The Grammar of English Grammars by Goold Brown (free ebook reader .txt) π
"In what regards the laws of grammatical purity," says Dr. Campbell, "the violation is much more conspicuous than the observance."--See Philosophy of Rhetoric, p. 190. It therefore falls in with my main purpose, to present to the public, in the following ample work, a condensed mass of special criticism, such as is not elsewhere to be found in
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UNDER NOTE VII.βPARTICIPLES FOR INFINITIVES, &c.
"To teach little children is a pleasant employment." Or: "The teaching of little children," &c.βBartlett cor. "To deny or compromise the principles of truth, is virtually to deny their divine Author."βReformer cor. "A severe critic might point out some expressions that would bear retrenching"β"retrenchment"βor, "to be retrenched."βDr. Blair cor. "Never attempt to prolong the pathetic too much."βId. "I now recollect to have mentionedβ(or, that I mentionedβ) a report of that nature."βWhiting cor. "Nor of the necessity which there is, for their restraintβ(or, for them to be restrainedβ) in them."βBp. Butler cor. "But, to do what God commands because he commands it, is obedience, though it proceeds from hope or fear."βId. "Simply to close the nostrils, does not so entirely prevent resonance."βGardiner cor. "Yet they absolutely refuse to do so."βHarris cor. "But Artaxerxes could not refuse to pardon him."βGoldsmith cor. "The doing of them in the best manner, is signified by the names of these arts."βRush cor. "To behave well for the time to come, may be insufficient."βBp. Butler cor. "The compiler proposed to publish that part by itself."βAdam cor. "To smile on those whom we should censure, is, to bring guilt upon ourselves."βKirkham cor. "But it would be great injustice to that illustrious orator, to bring his genius down to the same level."βId. "The doubt that things go ill, often hurts more, than to be sure they do."βShak. cor. "This is called the straining of a metaphor."β Blair and Murray cor. "This is what Aristotle calls the giving of manners to the poem."βDr. Blair cor. "The painter's entire confinement to that part of time which he has chosen, deprives him of the power of exhibiting various stages of the same action."βL. Mur. cor. "It imports the retrenchment of all superfluities, and a pruning of the expression."βBlair et al. cor. "The necessity for us to be thus exempted is further apparent."βJane West cor. "Her situation in life does not allow her to be genteel in every thing."βSame. "Provided you do not dislike to be dirty when you are invisible."βSame. "There is now an imperious necessity for her to be acquainted with her title to eternity."βSame. "Disregard to the restraints of virtue, is misnamed ingenuousness."βSame. "The legislature prohibits the opening of shops on Sunday."βSame. "To attempt to prove that any thing is right."βO. B. Peirce cor. "The comma directs us to make a pause of a second in duration, or less."βId. "The rule which directs us to put other words into the place of it, is wrong."βId. "They direct us to call the specifying adjectives, or adnames, adjective pronouns."βId. "William dislikes to attend court."βFrost cor. "It may perhaps be worth while to remark, that Milton makes a distinction."βPhil. Mu. cor. "To profess regard and act injuriously, discovers a base mind."βMurray et al. cor. "To profess regard and act indifferently, discovers a base mind."βWeld cor. "You have proved beyond contradiction, that this course of action is the sure way to procure such an object."βCampbell cor.
UNDER NOTE VIII.βPARTICIPLES AFTER BE, IS, &c.
"Irony is a figure in which the speaker sneeringly utters the direct reverse of what he intends shall be understood."βBrown's Inst., p. 235. [Correct by this the four false definitions of "Irony" cited from Murray, Peirce, Fisher, and Sanborn.] "This is, in a great measure, a delivering of their own compositions."βBuchanan cor. "But purity is a right use of the words of the language."βJamieson cor. "But the most important object is the settling of the English quantity."βWalker cor. "When there is no affinity, the transition from one meaning to an other is a very wide step taken."βCampbell cor. "It will be a loss of time, to attempt further to illustrate it."βId. "This leaves the sentence too bare, and makes it to be, if not nonsense, hardly sense."βCobbett cor. "This is a requiring of more labours from every private member."βJ. West cor. "Is not this, to use one measure for our neighbours and an other for ourselves?"βSame. "Do we not charge God foolishly, when we give these dark colourings to human nature?"βSame. "This is not, to endure the cross, as a disciple of Jesus Christ; but, to snatch at it, like a partisan of Swift's Jack."βSame. "What is spelling? It is the combining of letters to form syllables and words."βO. B. Peirce cor. "It is the choosing of such letters to compose words," &c.βId. "What is parsing? (1.) It is a describing of the nature, use, and powers of words."βId. (2.) "For Parsing is a describing of the words of a sentence as they are used."βId. (3.) "Parsing is only a describing of the nature and relations of words as they are used."βId. (4.) "Parsing, let the pupil understand and remember, is a statement of facts concerning words; or a describing of words in their offices and relations as they are."βId. (5.) "Parsing is the resolving and explaining of words according to the rules of grammar."βId. Better: "Parsing is the resolving or explaining of a sentence according to the definitions and rules of grammar."βBrown's Inst., p. 28. (6.) "The parsing of a word, remember, is an enumerating and describing of its various qualities, and its grammatical relations to other words in the sentence."βPeirce cor. (7.) "For the parsing of a word is an enumerating and describing of its various properties, and [its] relations to [other words in] the sentence."βId. (8.) "The parsing of a noun is an explanation of its person, number, gender, and case; and also of its grammatical relation in a sentence, with respect to some other word or words."βIngersoll cor. (9.) "The parsing of any part of speech is an explanation of all its properties and relations."βId. (10.)" Parsing is the resolving of a sentence into its elements."βFowler cor. "The highway of the upright is, to depart from evil."βProv., xvi, 17. "Besides, the first step towards exhibiting the truth, should be, to remove the veil of error."βO. B. Peirce cor. "Punctuation is the dividing of sentences, and the words of sentences, by points for pauses."βId. "An other fault is the using of the imperfect tense SHOOK in stead of the participle SHAKEN."βChurchill cor. "Her employment is the drawing of maps."βAlger cor. "To go to the play, according to his notion, is, to lead a sensual life, and to expose one's self to the strongest temptations. This is a begging of the question, and therefore requires no answer."βFormey cor. "It is an overvaluing of ourselves, to reduce every thing to the narrow measure of our capacities."βComly's Key, in his Gram., p. 188; Fisk's Gram., p. 135. "What is vocal language? It is speech, or the expressing of ideas by the human voice."βC. W. Sanders cor.
