Document 6493564
Transcription
Document 6493564
MISTAKES ENGLISH, WRITING FOR THE TJS" OF TEACH, WHO ALL THE THEM. AVOID TO HOW AND WRITE, LAKOUAGR BY T. MARSHALL AUTHOR OP BIGELOW, "punctuation, AND OTHBB MATTERS." TTPOOKAPHICAL THIRD EDITION. BOSTON: LEE AND SHEPARD, NEW CHARLES PUBLISHERS. YORK: T. DILLINGHAM. 1891. OR SPEAK Copyright, Bt Marshall T. Uniyebsitt John Wilson 1886, Bioelow. Pbbss: and Son, Cambbidoe. PREFACE. A Blackwood in WRITER this of author celebrated reference in truth While does it own, all great be must brilliant, should that be might It be may work written, from within on to say that recent admitted aggerated ex- an the near of mar gram- elegant English, of peculiarities have that excused rules the of constitute writers be it is very following necessarily not while and slavish mere two present time. the to been have may nevertheless statement, one ety flagrant impropri- some This grammar." the in is not written has who day without consecutively pages there Wordsworth, of exception the that, *'with said once writer, however no for their grammatical errors avoided. sufficient a subject a that of years, the most which for reason on which so object of works seem publishing it is which to has much been ent entirely differhave have other an- been appeared written iv , PREFACE, mainly for hoped teacher that this work the be vulgarismswhich education errors is as A they purpose. the grammar, in shown It must the many be cases any may on claim to avoid,but such to be common to ungrammaticalsentences the works Others whenever in borne were in ; and may should in rected cor- which have been they served mind, that,in sentences,the main error the sentence wasted and proof-reading, erroneous the brief so attention. particular source any to show clearly with published. were the correction of and in is of ular partic- any been and their writers before from appropriated my of observed occurred rangement, orderlyar- best writers has know experiencehas large number by an to pointstreated one every have received given were all the space supposed to my all authors ia No easilyacquired. mere the the use arrangedthat so knowledge of full possible of readilybe found, and subjectmay a which to errors liable. It is Englishare that be may by pointingout, in scholar, or flaw pickingevery criticised. in the author It is of the purpose object merelycorrecting often be left inelegant, undoubtedlybe entirely reconstructed. In the Italicsare examples cited,all either the words printedin or tautological, ungrammatical, super- PREFACE. fluous. the The words placeof the added Where author's the best writers to relating and of that grammaticalerrors are Shakespeare but as lead the Bible with any idea to show that in pointedout not are to follow archaic in plural, expect more the precisely of Sentences" than matter is there to which it of itself requirea volume. given rules are which I have this simplifies I have doubt no line of true rules on to "Construction entitled, though a thoroughtreatment so Appendix given some authors those even languageof but corrected, one subjectwould in the remarks not be that is as change which which that showing authorities in matters in the chapter entitled short In the of the erroneous " it is relates, of the of an " Englishwe might given; given for infallible,no" standard sarily neces- grammar. writingmodem The not are correct. for the purpose are they ought to forms. is name considered are The the sentence take to are precedingItalic words, or sentence,it is done who inserted in brackets to make an V some ought to to as for the formation ventured matter will be very propose a much, and generally approved, reform. spelling I have also with compound words,together matters typographical be to acquainted. with which vi PREFACR Grammars the Besides Professors and Whitney Goold Murray, of others, and Tweed, Brown, I have ^ made frequent of Rhetoric," its Faults use and Richard Mr. their works I am Prof. Prof. A. its Graces," Grant "Words, of White, and Use greatly P. A. S. October publications various and Professor and Abuse," 5, 1886. T. of Mathews's to all indebted. M. Cambridge, "Conversation, Peabody's the "Principles Hill's BIGELOW. these CONTENTS. CHATTIB PAOI Use I. The II. of Abticlb ths 9 " Nominative Case akd the Verb 13 . . III. The Possessite Case 21 IV. The Objective Case 24 Antecedent 25 y. VI. VII: VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. ' " Pronoun The Subjunctive The Infinitive Tense, Shall Lie Use Adverbs XIV. Relative XVI. Double Correlatives 31 34 Will, the Adjectives 30 Mood Lay. and Op Mood Time or and XIII. XV^ and " Should Set and and Would . .36 . Sit 42 .... Participle and Adjective 45 Pronouns 48 . . 55 Pronouns Negatives 60 64 '66 CONTENTS. VIU PAGI CHAPTER XVII. XYIII. CONJtTNCTIONS 69 Prepositions 72 Construction XIX. of 76 Sentences ..... XX. Tautological 78 W(irds Superfluous and " . XXI. Miscellaneous Words and .81 Phrases " . APPENDIX. I. n. III. Formation Compound Some of Words Ttpographical the 89 Plural 93 ....."" .100 Matters . INDEX . . " 1""7 MISTAKES WRITING IN ENGLISH. I. CHAPTER OF USES " A 1. used a fleet,"etc. ^ 2. consonant, or beginning with "a woman," a honest." or a beginning with an, before a all words silent h; as, "a man," "a sound beginning with is a " an of y, and one begins with they therefore require a, and erroneously used before these There used, however, youth," "a European," "a unit," one," "a harpoon," "a harangue," "a hypocritical "an Indian," "an angel," "an hour," "an The words unit, European, reallybegin with the consonant before sound; true vowel a " all words consonant a be can be cannot dred,'* huna army," also with a pluralsignification " a man," a gem," many ; and before is used article,and ; as, " "many often It phrases like many a flower,"etc. in of w; indefinite of multitude noun " ARTICLE. plural noun. a a "such ia the an with before " ov THE an similar as and an, which other is words combinations. exception to consonant not the sound to the words rule for the use "beginningwith of a h, of 10 IN MISTAKES which have either a primary syllables, in which secondaryaccent on the second syllable, is used; as, "an "an historian," an rapher," historiog"an "an harpooner," hypothesis."^ a case " 3. noun, definite articlethe may be used before any whether singular or plural, except abstract terms, The sciences. or vices, virtues, of names or ENGLISH. than two more or WRITING of the articlewhere omission The " 4. used is very it should be ; as, common and [the] literalmeaning of words should metaphorical distinguished." from both the Greek and [the] **But the French pilfered **The be Latin." A red and [a]blue star may producephotographic images equalintensity." **The president and [the] secretarywere elected." "The indebtedness of the Englishto the French,[the] Latin, '* of is disclosed in almost every sentence." uttered by the artist, the mechanic,and terms are Greek [the] and "These [the]husbandman." " languagehave three cases English and [the] objective." possessive, [the] in the Nouns *The " one means secretary' person *the treasurer and the secretwo tary' offices; two officers. *A black and white dog' animal ; a black and a white parti-colored black and one white. two dogs,one The means means dog 1 and treasurer holds who * one ' * means Worcester's rule for the use of an before h is as^Webster's; and each of them violates his says that an are accented Worcester rule. own beginningwith the second syllable; Webster,that it should on banning but the first. Yet to according as well defective, should be used before all words before all words and native, ; the nomi- both Worcester with h which are accented " be used syllable poon," hotel," a haron any write,very properly, a which even gives **a hxirpooner" either rule. h which " is wrong USES ' honest and and two the 11 ARTICLE. THE OF those who are both honest are intelligent 'the honest and the intelligent' are intelligent; classes : one, composed of those who are honest ; The following other,of those who are intelligent. is therefore defective sentence that the [the]synod maintained impliednot shows context unity in the any that council tha : * The council and unity of the person consciousness.' The was one body, the synod another."^ is followed " 5. Wlienever the present participle immediatelyby o/, it should be preceded by the definite article; as, '*It is [the] drawingof or " conclusion which a was before known un- dark." Prompted by he persisted in [the] vanity, writing extreme of bad verses." ** " [the]framingof his sentences he was very exact." From of names he proceeded to blows." [the] calling In if the articleand But sentences Articles " 6. in the " will be the equallycorrect. also often inserted are following examples: That is the kind of ** What sort of ** What of species a of are both omitted,these a charm " of whom man as erroneously, do we theypossess ? is this? reptile are speaking." " " a has been given oi^nization have active minds." Ayres,Verbalist, p. 192. generally of a gentleman." He is entitled to the appellation the Mufti is the head of the ministers of law The one styled and religion." than a linguist" He was a better mathematician " Men to whom this kind of an " " " ** The article should not case and 1 the noun be used between which of Hill's Principles it governs; Rhetoric, p. 104. the possessive as, 12 MISTAKES **Prescott*s * Peru.' of IN Th6 *A Chance "Cushing's *A Year This* is Mexico/ and his the book." * The quest Con- in equivalent should Spain.' " "his saying to all are omitted be " Acquaintance.' foregoing examples articles of Conquest ENGLISH. " Howells's *' WRITING and wrong, all the in the The Italicized examples in this section. " 7. The used improperly [the] eagle is **An ** A and definite indefinite together the : of the emblem article are times some- as, United of [a] combination is the diphthong the States." two vowels in one syllable." " Where 8. the noun, article noun is noun is made adjectives qualify more precede must the in put or plural; and the "The nominative and objective is to noun **In a verb plural be lines, the twelfth, "The Christians ; so do ninth, eleventh, and fourteenth Old and the generally to the first if the sases." used in either after each the'firat,the usually rhyme if the adjective only same objective case." be must understood sonnet, the as, nominative a each singular, but "The But line two the and fourth, the adjective ; fifth,and second, third, sixth, thirteenth case, lines, and as the as, the and the eighth seventh tenth, lines." New be Testament inspired.' are both believed by NOMINATIVE THE CASE AND NOMINATIVE The " 9. 13 VERB. II. CHAPTER THE THE CASE AND which THE VERB. is the of a subject sentence, or the nominative,alwaysgoverns the verb, and person. both in number violations Very common of this rule in conversation are the use of You 2^a"," He donX' for for You were,"and of He does n't." The rule is often carelessly violated in writing, although or noun pronoun " " " in it is difficult to cases many The nominative. usage " determine the actual are following examplesof incorrect : " steamer, with the "The crew and were passengers, [was] lost." when [signify] good opinions, signifies "What is bad ? " In practice " pietyand the happiness of man." virtue consist [consists] conformityof opinionsand qualities prepare "A us our [prepares] for friendship." away." Day after day pass [passes] how with the Governor, decide [decides] **Tlie Legislature, " expended." what the show [shows] "The whole scope of these provisions was." objectof the Legislature and conflagrations ploy emNothing less than murders,rapine, their thoughts." [employs] economist after another have [has] "One against protested the State taxes shall he " some other of the articlesof the old Ricardian creed." " pieces masterThe second book of the ^neid is one of the greatest executed by any hand." that ever was [were] been written of the best that has [have] "This letter is one one or about Lord Byron." H MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. " "To these rules and ** who The a copiousselection of [is]subjoiued preceptsare maxims." of Addison in matters authority made of grammar, of Bentley, his study,of Bolingbroke, the English grammar The English others,are [is]nothing." Harrison, never Pope, and " Langiiage, "The conduct and the of Administration of the Commissioners towards Boston,were at the nies, Colo- [was]wamily attacked." "The conduct of the Administration Better,perhaps, towai*ds the Colonies,as well as that of the Commissioners at Boston, was warmly attacked." nies, Or, "The conduct of the Administration towards the Coloand that of the Commissioners at Boston, were warmly attacked." "That the moment recedes and Con'ect fallsinto as standards and " 10. world,and its falsestandards and prizes, its place." follows: "That recedes prizes, Two or more moment the world,with its false^ and fallsinto its place." or nouns number, in the nominative whether connected by and clauses, in the singular pronouns case, or or two more or without any necting con- verb. As, a plural require particle, to changeare doomed." "Art, empire,earth itself, one answer Reason,virtue, greataim." conspireto recommend "Virtue, honor, even self-interest, " the measure." " and private consideration, Patriotism, morality, every public demand The our submission to lawful following examplesare and "Tranquillity "By whose power " " government." For woman's Man, woman therefore erroneous : " there." peace dvoells [dwell] distributed." all good and evil is [are] quantity." Hamlet, [hold] ing, feeland lifeis action, life, [crave] fear and love holds too,craves " variety." purpose and the onlydirect effect of the evidence is to show that the witness is not to be believed." [are] " The "The letterand the of spirit the statute is defeated." [are] When " 11. or AND THE nominatives more the subject, verb 15 VERB. stand for the be in governedmust singular; as, the of leamiDg,this scholar, and antiquary, critic, prodigy and civility." destitute of breeding entirely and jioetwas banished from his country." "The philosopher Such a Saviour and Redeemer is actually providedfor us." Whose icycurrent and compulsivecourse Ne'er feelsretiring ebb, but keepsdue on." recorded in the regis**The said deed and conveyance is now try '* was two or person same CASE NOMINATIVE THE This - ** " of deeds,and at the time said deed and conveyance was corded," re- etc. ** ** for its own Truth,and truth only,is worth seeking In this mutual wisdom, which we influence there is a wisdom,a sake." " wonderful fathom." cannot self-command,this exertion of reason in the midst of both to please and to persuade." has a wonderful effect, passion, is evident in everything." "A purpose, a design, an intention, ** You create a fastidiousness, a which cravingfor the ideal, "This of the compelsmany in wanderera of rank and sons fortune to become Where whether nominatives, by a7id or unconnected,are qualified by each,no, or not, the verb must be singular ; as, " 12. weary lands." foreign ** Every man, " Each " No two or more and child knows woman, nected con- every, this to be so." and ofScer receives his allottedshare." soldier, seaman, no ruggedflint, chalk,no grim sandstone, glaring outface it." [outfaces] " Not a bird and not a beast,not a tree and not a shrub,was to be seen," nominatives are " 13. WTiere two or more singular separated by or, nor, as well as, or other disjunctive, "bein the singular; the verb must as, "The of Newton, Principia the place, M^caniqueCeleste of Lawere [was]not the outcome of any thoughtwhatever. Not a weed nor a blade of grass loere [was]to be seen. Prescott as well as Ticknor make [makes] this statement. or " " ** f* 16 MISTAKES WRITING IN ENGLISH. ^wd [finds]." listening ear, an object Neither character nor dialogue were [was]yet understood." No monstrous or length or breadth, height, appear [appears]. the i n other of them are [is] the wrong." Either one or Nor ** ** eye, nor " * * ** " 14. But where either of two or more nominatives in the foregoing as section, separated by a disjunctive, the verb should also be plural. The followis plural, ing sentences "Neither "It incorrect : are riches a man*s [affect] poverty affects ness." happi- that or culture, exceptional beauty,or gifts, his is not nor " him this distinction." gives[give] the shai*e or death of any such children, shares of such deceased children is [are]to be divided among In ** his or case of the her brothers and sistei-s." fawn upon every one whose faultsor negligence inter' retards their lessons." (Changefaultsto fault, and the "They rupts or is correct.) sentence example or "An two is sufficientto [are] illustratethe general observation." "The entire or the earthquakes, " 15. many 1 A hand word persons undisturbed exceptwhere erosion, of man, lias [have]mutilated it."