Composition and punctuation familiarly explainedVirtue Bros. & Company, 1865 - 122 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 18
Page 5
... assertion , without lugging into one part or other of the sentence , some qualification or exception of little impor- tance . As far as my observation has gone , Dryden appears to be the first who emancipated our style from this insipid ...
... assertion , without lugging into one part or other of the sentence , some qualification or exception of little impor- tance . As far as my observation has gone , Dryden appears to be the first who emancipated our style from this insipid ...
Page 14
... assertions about bare possibility - if I am to argue on assumptions , and not on facts - if my positive assertions are to be answered by conjectures - if Pascal is produced when I require Kant - if exceptions are constantly tendered ...
... assertions about bare possibility - if I am to argue on assumptions , and not on facts - if my positive assertions are to be answered by conjectures - if Pascal is produced when I require Kant - if exceptions are constantly tendered ...
Page 16
... assertion and so he gave it to John . John then came to me but this was like all the rest . Rest assured notwithstanding Thirdly . Avoid the frequent & c . as your great enemy to improvement in writing . If you depend on this crutch ...
... assertion and so he gave it to John . John then came to me but this was like all the rest . Rest assured notwithstanding Thirdly . Avoid the frequent & c . as your great enemy to improvement in writing . If you depend on this crutch ...
Page 34
... Règles de l'art d'écrire , or Rules for the Art of Writing , I may safely assert , that if one had it off by heart it could afford no assistance whatever in the way of instruc- tion - those who are labouring to acquire a good 34 STYLE .
... Règles de l'art d'écrire , or Rules for the Art of Writing , I may safely assert , that if one had it off by heart it could afford no assistance whatever in the way of instruc- tion - those who are labouring to acquire a good 34 STYLE .
Page 38
... assertion . But as this will be treated elsewhere , we may now dismiss it , and pursue our immediate subject . Style ... assertions that no one is bound to believe . But when offered as media of instruction , they are worse than useless ...
... assertion . But as this will be treated elsewhere , we may now dismiss it , and pursue our immediate subject . Style ... assertions that no one is bound to believe . But when offered as media of instruction , they are worse than useless ...
Common terms and phrases
admiration admit ÆSCHYLUS AMEN CORNER answer appear assertion auxiliary verb avoid beautiful better blunder Book of Armagh called century CHAPTER Charles Tomlinson christmas-box Cicero cloth boards colon and semicolon comma commencement composition compositor conjugators construction correct dash defective verbs DICTIONARY Doctor Johnson doubt ellipsis English errors example explain expression extenso fault French give grammar grammarians Greek high pointing horse ignorance important improvement instance instruction Irish John language Latin learned literary long sentence long-winded long-windedness meaning morocco Murray Murray's necessary never newspapers object observe occasions paragraph parentheses particular past participle persons plain polished languages printers proper propriety punctuation pupil racter reader remarkable requires rules S. P. Woodward sense signify simple sometimes stop style subjunctive mood Suppose tence tense thing tion uncle gave understand verbs VIRTUE BROTHERS W. D. Hamilton wish words write
Popular passages
Page 2 - VITRUVIUS'S ARCHITECTURE, translated by J. Gwilt, with Plates. 5s. 130. GRECIAN ARCHITECTURE, Principles of Beauty in, by the Earl of Aberdeen.
Page 65 - Philosophers assert, that nature is unlimited in her operations ; that she has inexhaustible treasures in reserve ; that knowledge will always be progressive ; and that all future generations will continue to make discoveries, of which we have not the least idea.
Page 6 - Gd. 131. READY-RECKONER FOR MILLERS, FARMERS, AND MERCHANTS, showing the Value of any Quantity of Corn, with the Approximate Values of Mill-stones & Mill Work.
Page 4 - NAVIGATION AND SHIP-BUILDING. 51. NAVAL ARCHITECTURE, by J. Peake. 3s. 53*. SHIPS FOR OCEAN AND RIVER SERVICE, Construction of, by Captain HA Sommerfeldt. Is.
Page 5 - Is. 6d. 76. GEOMETRY, DESCRIPTIVE, with a Theory of Shadows and Perspective, and a Description of the Principles and Practice of Isometrical Projection, by JF Heather.
Page 6 - ARITHMETIC : including Tables for the Calculation of Simple Interest, with Logarithms for Compound Interest, and Annuities, by W. Hipsley. Is. 85*. SUPPLEMENT TO THE ABOVE, Is. 85 and 85* in 1 vol., 2s.
Page 19 - ... which used to be the standard of propriety and correctness of speech, was then, and, I think, has ever since continued, the worst school in England for that accomplishment ; and so will remain, till better care be taken in the education of our young nobility, that they may set out into the world with some foundation of literature, in order to qualify them for patterns of politeness.
Page 1 - Lamborn. 2s. 134. METALLURGY OF SILVER AND LEAD, by RH Lamborn. 2s. 135. ELECTRO-METALLURGY, by A. Watt. Is. Gd. 138. HANDBOOK OF THE TELEGRAPH, by R. Bond. Is. 143. EXPERIMENTAL ESSAYS— On the Motion of Camphor and Modern Theory of Dew, by C. Tomlinson. Is.
Page 65 - But as this passion for admiration, when it works according to reason, improves the beautiful part of our species in every thing that is laudable ; so nothing is more destructive to them when it is governed by vanity and folly.
Page 2 - ENGINEERING. 33. CRANES AND MACHINERY FOR RAISING HEAVY BODIES, the Art of Constructing, by J. Glynn. Is. 34. STEAM ENGINE, by Dr. Lardner. Is.