Lindley Murray was born at Swatara in Penn sylvania. He studied law and practised at the bar until the breaking out of the war of independence, when he became a merchant, and soon amassed a handsome fortune which enabled him to retire. The remaining years of his life were spent in England; here he wrote his celebrated English Grammar”, and other works, and died in February, 1826. The Hon. G. P. Marsh is a native of Vermont, U. S. A. After occupying several important offices in that State, he became a member of the Federal Congress, subsequently United States' Minister at Constantinople, and is now United States' Minister at Florence. But his real distinction is as a scholar; and especially as a linguist. He is a rival of Bowring as a polyglot, and has attained deserved eminence as a master both of Northern and of Oriental languages. Mr. S., who defends certain of Mr. Marsh's expressions, is one of the professors in Trinity College, Hartford. Mr. E. S. Gould is a son of the late Hon. Judge Gould of Connecticut, who was one of the most eminent jurists, graceful speakers, and accomplished scholars in the United States. Judge Gould was also especially distinguished for purity and precision as a writer of English. Mr. E. S. Gould has therefore a sort of hereditary claim to rank as a purist in English style; and he has long been recognised in America an authority in matters of literary and philological criticism. as 2, COLLEGE CRESCENT, BELSIZE PARE, LONDON, N.W. + . Therefore" 94 “So totally”, “supremely”, absolutely” Neuter verbs, not to be qualified by adverbs “This construction sounds rather harshly”. “ The dog smells disagreeably” “It sounds very strangely 187, 199 53 53 94, 105 132 133, 188 134, 135, 176 135 Improper omission of the definite article 10 Use of articles in connection with “both" and " and” 39 Repetition of article, necessary A” and “an", when used 56, 83, 96 . |