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.

REMARKS ON IT.

For the want of a proper knowledge of this little pronoun it, many grammarians have been greatly puzzled how to dispose of it, or how to account for its multiform, and, seemingly, contradictory characters.  It is in great demand by writers of every description.  They use it without ceremony; either in the nominative or objective case; either to represent one person or thing, or more than one.  It is applied to nouns in the masculine, feminine, or neuter gender, and, very frequently, it represents a member of a sentence, a whole sentence, or a number of sentences taken in a mass.

A little attention to its true character, will, at once, strip it of all its mystery. It, formerly written hit, according to H. Tooke, is the past participle of the Moeso-Gothic verb haitan.  It means, the said, and, therefore, like its near relative that, meaning, the assumed, originally had no respect, in its application, to number, person, or gender. “It is a wholesome law;” i.e. the said (law) is a wholesome law; or, that (law) is a wholesome law;—­the assumed (law) is a wholesome law. “It is the man; I believe it to be them:”—­the said (man) is the man; that (man) is the man:  I believe the said (persons) to be them; I believe that persons (according to the ancient application of that) to be them. “It happened on a summer’s day, that many people were assembled,” &c.—­Many people were assembled:  it, that, or the said (fact or circumstance) happened on a summer’s day.

It, according to its accepted meaning in modern times, is not referred to a noun understood after it, but is considered a substitute.  “How is it with you?” that is, “How is your state or condition?” “It rains; It freezes; It is a hard winter;”—­The rain rains; The frost frosts or freezes; The said (winter) is a hard winter. “It is delightful to see brothers and sisters living in uninterrupted love to the end of their days.”  What is delightful? To see brothers and sisters living in uninterrupted love to the end of their days.  It, this thing, is delightful. It, then, stands for all that part of the sentence expressed in italics; and the sentence will admit of the following construction; “To see brothers living in uninterrupted love to the end of their days, is delightful.”

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OF ADJECTIVE PRONOUNS.

ADJECTIVE PRONOUNS, PRONOMINAL ADJECTIVES, or, more properly, SPECIFYING ADJECTIVES, are a kind of adjectives which point out nouns by some distinct specification.

Pronouns and adjectives are totally distinct in their character.  The former stand for nouns, and never belong to them; the latter belong to nouns, and never stand for them.  Hence, such a thing as an adjective-pronoun cannot exist. Each, every, either, this, that, some, other, and the residue, are pure adjectives.

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English Grammar in Familiar Lectures from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.