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AN ENGLISH GRAMMAR
FOR THE USE OF
HIGH SCHOOL, ACADEMY, AND COLLEGE CLASSES
BY
W.M. BASKERVILL
PROFESSOR OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE IN VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY NASHVILLE, TENN.
AND
J.W. SEWELL
OF THE FOGG HIGH SCHOOL, NASHVILLE, TENN.
1895
PREFACE.
Of making many English grammars there is no end; nor should there be till theoretical scholarship and actual practice are more happily wedded. In this field much valuable work has already been accomplished; but it has been done largely by workers accustomed to take the scholar's point of view, and their writings are addressed rather to trained minds than to immature learners. To find an advanced grammar unencumbered with hard words, abstruse thoughts, and difficult principles, is not altogether an easy matter. These things enhance the difficulty which an ordinary youth experiences in grasping and assimilating the facts of grammar, and create a distaste for the study. It is therefore the leading object of this book to be both as scholarly and as practical as possible. In it there is an attempt to present grammatical facts as simply, and to lead the student to assimilate them as thoroughly, as possible, and at the same time to do away with confusing difficulties as far as may be.
To attain these ends it is necessary to keep ever in the foreground the _real basis of grammar_; that is, good literature. Abundant quotations from standard authors have been given to show the student that he is dealing with the facts of the language, and not with the theories of grammarians. It is also suggested that in preparing written exercises the student use English classics instead of "making up" sentences. But it is not intended that the use of literary masterpieces for grammatical purposes should supplant or even interfere with their proper use and real value as works of art. It will, however, doubtless be found helpful to alternate the regular reading and aesthetic study of literature with a grammatical study, so that, while the mind is being enriched and the artistic sense quickened, there may also be the useful acquisition of arousing a keen observation of all grammatical forms and usages. Now and then it has been deemed best to omit explanations, and to withhold personal preferences, in order that the student may, by actual contact with the sources of grammatical laws, discover for himself the better way in regarding given data. It is not the grammarian's business to "correct:" it is simply to record and to arrange the usages of language, and to point the way to the arbiters of usage in all disputed cases. Free expression within the lines of good usage should have widest range.
It has been our aim to make a grammar of as wide a scope as is consistent with the proper definition of the word. Therefore, in addition to recording and classifying the facts of language, we have endeavored to attain two other objects,--to cultivate mental skill and power, and to induce the student to prosecute further studies in this field. It is not supposable that in so delicate and difficult an undertaking there should be an entire freedom from errors and oversights. We shall gratefully accept any assistance in helping to correct mistakes.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: An English Grammar by Baskervill and Sewell
- 2: Kellner's Historical Outlines of English Syntax
- 3: Sidenote The material of grammar
- 4: Its peculiar and abundant idioms
- 5: Which will serve to illustrate points of syntax once correct
- 6: These are called COLLECTIVE NOUNS
- 7: Sidenote Verbal abstract nouns
- 8: Sidenote Nouns change by use
- 9: Nor are they common class nouns
- 10: Nouns used as descriptive terms
- 11: Are spoken of as if pure nouns
- 12: Sidenote Some words either gender or neuter nouns
- 13: The inflections for gender belong
- 14: From the Old French maistre maistresse
- 15: Sidenote Two masculines from feminines
- 16: Sidenote Effect of personification
- 17: Plurals formed by Vowel Change
- 18: Though they are plural in form
- 19: These make the last part plural