^ remains mass or in the singularnumber indicating or things,called a collective noun grammarians say, that,in pluralnominative are separatedby Some cases a where a singularand the verb disjunctive, a must the servants agree with the nominative nearest to it; as, "Neither is the master "Neither the writings the author nor nor respected;" is in existence." Goold is the Brown says, farther," word, and the principal But where the remoter nominative expressedparenthetically, only by implication with the latter," and cites the following examples: "One example ten says nothingagainstit" (LeighHunt) ; "A or or parenthesis, consists of two angularstrokes, or or brackets, one hooks,enclosing words." I think,however, that all such sentences are un'^ore the verb nearer is with the former,and agrees literally immatical. ^ 18 IN MISTAKES the to or follows ** ** : WRITING proximityof immediate more ENGLISH. the verb, as " wages of sin is death." Whatever we have,and whatever The barbarism,is a be moderate "To of matter in are, above the level of we growth." views,and our to in temperately proceed the best way to insure success." pursuitof them, are [is] To do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God, of universal obligation." is a duty [areduties] is but one offence." An offerto selland actually selling the cross to the presenthalls is [are] *'The only objection of the wall cases." which fallupon some lights the ** '* and dwelling-house "This the land under it is the property soughtto be divided." ** and pleurisy His illness was A " 17. followed sum by a rheumatism." of money, in the verb ; as, singular plural form,is usually "Twenty dollars was subscribed by him." Fiftythousand pounds was lost in this speculation." ''Three hundred thousand dollars is to constitute the capital " of the company." title of The followed by a in the pluralnumber verb. singular Holmes's "Dr. book a 'American should be As, Annals' was bridge, Cam- at published in 1805." Jameson's 'Memoirs of the EarlyItalian Painters* comprisesupwardsof thirtybiographies." " 18. Several words in Englishwhich are pluralin "Mrs. form are used in the verb. Such number, and singular the with of sciences a gular sin- endingin mathematics, ics^as ethics^ hydraulics, optics, etc.;also instrument or objectby which to an as news, means attain an end or purpose, and pains in the sense of toilsome effort or are severe I See names labor.^ infra,page 49. NOMINATIVE THE word The whereabouts used in newspapers whereabouts "The CASE as with a AND pluralverb a of the child theysought him Luke " ** 44, u. "As the terms our for the pluralthan folks. As, than and safe at company cherubim cherubims ance." acquaint- their home, telling acquaintance." and seraphimare plurals, the as seraphims, expressing are plural, quiteimproper."^ The pluraleffluvia is often used "a disagreeable ejluvia.'* Mussulmen to him." their kinsfolk and among to relativesand the words ; as, ' Behold two thirds of strangeadventures erroneously [was]unknown were 19 VERB. is often noun is a better form Acquaintance acquaintances ; and folk is better ''And THE as if singular; as, is often used for the proper pluralMus- sulmans,^ The titles Mr., Mrs.,and Miss in the pluralare spectively re- sieurs Messieurs,Mesdames, and Misses ; as. MesBarrett and Thompson, Eothschild,Mesdames Misses The Smith. pluralafter a title. " 19. A very common number is to .025 should surname error never be made in writinga decimal it; as, .0048 grains, pluralafter yards. This is wrong, use the as miles,.38 any decimal it number, no matter of how many or how few figures is less than the whole number fore consists, one, and therecannot be plural. The above expressions mean 48 ten-thousandths of a grain; 25 thousandths of a mile ; 38 hundredths of a yard; and consequently the singularnumber should be used in all three cases, grain,mile, yard. " 1 Dr. 3 For the formation of the Campbell'sPhilosophyof Rhetoric. see Appendix L plural, 20 MISTAKES " The 20. correct words words The iu indicates and things, of WRITING ** the to Not a only, be can of use of one or their each as which done the of of food before now iu of two happen. can alternative are signification. true mouthful dilemma in position a two aud singular number, the following examples contrary ENGLISH. alternative be must use these IN us [was] were the left,and was twelve-mile a native] [alter- alternatives paddle or no supper." ** Unless the reference statement, **An we which argument the to chooses." only ceding pre- two or which- against him, Webster's " with antagonist an the alternative." other conclusive equally with inconsistent as presents is he alternative ever driven are alternatives^ but more is credited ' under Dictionary, Dilemma. Gladstone's *'Mr. to for coercion that prove coercion, and it to give Times, The clear that Ireland local control June 14, seen, The " either showing following example *' A To strong act a her Crown colony. . . . alternative, namely, is another true shows infamy of horn the dilemma with Ireland of than other fourth, by admitting a as rule home to affairs." local London " (cable despatch). 1886 expression policy suggested there made be It must govern single argument a alteniative one gave Morley to offer not only alternative is the John Mr. possible was does Chamberlain Mr. Ireland. that manifesto in or a the dilemma significationof the correct desperate quit the usage " the ; case. place." " is frequently Swift. " word. THE POSSESSIVE III. CHAPTER THE All " 21. nouns ", pluralendingwith case by the possessive the letter s; CASE. singularnumber, in the form the any and all other letter than addition of the apostrophe dren's, chilman's, men's,child's, duchess's. Felix's, witness's, Charles's, Hastings's, the singular ends in ", sh,ch soft, noun ce, se, or x, and When POSSESSIVE in the nouns 21 CASE. as, addition of the and s makes apostrophe possessive another syllable Mackintosh's, ; as, James's,countess's, fox's. It is therefore just church's, horse's, justice's, to omit the plural as proper es in Charleses, countesses, or churches, as to omit the '" in the jttstices, boxes, horses, posses^vecases above given,or in any proper name ending either with s or any other of the letters or digraphsmentioned. The only exceptions to this rule are that in poetry the the additional and that s may be elided for the sake of the meter few ; like for righteousness' sake," phrases, " "for conscience' sake," for goodness' sake," "for Jehave become from longusage established as ^^^fius^-eake," idioms. The followingexamples are consequently and require the addition of s after the erroneous, apostrophe. "Moses' a " minister." "Phinehas'wife." "Festus "These came answers into Felix' room." were made to the witness' questions." 22 IN MISTAKES A " WRITING ENGLISH. attended the countess* largecompany party." administratrix' sale." "The Poems." ** Burns' ** Mr. James' novel of All " 22. PhilipAugustus." " ending in s form the possessive the addition simplyof an apostrophe after by horses*, Jameses',countesses', foxes', as, boys*, plural nouns the 8; churches'. " 23* .Personal pronouns take the apostrophe, but are in the never case possessive written kera, its^ ours, yours, theirs. The indefinite pronouns 07ie and other, however, form the possessive in the same ; as, way with nouns One is apt to lose one's self." ** ** littlehands Your were made never To tear each other's eyes." ''Shine with such lustre as the tear that flows Virtue's Down " 24. Where connected are case one was Men, my in the by and, and refer to ''Henryand James's But possessive the annexed same to the or father, mother, and uncle's advice.** and children's shoes for sale here." women, Farmers "The and Mechanics' Bank." William's teacher is a of man than leaniiiig more Andrew's." where a word disjunctive be annexed signmust * ' nouns and Eliza'sbooks." "This " more or is sign of the possessive only; as, "John " for others' woes." the noun, last two manly cheek They are John's or or to each word words are used,the ; as, Eliza'shooks." the She had thiephysician's, as well surgeon's, as the ecary's apoth- assistance." "They relieve neither the "Without any will." guardian's boy'sTior impedimentbut his the distress." girl's or own, his parents', his THE "Where two POSSESSIVE in are nouns or apposition, the possessive title, signis annexed David "For "Give John me It is the ** "The my constitute a to the last ; as, servant's sake." the Queen of Mayor 23 CASE. head." Baptist's England'sprerogative.'" of Boston's address." " 25. In some signification cases, having a peculiar the possessive case signmay be used after the objective and the possessive of; as, discoveryof Dr. Franklin's." This picture of my friend's." "A subjectof the emperor's." It " a was " Grant's." fiiend of General "A Meaning, " It "This of Dr. one was Franklin's discoveries." picturebelongingto my " One of the " One of General Grant's friends." ~ The " 26. like the cases mckcs seven " emperor'ssubjects." is signof the possessive : following They focus was of words vMihes seven in aperture and thirty- procured." arrived weary and after a twenty 'milts walk." fatigued apostropheshould expressionvaried so as in the objective case. Either the the often omitted " lens photographic *'A or friend." be used to put in these cases, the Italicized " 27. Anybody else^sis often seen in print; it should be "anybody'selse." We might as well say, "any bird else's nest,""any boy else's hat," etc. For the incorrect case, The shown use see use of the article before the ante, pages of the 11, 12. before possessive infra,pages 45, 46. sessive pos" the is participle 24 MISTAKES IN ENGLISH. WRITING IV. CHAPTER Errors in the " 28. made which cannot and cases objective E.g.: CASE. OBJECTIVE THE case occur of the often are pronoun in the noun, the nominative in pronouns havingdifferent forms. " "Through spoke,or whom those two, ensuingdialogue, the [who]was looked addressed, no matter who at each other." " Dickens. "Let the sea they[them]that ** whom " it was For " thereof;the world,and Psalm xcviii.7. you and / [me], joysthat riches ne'er could buy." joys for " not the work was the fulness dwell therein." This lifehas And "It roar, and of so eminent an author as Bums. him [he]to imputed." the benefit of those whom [who]he thoughtwere his friends." " Who [whom] should I see old friend ! but my Nature,partial Nature,I arraign."Burns. [Thee], Between you and /[me]." "^^'*' He can read better than me [I]."ceuvi. It was him [he]." Whom [who]do you think I am ? W?u) [whom] do you take me for ? I saw a ladywhom I supposedto be she [lier]." It might have been him [he]who did it." Let ?ie [him]who made thee answer that." Byron. Let they[them]who raise the spell beware the fiend." **Thou " " " " " " ** " " " " " " " , It must same mood be remembered that the neuter verb has the it,and that the imperative the objective after it. case requires case after as before 26 MISTAKES mistress: you have know would IN WRITING told the of us something of ENGMSH. the but latter, former. Who we is thy miasterr"^ " 31. Where the antecedent in the nouns and ** number, singular not,the pronoun or Did consists of two must whether be in the or more connected by plural.As, Proteus,Merlin,any witch, ever Transform themselves " as the rich ? strangely heaven itself, now Faith,justice, quittheir hold." **Both minister and magistrate are compelledto choose be^ tween his [their] duty and his [their] reputation." Such unconunon and goodnesswas [were] in iJts generosity nature liable to misconstruction, and we accordingly find [their] U has [they have]been misconstrued." so ** '* But where antecedent the two refer to be must pronoun "This or the more the constituting the or subject, nouns same person singular.As, and great philosopher statesman continued in public lifetillhis eightieth year." said deed and conveyance of deeds,and at the time it was "The is now recorded in the try regis- etc. recorded," of two one or consisting " 32. A pluralantecedent, or more by each^every^ noy or not^ nouns, if qualified in the singular. a requires pronoun Each " which " of them, in theywere their [his]turn, received the reward to [hewas]entitled." Every plantand every tree othera produces after their [its] kind." "Both and of "No their sisters were course uncomfortable;each felt for the other, [herself]." employee,and no citizen for (AewweZfe* policeman,no dared to lift hand." [his] and not a camp-follower not a soldier, caped esofficer, health." permanent injuryto their [his] "Not an 1 Bain^s CompositionGrammar. PRONOUN Where " 33. AND antecedent consists of two an by or, separated the pronoun disjunctive, vxiVy nouns When *' press you Venice "Neither a as must or more well as, or any other be singular.As, watch,or pulla clock,they answer questionwith answers]your 27 ANTECEDENT. Genoa nor [it precision." retain the [retains] rank they[it] held." once "There is evidence that either Charles I. while [his] [his]subjects." deemed their it worth When " no do we embarrassed their by an ignoranceof languages? They respective knowing one rule at any thinks of they are Charles II. of happiness Englishmanor the grammar first learn it man French- of their [his] and practically erringly un- to look back and smile theychose [choose] of havingproceeded without by a number of rules, of them by heart,or beingconscious that theyhad ; and then at the idea to consult the find a well-educated ever or if amusement all,this is a philosophical learningthe grammar of their own [his] ; but who ever tongue before " ? [he is a] very good grammarians [grammarian] " Sydney Smith. " 34. Where an antecedent is collective noun, or must be pluralor gular sin- of a the pronoun multitude, accordingto the sense intended to be conveyed. In many or pluralmay be cases, either the singular be used together. employed,but both cannot properly A report of a committee is hardlyever made without noun violation of this rule. board of selectmen "A E. g. : " to keeprecords, not required [is] and their [its] clerk,if theyappoint[itappoints] one, is not a officer." certifying " are The Council desire^ in the name of the Institute, to express its [their] to the individual subscribers for their gengratitude erous gifts.'* ** If the of the in violation committee leaves to an officer, investing the authority vestment into make duty imposed upon them [it], etc. 28 IN MISTAKES " 35. The use of antecedent expressed a WRITING ENGLISH. without pronoun is a very common properly any error ; as, of a resignation till postponethe formality I should return to America then,and has been ever ; which was I should return," to take place since, expected very soon." For ** I desired him to ** read my return. "Nor will anythingfurther than the I have preparations be resolved upon before Parliament meets, fixed for the 4th of January." For "Parliament mentioned now read the meeting of Parliament. opposedme, which was anticipated." attentive,without which you will learn "The man "Be " fallof tremendous A rendered his snow days. When the roads received littlepracticable, they successively for }ohichis meets," than ten more of the Chevalier into nothing." departure impossible began to become a of the retreat news Scotland,then that he had abandoned the etc. frontiers," quotationfrom Scott's Waverley,"the his refers to Waverley in the in the firstsentence correctly precedingsentence ; the he in the last clause stands for the Chevalier ; but thephas no antecedent correctly Read news was successively whatever. for they received, received news." successively In this " " Germanicus "When he many, was Here it has no and right, tjlerproposedto Tiberius to subjugate the Emperor was wrong in opposingit,'* antecedent ; " change to " subjugateto ^ stcbju- gationof. filledthe blank in the certificate, and sent it purchaser corporation, demandingthat the transfer be recorded and "The to the a new certificatebe whicJi issued, was refused." For "demanding," read vrith a demxi7id. " Governor Winthrop tellsus the Sabbath with t?iem of visiting Agawam, [whom?],as they were and ing spend- without a minister." " 36. Sentences antecedent of a are often pronoun is so constructed that the or doubtful, so that the pronoun grammatically intended by the 29 ANTECEDENT. AND PRONOUN refers to antecedent an not As, writer. that to distinguished philosopher [i.e. Philip] wrote [i.e. Aristotle]in terms polite and flattering,begging of him and his [Alexander's]education, and undertake to come bestow "He hirn. those on ought man every useful Goldsmith, had the intrenchments that adjoined Johnstone he Smith only that he lie Benjamin he night. the . Genei-al in the one and in was he daybreak At [Philip]." " . Troops . walked the morning, lined field panied accom- Poulariez. Colonel great agitation,and heard the sound of taking the article in the Mr. Johnstone, though it for Montcalm. spirits,and the they rapped settlement best he for almost but could with not also the nothing from the he heirs adjoining parcel, for of which value.