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Kirkham, Samuel

"English Grammar in Familiar Lectures"


pron.?--When are they called interrogative pronominal adjectives?--What
is said of _whatever_ and _whichever_?--Is _what_ ever used as an
interjection?--Give examples.--Repeat the order of parsing a rel.
pron.--What Rules do you apply in parsing a relative?--What Rules in
parsing a compound relative?--What Rules in parsing an
interrogative?--Does the relative _which_ ever relate to a sentence for
its antecedent?--When does the conjunction _as_ become a relative?--Give
examples.
EXERCISES IN FALSE SYNTAX.
NOTE 1, to RULE 13. When a noun or pronoun is the subject of a verb, it
must be in the nominative case.
Who will go? Him and I. How does thee do? Is thee well?
"Him and I;" not proper, because the pronoun _him_ is the subject of the
verb _will go_ understood, therefore him should be in the nominative
case, _he_, according to the above NOTE. (Repeat the NOTE.) _Him_ and I
are connected by the conjunction _and_, and _him_ is in the obj. case,
and I in the nom., therefore RULE 33d, is violated. (Repeat the Rule.)
In the second and third examples, _thee_ should be _thou_, according to
the NOTE.


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