English Grammar in Familiar Lectures eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about English Grammar in Familiar Lectures.

English Grammar in Familiar Lectures eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about English Grammar in Familiar Lectures.

Who all my sense confinedst; or, didst confine.

Note.  And who broughtest him forth out of Ur.

RULE 15, Who shall be sent, &c.—­This is the man who, &c.

RULE 16.  They to whom much is given, &c.—­with whom you associate &c.—­whom I greatly respect, &c.—­whom we ought to love, and to whom, &c—­They whom conscience, &c.—­With whom did you walk?—­Whom did you see?—­To whom did you give the book?

RULE 17.  Who gave John those books? We.—­him who lives in Pearl street—­My brother and he.—­She and I.

RULE 18:  Note 2.  Thirty tuns.—­twenty feet—­one hundred fathoms.

Note 6.  He bought a pair of new shoes—­piece of elegant furniture.—­pair of fine horses—­tract of poor land.

Note 7.  Are still more difficult to be comprehended.—­most doubtful, or precarious way, &c.—­This model comes nearer perfection than any I, &c.

RULE 19:  Note.  That sort.—­these two hours.—­This kind, &c.—­He saw one person, or more than one, enter the garden.

Note 2.  Better than himself.—­is so small.—­his station may be, is bound by the laws.

Note 3.  On each side, &c.—­took each his censer.

RULE 20. Whom did they, &c.—­They whom opulence,—­whom luxury, &c.—­Him and them we know, &c.—­Her that is negligent, &c.—­my brother and me &c.—­Whom did they send, &c.—­Them whom he, &c.

RULE 21.  It is I.—­If I were he.—­it is he, indeed.—­Whom do you, &c.—­Who do men say, &c.—­and who say ye, &c.—­whom do you imagine it to have been?—­it was I; but you knew that it was he.

RULE 25.  Bid him come—­durst not do it.—­Hear him read, &c.—­makes us approve and reject, &c.—­better to live—­than to outlive, &c.—­to wrestle.

RULE 26:  Note.  The taking of pains:  or, without taking pains, &c.—­The changing of times,—­the removing and setting up of kings.

RULE 28:  Note 3.  He did me—­I had written—­he came home.—­befallen my cousin—­he would have gone.—­already risen.—­is begun.—­is spoken.—­would have written—­had they written, &c.

RULE 29:  Note 1.  It cannot, therefore, be, &c.—­he was not often pleasing.—­should never be separated.—­We may live happily, &c.

RULE 30:  Note.  I don’t know any thing; or, I know nothing, &c.—­I did not see anybody; or, I saw nobody, &c.—­Nothing ever affects her.—­and take no shape or semblance, &c.—­There can be nothing, &c.—­Neither precept nor discipline is so forcible as example.

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