*' its full Italicized would he be sentence which the out " obtained is meant to infalliblylose all his fine estate, Ingalls had originally held, and which " the to stand make Pai'sons, paid he him would had Ingalls, and that while [Montcalm] night. must which [Mr. Smith] Here troubled Johnstone consulted Ingalls,or had [i.e. Philip's]nu- his impossible for grammatically refers that Mr. which etc. "Mr. he day, evidently intended answer a Chevalier all rest which virtue Chreece, passed that and magnanimity till head-qua]:;ters his says Here is and till the by cannon," possess, History of "Montcalm no of rendered associations merous took to lessons the to grammatically so by understood itself; but sentence refer to by from appears, Mr. refers Smith. it to Mr. the reader the whole is evident IN MISTAKES 30 WRITING ENGLISH. CHAPTER VI. SUBJUNCTIVE THE MOOD. doubt or indecisio or future contingency, the verb should be in or a wish,is expressed, the subjunctive mood; as, Where " 37. ** "* ** a [come],I will consent to stay." small." are [be] We may live happily, thoughour possessions And so would I, if I was [were]he." if it vxls [were] I could name A certain ladywhom necessary." unless he reperUs[repent]." He will not be pardoned, condition that he Od **The word if it was as * heirs* appears to have I wish that he " Would were future is by the tor testa- here." that it might be where been used [were]a generalword." ** But comes a so ! " conditional circumstance which the expressed, is not verb should be in the indicative; as, [knows]the way, he does not need a guide." If art become [becomes] it disgusts the reader." apx)arent, Whether the translation loere [was]ever I am published, whollyignorant" If a man have [has] built a house,the house is his." ** If he know " ** ** " 38. put in ** The verb in connected clauses should not be dififerentmoods; as, If there be but it is [will be] no body of legislators, better than a tyranny; if there are [be]only two, there will want a castingvoice." " But \f^i|.climb, hands, wijhyour assisting The Tt^^i^I^ind in the citystaiids" "*" """ Dryden'sTiT^. one "* THE INFINITIVE VII. CHAPTER THE 31 MOOD. MOOD. INFINITIVE to, as the sign of the " 39. The particle omitted ; as, mood^ is often improperly ** infinitive eration, It is necessary to act with more vigoror with greatermodto conciliate them or [to]subdae them completely, " altogether." insert points Please [to] so '* *' But it would tend to to make as sense.'* obscure,rather than [to]elucidate the subject." "So as neither to embarrass weaken nor^[to] the sentence." death nor [to]believe that neither the king's would helphim." imprisonment of It is necessary for the lawyerto have a clear conception the governingrules of law, and [to]be able to presentdecisive the for establishing or reasons [to]give satisfactory authority ** He was made " rules." The like *' sign,however,is properlyomitted the following : ^ in sentences " Of me the Roman strive with my and redeem." utmost peoplehave many which pledges, endeavors to preserve, I must defend,confirm, and digest to point, ''Many authors expectthe printer spell, their copy, so that it may be intelligible to the reader." "To shake the head, relent, and sigh, and yield." "The most accomplished way of using books at presentis, to serve them as some do lords, le^m their titles, and then brag of their acquaintance." " The active verbs take usually hidfdare,feel, see, and some otheis, the infinitive after them without the to; as, "If he bade thee how depart, darest thou stay?" 32 MISTAKES The WRITING ENGLISH. is erroneously used in the to wherever following examples it is Italicized : " **I dare not to '* IN lest I should giveoffence." proceedso hastily, he has not got home yet." I dare to say I felta chilling sensation to creep over me." It cannot but be a delightful to spectacle, " '* ' see a sieged person be- by temptationson every side to acquithimself gloriously, to hold out against the most violent assaults." resolutely and ** Who bade the mud from Dives' wheel To spurn the rays of Lazarus ? " The " 40. the verb to particle by examples: any should not be from separated in the following intervening word, as " The student must " not to find] expectto alvmysfind[always studyagreeable." sufficientnumber "A and of variety to cases fullyillustrate to illustrate] the rule." [fully "It seems that this portionwas filledwith some probable substance to better adapt [thebetter to adapt]it to the hand." "A rightto exclusively [exclusively to]make and sell an articlerests," etc. " To without to]cleanse thoroughly[Thoroughly and purifygarments etc. injury," "But to example of point out only one writers have this dog- taken to illlately compact verb by ramming an adverb into its midst. They will say, *to appreciatively walk drink bottled stout'; *to energetically to Paddington'; *to think'; *to ably incessantly this dog-English reason.' Where was whelped1 You *to reason should say, *to think incessantly'; ably.' some of our English, using our neat and suppose that hear your ever Let us you tail " 1 * bow-wow dog ' say, *Bovv drink. Do wagging my to means " wow?"'i Jean Ingelow,John Jerome,(Boston,1886,) pp. 211,212. 34 IN MISTAKES WRITING ENGLISH. CHAPTER VIII. OR TENSE, " 43. Errors of the verb. are very E. g. : TIME. in the tense,or common time, " his health." [drank] to feel sleepy." I begun [began] did well,"or "You done well." Say,"You I drunk " ** "You have done welL" him when ** I " I intended to saw "I feared that the it." [did] have written [write] to him on the subject." it before I arrived at I should have lost [lose] he done city." that you mig?U [may]fail." be asked." if I shvuld [shall] I will not speakof it,even their depreciation, the proper ^''^ohave prevented[prevent] " Remember ** course, it is would affirmed, have been to have made [make]a valuation of all the confiscated property." ** an annuityupon By charging shown " the intent that the annuitant an whenever No a he has specific property, should [shall] receive it [can]be realized therefrom." had the nobility met their doom in the Wars of the hands of royalty were [hadbeen]untied, it amid sooner Roses,and than the determined effort was made to uproot every national Uberty." for the English would give we public, writing and from it but a paragraph the quotation [shouldhave given] ; the Macaulaygiven below would constitute [haveconstituted] substance of what we said [should have said]." The witness testifiedthat he vjos [hadbeen]chairman of " Had we been " the selectmen since 1880." k "The generalconclusions of the judgeare correct,and the OR TENSE, only therein error who '*One would time should the in Qiave have made] [had make ^crfic^ would "It [consists] improper of use the ** trade-mark.' * tenn consisted 35 TIME. predicted] worth been steady, a while your of study a him swift not have to that at growth." heard [hear] them." "The after the the granting act war and over was pension the passed not was service until long [had rendered been rendered]." " The 44. is verbs, imperfect tense erroneously ollben in preterite, or for used the irregular perfect ticiple. par- As, "When interesting an story is hroke to his [broken] off tlie in middle." hath " He " Philosophers bore [borne] have witness often faithful servants." the [mistaken] mistook of source happiness." true " " " have I They He "I [chosen] chose is have torote verses were uovf follow [shaken] the [written] [forsaken] forsook shook to off by the arrangement." common glass." on every regal one." wherewith thoughts I reigned." it would "And I had u?rote become [written] on necessary the other." to contradict one day what 36 IN MISTAKES ENGLISH. WRITING IX. CHAPTER AND SHALL SHOULD WILL, AND WOULD. shall and The fundamental distinction between " 45. indicates what will is that shaU what and wiU is is involuntary^ or pulsory, com- the result of or volwitaryy the will. 'owe, be under obligation'; originally determine.* The phrases and toillmeans wish,resolve, then, I owe, am bound or obligated to, really signify, determined on, I intend,am the act of giving; and giving.' Out of this difference in the original meaning ^' Shall means * * ' * between the form of the words has grown a diflference in the firstperson on the one of the future expression hand, and the second and third persons on the other hand. To denote simply somethingthat is going to take place, shall in the firstperson, we use ordinarily and " wiU in the others."* The diflferencebetween should and "w"mZ^ is in eral genthe same as that between shall and mil, and they in like manner are confused by inaccurate Will in the firstperson expresses assent or a " " ^ speakers." or a promise, determination ; as, I will go I will go "' (ifit is asked of me). " (whatever may oppose). ^ Whitney'sEssentials of EnglishGrammar, page s Ibid., page 121. 119. SHALL AND SHOULD WILL, AND 37 WOULD. Will in the second person foretells ; as, " at twelve o'clock, If you come you will find " at me home." " will You Sometimes " You " On twenty." be soon it expresses a command ; as, will learn the next lesson to-morrow." of this, receipt you will immediatelyreportat head-quarters." on the second person, mil expresses the part of the speaker ; as, go to-morrow questionsin In wish or desire " Will you " WiU you let me know r* = I wish you to go tomorrow. " if you 1" come can is Will in the third person simply foretellswhat known or thoughtby the speaker;as, " to-morrow." He will be at home I think it will rain to-day." i.e. "We will have dinner at six o'clock," order it to be readyat six o'clock." " In " When will our troubles be at an as, ?" endl" Shall in the firstperson expresses a future action ; as, merelyannounces " " will the third person, tvillinquires concerning the pui'pose of another, or asks what of knowing; speakerhas no means Will they be willing to receive us or "We in questions the " a I shall go to town We shall set out determination, to-morrow." and shall try to early, arrive by noon." " We is to be shall have dinner at six readyat six o'clock." i.e. o'clock," " Dinner 38 MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. Shall in sentences interrogative asks permission, or inquiresas opinionof another;as, " Shall I go with you T" with you 1 Do wish you to go me " When shall we " When shall we a " " " ShaU = in the first person to the intention or you again? " get there % see in the second or third person expresses a command, determination, " You " He shall go,"= " He shaU or a a ise, prom- threat ; as, shaU have these hooks to-morrow." " Thou " You " I promisethat he go/*i. e. whether shall go.'* he wishes to go or not Shalt not steal." shall he punishedfor this." In the third person it is sometimes also used conditionally; as, " If he shall " 46. obey,it will be well for him." The differencebetween which tooidd, the pastforms of sliaU and tvill, is mainly the same are to an exercise as in the presentforms ; would referring of wiU, and should implyingcontingent, tion, dependentacE. g. : or obligation. should and " ^' I would as do readily it myselfas another persuade to do it." "I should like to go to town, and would go if I could." " I hoped that " I know I should not be leftalone." I should dislike the Shotdd and would are both country." often used to express conditional assertion ; as, " " I should go, if I could get away." He would give, if he had the means." a SHALL " ** " AND WILL, SHOULD 39 WOULD. AND If he should come, you would see him." in your place." I should not do so, if I were in your place." I would not do so, if I were "Should agree to* the they not what proposals, I am todol" is often used to express I were home again! " Would Would " I would " "Would have you think of these things." God I had died for thee,0 Absalom !" Also to express He " She would ; as, things." all day." weep expresses determination ; as^ also sometimes go, I could not stop him." would in his course, in persist "He could custom would He " a would often talk about these " Would words 1 " thou hadst hearkened to my Would " wish; as, a spiteof all I say." Should often has the and meaning of ought, expresses duty; as, should go by all means, but he will not." You should not allow such conduct in school." He " " " 47. The of these words ** They unto law." " " are following : the correct use " that fear the Lord will seek that which him ; and they that love him is well ing pleas- shall be filledwith the Ecclus, ii. 16. He that honoreth that is obedient unto He examplesof his father shall have the Lord that feareth the Lord vice unto shall be will honor a longlife; and he comfort to his mother. a his father and will do ser- his parents,as to his mastera." *Mf I might see you at my honse,it should go hard but I would have a bottle of wine and a pipe of tobacco for you." " Ecclus, iii.6, 7. " Beaumont and Fletcher. 40 MISTAKES " If she love I will die IN ENGLISH. then believe me, ere WRITING she shall grieve." George"Wither. " "If she hate me, then believe She shall die ere I will grieve." B^n Jonson. " "This child I to myselfwill take : She shall be mine, and I will make A ladyof my own. Myselfwill to darlingbe Both law and impulse; and with me The girl, in rock and plain. In earth and heaven,in gladeand bower, Shall feel an overseeing power To kindle or my restrain." Wordsworth,Toems of hnagiMdwa^ at the end "And deliver up the " 48. are The or determination of this lease shall and will premisesunto words erroneous : X. the lessor," etc. Italicizedin the " Modem Lease. following examples " We toill issue this paper as occasion demands. The next edition will be issued earlyin the spring. The size of the sheet " will be very much enlai^d,and we vrUl circulate between fifteen tising and twenty thousand copies. We will have considerable adverof this space, which will be allotted to i;hebusiness men on Newspaper Prospectus. vicinity very reasonable terms." ** If we found such a system of writing would prowe history nounce " the division of labor in it unnatural." "We wUl soon be able to answer this pertinent question." theycan intervene to preserve the credit of the mark, shall soon be destroyed." all faith in its integrity " Unless mails to all European supplemental from the main office to the steamer steamers vnll be despatched mail." after the close of the regular would giveit Were we writing for the Englishpublic, we but a paragraph." and I shall be fallen indeed ; I would "Compel me to retire, feel myselfblighted in the eyes of all my acquaintance ; I would liftui" my face in society ''vermore ; I would burymyselfin the "An " order was made that 42 MISTAKES WRITING IN ENGLISH. X. CHAPTER AND LIE LAY." SET AND SIT. " 49. In order to understand the proper use of these verbs,the form of their principal partsshould firstof learned. all be thoroughly viz. : In lie and /ay these are as follows, " The every main in which sense or thingto active is that the it can in mind verb,and lie is of imperfect lieis is that lay (in is a misunderstood) be an sitive tran- intransitive or neuter between adds to the confusion What verb. be borne the words lay. Present "I lie down table.'* "Guilt lies between " the sle^p." "A book lies lies heavy on his mind." to the two upon the "The sea countries." laymyselfdown to sleep." I laya book upon table." The rain lays We laya foundation." " I " " the dust." Imperfect, " I lay down table." "Guilt y between to sleep." lay heavy on the two " A book lay his mind." countries." upon "The the sea LIE AND LAY. SET " AND 43 SIT. . ** the I laid myselfdown table." " We I laid a book upon " laid the foundation." Tlie rain sleep." to " laid the dust." Present " A book Participle, the table." is lyingupon heavy on his mind." We are layingthe foundation." " ** the dust." Guilt is " The lying rain is laying " Perfect Participle, had "I the table." upon I had the book sleep." "A to "The had sea once book had lain lain between countries." the two " lain down laid upon myself down to sleep." " I had laid the table." we our lay down yesterday, to-night, but we lay a studies have lain in certain directions; laid it down book down we we io-night, yesterday, have laid aside our studies. A shipliesto,not laysto. distinction applies to compounds ; as, to unThe same derlie, y ^ to overlay " We " 50. : lie down The principal partsof set and sit are as lows fol- " PRES. PART. PERF. PART. Setting Set Sitting Sat Set is in most active verb; but an sigiiifications The sun sets," and The tide sets." say, set aside,anything. We set about,set apart, We set out on a journey, in writing. set down " " 1 Hill's of Rhetoric, Principles pp. 54, 55. we 44 MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. . is Sit in most in however, We sit We sit the for set in We room." sit in court a but hen, therefore, say, a chair, " a " a verb. neuter " A coat sits active, horse." a late up is It sits man sit we A portrait. a or a n expression, down Congress We senses at night. welL sits. a sitting hen hen," sitting-room," sits on not and We eggs. " a not should hen." setting in " a setting- USE OF THE CHAPTER USE the cases many THE XI. PARTICIPLE. the articleis used before Where " 51. OF 45 PARTICIPLE. presentparticiple, a after it ; but in either the omission of both articleand preposition, or preposition of is necessary substitution of the is better. signification, E. g. : a noun of equivalent " [of]government regulating chusetts." in Massa- " An act for the better '* An act for better " An act for the ** To the ** To ** To ** By th" establishing good laws,we secure our peace." [of] By estabUshing good laws,we secure our peace." By the establishment of good laws,"etc. " '* such an order of things." introducing [of] such an order of things." introducing the introduction of such an order of things." " 52. where regulating government in Massachusetts." of government," better regulation etc. But o/ should participle, the articleis not used before it. It should therefore be omitted in the " not be used after the examples: following " From ^ names theyproceededto blows." calling "In formingq/* his sentences he was very exact." In breakingof bread from house to house." "They set about repairing o/thewalls." Teachingo/ children is a pleasant employment." ** ** " 53. The it where if the not noun be used. the possessive case participle requires the is a fore be- itselfis the active agent; but the possessive should subject, peissive noun E. g. : " 40 IN MISTAKES "Lady "Much ENGLISH. walkingin [Macbeth's] Macbeth full of WRITING horror." tragic will depend on the her sleepis an dent inci- pupil [pupil's] composing fi'e- quently." event T^ie of Maria [Maria's] lovingher brother." The fact of Jaines [James's] placinghimself