An Essay on Punctuation: With Incidental Remarks on CompositionWhittaker and Company, 1842 - 96 pages |
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Page
... principal 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 ...
... principal 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 ...
Page 2
... principal 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 ...
... principal 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 ...
Page 27
... principal member and one or more subordinate members ; such subordinate members being used only for the purpose of illustrating the principal member . The main proposition of a sent- ence is contained in the principal member . To ...
... principal member and one or more subordinate members ; such subordinate members being used only for the purpose of illustrating the principal member . The main proposition of a sent- ence is contained in the principal member . To ...
Page 44
... principal proposition of a sentence , by one or by many illustrative clauses , may be a matter of taste ; but he cannot change their nature by pointing : the great use of pointing is to facilitate the reading of a composit- ion ...
... principal proposition of a sentence , by one or by many illustrative clauses , may be a matter of taste ; but he cannot change their nature by pointing : the great use of pointing is to facilitate the reading of a composit- ion ...
Page 47
... principal constructive parts , Rhetor- icians have considered under the following distinctions , as the most obvious and remarkable : the Period , Colon , Semicolon , and Comma . The Period is the whole Sentence , complete in itself ...
... principal constructive parts , Rhetor- icians have considered under the following distinctions , as the most obvious and remarkable : the Period , Colon , Semicolon , and Comma . The Period is the whole Sentence , complete in itself ...
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
Adjuncts ancient ARISTOPHANES of Byzantium Art of Pointing articulate sounds Asyndeton BANBURY Bishop Lowth Blair born Brutum Orator Cicero clause colon and semi-colon colon-point comma comma-point connected dash denote destroyed Corinth discourse distinguished divided division edition eest ence English composition express full-point give Grammarians Greek hearer HENRY HOME Hyperbaton illustrative Imperfect Phrase inconvenient length instances interjection interrogation James Burrow Julius Scaliger Lanfranc language letter Lindley Murray loose sentence Lowth Lucius Mummius Marc marked Matthæi members and fragments mind nouns opinion parathesis parenthesis parenthesis-points passage passion perfect periodi Persian Emperor Philosophy of Rhetoric placed Port Royal Latin preceding member principal constructive printed printer pronoun proposition quæ Quinctilian quotation reader recast Rhetoricians Royal Latin Grammar says Scriptures semi-colon-points sense Sentence or Member Simple Members simple period Simple Sentence Sir James Burrow Thou translation Verb vex'd virgil voice Vossius words writers Wynkyn de Worde
Popular passages
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Page 84 - In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. 2 And the earth was without form, and void ; and darkness was upon the face of the deep, And the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. 3 And God said, Let there be light ; and there was light.
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