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meaning of Voices, Moods, Tenses, Persons, and Numbers, they ought to be able, with a little guidance, to make up a conjugation. They would thus be engaged in an interesting exercise of the intelligence, while learning by rote would be only a tedious exercise of the memory.

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33. Analysis is a more valuable exercise than diagramming, since it calls for much practice in the use of English. Diagramming (see pars. 547-551) may be employed more or less as a substitute for oral or written analysis, or for illustration (as a drawing) of a difficult

sentence.

34. The system of diagramming here given has the advantages of accuracy and clearness. A diagram is a graphic representation of the relations of the parts of a sentence, and it should show unmistakably the nature and use of every element. Such graphic representation is economical of time and space, and for advanced pupils it is, if not overdone, an excellent means of showing complete grammatical grasp of a sentence. It conduces to the better understanding, and therefore to the better use, of written English.

35. "The author is utterly at a loss to conceive on what principle the introduction of faulty sentences for correction can be objected to. Specimens of bad spelling for correction are injurious, because, in English, spelling is not reducible to fixed rules, but is for the most part a matter of simple recollection, and if the eye gets accustomed to the look of ill-spelt words, it is often difficult to recollect the correct mode of spelling them. Syntactical errors are of a totally different kind. They admit of being corrected on fixed principles; and as the learner is pretty sure to meet with numerous examples of faulty sentences, both in conversation and in reading, it seems desirable that he should have some practice in the correction of those mistakes which are of most frequent occurrence. Those who object

to exercises of this kind should, to be consistent, exclude from books on logic all specimens of fallacies given for the purpose of correction. Yet those who have studied and taught logic are aware that few exercises are more beneficial.”-MASON: English Grammar, ed. 1861, p. 173.

INDEX

The numbers refer to the pages.

A and an, uses of, 120, 121
Absolute nominative, 82
Abstract nouns, 4, 65, 66
Active voice, 127

Adjective clauses, 243–245

Adjective elements, 221, 256, 257
Adjectives, uses of, 29-31, 37
definition, 37
position of, 33

kinds, 117, 118
participial, 40, 117, 152
limiting pronouns, 35
used as nouns, 119
used for adverbs, 199, 283
comparison of, 122–124
some not compared, 124
parsing of, 126

review of, 125

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Adverbs, distinguished from attri-
butes, 132, 133, 199
misuse of, 199
comparison of, 198

interrogative, 45, 194

conjunctive, 195–197, 322, 245,
250

Agreement, rules of, 185, 186,
277

Analysis of sentences, 84, 217-271
of simple sentences, 230-236
of complex sentences, 237-259
review of, 262-265

by diagrams, 266–271, 325
Anglo-Saxon, 288-291

Antecedent of a pronoun, 101, 105

agreement with, 101, 110, 282
Apposition, 81

case of nouns in, 81, 87, 91
pronouns in, 100, 103
Articles, 33, 120, 121, 283

origin of name, 319
Aryans, the, 285

As, as relative pronoun, 110
other uses, 196, 209, 210
Attribute, 132

simple, 220

adjuncts of, 227

distinguished from adverb, 132,
133, 199, 283

Auxiliary verbs, be and have, 9–13

Auxiliary verbs, shall and will, 13, Comparison of adjectives, 122-124

160, 181, 279

others, 146, 181-184

in old English, 299, 300
Comparison of adverbs, 198

in the subjunctive mood, 141, Complex sentences, 237

321

BE, parts of, 8

conjugation of, 173-175
cases after, 80, 88

uses of, 8-13, 17, 133, 319
understood, 229
But, as relative pronoun, 110
other uses, 211, 322

CALL, Conjugation of, 176-181
Can, conjugation and use of, 183,
184

Case, definition, 78
nominative, 78-82
nominative absolute, 82
nominative of address, 81

objective, 83-88, 148

analysis of, 237-259

diagramming of, 268-271
Compound elements, 207, 208,
229, 261

Compound sentences, 260, 261
diagramming of, 271
Compound words, 304-306
Conditions, 139

with or without if, 142
Conjugation of verbs, 170-185
Conjunctions, uses of, 53, 54, 202,
284
definition, 54

kinds of, 202, 203

correlative, 55, 202

position of, 55

possessive, 88-91, 96, 271, 299 Conjunctive adverbs, 195-197,

after be, 80, 88

of appositives, 81, 87, 91, 100, 103 Coördinate, see "Clauses"

in old English, 299

rules of, 276, 278

Clauses, 237

introducing adverbial clauses,

196, 237

245, 250, 322

Coördinating conjunctions, 202

Copulative verbs, 131-134

participles of, 153

coördinate, 260

subordinate, how introduced,

237, 244, 245, 250

in apposition, 244

noun, 238-242

adjective, 243-245
adverbial, 247-255
Collective nouns, 64
number of, 71, 186
Common gender, 74
Common nouns, 63

Comparative degree, 122, 123

cases after, 134

passive, 134

DARE, 184

Declarative sentence, 22

Defective verbs, 181-184
Definite article, 120, 121

Demonstrative adjectives, 118
Demonstrative pronouns, 113
Derivation of English words, 304–

318

Derivatives, formation of, 304

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Inflection, 288, 289

in early English, 298-303
of verbs, 186, 303

of personal pronouns, 98, 300-
302

Interjections, uses of, 58
definition, 59

Interrogative adjectives, 118

Interrogative adverbs, 45, 194
Interrogative pronouns, 111-113
Interrogative sentences, 22, 231
Intransitive verbs, 129, 154
Irregular comparison, of adjec-
tives, 123, 299, 300
of adverbs, 198
Irregular verbs, 165
It, uses of, 100, 240
Its, history of, 301, 302

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