on his side." **The paper then discusses the probableresult of England the policy indicated by Mr. Chamberlain's [England's] following speeches." When s [monosyllable syllable or monotheyspeakof a monosyllable* as]havingthe grave or the acute accent." The dailyinstances of men*s [men]dyingaround us." " ** ** ** " 54. The passivesense of the active, participle in Englishin use a is well and cannot be quesestablished, tioned, in the following as examples: The house is is selling," "The work is now building,""Wheat " etc. publishing," Many writers have contended that this form is erroneous, and that the passive form should ously always be used instead;while others have as strenumaintained that the form passive used, and that the activeform doubt form no following examples: those who **For are be never is the that in many is decidedly better than the But there is should only correct one. the passive cases active;as in the " beingeducated in our seminaries." " Southey. Coleridge. beinguttered." It signifies one though in uncouth English, properly, being beaten." Whately. The foundation was beinglaid." ** It wfis " " is wlio " *' In the the followingpassage it must be admitted form would be infinitely : passive preferable " '*I by that saw the ruins. '^count by AVer." . some . . I passed Whether she was taking [beingtaken]to disappointed votary, I will not pretendto into light, as dragging[beingdragged] one USE the In form following "The law example, better certainly is : annulled is 47 PARTICIPLE. THE OF the on the contrary, active " the in of act very its being made [making]." " and The 55. form. ** But soon gs Correct whole **The seeds been difficult attempted The storm by the to as be to which umbrella be had was carved^ which results, parts he is a most soon as is made attempt an to should charged be under alleged it pine, obtained^ been observers, he difficult unfortunate and is in thus attempted which in his to great etc. visit quantities." obtain." selecting lost charge," previous procured to to a district poorly of opportunity the resented rep- being observed." carefully Correct, poorly of to statute." offence "it to the of The Correct its is impersonal or etc. attempted section Correct, But ^* read, body," offence The another " active eye." to as so the carve had imprbperly the body various its the to whole the as between disagreeable " of sometimes As, disproportion '* instead used awkwardly is participle passive "The represented careful observation unfortunately storm by observers, was lost." and occurred thus the in a district opportunity for IN MISTAKES 48 WRITING CHAPTER XII. PRONOUNS. ADJECTIVE AND ADJECTIVES ENGLISH. must " 56. Adjectivesimplyingunity or plurality which they qualify. with the nouns agree in number The following : examplesare therefore erroneous -*- ** Tfiese sort of fellows are ** This very numerous." twenty years have I been with thee." thoughttJiesekind of excesses indicativeof greatness." than two footabove it." The standard beingmore Three pound of goldwent to one shekel." Most of the churches had one or more elder [elders]." ruling '*The nature of that [those] riches and [that] is long-suifeiiug lead to repentance." that which is myselfnow, and that which on By reflecting myselftwenty yeai-s ago, I discern that they are not two, He ** " ** ** to ** was but one "selves" the and after self." same Butler's " Analogy, (Insert two.) the contract was other reasons **For this among executed." ** (Correct, For this reason, among others,"etc.) ** In this and most of our largecities." (Insert "city" after this.) "Between the fourth and ninth the fourth and the ninth "From the day [days]."Or, " Between ^ day." fifteenth up to the nineteenth An centuries tury]." [cen- in the plural, however, may adjective pronoun sometimes be properly associated with a singular noun ; our desire,"your intention,"their resignation,' as, " " " etc. 1 See ante, page 12. 50 MISTAKES " He [than]those is gateof the WRITING tickets for selling was "This IN other railroads in addUicni to two before mentioned." other hiU none [than]the other used ; than mentioned,whereas "other . . those mentioned. E. g. Other words besides the " 59. here Where what ** fondness besides" is inclusive of . " preceding may beginwith capitals." used are and in the house service." made, use or be must care include in both is intended, by the terms omission of cisely pre- otiier, As, useful than all the Iron is more "A is exclusive of those comparisonsare word. equivalent an times some- signify somethingelse besides warning." taken to exclude from or : . materials besides lead Pain must " . . ** God, and this is besides is preposition " "Other house of heaven." After elseand other the ** ENGLISH. metals." [other] for show is of all other follies the most lous." ridicu- mated whatever so abound with bold and ani[other] writings the sacred books." as figures man's that ever wrote." This was less his case than any [other] "The holy than any temple of Cholula was deemed more in New Sxmin." [other] has certainly the greatestreason "Of all other beings, man for gratitude." us." that which most moves It Is of all others [things] work of that nature we to any [other] "I think it superior ** No ** " have yet had." "No was sovereign [other] people." me delights Nothing [else] " "He celebrates the Church ever much so of so much as beloved by the the works of nature." England as the nearest tion perfec- of all otliers[churches]." " 60. Either and thingstaken " These words were merly for- only to two persons applyproperly the and to signify one or separately, considered to r neither, AND ADJECTIVES ADJECTIVE 51 PRONOUNS. their trae usage. But good other,and that is strictly has established the use of both words in relation authority to any indefinite number. As, ** Either of several provinces." " Our alphabethas letter to no either of five simple represent sounds." consonant not reducible to either of the three heads." preceding have not scrupled to laya **Dryden,Pope,and Wordsworth profanehand upon Chaucer, a mightiergeniusthan either." GeorgeP. Marsh. " Wonis " " "Neither of these fiveverbs "Neither of the ten was be neuter." can there." the antecedent of his "One ought to mind." It has been contended by many know his own that this construction is wrong, and contraryto English both logiIt seems to me, however, to be right, idiom. cally and grammatically; it is more euphoniousthan using one^s for Aw, is sanctioned by good usage, and is correct according to the principle line by which the mascu" 61. One as : " pronoun as is used where gender; to others A person can his own nature." as, variance with the antecedent " like it,would do never This be equallycorrect person." substituted for "A is indefinite anythingat sentence,and if " One *' were meaning no one, may " 62. NonCy althoughliterally be used with a plural of verb,having the signification of multitude. a noun As, " In at this gatenone ** Terms "None "None " None " 63. in of peace were here pass the vigilance vouchsafed." none that go unto her return of their productions are of them The are " again." " extant." varied to express the " placed.""Milton. Ibi"l. Prov. ii. 19. Blair. gender." whole and less are properly adjectives applied relation to quantity;all q.u^fewer,in relation 52 IN MISTAKES The number. to usage : WRITING ENGLISH. are following examplesof erroneous " "Almost "The the whole Red [all the]inhahltants were present." Knightruns throughtliewhole [all the]steps cross of the Christian life." "There are less no than twenty diphthongs in [fewer] the Englishlanguage." "There less not were or [fewer]than fifty sixtypersons present." All is sometimes sometimes " " The used incorrectly for the whole,and for onlt/ ; as, disease spreadover Cynthiaand Mary were all the [thewhole]country." all the [theonly]children of their parents." " 64. The of two three last, first, etc.,for first two," last three," etc.,is incorrect. As, "The two last [last will not be found deficient two]chapters use " " in this respect." "The books of the ^Eneid six first "The nine are of the Book firstchapters poetical." Notes on "Analytical Prophets.By the Rev. the First and \Vm. beautiful." exceedingly of Proverbs are highly TTiree Last of the Minor Randolph,M. A. Cambridge." attemptedto defend the usage of two first," etc.,by authority.But every error in grammar might be established if frequent usage or the occasional ity. of good authors are to be accepted as final authorslips Goold Brown says, "The ordinal adjectives ^r"^, the cardinal numbers,but sjecond, next, last, may qualify be qualified by them,'*and they cannot very properly in support is overwhelmingly the weight of authority It has been " of this statement. The ordinals second,third,etc. should not be used ~'' as etc.;and first, adverbs,for secondly, thirdly, to firstly. ^erb,is preferable an ADJECTIVES AND ADJECTIVE " 65. Adjectivesare Tequired;as, PRONOUNS. often used where 53 adverbs are I now to my promise, write." Agreeable[Agreeably] "He acted in this businessbolder [more boldly] than was ** expected." ** I think [meanly]of him." How remarkable [remarkably] heavy it is ! He was exceeding kind to me." [exceedingly] I called on his lordship previous^to my leavingEngland." "Endeavor to live hereafter suitable [suitably] to your can never so mean very ** " *" ** station in life." In like manner, adverbs are sometimes used for adjective as, "The arrows of at calumny fall hamdessly [harmless] the feet of virtue." . "This construction sounds rather "The returns of the harshly[harsh]." officialor election, otherwimy are now all in." " ^Q, " There is sometimes a questionwhether to adverb after certain verbs. The or an adjective the limiting word exto be, that when seems presses principle the object, state of the subject or or a quality of the action,an adjective rather than the manner is This construction takes placewith the verbs proper. if the he, look,taste,smell,feel,seem, etc."^ Briefly, the adverb should be verb is intended to be qualified, the used ; if the noun is intended to be qualified, adjective.Kg.: use an " " The berrytastes " The man "The " * woman sour." " The flower smells sweet." felt bad about it." looked beautiful." She looks cold." " He feelswarm." Although this use of previousiov previouslyis objectedto by grammarians,yet it has been used by many good writers. 2 Tweed's for Common Grammar Schools,page 111. 54 adverb followingexamplesthe the In ENGLISH. WRITING IN MISTAKES is correctly used ; as, ** coldlyon him." to feels warmly the liisultyffered looks She **He and Then to adjectives; as, as serve made improperly sometimes are now him." tions rigorousciimate and other hard condiof Europe." (Omit then, and insert at that time after "Europe.") The then King of France was engaged in waging war with England." The now text are or present] copiesof the original [existing in the then **Even ** " entire." " 67. Where the only two must adjective are pared, compersons or subjects be in the comparative degree, not, as is often the case, in the than two are be used. must "This mother two " 68. after a or in the E. g. : " is the best [better] of the two." "Her "Of included superlative ; but if more comparison,the superlative seemed of [younger] lecist[lesser]." the younrfcd evils choose the the two." and latter, of the beingadjectives Former degree,should not of three specitication be used for or more parative com- firstand last, different subjects persons ; as, "The tvx) latter [last two] localitiesare much older than the pueblosof Cholula." "The court-yardis forme"l hy two decayed mounds, the of worship,and a hill,the latter [last] mound of which is a regularterrace." "Our road lay by Lou vain,Thirlemont,Liege,Aix-la-ChaThe former [first] of these to the Rhine. pelle,and Juliers, J. Fenimore Cooper. towns," etc. " " 69. these and When the adjective pronouns this and that,or refer to contrasted antecedent terms,this those, ADJECTIVES should these or former term ** And ** of the " the He of the preceded confederacy, as *t is man." foes with Pope. ! those omitted ! the the when the coming well effect of the of this under be volatile tribes the sary neces- as, ; the clusive." con- acid dilute." equally are of is would argument [that] as it operations both acid Bums. " term its on 1794, " where antecedent an between fixed can, you my love my of difference certainly valley those or " carrying was strong a as that farewell to [that] or in is often reference 1792, Notice ! these, corporation [that] and with that show If the charter ** friends my pronoun to directs, 't is God peace instinct o'er mise Farewell The that latter, and as, ; reason My the 55 PRONOUNS. ADJECTIVE represent this In ** AND formed that later of tribes Tlascala." " Other 70. tJiose; and to also etc. supreme, universal," nearer the It is but **less vulgar application are incorrect we of use degrees in superlative cJiief, extreine, etc.; right," the are which adjectives as a errors can extreme," perfectf to say, say them of son compari- primary riglU, ""o "nearer "less of for nificati sig- universal, perfect," ""o perfection," perfect," etc. 56 MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. XIII. CHAPTER ADVERBS. " 71. Adverbs are in the sentence. frequentl}^ givena absolute rule No can wrong position be laid down for their proper position.They should generally be ever, placedbefore the words theyqualify ; sometimes,howafter verbs, verb, but between never examples of are following We must not expectto the and to only is especially apt adverb ** between or to the the infinitive.^ The be wrong find and auxiliary misplaced. The position: " always [always studyagreeable agreeable]." ** dozen [down contemptulookingcmiteinpttwusly ously] fully crooked in mind or body,we should look up thank- Instead of the on God, to who has made us better." * Everythingfavored by goml usage is not on that accoimt to of the sentence. ) be retained." (Place not at the beginning shall acquirecertainly we [certAinly By hastycomposition bad a very style." acquire] The comparisons are short, touchingon one pointonly [only one on point]of resemblance." fore prominentobjectset beHaving had once [oncehad] some ** ** *' '* lis." ** a The seems positive called improperlyto 6e [tobe improperly] de"rree." '*In some is] phrasesthe genitiveis only [onlythe genitive " used." 1 See * Murray ante, " 40. Jiorrects "look tip thankfully"to "thankfully look but I think the of order the firstclause as corrected," looking ; up down contemptuously,"should be followed in the second one. " 58 MISTAKES This WRITING IN of like for as is by ENGLISH. of peculiarity I have known the South and West. Englishmenwho used the expression, and the following examples, constantly which are might be multipliedindefinitely, taken from recent Englishworks: use uo lueane a " ** ** be very jolly to travel like he does." Living and Dead, It must So few understand placedlike I are and that my was, " into ray feelings must Ibid.,and so^mm.. *'It is like it was be king when be too way, Con- would limited to struggledamong a king." Anthony TroUope. sometimes, passingthrough the ground-floor passage, /iX;ethat firsttime." her ironing, Vernon Lee, see to a themselves who should be '* Hagh audience who enter trouble about." " And he would men " " Miss Brown, Such E. g.: for the adverb so, " *' In such ** With [so]mild a and fruitful [a]region." all due deference to such [so]very siicti a on improperlyused is often a high[sohighan]authority Moon, Dean's important[a]matter." " English, **Such [so]lovely[a]woman," a ** Sucli a [so]beautiful [a] etc. flower," ^^ never Quite should be used in the for rather or very.'} ' * of sense * entirely,' " * ** Wounded severely." quite[very] ** Mr. John Redman flatteredhimself he was man." quitethe gentle- Say, "a perfect gentleman." ''The conclusions drawn from quitedifferentfrom the results of ** a The of the acquisition quiterecent a.s casual view are frequently completeinvestifi^tion." of speechis in all probability a occurrence." tffell is often used Equallyas " power a for " equallywell,"or well." 1 of Rhetoric, Hill's Principles p. 58. 