This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
33826 | ( H. James) was n''t"Was n''t it curious?" |
33826 | || know|to understand|Do you know your lesson? |
19052 | A person may say( a little vulgarly),"Do you expect me to cart all these things to another room?" |
19052 | But we may ask,"Is it a good thing for stones to gather moss?" |
19052 | Many people have inquired in their turn,"And what about the worm?" |
40415 | Can the doll see? |
30778 | Cold star at the blue vault''s height, What is it that shakes you so? 30778 But where is the Pompadour, too? 30778 ENVOYWhere are the secrets it knew? |
30778 | Weavings of plot and of plan? |
30778 | You should disdain and I despair With quite the true Augustan air; But... could I love you more or less,--''In teacup times''?" |
15577 | But what interest can the history of the McGuffey Eclectic Readers have to those who did not use these books in their school career? |
15577 | Did you not commit it to memory and speak it? |
15577 | What are the qualities in these McGuffey Eclectic Readers that won for them through three- quarters of a century such wide and constant use? |
15577 | Who can not remember"The atrocious crime of being a young man,"and go on with the context? |
28569 | IX THE MAKING OF SHOES Did you ever stop to think how many different qualities you expect in a shoe? |
28569 | Is it any wonder that the thrifty housewife saved her rags with the utmost care, keeping one bag for white clippings and one for colored? |
28569 | Suppose that a watch has been made with only the main spring, the four wheels, and the three hands, what would happen when it was wound? |
28569 | The points soon wore out, and"Teacher, will you please mend my pen?" |
28569 | VII THE DISHES ON OUR TABLES If any one should give you a lump of clay and ask you to make a bowl, how should you set about it? |
28569 | With so many shams in the market, how is a woman to know what she is buying and whether it will wear? |
15456 | Do you dissent from my opinion? |
15456 | Dost consider that dust thou art? |
15456 | The Interrogation Point[?] |
15456 | Transcribers Notes: Do you remember how to spell"pharmacopoeia"or"Winnipiseogee"? |
15456 | Which is the larger, the divisor or the quotient? |
15456 | Which of the pair of fine pears will you pare for the child? |
37134 | = Participle for verbal noun.= Do you mind me asking a question? |
37134 | Do you mind my asking a question? |
37134 | He declares( and why should we doubt his good faith?) |
37134 | It may be asked, what if a writer needs to express a very large number of similar ideas, say twenty? |
37134 | Must he write twenty consecutive sentences of the same pattern? |
37134 | Strictly applicable only to actions:"Is it worth while to telegraph?" |
38699 | QUIEN SABE, kien sä''be, who knows? |
38699 | [ L.,''what now?''] |
38699 | _ ko[=i] hai_,''who is there?''] |
38699 | _ quoter_, to number-- Low L._ quot[=a]re_, to divide into chapters and verses-- L._ quotus_, of what number?--_quot_, how many?] |
38699 | _ quotiens_,_ quoties_, how often?--_quot_, how many?] |
38699 | _ quotus_, of what number?--_quot_, how many?] |
38538 | ENEMY, en''e- mi,_ n._ one who hates or dislikes: a foe: a hostile army.--_adj._(_ obs._) hostile.--HOW GOES THE ENEMY? |
38538 | GRUNDY, grund''i, MRS, the invisible_ censor morum_ who is frequently appealed to in the phrase,''But what will Mrs Grundy say?'' |
38538 | HOWDY, how''di,_ interj._ a colloquial form of the common greeting,''How do you[ do]?'' |
38538 | [ Webster ingeniously at least suggests a derivation in''How d''ye?'' |
38538 | _ m[=a]n h[=u]_, what is it? |
13311 | Are we to let the_ pendulum_ swing back to the old_ rut_? |
13311 | Call it a poke? |
13311 | How give a literary touch? |
13311 | No, we can better that; who was it drew what from his poke? |
15901 | Hwat dhen shood cauz dhat lafter strainge? |
15901 | Hwat onnest crittic ehr cood creddit elligibel, Riddels to''hiz reserches unintelligibel? |
15901 | Hwat shood occazion genn''ral chainge? |
15901 | What honest critic e''er could credit eligible, Riddles to his researches unintelligible? |
15901 | What should occasion gen''ral change? |
15901 | What then should cause that laughter strange? |
11694 | Borne in the West? |
11694 | From Oxford, Cambridge, London? |
11694 | What should I say? |
11694 | liue there? |
11694 | so far from Court? |
11694 | vnknown? |
11694 | vntaught? |
11694 | yet report( Now in these daies of Eloquence) such change Of words? |
37683 | --_v.i._ in such phrases as''How cheer''st thou?'' |
37683 | [ BLAZE(?).] |
37683 | [ Singhalese(?).] |
37683 | and Cleop._ I. v. 48), with gaunt limbs(?). |
37683 | phrase''What ails you?'' |
37683 | what is the matter? |
5430 | But what makes a word obsolete, more than general agreement to forbear it? |
5430 | If the changes that we fear be thus irresistible, what remains but to acquiesce with silence, as in the other insurmountable distresses of humanity? |
5430 | When the radical idea branches out into parallel ramifications, how can a consecutive series be formed of senses in their nature collateral? |
12390 | Has, or has not, a comma dropped out after_ moral_? |
12390 | In the light of these parallels is it not the patrons of_ moral_ who deserve the imputation of ignorance rather than we common folk? |
12390 | Is the spelling or the pronunciation to stand? |
12390 | Moral and internal? |
12390 | Now how should this word be Englished? |
12390 | We say Music and Physics, but should we say Ethic or Ethics, Esthetic or Esthetics? |
12390 | or moral and troubles? |
12474 | Can I go fishing? |
12474 | Is that so? |
12474 | Who do you take me for? |
12474 | But will we? |
12474 | For whom? |
12474 | How would this sound? |
12474 | The fact that we are in some ways one nation has nothing to do with it; it is enough to know that the word States is plural-- if not, what is State? |
12474 | The following what? |
12474 | What was it that its author did to it? |
12474 | Why? |
26991 | Asking; as_ why?__ whence?__ wherefore?_. |
26991 | Asking; as_ why?__ whence?__ wherefore?_. |
26991 | Asking; as_ why?__ whence?__ wherefore?_. |
26991 | Cou''d the Truth have been known?_ RULE 6th. |
26991 | _ Of the other NOTES or CHARACTERS._ A Note of_ Interrogation_(?) |
26991 | has he washed his Hands?_ And when the_ Verb_ has two or more_ Auxiliaries_, the_ Noun or Pronoun_ is placed after the first; as_ have I been taught? |
26991 | has he washed his Hands?_ And when the_ Verb_ has two or more_ Auxiliaries_, the_ Noun or Pronoun_ is placed after the first; as_ have I been taught? |
26991 | is used when a Question is asked; as_ who comes there?_ A Note of_ Admiration_(!) |
5742 | Then,he said,"why are you going to leave us now? |
5742 | Do you see a stream named"Crooked Creek?" |
5742 | Every incident is found in the Lewis and Clark Journals, so that the child''s frequent question,"Is it true?" |
5742 | He said,"Did you not promise to carry our goods over the mountains?" |
5742 | Sacajawea came to Captain Clark and said,"May I go, too? |
5742 | Shall we help them, my brothers?" |
5742 | She said to the Clatsop chief,"Will you sell the robe for my belt?" |
5742 | Which do you think is the prettier name? |
5742 | Which do you think we should call it? |
5742 | gone land word keep prom ise yes Then Captain Lewis said,"Are you men of your word?" |
5849 | But in what does a strong association between a word and an idea differ from a weak one? |
5849 | But what know they more than we? |
5849 | For what is bombast but a force of expression too great for the magnitude of the ideas embodied? |
5849 | Here we drift, like white sail across the wild ocean, now bright on the wave, now darkling in the trough of the sea; but from what port did we sail? |
5849 | Is it better to place the adjective before the substantive, or the substantive before the adjective? |
5849 | Or to what port are we bound? |
5849 | Ought we to say with the French-- un_ cheval noir;_ or to say as we do-- a black horse? |
5849 | Who knows? |
5849 | Who knows? |
5849 | Why is Johnson pompous, Goldsmith simple? |
5849 | Why is one author abrupt, another rhythmical, another concise? |
15364 | ''I do n''t know; is n''t it Emm[=a]us?'' |
15364 | Deb[)o]rah? |
15364 | He looked for comment and hoped for praise, but the Provost''s only remark was,''Why do you say Emm[=a]us?'' |
15364 | Is it useful? |
15364 | Then he went on''Deb[)o]rah? |
15364 | Why can we not so use it now? |
15364 | Why do we not speak of''The Royal College of Leeches''? |
15364 | _ meterly fausse_(? |
15364 | fy!--a Greek tragedy and protagonists?). |
15364 | or is it merely a pretentious blundering substitute for words that are useful? |
35094 | For, what are Epithets, but Adjectives that denote and express the Qualities of the Substantives to which they are join''d? |
35094 | Hilas, O Hilas,_ why sit we mute? |
35094 | In the Preface, the French phrase"consiste qu''en vn[ typo for un?] |
35094 | Or of 7; as, Phillis,_ why should we delay Pleasures shorter than the Day? |
35094 | T. Hanmer''s(?) |
35094 | What Synonymes, but Words of a like Signification? |
35094 | _ No, to what purpose should I speak? |
35094 | let no Man know The Price of Beauty fall''n so low: What dangers oughtst thou not to dread When Love that''s blind, is by blind Fortune led?_ Cowl. |
35094 | what wilt thou do? |
14227 | ABODE= bode(? |
14227 | ASSAY: quite a common word, lost in_ say_(?) |
14227 | And when you have experienced this warcry''what? |
14227 | But I wish to put my case practically, and, rather than argue, I would ask what are the results of learning English on Mr. Jones''system? |
14227 | But in Tyndal''s gospel we read Why seest thou a mote in thy brother''s eye and perceivest not the beam that is in thine own eye? |
14227 | How is''t with aged Gaunt? |
14227 | JADE: almost confined to_ jaded_(?). |
14227 | Now how do these words appear in Jones''dictionary? |
14227 | So, then, we are asking what is the condition of a man who has learned the dictionary standard? |
14227 | What would Mr. Jones''system substitute for this natural grace? |
14227 | What would be the condition of a man who had learnt in this way? |
14227 | _ K._ What comfort man? |
14227 | what?'' |
14227 | would you have no puns?'' |
18119 | Can Sam get the hat? |
18119 | How many vowels are there? |
18119 | In your books? |
18119 | on the blackboard? |
18119 | ( not meat chew) When shall I meet you? |
18119 | A child who is called on asks,"Is it c an?" |
18119 | After teaching"c"say,"Who can find a word on the chart beginning with this sound?" |
18119 | Ah no, but for grubs, which he ate quick as( snap) Can you name this gay drummer who wears a red( cap)? |
18119 | Another asks,"Is it m an?" |
18119 | Could you? |
18119 | Do n''t you? |
18119 | Have the pupils practice such exercises as:-- Did you? |
18119 | Her coat is smooth as silk, She likes to drink sweet( milk) She grows so fast and fat That soon she''ll be a( cat) Ca n''t you guess? |
18119 | Is_ the_ envelope sealed? |
18119 | Should you? |
18119 | Where shall I meet you? |
18119 | Who can find them?" |
18119 | Would you? |
11065 | And can I ever cease to be Affectionate and kind to thee, Who was so very kind to me, My Mother? |
11065 | Did you hear it? |
11065 | Do you feel cold? |
11065 | Do you feel hot? |
11065 | Do you see the pictures? |
11065 | Now put another line across the top* T. What letter is that like? |
11065 | Or kiss the place and make it well? |
11065 | Sir?] |
11065 | What letter is it like? |
11065 | When sleep forsook my open eyes, Who was it sung sweet lullaby, And soothed me that I should not cry? |
11065 | Who fed me from her gentle breast, And hush''d me in her arms to rest, And on my cheek sweet kisses prest? |
11065 | Who lov''d to see me pleased and gay, And taught me sweetly how to play, And minded all I had to say? |
11065 | Who sat and watch''d my infant head, When sleeping on my cozy bed; And tears of sweet affection shed? |
11065 | Who taught my infant heart to pray, And love God''s holy book and day; And taught me wisdom''s pleasant way? |
11065 | Will Jane go for a walk with me? |
11065 | Will you go with me? |
11065 | Would not you like to taste it? |
11065 | [ Illustration: Any Chairs to mend?] |
11065 | [ Illustration: Any knives to grind?] |
11065 | [ Illustration: Who will buy my flowers?] |
11065 | [ Illustration: Who''ll buy my images?] |
7841 | Does she live far? |
7841 | Where are you going? |
7841 | ******* tapped thank dear arms hug called When Red Riding- Hood tapped on the door, the wolf called out,"Who is there?" |
7841 | At last they said,"Who let the apples go?" |
7841 | Freyja said,"Do you think I will be the Frost Giant''s wife? |
7841 | He said,"What makes Freyja''s eyes shine so?" |
7841 | Loki said,"Can you make me a gold crown that will grow like real hair?" |
7841 | So he went to Freyja and said,"Will you let me have your falcon suit? |
7841 | The cat said,"Can you growl?" |
7841 | The grandma said,"Who is there?" |
7841 | The hen said,"Can you lay eggs?" |
7841 | Thor said,"Did you cut off Sif''s hair?" |
7841 | Thor said,"Well, did you get the hammer?" |
7841 | What did he see? |
7841 | When he saw Loki, he said,"What do you want?" |
7841 | [ Illustration: THE CAT SAID,"CAN YOU GROWL?"] |
7841 | [ Illustration:"DID YOU CUT OFF SIF''S HAIR?"] |
7841 | he called,"Where are you?" |
15755 | Who be I? 15755 ''Tes the right neyam, esn ut? 15755 3),''Is it a boy or a child?'' 15755 A bittle up thuck tree did clim, And scarnvully did look at him; Zays he,Zur harnet, who giv thee A right to zet in thuck there tree? |
15755 | And who be you? |
15755 | Duz he think''at thaay dig it oot o''th''grund, saäme as thaay do sugar?" |
15755 | I remember once hearing the remark made--"What is the good of dialects? |
15755 | I toud Sam wen''e t{)o}{)o}k the''ouse as I didna like it.--"Bless the wench,"''e sed,"what''n''ee want? |
15755 | In fact, the_ English Dialect Dictionary_ cites the phrase"is it a lad or a child?" |
15755 | Where ded''st leyarn to caal''n by that neyam? |
15755 | Why not sweep them all away, and have done with them?" |
15755 | Why, ye gurt zote vool, casn''t zee''tes a dumbledore? |
15755 | _ J._ Right neyam? |
15755 | _ J._ Straddlebob? |
15755 | _ J._ Well, what ded ur zay? |
15755 | _ Jan._ What''s got there, you? |
15755 | _ Jaup_, senseless talk.--Ho''d the jaup wi''th{(e}; dos''t ta want ivery body to knaw how soft thoo is? |
15755 | _ Neighbour Robin and Neighbour Stephen.__ R._ Tibby, d''ye know how the knacker''s mawther Nutty du? |
15755 | _ R._ Stephen, do you know how the collar- maker''s daughter Ursula is? |
15755 | _ W._ Why, what shoud e caal''n? |
12524 | And if_ chassis_ is to impose itself from sheer necessity what is to be done with it? |
12524 | Are not_ canaille_ and_ noblesse_ distracting? |
12524 | Can anything be done? |
12524 | Do they not interrupt the flow? |
12524 | If_ musicale_ is too serviceable to demand banishment, why should it not drop the_ e_ and become_ musical_? |
12524 | In that sense it lacks authority(? |
12524 | Is it_ bal- lett_ or_ ballay_ or_ bally_? |
12524 | Is there any available substitute for the French word? |
12524 | Is this the exact equivalent of''running gear''? |
12524 | The first is the simplest: Is the foreign word really needed? |
12524 | The second question is perhaps not quite so simple: Is the French word one which English has already accepted and made its own? |
12524 | Vecktor should be Veektor? |
12524 | What can be done? |
12524 | What is the accepted pronunciation of_ ballet_? |
12524 | Why not forswear French again and pronounce_ nuance_ without trying vainly to preserve the Gallic nasality of the second n--_newance_? |
12524 | Why not therefore frankly and boldly pronounce it as English--_ennwee_? |
12524 | Why should not_ garage_ and_ barrage_ rhyme easily with_ marriage_? |
12524 | Why should not_ séance_( which was used by Charles Lamb in 1803) drop its French accent and take an English pronunciation--_see- ance_? |
12524 | Était- il superflu de dire comment nous articulons_ shampooing_? |
34316 | H[=e] cwæþ t[=o] him:''[.G]e·l[=i]efe[.g]it þæt ic inc mæ[.g]e[.g]e·hælan?'' |
34316 | H[=u] fela hl[=a]fa hæbbe[.g][=e]? |
34316 | Hwelc fæder wile s[e,]llan his[.c]ilde st[=a]n,[.g]if hit hine hl[=a]fes bitt? |
34316 | Hwelc mann s[e,]lþ his bearne n[=æ]ddran,[.g]if hit fisces bitt? |
34316 | Hwæt s[e,][.c][.g]e[.g][=e] þæt ic s[=i]e? |
34316 | Hwæþer þe þ[=i]n[= e]age m[=a]nfull is for þ[=æ]m þe ic g[=o]d eom? |
34316 | Oþþe ne m[=o]t ic 85 d[=o]n þæt ic wile? |
34316 | S[=e] þe ne lufaþ his br[=o]þor, þone þe h[=e][.g]e·sihþ, h[=u] mæ[.g] h[=e] lufian God, þone þe h[=e] ne[.g]e·sihþ l[=i]cham- l[=i]ce? |
34316 | Se H[=æ]lend[= a]scode his leornung- cnihtas,''Hwone s[e,][.c][.g]aþ 125 m[e,]nn þæt s[=i]e mannes Sunu?'' |
34316 | Se mæsse- pr[=e]ost[= a]scaþ þæt[.c]ild, and cwiþþ:''Wiþ·sæcst þ[=u] d[=e]ofle?'' |
34316 | W[=e] syngodon, w[=e] dydon un- rihtl[=i]ce; s[e,]le[= u]s for·[.g]iefnesse: hwæt sculon w[=e] d[=o]n? |
34316 | What is the use of a grammar which gives a number of forms and rules which the learner has no occasion to apply practically in his reading? |
34316 | [= E]al[=a][.g][=e] n[=æ]ddran and n[=æ]ddrena cynn, h[=u] fl[=e]o[.g][=e] fram h[e,]lle d[=o]me? |
34316 | hwanon hæfde h[=e] coccel?'' |
34316 | Þ[=a] cw[=æ]don þ[=a] 35 þ[=e]owas:''Wilt þ[=u], w[=e] g[=a]þ and gadriaþ h[=i]e?'' |
34316 | Þ[=a] cwæþ h[=e]:''L[=a], fr[=e]ond, h[=u]meta[= e]odest þ[=u] inn, and næfdest[.g]ieftlic r[=e]af?'' |
34316 | Þ[=a][= e]odon þæs hl[=a]fordes þ[=e]owas and cw[=æ]don:''Hl[=a]ford, h[=u], ne s[=e]owe þ[=u] g[=o]d s[=æ]d on þ[=i]num æcere? |
14642 | Do you not know, Henry? |
14642 | What do you mean? |
14642 | Bess, do you hear a noise? |
14642 | Can Ann fan the lad? |
14642 | Can Tom catch his nag? |
14642 | Can an owl see at night? |
14642 | Can not Rab catch it?] |
14642 | Can the frog see Rab? |
14642 | Can this old fox catch the hen? |
14642 | Can you see them? |
14642 | Can you see them?] |
14642 | Do you know who made it do so? |
14642 | Do you see my two lambs? |
14642 | Do you see that tall tree? |
14642 | Do you see the boys at play? |
14642 | Do you think it is a schoolhouse, or a church? |
14642 | Has Ann a hat? |
14642 | How do they cut the logs, Tom,--with an ax? |
14642 | How would you like to live in a lighthouse? |
14642 | Is it good to eat?" |
14642 | Is not this a dear baby in the crib? |
14642 | May we not go and see the mill at work, Tom? |
14642 | Nat''s cap a fat dog Has the lad a dog? |
14642 | Should we not then love him? |
14642 | What bird has big eyes? |
14642 | What bird is this? |
14642 | What kind of house is this? |
14642 | Which way do you like to skate,--on the ice, or on the floor? |
14642 | Who shall it be? |
14642 | Will he not run? |
14642 | Will the bird let the cat get her five eggs? |
14642 | Yes, Tom; what is it? |
14642 | what is it?" |
20938 | Is it not written,''Thou shalt be zealous even to slaying''? |
20938 | Not Income- tax? |
20938 | What have you done? |
20938 | And all this long story was about-- what do you think? |
20938 | Do you remember the passage where Burke alludes to the old warning of the Church--_Sursum corda_? |
20938 | Do you remember who it was that wrote"Whatever England''s fields display, The fairest scenes are thine, Torbay!"? |
20938 | Hast thou never cried,"What must I do to be saved"? |
20938 | Have you spoken to him? |
20938 | He asked me:"Have you seen my friend? |
20938 | How do you like him?" |
20938 | How much better to cease asking the question,"What would he have done in different circumstances?"! |
20938 | In a voice which was fascination itself, the being addressed me, saying,"Wilt thou come with me? |
20938 | Is it better that estates should be held by those who have no duty than by those who have one? |
20938 | Nevertheless, you will say that there must be a difference between true poetry and true speech not poetical: what is the difference? |
20938 | Now where is the revenue which is to do all these mighty things? |
20938 | Or why should it be ever night Where it was day before? |
20938 | Or why should women have a tongue, Or why should it be cursed, In being, like my Second, long, And louder than my First? |
20938 | The question may end in the middle of a sentence: Is he happy? |
20938 | The reason is, that the question to be answered is not the quoted question, but"hast thou never cried?" |
20938 | Thereupon the mob bursts in and inquires,"What are you doing for the people?" |
20938 | What does this honourable person mean by"a tempest that outrides the wind"? |
20938 | What, it may well be asked, can the interests of the community be those of-- I do not say_ an_ individual, but--_the_ individual? |
20938 | When I remember how we have worked together, and together borne misfortune; when I remember-- but what avails it to remember? |
20938 | Where are you going, my pretty maid? |
20938 | Whether of them twain did the will of his father? |
20938 | While you are revelling in the delights(?) |
20938 | Why should we trouble ourselves with it in writing? |
20938 | Wilt thou be mine?" |
20938 | replied the Emperor,"you do not see it? |
20938 | why should Hymen ever blight The roses Cupid wore? |
26056 | But you will saie, many calamitées happeneth in mariage? |
26056 | Cur resident? |
26056 | Cur sine sunt manibus? |
26056 | Doe olde men or young men, better gouerne a common wealthe? |
26056 | Doeth wisedome more auaile, then strength in battaile? |
26056 | From whence commeth the tempeste, the stormes and bitter seasons? |
26056 | Had the worlde a beginnyng? |
26056 | Is Phisicke more honourable then the Lawe? |
26056 | Is it mete for Cesar to moue warre against Pompei? |
26056 | Is not there a certain persone? |
26056 | Is the Greke tongue meete for a Phisicion? |
26056 | Is the Greke tongue mete, and necessarie to be learned? |
26056 | Is the Greke tongue to be learned of a Diuine? |
26056 | Is the heauen greater then the yearth? |
26056 | Is the soule immortall? |
26056 | Is vertue of more value then gold, to the coueitous man[?] |
26056 | Is warre to be moued vpon a iuste cause? |
26056 | Or doe the Mariners leaue for all these tempestes, their arte of Nauigacion? |
26056 | Or the owner breake his shippe? |
26056 | The Marchaunt lesyng his marchaundise by ship- wrack, shall thei impute the daunger and losse, to their wife at home? |
26056 | The fame of Troie and Brute, his glorie and renoume, what landes knoweth not? |
26056 | Upon this question: Is it good to marie a wife? |
26056 | WHat kyngdome can alwaies assure his state, or glory? |
26056 | What age remaineth aboue a hun- dred yeres? |
26056 | What difference is there, betwene them and beastes? |
26056 | What is the cause that you dye? |
26056 | What it is to vertue a mainteiner, otherwise if it be not profitable? |
26056 | What strength can alwaies last? |
26056 | Whether is it best to marie a wife? |
26056 | Who can deny saieth he, but that with her it can not bee better? |
26056 | _ Quid hominem occidere._ What saie you to be a murderer? |
26056 | in discord broile? |
26056 | liiij.r Remainder of last sentence missing? |
26056 | power maie alwaies stande? |
26056 | theim, commaunded a sworde to be giuen to either of theim, and saied to them:_ Nonne videtis fato potestatem dari._ Dooe you not see? |
22600 | *What pen can describe the tears, the lamentations, the agonies, the_ animated remonstrances_ of the unfortunate prisoners?" |
22600 | What is the splendour of Solomon compared with the beauty of a daisy? |
