Linguĉ Anglicanĉ clavis, or, Rudiments of English grammar, ed. by C. Heycock |
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Page iii
... Gerunds and Supines ; with various corrections and additions ; particularly on the principles of Spelling , and a fresh construction of the Verbs : BY THE REV . CHARLES HEYCOCK , A.M. , Perpetual Curate of Owston , and Rector of ...
... Gerunds and Supines ; with various corrections and additions ; particularly on the principles of Spelling , and a fresh construction of the Verbs : BY THE REV . CHARLES HEYCOCK , A.M. , Perpetual Curate of Owston , and Rector of ...
Page xxiv
... Gerunds , and Auxiliaries are so fully treated of in their respec- tive places in the body of the Grammar . But the Declension of our nouns , is a point of disparity be- tween this and all other English Grammars , so de- cided ; that it ...
... Gerunds , and Auxiliaries are so fully treated of in their respec- tive places in the body of the Grammar . But the Declension of our nouns , is a point of disparity be- tween this and all other English Grammars , so de- cided ; that it ...
Page 13
... Gerunds , as - in reading a sentence , by hearing a report , & c . , which govern the same case , as the verbs from which ... Gerund of serving . - Vide Syntax , cap . viii . - Some nouns are always used in the singular , as strength ...
... Gerunds , as - in reading a sentence , by hearing a report , & c . , which govern the same case , as the verbs from which ... Gerund of serving . - Vide Syntax , cap . viii . - Some nouns are always used in the singular , as strength ...
Page 69
... GERUND S. Of Having . In , by , with , for , or from Having . SUPINES . Active . To Have . Passive . To be Had . PARTICPLES . SIGN ing . Present Tense Perfect Future Having . Had , or having had . Being about to have . * The forms to be ...
... GERUND S. Of Having . In , by , with , for , or from Having . SUPINES . Active . To Have . Passive . To be Had . PARTICPLES . SIGN ing . Present Tense Perfect Future Having . Had , or having had . Being about to have . * The forms to be ...
Page 78
... Gerund , as- Happiness is to be obtained by wording evil , and by doing good . by seeking peace , and by pursuing it . And this form is authorized by the Saxon . GERUNDS . Of ruling ourselves , much may be said . In ruling a kingdom ...
... Gerund , as- Happiness is to be obtained by wording evil , and by doing good . by seeking peace , and by pursuing it . And this form is authorized by the Saxon . GERUNDS . Of ruling ourselves , much may be said . In ruling a kingdom ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent accusative admit adverbs ancient apostrophe auxiliary Verb Ben Jonson called compound conjugated and declined conjunction consonant construction Dative declension definite article denotes derived did'st Diphthong do'st employed English gender genitive Gerund govern Gram Grammar Greek had'st has't hath Hence Imperat IMPERATIVE IMPERFECT TENSE indefinite INDICATIVE MODE Infinitive Mode inflections King laid lain language Latin letter Lowth lying may'st or can'st might'st or could'st names nominative nouns object omitted passive Perf Perfect Participle person singular Plup PLUPERFECT TENSE Plur plural number prefixed preposition Pres PRESENT TENSE preterit Pronouns Substantive rain relative ruling Saxon SECOND FUTURE TENSE seek sense sentence shal't or wil't shew signifies Sing sometimes sought sound SUBJUNCTIVE MODE sung superl SUPINES syllable taken taking termination things third person Thou may'st Thou might'st Thou shal't tion tive Transitive Verb vowel Words ending write
Popular passages
Page viii - And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
Page ix - He did not thus begin the world with names, but with the power of naming : for man is not a mere speaking machine ; God did not teach him words, as one of us teaches a parrot from without ; but gave him a capacity, and then evoked the capacity which He gave. Here, as in everything else that concerns the primitive constitution, the great original institutes, of humanity, our best and truest lights are to be gotten from the study of the...
Page xvii - ... indeed is Scandinavian, though he must borrow his ' countess' from the Norman,) 'chancellor/ 'treasurer/ 'palace/ 'castle/ 'hall,' 'dome/ and a multitude more. At the same time the one remarkable exception of...
Page ix - Yet this must not be taken to affirm that man started at the first furnished with a full-formed vocabulary of words, and as it were with his first dictionary and first grammar ready-made to his hands. He did not thus begin the world with names, but with the power of naming: for man is not a mere speaking machine ; God did not teach him words, as one of us teaches a parrot, from without; but gave him a capacity, and then evoked the capacity which He gave.
Page xviii - Wamba, the Saxon jester in Ivanhoe, plays the philologer here), that the names of almost THE HISTORY IN WOEDS. all animals so long as they are alive, are thus Saxon, but when dressed and prepared for food become Norman — a fact indeed which we might have expected beforehand ; for the Saxon hind had the charge and...
Page 46 - In the first Person simply shall foretells ; In will a Threat, or else a Promise dwells. Shall, in the second and the third, does threat ; Will simply, then, foretells the future feat.
Page 151 - It is remarkable that in such instances, if the personal pronoun were used, it would be in the nominative case ; as, ' A greater king never reigned than he, that is, "•than he was.
Page xviii - Thus ox, steer, cow are Saxon, but beef Norman; calf is Saxon, but veal Norman; sheep is Saxon, but mutton Norman; so it is severally with swine and pork, deer and venison, fowl and pullet.
Page 39 - Teach me to feel another's wo, To hide the fault I see : That mercy I to others show, That mercy show to me.
Page 121 - It is of the nature of both the articles to determine or limit the thing spoken of. A determines it to be one single thing of the kind, leaving it still uncertain which : the determines which it is, or of many, which they are. The...