59 ADVERBS. should How it ; for nor "He said "Ye see be not E. lest." " used [that] how hoyr before g. he : of go." would wise [lest]you offend not instead or " many that that," " men called." are (Omit that.) "Be No used is often 1 do " how cautious Whether " be he I make "Can and In " seldom "We God." (Or of the or correct good," But Professor some other not, they that if well," Hill, speaking expressions, are to easy [never] ever forsaken who rains." in trust like expressions "never be of " says, or as, ; ever."] should never Cowper. those consider so 25. mo?" or confused see ix. John " Rousseau it seldom country, "seldom will " often Byron. " not." no" or as, ; no." or they Jaques [never] ever to "never and or very grammarians Many so are parts Jean confabulate never some ask not " not I know no, or " out are live, whethej If birds Ever they sinner a men I shall " for improperly whether know not him." in "never such so Whether understand, never wisely," so ever ** are roneous, er- pbmses. and good," easy and as to parse' facts in language." for Most work is most almost done." is a common barbarism " ; as, The GO IN MISTAKES ENGLISH. WRITING XIV. CHAPTER PRONOUNS. RELATIVE " 74. Who, whose, and whom apply only to persons mals to irrationalanior to things personified ; which applies to either or to inanimate objects ; and that applies persons, animals,or things. of its applicability to both That, either by reason after same or because it is required persons and things, in the superlative, should be used in an or adjective the followingsentences in placeof who or which, **Ke instructed and fed the crowds w?u) [that]surrounded him." *' of Among nations wJio are [that] in the first and rude periods society." ** The crowd **An who only child was [that] going up is w?io one the street [that]has was veiy neither hrother derly." or- nor sister." " He of the spokelargely men he thingswhich [that] and had seen." The second person denotes the person is spokento." ** ** are This is the most thingwhich [that] men possess." [that] ''The same in a model lohich [that] are agreeahle proportions not agreeahle in a largebuilding." useful art which Who, whose,and whom as or also which for whom, are often misused E. g. : whichy has taught " "Frequentedby every fowl wTiovi [which]nature Johnson. iipthe wing in water." " for Exactlylike " puppets,who [which]are many so 61 PRONOUNS. KELATIVE moved by wires." "They are the laud of [whom] 1 broughtforth out servants,which my of Egypt." ''They being the agents to which [whom] this thing was intrusted." of away under a knotted veil,whose flaps[theflaps which]fallon either side of her brightround throat" " Hidden '* The is to transfer each method to ingredient some new bination com- and whose compost' which can be formed without loss, of which]is kiiowu." tion [thecomposition ** acid whose specific Weigh in a vial a quantityof sulphuric has gravity been ascertained." previously wh"ose weightand dignity were His character, onlypartially the church lustre." (Correct by his modest motto, gave expressed " " to weightand dignityof which.") the of which in both of givenas the possessive and its use as such has beAmerican Dictionaries, come the common; yet the best authorities condemn Whose is our deem usage, and " 75. which or The in the E. g. : "The and word there has sentence be used before properly been a preceding which and in the tion. construc- same " and observations, importantrules,definitions, more which same error. and cannot who, unless or who it an are therefore the most wUh printed proper to be committed to larger type." MurraxfsOraminar. Bad English as follows : Corrected in Moon's The rules, and observations which are the more and definitions, important, are memory, a " which are therefore the most " " ** proper to be committed to memoiy, type." printedin larger of each, agreeingin movement have duplicates "But we in measure, atid which make differentimpresthough differing sions to the ear: and an on our opulencepeculiar language, of a boundless variety." Murray's which may be the source Orammar. (Omit the and before which in both places.) "This layerconsists of small cellswhose exposedouter walls are " 62 IN MISTAKES WRITING ENGLISH. rounded,arid which contain the pigmentscharacteristic of the group.'.' (Correctto "cells the exposed outer walls of which," etc.) are ** think We of the roadside life seen of which Clinker,and Humphry glimpsewhile dwellingin Mr. the tents by Parson Borrow of the Adams caught the or last Romany." (Omit aiid.) approachof a party,sent for the purpose of compelling the countrypeopleto bury their dead,and who had already sembled asseveral peasantsfor that purpose, now obligedEdward to rejoinhis guide." (Insert**who had been" immediately after and the sentence is connect) party," ** The " For the of which use without antecedent,see an ante, " 35. For the misuse of who and " 76. Adverbs and the sense ** whom, used frequently are relative pronoun would arUe, " 28. see where much a tion preposi- better express ; as, They framed a w?iere [inwhich]theyrepeated protestation, their claim." " They are not such in the languagewhence [fromwhich]they derived." are we why or the manner By prepositions express the cause ?iow [inwhich]a thingis done." "And the battle where [inwhich]their fathers fell." curse There is no rule given?iow [bywhich]truth may be found ** *' out." " 77. The relative should be so placedas to prevent to the antecedent. and as near as possible ambiguity, E. g.: "It " theywould " (Put not ** who knew [towords a meaning] which have." For he hath made " to ioords gives a meaning no who him to be sin for \is, sin " after ** knew him.") who have the power friend, Take that of me, my To seal the accuser's lips." tftkethat of me." Correct,"My friend, no sin." The next E. [that] I error is often pronoun expressed. be should ** relative The " 78. 63 PRONOUNS. RELATIVE g. : it where " mention shall omitted is a capital one." of the divine perfections." [that]we know is the worat "This thing [that] could happen." me." "I'here were several thiugs [which] brought it upon We speak that [which] we do know, and testifythat [which] It is little *' ** seen." have we ** from arisen have originallyinserted lai'." Murray* " ** says : his Bain, in restrictive. That is the W. " Whitney, as co-ordinating limiting 'clouds, wounded*; thrtt horizon ' or ; and Neither so a as who on that English which Prof. mar," Gram- of the best English but usage *the diers sol- near the lay by as recently but th"at used that was vapor'; cloud be to are soldier, wh^ left' ; *a were But this bodies are no means distinction." Worcester no nor of real Webster that, and limitation title-pageof this teach, write, or speak the and wJw * thus, ; which on. definition where of simply descriptive relatives, wounded were requires such hold restrictive or Essentials But " authorities Some his in lish Eng- restrictive, proper defining relative." ** it regu- "Higher explicative,limiting, or says: were Graminar, Grammar," D. which made [which] and sentence words some guage lan- of any construction ellipsisof the the in s That 78a, the in irregularities all the Almost iii. 11. John " book the gives it is ** clusive ex- certainly inapplicable is intended : such any For the Language." or desired, Use of all 64 MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. XV. CHAPTER NEGATIVES. DOUBLE Two one other/ annegativesin Englishdestroy to an affirmative." Such comor are equivalent mon I don't want barbarisms as and I nothing,** be used by a respecthave n't got none,"would never able violate the foregoing writer. But authors frequently rule,althoughthe mistake is not so apparent. E.g.: " 79. " " " " ''Give not ear." mine counsel,Nor [and]let no me pray you bear with me; You, Like It, " I did never There be can that befellTheseus *' no on The facultiesare rules laid down, thingonlybecause No ** Now one further." " As nor [and]na manner ommended." rec- tellyou hardlyany of the adventures the way to Athens." Hawthorne. called into no exercise by doinga " merelybecause others do " no ' stop to [can] I cannot go Sheridan. " '' I canrwt repentfor doinggood,nor [and]shall not now." of Venice, Merchant "* delight Mvdih Ado, " "I ** comforter it,no [any]more others believe it." " had petitioners elsebut the than thing a by believing Geo. P. Marsh. ter." any interestin the mat- (Omit else,) let there not was us and decide whether or cited, mistake made in the name." (Omit the examine not a the case second not,) [and]do not,confine the purposes of God." allow him what his argument "I cannot by no [any] means must prove." (Or, I can by no means allow,"etc. ) *' We need not,nor " 1 See anUf page 49. 66 MISTAKES IN WBITINQ "NQUSH. CHAPTER XVI. COBBELATIYES. " 80. Certain adverbs and conjunctions tain requirecerothers to correspond with thera,in comparison or which are called correlatives. The princiantithesis, pal words of this sort are the following: " as . , both if , . . . either ajid, , , . *' As I n^t as white . merely , there, . . , . or, but,hut also,hid .... even. shall thy strengthhe." as driven snow." dehtor hoth to the Greeks and to the am yet. tlien, . . "is, ilicU, , . . . whether nor, . . wliere thy days,so **Lawn ** . when or, . f neiUter not onlyor . . though then, . . so, such ctSyso, , both harbarians, to the wise and to the unwise.*' " ** " ** If I then speakfalse, father perish.*' Either he must leave, or I shall go." Neither this man sinned,nor his parents." but These are questions, not of prudencemerely, my may of morals also." *' but Smugglingand piracywere honorable." even absolutely ** No lamb " No '* " ** e*er so mild as not onlynot infamous, he." poor that he could not make restitution." The difference is of such a nature that it is easily seen." man was so Though he slayme, yet will I "When " was deemed Where the heart beats no more, trust in him." then the lifeends." the bee sucks, there suck I." Whether of a publicor of a privatenature." 67 CORRELATIVES. made in the use of or frequently and of either and neither, correspondents " 81. Mistakes and as nor the are onlywithout its proper correlative but of not of *' ** correlatives, The following are amples ex- occur. usage: erroneous but also. the other with They are not so common though they sometimes or " sold ice at Worcester." or [nor] He ueither cut, stored, Upon the decease of either said Cynthiaaiid [or]Mary, etc. leavingchildren," instraraent should "The claim that any "Neither be or one, [nor]the in law. or (Changeboth be made." can bar,both a to to equity, or either, or the least chance other has to of success." " in [nor] ** Not so accurate and yet as [so] of it is retained much as much simpli[so] fied injures [thatit]greatly of the work." uniformity the able to judge, **A8 [So]far as I am "i)^Chancer was accustomed of whatever he found directed to hesitate over as be." it may "Still the world,neither too [but also Ids reputation] onlyhis estate,his reputation suffered by his misconduct." His work is not as in this the world to come." has ** him, neither forgiven It shall not be book is well written." to say that he took possession no greatpoet need him, so [then] any material at hand." " 82. As in comparisons ("59),care must be taken to placethese correlativesso as to exclude and include what is intended. The following are examples precisely of wrong position : " "I remember manners either] "He that I or morals." either comes from here not am " as a censor either of [of R, G. White, Every-Day English, Ohio or Indiana."^ [from either] Ayres,Verbalist. " not only]a only communicated [communicated and a lethis commission,but a partof his instructions, ter Oswald copy of from the not of Secretary State." " GeorgeBancroft. 68 MISTAKES I " estimated neither after neither (Put money." of would until proved " will them, is of the S. Mill. oil, nor nor miration.*' ad- be would auger.") be obliged put the to the postpone to expense use made." what about neither can [be be neither] disproved." a which good nor division and nor ridicule, neither would] only were dispute others, "The but ones not nor It J. " wiue, nor anger, excite to [not only new will "I excite to "attempted Twt I'epixxlucing them lowly." nor neitlier] [give give attempted (Say, of highly ) neither neither "He ENGLISH. Thackei-ay. " He ** WRITING myself myself, would "He IN the affected forms beliefs, the on and of affluence not society, marked [depends depends neither off of only but the external [not entered whole neither] on the fortune." only affected] tions institu- the household, fied modi- structure of society." 69 CONJUNCTIONS. CHAPTER XVII. CONJUNCTIONS. " 83. Beginningparagraphsor should be avoided. sentences with junctions con- The and, conjunctions often needlessly are connective, or, and others strictly thus made to begin a sentence,more especially nor, In many be cases, the and is useless and may omitted, and where it is necessary the sentence can often be joinedwith the preceding A disjunctive, one. and. like hut,may sometimes of the sentence,and in be necessary at the beginning animated or easy,styleit is an It is to begin one with and. perhapsunobjectionable without takingup too much not easy to giveexamples, space, as whole sentences would be requiredto show the connection. Any one can find plentyof examples in his every-dayreading, and can judge for himself as to their propriety or impropriety. and becavse should 'not be " 84. The words reason used together, the word because meaning for that reason," and thus beingredundant ; as, " ** Because was picture ** The [That]Rousseau had giren an equallybeautiful no reason why Goethe should not repeatit." [except that]the '* The reasons parentshad "The do it 60 not for any apparent reason fail, other will loves the child from the one of appealwere not been reason much but because beginning." the consent becatcse [that] of the obtained." I ask you to do this is because better than I." [that] you can 70 MISTAKES other " 85. the are IN WRITING ENGLISH. in the errors common use of tions conjunc- following. WithotU for unless, btU/or; as, form of .a word can the grammatical be [Unless] littleprogress can be made in readingthe at a glance, recognized language." in You will never live to my age wUhotU you keep yourself "WUhotU ** breath with exercise. " " fortycampaignswould have fallen into the without [but for]a vigorouseffort of the first of This veteran enemy's hands legion." E. g. : Onli/or but for except "It has the well-known " of the cube, only [but]with form this difference." was photograph that]a greaternumber ** The " First of white similar manner, of exposures were made." taken biU men the fresh-water plainbeheld I Tliink ** He would not was But man no sea E. g. : " he may err." [butthat] was joking." (Say, that whcU not believe btU what 1 ** joking.") is often used after words unnecessarily for that ot if, E. g. : doubt,or "There to be only [except Friar Le Caron, Chamof the Hurons." hut perfect so a the [except] "iU what for but that, " in " is no doubt but that the settlement there had ceased occupiedbefore the He " I should not wonder ** I have For the Conquest." their intention." doubts but that he knows " never no ing express- doubt but use but that [if] he [that] was will the case." cx"rae to-night." of hut for than after other and the parative com- degree,see ante, " 58. an tha"t is often repeated, after " 86. The conjunction clause,before the clause with which intervening ^;he first that was intended to connect. In each of 71 CONJUNCTIONS. the followingsentences Italicized that should one be omitted. **To it us clear that if the seems "is to 136 taken feelingof God the as every sinner must at least be of His redeeminglove." ** It does not of son prodigal sinner,thaJt every broughtback by the mighty power me fixed a towards the dated easy to say, that if cases of unliquibe treated as debts l)ecause theyend in the to seem damages may ascertainment parableof say that the doctrine of money, sum that at are we to applicable equally damages." Judge Story. is not all to liberty cases of liquidated un- " ** I have noted tliatwhen that details, Master "The colora the you were so ent differyou wish to touch on many fare better if you adoptrapidinterrogation." held that if,in dyeing,the effected that whiteness could not be predicated of of the Rolls had that the twisted thread and selvage, mottled, red and was trade-mark was not particular had no remedy.'^ and that therefore the plaintiff infringed, counsel contended, that, if the jury found "The that the and amounted claimed by the plaintiff, to a warfacts were ranty, as white,that matter as thcU such of law the warranty was a partof the " contract. Uiai so far were show, by your own writings, you fix"m being competent to teach others Englishcomposition, to study its firstprinciples."Moon, that you had need yourself DearCs English. " I wished to " " 87. That is also often omitted essentialto the " After years contrast between E. g. : sense. of labor the in cases where it is " there he felt [that] of his insignificance very strong performanceand the was a greatness of his project." " fixed classes in " there an prevalent opinion[that] ? society Is there not Though too the instances will not be found too must are numerous, it is they hoped [that] many." he would proceedimmediately." [that] **It is manifestly to to apply the principle impos-sible A is greaterthan B." judgmentsas [that] **Hb told be " me such 72 MlSTAKJiS IN ENGUSH.* WKITING XVIII. CHAPTER PREPOSITIONS. is " 88. The endingof a sentence with a preposition considered at the presentday to be a perfectly generally accordant with Englishidiom, and entirely legitimate the usages of the language,though it was formerly the objectedto by many writers. Hence originated the grammarian who gave as familiar jestconcerning is a very bad word to end a a rule,"A preposition This usage of the preposition, ever, howsentence with." in a free and flowingstyle. is indispensable often misused,and there is are " 89. Prepositions difference of opinionamong writers as to the some to be used with certain words ; but proper preposition few specimenexamples, the following if not of a are ^ at least of inelegant E g. : erroneous, usage. " ** The trust refeiTed to by [in]the letter is not used in the will." " that is givento To rise beyond[above] ** Alike " How few." another." on [of] independent differentto [from] this is the lifeof Fulvia ! is very different to [from]what was expected." " "This or a " The wisest powers " In pursuance need not think it any diminution to [from] their sufficiency." derogation 1 For a the proper to ones to be used with " [of] of their charter." [of]the provisions completesynopsisof ^bell's exceUent to Handbook the and a list giving prepositions, certain words, see Mr. Loomis D. of Synonyms and Prepositions.'