The Elements of English GrammarUniversity Press, 1898 - 304 pages |
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Page 134
... mood , or a noun - clause . Thus we may say Error ( Noun ) It ( Pronoun ) To err ( Infinitive ) That one should err ( Noun - clause ) is human . When we make an assertion about a thing , we are said in grammatical language to predicate ...
... mood , or a noun - clause . Thus we may say Error ( Noun ) It ( Pronoun ) To err ( Infinitive ) That one should err ( Noun - clause ) is human . When we make an assertion about a thing , we are said in grammatical language to predicate ...
Page 137
... mood . To say ' He is , ' ' They can , ' ' We became , ' ' You will , ' ' She seems , ' is meaningless until we add some word to complete the sense . Thus we give significance to these incomplete assertions , if we say ' He is good ...
... mood . To say ' He is , ' ' They can , ' ' We became , ' ' You will , ' ' She seems , ' is meaningless until we add some word to complete the sense . Thus we give significance to these incomplete assertions , if we say ' He is good ...
Page 141
... Mood , Tense , Number , Person . As inflexions have almost entirely disappeared from English verbs , we have recourse to auxiliary verbs and pronouns to express these differences . Amaverimus , ama- bimur are inflexions of the Latin ...
... Mood , Tense , Number , Person . As inflexions have almost entirely disappeared from English verbs , we have recourse to auxiliary verbs and pronouns to express these differences . Amaverimus , ama- bimur are inflexions of the Latin ...
Page 144
... Mood . The Moods , or changes of form assumed by a verb to show the different ways in which the action is thought of , are four in number : ( i ) The Indicative Mood contains the forms used ( 1 ) to make statements of fact , ( 2 ) to ...
... Mood . The Moods , or changes of form assumed by a verb to show the different ways in which the action is thought of , are four in number : ( i ) The Indicative Mood contains the forms used ( 1 ) to make statements of fact , ( 2 ) to ...
Page 145
... Mood contains the form used to give commands . ( iii ) The Subjunctive Mood contains the forms used to represent actions or states conceived as possible or contingent , but not asserted as facts . ( iv ) The Infinitive Mood is the form ...
... Mood contains the form used to give commands . ( iii ) The Subjunctive Mood contains the forms used to represent actions or states conceived as possible or contingent , but not asserted as facts . ( iv ) The Infinitive Mood is the form ...
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Common terms and phrases
action adjective Adjuncts adverb alphabet antecedent application apposition auxiliary verb called CHAPTER complete Complex Sentence compound conjugation conjunction consonants construction dative denote derivation diphthongal distinction ellipsis employed ending English Grammar English language English origin English words Etymology examples express feminine following sentences following words French gender genitive German Gerund Give Greek horse illustrate Imperative Mood Indefinite indicative Indirect Object inflexion Intransitive Keltic Latin words letters limiting mark meaning modern English neuter Norman noun or pronoun noun-clause Old English Parse passive Past Participle Past Tense person phrase Pleonasm plural possessive predicate prefix preposition present principal clause pronunciation relative pronoun represented Roman sentence contains signifies Sing singular sometimes sonant speak speech stands Strong Verbs subjunctive mood subordinate clause suffix superlative surd syllable Syntax thing thou tive town transitive verb vocabulary vowel vowel sounds Weak Verbs write written