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We find it in O.E. after ought, nought, as in modern English. It has acquired an adverbial sense = aliter. Cp. O. E. owiht elles aught of other aught else.

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"A pouder

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I-maad, outher of chalk, outher of glas,
Or som what elles."-CHAUCER, 1. 13078.

"Bischopes and bachelers, bote maistres and doctours,
Liggen in London in lenten and elles."

"So, what for drede and ellis, they were both ensuryd."

Piers Plowman, Prol. I. 91.

Tale of Beryn, l. 1122.

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aught else.1

In the oldest English we had elles hwat
Sometimes we find not else = nought else.

"In Moses' hard law we had

Not else but darkness.

All was not else but night."-DODSLEY'S Old Plays, p. 39.

24. Sundry (O.E. synderig

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singularis, sundrie, sondry ==

separate) is now used in the plural

"For sundry weighty reasons."-Macbeth, iii. 1, iv. 3.

It occurs, however, sometimes as a singular in older writers in the sense of separate.

"Alc hefde sindri moder."-La3. i. 114.

"Thor was in helle a sundri sted."-Gen. and Ex. 1984, p. 57.

So in Shakespeare

"The sundry contemplation

Of my travels is a most humorous sadness."

As You Like It, iv. 1.

249. Several is used for sundry

"To every several man."--Julius Cæsar, iii. 2.

66 Two several times."— Ib. v. 5.

"Truth lies open to all, it's no man's several."— Ben Jonson.

"By some severals."-Winter's Tale, i. 2.

250. Divers (O.E. diverse, O.Fr. divers), and different (Fr. different), and O.E. sere, ser (O.Fr. sevre, separated; sevrée, separation), are sometimes employed for sundry.

251. Certain (from Lat. certus) is singular and plural, and is used substantively and adjectively.

Iels what in Chaucer.

"A certain man planted a vineyard."-Mark xii. 1.

"There came from the ruler of the synagogue's house certain which said.”— Ib. v. 35.

"To hunt the boar with certain of his friends."-Venus and Adonis.

Cp. its use as a substantive in the following passages :-

"A certayn of varlettes and boyes."-Berner's Froissart.

"A certain of grain."-Fardell of Facion.

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Beseeching him to lene him a certeyn

Of gold, and he wold quyt it him ageyn."-CHAUCER, 1. 12952.

"3it I wolle have another certayne."-Gesta Rom. p. 23.

CHAPTER XIII.

VERBS.

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252. VERBS may be classified into (a) transitive, requiring an object, as he learns his lessons;" (b) intransitive, requiring no object, as the sun shines."

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253. Transitive verbs only have a passive voice.

Transitive verbs include (1) reflexive verbs, in which the agent and object are identical, as "he hurt himself," "I'll lay me down ;" and reciprocal verbs, as "to love one another." These verbs admit of no passive voice.

254. Intransitive verbs include a large number that might be classed as frequentative, diminutive, inceptive, desiderative, &c.

Some intransitive verbs, by means of a preposition, become transitive, and may be used passively, as "the man laughs at the boy," "the boy was laughed at by the man.

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Some intransitive verbs have a causative meaning, and take an object, as "he ran," "he ran a thorn through his finger." See Causative Verbs, under the head of VERBAL SUFFIXES.

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255. Some transitive verbs are reflexive in meaning, though not in form, and appear at first sight as if used intransitively, as he keeps aloof from danger," i.e. he keeps himself, &c. Cp. "he stole away to England."

Sometimes a transitive verb has a passive sense, with an active form, as "the cakes ate short and crisp " = the cakes were eaten short and crisp.

256. Intransitive verbs may take a noun of kindred meaning or object, called the cognate object, as to die a death, to sleep a sleep,

to run a race.

257. Verbs used with the third person only are called impersonal verbs, as me thinks, me seems, it rains, it snows.

258. The verb affirms action or existence of a subject, under certain conditions or relations, called voice, mood, tense.

In some languages verbs undergo a change of form for voice, mood, and tense; the root being modified by certain suffixes before the person-endings are added.

Thus in Latin the root reg is modified by the suffix s,I to express time or tense; so the root reg becomes by this addition a stem to which the person-ending -i is suffixed; whence rexi, the perfect of reg-ere.

Voice. There are two voices-(a) the active, in which the subject of the verb is represented as acting, as "I love John;" (b) the passive, in which the subject of the verb is represented as affected by the action, as I am loved by John."

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The passive voice has grown out of reflexive verbs; but our language has never developed, by change of the verb, a reflexive form, so that the passive voice in English is expressed by the passive participle combined with auxiliary verbs. The Scandinavian dialects have a special form for reflexive verbs. See p. 6.

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259. There are five moods (1) the indicative makes a simple assertion, states or asks about a fact; (2) the subjunctive expresses a possibility it is sometimes called the conditional or conjunctive mood; (3) the imperative denotes that an action is commanded, desired, or entreated; (4) the infinitive states the action without the limitations peculiar to voice, tense, &c., and is merely an abstract substantive; (5) participles are adjectives.

260. The tenses are three-(a) present, (b) past, (c) future.

An action may be stated with reference to time, present, past, and future, as (a) indefinite, (b) continuous and imperfect, (c) perfect, (d) perfect and continuous.

Hence we may arrange the tenses according to the following scheme :

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Future

have been praising.

I shall praise. I shall be I shall have I shall
praised.

praising.

I This s was originally a part of the root as, to be.
2 Sometimes called imperfect.

! 261. For I praise, I praised, we sometimes use I do praise, I did praise, which are by some called emphatic present and past tenses. is called intentional present.

I am going to praise
I was going to praise

I shall be going to praise

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In English we have only change of form for the present and past; the other tenses are expressed by the use of auxiliary verbs.

262. There are two numbers, singular and plural; three persons, first, second, and third.

263. Conjugation.-Verbs are classified according to the mode of expressing the past indefinite tense, into (a) strong verbs, (6) weak verbs.

Strong Verbs. The past tense of strong verbs is expressed by a change of vowel only; nothing is added to the root.

Weak Verbs.-The past tense indefinite of weak verbs is expressed by adding to the verbal root the syllable d or its euphonic substitute t. The e before d unites the suffix to the root.

The distinction between strong and weak verbs must be clearly borne in mind. (1) Strong verbs have vowel change only; their past tense is not formed by adding -d or -t.

(2) The passive participles of strong verbs do not end in -d or -t, as do those of weak verbs.

(3) All p. participles of strong verbs once ended in -en (-n); but in very many p. participles this suffix has dropt off. The history of a word is sometimes necessary to be known before its conjugation can be decided.

Weak verbs sometimes have a change of vowel, and the addition of -d or -t, as bough-t; but this change is no result of reduplication.

STRONG VERBS.

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264. All strong verbs in the Aryan languages originally formed their perfect tense by reduplication, that is by the repetition of the root: thus from the root bhug bend was originally formed (1) bhug-bhug; (2) bhu-bhug (by shortening the first root); then by adding the personal ending (3) bhu-bhoga, which is the Sanskrit verb = I bowed or bent, and this is found in Gr. πé-pevya, Lat. fûgi (=fufugi), Goth. baug, O.E. beth, English bowed.

In the Latin, Gothic, and O.E. forms, the vowel change shows that the initial letter of the root has gone, and the first consonant is

The passive participle in -n is only an adjective like wooden. Cp. Lat. plenus, original form = (1) na, whence (2) an = (3) en.

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