22600 | _ Jesus_ I know, and_ Paul_ I know; but who are ye? |
22600 | (_ a_) What difference in the meaning would be caused by the use of"that"for the second"which"? |
22600 | (_ a_) What is a"period"? |
22600 | (_ a_) What is the difference between"observance"and"observation,""discover"and"invent,""persuasion"and"conviction"? |
22600 | (_ a_) What is the exact meaning of_ conscious_? |
22600 | (_ a_) Who or what"has attained"? |
22600 | (_ a_)"What must it be...?" |
22600 | (_ b_) What Asian king was proverbial for wealth? |
22600 | (_ b_) What is the meaning of"neophyte,""alluded to"? |
22600 | (_ b_) What noun is qualified by"believing?" |
22600 | (_ b_) What single word can be substituted for"rendered slow"? |
22600 | (_ b_) Why is_ who_ right here? |
22600 | (_ c_) What is the meaning of"transpired"? |
22600 | (_ d_) What is the word for"that which happens_ around_ one, or in connection with some central object?" |
22600 | (_ d_) What would be the meaning if"that"were substituted for"which"? |
22600 | *"We are all( and who would not be?) |
22600 | *"What is the splendour of_ the greatest monarch_ compared with the beauty of_ a flower_?" |
22600 | But what does this imply? |
22600 | Does this mean_ every_, or_ a single_? |
22600 | Does_ quickly_ here modify_ left_ or_ dropping_? |
22600 | He was therefore disposed& c."(_ b_) What is the difference between"remorse"and"repentance,"between"sin"and"crime"? |
22600 | If you are writing about the capture of a city, was the city_ stormed_,_ surprised_,_ surrendered_,_ starved out_, or_ demolished before surrender_? |
22600 | It is( 34) sufficient? |
22600 | Was an army_ repelled_,_ defeated_,_ routed_,_ crushed_, or_ annihilated_? |
22600 | Why? |
22600 | _ all the Radical_ members in the House,"or"there are a good many Radical members of the House_ that_ can not& c."? |
22600 | or it?) |
52320 | A watch and ten guineas? |
52320 | Ahr say, Bill, vy do n''t yer hopen that jug and draw the cole? |
52320 | But what about the stone- jug? |
52320 | How then came you by his super? |
52320 | I say, Sam, what kind of crib was that you cracked? |
52320 | I say, Smasher, wo n''t the cove squeak if he''s pinched and promised by the beak to be turned up? |
52320 | I say, Tim, what''s your gait now? |
52320 | I say, my bene blowen, ca n''t you kiddy the bloke? |
52320 | Me, Hitch? 52320 No, Dick, it''s of no use trying, he wears a Joseph''s coat,"I say, my good girl, ca n''t you seduce the man? |
52320 | The cove is bene, shall we lach him? |
52320 | Vell, vot hof it, are n''t yer habel to put him to hanodyne? |
52320 | Vy, my cove, are n''t you avare as how a bloke snoses hin it? |
52320 | Was he nabbed on the scent? |
52320 | What then? |
52320 | What''s the cove''s lay? |
52320 | Why, Bell, is it yourself? 52320 Will you lush and cock an organ with me, my bene cove?" |
52320 | And where the swag, so bleakly pinched, A hundred stretches hence? |
52320 | Bell whispered in the officer''s ear:"Could n''t you let him pike if I come down with a thimble and ten beans?" |
52320 | But how did you hare it to Romeville, Bell, for I suppose the jets cleaned you out?" |
52320 | But say, Harry, will you suffer yourself to be made a two- legged stool of by a flag- about?" |
52320 | But who was the cull that peached?" |
52320 | For instance,"Have you been playing faro to- night?" |
52320 | I say, Smasher, wo n''t the fellow betray us if he is arrested and promised by the judge to be set at liberty again? |
52320 | Is the bloke living or dead?" |
52320 | The bene morts, who sweetly sing, A hundred stretches hence? |
52320 | The thimbles, slang, and danglers filched, A hundred stretches hence? |
52320 | What have you done with the bloke?" |
52320 | What will you drink? |
52320 | Who fears? |
52320 | Who is it? |
52320 | Why, sure, Jack had a rattler and a prad?" |
52320 | do you know? |
52320 | is n''t it out of order, and he so green? |
52320 | the man is good, shall we let him in? |
52320 | what''s your lay?" |
52320 | where will be the culls of the bing A hundred stretches hence? |
52320 | will you drink and smoke a pipe with me, my good fellow? |
38235 | Are any of you going to see the opening of Parliament? |
38235 | Could you, without inconvenience, oblige me with the loan of 20_l._ for a month? |
38235 | DEAR BROWNE, Will you dine with me at eight o''clock to- morrow? |
38235 | DEAR CAPTAIN MAURICE, Will you favour Mrs. Trevor and myself with your company at dinner on Monday next at 6 o''clock? |
38235 | DEAR REID, Will you accompany a party of us to- morrow to the Derby? |
38235 | DEAR SMITH, Will you dine with us to- morrow? |
38235 | Do you recommend a new neighbourhood, or not? |
38235 | Do you think it would prove efficacious? |
38235 | Do you wear yours the same, my dearest Fanny? |
38235 | Have you forgotten that Truth is the point of honour in a gentleman, and that no one can tell a falsehood and retain the character of one? |
38235 | Have you had much civility shown you at P----? |
38235 | Have you seen anything of Doxman lately? |
38235 | How can you so soon have forgotten all the home lessons of duty you have learned? |
38235 | I wonder if there is any chance of your meeting? |
38235 | Julia, you love me; you are mine, are you not, dear Julia? |
38235 | May I ask for the first waltz? |
38235 | Oh, my dearest, what but duty could reconcile me to leaving you? |
38235 | So you are thinking of going abroad to try the German waters? |
38235 | What can be pleasanter than to find yourself at the head of your school, leaving all competitors behind? |
38235 | What have you done with your piece of the half- sovereign we cut in halves? |
38235 | What society can you have mingled in to have caused you to be guilty of such folly? |
38235 | When I come home we will splice the halves, and Fanny and her William will be one-- will we not, darling girl? |
38235 | When you write to your sister- in- law, will you be so good as to present our kind regards to her? |
38235 | Why did you try to deceive me by a falsehood? |
38235 | Why then persist in remaining in a profession wherein you are exposed to constant and imminent danger? |
38235 | Will you accept me as your husband, dearest Rosy? |
38235 | Will you also give me some hints as to the sort of connexion I should endeavour to obtain? |
38235 | Will you attend on the mournful occasion as"best man?" |
38235 | Will you call to- morrow, and bring as much money as you can collect? |
38235 | Will you come and dine with us to- morrow? |
38235 | Will you favour me with a prospectus of your School, and also inform me whether you have a vacancy? |
38235 | Will you join it? |
38235 | Will you kindly remit it? |
38235 | Will you see my master, and tell him how deeply I regret my fault, and entreat him to forgive me? |
38235 | Will you, dear William, look out for a good school for my little sister? |
38235 | Would you, next Thursday, on your way to the board of guardians''meeting, call and see her? |
38235 | should I act thus in my mother''s presence?" |
38235 | what more gratifying than to give pleasure to your father and mother, and to obtain the admiration and approval of your teachers? |
6409 | Have you a pin? |
6409 | Is he not doing right in his course? |
6409 | On Tom Flynn? |
6409 | Shook hands with the horse, Billy? |
6409 | Tie Tom Flynn up? |
6409 | What can a man do under the circumstances? |
6409 | What''s the matter with----? 6409 Where are you from?" |
6409 | Which of the two do you mean, the pig or the horse? |
6409 | Who did you give the apple to? |
6409 | Who do you take me for? |
6409 | Who owns that book? |
6409 | _ Whom_ do you think I am? |
6409 | to whom did he give it? |
6409 | what was the result? |
6409 | why did he give it? |
6409 | ( 3) Every direct question commences with a capital;"Let me ask you;''How old are you?''" |
6409 | ( 3) The mark is often used parenthetically to suggest doubt:"In 1893(?) |
6409 | ( 4) Every line of poetry begins with a capital;"Breathes there a man with soul so dead?" |
6409 | ( 9) When questions and answers are put in the same paragraph they should be separated by dashes:"Are you a good boy? |
6409 | ( For) why did he postpone it? |
6409 | Did you sleep in church? |
6409 | Have you heard the present day masters of speech? |
6409 | In his own peculiar, abrupt, crusty way the Sage of Chelsea interrogated the young man:"For what profession are you studying?" |
6409 | Such words are understood by them and understood by the learned as well; why then not use them universally and all the time? |
6409 | The Interrogation[?] |
6409 | Thus--"The foreman gave the order"-- suggests at once several questions;"What was the order?" |
6409 | What age is he? |
6409 | What can you write about? |
6409 | Where is the fire( at)? |
6409 | Why make a one- sided affair of language by using words which only one class of the people, the so- called learned class, can understand? |
6409 | Would it not be better to use, on all occasions, language which the both classes can understand? |
6409 | Yes, Sir.--Do you love study? |
6409 | and"_ Who_ do they suppose me to be?" |
6409 | hold Hamblin by the head?" |
6409 | mounted Hamblin again?" |
6409 | mounted Tom Flynn?" |
6409 | should be"_ Who_ do you think I am?" |
6409 | should be"_ Whom_ do they suppose me to be?" |
6409 | what shall I do?" |
6409 | you and the horse?" |
6409 | you and the horse?" |
31766 | ''Ow''appens it that_ H_englishmen so_ h_often misplace their_ h_aitches? |
31766 | A_ nishe_ young man,"What_ makesh_ you laugh? |
31766 | Are you at_ leisure_? |
31766 | Do you know_ who_ this dog- headed cane belongs to? |
31766 | Do you_ believe_ that he will_ receive_ my letter? |
31766 | Have you any leisure_ upon your hands_? |
31766 | Have you_ lit_ the fire, Bridget? |
31766 | Have you_ shook_ the table- cloth? |
31766 | How do you like_ these kind_ of pears? |
31766 | How will you_ swap_ jack- knives? |
31766 | I own that I did not come soon enough; but_ because why_? 31766 Is Mr. Smith_ in_?" |
31766 | Is this or that the_ best_ road? |
31766 | Was it_ her_ who called me? |
31766 | Who has my_ scissors_? |
31766 | Who made that noise? 31766 Whose are_ these here books_?" |
31766 | Will you_ accept_ of this slight testimonial? |
31766 | _ How''s yourself_, this morning? |
31766 | _ Was_ you? |
31766 | _ What_ was he? |
31766 | _ Which_ of the Blakes? |
31766 | _ Who done it?_say,_ Who did it?_ 63. |
31766 | _ Who done it?_say,_ Who did it?_ 63. |
31766 | _ Who_ did you wish to see? |
31766 | _ Who_ do you mean? |
31766 | _ Who_ do you think I saw yesterday? |
31766 | _ Whom_ say ye that I am? |
31766 | Among interrogatives,_ who?_ inquires for the name;_ which?_ for the individual;_ what?_ for the character, or occupation. |
31766 | Among interrogatives,_ who?_ inquires for the name;_ which?_ for the individual;_ what?_ for the character, or occupation. |
31766 | Among interrogatives,_ who?_ inquires for the name;_ which?_ for the individual;_ what?_ for the character, or occupation. |
31766 | Do you say_ w_agabond or_ v_agabond,_ w_inegar or_ v_inegar,_ w_ery or_ v_ery,_ v_alking or_ w_alking,_ v_atchman or_ w_atchman? |
31766 | Does it mean that St. John''s is nearer to England than Halifax is, or nearer to England than to Halifax? |
31766 | Does it mean,"I esteem you more than_ I esteem the others_,"or,"I esteem you more than_ the others esteem you_?" |
31766 | How often are precisely these words spoken? |
31766 | In expressing in_ writing_ the idea conveyed in this question, a better form of sentence would be,"Do you know_ to whom_ this belongs?" |
31766 | Some persons talk of"_ continuing on_:"in what other direction would it be possible to_ continue_? |
31766 | The old song takes up with a bad pronunciation, for the sake of a good rhyme:"Mistress Mary, Quite_ contrary_, How does your garden grow?" |
31766 | The question which naturally arises in the mind of the discriminating hearer is,"_ What_ are you going to lay down-- money, carpets, plans, or what?" |
31766 | Thus,"_ Who_ built the bridge?" |
31766 | What shall be said of the following--"_No Smoking Aloud_?" |
31766 | Who ever speaks of the_ United State of America_? |
31766 | Who would think of saying,_ Let I go_? |
31766 | Why use two prepositions where one would be quite as explicit, and far more elegant? |
31766 | _ O_ is used to express_ wishing_,_ exclamation_, or a direct_ address_ to a person; as,"O mother, will the God above Forgive my faults like thee?" |
31766 | _ Which_ usually refers to animals and inanimate objects, except in such an expression as,"Tell me_ which_ of the two men was chosen?" |
31766 | of raisins,_ how much_ can I purchase for$ 14 49?" |
31766 | say,"_ what quantity_ can I,"& c. Who would think of saying,"_ how much raisins?_"141. |
31766 | should be, Is Mr. Smith_ within_? |
31766 | should be,_ Were_ you? |
13910 | And the others? |
13910 | Are mental activity, energy transformation, and transformation of matter three aspects of the same biochemical phenomenon? |
13910 | But are space and time real existing things? |
13910 | But how? |
13910 | But is the grub capable of fasting for any length of time when once hatched? |
13910 | But what does this mean, and what conclusions follow from it? |
13910 | But what, then, is mind? |
13910 | By what aberration does the mother abandon her children to starvation on this totally insufficient vegetable? |
13910 | Did it think out a plan and work out a scheme of its own devising? |
13910 | Did the ingenious insect conceive the undertaking? |
13910 | Do they hear their brother gnawing at the walls of his lodging? |
13910 | Do they perish outside when the more precocious have one by one taken their places in their vegetable larder? |
13910 | Does this actually mean that there are several grubs in the pea? |
13910 | Have they an absolute reality outside of our mind, as a part or framework of nature, as entities-- that is, things that are? |
13910 | How are idioms acquired, how do local peculiarities of phrase and accent come about? |
13910 | How are they warned that the place is taken? |
13910 | How can conversation possibly steer itself through such a sea of responsibilities and inhibitions as this? |
13910 | How does this communal feast terminate? |
13910 | Is it to be found elsewhere? |
13910 | May not the central portion of the pea be the feeding- bottle of the Bruchid? |
13910 | Now what has happened that these lives around the privileged one should be thus annihilated? |
13910 | Now what is the cause of this absence of repose, this bottled- lightning quality in us Americans? |
13910 | Or is mind an entity, just like the entity energy and the entity matter, but differing from either of them-- in short, a third entity? |
13910 | Shall we credit it to the Bruchus? |
13910 | So that, if the_ homo sapiens_ of the future can only digest his food and think, what need will he have of well- developed muscles at all? |
13910 | What are the motives that safeguard the germ? |
13910 | What are these spots, of which I count five, six, and even more on a single pea? |
13910 | What is the result? |
13910 | What is to become of all these supernumeraries, perforce excluded from the banquet for want of space? |
13910 | What was lacking to this egg, that it should fail to produce a grub? |
13910 | Whence comes wheat, the blessed grain which gives us bread? |
13910 | Whence does it come? |
13910 | Where is it, this original pea, in the world of spontaneous vegetation? |
13910 | Who are the scholars who get"rattled"in the recitation- room? |
13910 | Who are those who do recite well? |
13910 | Why is this particular portion left untouched? |
13910 | Why so many grubs to each pea when one pea is sufficient only for one grub? |
13910 | With the bean did those ancient teachers also involuntarily bring us the insect which to- day disputes it with us? |
13910 | Yet who has told you, O man of little faith, that what is useless to- day will not be useful to- morrow? |
13910 | can they feel the vibration set up by his nibbling mandibles? |
13910 | or do they succumb to the intolerant teeth of the first occupants? |
10681 | ; what''s new? |
10681 | ; what''s the latest poop?. |
10681 | ; what''s the latest? |
10681 | Heaven knows; who can tell? |
10681 | No kidding? |
10681 | OK, all right, might as well, why not? |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ Macbeth]; who can cloy the hungry edge of appetite? |
10681 | ], how now!, where am I? |
10681 | ], thinkest thou existence doth depend on time? |
10681 | ], who will watch the watchers? |
10681 | ]; What, drunk with choler? |
10681 | ]; and what not? |
10681 | ]; chi tace accousente[ It]; the public mind is the creation of the Master- Writers[ Disraeli]; you bet your sweet ass it is; what are we waiting for? |
10681 | ]; glory be to, honor be to? |
10681 | ]; qui vive? |
10681 | ]; what stronger breastplate than a heart untainted? |
10681 | airy tongues that syllable men''s names[ Milton]; what''s up? |
10681 | am I not a man and a brother? |
10681 | cui bono? |
10681 | how comes it, how is it, how happens it? |
10681 | how does it happen? |
10681 | little did one think, little did one expect; nobody would ever suppose, nobody would ever think, nobody would ever expect; who would have thought? |
10681 | never mind; Who cares? |
10681 | one''s bark being worse than his bite; beggars mounted run their horse to death[ Henry VI]; quid times? |
10681 | quaere? |
10681 | quis custodiet istos custodes? |
10681 | what art thou, thou idol ceremony? |
10681 | what next? |
10681 | what on earth!, what in the world!, What the devil!, Holy cow!, Can you top that? |
10681 | what''s the matter? |
10681 | whence? |
10681 | wherefore? |
10681 | who cares?, what difference does it make? |
10681 | who cares?, what difference does it make? |
10681 | who shall decide when doctors disagree? |
10681 | why? |
10681 | with friends like that, who needs enemies? |
5402 | ''Do n''t abuse the gemman,''adds a by- stander,''he has been grossly insulted already; do n''t you see his back''s up?'' |
5402 | An abbreviation of housewife, but now always used as a term of reproach; as, How now, hussy? |
5402 | As old as my tongue, and a little older than my teeth; a dovetail in answer to the question, How old are you? |
5402 | Bing we to Rumeville: shall we go to London? |
5402 | Can you tip me any quids? |
5402 | Do they bite, master? |
5402 | Do you think to fun me out of it? |
5402 | Hark ye, friend, have you got a padlock on your a- se, that you sh- te through your teeth? |
5402 | Hark ye, friend, whether do they bite in the collar or the cod- piece? |
5402 | Has he come it; has he lent it? |
5402 | How d''ye do, young one? |
5402 | How fares your old trunk? |
5402 | How lies the land? |
5402 | How stands the reckoning? |
5402 | Is he foolish or flash? |
5402 | It consisted in the seller naming his or her hinder parts, in answer to the question, What? |
5402 | Likewise an expression of quizzical familiarity, as"how d''ye do, OLD ONE?" |
5402 | Lord, where do you keep? |
5402 | Mother have you any game; mother, have you any girls? |
5402 | Mother: how many tails have you in your cab? |
5402 | On any of the company asking, What? |
5402 | Quid est hoc? |
5402 | Some derive the term quandary from the French phrase qu''en dirai je? |
5402 | These unhappy people afford great scope for vulgar raillery; such as,''Did you come straight from home? |
5402 | What did thought do? |
5402 | What does scrip go at for the next rescounters? |
5402 | What, sweet one, all- a- mort? |
5402 | Who has any land in Appleby? |
5402 | Who is Peter Lug? |
5402 | Who owns this? |
5402 | Who put that monkey on horseback without tying his legs? |
5402 | Will you cock your organ? |
5402 | Will you hob or nob with me? |
5402 | Will you lap your congo with me? |
5402 | Will you melt a borde? |
5402 | can you lend me some money? |
5402 | did any of you ever see such another? |
5402 | does your nose still stand fast? |
5402 | how many girls have you in your bawdy house? |
5402 | seems only to have meant, Will you have warm or cold beer? |
5402 | that is, Why do not you set Dun to attest him? |
5402 | what does scrip sell for delivered at the next day of settling? |
5402 | what shall I say of it? |
5402 | where are your rooms? |
5402 | will you drink tea with me? |
5402 | will you smoke your pipe? |
5402 | will you spend a shilling? |
30847 | Are these rules universally followed? |
30847 | At what stage of the process are we with regard to any given word? |
30847 | Do we so find it, and why? |
30847 | How are compound nouns written when one of the components is derived from a transitive verb? |
30847 | How are compounds of color treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ father_,_ mother_,_ brother_,_ sister_,_ daughter_,_ parent_, and_ foster_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ fellow_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ fold_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ life_ and_ world_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ maker_ and_ dealer_ written? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ master_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ store_ treated? |
30847 | How are compounds of_ tree_ treated? |
30847 | How are possessive phrases used as specific names treated? |
30847 | How are titles treated when compounded with_ vice_,_ elect_,_ ex_,_ general_, and_ lieutenant_? |
30847 | How do you treat a compound consisting of a suffix and a compound proper name? |
30847 | How do you treat a compound of two nouns one in the possessive case? |
30847 | How do you treat compounds beginning with_ eye_? |
30847 | How do you treat compounds ending in_ holder_ and_ monger_? |
30847 | How do you treat two words, not nouns, arbitrarily used as a name? |
30847 | How do you treat words so associated that their joint sense is different from their separate sense? |
30847 | How do you write a pair of words used as a name when the second word is a noun and the first not really an adjective? |
30847 | How do you write compounds of ordinal numbers and nouns? |
30847 | How do you write three familiar compounds denoting time? |
30847 | How is a compound of a present participle and a noun written? |
30847 | How is a compound of a present participle and a preposition treated? |
30847 | How may compounds having the force of adjectives be made up? |
30847 | How may compounds having the force of adverbs be made up? |
30847 | How may compounds having the force of nouns be made up? |
30847 | How may compounds having the force of verbs be made up? |
30847 | How shall we shape the new word we have just coined? |
30847 | How should you treat fractional numbers spelled out? |
30847 | In what three forms do compounds appear? |
30847 | In which of these forms shall we write the phrase we speak so easily? |
30847 | What are the negative prefixes and how are they used? |
30847 | What can the printer do? |
30847 | What compounds of_ great_ are hyphenated? |
30847 | What is done when nouns are combined in a descriptive phrase before a name of a person? |
30847 | What is done when two or more compound words with a common component occur in succession? |
30847 | What is meant by a"compound"? |
30847 | What is said of compounds beginning with_ deutero_,_ electro_,_ pseudo_,_ sulpho_,_ thermo_, and the like? |
30847 | What is the duty of the compositor in these cases, especially when doubtful? |
30847 | What is the influence of accent in compounding? |
30847 | What is the purpose of a compound? |
30847 | What is the rule about compounds of a noun followed by_ like_? |
