectives, punct. of —derivation of, from nouns, from adjectives, &c. —poet. peculiarities in respect to —Adjective, taken abstractly with infin. or part. —following a finite verb, without a noun —do. an infin. or a part. —position of, in Eng. —when may either precede or follow its noun —Whether adj. or adv. is required, how determined —Adjective, one superadded to an other, without conjunc., position of —when the figure of, affects the sense, what to be done —should not be represented by a pronoun —ellipsis of, shown
Adjectives, common, probable numb. of, in Eng.
—enumeration of, according to their endings
Adjectives, compound, analogies of their formation, traced
—nouns derived from, generally disapproved
Adjectives, numeral, kinds of, named
—Cardinal numb. and its corresponding numeral, what denote
—Construction and figure of the numerals
Adjectives, participial, what words to be referred to the class of —cannot be construed to govern obj. case
Adjectives, pronominal, list of —which, sometimes used adverbially —which, sometimes used partitively, appar. as nouns —without nouns expressed, how parsed —distribution of, by CHURCH See Other, &c.
Adjectives, proper, peculiarities of, considered —rule for initial capital in
Adjuncts of nominative in the agreement of a verb
Admitting, allowing, &c., appar. independent, to what may relate
ADVERBS, Etymol. of —Adverb, defined —Adverbs, serve to abbreviate expression —other classes of words sometimes take the nature of —appar. take the nat. of other parts of speech —how distinguished from adjectives —Classes of, named and defined —proper classification of, by what indicated —of time, place, and manner, with what connected; of degree, do. —conjunctive (see Conjunctive Adverb:) —Modifications of —number of, in Eng. —Whether adverb or adjective required, how determined —Adverbs, Synt. of —in what do. consists —to what relate —Adverb before a prep. ("CONSIDERABLY beyond,") —Adverbs, whether sometimes qualify nouns —of participles which become nouns, how managed —above, then, &c., as relating directly to a noun, how parsed —Adverbs, of degree, to what adjectives not applicable —direct use of, for pronouns, inelegant —position of —needless use of, for adjectives —hither, &c., for here, &c., with verb of motion —hence, &c., with from prefixed —when, &c., not to follow is in a definition ("Concord is WHEN," &c.,) —ever and never, to be carefully distinguished —in ly, when preferable to other forms —Adverb, appar. made object of a prep. ("At ONCE,") —emphatic, with verb of self-motion suppressed ("I'll HENCE,") —Adverb HOW, misuse of ("He said HOW," &c.,) —NO, not to be used in reference to a verb or a part. —Adverbial form or character, words of, how parsed —Adverbs, punct. of —Adverb, ellips. of, shown —Adverbs, derivation of, —many common Eng., of Anglo-Sax. origin —poet. peculiarities in the use of —peculiar use of those of two syllables in ly, by MILT. and his contemporaries —Adverbial phrase, a needless and improper designation in analysis
Affectation of fine writing, PREC. against
Ago and since, difference between
AGREEMENT, of words, defined —with what synonymous —Agreement, how many of the parts of speech in Eng., incapable of; none necessary between words unrelated —as differing from relation —of words in the same construc., not easy to determine —rules of, as applied to articles, impertinent —Agreements, syntactical, in Eng., specified —Agreement, general principles of —figurative, of pronouns with antecedents
Ah, sometimes departs from usage
Alexandrine verse, description of
Alias, for the equivocal or, use of, in judicial proceedings
All, when may be reckoned a noun
Allegory, defined —Allegory includes most parables of Script., and some fables
Alphabet, Eng., names and plur. numb. of the letters
—Hebrew, names and characters of, given,
—Greek, do.
—Latin, names of the letters of, scarcely known even to the learned;
account of its letters
—A perfect alphabet in Eng., what it would effect
—Letters of the alphabet, when and how used in the sciences
Alphabetic writing, its advantage over the syllabic
Ambiguous, construc., with respect to the class of a word —do., with resp. to the case of a word —expressions, PREC. against
Amen, use and import of
Among and amongst, amid and amidst, different in sense and construc.
from between and betwixt
—incompatible with the distributive one an other
—derivation of, from Sax.
Amphibrach, defined
Amphimac, amphimacer, or Cretic, defined.
An, conjunc., obsolete for if ("Nay, AN thou 'lt mouthe," &c., SHAK.,) —derivation of, from Sax.
An, a, art., one and the same
—preferable form before a particular sound
—A or an before genus
—how commonly limits the sense
—belongs to sing. numb. only
—with adjective of numb.
—its effect upon proper and common nouns
—is without agreem.
—Whether an is from a or a from an
—An, a, origin of
—of proportion
—with numerals
—by what definitives superseded
—implies unity; sometimes precedes collective noun conveying the idea
of plurality
—present usage of, how differs from that of ancient writers
—use of, before humble, and its compounds and derivatives
—erroneous use of, as relating to a plural
—not to be used for the, to denote emphat. a whole kind
Analysis, "to analyze a sentence," what
—Analysis of sentences shown in five different methods; which method
BROWN calls "the best and most thorough"
—Analysis, notices of the different methods of
—importance of, in teaching grammar; the truest method of, parsing
Anapest, defined
Anapestic verse, treated —what syll. of, has stress; first foot of, how may be varied —what variation of, produces composite verse —whether a surplus syll. in, may compensate for a deficient one —what number of syllables in the longest measure of —Anapestic verse shown in its four measures —Anapestic, measures, why few —poetry, pieces in general short —(instance of a long piece, L. HUNT'S "Feast of the Poets,")
And, discriminated from or
—when preferable to with, or, or nor
—whether emphatic of word or phrase following it ("Part pays, AND
justly;" &c., POPE,)
—derivation of, from Sax.
Anglo-Saxon dialect, and accessions thereto, as forming the modern
Comments (0)