An essay on punctuation |
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... proposition in the Essay , original or derivative . Besides , if any of the learned should honour my work with a consideration , the quotations and citat- ions may afford them some small help in forming an opinion on the subject , or if ...
... proposition in the Essay , original or derivative . Besides , if any of the learned should honour my work with a consideration , the quotations and citat- ions may afford them some small help in forming an opinion on the subject , or if ...
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... propositions that the parts of a composition are not formed by the points , SECTION I. 1 ib . ib . 2 The History of Pointing before the Invention of the Art of Printing , 3 Pointing unknown to the Grecian writers of the highest ...
... propositions that the parts of a composition are not formed by the points , SECTION I. 1 ib . ib . 2 The History of Pointing before the Invention of the Art of Printing , 3 Pointing unknown to the Grecian writers of the highest ...
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... propositions intended to be maintained , will be stated ; it is this , that the several parts of a com- position are not formed by the points , which commonly bear the names of periods , colons , semi - colons , commas , parentheses ...
... propositions intended to be maintained , will be stated ; it is this , that the several parts of a com- position are not formed by the points , which commonly bear the names of periods , colons , semi - colons , commas , parentheses ...
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... proposition was only partly finished , that another member , beginning with a pronoun or con- junction was necessary or about to be added , and from its position it was by the Latins termed media distinctio ; -if placed at the bottom of ...
... proposition was only partly finished , that another member , beginning with a pronoun or con- junction was necessary or about to be added , and from its position it was by the Latins termed media distinctio ; -if placed at the bottom of ...
Page 15
... proposition is apparently com- plete ; the mind is satisfied ; there is not one preceding word , which intimates that the period was not finished , and before it can be proceeded with , the mind has to take up the subject a second time ...
... proposition is apparently com- plete ; the mind is satisfied ; there is not one preceding word , which intimates that the period was not finished , and before it can be proceeded with , the mind has to take up the subject a second time ...
Other editions - View all
An Essay on Punctuation With Incidental Remarks on Composition (Classic Reprint) F. Francillon No preview available - 2017 |
An Essay on Punctuation With Incidental Remarks on Composition (Classic Reprint) F. Francillon No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
ancient Archbishop of Dublin ARISTOPHANES Of Byzantium Aristotle Art of Pointing BANBURY Belles Lettres Bishop Lowth Blair's Lectures Brutum Orator century Cicero clause Cobbett's colon and comma colon-point comma-point dash denote discourse distinguish divided edition ence ESSAY ON PUNCTUATION example express extract full-point gives Grammarians greater pause Greek Greek Language hearer idea Imperfect Phrase incisum interjection interpungendi interrogatif interrogation interrogative-point James Burrow language letter Lindley Murray loose sentence Lucius Mummius manuscripts Matthæi members and fragments mind note of admiration parathesis parenthesis parenthesis-points pars periodi passion perfect Persian Emperor perspicuity Philosophy and Belles Philosophy of Rhetoric Port Royal Latin poynt principal constructive printed printer pronouns proposition quæ Quinctilian quotation reader Rhetoricians Royal Latin Grammar ruminate secondary meanings semi-colon semi-colon-points sense Sentence or Member Simple Sentence sometimes thing thiswyse Thoughts upon Pointing Verb virgil Vossius says Vulgate Whateley words colon writers Wynkyn de Worde
Popular passages
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Page 17 - We came to our journey's end, at last, with no small difficulty, after much fatigue, through deep roads, and bad weather.
Page 73 - What good he will do to mankind I know not ; this comfort he may be sure of, he cannot do less than you have done before him. . I have sometimes thought, that if preachers, hangmen, and...
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Page 67 - Men of your large profession, that could speak To every cause, and things mere contraries, Till they were hoarse again, yet all be law ; That, with most quick agility, could turn, And return ; make knots, and undo them ; Give forked counsel ; take provoking gold On either hand, and put it up ; these men, He knew, would thrive with their humility.
Page 17 - At last, with no small difficulty, after much fatigue, through deep roads, and bad weather, we came to our journey's end.
Page 55 - sis, s. a sentence so included in another sentence, as that it may be taken out, without injuring the sense of that which encloses it ; commonly marked thus ( ). [plu.
Page 71 - ... feeble and precarious, is better than it has been these two years. She is much your servant, and as she has been her own physician with some success, imagines she could be yours with the same. Would to God you was within her reach ! She would, I believe, prescribe a great deal of the medicina animi, without having recourse to the Books of Trismegistus.