INDEX
INTRODUCTION.
So many slighting remarks have been made of late on the use of teaching grammar as compared with teaching science, that it is plain the fact has been lost sight of that grammar is itself a science. The object we have, or should have, in teaching science, is not to fill a child’s mind with a vast number of facts that may or may not prove useful to him hereafter, but to draw out and exercise his powers of observation, and to show him how to make use of what he observes.... And here the teacher of grammar has a great advantage over the teacher of other sciences, in that the facts he has to call attention to lie ready at hand for every pupil to observe without the use of apparatus of any kind while the use of them also lies within the personal experience of every one.—Dr Richard Morris.
The proper study of a language is an intellectual discipline of the highest order. If I except discussions on the comparative merits of Popery and Protestantism, English grammar was the most important discipline of my boyhood.—John Tyndall.
INTRODUCTION.
What various opinions writers on English grammar have given in answer to the question, What is grammar? may be shown by the following—
[Sidenote: Definitions of grammar.]
English grammar is a
description of the usages of the English
language by good speakers
and writers of the present
day.—Whitney
A description of account
of the nature, build, constitution, or
make of a language is
called its grammar—MEIKLEJOHN
Grammar teaches the
laws of language, and the right method of
using it in speaking
and writing.—Patterson
Grammar is the science
of letter; hence the science of using
words correctly.—Abbott
The English word grammar
relates only to the laws which govern
the significant forms
of words, and the construction of the
sentence.—Richard
grant white
These are sufficient to suggest several distinct notions about English grammar—
[Sidenote: Synopsis of the above.]
(1) It makes rules to tell us how to use words.
(2) It is a record of usage which we ought to follow.
(3) It is concerned with the forms of the language.
(4) English has no grammar in the sense of forms, or inflections, but takes account merely of the nature and the uses of words in sentences.
[Sidenote: The older idea and its origin.]
Fierce discussions have raged over these opinions, and numerous works have been written to uphold the theories. The first of them remained popular for a very long time. It originated from the etymology of the word grammar (Greek gramma, writing, a letter), and from an effort to build up a treatise on English grammar by using classical grammar as a model.