30847 | What is the rule about compounds of two adjectives? |
30847 | What is the rule about compounds of_ god_? |
30847 | What is the rule about compounds of_ self_ and_ by_? |
30847 | What is the rule about compounds of_ skin_? |
30847 | What is the rule about names composed of a plain noun and a verbal noun? |
30847 | What is the rule about phrases used as specific names? |
30847 | What is the rule about points of the compass? |
30847 | What is the rule about the prefixes_ quasi_,_ extra_,_ supra_,_ ultra_, and_ pan_? |
30847 | What is the rule about two nouns used together to form a name? |
30847 | What is the rule about_ over_ and_ under_? |
30847 | What is the usage in compounds of_ book_,_ house_,_ will_,_ room_,_ shop_, and_ work_? |
30847 | What rule is given about numerals compounded with nouns? |
30847 | What rule is given about numerals of one syllable? |
30847 | What should you do with compounds ending in_ man_ or_ woman_? |
30847 | What tendency is observable in usage regarding compounds? |
30847 | Where should we expect to find guidance in the choice of these forms? |
30847 | Which form of the process is operating in any given case? |
30847 | Which of these three forms shall we use, and why? |
38700 | ( L.), are there such violent passions in celestial minds? |
38700 | ( L.), by what right? |
38700 | ( L.), could you keep from laughing, friends? |
38700 | ( L.), for whose benefit is it? |
38700 | ( L.), full cups, whom have they not made eloquent? |
38700 | ( L.), to what length, then, O Catiline,[ are you resolved to go]? |
38700 | ( L.), what does this mean? |
38700 | ( L.), who shall separate[ us]? |
38700 | ( L.), who will watch the watchers? |
38700 | ( L.), why do you laugh? |
38700 | ( L.), why should there be shame or stint in regret for the loss of one so dear? |
38700 | ), how do I know? |
38700 | ), is it not true? |
38700 | ), the state? |
38700 | ), what the devil was he doing in that galley? |
38700 | ), what would you have? |
38700 | ), what''s the good of it? |
38700 | ), who goes there? |
38700 | ), who is like the Lord? |
38700 | COELEBS QUID AGAM( L.), being a bachelor, what am I to do? |
38700 | CUI BONO? |
38700 | FECUNDI CALICES, QUEM NON FECERE DISERTUM? |
38700 | NICHT WAHR? |
38700 | QUE DIABLE ALLAIT- IL FAIRE DANS CETTE GALÈRE? |
38700 | QUE SAIS- JE? |
38700 | QUE VOULEZ- VOUS? |
38700 | QUI VA LÀ? |
38700 | QUID DESIDERIO SIT PUDOR AUT MODUS? |
38700 | QUID RIDES? |
38700 | QUIS CUSTODIET IPSOS CUSTODES? |
38700 | QUIS SEPARABIT? |
38700 | QUO JURE? |
38700 | QUOD HOC SIBI VULT? |
38700 | QUOUSQUE TANDEM, O CATILINA? |
38700 | RISUM TENEATIS, AMICI? |
38700 | TANTÆNE ANIMIS COELESTIBUS IRÆ? |
38700 | WHAT NOT, elliptical for''what may I not say?'' |
38700 | WHEN, hwen,_ adv._ and_ conj._ at what time? |
38700 | WHERE, hw[=a]r,_ adv._ and_ conj._ at which place, at what place? |
38700 | WHEREBY'', by which; WHERE''FORE, for which reason: for what reason? |
38700 | WHEREINSOEV''ER, in whatever place or respect; WHEREINTO( hw[=a]r- in''t[=oo],-in- t[=oo]''), into what? |
38700 | WHEREON'', on which: on what? |
38700 | WHEREUN''DER, under which; WHEREUNTIL''(_ Shak._), whereunto; WHEREUNTO'', WHEREUN''TO, whereto: for what purpose? |
38700 | WHEREUPON'', upon or in consequence of which; WHERE''ER'', WHEREV''ER, at whatever place; WHEREWITH'', WHEREWITHAL'', with which? |
38700 | WHITHER, hwith''[.e]r,_ adv._ to what place? |
38700 | WHO, h[=oo],_ pron._( both_ rel._ and_ interrog._) what person? |
38700 | WHY, hw[=i],_ adv._ and_ conj._ for what cause or reason? |
38700 | [ A reduplication of''_ Shall I?_''] SHILPIT, shil''pit,_ adj._(_ Scot._) weak, washy: feeble- looking. |
38700 | a loud summons; WHAT IF, what would happen if? |
38700 | for Is it so? |
38700 | implying the presence or existence of many other things; WHAT OF, what comes of? |
38700 | into which.--_n._ WHERE''NESS, state of having place or position.--_advs._ and_ conjs._ WHEREOF'', of which: of what? |
38700 | is n''t that so? |
38700 | pron._ something:(_ Spens._) a portion, bit.--_adv._(_ obs._) why? |
38700 | to what place, to which place? |
38700 | what do you think of? |
38700 | which is the one, which is the other? |
38700 | which person.--_pron._ WHOEV''ER, every one who: whatever person.--WHO BUT HE, who else? |
38700 | who is the gainer? |
38700 | why?--_n._ the cause.--_advs._ and_ conjs._ WHEREFROM'', whence; WHEREIN'', in which respect: in what? |
38700 | with what.--WHERE AWAY? |
38700 | À QUOI BON? |
7453 | An how can you, a seely man, Jitch seely journey make? 7453 Seest not thilk same hawthorn stud How bragly it begins to bud And utter his tender head?" |
7453 | Which is tha wâ to Glassenberry? 7453 Why mister wizard? |
7453 | An shall I drap tha Reed-- an shall I, Athout one nawte about my SALLY? |
7453 | An who d''ye thenk I envy?-- Tha nawbles o''tha land? |
7453 | And why should not our Western dialects be so employed? |
7453 | Ave you bin down in ham, Thomas, o''late-- is thic groun, tha ten yacres, haind vor mawin? |
7453 | Bit how be I ta knaw that? |
7453 | Did Mary love me? |
7453 | Did_ Evans_, gallid_ Evans_ then, Câll out, at once, vor father''s men? |
7453 | Dunch,( Dunce?). |
7453 | Guy Whipt out hiz knife an cut tha belt, Then push''d er off!--Vor why? |
7453 | I dwont like norn''om? |
7453 | If we at head- quarters commit such blunders can we wonder at our provincial detachments falling into similar errors? |
7453 | In the eastern part it is used very rarely if ever in the beginning of sentences; but frequently thus:_ A did, did er?_ He did, did he? |
7453 | In the eastern part it is used very rarely if ever in the beginning of sentences; but frequently thus:_ A did, did er?_ He did, did he? |
7453 | Jerry zed,"What do tha think that I be like?" |
7453 | Larence, whys''n thee let I up?" |
7453 | Larence; doose thee thenk I can bear tha betwitten o''thic pirty maid? |
7453 | Now who is ther that han''t a hir''d O''one young TOM CAME? |
7453 | Oot let I goo?" |
7453 | Oot let I up, Larence?" |
7453 | Oot let I up?" |
7453 | Oot thee hire what I da zâ? |
7453 | QUARLES uses this verb:"What is my soul the better to be_ tin''d_ With holy fire?" |
7453 | That the young Churchwarden loud raur''d out,"You''ll break my yarm!--what be about?" |
7453 | Thus,_ ool er do it_? |
7453 | Thâ zâ I''m maz''d.--Why dwont you speak? |
7453 | Used for_ his_ when not followed by a substantive, as, whose house is that? |
7453 | We hir''d en not, we zeed en not!-- The glassy wâter zim''d a blot? |
7453 | What bisniss ad thâ ta up wi''t? |
7453 | What da thâ câll_ he_? |
7453 | What good war paintin, vornishin, an jitch? |
7453 | What good war''t vor''n ta mend Tha Ten Commandments?--Why did he Mell o''tha Lord''s Prayer? |
7453 | What need War ther tha âltar- piece ta titch? |
7453 | When tha wine, mangst thy boughs sifes at Milemas in sorrow, Zâ oolt thou sife for me, or one wild wish awake? |
7453 | Who hath not hir''d o''_ Avalon?_[ Footnote:"The Isle of ancient Avelon."--Drayton.] |
7453 | Will he do it? |
7453 | Will you do me the favour to amuse yourself and your friends with the enclosed epistle? |
7453 | [ proofer''s note: missing comma?] |
7453 | _ Farmer Bennet._--What did Missis Boord zâ or do ta Hester, than? |
7453 | _ Ool er goo?_ will he go? |
7453 | _ Ool er goo?_ will he go? |
7453 | _ What shall utchy do?_ What shall I do. |
7453 | _ Why, thee hass''n bin here an hour, an vor what shood I let thee goo? |
7453 | _ Wordn er gwain?_ Was he not going? |
7453 | _ Wordn er gwain?_ Was he not going? |
7453 | an thy cawld shade in zummer; Thy apples, aw who ool be lotted ta shake? |
7453 | an why d''ye bring en here To gally âll tha people? |
7453 | doose thee hire? |
7453 | doose thee meän to let I goo?" |
7453 | dwont ye knaw that now about It is the midst o''June? |
7453 | muss''n I hâ an hour like wither vawk ta ate my bird an cheese? |
7453 | what, oot niver let I up? |
7453 | why doos''n let I up? |
7453 | why doos''n let I up? |
7453 | why dwon''t ye right my shoes? |
7453 | zed he, I''m come to Glassenberry To zee tha Torr an Hawly Thorn; What makes ye look za merry?" |
15659 | Alas,she cried,"why should I always have to stay in the kitchen while my sisters dress in silks and satins?" |
15659 | Are you sure that you no longer wish the golden touch? |
15659 | Are you sure? |
15659 | But how am I to go in these clothes? |
15659 | Did you hear that noise? |
15659 | Do you not know? 15659 Do you still think that gold is the greatest thing in the world?" |
15659 | Does no one of our soldiers dare to meet him? |
15659 | Henry? |
15659 | How could you hold the reins? |
15659 | If I should grant you one wish,said the fairy,"would you ask for more gold?" |
15659 | Is it not time to pull out the fish? |
15659 | Is not God on the side of our people? |
15659 | Is that you, little Goody? |
15659 | Is your name Cowribs, or Sheepshanks, or Bandy legs? |
15659 | Well, Alice,said Two Shoes,"have you learned your lesson?" |
15659 | What do I see? |
15659 | What do you see, old Long Ears? |
15659 | What do you wish, dear Jumper? |
15659 | What if some one should need help while the rope is down? |
15659 | What is Dick going to send in the ship? |
15659 | What''s the matter with you, old Tom? |
15659 | Where are my dear children? |
15659 | Where are you going? |
15659 | Where are you, Tom? |
15659 | Who is calling for justice? |
15659 | Who is that man? |
15659 | Who is there? |
15659 | Whose horse is this? |
15659 | Why are you making so much noise? |
15659 | Why are you panting, my friend? |
15659 | Why are you sad? |
15659 | Why do you bark at little Two Shoes? 15659 Why do you let the rats do this?" |
15659 | Will you sell me that cat? |
15659 | All the children were safe, but what had become of Margery''s dear books and letters and other things? |
15659 | And does it not seem hard to you, When all the sky is clear and blue, And I should like so much to play, To have to go to bed by day? |
15659 | And would n''t it be better far To treat it as a joke, And say you''re glad''twas Dolly''s, And not your head that broke? |
15659 | And would n''t it be nicer For you to smile than pout, And so make sunshine in the house When there is none without? |
15659 | And would n''t it be wiser Than waiting like a dunce, To go to work in earnest, And learn the thing at once? |
15659 | Can you see Margery with her basket of letters in this picture? |
15659 | Can you see Tommy in the picture wearing his new clothes? |
15659 | Did you ever read lines like these in your school reader? |
15659 | Did you ever see a dog with such bright eyes? |
15659 | Did you notice how short his tail was? |
15659 | Do you think she deserved to be very happy? |
15659 | He took off his pointed cap and said to the miller''s daughter,"What will you give me if I help you again, and spin this straw into gold?" |
15659 | How did you catch them?" |
15659 | LYDIA MARIA CHILD[ Illustration] WHY THE BEAR''S TAIL IS SHORT Did you ever go to a circus where there was a bear in a cage? |
15659 | Pitter- patter, pitter- patter, All the rainy day? |
15659 | Suppose you''re dressed for walking, And the rain comes pouring down, Will it clear off any sooner Because you scold and frown? |
15659 | Suppose your task, my little man, Is very hard to get, Will it make it any easier For you to sit and fret? |
15659 | Taking off his pointed cap, he said to the girl,"What will you give me if I will again spin this straw for you?" |
15659 | Tell me, little raindrops, Is that the way you play? |
15659 | The little raindrops can not speak, But"pitter- patter- pat"Means,"We can play on this side, Why ca n''t you play on that?" |
15659 | The next morning the good shoemaker said to his wife,"What can we do for those dear little elves?" |
15659 | The queen asked,"Is your name Conrad?" |
15659 | Then the little man said,"What will you give me if I will spin it for you?" |
15659 | Then the old woman cried,"What do you fear, my child? |
15659 | They now looked like this: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Do you think you could have done as well as little Billy? |
15659 | Upon the roof sat the judge, who cried,''What did he do? |
15659 | WILLIAM AND JACOB GRIMM LITTLE BIRDIE What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
15659 | What could two boys do against an army? |
15659 | What did he do?'' |
15659 | What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day? |
15659 | What was to be done? |
15659 | When the giant saw that David was only a boy, he was angry and cried out:"Do you dare fight with me? |
15659 | Where are you going, you little pig? |
15659 | Where are you going, you little pig? |
15659 | Where are you going, you little pig? |
15659 | Where are you going, you little pig? |
15659 | Why are you crying?" |
15659 | Why, whoever before saw a pig in a wig? |
15659 | _ English Fairy Tale_ RAINDROPS Oh, where do you come from, You little drops of rain, Pitter- patter, pitter- patter, Down the windowpane? |
15659 | _ Scottish Tradition_[ Illustration] THE WISE LITTLE PIG Where are you going, you little pig? |
15659 | leaving your mother, you foolish young pig? |
14668 | Afraid of what? |
14668 | And earn money? |
14668 | But how did you catch him? 14668 But wo n''t he catch all your ducklings and little chickens?" |
14668 | Clinging to this bit of earth, As if in mid- air, With your sweet face turned to me, Looking strangely fair? |
14668 | Do you know how many that is? |
14668 | Give me something this cold day? |
14668 | Herbert, will you please peel my orange? |
14668 | How did you know he was there? |
14668 | How many, Willie? |
14668 | Oh, what is it? |
14668 | Shall I make a pair of scales, Lucy, for you to use when you play store? |
14668 | There, Lucy, what do you think of that? |
14668 | To let it rain? |
14668 | Well, how would you like to be a little flower merchant? |
14668 | What are you crying for? |
14668 | What are you going to do with him, Harry? |
14668 | What are you good for, my brave little man? 14668 What is the dark?" |
14668 | What makes the big shadow, mamma? |
14668 | What was it you wanted, mother? |
14668 | What will he do next? |
14668 | Where did you get that owl, Harry? |
14668 | Where is Winter, with his snowing? 14668 Will a ribbon block do, Herbert?" |
14668 | Willie, will you run upstairs, and get my needle book from the bureau? |
14668 | Wo n''t you tell me? 14668 An Interrogation Mark(?) 14668 And the twig said,What is the matter, little leaf?" |
14668 | And what do you think came down through the branches of the fig tree over our heads?" |
14668 | And why do I always know where to find my things? |
14668 | Are you not a sunbeam, Child, whose life is glad With an inner brightness Sunshine never had? |
14668 | Blooming in the shadow On this rock so drear?" |
14668 | But how did Patty teach them to be so tame? |
14668 | But where shall I get my flowers?" |
14668 | Can your shadow hurt you?" |
14668 | Did you ever look into a glass hive to see the bees while at work? |
14668 | Did you ever see a squirrel with a nut in his paws? |
14668 | Didst thou not, in hours of pain, Lull this head to ease again? |
14668 | Do you know what a glutton is? |
14668 | Do you know? |
14668 | Do you not wish that every boy and girl could have a home like this? |
14668 | Do you, my little readers? |
14668 | Does anybody know? |
14668 | Glad to see you, little bird;''Twas your little chirp I heard: What did you intend to say? |
14668 | Have you ever thought what use whiskers are to cats? |
14668 | He then went to the corner of the street, and said to every one whose boots did not look nice,"Black your boots, sir, please?" |
14668 | How can I tell? |
14668 | How much more time will it take to put a thing in its place, than to hunt for it or to borrow whenever you want to use it? |
14668 | I must introduce her? |
14668 | Is not the little fellow a brave bird? |
14668 | Love me, mother? |
14668 | Lucy ran out to the woodhouse to find the sticks.--"Will these do?" |
14668 | Robbing all the summer long; Do n''t you think it very wrong? |
14668 | She knew it was calling her home; but how could she leave her basket? |
14668 | She saw who it was, and stopped, saying kindly,"What is the matter, Davy?" |
14668 | Shocking tales I hear of you; Chirp, and tell me, are they true? |
14668 | Softly taps the Spring, and cheerly,--"Darlings, are you here?" |
14668 | They seem to say,"Wo n''t you have one?" |
14668 | To the nursery now comes mother, at last, And what in her hand is she bringing so fast? |
14668 | Was it not upon thy breast I was taught to sleep and rest? |
14668 | Was not the strange cat kind to puss? |
14668 | What return then can I make? |
14668 | Where do you think she went? |
14668 | Where is your mate? |
14668 | Which of the boys do you think was truly kind to the poor man? |
14668 | Who wants me?" |
14668 | Why do you come to my apple tree, Little bird so gray? |
14668 | Why do you lock your rosy feet So closely round the spray? |
14668 | Why is it, Mary, you can never find it? |
14668 | Why on the topmost bough do you get, Little bird so gray? |
14668 | With the music of thy voice, Bid my little heart rejoice? |
14668 | Yes, indeed, you may go,"said Aunt Annie;"but what will you put the roots and earth in while you are making the garden?" |
14668 | [ Illustration: Script Exercise: There is a little maiden-- Who is she? |
14668 | did Sam give the poor blind man nothing? |
14668 | is used at the end of a question; as, Where is John going? |
14668 | who wants to run and put away a thing as soon as she has used it, as if her life depended upon it? |
14668 | why are you lead- colored while we are all beautiful and golden?" |
14640 | About what time will you get back? |
14640 | Did he catch it, Frank? |
14640 | How do you do, Frank? |
14640 | Is that what all this noise is about? 14640 Kate, will you play with me?" |
14640 | Mamma, will you go to town? |
14640 | My cat? |
14640 | Papa, may we have the big flag? |
14640 | Shall we let it out, Lucy? |
14640 | Shall we take the nest, Rose? |
14640 | Well, children, did you have a nice time in the woods? |
14640 | What can my little boy do with such a big flag? |
14640 | What do you ask for a ticket on your train? |
14640 | What is that? |
14640 | What shall we get for you in town, mamma? |
14640 | What would the old bird do, Rose, if she should come back and not find her nest? |
14640 | Where did it go, Rose? |
14640 | Why, Hattie, you are not sorry puss got the rat, are you? |
14640 | Would you like to have it? |
14640 | Yes; may I go? 14640 And what do you think she found besides flowers? 14640 And when the little drops pitter- patter on the window do you think they are playing with me? 14640 And would you not do all yon could to please her? 14640 Are you lost? 14640 Are you not glad that we did not go to the woods with John? 14640 Are you not glad to be ready for a new book? 14640 But what would mother do, I wonder, without her little Fanny? |
14640 | Ca n''t you get back to the hen? |
14640 | Can Ann catch Rab? |
14640 | Can the dog catch the rat? |
14640 | Can the hen run? |
14640 | Can you see?" |
14640 | Did she run after it?" |
14640 | Did the doll hear Kate sing? |
14640 | Did you call us, mamma? |
14640 | Did you jump into the mud? |
14640 | Did you see him there? |
14640 | Did you see that boy fall down? |
14640 | Did you think we might fall into the pond? |
14640 | Do n''t you know the nest we saw some days ago? |
14640 | Do n''t you?" |
14640 | Do you know what kind of bird it is? |
14640 | Do you know where they live? |
14640 | Do you not think it is fun? |
14640 | Do you see Nell? |
14640 | Do you see the children at play? |
14640 | Do you see what it is made of?" |
14640 | Do you think he is a good dog? |
14640 | Does it come from the sky? |
14640 | Fido? |
14640 | Has grandma seen it?" |
14640 | Has the black hen left the nest? |
14640 | Have you ever been at the seaside? |
14640 | Have you taken good care of your book? |
14640 | How do you do, sir? |
14640 | Is it not good sport to watch the big waves, and to play on the wet sand? |
14640 | Is n''t Fido a good dog, Ellen? |
14640 | Is the cat on the mat? |
14640 | Is the pen in his hand? |
14640 | Is this a good pen? |
14640 | Is this the fast train?" |
14640 | Let me have the pan and the eggs, will you, Nell? |
14640 | May we go to the swing, now, mamma? |
14640 | May we take it, and show it to mother?" |
14640 | One evening Frank''s father said to him,"Frank, would you like to go with me to catch some fish?" |
14640 | Papa, will you let me ride with you on Prince? |
14640 | REVIEW"What shall we do?" |
14640 | Shall I shut the box? |
14640 | Shall we call mamma and Fanny to see it? |
14640 | Shall we hunt for eggs in the barn?" |
14640 | The little raindrops only say,"Pit, pitter, patter, pat; While we play on the out- side, Why ca n''t you play on that?" |
14640 | We did not go too near, did we, Tom? |
14640 | What do you think is in it now?" |
14640 | What do you think of Ponto? |
14640 | What do you think she is reading about? |
14640 | What has he in his hand? |
14640 | What have you in your pan, Lucy?" |
14640 | What is in this flower?" |
14640 | When she says,"Robert, will you get me a drink?" |
14640 | Where can it be? |
14640 | Where have you gone, little chick? |
14640 | Why do you scamper away? |
14640 | Why not hoist your own flags?" |
14640 | Will not papa let us catch Prince, and go to the big woods?" |
14640 | Will she not come out to get some grass? |
14640 | Will the hen let Ned get them? |
14640 | Will you run, too? |
14640 | Wo n''t it upset?" |
14640 | Wo n''t they please her?" |
14640 | Would you like to ride fast? |
14640 | Would you not love a dear, good grandma, who is so kind? |
14640 | Yes; can you catch it, Ann? |
14640 | [ Illustration: Script Exercise: Will the dog hunt a fox? |
14640 | and with you, father?" |
14640 | let me get in, will you? |
14640 | strong round dry bill worked sends claws flit God spring"How does the bird make the nest so strong, Willie?" |
30036 | May I see a proof? |
30036 | What_ kind of_ man is he? |
30036 | Are prepositions ever omitted, and why? |
30036 | Do passive verbs ever have objects? |
30036 | Do possessive pronouns take an apostrophe? |
30036 | Does it make much difference where words are put in a sentence? |
30036 | How are adjectives compared? |
30036 | How are compound nouns, appositives, etc., treated in the possessive? |
30036 | How are should and would used in subordinate clauses, in indirect discourse? |
30036 | How are the nominative and objective cases distinguished? |
30036 | How are_ shall_ and_ will_ used in direct discourse( a) in simple statements,( b) in questions,( c) in other cases? |
30036 | How are_ shall_ and_ will_ used in indirect discourse? |
30036 | How do compound nouns form their plurals? |
30036 | How do ordinary nouns form their plurals? |
30036 | How is the imperative mood used? |
30036 | How is the indicative mood used? |
30036 | How is the possessive case formed in the plural? |
30036 | How is the subjunctive mood used? |
30036 | How many articles are there? |
30036 | How many cases are there, and what does each indicate? |
30036 | How many families of words are there, and what are they? |
30036 | How many moods are there, and what are they called? |
30036 | How many numbers are there, and what do they mean? |
30036 | How many tenses are there, and what are they called? |
30036 | How many voices are there, what is each called, and what does it indicate? |
30036 | How should we pair_ either_,_ neither_,_ or_, and_ nor_? |
