FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2165   2166   2167   2168   2169   2170   2171   2172   2173   2174   2175   2176   2177   2178   2179   2180   2181   2182   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189  
2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207   2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   >>   >|  
'"--_Jonson cor._ "Honesty is reckoned _of_ little worth."--_Lily cor._ "Learn to esteem life as _you_ ought."--_Dodsley cor._ "As the soundest health is less perceived than the lightest malady, so the highest joy toucheth us less _sensibly_ than the smallest sorrow."--_Id._ "_Youth_ is no apology for _frivolousness_."--_Whiting cor._ "The porch was _of_ the same width as the temple."--_Milman cor._ "The other tribes contributed _neither_ to his rise _nor to his_ downfall."--_Id._ "His whole religion, _with all its laws_, would have been shaken to its foundation."--_Id._ "The English has most commonly been neglected, and children _have been_ taught only _in_ the Latin syntax."--_J. Ward cor._ "They are not _noticed_ in the notes."-- _Id._ "He walks in righteousness, doing what he would _have others do to him_."--_Fisher cor._ "They stand _independent_ of the rest of the sentence."--_Ingersoll cor._ "My uncle _and_ his son were in town yesterday."--_Lennie cor._ "She _and_ her sisters are well."--_Id._ "His purse, with its contents, _was_ abstracted from his pocket."--_Id._ "The great constitutional feature of this institution being, that directly _after_ the acrimony of the last election is over, the acrimony of the next begins."--_Dickens cor._ "His disregarding _of_ his parents' advice has brought him into disgrace."--_Farnum cor._ "Can you tell me _why_ his father _made_ that remark?"--_Id._ "_Why does_ our teacher _detain_ us so long?"--_Id._ "I am certain _that_ the boy said so."--_Id._ "WHICH means any thing or things before named; and THAT may represent any person or persons, thing or things, _that_ have been speaking, spoken to, or spoken of."--_Perley cor._ "A certain number of syllables _occurring in a particular order_, form a foot. _Poetic feet_ are so called because it is by their aid that the voice, as it were, steps along."--_L. Murray et al. cor._ "_Questions asked by_ a principal verb _only_--as, _'Teach I?' 'Burns he?'_ &c.,--are _archaisms_, and now _peculiar to the poets_."--_A. Murray cor._ "Tell whether the 18th, _the_ 19th, _the_ 20th, _the_ 21st, _the_ 22d, or _the_ 23d _rule is_ to be used, and repeat the rule."--_Parker and Fox cor._ "The resolution was adopted without much deliberation, _and consequently_ caused great dissatisfaction." Or: "The resolution, _which_ caused great dissatisfaction, was adopted without much deliberation."-- _Iid._ "The man is now much _noticed_ by the people thereabout
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2165   2166   2167   2168   2169   2170   2171   2172   2173   2174   2175   2176   2177   2178   2179   2180   2181   2182   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189  
2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207   2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Murray

 
things
 

dissatisfaction

 

resolution

 

adopted

 
deliberation
 
acrimony
 
noticed
 

caused

 

spoken


number

 
speaking
 

persons

 
person
 

represent

 
Perley
 

father

 

remark

 

brought

 

disgrace


Farnum

 
syllables
 

teacher

 
detain
 

peculiar

 

people

 
thereabout
 
repeat
 

Parker

 

archaisms


called

 

Poetic

 
advice
 

principal

 

Questions

 
occurring
 

pocket

 

Milman

 

temple

 
tribes

contributed

 

frivolousness

 

Whiting

 

foundation

 

shaken

 

English

 
commonly
 

downfall

 
religion
 

apology