The English Grammar

Front Cover
Lanston Monotype Corporation Limited, 1928 - 93 pages
 

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 75 - For, whereas our breath is by nature so short, that we cannot continue without a stay to speak long together ; it was thought necessary as well for the speaker's ease, as for the plainer deliverance of the things spoken, to invent this means, whereby men pausing a pretty while, the whole speech might never the worse be understood.
Page 9 - Syllabes, it hath sometimes the sharpe accent; as in binding, minding, pining, whining, wiving, thriving, mine, thine. Or, all words of one Syllabe qualified by e. But, the flat in more, as in these, bill, bitter, giddy. little, incident, and the like In...
Page 17 - R is the Dogs letter, and hurreth in the sound ; the tongue striking the inner palate, with a trembling about the teeth. It is sounded firme in the beginning of the words, and more liquid in the middle, and ends : as in rarer, viper, and so in the Latine.
Page 1 - Wee free our Language from the opinion of Rudenesse, and Barbarisme, wherewith it is mistaken to be diseas'd; We shew the Copie of it, and Matchablenesse, with other tongues; we ripen the wits of our owne Children, and Youth sooner by it, and advance their knowledge.
Page 17 - Is a letter we might very well spare in our alphabet, if we would but use the serviceable k as he should be, and restore him to the right of reputation he had with our forefathers.
Page 40 - We have set down that, that in our judgement agreeth best with reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly ; and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought sufficiently to have done my part, if, in...
Page 37 - The persons plural," he says (English Grammar, c. 17), " keep the termination of the first person singular. In former times, till about the reign of King Henry VIII., they were wont to be formed by adding en; thus, loven, sayen, complainen.
Page 67 - The futures are declared by the infinite, and the verb shall, or will; as amabo, I shall or will love. Amavero addeth thereunto have, taking the nature of two divers times; that is, of the future and the time past. I shall have loved ; or / will have loved.
Page 24 - This would aske a larger time and field, then is here given, for the examination: but since I am assigned to this Province; that it is the lot of my age, after thirty yeares conversation with men, to be elementarius Senex: I will promise, and obtaine so much of my selfe, as to give, in the heele of the booke, some spurre and incitement to that which I so reasonably seeke.

Bibliographic information