30036 | It is also improperly used in such expressions as"Where is he_ at_?" |
30036 | Of what three parts does a simple sentence consist? |
30036 | Should the two methods of comparison ever be combined? |
30036 | Such expressions as"pigs is pigs,""how be you?" |
30036 | The common question,"Can I see a proof?" |
30036 | What are Campbell''s five canons? |
30036 | What are the exceptions in the use of_ shall_ and_ will_? |
30036 | What are the rules for the formation of paragraphs? |
30036 | What are the rules for the formation of sentences? |
30036 | What are the three things about a noun which indicates its relation to other words? |
30036 | What can you say about the relation of a noun to a preposition? |
30036 | What can you say of the use of the verb with collective nouns? |
30036 | What common error occurs in the use of cases in subordinate clauses? |
30036 | What common error occurs in the use of plural possessive pronouns? |
30036 | What danger attends the use of_ most_? |
30036 | What danger is there in the use of pronouns, and how can it be avoided? |
30036 | What do degrees indicate, and how many are there? |
30036 | What does the phrase"I only saw him"mean? |
30036 | What exactly does this mean? |
30036 | What exceptions are there in the use of_ should_ and_ would_? |
30036 | What happens when the statement in the subordinate clause is of universal application? |
30036 | What is a conjunction? |
30036 | What is a noun? |
30036 | What is a preposition? |
30036 | What is a pronoun? |
30036 | What is a verb? |
30036 | What is an adjective? |
30036 | What is an adverb? |
30036 | What is an article? |
30036 | What is an interjection? |
30036 | What is case? |
30036 | What is mood? |
30036 | What is one very important use of number? |
30036 | What is said of_ and_ and_ but_? |
30036 | What is tense? |
30036 | What is tense? |
30036 | What is the case of the object in participial construction? |
30036 | What is the danger in such omission? |
30036 | What is the exact meaning of( a)_ may_,( b)_ can_,( c)_ must_,( d)_ ought_? |
30036 | What is the general rule for placing words? |
30036 | What is the general use of_ should_ and_ would_? |
30036 | What is the important distinction in the use of adverbs and adjectives? |
30036 | What is the potential mood? |
30036 | What is the reason for the rule, and how can accuracy be determined? |
30036 | What is the relation of the verb to the subject with regard to person and number? |
30036 | What is the rule about placing correlatives? |
30036 | What is the rule for tense in subordinate clauses? |
30036 | What is the writer''s task? |
30036 | What is voice? |
30036 | What is_ it''s_? |
30036 | What kinds of articles are there? |
30036 | What rule is to be observed in the use of negatives? |
30036 | What should be avoided in the use of prepositions? |
30036 | What three abuses are to be avoided? |
30036 | When may words be omitted? |
30036 | When should the long form of comparison be used and when the short? |
30036 | When should you use_ a_? |
30036 | When should you use_ an_? |
30036 | Where is it placed in the sentence? |
30036 | Why are some adjectives never compared? |
30036 | Why do we make mistakes in the use of compound tenses? |
30036 | Why is the subject important? |
30036 | Why? |
30036 | _ To_ is superfluous and wrong in such expressions as"Where did you go_ to_?" |
30036 | _ Who_ should not be misused for_ whom_ or_ whose_, e. g.,"_ Who_( whom) did you wish to see?" |
30036 | means"Have I permission, or will you allow me, to see a proof?" |
30036 | not"What_ kind of a_ man is he?" |
6158 | And what is that? |
6158 | But will you allow me to attend you, so that the people will not withdraw their confidence? |
6158 | Can not you give me a plain answer to this plain question-- Did it rain yesterday? |
6158 | Did it rain yesterday? |
6158 | Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? 6158 Have I time to catch the Hudson River train?" |
6158 | Have you heard nothing to- day? |
6158 | I have promised to be there--_promised_, do you hear? 6158 Is it yesterday you mean?" |
6158 | My good friend, I do n''t know what you mean about the bog; I only asked you whether it rained yesterday? |
6158 | Of what use? |
6158 | Please your honor, I was n''t at the bog at all yesterday,--wasn''t I after setting my potatoes? |
6158 | Pray, sir,continued Smith,"do you believe in a cook?" |
6158 | True enough,was the prompt reply,"but did I not blacken them well?" |
6158 | Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you? |
6158 | What can be more palpably absurd and ridiculous than the prospect held out of locomotives traveling twice as fast as horses? |
6158 | What do you like, my little girl? |
6158 | What is the secret of success in business? |
6158 | What makes you work so hard? |
6158 | What now was the cause of this heart- rending event? 6158 Why do n''t you send in a bid?" |
6158 | Yes, sir; what do you want? |
6158 | ''Charley,''he cried,''what are you doing there?'' |
6158 | A few years since, a manly boy about nine years old stepped up to a gentleman in the Grand Central Depot, New York, and asked,"Shine, sir?" |
6158 | After all, would it not appear that the true theory is that of a golden mean between these two extremes? |
6158 | An Irishman, who had neglected to thatch his cottage, was one day asked by a gentleman with whom he was conversing,"Did it rain yesterday?" |
6158 | And why should we not look for full mental development, and for the most perfect moral maturity? |
6158 | And you, little boy, with dirty hands and low forehead,"What do you like?" |
6158 | At the close of dinner one day my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door, and said to me:''David, what do you mean to be?'' |
6158 | Bishop Vincent, writing about boyhood, says,"If I were a boy? |
6158 | But always, What is my duty? |
6158 | But where does he eat his lunch at noon? |
6158 | But who says there are no joys in life? |
6158 | Could anything be more beautiful or noble in public life, where jealousy, and selfishness and double- dealing appear to rule the hour? |
6158 | Did he conclude that he had made a mistake in his calling, and dabble in something else? |
6158 | Did he slink out of sight? |
6158 | Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them? |
6158 | Did you ever read the fable of the magician and the mouse? |
6158 | For example: Have you a hot, passionate temper? |
6158 | He did not ask, Will this course win fame? |
6158 | Hearing a young lady highly praised for her beauty, Gotthold asked,"What kind of beauty do you mean? |
6158 | How can he answer for it to his country? |
6158 | How many of us would be alive to- day, if in our earliest years we had not been provided for and watched over with tender care? |
6158 | I said to myself,''Lincoln, when is a thing proved?'' |
6158 | If it is not so, how can it so control them as to develop a pure and noble character? |
6158 | If what is imperfect constitutes the exception in the physical world, why should it be otherwise in the world of mind and of morals? |
6158 | Is it a thing to be preferred, to be stunted, and little, and dwarfish, in our intellectual and moral stature? |
6158 | Is not this a queer city? |
6158 | Leave a little baby to take care of itself, and how long do you suppose it would live? |
6158 | Merely that of the body, or that also of the mind? |
6158 | One of the gentlemen then said to him,"What if one of the lights should chance to go out?" |
6158 | Or do we prefer a state of childhood to that of a perfect man? |
6158 | Or was he up and at it again with a determination that knows no defeat? |
6158 | President Lincoln was asked,"How does Grant impress you as a leading general?" |
6158 | Shall I?" |
6158 | Should he be less particular in selecting his companions? |
6158 | Suppose you go out into the street and ask the first person you meet what he likes? |
6158 | The boy remembered the gentleman, and asked him,"Did n''t I shine your shoes once in the Grand Central Depot?" |
6158 | The general, without returning his salute, asked, roughly:"Have you got the powder?" |
6158 | The mere fact of his failure has interest; but how did he take his defeat? |
6158 | The question might be asked,"Why do some forms and colors please, and others displease?" |
6158 | The question to be settled by most of us is, Shall I steer or drift? |
6158 | Then I thought,''What use is it for me to be in a law office if I ca n''t tell when a thing is proved?'' |
6158 | Then in the spring, when I had got through with it, I said to myself one day,''Ah, do you know now when a thing is proved?'' |
6158 | There may be evidence enough, but wherein consists the proof? |
6158 | To his mind, the first, last, and closest trial question to any living creature is, What do you like? |
6158 | WHAT CONSTITUTES GOOD CITIZENSHIP? |
6158 | Was he discouraged? |
6158 | Was it stress of weather, or a contrary wind, or unavoidable accident? |
6158 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
6158 | Washington broke out at first with terrible severity of speech, and then said:"Why did you come back, sir, without it?" |
6158 | What are hardships, ridicule, persecution, toil, or sickness, to a soul throbbing with an overmastering purpose? |
6158 | What constitutes proof? |
6158 | What did he do next? |
6158 | What does he do after supper? |
6158 | What other creature in the world is so helpless as the human infant? |
6158 | What then was the character of these homes? |
6158 | What would become of the world if we could not trust each other''s word? |
6158 | What would now be thought of the greatest chemist or geologist of 1776? |
6158 | What?" |
6158 | When can their glory fade? |
6158 | Where does he go when he leaves his boarding- house at night? |
6158 | Where does he spend his Sundays and holidays? |
6158 | Who does not see that if these men had lost their grip upon themselves, the world would have been deprived of many of its rarest literary treasures? |
6158 | Who ever contemplates stunted growth, or any kind of visible deformity, with complacency and satisfaction? |
6158 | Who ever heard of excuses in football- playing? |
6158 | Why? |
6158 | Will this battle add to my earthly glory? |
6158 | Yankee fashion, it might be answered by the question,"Why do we like sugar and dislike wormwood?" |
6158 | You can take a pretty good measure of his character from that answer, can you not? |
6158 | You young rebel, what are you doing there? |
6158 | he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?" |
10294 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
10294 | I,said the Rook,"With my little book, And I''ll be the parson"Who''ll be the clerk? |
10294 | It is very cruel, too,Said little Alice Neal;"I wonder if he knew How sad the bird would feel?" |
10294 | What makes the lamb love Mary so? |
10294 | ''Tis a note of enchantment; what ails her? |
10294 | ***** A dillar, a dollar, A ten o''clock scholar, What makes you come so soon? |
10294 | ***** Baa, baa, black sheep, Have you any wool? |
10294 | ***** Bless you, bless you, burnie bee; Say, when will your wedding be? |
10294 | ***** Bow, wow, wow, Whose dog art thou? |
10294 | ***** How does my lady''s garden grow? |
10294 | ***** If all the world were apple- pie? |
10294 | ***** Little boy blue, come blow your horn, The sheep''s in the meadow, the cow''s in the corn; Where''s the little boy that tends the sheep? |
10294 | ***** Little girl, little girl, where have you been? |
10294 | ***** Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
10294 | ***** Once I saw a little bird Come hop, hop, hop; So I cried,"Little bird, Will you stop, stop, stop?" |
10294 | ***** Pussy sits beside the fire, How can she be fair? |
10294 | ***** See, saw, sacradown, Which is the way to London town? |
10294 | ***** Some little mice sat in a barn to spin; Pussy came by, and popped her head in;"Shall I come in, and cut your threads off?" |
10294 | ***** Where are you going, my pretty maid? |
10294 | ***** Who killed Cock Robin? |
10294 | And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink? |
10294 | And does it not seem hard to you, When all the sky is clear and blue, And I should like so much to play, To have to go to bed by day? |
10294 | And was going to the window To say,"How do you do?" |
10294 | And who''ll toll the bell? |
10294 | Do you ask what the birds say? |
10294 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
10294 | How do you like to go up in a swing, Up in the air so blue? |
10294 | How does my lady''s garden grow? |
10294 | How does my lady''s garden grow? |
10294 | How shall I cut it Without any knife? |
10294 | How shall I marry Without any wife? |
10294 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
10294 | I''ve as many legs as you: Why ca n''t we walk on two?" |
10294 | In comes the little dog,"Pussy, are you there? |
10294 | Late in the night when the fires are out Why does he gallop and gallop about? |
10294 | Little girl, little girl, what gave she you? |
10294 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
10294 | May I go with you, my pretty maid? |
10294 | Now what do you think? |
10294 | Now what do you think? |
10294 | Now what do you think? |
10294 | Now, would n''t you play, If a little child, like me, should say,"Play, play with me?" |
10294 | Oh, let us be married; too long we have tarried: But what shall we do for a ring?" |
10294 | Say, will you marry me, my pretty maid? |
10294 | So, so, dear Mistress Pussy, Pray tell me how do you do?" |
10294 | Thank you? |
10294 | The kitten came this morning, and said, With a touch of her paw and a turn of her head? |
10294 | WHO STOLE THE BIRD''S NEST? |
10294 | What are the songs the mother sings? |
10294 | What are the tales the mother tells? |
10294 | What are the thoughts in the mother''s mind? |
10294 | What does little baby say In her bed at peep of day? |
10294 | What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
10294 | What is your father, my pretty maid? |
10294 | What shall I call thee? |
10294 | What shall I sing? |
10294 | When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman? |
10294 | When the day is bright, On the grass you lie; Tell me then, at night Are you in the sky? |
10294 | When they said,"Is it small?" |
10294 | Who caught his blood? |
10294 | Who made his shroud? |
10294 | Who saw him die? |
10294 | Who shall dig his grave? |
10294 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree, to- day?" |
10294 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree, to- day?" |
10294 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree? |
10294 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
10294 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
10294 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
10294 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
10294 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
10294 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
10294 | Who''ll be the chief mourner? |
10294 | Who''ll be the parson? |
10294 | Who''ll bear the pall? |
10294 | Who''ll carry him to the grave? |
10294 | Who''ll carry the link? |
10294 | Who''ll sing a psalm? |
10294 | Will nobody answer this bell? |
10294 | Will you be constant, my pretty maid? |
10294 | Will you listen to me? |
10294 | Will you listen to me? |
10294 | Will you listen to me? |
10294 | Will you listen to me? |
10294 | cried the crow;"I should like to know What thief took away A bird''s nest to- day?" |
10294 | to- day?" |
10294 | what cheer? |
10294 | what cheer?" |
10294 | where are you going? |
19906 | And where do the four winds meet? |
19906 | Is anything the matter, sir? |
19906 | To this rough duty in northern seas what greater contrast than that other in southern, the naval bombardment of the Dardanelles? 19906 What,"I thought,"is the convention when one tumbles in upon a pair of Fritzes without the formality of being announced?" |
19906 | Where is the Thirteenth Regiment? |
19906 | _ Was ist los_? |
19906 | _ Was ist los_? |
19906 | **** Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | A poet says of the Kaiser''s letter:--"What bit of writing plainer tells That neither love nor mercy dwells Within his heart? |
19906 | A thought for soldiers in training: Are you ambidextrous? |
19906 | America said,"What is this?" |
19906 | Amusingly enough, I did n''t actually know at the time that it meant"What''s the matter?" |
19906 | And I too, have I nothing to reproach myself with? |
19906 | And how do they sustain the reputation of their branch in the great things? |
19906 | And they''re not going to mind That, since"Wypers,"[ 1] I''m blind, And the road is a long dark road? |
19906 | And was he sure of it in 1898? |
19906 | And when I wanted to fish for trout, did I ever hesitate to dismiss you?" |
19906 | And why was the visit repeated nine years later in 1898? |
19906 | And, in the land they guard so well, Is there no silent watch to keep? |
19906 | Are we living in a fairy tale? |
19906 | As I walked the old lines flashed into my head--"And though you be done to the death, what then, If you battled the best you could? |
19906 | As you imagine the scene as it would appear to the eye, can you realize its significance and what it all meant? |
19906 | But how could they say the word? |
19906 | But may I say that we have been in this business for three years? |
19906 | Did William II feel in 1889 that Abdul Hamid was a man after his own heart, more nearly so than any other ruler in Europe? |
19906 | Did the soul of Private George Dilboy of Somerville, Massachusetts, faint in him when he charged alone the German machine gun? |
19906 | Dire rumors of the postponement of our longed- for rest-- but what is rumor, after all? |
19906 | Has justice been done? |
19906 | Have I not often made you water my garden instead of learning your lessons? |
19906 | How did they carry it? |
19906 | I had an idea it was a liberal translation of"Who''s looney now?" |
19906 | I had my reward, for just as I found him out there, he said,''Is that you, Tom? |
19906 | Is it Mother? |
19906 | Is it here the road bends? |
19906 | Is the safety of civilization assured? |
19906 | On the roof of the school the pigeons cooed softly, and I thought to myself, hearing them:--"Are they to be forced to sing in German too?" |
19906 | Or Kate? |
19906 | So it''s beat, drums, beat; And who will find them food to eat? |
19906 | The Secret Service man was getting worried; would he fail? |
19906 | The United States or Germany? |
19906 | Then suddenly a boche voice called out, a little to our front:"_ Bist du Deutsch_?" |
19906 | There''s some one, you say, at the gate Of the little old house by the road? |
19906 | WHERE ARE YOU GOING, GREAT- HEART? |
19906 | WHERE ARE YOU GOING, GREAT- HEART? |
19906 | Was this a small, mobile party? |
19906 | What attraction brought these two strange monarchs together? |
19906 | What crown of rich words would he set for all time on this day? |
19906 | What had he done? |
19906 | What is the Hindenburg line? |
19906 | What kind of reading do they make? |
19906 | What picture grim Could better paint the soul of him?" |
19906 | What true American can think of them or picture them without having his heart overflow with grateful and affectionate pride? |
19906 | What was it she used to say so much? |
19906 | What was it? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart, With your eager face and your fiery grace?-- Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where are you going, Great- Heart? |
19906 | Where can we look for aid? |
19906 | Where can we look for aid_ now_?" |
19906 | Which represents this ideal, Lincoln or the Kaiser? |
19906 | While we hesitated, considered, debated, who was it that maintained the freedom of the seas and kept inviolate our coasts? |
19906 | Why did the German Kaiser select Abdul Hamid for this high honor? |
19906 | Why did the Kaiser love the Sultan and Kalif so greatly? |
19906 | Why go on shedding rivers of blood uselessly? |
19906 | Why should he think about being fair or humane? |
19906 | Why? |
19906 | Will this path take me?" |
19906 | Would the Kaiser have felt equally"gratified"if his six sons had given up their lives in fighting Germany''s war of plunder and conquest? |
19906 | what do you bear-- A song of the men who fought and fell, A tale of the strong to do and dare? |
4597 | ''Are you sure?'' 4597 ''Do you think he is alive?'' |
4597 | ''In this village?'' 4597 ''Where do you think Livingstone is?'' |
4597 | ''Who are you?'' 4597 And who are you?" |
4597 | Bless me, what does the child mean? |
4597 | But how shall I know the place? |
4597 | But the sun and moon are round,replies Columbus,"why not the earth?" |
4597 | But where shall I go? |
4597 | Daniel, Daniel,he said sorrowfully,"do n''t you mean to take that office?" |
4597 | How can trees grow with their roots in the air? |
4597 | How much does he ask for it? |
4597 | If the earth is a ball, what holds it up? |
4597 | My lord,cries the agonized parent;"what horrible command is this you lay upon me? |
4597 | W----? |
4597 | What didst thou intend to do with it? |
4597 | What do you, who already have so much to be grateful for, want with diamonds? |
4597 | What holds the sun and moon up? |
4597 | What if the earth is round? |
4597 | What is the lowest price you can take for this book, sir? |
4597 | What shall I do? |
4597 | What will He do,asked the boy one day,"when we do n''t do the best we can?" |
4597 | Who did you say is waiting for me? |
4597 | Who is the sculptor of this group? |
4597 | Why dost thou hesitate? |
4597 | Why, what do you want to be now? |
4597 | Why,thought he,"ca n''t I gather and sell enough to buy my dictionary?" |
4597 | You''d make a pretty president, with all your tricks and jokes, now would n''t you? |
4597 | ''That''s my fate, is it? |
4597 | ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks to the steamer?'' |
4597 | A learned doctor asks,"How can men walk with their heads hanging down, and their feet up, like flies on a ceiling?" |
4597 | And little Pierre? |
4597 | And the story of William Tell,--is it not dear to every heart that loves liberty? |
4597 | And the words, too?" |
4597 | And what were the experiences that led to it? |
4597 | And where is that band, who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
4597 | And who was this young man who was chosen to undertake a work which required the highest qualities of manhood to carry it to success? |
4597 | Angel or demon? |
4597 | But if a fellow has to grub away ten or twelve hours out of the twenty- four, what time is left to do anything for one''s self?" |
4597 | But stay, what is this? |
4597 | But why is this master artist at work, in secret, in a cellar where the sun never shone, the daylight never entered? |
4597 | Can ships sail up hill?" |
4597 | Did he get the dictionary? |
4597 | Did he give up his dreams of being a great man? |
4597 | Did influence, a"pull,"or financial considerations have anything to do with the merchant''s choice of a partner? |
4597 | Do n''t you remember young W----?" |
4597 | Do you mean me to go to Central Africa?'' |
4597 | FRANKLIN''S LESSON ON TIME VALUE Dost thou love life? |
4597 | Gessler cries in a loud authoritative voice:"Wherefore is this assembly of people? |
4597 | Has Ali Hafed returned?" |
4597 | He was starving and almost naked, and the diamonds-- which had lured him away from all that made life dear-- where were they? |
4597 | Heralds, in thunder tones, repeat,"Who is the sculptor of this group?" |
4597 | Is Dr. Livingstone here?'' |