- 20: And retain their foreign plurals
- 21: And being equivalent to one verb
- 22: The word toward which the preposition points
- 23: Sidenote Use of the apostrophe
- 24: Containing words in apposition
- 25: The introduction which Atterbury made
- 26: What is bolder than a miller's neckcloth
- 27: Sidenote Classes of pronouns
- 28: Sidenote Three persons of pronouns
- 29: And hoo for heo in some dialects of England
- 30: Sidenote Absolute personal pronouns
- 31: Formerly mine and thine stood before their nouns
- 32: Sidenote The old dative case
- 33: Sidenote Reflexive use of the personal pronouns
- 34: Reflexive or compound personal pronouns
- 35: Exercises on Personal Pronouns
- 36: Declension of interrogative pronouns
- 37: It usually precedes the pronoun
- 38: Remarks on the relative pronouns
- 39: Other examples might be quoted from Burke
- 40: Sidenote Which and its antecedents
- 41: Either of which would be neuter
- 42: Whoso is heroic will always find crises to try his edge
- 43: As what hardly ever has an antecedent
- 44: Pronouns in indirect questions
- 45: Exercises on the Relative Pronoun
- 46: Sidenote Function of adjective pronouns
- 47: Some of these are simple pronouns
- 48: Find sentences containing ten numeral pronouns
- 49: Find sentences with six indefinite pronouns
- 50: I did remind thee of our own dear Lake
- 51: Sidenote Office of Adjectives
- 52: Sidenote Classes of adjectives
- 53: Faded participial adjectives Sleep is a blessed thing
- 54: Their pronominal use being evidently a shortening
- 55: Pronominal adjectives are primarily pronouns
- 56: But might be called an EXCLAMATORY ADJECTIVE
- 57: Sidenote Substitute for inflection in comparison
- 58: Sidenote Adjectives irregularly compared
- 59: Throw away the worser part of it
- 60: 163 the comparatives and superlatives are adjectives
- 61: Adverbs are sometimes used as adjectives
- 62: The method of parsing is simple
- 63: And that remained a demonstrative adjective
- 64: We ca' her sometimes the tane
- 65: Sidenote With plural of abstract nouns
- 66: Sidenote Mark of a substantive
- 67: PEARSON Sidenote With abstract nouns
- 68: Might be considered as adverbs modifying the article
- 69: Parse the articles in the following 1
- 70: Transitive and intransitive verbs
- 71: Sidenote The nature of intransitive verbs
- 72: The verb representing the action
- 73: Sidenote Meaning of passive voice
- 74: Sidenote Meaning of the word
- 75: Subjunctive in Dependent Clauses
- 76: Tell whether each verb is indicative or subjunctive
- 77: The subjunctive is often found in indirect questions
- 78: Prevalence of the Subjunctive Mood
- 79: But hardly any other subjunctive forms are
- 80: And dart their arrowy odor through the brain
- 81: It is not in man that walk eth
- 82: Such verbs as choose have five
- 83: Broadswords are maddening in the rear
- 84: They will be discussed later Sec
- 85: Verbs classified according to form
- 86: 3
- 87: The form clomb is not used in prose
- 88: Drunk is the one correct past participle of the verb drink
- 89: May is used as either indicative or subjunctive
- 90: Sidenote Second and third persons
- 91: Sidenote Disguising a command
- 92: Exercises on Shall and Will
- 93: Which may be called irregular weak verbs
- 94: Bend bent
- 95: Is always intransitive in use
- 96: Participles are adjectival verbals
- 97: Participles of the verb choose
- 98: Infinitives of the verb choose
- 99: While the gerund expresses action
- 100: How to parse verbs and verbals
- 101: For fuller parsing of the infinitive
- 102: The word adverb means joined to a verb
- 103: And limit adjectives or adverbs
- 104: Adverbs classified according to meaning
- 105: Adverbs classified according to use
- 106: Bring up sentences containing twenty adverbs
- 107: Then whether it is an adjective or an adverb
- 108: Parse all the adverbs in the following sentences 1
- 109: Sidenote Classes of conjunctions
- 110: Or whether such a body is moved along my hand
- 111: Let us see whether the greatest
- 112: But really there is an ellipsis between the two words
- 113: Parse all the conjunctions in these sentences 1
- 114: Whilst now we pray with the utmost coldness
