and the linguals
l and
r.”—
Ib.,
p. 25. “Thus, ’the man
having finished
his letter, will carry it to the post office.’”—
Ib.,
p. 75. “Thus, in the sentence ’he
had a dagger
concealed under his cloak,’
concealed is passive, signifying
being
concealed; but in the former combination, it goes to
make up a form, the force of which is active.”—
Ib.,
p. 75. “Thus, in Latin, ‘he had concealed
the dagger’ would be ‘
pugionem abdiderat;’
but ‘he had the dagger concealed’ would
be ‘
pugionem abditum habebat.’”—
Ib., p. 75. “
Here, for instance,
means ‘in this place,’
now, ’at
this time,’ &c.”—
Ib.,
p. 90. “Here
when both declares the
time of the action, and so is an adverb, and
also
connects the two verbs, and so is a conjunction.”—
Ib.,
p. 91. “These words were all no doubt originally
other parts of speech,
viz.: verbs, nouns,
and adjectives.”—
Ib., p. 92.
“The principal parts of a sentence are the subject,
the attribute, and the object, in other words the
nominative, the verb, and the objective.”—
Ib., p. 104. “Thus, the adjective
is connected with the noun, the adverb with the verb
or adjective, pronouns with their antecedents, &c.”—
Ib.,
p. 104. “
Between refers to two,
among
to more than two.”—
Ib., p.
120. “
At is used after a verb of
rest,
to after a verb of motion.”—
Ib.,
p. 120. “Verbs are of three kinds, Active,
Passive, and Neuter.”—
Lennie’s
Gram., p. 19;
Bullions, Prin., 2d Ed., p.
29 “Verbs are divided into two classes:
Transitive and Intransitive.”—
Hendrick’s
Gram., p. 28 “The Parts of Speech in the
English language are nine,
viz. The Article,
Noun, Adjective, Pronoun, Verb, Adverb, Preposition.
Interjection and Conjunction.”—
Bullions,
Prin. of E. Gram., p. 7 “Of these the Noun,
Pronoun, and Verb are declined, the rest are indeclinable.”—
Id.,
ib., p. 7;
Practical Lessons, p. 9.
“The first expression is called the ‘Active
form.’ The second the ’Passive form.’”—
Welds
Gram., 2d Ed., p. 83; Abridged, p. 66.
“O ’tis a godlike privilege
to save,
And he that scorns it is himself
a slave.”—Cowper, Vol. i.,
p. 123
SECTION III.—THE COLON.
The Colon is used to separate those parts of a compound
sentence, which are neither so closely connected as
those which are distinguished by the semicolon, nor
so little dependent as those which require the period.
RULE I.—ADDITIONAL REMARKS.
When the preceding clause is complete in itself, but
is followed by some additional remark or illustration,
especially if no conjunction is used, the colon is
generally and properly inserted: as, “Avoid
evil doers: in such society, an honest man may
become ashamed of himself.”—“See
that moth fluttering incessantly round the candle:
man of pleasure, behold thy image!”—Art
of Thinking, p. 94. “Some things we
can, and others we cannot do: we can walk, but
we cannot fly.”—Beanie’s
Moral Science, p. 112.