4597 | Is it the work of the gods? |
4597 | Is there in all the length and breadth of the United States to- day a boy so poor as to envy Abraham Lincoln the chances of his boyhood? |
4597 | It lies, like a block of pure, uncut Parian marble, ready to be fashioned into-- what? |
4597 | It was hard, was n''t it, for a little fellow only eight years old to have to leave off going to school and settle down to work on a farm? |
4597 | Now, of all things in the world; of what use was a cow to an ambitious boy who wanted to go to college? |
4597 | Perhaps-- But what is this? |
4597 | Shall it be one of beauty, or of deformity; an angel, or a devil? |
4597 | Tell me how and where you found it?" |
4597 | The latter wrote back without delay:"What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea? |
4597 | Then a light broke in upon them, and they cried out,"Is it possible that you had the valedictory in mind when you put that''V''over your door?" |
4597 | Then, turning toward him, she asked, in amazement:"Did you compose it? |
4597 | To what purpose didst thou destine the second arrow?" |
4597 | WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH IT? |
4597 | Was it any wonder that he was popular with all kinds of people? |
4597 | Was it any wonder that his"middies"almost worshiped him? |
4597 | What change has come o''er the spirit of his dreams? |
4597 | What does all this mean? |
4597 | What has happened to check the laughter on their lips, and dim their bright eyes with tears? |
4597 | What is it?" |
4597 | What schoolboy or schoolgirl is not familiar with those stirring lines from"William Tell''s Address to His Native Mountains,"by J. M. Knowles? |
4597 | What was to be done? |
4597 | What will you do with it?" |
4597 | Which will you call into life? |
4597 | Who art thou, and why dost thou hold that man a prisoner?" |
4597 | Who called for help? |
4597 | Who could his benefactor be? |
4597 | Who did it?" |
4597 | Whom do you mean?" |
4597 | Why did she do it? |
4597 | Will you shape it into a statue of beauty which will enchant the world, or will you call out a hideous image which will demoralize every beholder? |
4597 | With his arm linked in that of the philosopher, we see-- but why prolong the list? |
4597 | Without waiting for a reply, she added quickly,"Would you like to come to my concert this evening?" |
4597 | You will lose your place; or, supposing you to retain it, what are you but a clerk for life? |
4597 | aim at a mark placed on the head of my dear child? |
4597 | could it be possible that the great artist who had been so kind to him would sing his little song before this brilliant audience? |
4597 | groans the stricken youth,"why have ye deserted me, now, when my task is almost completed? |
4597 | or-- and, with bated breath, the question passes from lip to lip,"Can it have been fashioned by the hand of a slave?" |
4597 | said I,''do you really think I can find Dr. Livingstone? |
4597 | say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
4597 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
4597 | they said,"and you sail down the other side, how can you get back again? |
38412 | A penny for a passenger, But sailors voyage free; O, will you be a sailor, sir, And hold the sheet for me? |
38412 | And how did the hares know? |
38412 | And how did the jackals know? |
38412 | And how did the monkeys know? |
38412 | Are you afraid? |
38412 | Brother Camel, had n''t you better go home now? |
38412 | Can you hit it? |
38412 | Can you see my brother? |
38412 | Do you see that little black speck away out there in the sea? |
38412 | How are you, Monkey? |
38412 | How do you know that? |
38412 | How do you think I can talk when I have a stone in my mouth? |
38412 | How shall we get out to the box? |
38412 | I should like to ask whose work is the finer, mine or that merchant''s? |
38412 | Is it Jack? |
38412 | Is it Tom? |
38412 | Is that enough? |
38412 | Is this your ax? |
38412 | Is this your ax? |
38412 | Is this your ax? |
38412 | Is this your ax? |
38412 | Little hare,said the lion,"why did you say that the earth was falling in?" |
38412 | Must we not leave the nest? |
38412 | Now what do you think it is? |
38412 | Then what is his sled string made of? |
38412 | Well,he said,"what is my name? |
38412 | What are you crying about? |
38412 | What are you saying, woman? |
38412 | What are you saying? |
38412 | What can you do? |
38412 | What have you done? |
38412 | What have you lost? |
38412 | What is his sled string made of? |
38412 | What makes the bears think so? |
38412 | What makes the tigers think so? |
38412 | What makes you think so? |
38412 | What will you take for your big golden apple? |
38412 | Where did you find that wonderful thing? |
38412 | Where is the Dark Tower? |
38412 | Where is the Dark Tower? |
38412 | Where is the Dark Tower? |
38412 | Where is the Dark Tower? |
38412 | Where? |
38412 | Why do n''t you talk to me? |
38412 | Why do the buffaloes think so? |
38412 | Why do the deer think so? |
38412 | Why do you want to do that? |
38412 | Why, Cousin Jeremy, how can I tell, When my eyes are shut? |
38412 | You laughed at me,said the mouse,"but have I not helped you?" |
38412 | And what is a shoe? |
38412 | Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me? |
38412 | Are you going so soon?" |
38412 | But what does the man do with this root? |
38412 | But what is it good for? |
38412 | But who are you, kind sir? |
38412 | COUSIN JEREMY He came behind me and covered my eyes;"Who is this?" |
38412 | Can you make him take it off?" |
38412 | Do you know where that is?" |
38412 | Friend Worm, did you hear what those men were saying? |
38412 | Green leaves a- floating, Castles of the foam, Boats of mine a- boating-- Where will all come home? |
38412 | He sat down by the water and said to himself,"What shall I do? |
38412 | How can anything with two legs do more than we, who have four? |
38412 | How can that be? |
38412 | How does this happen, my child?" |
38412 | Is n''t that enough?" |
38412 | Little girl, O little girl, And must I pay a fare? |
38412 | Next morning Long- Nose looked out of the window and said to her,"What will you take for the comb?" |
38412 | O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? |
38412 | POEMS BY ABBIE FARWELL BROWN THE SAILOR Little girl, O little girl, Where did you sail to- day? |
38412 | POEMS BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON WHERE GO THE BOATS? |
38412 | SNOWFLAKES Little white feathers, Filling the air; Little white feathers, How came you there? |
38412 | She was always saying,"What if the earth should fall in? |
38412 | Should you not like to have such diamonds whenever you wish them? |
38412 | Then she said:"Cousin, how can you live on this poor corn and wheat? |
38412 | What do you think she saw? |
38412 | What do you want me to do? |
38412 | What do you want?" |
38412 | What has the rain done, I should like to know? |
38412 | What have you brought for me?" |
38412 | What have you ever given to anybody? |
38412 | What is a man? |
38412 | What is a shoe? |
38412 | What more can you ask? |
38412 | What shall I do? |
38412 | What shall I do?" |
38412 | What would happen to me then?" |
38412 | When she came home, she asked,"Did you see or hear anything?" |
38412 | When she saw Childe Rowland, she came to him and said:"Brother, why are you here? |
38412 | When the older daughter went back to the house, her mother called out,"Well, daughter?" |
38412 | When they had gone a little way, the bear turned around and asked,"Are you afraid?" |
38412 | White Maiden took her to the door of the wigwam and said:"Little Scar- Face, can you see my brother?" |
38412 | White Maiden took the sister to the door of the wigwam and said,"Can you see my brother?" |
38412 | Who ever heard of such a thing as a shoe? |
38412 | Who''ll drive me this little Brown Bossy away?" |
38412 | Why did you make such a noise?" |
38412 | Why do n''t they talk about me? |
38412 | Why should n''t I open a shop, too?" |
38412 | Will you do it?" |
38412 | peek"? |
38412 | said the man,"what is that?" |
18362 | Is that the idea? |
18362 | What''s the idea? |
18362 | And even if it were so? |
18362 | And how am I to thank you? |
18362 | And in the end, what are you going to make of it? |
18362 | And who is without a friend who at some time or another has not sprung"meticulous"upon him? |
18362 | And yet the explanation does not wholly satisfy me Apparently I was wrong Are we wandering from the point? |
18362 | Are you a trifle-- bored? |
18362 | Are you fully reconciled? |
18362 | Are you not complicating the question? |
18362 | Are you prepared to go to that length? |
18362 | Are you still obdurate? |
18362 | But who could foresee what was going to happen? |
18362 | But you are open to persuasion? |
18362 | Can you imagine anything so horrible? |
18362 | Consult me when you want me-- at any time D Decidedly so Dine with me to- morrow night?--if you are free? |
18362 | Do I presume too much? |
18362 | Do I seem very ungenerous? |
18362 | Do not misunderstand me Do not the circumstances justify it? |
18362 | Do you know, I envy you that Do you know what his chief interests are now? |
18362 | Do you mind my making a suggestion? |
18362 | Do you press me to tell? |
18362 | Do you really regard him as a serious antagonist? |
18362 | Do you think there is anything ominous in it? |
18362 | Does it please you so tremendously? |
18362 | Does it seem incredible? |
18362 | Have I incurred your displeasure? |
18362 | Have you any rooted objection to it? |
18362 | Have you anything definite in your mind? |
18362 | Have you reflected what the consequences might be to yourself? |
18362 | How can I thank you? |
18362 | How can you be so unjust? |
18362 | How delightful to meet you How does the idea appeal to you? |
18362 | How? |
18362 | I should have thought otherwise Really-- you must go? |
18362 | I wonder if you have the smallest recollection of me? |
18362 | I would agree if I understood I would n''t put it just that way If ever I can repay it, command me If I mistake not you were there once? |
18362 | Indeed, you are wholly wrong Indifferently so, I am afraid Irony was ten thousand leagues from my intention Is it sane-- is it reasonable? |
18362 | Is n''t it amazing? |
18362 | Is n''t it extraordinarily funny? |
18362 | Is n''t it preposterous? |
18362 | Is n''t that a trifle unreasonable? |
18362 | Is n''t that rather a hasty conclusion? |
18362 | Is that a fair question? |
18362 | It always seemed to me impossible It amuses you, does n''t it? |
18362 | May I ask to whom you allude? |
18362 | May I be privileged to hear it? |
18362 | May I speak freely? |
18362 | May I venture to ask what inference you would draw from that? |
18362 | Might I suggest an alternative? |
18362 | Then you merely want to ask my advice? |
18362 | Then you''re really not disinclined? |
18362 | What are your misgivings? |
18362 | What can you possibly mean? |
18362 | What conceivable reason is there for it? |
18362 | What do you imagine my course should be? |
18362 | What do you propose? |
18362 | What is the next step in your argument? |
18362 | What is there so strange about that? |
18362 | What unseemly levity on his part What very kind things you say to me What would you expect me to do? |
18362 | What you have just said is even truer than you realize What you propose is utterly impossible Who is your sagacious adviser? |
18362 | What, may I ask, is your immediate object? |
18362 | Why did you desert us so entirely? |
18362 | Why do you take it so seriously? |
18362 | Will you allow me to ask you a question? |
18362 | Will you be more explicit? |
18362 | Will you have the kindness to explain? |
18362 | Will you pardon my curiosity? |
18362 | Will you permit me a brief explanation? |
18362 | Would you apply that to everyone? |
18362 | Would you mind telling me your opinion? |
18362 | You were saying? |
18362 | [ sagacious= sound judgment, wise] Why ask such embarrassing questions? |
18362 | that is at least something Gratifying, I am sure H Happily there are exceptions to every rule Has it really come to that? |
6480 | ''Will he come?'' |
6480 | 29- 31, of their contraries? |
6480 | 47); and, indeed, what honour can be higher than to have nothing_ double_ about us, to be without_ duplicities_ or folds? |
6480 | Again, why should''simple''be used slightingly, and''simpleton''more slightingly still? |
6480 | And whence is''Yankee''a title little more than a century old? |
6480 | And why? |
6480 | Are those who bring forward these statements libellers of human nature? |
6480 | At once the question comes to the front, Shall the labour- pangs of this immense new- birth or transformation of English be encountered all at once? |
6480 | But are statements of the depth of his fall, the malignity of the disease with which he is sick, found only in Scripture and in sermons? |
6480 | But has man fallen, and deeply fallen, from the heights of his original creation? |
6480 | But is it not a real gain to know further that the one is to strut_ as the peacock does_, the other to swarm_ as do ants_? |
6480 | But to what end two words for one and the same thing? |
6480 | But what does their language on close inspection prove? |
6480 | But what exactly are caprices? |
6480 | But what, you may ask, is meant when, comparing certain words with one another, we affirm of them that they are synonyms? |
6480 | But''Will he not come?'' |
6480 | Do we attach any very distinct meaning to the word? |
6480 | For what is''education''? |
6480 | Have you ever asked yourselves what this division means, for something it must mean? |
6480 | His scholar inquired of him one day if he were aware of the derivation of''crypt''? |
6480 | How came they there? |
6480 | How can the bow be''relaxed''or slackened( for this is the image), which has not been bent, whose string has never been drawn tight? |
6480 | How else shall we explain this long catalogue of words, having all to do with sin or with sorrow, or with both? |
6480 | How explain the presence of a Greek word in the vocabulary of our Teutonic forefathers? |
6480 | I), a goddess of the same mythology? |
6480 | Is it a furnishing of a man from without with knowledge and facts and information? |
6480 | Is it possible to find anything which is common to all these uses of''post''? |
6480 | Is man of a divine birth and of the stock of heaven? |
6480 | Is not the word so understood a far more picturesque one than it was before? |
6480 | Is the process of education the filling of the child''s mind, as a cistern is filled with waters brought in buckets from some other source? |
6480 | Is''Hottentot''an African word, or, more probably, a Dutch or Low Frisian; and which, if any, of the current explanations of it should be accepted? |
6480 | Is''Lollard,''or''Loller''as we read it in Chaucer, from''lollen,''to chaunt? |
6480 | Must we not own then that there is a wondrous and mysterious world, of which we may hitherto have taken too little account, around us and about us? |
6480 | Nay, how should they have had it there? |
6480 | Need I remind you here of the importance of seeking to obtain in every case the earliest spelling of a word which is attainable? |
6480 | No doubt you may; but can you''educate''without bringing moral and spiritual forces to bear upon the mind and affections of the child? |
6480 | Or was it because they were mysteriously kept out of sight and_ hidden_ by the heretical sects which boasted themselves in their exclusive possession? |
6480 | Or was it that they were books not laid up in the Church chest, but_ hidden away_ in obscure corners? |
6480 | Or were they books_ worthier to be hidden_ than to be brought forward and read to the faithful? |
6480 | Shall we allow Humboldt''s derivation of''cannibal,''and find''Carib''in it? |
6480 | Some might ask why the stormy petrel, a bird which just skims and floats on the topmost wave, should bear this name? |
6480 | Starting then from this point, that''Christians''was a title given to the disciples by the heathen, what may we deduce from it further? |
6480 | The word has plainly to do with''leo''in some shape or other; but are these verses leonine from one Leo or Leolinus, who first composed them? |
6480 | Was it because their origin was_ hidden_ to the early Fathers of the Church, and thus reasonable suspicions of their authenticity entertained? |
6480 | Were the''Waldenses''so called from one Waldus, to whom these''Poor Men of Lyons''as they were at first called, owed their origin? |
6480 | What contact, direct or indirect, between the languages will account for this? |
6480 | What gives to the verb the right to monopolize the dignity of being''the word''? |
6480 | What humour for example can any one find in''philofelist''or lover of cats? |
6480 | What is the consequence? |
6480 | What point in common can we find between them all? |
6480 | What profit can there be in seeking to extend the region of these? |
6480 | What then did these, or what, rather, did the working genius of the language, do? |
6480 | What then does it mean in itself, and how has it arrived at this double use? |
6480 | What would be there the results? |
6480 | When did California obtain its name, and why? |
6480 | Which was it that should maintain its ground? |
6480 | Who is there that has not mentally put the Gulf of Lyons in some connexion with the city of the same name? |
6480 | Why was''Canada''so named? |
6480 | Why, it may be asked, should this be? |
6480 | Would he trace, for example, the relation in which the English and Norman occupants of this land stood to one another? |
6480 | [ Footnote: Hoc[ Greek: soter] quantum est? |
6480 | [ Footnote: See Skeat, s. v.] Whence did the''Chouans,''the insurgent royalists of Brittany, obtain their title? |
6480 | [ How did the lay sisters in the Low Countries, the''Beguines''get their name? |
6480 | and is there not some real gain in the vigour and vividness of impression which is in this way obtained? |
6480 | coming from God, and, when he fulfils the law of his being, and the intention of his creation, returning to Him again? |
6480 | or because, as the lion is king of beasts, so this, in monkish estimation, was the king of metres? |
6480 | or can you offer any other reason? |
6480 | or from some other cause which none have so much as guessed at? |
6480 | or is it a drawing forth from within and a training of the spirit, of the true humanity which is latent in him? |
6480 | or shall they be spread over years, and little by little the necessary changes introduced? |
6480 | or the opening up for that child of fountains which are already there? |
6480 | that is, does it mean the chaunting or canting people? |
6480 | why is one offering himself to the choice of his fellows called a''candidate''? |
11921 | What is that? |
11921 | ***** WHAT IS TIME? |
11921 | And by the brook, and in the glade, Are all our wand''rings o''er? |
11921 | And can eternity belong to me, Poor pensioner on the bounties of an hour? |
11921 | And has he left the birds and flowers, And must I call in vain, And through the long, long summer hours, Will he not come again? |
11921 | And is it not apparent that all their labours tend towards certain ends? |
11921 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
11921 | And where were they? |
11921 | Are we startled at these reports of philosophers? |
11921 | As for the old woman, she was Time, Old Age, Duration: with her what can wrestle? |
11921 | But are they all true? |
11921 | But why do they live together, if they do not help one another? |
11921 | By what rules does she determine the due proportions between the nest and the young which are not yet in existence? |
11921 | Can Honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flatt''ry sooth the dull, cold ear of Death? |
11921 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
11921 | Do all rooks live in rookeries? |
11921 | Do rooks always keep to the same trees? |
11921 | Do they all work together, or every one for itself? |
11921 | Do you hear what a cawing the birds make? |
11921 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
11921 | He spoke the truth: but why had he become necessary? |
11921 | He was a weak child, they told him; could he lift that cat he saw there? |
11921 | How did she learn that she should lay eggs-- that eggs would require a nest to prevent them from falling to the ground and to keep them warm? |
11921 | How long by tyrants shall thy land be trod? |
11921 | How would ye bear to draw your latest breath, Where all that''s wretched paves the way for death? |
11921 | I ask''d a dying sinner, ere the tide Of life had left his veins:"Time?" |
11921 | I say, what name detestable enough could we find for such a being? |
11921 | If, dead to these calls, you already languish in slothful inaction, what will be able to quicken the more sluggish current of advancing years? |
11921 | If, then, not our globe only, but this whole system, be so very dimunitive, what is a kingdom or a country? |
11921 | In what far distant region of the sky, Hush''d in deep silence, sleep ye when''tis calm? |
11921 | Is that a rookery, papa? |
11921 | Is this the foundation which you lay for future usefulness and esteem? |
11921 | Is this the whole? |
11921 | Most perfect most divine, had by consent Flock''d thither to abide eternally Within those silent chambers where they dwell In happy intercourse? |
11921 | Must_ we_ but weep o''er days more blest? |
11921 | My hopes and fears Start up alarm''d, and o''er life''s narrow verge Look down-- on what? |
11921 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
11921 | Oft as the morning ray Visits these eyes, waking at once, I cry, Whence this excess of joy? |
11921 | Pray, are not rooks the same with crows? |
11921 | So true, so brave-- a lamb at home, A lion in the chase?" |
11921 | That horn you tried to drink was the sea; you did make it ebb: but who could drink that, the bottomless? |
11921 | The giant merely awoke, rubbed his cheek, and said,"Did a leaf fall?" |
11921 | Those gay- spent festive nights? |
11921 | Those restless cares? |
11921 | Was it the hunted quarry past Right up Ben- ledi''s side? |
11921 | What are a few lordships, or the so- much- admired patrimonies of those who are styled wealthy? |
11921 | What can preserve my life, or what destroy? |
11921 | What has befallen me? |
11921 | What if the foot, ordain''d the dust to tread, Or hand to toil, aspired to be the head? |
11921 | What if the head, the eye, or ear, repined To serve-- mere engines to the ruling Mind? |
11921 | What is it that teaches the bird to place her nest in a situation sheltered from the rain, and secure against the attacks of other animals? |
11921 | What is the earth, with all her ostentatious scenes, compared with this astonishingly grand furniture of the skies? |
11921 | What, but a dim speck hardly perceptible in the map of the universe? |
11921 | When shall I and my people be able to get rest?" |
11921 | Where are they? |
11921 | Where are your stores, ye powerful beings, say, Where your aerial magazines reserved To swell the brooding terrors of the storm? |
11921 | Where''s the respect to wisdom paid? |
11921 | Why do those cliffs of shadowy tint appear More sweet than all the landscape smiling near? |
11921 | Wouldst know the moral of the rhyme? |
11921 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet; Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
11921 | You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
11921 | [ Illustration: Letter C.] Can anything( says Plato) be more delightful than the hearing or the speaking of truth? |
