Abridgment of Murray's English Grammar: With an Appendix, Containing Exercises in Orthography, in Parsing, in Syntax, and in Punctuation |
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Page 64
... repeated all their former claims ; " that is , " in which they repeated Part 2. The adverbs her applied to verbs signifyi whither ; as , " He came speed ; " " Where are you hither ; " " They rode thi Note 3. Some adverbs as , " In 1687 ...
... repeated all their former claims ; " that is , " in which they repeated Part 2. The adverbs her applied to verbs signifyi whither ; as , " He came speed ; " " Where are you hither ; " " They rode thi Note 3. Some adverbs as , " In 1687 ...
Page 66
... repeated ; as , " He lives temperately , and he should live temperately . " RULE XIX . It Part 1. Some conjunctions require the indica- tive , some the subjunctive mood , after them . is a general rule , that when something contingent ...
... repeated ; as , " He lives temperately , and he should live temperately . " RULE XIX . It Part 1. Some conjunctions require the indica- tive , some the subjunctive mood , after them . is a general rule , that when something contingent ...
Page 70
... repeated ; as , " a house and an orchard ; " in- stead of , " a house and orchard . " Note 2. The noun is frequently omitted in the following manner : " The laws of God and man ; " that is , " the laws of God and the laws of man ...
... repeated ; as , " a house and an orchard ; " in- stead of , " a house and orchard . " Note 2. The noun is frequently omitted in the following manner : " The laws of God and man ; " that is , " the laws of God and the laws of man ...
Page 77
... repeated exertions . " " Vices , like shadows , towards the evening of life , grow great and monstrous . " " Our interests are interwoven by threads innumerable ; " " By threads innumerable , our interests are interwoven . " RULE XIX ...
... repeated exertions . " " Vices , like shadows , towards the evening of life , grow great and monstrous . " " Our interests are interwoven by threads innumerable ; " " By threads innumerable , our interests are interwoven . " RULE XIX ...
Page 104
... ? Why omitted ? Why repeated ? Substantive . Why is it in the possessive case ? Why in the objective case ? Why in apposition ? Why is the apostrophick s omitted ? Adjective . What is its substantive ? Why in the 104 APPENDIX .
... ? Why omitted ? Why repeated ? Substantive . Why is it in the possessive case ? Why in the objective case ? Why in apposition ? Why is the apostrophick s omitted ? Adjective . What is its substantive ? Why in the 104 APPENDIX .
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Common terms and phrases
active verb Adjective Pronouns adverb antecedent auxiliary comma Compound Perfect Conjugate the following conjunction connected copulative DEFECTIVE VERBS denote Diphthong ellipsis English Exercises following verbs frequently genitive govern verbs Grammar hadst happy hath honour Imperative Mood Imperfect Tense improperly indicative mood infinitive mood Interjections Irregular Verbs king letter live manner mayst or canst nominative noun or pronoun nouns and pronouns number and person omitted Orthography Parsing passions passive verb pause perfect participle personal pronoun phrase Pluperfect Tense plural number possessive Potential Mood preposition Present Tense relative pronoun respect reward RULE VIII Rule XII Second Future Tense SECT semicolon shalt or wilt shouldst signifies singular number sometimes subjunctive mood syllable thing Thou art Thou hast thou love Thou mayst Thou mightst thou shalt tion tive mood verb active verb neuter vice virtue voice vowel wise word wouldst Write the following
Popular passages
Page 15 - Gender. GENDER is the distinction of nouns, with regard to sex. There are three genders, the MASCULINE, the FEMININE, and the NEUTER. The Masculine Gender denotes animals of the male kind : as, a man, a horse, a bull.
Page 21 - A Pronoun is a word used instead of a noun, to avoid the too frequent repetition of the same word ; as, the man is happy, he is benevolent, he is useful.
Page 55 - For when a man declares in autumn, when he is eating them, or in spring, when there are none, that he loves grapes...
Page 13 - A Conjunction is a part of speech that is chiefly used to connect sentences; so as, out of two or more sentences, to make but one; it sometimes connects only words; as, " Thou and he are happy, because you are good.
Page 73 - PUNCTUATION is the art of dividing a written composition into sentences, or parts of sentences, by points or stops, for the purpose of marking the different pauses which the sense, and an accurate pronunciation require.
Page 13 - A verb is a word which signifies to be, to do, or to suffer ; as, I am — I rule — I am ruled.
Page 67 - If there be but one body of legislators, it is no better than a tyranny ; if there are only two, there will want a casting voice...
Page 9 - ENGLISH GRAMMAR. ENGLISH GRAMMAR is the art of speaking and writing the English Language with propriety.
Page 37 - FUTURE TENSE. SINGULAR. PLURAL. 1. I shall or will love. 1. We shall or will love. 2. Thou shalt or wilt love. 2.
Page 78 - The propriety of using a colon, or semicolon, is sometimes determined by a conjunction's being expressed, or not expressed : as, " Do not flatter yourselves with the hope of perfect happiness : there is no such thing in the world.