* 74 MISTAKES But we use IN WRITING ENGLISH. the and the fanner *' read between the lines," expression ploughsbetween the rows of corn." " often omitted which are are " 91. Prepositions to the correct grammatical construction of E. g. sentence. the " would have been less worthy [of] notice." "This "It : cessary ne- of about was fortyfeet [in]diameter at the base,and of altitude." about twelve feet [in] Then he broughtme back [by]the way of the gateof the outward sanctuary." The army must of necessity be the school, not of honor,but [of]effeminacy." I might be excused [from]taking notice of it." any more " " " for "Watch, therefore, Lord ye know not have banished [at]what hour your doth come." laws of the "The censors him [from]the forum." " The act militarysettlements creating was passed[in]the " year,and it is stillin force. same " President [on]April30,1789, Washingtonwas inaugurated life[on]March 4, 1797." and retired to private both of the mollusk and "They stimulate the oiganization [of]the creatures Where the three which or form its food." more construction words in the requirethe same if repeated at all, must preposition, same case; in case objective the preposition, be used in every as, *' in quality, Simplesensations are said to be distinguished and in time." [in]intensity, of innocence or of guilt, of merit or We may have a feeling [of]demerit." "She has been assisted by Miss Smitli,Miss Brown, and by Miss Robinson, as well as by Messrs. Jones and Thompson." " (Omit the Italicizedby.) often inserted needlessly, are pecially es" 92. Prepositions by the older Englishwriters. In the following 75 PREPOSITIONS. the examples : prepositions erroneously are terposed in- " the And ** Italicized elders apostles and together/or came consider to of matter." this first emotion This ** of instead by the awakened by the dental, acci- antecedent." necessary Notwithstanding o/"the ** last to be at comes panegyrics numerous the on ancient English liberty." I will " Inserting of by another a//, before after already governed word a preposition, is especiallycommon of this period, " During all ** He was informed In all ** Andronicus." loith encounter 0/ these of all forces same conditions of the the cases, the works mind by ; as, work." at were agreement." of the of its methods own invention." " a Double 93. single E. etc. "The of the "Leap The are a with the then small in fence sold at above, to, up me into frequently used include tautologous. ; the angry as idea the tops about that a/.) flood." hence, from but above occasionally,at (Omit this up up,) and par, premium." with top extended on (Omit expressions /rom whence on but " wall at of, of where used often are as, first-storywindows." time, and : Its stock ** are is necessary; one g. prepositions the of thence,from adverbs from, whence, hence, thence, the expressions 76 MISTAKES IN WRITING ENGLISH. XIX. CHAPTER . CONSTRUCTION " 94. or two sion must In or two containing sentence a SENTENCES. OF each of which clauses, more words, more or a requires ferent dif- to connect it with the conchiproperly particle of the sentence,the appropriate connecting particle he used after each word of this rule is one of the most or The clause. and common, violation one of the sins against ing In the followEnglishgrammar. grossest, the words inserted in brackets are necessary examples, to make the sense complete. E. g. : and perhapsmore "So he, as much than, any of his [asj, " feels the burden townsmen, it is not a of heavy taxes. Thus we all,[of]the peoplewho must few, but see tliat bear the burden." **Beak about the and -or a littlelonger length[of], [than], twice as broad as the cuspidate scale." Botany. structed Those shares were purchasedby a person who had been inbut no higherthan,forty dollai*3 to bid as high[as], per " ** share." ** He has made alterations [in]and additions to the work." **The firstproposal was and different [from] essentially rior infe- to the second." ** Will it be urgedthat older than tradition? **He was more the four are Gospels as old or [as] even " beloved but [than], not so much admired as Cynthia." times someguidedby interests alwaysdifferent [from], contraryto, those of the community." So far as these are private the State has the same property, and no greaterthan,over other private property." [as], **Ho ** ower was OF CONSTRUCTION 77 SENTENCES. "Elegance prohibitsan arrangement that throws the emphasison, and thus causes a suspension other unimportantword of the sense or at, a particle (as in this sentence)."^ is This,whether in the familiar or the solemn style, be avoided. In and should generally alwaysinelegant, forms of law, and the like,where fulness and exactness ation, take placeof every other considermust of expression " 95. " be admitted." it may the foregoing sentence principle, Hill's Ehetorio should be transposed as In accordance from follows : * with this " an Eleganceprohibits arrangement of the sentence that throws the emphasis on a particle, other unor important word, and there causes a suspensionof the '* sense.** The examples in the precedingsection would if likewise transposed improved,therefore, : all be " So he " as much as any of his townsmen feelsthe bnrden of heavytaxes, and perhapsmore so. Thus we see that it is not a few of the ])eople who must hear this burden, but all of them." about the lengthof the cuspidate "Beak scale,or a little and twice as broad." longer, structed Those shares were purchasedby a person who had been indollars per share,but no higher." to bid as highas forty '* " " has made alterations in the work, and additions to it." Will it be urgedthat the four Gospelsare older than tradition, or even ''He was " the He as old?" more beloved than Cynthia,but not so much guidedby interests always different from community, and sometimes contrary to them." He was 1 2 of Rhetoric,page 139. Principles Mun*ay'sGrammar, under Rule XVII. Hiirs mired." ad- those of 78 MISTAKES IN CHAPTER XX. AND SUPERFLUOUS TAUTOLOGICAL The ENGLISH. WRITING WORDS. words, or of words superfluous which are either impliedin another word already used is very general "There in the sentence or itself, is especially ginning at the becommon are,"or "There is,'* " 96. of of use where sentence a it is useless or worse than useless;stillthere are cases wh^re it givesa special The Italicized emphasisto a statement or a remark. all tautological sentences words in the following are or redundant,and should be omitted : " ** walked usually We side of the stream the to shore offered the better ** legof his trousers he beinglittlebetter, "Give ** other,and brother called Mv had become had cut them both off at the knee." on me, and actual life compels us "Our badlytattered,and, the 0/ those books." both me wading from one back, accordingas either footing." One other of the canoes, ahead we both took to connect a walk." these ideas togetker often." very "They invited me "He these facts combined to enter in." together" higherup, in a recess, there were remains of similar line with the lower ones." step",but not in a straight "Still "There are placesthere on are many rabbits and fieldsof maize ; and it now now snakes,and in some the top there is on small,ancient temple." and no other bones layalone by themselves, were aloiigwith them." any other objects set apartby themaelves" "The discriminated objects are " The skulls nor a TAUTOLOGICAL '* AND had the candor to abandon He convinced that he was SUPERFLUOUS ''At the extreme at once 79 WORDS. his when position Jie in error." was northern pointthere towers aloft the peak of Mt. Athos." ** certain features of monastic lifewhich Tfiere are are common to all the monasteries.** settlement "A about and " The of considerable had proportions grown up it." around of the fraud government could show the entire history the from perpetrated, of the scheme to its^Tta^ firstconception consummation. It is apparent from these lettersthat the accused had combined together to carry out the fraud." ... " I shall have finished by the laUer end of the week." " "They soughthim throughoutthe whole country." Greenhouse to sow m%u^ prefer seeds in Januaryrather men " than in December." " words indicates re of itselfin many " 97. The prefix and such words are often reor dundantly iteration, repetition the same used with another word signifying thing. Kg.: " "There is not the ground for supposingit ever slightest appears re- again" ing of dividagain the old folly dangerof repeating our peopleinto two hostile camps." of our discussion." Returningagain to the subject "They returned inick again to the cityfrom whence they ** We are in ** forth." came ** Whether he can recover back the sum thus paidis not the questionbefore us." again,and take "Return " He " 98. The fUl fvU and fiJdup expressions " are wise like- filla glass ; as, /mZZ o/[with]water." glasshalf /uW of wine." (Say,"Half Fi]l a basin **FiU with oath with thee." restored it back to the owner." redundant " an a wine.") Fill up the pitwith stones." ' 80 The " l"rn *'The filled full of was canal WRITING IN MISTAKES filled up was ENGUSH. hay. to " level the the of sarroimdiog surface/* So 99. " : ** got is frequently used following examples^, the in as have expression the where is got fluous super- " I have ''They got cold." a have got excellent an 'of assortment silks their at establishment." " 1 have the In is correct: " I have worked *' got a my "Rules than meet the " have got " have, because I have is done the ? tautologicalexpressions absurdity of of truth and together,** "follow which of some not g. : quite so are is very obvious, and "bold leading citizens,** aud audacious bery,** rob- veracity,**"sylvan forest,**"false matter,** after,*'"most "trifling minutise,'* unbounded,** "very incessant." For the For double use of reason in " regulations/* "prominent ordinary occurrence,'* man mother " misrepresentations,** "subject " evening.*' got through learning my ' great familiarity. E. and yoa others, however, it is and "a work I have great many ; in their education better say, use, evident this Washington for it.** A common for " can 100. "usual leave ' Who from to following examples, however, harder tongue, and " got with hecatise,see prepositions,etc.,see ante^ ante^ " 93. " 84. 82 MISTAKES laborers. IN But WRITING ENGLISE. at the presenttime there is an for the word, which would justify absolute necessity its vants or alreadyexist. It is the proper and necessary correlative of employer and is justas correct and other words of as are dssignee, payee^ indorsee, tlie same class. It is givenin the Supplementto Worcester's Dictionary, publishedfive years ago, is used by the judgesof our Supreme Court in the Massachusetts is found in many law books,and is in constant Keports, use by many of our best newspapers, like the New York Nation and the Boston Evening Transcript.There is whatever to employeewhich does not apply no objection when without the to employe(especially printed equally finale). One wiseacre proposes to substitute worhmmi. But the word employeeis far more can comprehensive, be used for every gradeof employment,from the agent of a corporation down, and appliesto persons of any The antipathy which some age or of either sex. ple peoThere is no have had to the word is astonishing. at least should not reason, however, why Americans if coinage, it did not ^ it. use jyibriB. This is one " of the few French words which and it should be adopted Englishequivalent, into the languageas a necessity.In that case it might without the accent, like properlybe written debris, depotSLudfete, have ^ no Allude. the " the most This is perhaps misused word in the presentday. Its only proper significa ally is to refer to a person or thingwithout actu- languageat often mentioningthe name, read of a speechin oeaker alluded to several " to which hint at. Yet we it is said that the when subjects, in fact they MISCELLANEOUS WORDS constituted its whole AND substance. 83 PHRASES. In a reportfrom a the writer states of institution, collegiate certain mattera that they have been alluded to in former cussed. disreports,when in fact they had been elaborately branch of a A here it is proper writer says, "And been adopted'' method which has recently ; recent to allude to a and then goes on to givea full and elaborate account of without similar it. There is hardlya newspaper printed of this word. misuse Drive lUde. or " The. Englishcustom of usingride ing for ridingon horseback,and drive for ridexclusively in a carriage, is the fashion in England,and undoubtedly correct enough because the fashion there. This is not New England usage, however,and is not does Dictionaries. Where warranted by our a person it is proper to say that he takes a drive ; drive^ actually but but a person who goes with him does not drive^ rides. car or he rides in a street says he drives when railroad car, and neither does he drive when No a one closed carriage.A farmer may say, " I will he intends actually drive you to the railroad station," as he rides in a to drive ; but if he should overtake you road,he would ask and O. you to ride,and walkingon tlie not to drive. Oh! is properly an inteqection onlyof pain,grief, surprise, sorrow, or anxiety.It was formerly of a wish,and is so employedalso for the expression Oh! used in our versions of the Bible : but the best mod- this last usage of the word, generally reject and employ only 0 for that purpose. This distinction is made by Professors Crosby and Goodwin, by Goold mars, Brown, and by Prof. W. D. Whitney, in their Gramand by most of the best authors. em writers " 84 MISTAKES is used IN WRITING ENGLISH. for the sign of address,or the vocative for the expressionof a wish; to introduce an case; meaning unas an exclamatoryphrase;and also,colloquially, 0 introduction it might be omitted the Oh I requires it,but 0 The words " addition to or without sentence,where a the at all affecting exclamation sense. after pointimmediately should have it. never are following correct examplesof the of both use : -^ But oh ! as to embrace she me I waked." inclined, Miltmi, " But she is in her grave, and oh ! The difference to me ! Wordsioorth. ** " " **Oli! I " ** Oh ! I die,Horatio." '* 0 for a Some ** Hamlet. " ** lodgein some boundless vast wilderness, Fontarabian shade." of contiguity O for the voice of that wild On resolve itselfinto a " Covoptr, horn, echos borne ! " " ScotL 0 that this too, too solid flesh would Thaw, and reform Othello, " amiable thou art, 0 virtue ! "- How "I by villains." undone spoiled, am melt, dew ! " " Hamlet, with hope we have reformed that iQdiiferently it altogether." Hamlet, us. -^0, " "Remuneration! O, that's the Latin word Love's Labor " for three farthings. Lost, "Catch, then,0, catch the transient hour. Johnstm, as it flies." Improve each moment " Although the use of this verb in phrases like "You are mistaken,"**I was mistaken,"etc.,is given in the Dictionaries of Worcester,Webster, and as havingtwo meanings; Richardson, precisely opposite it is better should alwaysbe preferred, yet,as precision and say, to limit words to their primary signification, "You and **I mistook,"when that is what is mistake," Mistake. tended. " MISCELLANEOUS 85 PHRASES. AND WORDS is unobjectionhowever,as an adjective, able, We and the authority find for it is abundant. like mistaken ideas,''mistaken reports," expressions etc.,used by standard writers;and the hymn beginning, Mistaken, *' '* souls,who dream of heaven," "Mistaken is well known. No for without is a slang fail^certainly^ but not often seen in print colloquially, mistake, used phrase, and Farther Further. Although these " words are by many writers,yet fartheris indiscriminately to distance only; while more appropriately applicable of something to come, furtheris used in the sense used Jeopardize. old will say as, "I moreover; This " is etc. further," useless a Englishjeopard. We might as neologismfor well use the \ hazardize* for hazard. Almost no or nothing. " " *The Duke of Sutherland got almoist no rent for his salmon fisheries for the last four years.'The writer should have said soarcdy ^ His wages for that periodwere almost any rent^ anything." 7iothinyJ'* Say scarcely has " "** and Older. Elder ^^ " Elder and eldestare appliedto paring onlyin com- to the best usage, persons, and, according thus: *An of the same members family, brother * ; * the eldest sister.' But older and elder oldest ai-e and also to appliedto persons of different families, older than things. Hence we say, Franklin was Washington*; 'Harvard is the oldest collegein the * United States.'"" 1 " Peabody*sConversatioD, p. 138. Ibid.,p. 112. 86 MISTAKES ^*Had " had as IN as WRITING had better, had best, had like, liefy sometimes good,liad rather,are which idioms they are times, and ENGLISH. have in been criticised; but from use abundantlysupportedby and would rather Would as lief are early the best thorities. au- also used are by good writers."^ Than whom. " admitted It is generally that usage has sanctioned and it has been used good English, time this by at the present as expression standard many writers besides Milton. This word in the of to happen, both in America and Engto pass, is very common come land, but is condemned by all good authority.The to Websfer, is: true meaning of the word, according 1. To exhale ; to pass off in insensible perspiration ; Fluids transpire from the human body.