UNDER RULE XIV.—OF PREPOSITIONS.
“In a word charity is the soul of social life.” “By the bowstring I can repress violence and fraud.” “Some by being too artful forfeit the reputation of probity.” “With regard to morality I was not indifferent.” “Of all our senses sight is the most perfect and delightful.”
UNDER RULE XV.—OF INTERJECTIONS.
“Behold I am against thee O inhabitant of the valley!” “O it is more like a dream than a reality,” “Some wine ho!” “Ha ha ha; some wine eh?”
“When lo the dying breeze
begins to fail,
And flutters on the mast the
flagging sail.”
UNDER RULE XVI.—OF WORDS REPEATED.
“I would never consent never never never.” “His teeth did chatter chatter chatter still.” “Come come come—to bed to bed to bed.”
UNDER RULE XVII.—OF DEPENDENT QUOTATIONS.
“He cried ‘Cause every man to go out from me.’” “‘Almet’ said he ’remember what thou hast seen.’” “I answered ’Mock not thy servant who is but a worm before thee.’”
EXERCISE IV.—PUNCTUATION.
I. THE SEMICOLON.—Copy the following sentences, and insert the Comma and the SEMICOLON where they are requisite.
EXAMPLES UNDER RULE I.—OF COMPOUND MEMBERS.
“‘Man is weak’ answered his companion ’knowledge is more than equivalent to force.’” “To judge rightly of the present we must oppose it to the past for all judgement is compartive [sic—KTH] and of the future nothing can be known.” “‘Contentment is natural wealth’ says Socrates to which I shall add ‘luxury is artificial poverty.’”
“Converse and love mankind
might strongly draw
When love was liberty and
nature law.”
UNDER RULE II.—OF SIMPLE MEMBERS.
“Be wise to-day ’tis madness to defer.” “The present all their care the future his.” “Wit makes an enterpriser sense a man.” “Ask thought for joy grow rich and hoard within.” “Song soothes our pains and age has pains to soothe.” “Here an enemy encounters there a rival supplants him.” “Our answer to their reasons is; ‘No’ to their scoffs nothing.”
“Here subterranean works and
cities see
There towns aerial on the
waving tree.”
UNDER RULE III.—OF APPOSITION.
“In Latin there are six cases namely the nominative the genitive the dative the accusative the vocative and the ablative.” “Most English nouns form the plural by taking s; as boy boys nation nations king kings bay bays.” “Bodies are such as are endued with a vegetable soul as plants a sensitive soul as animals or a rational soul as the body of man.”