11921 | [ Illustration: Letter W.] What sounds are on the mountain blast, Like bullet from the arbalast? |
11921 | _ Elizabeth_:''It is false, for when they said"Do you confess the indictment?" |
11921 | _ Sir Matthew Hale_:''What is his calling?'' |
11921 | _ Twisden_:''Poverty is your cloak, for I hear your husband is better maintained by running up and down a- preaching than by following his calling?'' |
11921 | _ Twisden_:''Will your husband leave preaching? |
11921 | and silent all? |
11921 | and where art thou, My country? |
11921 | call my brother back to me, I can not play alone; The summer comes with flower and bee-- Where is my brother gone? |
11921 | for thee? |
11921 | rising to the ignoble call-- How answers each bold Bacchanal? |
11921 | said the King;"what is the matter?" |
11921 | said the other lady, whose visage glowed with passion, made up of scorn and pity,"what are the pleasures you propose? |
11921 | silent still? |
11921 | those busy bustling days? |
11921 | those longings after fame? |
11921 | those unsolid hopes Of happiness? |
11921 | those veering thoughts, Lost between good and ill, that shared thy life? |
11921 | where, Where are thy men of might-- thy grand in soul? |
11921 | whither now are fled Those dreams of greatness? |
11921 | whose power over them was employed in assisting the rapacious, deceiving the simple, and oppressing the innocent? |
11921 | why art thou the last Llewellyn''s horn to hear? |
11921 | why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds, and leav''st the kingly couch, A watch- case to a common larum- bell? |
11921 | why, my soul, dost thou complain, Why, drooping, seek the dark recess? |
31456 | An''what did I tell you''bout backin''out? |
31456 | And meanwhile, what do you suppose is going to happen to me? |
31456 | And you''re a fairy? |
31456 | Anna- Margaret, what on earth are you doing to the little chicken? |
31456 | But Anna- Margaret, do n''t you know you are hurting the little biddie? |
31456 | But this is your knife, is n''t it? |
31456 | But you have something to show that you are a free man, have you not? |
31456 | Dat you, Bud? |
31456 | Going? 31456 Going?" |
31456 | Have n''t you ambition enough to look around your wire and see if you can find the trouble? |
31456 | How do you get to the Land of Laughter? |
31456 | I wonder,she said to herself that afternoon,"if there is any such thing as a colored fairy? |
31456 | Is there a wireless near here? |
31456 | Is there such a land? |
31456 | John, who had the knife yesterday? |
31456 | No? 31456 Not go any more? |
31456 | Say,shouted Durmont,"does that thing have to keep up that confounded racket all the time?" |
31456 | So you prefer to bear the ills of New York than to fly to others you know not of, eh? |
31456 | That man? 31456 Well, has that partner of yours got that message down at his end yet?" |
31456 | Well, is that the only wire you have? |
31456 | What can you do about it? |
31456 | What in the world am I going to do about this message? |
31456 | What is mother''s angel doing? 31456 What you say about de boys? |
31456 | What''s open? |
31456 | Where is the rabbit, friend goose? |
31456 | Who laced up your shoes? |
31456 | Why are you crying, little boys? |
31456 | Why are you not in uniform, sir? |
31456 | Will the class please pass their Latin sentences to me? |
31456 | You ai n''t a- goin to back down, is you, Buddie? |
31456 | ( 1849-?) |
31456 | A religiously inclined youth asked his pastor,"Do you think it would be wrong for me to learn the noble art of self- defense?" |
31456 | And he said:"Where are you going so fast, little boys?" |
31456 | And he whispered to them:"Where are you going so fast, little boys?" |
31456 | And how do you suppose they knew this? |
31456 | And the gentle lady at the gate said:"Dear little boys, have you learned how to smile?" |
31456 | And who was he That breathed that comforting, melodic sigh,"Nobody knows de trouble I see?" |
31456 | Because the tongues of Garrison And Phillips now are cold in death, Think you their work can be undone? |
31456 | Can I describe little Annabelle''s amazement at finding in the bush a palace and a tall and dark- faced fairy before it? |
31456 | Dean of Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga. BROWN, WILLIAM WELLS( 1816-?) |
31456 | Did they hear aright? |
31456 | Did you drop this knife last night?" |
31456 | Do n''t I whip Ruth and Edith for telling lies?" |
31456 | Ere sleep comes down to soothe the weary eyes, Where ranges forth the spirit far and free? |
31456 | For a nice bone will you help me?" |
31456 | Have I not as good a right to be free as you have?" |
31456 | He got up, and walking over to the boy said:"What''s your name?" |
31456 | Heart of what slave poured out such melody As"Steal away to Jesus"? |
31456 | How did it catch that subtle undertone, That note in music heard not with the ears? |
31456 | How is this?" |
31456 | How much?" |
31456 | How, in your darkness, did you come to know The power and beauty of the minstrel''s lyre? |
31456 | I listened almost in expectation of hearing him say,"Johnson, Johnson, why smitest thou me 3,333 times?" |
31456 | I want to see the last picture-- and when will you return, fairy?" |
31456 | IS THE GAME WORTH THE CANDLE? |
31456 | If there is any young man who is spending more than he is making, let him ask himself the question, Is the game worth the candle? |
31456 | Is it any wonder then that we are having such poor crops? |
31456 | Is some celestial guardian Prisoned within thee, tiny shell? |
31456 | Is the game worth the candle? |
31456 | Just before charging, one of the colored sergeants, running up to Captain Fairfax, said:"Do you know there is a nest of German machine guns ahead?" |
31456 | Little attention was given the boy as he read in a sing- song, spiritless manner:"What plant we in this apple- tree? |
31456 | O BLACK AND UNKNOWN BARDS JAMES WELDON JOHNSON O black and unknown bards of long ago, How came your lips to touch the sacred fire? |
31456 | On reaching Philadelphia in the afternoon I inquired of a colored man how I could get on to New York? |
31456 | On some isle, Dreaming''mid music, may she be? |
31456 | One day Croesus said to Solon, the philosopher,"Do you not think I am a happy man?" |
31456 | Or do you think those precious drops From Lincoln''s heart were shed in vain? |
31456 | Or does she listen to the shell In coral halls within the sea? |
31456 | Or quenched the fires lit by their breath? |
31456 | Perhaps some mother expects to hear great things of her boy, some father''s hopes are centered in him, but what does that matter? |
31456 | She said,"Do you think so?" |
31456 | She said,"Does n''t this beat the band? |
31456 | Stand back of new- come foreign hordes, And fear our heritage to claim? |
31456 | That Lovejoy was but idly slain? |
31456 | The boatmen say on stormy nights They see rare Una with the shell, Sitting in pensive attitude, Is it a vision? |
31456 | The leader, leaning on his spear, replied,"You speak our language?" |
31456 | Then looking down upon me with an expression of mingled pity and surprise in his face, he said:"Why, do n''t you know Fred Douglass?" |
31456 | Then should we speak but servile words, Or shall we hang our heads in shame? |
31456 | Then, to dispel any further doubts the teacher might have, they asked triumphantly,"You never saw a blue- jay on Friday, did you?" |
31456 | Think you that John Brown''s spirit stops? |
31456 | This much, however, the world knows in common of Bishop Haygood: He was not a man who passed through life inquiring,"Who is my neighbor?" |
31456 | Through what strange realms and unfamiliar skies Tends her far course to lands of mystery? |
31456 | To what extent after sixty years have we advanced toward his ideals? |
31456 | Was he doing right or was he doing the easiest thing in not telling? |
31456 | Was the game worth the candle? |
31456 | Was the game worth the candle? |
31456 | Was there e''er so sweet a flower? |
31456 | What do you say, would you care for it?" |
31456 | What do you want a month?" |
31456 | What to her was the thought of another day; what did it matter to her whether he was a captain or a private? |
31456 | What would his mother and his"little sister"say? |
31456 | When the dog left, the rabbit called out from his hiding place,"How can you watch, friend goose, when you ca n''t see me?" |
31456 | Where is quaint Una? |
31456 | Where is this apparatus of yours? |
31456 | Whispering to a tall white brother beside me( the audience was half white) I asked:"Who, sir, is that man speaking?" |
31456 | Who can tell? |
31456 | Who first from midst his bonds lifted his eyes? |
31456 | Who first from out the still watch, lone and long, Feeling the ancient faith of prophets rise Within his dark- kept soul, burst into song? |
31456 | Who had the knife?" |
31456 | Who heard great"Jordan roll"? |
31456 | Whose starward eye Saw chariot"swing low"? |
31456 | Why should not men be as charitable unto one another? |
31456 | Will the young men who are to be the leaders, spend their hours in riotous living? |
31456 | Will they be disloyal to self, to home, to country, and to God? |
31456 | Will they be false to duty? |
31456 | Will they shirk? |
31456 | With what justice are we the inheritors of his renown? |
31456 | Wo n''t dat be nice, uh?" |
31456 | [ Illustration: His Motto]"How did you happen to construct this?" |
31456 | he asked contemptuously,"take it into town in an ox team?" |
31456 | what has lent Such fascination to thy spell? |
15747 | A saddler, eh? 15747 Are you not afraid,"said he,"of offending the great Being who reigns above, by thus using His name in vain?" |
15747 | Can you see anything from that window? |
15747 | Do n''t you call those things letters of recommendation? 15747 How do you know that I have so good a son?" |
15747 | I should like to know,said a friend,"on what ground you selected that boy, who had not a single recommendation?" |
15747 | My father''s trade? 15747 What used to be the pride of the Americans?" |
15747 | Where are my sons,asked he,"that I may give them my blessing?" |
15747 | Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found? |
15747 | Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found? |
15747 | Who has the direction of this garden? |
15747 | Would you hesitate to give anyone back his own? |
15747 | Young man,said he,"by what art, craft, or trade Did your good father earn his livelihood?" |
15747 | Alexander like a robber? |
15747 | And pray, sir, why did not your father make A saddler, too, of you?" |
15747 | And upon what is this great and glorious combination of states, so admirably united, really founded? |
15747 | And was this blessing heard? |
15747 | And what makes this countenance? |
15747 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war, and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more? |
15747 | Are we to answer just as we think, or just as we know? |
15747 | Are we to answer just as we think, or just as we know? |
15747 | Are we, then, so much alike? |
15747 | But go back to its origin, and what do we find that it means? |
15747 | By whom was it made? |
15747 | Did you ever hear about the little boats that they build? |
15747 | Did you ever see a mother kept at home, a kind of prisoner, by her sick child, obeying its every wish and caprice? |
15747 | Do you want to come out now?" |
15747 | England and France were far ahead of the others, but which of them should it be? |
15747 | For what does each star stand? |
15747 | For what does our flag stand? |
15747 | For what else does it stand? |
15747 | Have you ever fancied that you could do without it? |
15747 | How do we Americans look upon the flag? |
15747 | How have you passed your life? |
15747 | How many nations in the history of the world have proved themselves worthy of being so? |
15747 | How many stars are there in the flag? |
15747 | How would meat taste without salt? |
15747 | In what city was it made? |
15747 | Is it any wonder, then, that birds and their nests have always been a source of delight to thinking man? |
15747 | Is it any wonder, then, that she took them for her subject when she began to paint? |
15747 | Is it moonlight so suddenly flashing? |
15747 | Is it, then, nothing to be free? |
15747 | It might be asked, what land has ever felt the influence of liberty, that has not flourished like the spring? |
15747 | LESSON LVI OUR COUNTRY TO- DAY_ PART II_ How has it come about that the number of people in the United States has increased with such rapidity? |
15747 | LESSON XXIX THE SUN How far away from us is the sun? |
15747 | LESSON XXIX THE SUN How far away from us is the sun? |
15747 | My father''s trade? |
15747 | Oh, say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
15747 | Or is this obedience the obedience of slavery? |
15747 | Over what buildings do we see the flag floating? |
15747 | Shall I give him them?" |
15747 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea,-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
15747 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea,-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
15747 | The Englishman, sure that Franklin would be less ready to answer, continued:"What is now their pride?" |
15747 | Then another question arose; should it be England or the Thirteen Colonies? |
15747 | Was it not a noble action?" |
15747 | Was it the night wind that rustled the leaves? |
15747 | Was not this a noble deed?" |
15747 | Was there ever a bolder captain of a more valiant band? |
15747 | What did Washington think of it when he saw it? |
15747 | What does our flag proclaim? |
15747 | What does our flag tell to all the people? |
15747 | What is meant by the stars and stripes? |
15747 | What kind of a flag is it? |
15747 | What kind of a land is ours? |
15747 | What sport, what sport?" |
15747 | What''s all the gold that glitters cold, When linked to hard and haughty feeling? |
15747 | What, then, would be the youth''s fate, unless he soon overtook the child? |
15747 | When is Flag Day? |
15747 | When was the first American flag made? |
15747 | Where is the child that would willingly forget the most tender of parents, though to remember be but to lament? |
15747 | Where is the mother who would willingly forget the infant that perished like a blossom from her arms, though every recollection is a pang? |
15747 | Where is this salt found, that we prize so little, yet need so much? |
15747 | Who is proud of the flag? |
15747 | Who of us does not each day, in many ways, sacrifice these precious moments, these golden hours? |
15747 | Who would barter these for gold or silver? |
15747 | Who, as he sees it, can think of a state merely? |
15747 | Who, even in the hour of agony, would forget the friend over whom he mourns? |
15747 | Whose eyes, once fastened upon it, can fail to recognize the image of the whole nation? |
15747 | Why, blockhead, art thou mad? |
15747 | Will you call that mother a slave? |
15747 | Would not much of our vegetable food be insipid, if we neglected this common seasoning? |
15747 | _ Alexander_--Still, what are you but a robber,--a base, dishonest robber? |
15747 | _ My dear Mr. Curtis_:-- May we have the pleasure of your company at dinner Tuesday evening, February ninth, at seven o''clock? |
15747 | _ Questions_: Can you put this little poem in prose? |
15747 | _ Robber_--And does not Fame speak of me too? |
15747 | _ Robber_--And what is a conqueror? |
15747 | _ Robber_--What have I done of which you can complain? |
15747 | and had you stuffed with Greek, Instead of teaching you like him to sew? |
15747 | art thou that Thracian robber, of whose exploits I have heard so much? |
15747 | excuse the liberty I take; But if your story''s true, How happened it your father did not make A gentleman of you?" |
16936 | And when the petitions are sent up imploring his blessings, and asking his forgiveness, have you none to offer? 16936 As to that,"said the dial,"is there not a window in your house, on purpose for you to look through?" |
16936 | But, mother,asked Frank, impatiently,"how shall I keep these thoughts out? |
16936 | Do you ever pray to God? 16936 Do you mean God, mother?" |
16936 | If you allow yourself to be distressed by trifles now, how will you bear the real trials of life, which you must inevitably sustain, sooner or later? 16936 Now,"resumed the dial,"may I be allowed to inquire if that exertion was at all fatiguing or disagreeable to you?" |
16936 | Shall I,says he,"of tender age, In this important care engage? |
16936 | What then? 16936 Why ca n''t I have my potato sliced, Aunt Cleaveland?" |
16936 | And now, said the teacher, you see that I was right when I told you that I had a hard question to ask you, when I asked What is a bird? |
16936 | And why ca n''t I shut the door when it is open? |
16936 | Are you so blest as to have nothing to ask, and so good as to need no forgiveness? |
16936 | As you slip aside to allow him to take your place at the fire, will he not feel that you are kind? |
16936 | But did not something within you, my son, tell you, while there, that you were doing wrong to disobey your parents?" |
16936 | But how can there be any pleasure in it, if you choose such things as have no amusement in them, at all?" |
16936 | DESIGNED FOR THE YOUNGER CLASSES IN SCHOOLS, ACADEMIES,& c.*****"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
16936 | Did he recite his lesson correctly, read audibly, and appear to understand what he read? |
16936 | Did you read as correctly, articulate as distinctly, speak as loudly, or behave as well, as he? |
16936 | Do you pretend to sit as high in school as Anthony? |
16936 | Do you see any smoke in the wood and the coal, my dear? |
16936 | Do you, when his holy book is read, feel no desire to hear the directions he has given to lead you to your heavenly home? |
16936 | From thy all- seeing Spirit, Lord, What hiding- place does earth afford? |
16936 | Have not you, too, gone about the earth like an evil genius, blasting the fair fruits of peace and industry? |
16936 | He knows that you gave up to accommodate him; and how can he help liking you for it? |
16936 | How, then, could it take fire? |
16936 | I asked,"What''s your name, little girl?" |
16936 | I never heard a word about it before, said George, yesterday: who told you about it, Charles? |
16936 | I never heard one word of it before, said my uncle Toby, hastily: how came he there, Trim? |
16936 | Is that a map which you have before you, with the leaves blotted with ink? |
16936 | Is that what he said? |
16936 | Now, can you tell me what you go to the fire for? |
16936 | Now, can you tell me_ what fire is_? |
16936 | Now, what right had he to put himself in the way of temptation? |
16936 | Now, where can the heat come from? |
16936 | O where can I thy influence shun, Or whither from thy presence run? |
16936 | Should not you?" |
16936 | The question is this:_ What is a bird?_ 14. |
16936 | Thou shalt pronounce this parable upon the King of Babylon; and shalt say: How hath the oppressor ceased? |
16936 | Very well, said the teacher; but can you not think of anything else that a bird has, which other creatures have not? |
16936 | Was his copy written neatly, his letters made handsomely, and did no blot appear on his book? |
16936 | Was his wealth stored fraudfully, the spoil of orphans wronged, and widows who had none to plead their rights? |
16936 | Was it for this I sighed? |
16936 | Well, John, said the teacher, your hand is up; can you tell me_ what a bird is_? |
16936 | What does it Mean to be Tempted? |
16936 | What, all my flowers?" |
16936 | When Alice makes her fire in the kitchen, how does she make it? |
16936 | Whose book is that which you have under your arm? |
16936 | Whose towers are these that overlook the wood? |
16936 | Why, then, is not everything warm? |
16936 | Will you say that your time is your own, and that you have a right to employ it in the manner you please? |
16936 | Would you now do me the favor to give about half a dozen strokes, to illustrate my argument?" |
16936 | You know what fire is made from, do you not? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ And what are its effects, mother? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ But does not the fire make the heat, mother? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ But, mother, how did the heat get into the wood and coal? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ But, mother, the match is made of wood,--why does that take fire so easily? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ Dear mother, how can you do it? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ Everything contains heat, mother, did you say? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ I am sure I can not tell, mother; will you please to tell me? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ If the heat is in the wood and the coal, mother, why do we not feel it in them? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ Why, mother, have you never seen her? |
16936 | _ Daughter._ Why, mother, is heat kept in cages, like birds or mice? |
16936 | _ Daughter_ Why, mother, what sort of a cage can heat be kept in? |
16936 | _ Mother._ And can you see the smoke in the wood before the wood is put on the fire? |
16936 | _ Mother._ And do they burn the shovel and the tongs, my dear? |
16936 | _ Mother._ And how does the fire warm you, my dear? |
16936 | _ Mother._ And the heat that comes from the fire, after it is made, does not come in at the windows, nor down the chimney, does it? |
16936 | _ Mother._ And where does the heat come from, Caroline? |
16936 | _ Mother._ But does she not first do something to the match? |
16936 | _ Mother._ But how does she light the match, my dear? |
16936 | _ Mother._ But is the wood or the coal warm before the fire is made? |
16936 | _ Mother._ But you are sure that the smoke comes from the wood, are you not? |
16936 | _ Mother._ But, after the fire is made, we feel much heat coming from the fire, do we not? |
16936 | _ Mother._ Can you think of any reason why they do not burn the shovel and the tongs? |
16936 | _ Mother._ Did you never see a stick of wood fall on the hearth from the kitchen fire, and see the smoke coming from it? |
16936 | _ Mother._ Is there any fire in the sand- paper, Caroline? |
16936 | _ Mother._ Was there any fire in the match, before she lighted it? |
16936 | _ Mother._ Well, now, where can the heat come from? |
16936 | _ The same subject, continued.__ Mother._ Did you ever see a person rub his hands together, when he was cold? |
16936 | exclaimed Anna,"how can you sit and sew, when there are so many pleasant sights and sounds around you?" |
16936 | he cried:"Hast then, thou most ungrateful sot, My charge, my only charge, forgot? |
16936 | is there any harm in that?" |
16936 | said she;"what hurt can it do? |
16936 | said the mother, did he say so? |
16936 | why, what do you mean? |
22222 | 131 Charles Street? |
22222 | A letter always has an object-- otherwise why write it? |
22222 | A pious intention, was n''t it? |
22222 | A visit some time? |
22222 | Am I to understand that no other foods than those you mention contain these vitamines? |
22222 | And do you know about stringless string beans? |
22222 | Are his character and habits good? |
22222 | Are there awnings? |
22222 | Are you waiting to get a certain sum before bringing it in to be credited in your passbook? |
22222 | Books? |
22222 | But before you decide, may I ask you to make a comparison? |