- 115: The case in which the preposition is expected to be
- 116: The verb broke is a predicate
- 117: Sidenote Usefulness of prepositions
- 118: Sidenote Phrase prepositions
- 119: 5 Then the idiomatic phrases at last
- 120: PARKMAN The people were then against us
- 121: Especially adjectives and adverbs of direction
- 122: Which may be in the case of a Nouns
- 123: Sidenote Idiomatic use with verbs
- 124: 6 The equivalent of notwithstanding
- 125: A Parse the prepositions in these paragraphs 1
- 126: And his hat was garnished with white and sable plumes
- 127: A Indefinite relative adjective
- 128: He yearned to our patriot bands
- 129: And is followed by a dative objective
- 130: Classification according to form
- 131: Sidenote Definition Predicate
- 132: Sidenote Complement of an intransitive verb
- 133: Introduced by a preposition for example
- 134: As complement of an intransitive verb
- 135: 6 Participial phrase Another reading
- 136: And modify the predicate in the same way
- 137: Sentences with compound predicates are
- 138: Then the grammatical subject and predicate
- 139: Participles and participial phrases
- 140: 3 As complement See examples under 1
- 141: 4 Modifiers of the predicate Sec
- 142: The present capital of New England
- 143: Sidenote Sentences with like
- 144: The dependent or subordinate clauses
- 145: With a noun clause in apposition with it
- 146: Pick out the adjective clauses
- 147: Pick out the adverbial clauses in the following sentences
- 148: And adverb clauses as single modifying adverbs
- 149: 3 Analyze the dependent clauses according to Sec
- 150: The following complex sentences 1
- 151: The cooerdinate conjunctions and
- 152: Outline for analyzing compound sentences
- 153: Sidenote Ground covered by syntax
- 154: Sidenote The basis of syntax
- 155: Since most of the personal pronouns
- 156: Sidenote Objective for the nominative
- 157: The usage is too common to need further examples
- 158: Or preposition which governs it
- 159: Sidenote As antecedent of a relative
- 160: Sometimes the gerund has the possessive form before it
- 161: Personal pronouns and their antecedents
- 162: Restrictive and unrestrictive relatives
- 163: Who and which are either cooerdinating or restrictive
- 164: Others regard books as the antecedent
- 165: Object of a preposition understood
- 166: Or lack of proper connection between the clauses
- 167: Sidenote Direction for rewriting
- 168: And repeat this for any further reference
- 169: Sidenote Distributives either and neither
- 170: Sidenote None usually plural
- 171: PRESCOTT Sidenote All singular and plural
- 172: Agreement of adjectives with nouns
- 173: Comparative and superlative forms
- 174: Sidenote Double comparative and superlative
- 175: Sidenote With a singular noun
- 176: To limit two or more modified nouns
- 177: Sidenote Collective noun of singular meaning
- 178: Sidenote Plural form and singular meaning
- 179: Sidenote Subjects after the verb
- 180: Sidenote Conjunction omitted
- 181: Are connected by adversative or disjunctive conjunctions
- 182: Sequence of tenses verbs and verbals
- 183: Indirect discourse means reported speech
- 184: Sidenote Careless use of the participial phrase
- 185: To modify it as closely and clearly as possible
- 186: Tell what the adverb modifies in each quotation
- 187: Two negatives strengthened a negative idea
- 188: Sidenote Choice and proper position of correlatives
- 189: Instead of the subordinate conjunction that
- 190: Words with particular prepositions
- 191: Words taking different prepositions for different meanings
- 192: Expect from Sidenote Expect of
- 193: As shown in the following quotations Sidenote Of
- 194: Are neither beautiful to the sight nor feeling
- 195: Of personal pronoun with antecedent
- 196: Compound predicate and subject
- 197: Declension of interrogative pronouns
- 198: As compared with other languages
- 199: Irregularly compared adjectives
- 200: With different meaning in plural
- 201: Distinguished from other ing words
- 202: Reflexive use of personal pronoun
- 203: Spelling becoming phonetic in verbs
- 204: Distinguished from other ing words
