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Kirkham, Samuel

"English Grammar in Familiar Lectures"


Z.--_Z_ has the sound of flat _s_; as in _freeze, brazen_.

RULES FOR SPELLING.
SPELLING is the art of expressing a word by its proper letters.
The following rules are deemed important in practice, although they
assist us in spelling only a small portion of the words of our language.
This useful art is to be chiefly acquired by studying the spelling-book
and dictionary, and by strict attention in reading.
RULE I. Monosyllables ending in _f, l_, or _s_, double the final or
ending consonant when it is preceded by a _single_ vowel; as _staff,
mill, pass_. Exceptions; _of, if, is, as, lids, was, yes, his, this,
us_, and _thus_.
_False Orthography for the learner to correct_.--Be thou like the
gale that moves the gras, to those who ask thy aid.--The aged hero
comes forth on his staf; his gray hair glitters in the beam.--Shal
mortal man be more just than God?--Few know the value of health til
they lose it.--Our manners should be neither gros, nor excessively
refined.
And that is not the lark, whose notes do beat
The vaulty heaven so high above our heads:
I have more care to stay, than wil to go.


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