22222 | CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER I WHAT IS A LETTER? |
22222 | Caldwell Sons Co., 8941 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Gentlemen: May I call your attention to my account rendered on April 1st? |
22222 | Can he fill the position for which he has applied? |
22222 | Can you come at three- thirty? |
22222 | Can you leave off harassing yourself to please a thankless multitude, who know nothing of you, and begin at last to live to yourself and your friends? |
22222 | Can you quit these shadows of existence, and come and be a reality to us? |
22222 | Dear Bob: Will you visit us on the farm during your summer vacation? |
22222 | Dear Longfellow: Will you dine with me on Saturday at six? |
22222 | Dear Madam: Do you like perfectly fresh vegetables-- right off the farm? |
22222 | Dear Madam: Have you ever counted the cost of making your pickles, jams, and jellies at home? |
22222 | Dear Madam: Have you ever taken your best coat to an"invisible mender"and paid him ten dollars to have him mend two moth holes? |
22222 | Dear Miss Evans, Will you be one of our guests at a house- party we are planning? |
22222 | Dear Sir: May we thank you for your letter of May 3rd in which you expressed a desire to have an account with us? |
22222 | Dear Sir: May we thank you for your letter of May 5th and for the names of those whom you were kind enough to give as references? |
22222 | Did you ever deliver the Lectures on Preaching at New Haven? |
22222 | Did you ever taste Golden Bantam corn the same day or the day after it was picked? |
22222 | Do you always remember to get a receipt? |
22222 | Do you find it a nuisance to carry cash? |
22222 | Do you know Golden Bantam or is corn just corn? |
22222 | Do you know how long ago they were picked? |
22222 | Do you know that it is dangerous to keep much cash in the house? |
22222 | Do you think that string beans are just string beans? |
22222 | Does he who receives a letter acquire full property in it? |
22222 | Does it seem long to you? |
22222 | Either write or call me on the telephone; or, better still, if you are in our neighborhood, can you come in to see me? |
22222 | Had he the confidence of his employers? |
22222 | Has he an account with you now? |
22222 | Have you ever gone to your trunk to take out your furs and found that the moths had got into them? |
22222 | Have you ever had difficulty in collecting? |
22222 | Have you saved as much as you had expected? |
22222 | How can I serve? |
22222 | How does he pay? |
22222 | How long has he had the account? |
22222 | If I say to a man:"Will you cut my lawn for ten dollars?" |
22222 | If not Saturday, will you say Sunday? |
22222 | If we can be of use to you in the future, will you let us know? |
22222 | If you can arrange an appointment for me during the next week, will you let me know? |
22222 | Is his statement correct? |
22222 | Is it to be wondered at that even the parson here is acquiring the habit of swearing? |
22222 | Is the cellar dry? |
22222 | Is the house completely screened? |
22222 | May I get a small trial order from you? |
22222 | May I send my heartiest congratulations? |
22222 | May he publish it without permission? |
22222 | May we hear from you at once? |
22222 | May we look forward to having again the pleasure of serving you? |
22222 | Mrs. Arthur Thomas, 25 Spruce Avenue, Columbus, O. Dear Madam: Does our store please you? |
22222 | Mrs. Hester Wickes, 59 Market Street, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Dear Madam: Do you ever have arguments over bills that you have paid in cash? |
22222 | My dear Miss Burton, Will you come to tea with me informally on the lawn on Thursday afternoon, July the fourth, at four o''clock? |
22222 | My dear Miss Judson, May I send you my congratulations on this your birthday? |
22222 | My dear Mr. Jarrett, Will you help me out? |
22222 | My dear Mrs. Dean, May I ask you the favor of bringing with me on Wednesday evening, May the second, my old classmate, Mr. Arthur Price? |
22222 | My dear Mrs. Elliott, Will you and Mr. Elliott give us the pleasure of your company on Thursday, January the eighteenth, at ten o''clock? |
22222 | My dear Mrs. Emerson, Will you come to luncheon on Friday, May the fifth, at half- past one o''clock? |
22222 | My dear Mrs. Trent, Will you and Mr. Trent give us the pleasure of your company at a small dinner on Tuesday, December the twelfth, at seven o''clock? |
22222 | Or if you can not secure them, will you purchase as second choice Two jars in Kashan ware, with blue as the predominating color? |
22222 | Perhaps there was some lack of courtesy, some annoying error in your bill which we were exasperatingly obtuse in rectifying? |
22222 | Perhaps you think that you can not have absolutely fresh vegetables for your table or that it really makes no difference? |
22222 | Shall I be treated courteously when I go into the bank?" |
22222 | The floors-- of what wood and in what condition are they? |
22222 | Was the agreement that the lawn should be cut the next day, or the next month, or the next year? |
22222 | Were we stupid in filling some order or did we delay in delivery? |
22222 | What a man or a woman principally asks about a bank is:"Will my money be safe? |
22222 | What does he care most to read? |
22222 | What is your opinion and what course would you recommend? |
22222 | What kind of vegetables are you getting? |
22222 | What limit have you placed on the account? |
22222 | When can the house be ready for occupancy? |
22222 | Where is the laundry? |
22222 | Why not say it at once and abolish the wordiness? |
22222 | Why not start thinking now? |
22222 | Why not? |
22222 | Will my affairs be well looked after? |
22222 | Will you be quite frank and tell me why you do not buy from Sweetser''s now? |
22222 | Will you convey to him our thanks? |
22222 | Will you favor us by filling out the form enclosed and mailing it back as soon as convenient? |
22222 | Will you give us the chance to get acquainted? |
22222 | Will you kindly advise us, in confidence and with whatever particularity you find convenient, what you consider his credit rating? |
22222 | Will you kindly call for it and, if you have one like it in stock, send it to me to replace the damaged one? |
22222 | Will you let me hear from you as soon as possible? |
22222 | Will you let me know what information you desire? |
22222 | Will you let me try? |
22222 | Will you not drop in some time and at least permit us to become acquainted? |
22222 | Will you not send a check and keep the account on a pleasant basis? |
22222 | Will you send me a list of properties that you can suggest as possibly being suitable? |
22222 | Will you use the inclosed envelope to let us know? |
22222 | Would he like letters from me? |
22222 | Would it be possible by coaching to have him make up the required averages? |
22222 | Would you care to furnish us with further references in order that the account may be properly opened? |
22222 | _ For a card party_ 500 Park Avenue My dear Mrs. King, Will you and Mr. King join us on Thursday evening next at bridge? |
22222 | _ For an informal tea_ My dear Miss Harcourt, Will you come to tea with me on Tuesday afternoon, April the fourth, at four o''clock? |
27977 | That is you,and meaning"How do you do?" |
27977 | You been make a light yarraman this morning? |
27977 | You yacka wood? 27977 ` Never been christened?'' |
27977 | /? |
27977 | ?/ 1849. |
27977 | A very common answer from a converted native, accused of theft, was,` How can that be? |
27977 | A. J. Boyd,` Old Colonials,''p. 76:"Did I ever get stuck- up? |
27977 | A. L. Gordon,` Bush Ballads,''p. 23:"What''s up with our super to- night? |
27977 | Aileen smiled something like her old self for a minute, and said,` That comes natural to you now, Dick, does n''t it?'' |
27977 | B. Paterson,` Man from Snowy River,''p. 10:"But maybe you''re only a Johnnie, And do n''t know a horse from a hoe? |
27977 | B. Stephens,` Black Gin,''p. 61:"Lay aside thy nullah- nullahs Is there war betwixt us two?" |
27977 | C. Harpur,` Poems,''p. 78:"Why roar the bull- frogs in the tea- tree marsh?" |
27977 | C. P. Hodgson,` Reminiscences of Australia,''p. 77:"How far had these ideas been acted upon by the Colonists of Austral Asia?" |
27977 | C. stricta? |
27977 | C. tenuissima? |
27977 | Can they hibernate? |
27977 | Did I go hut- keeping? |
27977 | Did you ever know a hut- keeper cook for sixty shearers?''" |
27977 | Do bullocks eat pigs in this country?'' |
27977 | Do you know what` planting''is? |
27977 | From Greek HARPA? |
27977 | G. 7, p. 87:"Were not all your hapu present when the money was paid? |
27977 | Gilbert Parker,` Pierre and his People,''p. 242:"The wallaby track? |
27977 | H. Kingsley,` Geoffrey Hamlyn,''p. 211:"` What are these men that we are going to see?'' |
27977 | Has it, then, disappeared? |
27977 | Have you found or seen the horses this morning? |
27977 | How is the Waler''s off fore- leg?" |
27977 | I stared for a bit and then burst out laughing. It was a rum go, was n''t it? |
27977 | I wonder, will you-- now that you''re a knight?" |
27977 | In reply to the question"Has so- and- so left the township? |
27977 | Is it a love of mischief for mischief''s sake? |
27977 | Is it delusion or distance?" |
27977 | Is there not a wide distinction between blackbird- hunting and a legitimate labour- trade, if such a thing is to be carried on? |
27977 | Is this singular or plural?] |
27977 | J. Keighley,` Who are You?'' |
27977 | J. St. V. Welch, in` Australasian Insurance and Banking Record,''May 19, p. 376:"Whence comes the larrikin? |
27977 | Keighley,` Who are You?'' |
27977 | Keighley,` Who are You?'' |
27977 | Keighley,` Who are you?'' |
27977 | Modern:"Visitor,--`Where''s your Mother?'' |
27977 | Often used in the Land Courts in the question:"Who are your tupuna?" |
27977 | Oh, wherefore would they eat the muscles?" |
27977 | Or did the namer first shoot the bird and count?" |
27977 | Or is"pay the shout"a variant of"pay the shot,"or tavern reckoning? |
27977 | Or, as is more probable, were the names mere corruptions of aboriginal words now lost?" |
27977 | Probably the early sailors introduced attached meaning of devil from the Maori saying,` Are you not afraid to travel at night?'' |
27977 | Rolf Boldrewood,` A Colonial Reformer,''p. 82:"` What is the meaning of` out on the wallaby''?'' |
27977 | Rolf Boldrewood,` Colonial Reformer,''c. x. p. 96( 1890):"` What can you do, young man?'' |
27977 | Rolf Boldrewood,` Robbery under Arms,''p. 55:"Is it French or Queensland blacks''yabber? |
27977 | Ross,` Hobart- town Almanack,''p. 75[ Article said by Sir Joseph Hooker( Jan. 26, 1897) to be by Mr. Ronald Gunn]:"Casuarina torulosa? |
27977 | Sir George Stephen, Q.C.,` Larrikinism,''a Lecture reported in` Prahran Telegraph,''Sept. 23, p. 3, col. 1: What is Larrikinism? |
27977 | Surely no man, however old, can be an identity? |
27977 | THE LAW OF HOBSON- JOBSON Is Austral English a corruption? |
27977 | That means the fastest shearer-- the man who runs rings round the rest, eh?" |
27977 | The Police Magistrate, Mr. Sturt, did not quite catch the word--"A what, Sergeant?" |
27977 | To get labourers honestly if they could, but, if not, any way?" |
27977 | To what man or country the honour of this invention belongs, who can tell? |
27977 | Trevelyan,` Dawk Bungalow,''p. 223[ Yule''s` Hobson Jobson'']:"Well, young Shaver, have you seen the horses? |
27977 | Wanderer,` Beauteous Terrorist, etc., p. 60:"And have we no visions pleasant Of the playful lyre- tail''d pheasant?" |
27977 | Was it a guess? |
27977 | Was the first of the list any relative of the Minnesota lawyer who holds strange views about a great cryptogram in Shakespeare''s plays? |
27977 | Was the last of the three any relative of the eminent soldier who won the battles of Sobraon and Ferozeshah? |
27977 | Were they growers or buyers of timber? |
27977 | What did he allude to? |
27977 | What is a Nut? |
27977 | What is this I find? |
27977 | What may it be? |
27977 | White,` Voyage to New South Wales,''p. 229:"Tea Tree of New South Wales,< i> Melaleuca(?) |
27977 | You do n''t know what that is? |
27977 | [ Query, eighteenth century?] |
27977 | [? |
27977 | [` O.E.D.,''from which this quotation is taken, puts(?) |
27977 | ` A sundowner?'' |
27977 | ` Afraid of them?'' |
27977 | ` Do they take a day''s work?'' |
27977 | ` Melbourne Argus,''June 14th, p. 4, col. 2:"` Did you go hut- keeping then?'' |
27977 | ` Melbourne Punch'':"What''ll bark? |
27977 | ` Pay?'' |
27977 | ` The Argus,''Jan. 9, p. 14, col. 2:"And will you wear a boxer that is in a battered state? |
27977 | ` What does your lordship suppose a wallaby to be?'' |
27977 | ` What for you come alonga black fella camp?''" |
27977 | ` What?'' |
27977 | a sort of` half- horse, half- alligator,''haunting the wide rushy swamps and lagoons of the interior?" |
27977 | and planters?" |
27977 | exclaimed Ernest;` what kind of cattle do you call those? |
27977 | for a wet blanket, a fireless camp, and all the other etceteras of the stockman''s life?" |
27977 | he chanted gloomily:-- Oh, wherefore would they eat the muscles? |
27977 | if your children grow up duffers and planters?" |
27977 | or was it an original mistake on the part of Banks or Cook? |
27977 | p. 187:"` Were you ever on a buck- jumper?'' |
27977 | p. 238:"What do you say if I go run- hunting with you?" |
27977 | p. 27:"How can I calm this infantile corroboree?" |
27977 | p. 308:"Making as much noise as if you''d hired the bell- man for a roll- up?" |
27977 | p. 49:"Ca n''t you get your canaries off the track here for about a quarter of an hour, and let my mob of cattle pass?" |
27977 | p. 71:"Is there not very much that the Australian may well be proud of, and may we not commend him for a spice of blow?" |
27977 | why do n''t you call them pools or ponds?'' |
27977 | why not Centralia; for West Australia, Westralia; for New South Wales, Eastralia?" |
11230 | And live there men who slight immortal fame? 11230 And so,"returned she,"we have parted with the colt, and have only got a gross of green spectacles, with copper rims and shagreen cases? |
11230 | And what is friendship but a name, A charm that lulls to sleep; A shade that follows wealth or fame, But leaves the wretch to weep? |
11230 | Are ye mad? |
11230 | Ay, Moses,cried my wife,"that we know; but where is the horse?" |
11230 | But what, my friends,insisted Butler, with a generous disregard to his own safety--"what hath constituted you his judges?" |
11230 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
11230 | Dear mother,cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
11230 | From better habitations spurn''d, Reluctant dost thou rove? 11230 From that time he took to his bed? |
11230 | Has Ibraheem reached you? |
11230 | I hope,said Nelson,"none of our ships have struck?" |
11230 | My thoughts came back; where was I? 11230 Thus let me hold thee to my heart, And every care resign: And shall we never, never part, My life-- my all that''s mine? |
11230 | Well, Hardy,said Nelson,"how goes the day with us?" |
11230 | What do you mean by''at work in the world?'' |
11230 | What time did he give better folk for preparing their account? |
11230 | Who is that? |
11230 | -- Dark lightning flashed from Roderick''s eye--"Soars thy presumption then so high, Because a wretched kern ye slew, Homage to name to Roderick Dhu? |
11230 | A space he paused, then sternly said,--"And heard''st thou why he drew his blade? |
11230 | An ugly, straight- edged, monotonous fir- plantation? |
11230 | And if not the bank, why then the sandstone underneath? |
11230 | And sayest thou so, my dear? |
11230 | And then its hue-- Who ever saw so fine a blue?" |
11230 | Another,"Where is Thomas Becket, traitor to the King?" |
11230 | Answered Fitz- James--"And, if I sought, Think''st thou no other could be brought? |
11230 | Approach, thou craven crouching slave: Say, is not this Thermopylae? |
11230 | Are there balance here to weigh The flesh? |
11230 | Are there no means?" |
11230 | Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court? |
11230 | Art thou contented, Jew? |
11230 | As I was walking with him last night, he asked me how I liked the good man I have just now mentioned? |
11230 | Ay, his breast: So says the bond; doth it not, noble judge? |
11230 | But oh the important budget; usher''d in With such heart- shaking music, who can say What are its tidings? |
11230 | But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
11230 | But what had become of the waves that had thus fretted the solid rock, or of what element had they been composed? |
11230 | But what have I gained here more than a term? |
11230 | But what is Berezdah compared even with a second- rate European city? |
11230 | But what were its inhabitants? |
11230 | But where is the iron- bound prisoner? |
11230 | Came you from old Bellario? |
11230 | Can he be strenuous in his country''s cause, Who slights the charities, for whose dear sake That country, if at all, must be beloved? |
11230 | Can he love the whole, Who loves no part? |
11230 | Can no prayers pierce thee? |
11230 | Come, merchant, have you anything to say? |
11230 | Do I forebode impossible events, And tremble at vain dreams? |
11230 | Do you confess the bond? |
11230 | Had he come upon some wild island far in the Indian Sea, or was this the famed Cipango itself, the object of his golden fancies? |
11230 | Have you eyes to see? |
11230 | He be a nation''s friend, Who is in truth the friend of no man there? |
11230 | Heards''t thou that shameful word and blow Brought Roderick''s vengeance on his foe? |
11230 | His rising cares the Hermit spied, With answering care oppress''d; And,"Whence, unhappy youth,"he cried,"The sorrows of thy breast?" |
11230 | How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none? |
11230 | Instantly the answer came:"Reginald, here I am, no traitor, but the archbishop and priest of God; what do you wish?" |
11230 | Is India free? |
11230 | Is he not able to discharge the money? |
11230 | Is it so nominated in the bond? |
11230 | Is it the wind those branches stirs? |
11230 | Is that the law? |
11230 | Is your name Shylock? |
11230 | It is not so express''d: but what of that? |
11230 | On what compulsion must I? |
11230 | Or do they still, as if with opium drugged, Snore to the murmurs of the Atlantic wave? |
11230 | Or grieve for friendship unreturn''d, Or unregarded love?" |
11230 | Pent in this fortress of the North, Think''st thou we will not sally forth, To spoil the spoiler as we may, And from the robber rend the prey? |
11230 | Say, mounts he the ocean- wave, banished, forlorn, Like a limb from his country cast bleeding and torn? |
11230 | Say, rushed the bold eagle exultingly forth From his home, in the dark- rolling clouds of the north? |
11230 | Shall I not have barely my principal? |
11230 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
11230 | Surely that handful of men are not going to charge an army in position? |
11230 | The good man, surprised at the adventure, asked him"Whether Aristides had ever injured him?" |
11230 | The mountaineer cast glance of pride Along Benledi''s living side, Then fixed his eye and sable brow Full on Fitz- James--"How says''t thou now? |
11230 | There is no force in the decrees of Venice: I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it? |
11230 | These waters blue that round you lave,-- Oh servile offspring of the free!-- Pronounce what sea, what shore is this? |
11230 | They are my Alps; little ones, it may be: but after all, as I asked before, what is size? |
11230 | This letter from Bellario doth commend A young and learned doctor to our court:-- Where is he? |
11230 | Well, my boy, what have you brought us from the fair?" |
11230 | What are monuments of bravery, Where no public virtues bloom? |
11230 | What avail in lands of slavery Trophied temples, arch, and tomb? |
11230 | What booted it to traverse o''er Plain, forest, river? |
11230 | What deem ye of my path waylaid, My life given o''er to ambuscade?" |
11230 | What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong? |
11230 | What mercy can you render him, Antonio? |
11230 | What reck''d the Chieftain if he stood On Highland- heath, or Holy- Rood? |
11230 | What winter- garden can compare for them with mine? |
11230 | What, is Antonio here? |
11230 | Where dwell we now? |
11230 | Where is the clergyman?" |
11230 | Where is thy native simple heart Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art? |
11230 | Where live the mountain Chiefs who hold That plundering Lowland field and fold Is aught but retribution true? |
11230 | Where? |
11230 | Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? |
11230 | Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? |
11230 | Who is the happy Warrior? |
11230 | Who, then, with incense shall adore our name? |
11230 | Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly? |
11230 | Why doth the Jew pause? |
11230 | Why flames the far summit? |
11230 | Why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars from the firmament cast? |
11230 | Why sweat they under burthens? |
11230 | Why, goddess, why, to us denied, Lay''st thou thy ancient lyre aside? |
11230 | You have heard of ships at the last moment crying aloud like living things in agony? |
11230 | You stand within his danger, do you not? |
11230 | _ Enter_ NERISSA,_ dressed like a lawyer''s clerk.__ Duke._ Came you from Padua, from Bellario? |
11230 | _ Shy._ An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? |
11230 | and does she wear her plumed And jewell''d turban with a smile of peace, Or do we grind her still? |
11230 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
11230 | cried the other in a fury:"Why, do you think I''ve lost my eyes?" |
11230 | have our troops awak''d? |
11230 | he said,"or would ye execute an act of justice as if it were a crime and a cruelty? |
11230 | laugh''st thou, Lochiel, my vision to scorn? |
11230 | let their beds Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates Be season''d with such viands? |
11230 | she exclaimed;"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes? |
11230 | the rims not silver?" |
11230 | through the fast- flashing lightning of war, What steed to the desert flies frantic and far? |
11230 | what dost thou say? |
44802 | Are you a coming to- morrow? |
44802 | Ca n''t say, Ma''am? |
44802 | Clo'', Sir? 44802 Did I hear you speak?" |
44802 | Did it rain to- morrow? |
44802 | Did you ever see a shoot- ing of the moon? |
44802 | Did you ever? |
44802 | Do you think there is any{ 095}thing between him and her? |
44802 | Do you, though? |
44802 | Do you_ like_ pine- apple rum? |
44802 | Do_ you_ like pine- apple rum? |
44802 | Does a coachman say_ wot_ for_ which_ because he has a licence? |
44802 | Do{ 115}you like_ pine- apple_ rum? |
44802 | Have you an inclination to waltz? |
44802 | Mary, Mary, Quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
44802 | May I have the pleasure of-- hum? 44802 Miss Timms, do you admire Lord Byron?" |
44802 | Not fling farther than him? 44802 Vot''s the odds?" |
44802 | What do you think of Rubini''s singing? |
44802 | What is the damage? |
44802 | Where are we now, coachman? |
44802 | Where''ve you bin? |
44802 | Which is the left side of a round plum- pudding? |
44802 | Will you? |
44802 | Wot d''ye mean by that, Sir? |
44802 | Would you, you disagreeable old Bachelor? |
44802 | You''m a fine fellow, ai nt yer? |
44802 | _ Do_ you like pine- apple rum? |
44802 | ''how much? |
