The Grammar of English Grammars - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Grammar of English Grammars Part 281 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
_Series_, of terms, proper use of the _articles_ in, --of words, how to be commaed.
_Set_ and _sit_, signif. and employment of.
_s.e.x_, to what persons ascribed; why a young child may be spoken of without distinc. of, --whether animals may be represented as of no, --inanimate objects fig. represented as having.
--_s.e.xes_, distinction of, by _words_, in diff. ways, --denoted by _terminat_. of words, --designated by _proper names_.
_Shall_, verb, how varied, --original signif. of, --explet. use of.
--_Shall_ and _will_, discriminative application of, in the fut. indic.
_Sheridan, T._, actor and orthoepist, his literary reputation; the worth of his writings.
_Side_, noun, peculiarities of usage in regard to.
_Silent_, or _mute_, when a letter is said to be.
_Silliness, literary_, Crit. N. concerning.
_Simile_, explained.
_Since_, improp. use of, for _ago_, --derivation of, from Anglo-Sax.
_Sit_ and _set_, use and signif. of.
_So_, as expressing the sense of a preced. word or phrase, --derivation of, from Sax.
--_So --as, as --so_, correspondents.
_Soever_ or _soe'er_, whether a word or only a part of an other word; how explained by WEBST.
_Solemn style_, as distinguished from the familiar, --should not be displaced from the paradigms in a grammar, --is not adapted to familiar discourse, --pres. and pret. terminations of, what, and how uttered, --examp. of, second pers. sing., negat., throughout the verb LOVE, conjugated.
_Some_, cla.s.sed, --vulg. used for _somewhat_, or _in some degree_, ("SOME _longer_,"
SANB.). _Somehow_ or _other, somewhere_ or _other_, what the construc. _Somewhere, nowhere, anywhere_, &c., their cla.s.s, and how should be written.
_Sort_, see _Kind_.
_Sound_, of a letter, commonly called its _power_, --_elementary_, of the voice, defined.
--_Sounds_, simp. or primary, numb. in Eng., --elementary, what meant by; are few in numb.; their _combinations_ may be innumerable.
--_Vowel_ sounds, or vocal elements, how produced, and where heard; what those in Eng., and how may be modified in the format. of syllables; do., how may be written, and how uttered.
--_Consonant sounds_, simp., in Eng., how many, and what; by what letters marked; in what words heard.
--_Sounds_, long and short, SIGNS used to denote them.
--_Sounds_, a knowledge of, how acquired, --importance of being early taught to p.r.o.nounce those of one's native lang.
--Pa.s.sage exemplifying _all the letters_, and _all the_ SOUNDS, in Eng.
--_Sounds of the Letters_, treated.
_Speak, to speak_, what is meant by.
_Speaker_, why often speaks of himself in the third pers., --represents himself and others by _we_, --in Eng., should mention himself last.
--The _elegant speaker_, by what distinguished.
_Species_ and _figure_ of words, what so called, --unsettled usage of the lang. with regard to what relates to the latter. _Species_ and _genus_ of things, how admits limitation by the article.
SPELLING, defined.
--_Spelling_, how to be acquired, --cause of the difficulty of its acquisition, --Rules for, --_usage_, as a law of, --uniformity and consistency in, how only can be attained.
--The _right spelling_ of a word, what, PHILOLOG. Mus.
--_Oral spelling_, how should be conducted.
--Charac. of BROWN'S rules for _spelling_.
_Spondee_, defined.
_St_, unsyllab. suffix, whether, wherever found, is a modem contrac. of the syllable _est_.
_Standards_ of English _orthog._, the books proposed as such, abound in errors and inconsistencies.
--Whether we have a system of Eng. ORTHOEPY worthy to be accounted a STANDARD.
_Stanza_, defined.
--_Stanzas_, uniformity of, in the same poem, --varieties of, --_Elegiac stanza_, described.
--_Stanzas, lyric_, examples of, --"A GOOD NAME," ("two beautiful little _stanzas_," BROWN).
_Star_, or _asterisk_, use of.
--_Three stars_, or _asterism_,
_Stenotone_, or _breve_, for what used.
_Stops_, in printing or writing, see _Points_.
_Strength_, as a quality of style, in what consists, --essentials of, --Precepts aiming at offences against.
_Strew_, whether, or not, an other mode of spelling _strow_; whether to be distinguished in utterance from do.; whether reg. or irreg.
STYLE, qualities of, treated.
--_Style_, as connected with synt., what, --differs from mere words and mere grammar; not regulated entirely by rules of construc., --what relation has to the author himself, and what shows, --general characters of, by what epithets designated.
--What must be remembered by the learner, in forming his _style_; a good _style_ how acquired.
--_Style, solemn, familiar_, &c., as used in gram., what meant by.
--(See _Solemn Style_.)
_Subaudition_, meaning of the term. _Subdisjunctive_ particle, of the Latins, expressed in Eng. by _or_ of alternat.
_Subject_ of a finite verb, what, and how may be known, --must be the NOM. CASE, --what besides a noun or p.r.o.noun may be.
--_Subject phrases_, joint, what agreements require.
--_Subject_ and _predicate_, in a.n.a.lysis. See also _Nominative Case_.
_Subjunctive mood_, defined.
--_Subj. mood_, why so called; what denotes, --differing views of grammarians in regard to the numb. and form of its tenses.
--The true _subj. mood_ rejected by some late grammarians; strictures on WELLS.
--WELD'S erroneous teaching respecting the _subj._, noticed, --CHAND. do., do.
--Chief characteristical diff. between the indic. and the _subj. mood_.
--_Subj. mood_ described, --its two tenses do., and their forms shown, in the verb LOVE, conjugated, --whether ever put after a rel. p.r.o.noun, --proper limits of, --how properly employed.
--_False subj_.
--_Subj. mood_, not necessarily governed by _if, lest_, &c.