The Infant System eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about The Infant System.

The Infant System eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about The Infant System.
run! How does the master laugh, speak, sing? The children now find you ADVERBS, and it will be quite time enough to give them terms for the classification they thus intuitively make, when they have a clear idea of what they are doing.  When this end is attained, your children have some ideas of grammar, and those clear ones.  There is no occasion to stop here.  Proceed, but slowly, and in the same method.  The tenses of the verbs, and the subdivision into active, passive, and neuter, will require the greatest care and attention which the teacher can use, to simplify them sufficiently for the children’s comprehension; as it will likewise enable them to understand the nature and office of the other classes of words.  As, however, it is not my intention to write a grammar here, but merely to throw out a few hints on the subject, I shall leave the further development of the plan to the ingenuity of those who may think fit to adopt its principles, as above laid down.

  English Grammar doth us teach,
  That it hath nine parts of speech;—­
  Article, adjective, and noun,
  Verb, conjunction, and pronoun,
  With preposition, and adverb,
  And interjection, as I’ve heard. 
  The letters are just twenty-six,
  These form all words when rightly mix’d. 
  The vowels are a, e, o, i,
  With u, and sometimes w and y. 
  Without the little vowels’ aid,
  No word or syllable is made;
  But consonants the rest we call,
  And so of these we’ve mention’d all. 
  Three little words we often see,
  Are articles,—­a, an, and the
  A noun’s the name of any thing—­
  As school, or garden, hoop, or swing
  Adjectives tell the kind of noun—­
  As great, small, pretty, white, or brown
  Instead of nouns the pronouns stand,
  John’s head, his face, my arm, your hand. 
  Verbs tell of something being done—­
  To read, write, count, sing, jump, or run
  How things are done the adverbs tell—­
  As slowly, quickly, ill, or well
  Conjunctions join the nouns together—­
  As men and children, wind or weather. 
  A preposition stands before
  A noun, as in or through a door. 
  The interjection shows surprise—­
  As, oh! how pretty, ah! how wise. 
  The whole are called nine parts of speech,
  Which, reading, writing, speaking teach.

THE ARTICLES.

  Three little words we hear and see
  In frequent use, a, an, and the;
  These words so useful, though so small,
  Are those which articles we call.

  The first two, a and an, we use
  When speaking of one thing alone;
  For instance, we might wish to say
  An oak, a man, a dog, a bone.

The speaks of either one or more,—­ The cow, the cows, the pig, the pigs, The plum, the plums (you like a score), The pear, the pears, the fig, the figs.

  An oak, a man; means any oak,
  Or any man of all mankind;
  A dog, a bone, means any dog,
  Or any bone a dog may find.

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The Infant System from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.