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Kirkham, Samuel

"English Grammar in Familiar Lectures"

The introduction into the ELEVENTH EDITION, of
many verbal criticisms, of additional corrections in orthography and
orthoepy, of the leading principles of rhetoric, and of general
additions and improvements in various parts of the work, render _this
edition/,_ it is believed, _far preferable_ to any of the former
editions of the work.
Perhaps some will regard the philosophical notes as a useless exhibition
of pedantry. If so, the author's only apology is, that some
investigations of this nature seemed to be called for by a portion of
the community whose minds, of late, appear to be under the influence of
a kind of _philosophical mania;_ and to such these notes are
respectfully submitted for just what _they_ may deem their real value.
The author's own opinion on this point, is, that they proffer no
_material_ advantages to common learners; but that they may profitably
engage the attention of the curious, and perhaps impart a degree of
interest to the literary connoisseur.
New-York, August 22, 1820.


CONTENTS.
Address to the learner
A, an, one
And
Adjectives
Adverbs
Agreement of words
Anomalies
Articles
Because
But, than, as
Case
Nominative
Possessive
Objective
Nominative case independent
Nominative case absolute
Apposition of cases
Nominative and objective after the verb _to be_
Active, passive, and neuter nominatives
Conjunctions
Conjugation of regular verbs
Derivation (all the philosophical notes treat of derivation)
Etymology
Exercises in false syntax
In punctuation
Figures of speech
Gender
Government
Grammar, general division of
Philosophical
Have
Idioms
Interjections
It
If
Key to the exercises
Letters, sounds of
Like
Manner of meaning of words
Moods
Signs of
Subjunctive
Nouns
Gender of
Person of
Number of
Case of
Orthography
Rules of
Parsing
Participles
Poetry transposed
Prepositions
Pronouns
Personal
Compound personal
Adjective
Relative
Pronunciation
Prosody
Provincialisms
Punctuation
Rhetoric
Rules of syntax
Sentences, definitions of simple and compound
Transposition of
Standard of grammatical accuracy
Syntax
To
Tenses
Signs of the
The
That
Terminations
Verbs
Active-transitive
Active-intransitive
Passive
Neuter
Defective
Auxiliary
Regular
Irregular
Compound
Versification
Worth
What, which, who
You


PREFACE
There appears to be something assuming in the act of writing, and
thrusting into public notice, a new work on a subject which has already
employed many able pens; for who would presume to do this, unless he
believed his production to be, in some respects, superior to every one
of the kind which had preceded it? Hence, in presenting to the public
this system of English Grammar, the author is aware that an apology will
be looked for, and that the arguments on which that apology is grounded,
must inevitably undergo a rigid scrutiny.


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