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.

    “O, then, how blind to all that truth requires,
    Who think it freedom when a part aspires!”—­Id.

IMPROPRIETIES FOR CORRECTION.

ERRORS OF PRONOUNS.

LESSON I.—­RELATIVES.

“At the same time that we attend to this pause, every appearance of sing-song and tone must be carefully guarded against.”—­Murray’s English Reader, p. xx.

[FORMULE.—­Not proper, because the word that had not clearly the construction either of a pronoun or of a conjunction.  But, according to Observation 18th, on the Classes of Pronouns, “The word that, or indeed any other word, should never be so used as to leave the part of speech uncertain.”  Therefore, the expression should be altered:  thus, “While we attend to this pause, every appearance of singsong must be carefully avoided.”]

“For thou shalt go to all that I shall send thee.”—­Jeremiah, i, 7; Gurney’s Obs., p. 223.  “Ah! how happy would it have been for me, had I spent in retirement these twenty-three years that I have possessed my kingdom.”—­See Sanborn’s Gram., p. 242.  “In the same manner that relative pronouns and their antecedents are usually parsed.”—­Ib., p. 71.  “Parse or mention all the other nouns in the parsing examples, in the same manner that you do the word in the form of parsing.”—­Ib., p. 8.  “The passive verb will always be of the person and number that the verb be is, of which it is in part composed.”—­Ib., p. 53.  “You have been taught that a verb must always be of the same person and number that its nominative is.”—­Ib., p. 68.  “A relative pronoun, also, must always be of the same person, number, and even gender that its antecedent is.”—­Ib., p. 68.  “The subsequent is always in the same case that the word is, which asks the question.”—­Ib., p. 95. “One sometimes represents an antecedent noun in the same definite manner that personal pronouns do.”—­Ib., p. 98.  “The mind being carried forward to the time that an event happens, easily conceives it to be present.”—­Ib., p. 107. “Save and saving are parsed in the same manner that except and excepting are.”—­Ib., p. 123.  “Adverbs describe, qualify, or modify the meaning of a verb in the same manner that adjectives do nouns.”—­Ib., p. 16.  “The third person singular of verbs, is formed in the same manner, that the plural number of nouns is.”—­Ib., p. 41.  “He saith further:  ’that the apostles did not anew baptize such persons, that had been baptized with the baptism of John.’”—­Barclay’s Works, i, 292.  “For we which live, are always delivered unto death for Jesus’ sake.”—­2 Cor., iv, 11.  “For they, which believe in God, must be careful to maintain good works.”—­Barclay’s Works, i, 431.  “Nor yet of those which teach things which they ought not, for filthy lucre’s

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