The Elements of English GrammarUniversity Press, 1897 - 288 Seiten |
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Seite 3
... sense , to signify the language spoken to - day in Berlin and taught at school to English boys and girls who are said to be ' learning German . ' This German which is spoken at the present day in Germany is itself one of the Teutonic ...
... sense , to signify the language spoken to - day in Berlin and taught at school to English boys and girls who are said to be ' learning German . ' This German which is spoken at the present day in Germany is itself one of the Teutonic ...
Seite 31
... sense of furnishing him with a pleasant or striking style , but it will help to make him a correct writer , and many of our masters of English style would have written better , if they had paid more attention to grammatical rules . If ...
... sense of furnishing him with a pleasant or striking style , but it will help to make him a correct writer , and many of our masters of English style would have written better , if they had paid more attention to grammatical rules . If ...
Seite 32
... sense of its providing him with the means of getting his living , is likely to be a dull fellow , uninteresting to himself and to his neighbours . Now to English - speaking people the English language ought to be an attractive subject ...
... sense of its providing him with the means of getting his living , is likely to be a dull fellow , uninteresting to himself and to his neighbours . Now to English - speaking people the English language ought to be an attractive subject ...
Seite 53
... person had never learnt these pictures , or having learnt them had forgotten their meaning , he would be at a loss to understand the sense of a passage in which they occurred . But when he has once learnt the meaning of the.
... person had never learnt these pictures , or having learnt them had forgotten their meaning , he would be at a loss to understand the sense of a passage in which they occurred . But when he has once learnt the meaning of the.
Seite 66
... ' Don't call me uncle . ' The sense indeed is plain , but such forms would be impossible in a synthetic or inflexional language like Latin . ( 1 . QUESTIONS . What parts of speech are the 66 ELEMENTS OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR .
... ' Don't call me uncle . ' The sense indeed is plain , but such forms would be impossible in a synthetic or inflexional language like Latin . ( 1 . QUESTIONS . What parts of speech are the 66 ELEMENTS OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR .
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action Adjuncts adverb alphabet antecedent applied apposition assertion auxiliary verbs Britons called CHAPTER complete Complex Sentence compound conjugation conjunction consonants construction dative denote derivation diphthongal distinction employed ending English Grammar English language English origin equivalent Etymology examples express feminine following sentences following words French gender genitive German Gerund Give Greek horse illustrate Imperative Mood Indefinite indicative Indirect Object infinitive mood inflexion Intransitive Keltic language Latin words letters limiting mark meaning modern English neuter Norman noun or pronoun noun-clause occur Old English Parse passive Past Participle Past Tense person phrase Pleonasm plural possessive Predicate preposition present principal clause pronunciation relation 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 Teutonic thou tive town transitive verb voice vowel vowel sounds Weak Verbs write written