ACTIVE. I seek (indicative or fact mood, present tense, general notion; or, conjunctive mood, present tense). I am seeking (present tense, emphatic time). I shall go (indicative mood, future tense). PASSIVE. Every one of these combinations can be used with the passive verb, which requires the use of an additional auxiliary, thus :Active. PASSIVE. I am sought. I am being sought. I have been sought. I have been seeking I have been being sought. To avoid the awkwardness of this phrase in the passive, it is usual to adopt some other mode of expression; e. g. 'I have been an object of search.' ACTIVE. Passive. I am about to seek. I am about to be sought. I have been about to seek I have been about to be sought. IMPERATIVE MOOD. Let us go. The Imperative Mood is only in the second person; as, ‘Speak, thou,''Speak, ye.' The first and third persons are supplied by the verb élet;' as Let him speak now or never. Let them show us the way. Let the banquet appear. Let the enemy prevent us, if they can. Do not let us be late. 'Let' takes the noun or pronoun in the objective case; but 'Let you and l’is an allowable colloquialism*. 'Let you and I attend these gentlemen in the library.' (Johnson.) * The reason of this, perhaps, is that the expression. Let him speak,' is equivalent either to “Permit him to speak,' or 'Give him permission that he inay speak.' In Latin the latter is always the construction. There • Let fore{ : Permit that you and I attend,' would be correct. The object of a Transitive verb is often understood; as- Virtue leads (its followers) to happiness. He bowed (his head) to me as he passed. Some Intransitive verbs are capable of taking an objective case of a noun of kindred meaning; as— He lived a noble life. OUGHT. The word 'ought' is an example of the changes of sense brought about by usage. Ought' is properly the perfect tense of the verb 'to owe,' with the sense was debtor. It is now used as a present, with the sense 'is (morally) debtor;' his duty is ;' as, “The watch ought to offend no man. Notwithstanding this, in the expression “He ought to have done it,' and the like, it retains its original past tense. Thus we have the word 'ought' acting both as a present and a past tense according to the context. It seems strange that a passive participle, e. g. 'paid,' is made use of in forming an active tense: 'I have paid.' The Romanic languages form their perfect in the same way: 'Io ho veduto; J'ai vu.' This tense is evidently a development of the Latin use of 'habeo' in phrases like 'habeo cognitum. At first only transitive verbs could form their perf. and pluperf. in this way; the past part. qualified the object and was in agreement with it. The Romanic languages still preserve a recollection of this fact in making the past part. in certain cases agree with the object : ‘Le donne che ho vedute ;' 'Les femmes que j'ai vues.' By and by, as inflexions fell more and more out of use, intransitive verbs were treated in the same way. The origin of the form was lost sight of, and the auxiliary to have' with the past part. became a tense. A similar process may have been going on in Teutonic languages. 12 NUMERALS. . Numerals are used either as adjectives, when they are undeclinable; or as nouns, and declined. As adjectives they take (except 'one') a plural noun expressed or understood; as, ‘Napoleon invaded Russia with six hundred thousand men. “We are seven.' * Years of age' is often understood; as, ‘I was sixteen yesterday.' 'He is past fifty; over fifty; under sixty.' The Ordinal numbers 'first,' 'second, third,' are formed irregularly : the others regularly, by adding th to the Cardinals; as, 'fourth,' sixth,' 'twenty-seventh;' 'fifth,' 'eighth,' ninth,' 'twelfth,' are written according to their sound. The numeral adverbs once,' 'twice,' 'thrice,' are likewise irregular; the others are formed regularly, thus, 'four times,' twenty times,' 'five hundred and two times.' As nouns, numerals have a plural and a possessive case; as- In twos and threes. By twos and threes. In hundreds By hundreds. They went in fifties, by fifties. I will not do it for forty's sake. Notice the phrases The regiment was a thousand strong. George the Third was succeeded by George the Fourth. The first of June. The year 1868. Two or three. Seventy or eighty. Seventy to a hundred. Six at a time. 'Twain' is an old form of 'two.' It is usual to say, 'The four last days of June,' or 'The three first men in the country,' &c. The expression has been objected to on the ground that there cannot be more than one first or more than one last. Some recent writers, in consequence of this objection, have adopted the form ‘first three' or 'last four,' &c. But 'three first' or 'four last' is usual, and is defended by writers of ability and note. The expression admits of a satisfactory explanation. No one would object to the words * Four men marched first,' or 'Four men marched last, inasmuch |