An Examination of the Functional Elements of an English Sentence: Together with a New System of Analytic MarksMacmillan, 1882 - 163 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα v
... language must always be examined on historic principles . Hence I have been obliged to refer to some of the earlier forms of speech , and in particular to that Old English which was spoken by our Anglo - Saxon ancestors . The prominence ...
... language must always be examined on historic principles . Hence I have been obliged to refer to some of the earlier forms of speech , and in particular to that Old English which was spoken by our Anglo - Saxon ancestors . The prominence ...
Σελίδα vii
... languages of antiquity than with modern English : and I have many pages of Greek and Latin authors where , during the ... Language does not grow in accordance with the rules of grammarians , but the rules of grammarians are framed in ...
... languages of antiquity than with modern English : and I have many pages of Greek and Latin authors where , during the ... Language does not grow in accordance with the rules of grammarians , but the rules of grammarians are framed in ...
Σελίδα viii
... languages , or between the English of one period and of another . By the Etymologist and Lexicographer a converse process may some- times be followed with advantage ; for , if the constructions associated with a verb depend to a great ...
... languages , or between the English of one period and of another . By the Etymologist and Lexicographer a converse process may some- times be followed with advantage ; for , if the constructions associated with a verb depend to a great ...
Σελίδα 3
... , it was not until language had been growing through an immense period of time that the means existed for the separate expression of subject , copula , and predicate B 2 § 5 ] 3 INTRODUCTION . Subject and logical predicate.
... , it was not until language had been growing through an immense period of time that the means existed for the separate expression of subject , copula , and predicate B 2 § 5 ] 3 INTRODUCTION . Subject and logical predicate.
Σελίδα 4
... Language is analogous to that of living organisms . There is indeed one most important analogy between the growth of Language and that of the Animal or Vegetable kingdoms ; for just as the Naturalist discovers that the phenomena of a ...
... Language is analogous to that of living organisms . There is indeed one most important analogy between the growth of Language and that of the Animal or Vegetable kingdoms ; for just as the Naturalist discovers that the phenomena of a ...
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
An Examination of the Functional Elements of an English Sentence: Together ... William Garmonsway Wrightson Δεν υπάρχει διαθέσιμη προεπισκόπηση - 2008 |
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
accusative adjectival adjective adverbial clause adverbial function adverbial infinitive adverbial-attributes antecedent apodosis asked Assistant-Master Attributive-clauses begged Book Cambridge co-ordinate clauses co-ordinate conjunctions Co-ordinating apposites co-ordinating attribute cognate object complement completed complex relative consists construction contained copula Crown 8vo dative demonstrative adverbs dependent clause direct discharging Edited by Rev ellipsis expressed Extra fcap factitive Fellow of St finite verb gerund GRAMMAR Greek Hence hypothetical inasmuch indirect object interrogative John's College late Fellow Latin locative main clause main finite verb marks Master modern English mood nominative noun clause noun or pronoun oblique assertion oblique petition oblique question Owens College Oxford participle predicate primary sentence Professor protasis relative clause relative pronoun revised School simple sentence sometimes student subj subordinate clause subordinate conjunctions substantival swá tell tenses thee Trinity College verb of petition verbal verbal-noun whence whither word þæt þám þý
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