Aids to English Composition, Prepared for Students of All Grades: Embracing Specimens and Examples of School and College Exercises, and Most of the Higher Departments of English Composition, Both in Prose and VerseHarper & Brothers, 1845 - 429ÆäÀÌÁö |
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... thought will flow in rich and rapid currents . Rules and suggestions , however , are not wholly useless . They encourage the diffi- dent , and give confidence to those whose want of conversance with ap proved models renders it necessary ...
... thought will flow in rich and rapid currents . Rules and suggestions , however , are not wholly useless . They encourage the diffi- dent , and give confidence to those whose want of conversance with ap proved models renders it necessary ...
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... thought , on reading and observation , and an attentive study of the meaning and the force of language . The proper preparation for its suc cessful performance should be laid in a diligent attention to the rules of grammar , a thorough ...
... thought , on reading and observation , and an attentive study of the meaning and the force of language . The proper preparation for its suc cessful performance should be laid in a diligent attention to the rules of grammar , a thorough ...
1 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thoughts and ideas arise as it were spontaneously . For the first exercise in composition , therefore , it is pro- posed that the student be required to enumerate the parts of some visible object , according to the following Its parts ...
... thoughts and ideas arise as it were spontaneously . For the first exercise in composition , therefore , it is pro- posed that the student be required to enumerate the parts of some visible object , according to the following Its parts ...
4 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thought , and thereby to preserve what would proba- bly soon be lost , if intrusted to the memory alone . What is ɔnce written can be read , or preserved for future information , and thereby we can learn what our friends who are absent ...
... thought , and thereby to preserve what would proba- bly soon be lost , if intrusted to the memory alone . What is ɔnce written can be read , or preserved for future information , and thereby we can learn what our friends who are absent ...
8 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thought it very dull , Sir ; I scarcely met with a single per son . I would much rather have gone along the turnpike road . Tutor . Why , if seeing men and horses was your object , you would , indeed , have been better entertained on ...
... thought it very dull , Sir ; I scarcely met with a single per son . I would much rather have gone along the turnpike road . Tutor . Why , if seeing men and horses was your object , you would , indeed , have been better entertained on ...
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accent acute accent adverb Allowable rhymes Antonomasia beauty c©¡sura called Catachresis character clause comma composition compound compound sentence consists derived earth effect English English language Example 1st Example 2d exercise expression eyes father feelings figure following sentence Francesco Doria frequently give grave accent Greek Greek language happiness heart honor idea imagination kind labor lady language Latin Latin language letter literary look manner means mind moral nature Nearly perfect rhymes never nouns and third object observed Onomatopoeia participles of verbs phrases pleasure Pleonasm plurals of nouns poet poetical poetry present preterits and participles principles pronoun proper proposition prose remarkable rule Saxon sense short signifies sometimes sound spirit Spondee student style syllable tautology thing third persons singular thou thought tion Trochaic Trochee truth verse virtue words writer written young