The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

   “From nature’s chain, whatever link you strike,
    Tenth, or ten-thousandth, breaks the chain alike.”—­Pope.

UNDER EXCEPTION III.—­OF AN ALTERNATIVE OF WORDS.

Metre, or Measure, is the number of poetical feet which a verse contains.”—­Hiley cor. “The Caesura, or division, is the pause which takes place in a verse, and which divides it into two parts.”—­Id. “It is six feet, or one fathom, deep.”—­Bullions cor. “A Brace is used in poetry, at the end of a triplet, or three lines which rhyme together.”—­Felton cor. “There are four principal kinds of English verse, or poetical feet.”—­Id. “The period, or full stop, denotes the end of a complete sentence.”—­Sanborn cor. “The scholar is to receive as many jetons, or counters, as there are words in the sentence.”—­St. Quentin cor.That [thing], or the thing, which purifies, fortifies also the heart.”—­O.  B. Peirce cor.That thing, or the thing, which would induce a laxity in public or private morals, or indifference to guilt and wretchedness, should be regarded as the deadly Sirocco.”—­Id.What is, elliptically, what thing, or that thing which.”—­Sanborn cor.Demonstrate means show, or point out precisely.”—­Id.The man, or that man, who endures to the end, shall be saved.”—­Hiley cor.

UNDER EXCEPTION IV.—­OF A SECOND COMMA.

“That reason, passion, answer one great aim.”—­POPE:  Bullions and Hiley cor. “Reason, virtue, answer one great aim.”—­L.  Murray’s Gram., p. 269; Cooper’s Murray, 182; Comly, 145; Ingersoll, 282; Sanborn, 268; Kirkham, 212; et al. “Every good gift, and every perfect gift, is from above.”—­James, i, 17.  “Every plant, and every tree, produces others after its kind.”—­Day cor. “James, and not John, was paid for his services.”—­Id. “The single dagger, or obelisk [Dagger], is the second.”—­Id. “It was I, not he, that did it.”—­St. Quentin cor. “Each aunt, each cousin, hath her speculation.”—­Byron. “’I shall see you when you come,’ is equivalent to, ’I shall see you then, or at that time, when you come.’”—­N.  Butler cor.

   “Let wealth, let honour, wait the wedded dame;
    August her deed, and sacred be her fame.”—­Pope cor.

UNDER RULE V.—­OF WORDS IN PAIRS.

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The Grammar of English Grammars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.