The Grammar of English Grammars Part 214
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UNDER RULE IV.--OF TWO TERMS CONNECTED.
"Hope and fear are essentials in religion." "Praise and adoration are perfective of our souls." "We know bodies and their properties most perfectly." "Satisfy yourselves with what is rational and attainable."
"Slowly and sadly we laid him down."
EXC. I.--"G.o.d will rather look to the inward motions of the mind than to the outward form of the body." "Gentleness is una.s.suming in opinion and temperate in zeal."
EXC. II.--"He has experienced prosperity and adversity." "All sin essentially is and must be mortal." "Reprove vice but pity the offender."
EXC. III.--"One person is chosen chairman or moderator." "Duration or time is measured by motion." "The governor or viceroy is chosen annually."
EXC. IV.--"Reflection reason still the ties improve." "His neat plain parlour wants our modern style." "We are fearfully wonderfully made."
UNDER RULE V.--OF WORDS IN PAIRS.
"I inquired and rejected consulted and deliberated." "Seed-time and harvest cold and heat summer and winter day and night shall not cease."
EXERCISE II.--PUNCTUATION.
_Copy the following sentences, and insert the_ COMMA _where it is requisite_.
EXAMPLES UNDER RULE VI.--OF WORDS PUT ABSOLUTE.
"The night being dark they did not proceed." "There being no other coach we had no alternative." "Remember my son that human life is the journey of a day." "All circ.u.mstances considered it seems right." "He that overcometh to him will I give power." "Your land strangers devour it in your presence."
"Ah sinful nation a people laden with iniquity!"
"With heads declin'd ye cedars homage pay; Be smooth ye rocks ye rapid floods give way!"
UNDER RULE VII.--OF WORDS IN APPOSITION.
"Now Philomel sweet songstress charms the night." "'Tis chanticleer the shepherd's clock announcing day." "The evening star love's harbinger appears." "The queen of night fair Dian smiles serene." "There is yet one man Micaiah the son of Imlah." "Our whole company man by man ventured down." "As a work of wit the Dunciad has few equals."
"In the same temple the resounding wood All vocal beings hymned their equal G.o.d."
EXC. I.--"The last king of Rome was Tarquinius Superbus." "Bossuet highly eulogizes Maria Theresa of Austria." "No emperor has been more praised than Marcus Aurelius, Antoninus."
EXC. II.--"For he went and dwelt by the brook Cherith." "Remember the example of the patriarch Joseph." "The poet, Milton, excelled in prose as well as in verse."
EXC. III.--"I wisdom dwell with prudence." "Ye fools be ye of an understanding heart." "I tell you that which you yourselves do know."
EXC. IV.--"I crown thee king of intimate delights" "I count the world a stranger for thy sake." "And this makes friends such miracles below." "G.o.d has p.r.o.nounced it death to taste that tree." "Grace makes the slave a freeman."
UNDER RULE VIII.--OF ADJECTIVES.
"Deaf with the noise I took my hasty flight." "Him piteous of his youth soft disengage." "I played a while obedient to the fair." "Love free as air spreads his light wings and flies." "Physical science separate from morals parts with its chief dignity."
"Then active still and unconfined his mind Explores the vast extent of ages past."
"But there is yet a liberty unsung By poets and by senators unpraised."
EXC.--"I will marry a wife beautiful as the Houries." "He was a man able to speak upon doubtful questions." "These are the persons, anxious for the change." "Are they men worthy of confidence and support?" "A man, charitable beyond his means, is scarcely honest."
UNDER RULE IX.--OF FINITE VERBS.
"Poverty wants some things--avarice all things." "Honesty has one face--flattery two." "One king is too soft and easy--an other too fiery."
"Mankind's esteem they court--and he his own: Theirs the wild chase of false felicities; His the compos'd possession of the true."
EXERCISE III.--PUNCTUATION.
_Copy the following sentences, and insert the COMMA where it is requisite._
EXAMPLES UNDER RULE X.--OF INFINITIVES.
"My desire is to live in peace." "The great difficulty was to compel them to pay their debts." "To strengthen our virtue G.o.d bids us trust in him."
"I made no bargain with you to live always drudging." "To sum up all her tongue confessed the shrew." "To proceed my own adventure was still more laughable."
"We come not with design of wasteful prey To drive the country force the swains away."
UNDER RULE XI.--OF PARTICIPLES.
"Having given this answer he departed." "Some sunk to beasts find pleasure end in pain." "Eased of her load subjection grows more light." "Death still draws nearer never seeming near." "He lies full low gored with wounds and weltering in his blood." "Kind is fell Lucifer compared to thee." "Man considered in himself is helpless and wretched." "Like scattered down by howling Eurus blown." "He with wide nostrils snorting skims the wave."
"Youth is properly speaking introductory to manhood."
EXC.--"He kept his eye fixed on the country before him." "They have their part a.s.signed them to act." "Years will not repair the injuries done by him."
UNDER RULE XII.--OF ADVERBS.
"Yes we both were philosophers." "However Providence saw fit to cross our design." "Besides I know that the eye of the public is upon me." "The fact certainly is much otherwise." "For nothing surely can be more inconsistent."
UNDER RULE XIII.--OF CONJUNCTIONS.
"For in such retirement the soul is strengthened." "It engages our desires; and in some degree satisfies them also." "But of every Christian virtue piety is an essential part." "The English verb is variable--_as love lovest loves_."
UNDER RULE XIV.--OF PREPOSITIONS.
The Grammar of English Grammars Part 214
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The Grammar of English Grammars Part 214 summary
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