* 2. To as, public ; as, The proceedings escape from secrecy ; to become of the council have not yet transpired.' Transpire. " sense " * * " Quantity /br Number. or we mass, should speakingof a collection quantity;but in speakingof " use In must use the yvord number, "A we objects, of wheat,"or of wood," is correct, a quantity quantity of books,'* but of birds," is a quantity or a quantity individual " " " wrong. Peas, Pease. the pea, seeds in Peas " is used for seeds when spoken of by number; bulk, or by quantity. The or plantsof pease, for the is of in these expressions redundant,and should not be used. We taste a thing, but do not taste or smell ofit. or smell a thing, Taste of, Smell 1 of. " Tweed's Grammar, p. 106. AND WORDS MISCELLANEOUS 87 PHRASES. " Differ from with. or " Worcester says, thing;n some by many of the for differ good authority ; from a person person in opinion " quality; and this distinction is made a best writers. from " there is But and opinion, in its use Diflfertdth " or " be left to individual must taste. This form is very often used nowa* days for different from ; but it is a decided vulgarism, and should not be tolerated. Different to. Different than. " from, as bad has become who once This is another " the as for difexpression ferent foregoing.E. g. : The paper " the organ of different men determined its policy." than those [from] A fashion is very prevalentof using the latter of these two forms in Gradtiated or graduated. was " or speakingof a graduateof a university college. intransitive as an Why, it is hard to say, as gradiiate verb is given in all the Dictionaries. He graduated " Oxford." at Todd. " Brethren. Brothers, children of the of for members Zieam " Brothers is used used only parent; brethren is now or charitable body. religious same a This is very common children and iinlettered people.To teach is to for Teach. " error among instruct4 to glad to to receive instruction. learriy learn,if you will teach me." Relative. to express Meter come for male " This word is much kindred,and is now and Gram. within called to the "I shall be better than relation commonly used. does not Although orthography the provinceof this work, attention is in spelling discrepancy metre, millimetre, " 88 IN MISTAKES other and of measures the diameter with WRITING ENGLISH. metric thermometer^ close in system, barometer or , dimeter, hexameter, Greek word. word, in system, derived with made from better French the accordance words compound all altogether all and with , etc., is It nection con- from spell to of terms the which same the the of have itive primmetric number great it the the other nation termi- er. The have reasoning same anagram, metric this class not should be written word, long since writers. The etc. so only spelled program, introduced, from ^ram, is be other now used the gram, milli- and an we belonging word is and spelled programme, which and which telegram, should which weights, system to diagram, monogram, kilogram, to applies old this English by many 90 APPENDIX. 5. The third person of verbs singular in accordance singular, is formed the first person rules. E. g. : from with the foregoing " ride,rides 5 make, makes ; break,breaks ; echo,echoB ; push,pushes; professes ; profess, go, goes ; Compounds of woo, march, marches annex, annexes woos ; ; comply,complies ; ; pray, prays ; do, does ; buy,buys ; buoy,buoys. do and go follow the ritlefor the tive primi- word ; as, forego, foregoes ; undergo,undergoes; overdo,overdoes undo, undoes. ; for the foregoing changesin the rules for the formation of the pluralas they have heretofore in the following been laid down, are explained nication commuto the Boston Evening Transcript : 6. The reasons " "To THE of the Transcript: " reforms which can stillbe practical made in Englishby the droppingof useless silent letters. been made within Many such reforms have already the past fifty years, as the droppingof the useless silent in words ending in ouTy and the e after dg in words u like abridgmentand jttdgmerU, both of which reforms are now universally acceptedin America. Both for and uniformity I propose that the useless e simplicity in formingthe plural of nouns enHing in i and 0, and of verbs of like ending, also the third person singular Words be droppedin all words except monosyllables. " There Editor are some if writlike no, wo, go, and do would look very awkward ten without the es as b, termination. But the omission of e in all such words hardlybe respectto of than would syllable noticed,and I will venture to say that,with than half of th6 words ciiding in 0, no more more one FORMATION OF THE into the say without looking should be written. plural can one Of 91 PLURAL. how the dictionary are mainly endingin ^, the more common of Indian Oriental,chiefly Arabic,or else the names tribes or nations,like Abnakis, Miamis, Mississippis, the plurals of which are now almost always written without the e. The most common noun endingin i is Other such words are cadiy alkali,an Arabic word. mufti,maravedi,and rabbi,all of which are as often " nouns written without the e in the still ending in o, more perplexing.Thus, memento, canto, grotto,piano, and many take simplyan s for the plural others, ; while volcano,and many more, without any motto, mosquito, I respectfully apparent reason, take es in the plural. Now " As to words pluralas with it. the discrepancies are submit that the useless and e be perplexing dropped in forming the pluralof the whole list of w^ords ending with i and o, except in monosyllables. and It can make no difference with the pronunciation, from all doubt as to will relieve the writer and printer the correct spelling, by simply extendingthe regular rule for the formation of the pluralto all this large class of words. "Cambridge,March 15, 1886." This A. P. changehas Peabody and received the commendation Prof. F. W. of Prof. W. D. Whitney of Rev. Child of Harvard of Yale versity, Uni- of College, Mr. W. and of other J. Rolfe,the editor of Shakespeare, scholars. Prof. J. P. Cooke has also adoptedthe spelling of alkalis in his scriptiv recently publishedtext-book, DeList of Chemical Experiments." 7. The following nouns ending in / or fe form the pluralby changingthe forfe into ves, viz. beef,calf. " 92 APPENDIX leaf life, half,knife, loafselfsheafshelfwharf elf^ SLudioolf; as, wife, knife,knives cilf,calves ; wolf,wolves wharf,wharves. in the plural.All other ; written staves \^ usually Staff nouns endingin/,/e,or ^ form changingthe plural regularly. the .words is made following sound of the singular; as, pluralof 8. The the ; vowel by foot,feet; tooth,teeth, brethren ^ ; goose, geese ; louse,lice; mouse, mice. brother, in the same Compounds of these words form the plural men man, way; woman, ; the man syllable always follow this needlewoman,needlewomen. dormouse,dormicf. at the end of a word doos not rule;as, German, Germans; Norman, Normans The ; as, foeman,foemen ; Northman, Northmen. But women of plural ox Mussulman, Mussulmans; talismans. talisman, ; is oxen ; of children. child, Many words derived from the classicalor other guage foreignlanguagesretain the pluralform of the lanBut many of them from which theyare taken. have also the regular Englishplural; as, 9. focus,foci; larva,larvae; radius,radii; crises; criteria; crisis, criterion, matrix,matrices; phenomenon,-nomena; genus, genera; h3rpotheses hypothesis, ; - formula,formulse or formulas ; memorandum, -da (yr -dnms ; bean,beaux or beans ; cherub,cherubim'cr cherubs ; or stigmas stigma, stigmata ; -dices or appendix, -dixes; bandit,banditti or bandits ; seraph, seraphimor eeraphs. 10. In of capacity, measures abbreviating weight, or time,it is unnecessary to add an s for the distance, plural ; as, gal,for gallonor gallons ; Ih, for pound or pounds ; yd,for yard or yards; yr, for year or years. 1 See anteypage 87. II. APPENDIX WORDS. COMPOUND will convey the separatesimplewords words they in are 2. The written as one, use, and common accented are compounded where separate signification justas well ; and should always be united when should not be 1. Words when the words selves them- singlewords. as of words formerlycompounded, or written two words, which are now as generally is largeand constantly increasing; as, number railroad,steamboat,slaveholder, byword,anything,anybody, roughhew,heartache, raindrop, teardrop, everybody,^ everything, forevermore. nowadays,forever, which words seen frequently compounded,or written as two words, may be found written as one by Spenser,Shakespeare,Milton, or be so written ; as, and should now other old authors, 3. So, many are now wellnigh,erelong,bygone, alehouse,schoolboy,spellbound, awestrnck,downtrodden, selfsame. 4. Where compound a is used noun word should not as be a useless adjective, made; as, an top,Sunday school,supper table,slave trade,coffee table,journeyman printer, trade,minute hand, multiplication cabbageleaf,sister cit}^brother minister,apple peasantwoman, mountain tree, fellow student. 1 one Many peopleeven words. as single accented as two words and every to write any one as go so far now But these are justas distinctly pronounced and as any man and every man. 94 APPENDIX. 5. The many and nouns, as well following adjectives sometimes needlessly are others, compounded: as " law,law merchant,common sense, ill health,good free will, will, grandjury,North American (Review),New York South Boston (Biidge), Street (omnibus). (Directory), Washington common Also : phraseslike the following " well good by,good morning,ever to be remembered (event), laid out (grounds), inside out, uncalled longlooked for (retuni), for (remarks), by and by, attorneyat law,the pulHngdown, the carrying out, etc. away, the blotting 6. The rules are givenfor various classes of following words,in accordance with these generalprinciples. 7. Titles like the following are compounded : " viceex-president, ex-governor, rear-admiml,vice-president, etc. ; but viceroy, words. are single chancellor, vicegei'ent, Titles like the are but often compounded, are following and better, written as two words : frequently, as " chief solicitor justice, attorneygeneral,governor geneitd, lieutenant colonel, second lieutenant, etc. general, 8. Words kindred expressing compounded ; are as, etc., greatgrandfather, greatstep-daughter, step-mother, etc. etc. o r grand-aunt great-aunt, grandson, grand-uncle, , But the hyphen is needless in others,which are compounded;as, frequently cousin german, father in law, brother in law,son in law,etc., foster son, etc. second cousin,etc.,foster brother, 9. The written as following pointsof singlewords: the compass should be " southwest. southeast, northeast, northwest, But the are followhig compounded : " etc. north-northeast, west-southwest, 10. Fractions like the "'ihouldnot be one when following, compounded : written out, " two thirds, ten five eighths, half, thousandths. COMPOUND " Another class are one 95 WORDS. follows compounded as : " ' fiftieths, hundredths, ninety-uine twenty-fifth, forty-nine thirteen ten-thousandths, etc. like the Numbers are following also compounded : " etc. twenty-fifth, forty-second, forty-nine, twenty-five, of a fraction halfor qimrter (whether like the following are or from quarters) usually printed with a hyphen : Compounds 11. " witted, halfhalf-crown, half-barrel, half-dollar, half-way, half-past, half-yearly, quarter-day, half-price, quarter-barrel, ter-face, quaretc.; hut quartermaster. quarter-deck, words 12. The with /oW, of numbers one scctrey penny and pence^ united written as single y are syllable, words; but with numbers of more they are compounded or written as than words two syllable one : " two hundred-fold ; hundred-fold, twofold, tenfold, twenty-fold, fourscore, twenty score, a hundred score ; halfpenny, twopenny, fifteen fourpence, tenpence,fifteen-penny, tenpenny,halfpence, pence. 13. Ordinal numbers or hand compounded with the word usuallywritten with a hyphen ; as, are rate etc. first-rate, second-hand,fouith-hand, fifth-rate; 14. Numerals meaning,which compounded with explainthemselves : are words of various " one-eyed, one-armed,two-handed, two-headed,three-legged, etc. four-footed, four-story, Numerals are as adjective also combined follows : with a to form noun an " two-foot rule,ten-mile run, one-horse chaise,twenty-foot pole,etc. 15. Compound written as one nouns endingwith man or woman are word ; as, Eiiorlishman, workman, oysterman,goodman; needlewoman, Frencliwoman, market woman, etc. 96 APPENDIX. 16. Compounds endingwith written as one holder , monger, are ally usu- word ; as, landholder,slaveholder; bondholder,stockholder, horoughironmonger. cheesemonger, monger, Compounds ending with hoot,hook,drop,light house, room, side,or yard are made singlewords if the first part of the compound is of onlyone syllable, than one, but are joinedby a hyphen if it is of more written as two words; as, or 17. , canal-boat ; handbook, daybook,commonplace-book sailboat, longboat, water-drop sunlight, ; daylight, ; dewdrop,raindrop, ing-house, meetalehouse, boathouse,warehouse,greenhouse,* candle-light ; anteroom,) (a^so dwelling-house ; bedroom,greenroom, bedside, fireside, hillside, river-side, dressing-room; dining-room, mountain-side ; churchyard, farmyard,courtyard, timber-yard, marble-yard. written Compounds endingwith work are usually words,unless the combination is unusual ; as, single 18. as groundwork,network, framework, needlework,brickwork, ironwork,stonework ; biU mason-work,carpeut"r-work. 19. Compounds of and bush tree,leaf, made; but this seems unnecessary. in the Oxford alwaysprintedse|)arately 20. Compounds endingwith like are are Such frequently words are Bibles. written as one word, unless derived from a proper name, or unusual when combinations, they take the hyphen; as, childlike, lifelike, womanlike,workmanlike,fishlike; Arguslike, Bedouin-like, business-like, miniatu^-like. 21. one Compounds beginningwith word; as, eye are written as eyelash, eyebrow,eyeglass, eyewitness. 22. one Compounds beginningwith word, except when made bred,school-teaching); as, with school are a written as participle (school- 98 APPENDIX. The hyphen is used in all words self-explaining. and selfsame, beginningwith ulf^exceptingselfhood, with its derivatives. Selfis also compounded selfish and the compound with pronouns as a termination, etc. written as one word; as, himself, myself,itself, for on^s self, but its use is Some writers use oneself are not well established. in conare stant compound personalepithets usuallywritten with a hyphen use, which are explainthemselves;as, 28. and Many broad-shouldered, sharp-uosed, blue-eyed, longlight-haired, etc. legged, 29. of adverbs Compounds like above,ill,well,so, or ly,)with a participle endingin sometimes to form an epithet, are adjective, participial the noun written with a hyphenwhen theyprecede they but it is quiteas well to make them separate qualify, (butnot words in all cases ; as, reform," author," ^*theso called sjielling well known "the " of adverbs this illadvised Compound words; as, proceeding," the ** adverbs above should be named parties." written single as meanwhile,awhile,meantime,everywhere, anywhere,forever, forevermore, hereinbefore. howsoever, moreover, wheresoever, 30. Compounds are of all with very common, and are an or adjective written with a participle hyphen ; a as, all-conscious, all-wise,all-knowing, all-commanding,allto seeing,all-honored, all-informing, all-mighty {contracted almighty). 31. as Compounds made to the use Dictionaries and with are ing prefixes very perplexof the hyphen,and are given in the used by authors both with and with- COMPOUND out it. Those made from 99 WORDS. or adverbs,like prepositions under, after, out, cross, or counter, with words of made one word,and sometimes one are generally syllable, than one with words of more syllable.But the practice and the difference of the Dictionaries is so variable, so great,that the matter must be left to the taste and ovevy discretion of the writer. All words should be consolidated to consolidate. that it is possible Many of these compounds given in the Dictionaries, better written as separate however, would be much words; as, under anxious,over cunning,over burdensome,after counter cross reference, revolution, age, after part,cross section, counter lip,over influence. like demi,semi, Compounds made from prefixes intro, intra,extra, etc.,or like deutero, non, sub,inter, electro, pseudo,sutpho,ikermo,etc.,are often made and written as singlewords,althoughusage is -unsettled. 32. before a prefix co-, re-, or pre- occurs word which beginswith the vowel of the prefix, or ilar where before a consonant the prefixmakes a word simin form with another of different signification, a ; as, hyphen should be used after the prefix 33. Where the re-examine, re-creation, co-operate,co-ordinate,pre-exist, re-formation. re-collect, 34. It is not claimed that the rules foregoing are and usage is so variant that it cannot be expected perfect, is as the matter adopted, theywill be universally But the main dependenton taste as well as custom. pointis to make compound words only where theywill helpthe reader to understand the writer^smeaning. u . -5 , "* V APPENDIX III. TYPOGRAPHICAL SOME MATTERS. In correcting proofs, especially where they are sent to a distance,by mail or the as otherwise,authors should not use a lead pencil, to become marks are very likely Either ink illegible. or a crayon pencilshould be used. the proof-sheet, if the 2. When a query is made on author desires the correction to be made, he should the ? or Qy, If he does not wish the change erase tinctly made, the correction and query should both be dismarked through. Queriesshould never he rubbed This practice otU vntk an eraser. givesmuch trouble who are at a loss what to do, as the to proof-readers, in the manuscript, queriesoften relate to discrepancies to other matters which or they cannot readily When decide. duplicate proofsare sent to an author, should invariably be the one marked by the proof-reader returned^as otherwise errors marked by him may pass without being discovered. 