UNDER NOTE IX.βVERBS OF PREVENTING."The annulling power of the constitution prevented that enactment from becoming a law."βO. B. Peirce cor. "Which prevents the manner from being brief."βId. "This close prevents them from bearing forward as nominatives."βRush cor. "Because this prevents it from growing drowsy."βFormey cor. "Yet this does not prevent him from being great."βId. "To prevent it from being insipid."βId. "Or whose interruptions did not prevent its continuance." Or thus: "Whose interruptions did not prevent it from being continued."βId. "This by no means prevents them from being also punishments."βWayland cor. "This hinders them not from being also, in the strictest sense, punishments."βId. "The noise made by the rain and wind, prevented them from being heard."βGoldsmith cor. "He endeavoured to prevent it from taking effect."βId. "So sequestered as to prevent them from being explored."βJane West cor. "Who prevented her from making a more pleasant party."βSame. "To prevent us from being tossed about by every wind of doctrine."βSame. "After the infirmities of age prevented him from bearing his part of official duty."βR. Adam cor. "To prevent splendid trifles from passing for matters of importance."βKames cor. "Which prevents him from exerting himself to any good purpose."βBeattie cor. "The nonobservance of this rule very frequently prevents us from being punctual in the performance of our duties."βTodd cor. "Nothing will prevent him from being a student, and possessing the means of study."βId. "Does the present accident hinder you from being honest and brave?"βCollier cor. "The e is omitted to prevent two Ees from coming together."βFowle cor. "A pronoun is used for, or in place of, a noun,βto prevent a repetition of the noun."βSanborn cor. "Diversity in the style relieves the ear, and prevents it from being tired with the frequent recurrence of the rhymes."βCampbell cor.; also Murray. "Timidity and false shame prevent us from opposing vicious customs."βMur. et al. cor. "To prevent them from being moved by such."βCampbell cor. "Some obstacle, or impediment, that prevents it from taking place."βPriestley cor. "Which prevents us from making a progress towards perfection."βSheridan cor. "This method of distinguishing words, must prevent any regular proportion of time from being settled."βId. "That nothing but affectation can prevent it from always taking place."βId. "This did not prevent John from being acknowledged and solemnly inaugurated Duke of Normandy." Or: "Notwithstanding this, John was acknowledged and solemnly inaugurated Duke of Normandy."βHenry, Webster, Sanborn, and Fowler cor.
UNDER NOTE X.βTHE LEADING WORD IN SENSE."This would make it impossible for a noun, or any other word, ever to be in the possessive case."βO. B. Peirce cor. "A great part of our pleasure arises from finding the plan or story well conducted."βDr. Blair cor. "And we have no reason to wonder that this was the case."βId. "She objected only, (as Cicero says,) to Oppianicus as having two sons by his present wife."βId. "The subjugation of the Britons by the Saxons, was a necessary consequence of their calling of these Saxons to their assistance."βId. "What he had there said concerning the Saxons, that they expelled the Britons, and changed the customs, the religion, and the language of the country, is a clear and a good reason why our present language is Saxon, rather than British."βId. "The only material difference between them, except that the one is short and the other more prolonged, is, that a metaphor is always explained by the words that are connected with it."βId. et Mur. cor. "The description of Death, advancing to meet Satan on his arrival."βRush cor. "Is not the bare fact, that God is the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?"βChalmers cor. "As in the case of one who is entering upon a new study."βBeattie cor. "The manner in which these affect the copula, is called the imperative mood."βWilkins cor. "We are freed from the trouble, because our nouns have scarcely any diversity of endings."βBuchanan cor. "The verb is rather indicative of the action as being doing, or done, than of the time of the event; but indeed the ideas are undistinguishable."βBooth cor. "Nobody would doubt that this is a sufficient proof."βCampbell cor. "Against the doctrine here maintained, that conscience as well as reason, is a natural faculty."βBeattie cor. "It is one cause why the Greek and English languages are much more easy to learn, than the Latin."βBucke cor. "I have not been able to make out a solitary instance in which such has been the fact."βLib. cor. "An angel, forming the appearance of a hand, and writing the king's condemnation on the wall, checked their mirth, and filled them with terror."βWood
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