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Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 214    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

ouns, nor are they common class n

r is founded not merely on facts which can be communicated

art or a science, or the arts and sciences, be spoken of, the abstract idea is partly lost. The words preceded by the article a, or made plural, are still names of abstract ideas, not material

the followi

ve great actions, mak

ure tired, Succeeding sports the

pleasures, l

too keen

tary can

ur

were mere terrors

, nouns use

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Contents

An English Grammar
Chapter 1 No.1
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An English Grammar
Chapter 2 No.2
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An English Grammar
Chapter 3 Instead of considering the whole body of material of which certain uses are made, one can speak of particular uses or phases of the substance; as-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 4 No.4
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An English Grammar
Chapter 5 No.5
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An English Grammar
Chapter 6 Thus, the word child is neuter in the sentence, A little child shall lead them, but is masculine in the sentence from Wordsworth,-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 7 In this particular the native endings have been largely supplanted by foreign suffixes.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 8 ess is added to many words without changing the ending of the masculine; as,-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 9 Some of them have an interesting history, and will be noted below -
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An English Grammar
Chapter 10 16), material objects may be spoken of like gender nouns; for example,-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 11 s, the ending -es is added-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 12 Examples of these are, optics, economics, physics, mathematics, politics, and many branches of learning; also news, pains (care), molasses, summons, means as,-
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An English Grammar
Chapter 13 No.13
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An English Grammar
Chapter 14 No.14
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An English Grammar
Chapter 15 one corresponding to the singular, the other unlike it.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 16 No.16
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An English Grammar
Chapter 17 FROM THE LATIN.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 18 Uses of the Nominative.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 19 Uses of the Objective.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 20 Uses of the Possessive.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 21 The Possessive.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 22 Expressing a Wish.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 23 Condition or Supposition.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 24 Subjunctive of Purpose.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 25 Subjunctive of Result.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 26 In Temporal Clauses.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 27 In Indirect Questions.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 28 Expressing a Wish. 28
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An English Grammar
Chapter 29 In a Noun Clause.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 30 VERBS.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 31 VERB PHRASES.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 32 The From Relation.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 33 Modifiers of Subject, Object, or Complement.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 34 NOMINATIVE AND OBJECTIVE FORMS.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 35 POSSESSIVE FORMS.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 36 RESTRICTIVE AND UNRESTRICTIVE RELATIVES.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 37 RELATIVE AND ANTECEDENT.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 38 OMISSION OF THE RELATIVE.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 39 THE RELATIVE AS AFTER SAME.
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An English Grammar
Chapter 40 MISUSE OF RELATIVE PRONOUNS.
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