1. Correcting Proofs. 3. Dates two and ones. Numbers. numbers includingthe " to numbers Also to show tween A short dash is used be- " representthat they are that a part of years isvincluded in wher^tSitea':^'' #xen between the 25th' of March all the given and from a two or a intervening more certain term. the 1st of the time of series, secutive, con- Also, January and the adoptionof SOME TYPOGRAPHICAL MATTERS. 101 Styleby the Catholic Church in 1582 to the time of its adoptionby the English Parliament in 1752,*to show that accordingto Old Style it is in one Style in the other; year, and accordingto New 18, 1724-5.^ as, January 10, 1641-2; March should 4. In quotingpages or numbers the full figures be used; as, pp. 245-253, Nos. 124-129; not 245-53, dates the figures the 1 24-9. But in giving representing century may be dropped; as, 1634-35, not 1634-5; wise, 1713-15, not 1713-5; 1875-79, not 1875-9; otherit might sometimes appear to stand for a date in Old and New Style. better in figures than printed 5. Dates are much in full, althoughin legaldocuments they are written out to preventmistake,or ^ud by tbe alteration of a figure.It is better to write out the month, either in narrative matter or in the date of a letter, instead of cember abbreviating; as, the 24th of December, 1880; or, De24, 1880 ; instead of Dec. 24, 1880. But where in statistical dates are frequent, or other matter, they may be abbreviated to save space. Write 2d, 3d, not 2nd, 3rd. the New 6. Parentheses. " Parentheses are used to enclose an 'defii^tion, explanation, authority, reference, translation, not belongingto the sentence. or other matter They now are 1 seldom used except for this purpose. On the 16th of March, 27 Eiiz. 1584-5,a bill was read the first time,in the House of Lords,entitled " An Act givingher Majesty dar authorityto alter and new make a Calendar,accordingto the Calenused in other countries." Sir Harris Nicolas. But the change till the The Old Style is stillretained not made was year 1752. in Russia and Greece,and is now twelve days behind the regular " calendar. 2 Sometimes Written or 1724/5. 172|, 102 APPENDIX. 7. Brackets. The " of brackets is the same use as but is restricted to interpolations parentheses, made by authors in corrections, notes, or explanations from others, works. or by editors in editing quotations that of 8. Quotations. indicate to is said what a " Marks passage by a taken quotation(" ") are from when speaker, But the marks words. of another it is author, or given in not used when are used his own the substance or when a passage is given, Double marks in the first person. onlyof a quotation ; but marks another,single for a where are one speechis not given used are generally within occurs quotation used. 9. In from books or letters, if the quoquotations tation is long," it is usual to begin it with a paragraph. If the quotation does not begina paragraph, should none be made before its close. Every paragraphshould have the commencing quotationmarks, but no close should be used except at the end of the last-quoted paragraph. If there is a break in the quotation, three or four periods are ally gener10. used to indicate the omission. 11. Titles of or books, pictures, etc., newspapers, when formallygiven,are usuallyquoted; but where the title of a book is well known, the Iliad, the as ated, Odyssey,the ^Eneid, or Paradise Lost, or is abbrevior is frequently repeated, quotingis unnecessary. " " 12. In quotingstanzas of poetry, the commencing quotationmark should stand outside of the stanza,so that the lines themselves will appear precisely as in the original.The mistake should not be made of allowing the quotationmarks belongingto the stanza itself to stand outside of the lines. 13. The this of vessels are names 103 MATTERS. TYPOGRAPHICAL SOME sometimes quoted. But as quofcj generally to be quiteas unnecessary of streets, else ; churches,or anything ing the names in any work where constant repetition of the especially seems of vessels occurs. names 14. Italics. with All words " from which alphabet our should be Italicizedwhenever sentence. But the i. e., etc.,viz., are In such phrasesas Latin abbreviations common as written foreign languages have not been Anglicized they occur in an English g., well,or better,printedin Eoman. in loco parentis, in statu quo, etc., the in should not be in Roman as phraseis Italic, e. when the in is Latin,not 15. Abbreviations. " the rest of the English. In narrative matter very few allowed are used in English. Those orary titleslike Mr., Messrs.,Mrs.,Dr.,Hon.,Eev.,and honinitial letters indicating or degreesand titles, membership of a society ; as, LL. D., D. D., Esq.,Kt., K. C. B., M. P., S. J.,A. A. S., etc. The Latin e. g., abbreviations are i.e., viz., and etc. are also very common. when titles, frequently occurring, Military may and also the title Professor. be properlyabbreviated, short Nothing is gained,however, by abbreviating titles like Captain or Colonel,although in lists of names they should be so written. A long title like should not be written in Professor or Major-General full when are only initialsof the name given. 17. Where of a country designated sovereigns by numbers mentioned the number is are incidentally, usuallywritten in full;as, Henry the Eighth,Louis 16. the Sixteenth. But in works where such often,they may be written with Roman Henry VIIL, Louis XVI. names occur numerals ; as, 104 APPENDIX. numbers, roand printing 18. In out, and spelled but where statisticsare also,are or one usually hundred; should given,figures small the numbers however occur, smaller than numbers are sums may be. where given in figures where dollars and much of money, odd numbers Sums better cents be used, b^th to be are pressed, ex- easilyapprehended. The Englishlanguagehas 19. Accented Letters. accentual or diacritical no marks, recognized universally exceptthe long(-)and short (^),which are never used in general works,and the diaeresis( ). Even this last as they are more " .. is used in and dictionaries for a spelling-books differentfrom its proper use. totally vowels in Englishhave therefore on purpose All other accents fixed meaning; end it is useless for writers to undertake to show by the of a foreign word use of such letters the pronunciation to a mere Englishreader. 20. Foreign Names. In usingFrench titlesbefore in English, the barbarism of using an English names with a French preposition should be avoided; noun either make both French or both English. Write Due of Orleans ; Due de la Kochefoucauld, or Duke d'Orleans, of La Rochefoucauld ; Comte Duke or or d'Artois, Duchess Count of Artois;Duchesse de Perpignan, or Duke de la Rocheof Perpignan. Not Duke d'0rl6ans, foucauld, Duchess de Perpignan. Count d'Artois, 21. Names from foreignlanguages, precededby a without a title or Christian name, as preposition Van in Dutch, Von in German, De or D' in French, or Da, Bella,or Di in Italian, when given in English, for the preposition should be written with a capital ; as. Van Tromp, Von Humboldt, Von Moltke,De Thou, D*Alembert,Da Ponte, Delia Crusca,Di Cesnola,etc. no " " " 106 APPENDIX. those informing book relating consult it In for. of the his subject, birth 26. in that all find there words is is subject to know what that fill the an is with index bulk of an mind that is no information may to the and anything author and every it occurs; be able it. to sary Unneces- regular his make it test more or is references useless index if order possible. as and important, in subject An indexes. af of absurd concerning give to death account an index, relation in closely as the of is aiiy the in avoided, be logical chrono- somewhat there that for to biography a by the index. place book the keeping but a impossible the the anything should on ; in followed It 27. to have looking inversion of followed which on where one any in the mention a in wish may where life, it appears subject mentioned that with case, order should given page so early Every be to the followed; immediately and arranged be they is therefore, biography, a there which subjects should is often as what it consult the to order begins, who not to of its definite ought editor index ingly accord- worth nothing, value. while and INDEX. A or an, both 9-12, and, 66, 67. Brackets, 102. brothers,brethren, 87, 92. but,66, 67, 69, 70. . Abbreviations, 19, 103, 104. Letters,104. Accented acquaintancey19. Adjectives,48"55. . . Adverbs, For cherubims, 19, 53, 54. 92. Collective Noun, 16, 17, 27, 51. Adjective Pronouns, 48-55. less UseFor Adjectives, Compound Words, 93-4^. Adverbs, 56-59. Position 57. 54. of, 32, 56, Compounds, 93, 94, 96, 97. 53, of Sentences, 14, 23, Construction For Relative Pronouns, 62. att 52. 75. alf,51, 28, 29, 32, 45, 50, 56, 57, 67, 69, of, 72, 76, 77. allude,82. almost CorrectingProofs, 100. 66-68. Correlatives, 85. no, alternative,20. 73. among, an, dare, 31, 32. 9-12. sentence, 69. and, beginning and both, 66, . . and any^ any . which or 67. 62. Decimal 64. one, 27. Indefinite, do^ done, Definite, 10. of, 10, 11. Inserted Omission ously, errone- Double Double drive 11. as, so, Numbers not differ from, or with. differentthan^ 87. differentto, 72, 87. dilemma, 20. 93. "^ 9, 10. 101. debris^ 82. who, 61, 23. anybody else's, for is,14, 16, 18, are Article,Uses of,9-12. DateA, 100, or Negatives, 64, 65. Prepositions,75. ride, 83. 66, 67. after reason, 69. each other 49. ^ being,46, 47. besides,50. between, 73, 74. 19. effluvia, either^ pron., bid, 31, 32. elder,85. either . 87. 33. each, 15, 26. because plural,12. . . or, 50, 51. 66, 67. ./ 108 INDEX. 49,50. thatij 81,82. employeor employee^ 58. as wellj equally the . . . 85. \jeopardize, eceVy never, 59. every, 15, 26. 54. last, last three,52. 54. latter, every one, 93. and ^ie, 42, 43. /aj^ learn for feacA,87. 85. farther, 51,52. less, /ee/,81,32,53,54. compounds of,97. Jtllow, fewer,51, 52. /ie and lay,42,43. /i^e for as, 57, 58. 2iA;e, compounds of,96. or up, 79, 80. Jillf'aXl 52,54. firstly, Jirat, means, 18, 49. meter, 87. ^r""two, 52. folks,19. folk, MilitaryTitles, 94,103. Miss,Misses,19. ForeignNames, 104,105. 84. mistake, former,54. mistaken,85. 81,82, Money, sum of,in plural, "nglish, requires 18. v erb, singular Fractions,compomided,94,95. words French in 104. from, 72,73. from hence,thence further,85. for most 75. 59. almost, Mr.,pi.Messieurs,19. Mrs.,pi.Mesdames, 19. Mtusulmen, 19. got,80. graduatedor smu 87. graduated, 88. ^am, 104, 105. Names, Foreign, Double,64, 65. Negatives, neither,pron., 49. AoJ AcK? better, etc.,86. /"^ compounds of,95. Aa{/*, a" neither . . . Neuter Verb have got, 80. Aoto ^to, 59. nor, 66-68. has same Case after before it,17,18, 24. as never, ever, 59. 101. New Style, if, so, 67. no, 15,26, 58, 64,65, 85. no mistake^ 85. (/*...then,66, 67. Mood Nominative Case and the Verb, Imperative requires tive Objec, , Case,24. ImperfectTense,35. none, 51. in, 73. nor, Indexes,105. Infinitive Mood, 13-19. 64-66, 68, 69. not, 15, 26,64, 65. 31-33. sion Omis- of to,32. is for are, 14,16,17, 18, 22. 103. ~^lic8, of to,31. Misuse not only . . . but,66, 68. nothingafter almost^85. Nouns 51. of Multitude, 16, 17, 27, 109 INDEX. Preterite for 35. Participle, prttAouSy previously53. noWf as adj.,54. number for quantity 86. ^ y 88. written,92,94,95, programme^ Pronoun and 24-29. 100,101, 103,104. Antecedent, Numbers, how Pronouns,Possessive Case of,22. ObjectiveCase of, 24. Adjective, Numerals, compounded,95. 0 and oh ! 83, S4. 48-55. 60-63. Rehitive, 100. Proofs,correcting, ObjectiveCase, 24. ""/; 19,45, 72-75. oh I and 0, 83, 84. Old New and for number^86. quantity quitefor very, 58. 101. Style, o^er, 86. on iGt in,73. one*8f51. one, another one Quotations, 102,103. y Prefix,79, 99. 69. reason because^ re-. 49. . . . onlyfor excq"t^70. or, 65, 66, 67,69. Redundant Words, 69, 75, 78-80. relative lot relation^ 19, 87. 49,50. othery other bendeSf50. otAer than,50. 49. otherwise, Relative " " . . . . ride or Pronouns,60-63. 83. drive, 18. names of,Singular, Sciences, 52. secondjsecondly, 31, 32. /"a"n", 18. "ee, 101. Parentheses, Sentences, Construction of, 14, 23,28,29, 32, 45,50, 56, 57,67, 36. used for, Use of the,44-47. Possessive Case with, 45, 46. Active for use Passive,46,-47. Awkward Preterite Participle, of Passive,47. and pease,, 86. Plural,of Nouns, peas 13-20, 89-92. 69,72, 76, 77. seraphimSf19,92. 43, 44. sit, shall and will, 36-41. should and would,86-41. sitand set,43,44. set and 19. Of Decimals,19. Of Titles, Of Verbs, Of Pronouns, 25-27. hen, 44. sitting 44. sitting-room, 13-20, 25-27, 89-92. smell,53. Possessive Formation Case, eign For- tions, Of Abbrevia- Words, 92. 92. Of of,89-92. 21-24. With smeU of,86. 66, 67. as, that, matter^ 80. subject so, such, , . . Mood, Subjunctive 45, 46. Participle, 30. Prefix re-, 79, 99. such for so, 58. Prefixes,compounds with,98, 99. Superfluous Words, 69,75,78-80. 72-76. Prepositions, At end of 80. sylvan forest, Misuse of, 72, sentence, 72. 73. Omission of,74. Needless toMe, 53. use of,74,75. Double,76. taste of,86. 110 INDEX. Case and, 13- Taatological Words,69,7b,78-80. Verb,Nominative 19. teach and learn, 87. Tense, or Time, 34,35. whom, 86. that,adj.pron., 48,54,55. than that,rel. pron., 60, 63. that,conj.,66, 70, 71. them for . , . . very, 58. 80. incessant, Vessels, quotingnames very . was for was, 14,16,17, 26, 30. were when . where . then,66. . fAu,that,48, 54,55. Mote and yo", 25, 26. whether . . . yet,66. 52. last, Time, or Tense,34, 35. Titles,of Individuals,19, 103. Military,94, 103. Of Books, 104,105. etc.,102. Foreign, 31-33. to (signof Infinitive), Oiree 86. transpire, 80. minuiics, trifling try and, 33. two of,103. for were, 13, 26, 30. 87. graduated, was 66. there, 19. whereahouts, though after those,55. 54. then,as adj., then when,66. there where,66. these,those, 54,55. 52. third,thirdly^ . Verb,Neater,has same Case as before it, 17, 18, 24. 52. first, . . . ... or, 66. which,28,60-63. whole,51, 52. toAo,whose,whom, 24,60-68f'^ 36-41. tot7/and shall, but for,70. loithout for unless, tt^ottMand would yet , as . " should,36-41. 86. Uef,would rather, though,66. you was, 13. yotfand thou,25, 26. TTniversltyPresi*. Cambridge : John WUsoii nnd Son. HandbooK of Punctuation. Mctnation anilder Matters. Typoioiipliical of Authors Printers, MABSMAIilt T. BIGEJLOW, By BrettSs versity Camhridge. For the use and iTettehei^, Corrector SmaU Scholars* the at Uni' S9 CLOTH, 4to. CENTS. Lenox BiGiiiiOW. Mb. Deab Typographical and autnora which contribute it to all AlUbone'8 the other in pointing excellent an I many. of letters. of manual cordially is for be to of praf.tical treatment public's jations to him." a obli the use occasion afford I. Austin of Awthort, book reading have who men hardly Daily comfort bad over find to and Punctuation recom* authors, printers, men Faithfully yours, It is intended ** glad and Bigelow's enlarges your 19, 1881. Aug. York, " long groaned was the to Dictionary Mr. ** for sent (having and printers), will mend I " " Matters Neva Library, to without of Allibonb. the subject, and Monthly, Atlantic " teachers, while print circulars, advertisements, a and authors of it for copy reference." " business etc., can Schenectady Union. Mistakes inWriting anil How toATOidTbim Englisli, Wor Use the ** Punctuation This ** of is busy admirable an The *' we This is . generally ; but the as up their the of Matters,^' of the use which little manual Herald, with rules grammar, of and shows, speech, parts It is arranged cally, systemati- and use. the for and comprehensive. all writors nearly convenient It is not words correct use to most Christian " little volume. it takes by example, is adapted to and BIGELOW, Typogrttphical those are it knowledge." valuable a out commend . have definitions and pointed We which author admirable little work ; the more clear it is little,dnce it is also because errors . of other Lan^ the Speak or CENTS. people, liable. are T, and SO CLOTH, Write, Teach, MABSHAXL By guage. who all of home a and school." the " The Ctir^nt. ** The tion ** matter Is desired This would "Mak*n^ is be a of er is well can useful be arranged, and readily found." book. A careful the " study all who to advantage writing. "" Ooepel Banner* great points which ux"on Union. ^nstruc Cfhrittian of have the to several do mu"h cliapters or little THE BiaST IV WOBD THE UOBI FLAO". CAMPBELL'S Handbook English of WITH AN Synonyms APPSNDIX. 8HOWINO The Correct 160 This It in teachers and and vocabulary It includfs umes which A great writer The the certain doubtful his style languaize. containing *'A and is usage. ara would for speakers, gain writers, oopioua more a of expression. of two the dollars placed or at bulky more toI* more. the service of tha speaker. Words," of 40,000 synonymoidl aid matter is here words of Appendix, eriminated," sold eommonly choice and power really important the are all who their increase oti. type. in fact " 50 about substantially will students Undingf contains clear, distinct which work a Prepositions. of olotii little Tolnme printed 18 Heat pa"pei. oompaot words, Uses best a List ** A i^own what showing trustworthy writer's by his Compared Prepositions guide Prepositions in a knowledge use of these great of and to littla after use number EngUsh Dia- of cases Idiom hinges of and the