44802 | A Hamlet that draws? |
44802 | An Adverb is generally characterised by answering to the question, How? |
44802 | An interrogative sentence"merely asks a question:"as,"Are you a policeman? |
44802 | And can not each of those_ artistes_ boast of a toe which is the very essence of all poetry-- a TO''KAAO''N? |
44802 | By how many degrees was Socrates wiser than Alci- biades? |
44802 | Do n''t you like it?" |
44802 | Do you like taut( tart)?" |
44802 | Do you want me for to punch your head?" |
44802 | H.?" |
44802 | How much bigger is the earth than a grain of sand? |
44802 | How''s your Inspector?" |
44802 | How''s your Maw and Paw? |
44802 | I am dying to have an ice--"Young man for a husband, Miss? |
44802 | If she my love return, what bliss will be greater than mine; but What more deep sadness if she reprove my passion? |
44802 | Is he taught?" |
44802 | Is this what the witches mean when they sing, in the acting play of Macbeth,"We fly by night?" |
44802 | Jim, vot are you arter? |
44802 | Prepositions govern the objective case: as,"What did the butcher say of her?" |
44802 | Refuse one So true t''ye? |
44802 | So simple a question as"Do you like pine- apple rum?" |
44802 | The Indicative Mood simply points out or declares a thing: as,"He teaches, he is taught or it asks a question: as,"Does he teach? |
44802 | The most_ foolish_, undoubtedly, was Homer; for who was more_ natural_ than he? |
44802 | There is no one question that we are aware of more puzzling than this,"What is your opinion of_ things_ in general?" |
44802 | Thus, a schoolboy may be often heard to exclaim,"What did you hit me for, you great fool?" |
44802 | To despair shall I doom? |
44802 | To produce the agreement and right disposition of words in a sentence, the following rules( and observations?) |
44802 | Walker?". |
44802 | We have heard one boy ask of another, who was singing,"How much is that a yard?" |
44802 | What do I hear where''er I go? |
44802 | What healing art renew the weal Of subject so infirm of heel? |
44802 | What is the nominative case Of her who used to wash your face, Your hair to comb, your boots to lace? |
44802 | What potion, pill, or draught control So deep an ulcer of the sole? |
44802 | What''s the most gentlemanly brute Like, of all flow''rs? |
44802 | What_ shall_ we do? |
44802 | When we got home who do you think was there? |
44802 | When you ask people what wine they will take, never say,"What''ll you have?" |
44802 | Where got''st thou that goose? |
44802 | Why does a rope support a rope- dancer? |
44802 | Why is this? |
44802 | Why, Fanny Elsler''s feet and Taglioni''s feet are poetical feet-- are they not? |
44802 | Why? |
44802 | Why{ 054}is old age the best teacher? |
44802 | _ A mother!_ What the possessive? |
44802 | _ A mother''s!_ And shall I the objective show? |
44802 | _ Why, mothers!_ Whose pity wipes its piping eyes, And stills maturer childhood''s cries, Stopping its mouth with cakes and pies? |
44802 | as in the verse,"_ Merrily_ danced the Quaker''s wife,"the answer to the question, How did she dance? |
44802 | clo'', Sir? |
44802 | clo'', Sir? |
44802 | clo''?" |
44802 | do n''t you know that ere''s agin the Law?" |
44802 | found at midnight with a darkey, lit, A bull- dog, jemmy, screw, and centre- bit And tongueless of his aim? |
44802 | ha?" |
44802 | is as much as to say,"Do you, though, really like pine- apple rum?" |
44802 | is tantamount to,"Can it be that a young gentleman( or lady) like you, can like pine- apple rum?" |
44802 | means,"Is it possible that instead of disliking, you are fond of pine- apple rum?" |
44802 | mother''s!_ And whom, when master, fierce and fell, Dusts truant varlets''jackets well, Whom do they, roaring, run and tell? |
44802 | or by how many is snow whiter than this paper? |
44802 | or else what is meant by calling dancing the poetry of Motion? |
44802 | or where? |
44802 | or,"Will you, dearest, loveliest, most adorable of your sex, will you consent to make me happy; will you be mine? |
44802 | those bright eyes, what stars, what glittering dew- drops? |
44802 | what Parian marble, or snow, that bosom? |
44802 | what cordial can restore The gaping patch repatch''d before? |
44802 | when? |
44802 | will do either for"Will you be so impertinent, you scoundrel? |
44802 | will you dare to do so another{ 099}time?" |
44802 | { 038} Who are the anxious watchers o''er The slumbers of a little bore, That screams whene''er it does n''t snore? |
30294 | , asked Newcomb? 30294 Shall I go?" |
30294 | Shall we go by the old mill? 30294 Shall we take a walk?" |
30294 | What is it? 30294 What is the aim of a university education?" |
30294 | Where is he? 30294 Who''s your favorite character in the play?, persisted Laura. |
30294 | Will it rain tomorrow? |
30294 | ( Shall, will) I ever forget this? |
30294 | ( Shall, will) I raise the window? |
30294 | ( Shall, will) this calico fade? |
30294 | ( Shall, will) you give the organ grinder some money? |
30294 | ( Shall, will) you go driving with us? |
30294 | ( Should, would) I ask his permission? |
30294 | ( Should, would) you go if I( should, would) ask you? |
30294 | ( Who, Whom) do you imagine will be our next president? |
30294 | ( not_ Where is he at_?)" |
30294 | (_ Oh_, is that it? |
30294 | 7. Who is this that comes to the foot of the guillotine, crouching, trembling? |
30294 | A question mark is often used within a sentence, but should not be followed by a comma, semicolon, or period.= Wrong:"What shall I do?,"he asked. |
30294 | A question mark within parentheses may be used to express uncertainty as to the correctness of an assertion.= Right: Shakespeare was born April 23(? |
30294 | Also correct: Can you tell me the difference between"apt","likely", and"liable"; between"noted"and"notorious"? |
30294 | Always ask yourself: What is compared with what? |
30294 | Are the guests( already, all ready) for dinner? |
30294 | At what time? |
30294 | Awkward: What use of an education could a girl who married a penniless rogue and afterwards knew nothing but hard labor, make? |
30294 | Better: What use of an education could a girl make who married a penniless rogue and afterward knew nothing but hard labor? |
30294 | Burglars?" |
30294 | But will you pay?" |
30294 | Correct, and in common use, but slightly illogical: Can you tell me the difference between"apt,""likely,"and"liable"; between"noted"and"notorious"? |
30294 | Did I intend_ to go_, or_ to have gone_?] |
30294 | Did n''t you hear it?" |
30294 | Did the president( affect, effect) a settlement of the strike? |
30294 | Did you---- your ticket? |
30294 | Did yours? |
30294 | Do you think it( shall, will) rain? |
30294 | Elliptical expressions used in conversation may be regarded as exceptions: Where? |
30294 | Fairly emphatic: How did the general meet this new menace? |
30294 | Have you----( past participle of_ ride_) far? |
30294 | He says to me,"Are you ready?" |
30294 | How are you? |
30294 | How should I know? |
30294 | If not, who is?] |
30294 | In addition, relatives serve as connectives( the man_ who_ spoke), interrogatives ask questions(_ what_ man? |
30294 | In answer to the question,"Will you go?" |
30294 | Insert a dash when a sentence is broken off abruptly.= Right: The next morning-- let''s see, what happened the next morning? |
30294 | Is he from Irish descent? |
30294 | Is humor characteristic with the Irish? |
30294 | Is it expedient? |
30294 | Is it just? |
30294 | Is it superior to the other measures proposed? |
30294 | Is it"Brutus"? |
30294 | Is n''t it nice to be out of doors? |
30294 | Is n''t the sunset grand? |
30294 | Is the train moving or( stationary, stationery)? |
30294 | Is your sister coming? |
30294 | Letters, signs, and sometimes figures, add_''s_ to form the plural.= Examples: Cross your t''s and dot your i''s;? |
30294 | Loose thinking: Shakespeare''s_ Hamlet_ occurs in Denmark[ The scene is laid?]. |
30294 | Many passages are powerful, especially the grave- digging[ Is grave- digging a passage?]. |
30294 | May I call for you about 7:30 p. m., Miss Reynolds? |
30294 | Place in order the sentences of the following outline on"Why Keep a Diary?" |
30294 | Really? |
30294 | Right: But where are the stocks? |
30294 | Right: Did Savonarola say,"I recant"? |
30294 | Right: Did she inquire whether you had met her aunt? |
30294 | Right: In 1340(?) |
30294 | Right: Is there any criticism of Arthur''s going? |
30294 | Right: The difficulty is this: Where is the money to come from? |
30294 | Right: The measure must be considered from several standpoints: Is it timely? |
30294 | Right: The question is, Shall the bill pass? |
30294 | Right: Was it she? |
30294 | Right: What of it? |
30294 | Right: Where is the house that Jack built? |
30294 | Right: Who do you suppose made us a visit? |
30294 | Right: Whom did they detect? |
30294 | Right:"What shall I do?" |
30294 | Right:_ Whom_ do you wish_ to be_ your leader? |
30294 | Should a community, such as a small village, spend the money they do on roads? |
30294 | The boy left the package on the where did that boy leave the package? |
30294 | The character of Horatio is a noble fellow[ conception], and the same is true of Ophelia[ Ophelia a fellow?]. |
30294 | The road to Camden? |
30294 | The use of a question mark as a label for humor or irony is childish.= Superfluous: Immediately the social lion(?) |
30294 | Very emphatic: How did the general meet this new menace? |
30294 | Was it them? |
30294 | Was it they? |
30294 | What does it matter? |
30294 | What''s the matter with that horse? |
30294 | What? |
30294 | Where( shall, will) I hang my hat? |
30294 | Where----( past tense of_ be_) you? |
30294 | Who---- the lamp there? |
30294 | Who----( past tense of_ break_) it? |
30294 | Why not make it appear more important by subordinating everything to it?] |
30294 | Wrong: But where are the stocks?, the bonds?, the evidences of prosperity? |
30294 | Wrong: But where are the stocks?, the bonds?, the evidences of prosperity? |
30294 | Wrong: But where are the stocks?, the bonds?, the evidences of prosperity? |
30294 | Wrong: Did Savonarola say,"I recant?" |
30294 | Wrong: He asked whether I belonged to the glee club? |
30294 | Wrong: My courses required very hard study, did yours? |
30294 | Wrong: Was it her? |
30294 | Wrong: Who did they detect? |
30294 | Wrong: Whom do you suppose made us a visit? |
30294 | Wrong:"Will you come? |
30294 | [ Did the speaker consult one man or two?] |
30294 | [ Is the building coming in? |
30294 | [ Is the writer trying to tell us_ how to catch frogs_, or merely that_ frogs are stupid_? |
30294 | [ Or] My courses required very hard study; did yours? |
30294 | [ What is most important, the time? |
30294 | [ Which is the important idea? |
30294 | [_ This?_ What_ this_? |
30294 | [_ This?_ What_ this_? |
30294 | and where are you going? |
30294 | or the actual duel? |
30294 | the bonds? |
30294 | the evidences of prosperity? |
30294 | the place? |
4983 | Ai n''t there nothin''else you would like for dinner, sir? |
4983 | Are you the person that called? |
4983 | Can a man arrive at excellence who has no desire to? |
4983 | Could you lend me a dollar this morning? |
4983 | Did n''t she look beautifully upon the occasion of her wedding? |
4983 | Did the immigrants go directly to Italy? |
4983 | Did you injure yourself when you fell? |
4983 | Did you see the emigrants on the''Indiana,''which arrived this morning? |
4983 | Did you see them, fat oxen? |
4983 | Did you sleep good last night? |
4983 | Do you believe in corporal punishment for stupid school- children? |
4983 | Does this coat look good enough to wear on the street? |
4983 | Got any black cowhide of anything? |
4983 | Got any black sheepskin of something? |
4983 | Got any e pluribus unum? |
4983 | Got any jeu d''esprits? |
4983 | Got any mal de mer? |
4983 | Got any other kind of skins? |
4983 | Got any semper idem? |
4983 | Got any sine die? |
4983 | Got any soiree dansante? |
4983 | Got any tempus fugit? |
4983 | Got any vice versa? |
4983 | Has your uncle arrived? |
4983 | Have you got any black hides of something or anything? |
4983 | Have you got any sine qua non? |
4983 | Hearest thou thy mother''s call? |
4983 | Hey? |
4983 | How do you know that I have crossed the Atlantic? |
4983 | How many people were at church to- day? |
4983 | How? |
4983 | I want black-- something of something,he said;"have you got any?" |
4983 | Is n''t this a beautiful flower? |
4983 | Is this not a beautiful flower? |
4983 | Is this the man that you spoke of? |
4983 | Now, when could they have a different meaning? |
4983 | Of what profit is his prayers, while his practices are the abomination of the neighborhood? |
4983 | Possibly it''s a hide? |
4983 | Possibly it''s black oxide of manganese you want? |
4983 | Shall I try again? |
4983 | Shall you go to town to- morrow? |
4983 | Sir? |
4983 | What avails good sentiments with a bad life? |
4983 | What can we do for you? |
4983 | What exile from himself can flee? |
4983 | What kind of a bird is this? |
4983 | What other means is left to us? |
4983 | What use is this to us? |
4983 | When did you cross the Atlantic? |
4983 | When,I asked,"did an instance ever occur when the price did not depend on demand and supply?" |
4983 | Which house do you live in? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Who did you suppose it to be? |
4983 | Who do you take me for? |
4983 | Who should I see coming toward me but my old friend? |
4983 | Whom did you suppose it was? |
4983 | Whom do you think that tall gentleman is? |
4983 | Will he sail to- day? |
4983 | Will you attend to this matter promptly? |
4983 | A bright young lady was once asked,"Do n''t you think nice is a nasty word?" |
4983 | A man clothed in soft raiment?" |
4983 | Adjective or Adverb? |
4983 | All, Is that all? |
4983 | Apart, Aside"May I see you apart from the others?" |
4983 | As, That"Did your cousin go to town yesterday?" |
4983 | Beg pardon, Which? |
4983 | Better,"In which house do you live?" |
4983 | Compare"Is n''t he an eloquent speaker?" |
4983 | Dreadful solemn-- Adjective or adverb? |
4983 | Even the grammatical form of the word is often violated in such expressions as"Is n''t he awful nice?" |
4983 | Excuse me-- Which? |
4983 | Feels badly-- Adjective or adverb? |
4983 | For to see"But what went ye out for to see? |
4983 | Funny"Is n''t it funny that Smith, who resided in Chicago, should have died the same day that his father died in Boston?" |
4983 | Got any black calfskins of anything?" |
4983 | Healthy, Healthful A lady wrote to a paper asking,"Are plants in a sleeping- room unhealthy?" |
4983 | Hey? |
4983 | Hey? |
4983 | Idea, Opinion"Many persons think that the interior of the earth is a mass of fire; what is your idea?" |
4983 | In such cases as"Whereabouts did you find him?" |
4983 | In what latitude is Chicago in? |
4983 | Is it not because they can not say the right thing in the right place? |
4983 | It should be,"May I see you privately"or"aside"? |
4983 | Little bit"Will you have some of this pudding?" |
4983 | Nicely"How do you feel this morning?" |
4983 | No good, No use"How does that new machine work?" |
4983 | O Grave, where is thy victory?" |
4983 | Or if_________________________________________________________________ 109 he should say,"Is there anything else that you wish?" |
4983 | Say,"What is your opinion?" |
4983 | Shall you? |
4983 | Shall you? |
4983 | Shall you? |
4983 | Silent Predicate"Who will go with us to the woods? |
4983 | Smell of"Did you smell of the roses?" |
4983 | Smells sweetly-- Adjective or Adverb? |
4983 | Such interrogative rejoinders as"What?" |
4983 | The farmer asks the man in his employ,"Are you through with that field?" |
4983 | The older writers employed the useless for in such expressions as, What went ye out for to see? |
4983 | Titles with Proper Names Shall we say the Miss Browns, the Misses Brown, or the Misses Browns? |
4983 | Try and"Have you been to the country this summer?" |
4983 | Under the Weather"Are you well?" |
4983 | WHICH? |
4983 | Well, maybe you''ve got some bacon and cabbage, and a corn dodger?" |
4983 | What then does centennial anniversary mean? |
4983 | What would you not give for the ability to be rid of this embarrassment? |
4983 | What? |
4983 | What? |
4983 | When the grocer''s clerk has taken your order he is prompted to say,"Is that all?" |
4983 | Where am I at? |
4983 | Where are you going to? |
4983 | Where has James been to? |
4983 | Where is my book at? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Which? |
4983 | Why not avoid them? |
4983 | Will is sometimes incorrectly used instead of shall; as,"Will I go?" |
4983 | Will you? |
4983 | Will you? |
4983 | Will you? |
4983 | You ask your friend,"Are you through, with Trilby?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 11"Got any bon mots?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 12"No? |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 189 Off of"Can I borrow a pencil off of you?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 190 Been to"Where has he been to?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 37 Adopt, Take"What course will you take?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 59 Last, Latest"Did you receive my last letter?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ 93 Party, Person"Is she the party of whom you spoke?" |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ LETTER WRITING By Agnes H. Morton Why do most persons dislike letter writing? |
4983 | _________________________________________________________________ SLIPS OF SPEECH By John H. Bechtel Who does not make them? |
4983 | for"Shall I go?" |
4983 | he said,"if it ai n''t a skin, what in thunder is it?" |
4983 | is better than"What course will you adopt?" |
4983 | when he should have asked,"Have you finished ploughing that field?" |
4983 | with"Is not he an eloquent speaker?" |
48673 | Johnnie, do you suppose you can find your way five miles to Neighbor Ashley''s clearing? |
48673 | Tell me what you did last summer? |
48673 | True enough,said the caliph;"but who ever thought of insisting upon a pack saddle''s being included in a load of wood? |
48673 | Well, what shall I buy? |
48673 | Were n''t you in Archester one summer? |
48673 | Why do you refuse to shave this man''s companion? |
48673 | ( If your great- grandfather had written his autobiography when he was your age, what would you have liked to know of his life? |
48673 | ---- are you to believe? |
48673 | ---- can this be from? |
48673 | ---- do you think it was? |
48673 | ---- do you think this is? |
48673 | 4. Who saw it first, you or----? |
48673 | = Exercise 1.=--Which are dependent clauses? |
48673 | = Exercise 28.=--What do the opening sentences in the following paragraphs show? |
48673 | = Exercise 4.=--Which sentences are simple? |
48673 | = Exercise 52.=--Do you see any difference in meaning in the pairs of words given below? |
48673 | Ah, Moses, cried my wife, that we know, but where is the horse? |
48673 | Ali, kissing the ground, answered,"It is true, O caliph, that such was our agreement; but who ever made a companion of a donkey before?" |
48673 | And now the great question was,"What shall be done with the rogue?" |
48673 | And those maps-- how could they be any better? |
48673 | And what became of the little----, the poor_ boy_ in the pretty town of Marbach? |
48673 | And what next? |
48673 | Are n''t you glad then, little Queen, That your name is Josephine? |
48673 | Are you having a good time? |
48673 | Better for whom; or for what results?) |
48673 | But how shall we begin? |
48673 | But what are_ bad_ sentences? |
48673 | Can it be----? |
48673 | Can you tell---- to believe? |
48673 | Can your basket- ball team put off the match we were to play on Monday until Wednesday? |
48673 | Construct your argument as though in answer to the remark,"Why do you feel that way? |
48673 | Could it have been----? |
48673 | Dear mother, cried the boy, why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
48673 | Did you get the new skates you wanted? |
48673 | Did you notice the extreme delicacy of the shells? |
48673 | Did you put it in the trunk or was it left behind? |
48673 | Do these boys go to school? |
48673 | Do you feel that you would need to know more about it before trying to play? |
48673 | Do you mean that they should learn nothing else? |
48673 | Do you remember---- you saw? |
48673 | Do you see how much better the first way of telling you all this about Harry is than the second? |
48673 | Do you sing as wonderfully as you fly?" |
48673 | Does not the paragraph seem a little flat? |
48673 | Dost thou love life? |
48673 | Explain( as if to a boy or girl younger than you, who asks,"What is it for?") |
48673 | For instance, if some one should ask you, What is cheerfulness? |
48673 | For instance, the answer to the question,"Who was Abraham Lincoln?" |
48673 | From that charge who needs defend her? |
48673 | Has he---- it yet? |
48673 | How about dreadful tales of witches and hobgoblins that make the healthiest child afraid of the dark? |
48673 | How are bricks made? |
48673 | How do little girls play keep house? |
48673 | How does a water wheel work? |
48673 | How many did Audubon? |
48673 | How many did Henry Thoreau? |
48673 | How many eyes did Gilbert White open? |
48673 | How many topics are treated in each? |
48673 | I ask you,"Shall I go?" |
48673 | If I can not believe in her, in---- can I believe? |
48673 | If Pocohontas had written her autobiography, what would most interest you?) |
48673 | If a boy in China kept a diary, what would you find most interesting? |
48673 | If you are away on a visit, for instance, the questions he would probably ask are,"What sort of a place is it where you are? |
48673 | If you had been able to keep a diary when you were six or seven, what would you now read in it with most interest? |
48673 | If your parents had kept one when they were your age, what would you have found most interesting now? |
48673 | In a word, that Hat and you Do not have to be Hindu? |
48673 | In the complex sentences, which clauses are dependent? |
48673 | Is history taught in the schools? |
48673 | Is it you, Alice? |
48673 | Is it you? |
48673 | Is n''t he grand, the captain, as he comes forward_ like lightning_, stroke after stroke? |
48673 | Little Mistress Josephine, Tell me, have you ever seen Children half as queer as these Babies from across the seas? |
48673 | MAIN:_ Cities and Sights of Spain._ Are there any questions that you would like to ask about pelota after reading this explanation? |
48673 | May Aunt Jane buy a new one for me to wear at my cousin''s party? |
48673 | May Ethel and---- remain after school? |
48673 | May I stay over another day to see it? |
48673 | Or animals used for food? |
48673 | Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy, for with the jeopardy of their lives they brought it?" |
48673 | Shall I go? |
48673 | That you live in Springfield, or Not at least in old Jeypore? |
48673 | That you''ve an entire nose And no rings upon your toes? |
48673 | That your Christian parents are John and Hattie, Pa and Ma? |
48673 | The mother turned her head as Alice entered, and said, Who is it? |
48673 | The next morning, at breakfast, the landlord said to him,"Did you enjoy the cornet playing in the room next to yours last night?" |
48673 | Tiger, tiger, burning bright in the forests of the night, what immortal hand or eye could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
48673 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
48673 | Was it---- whom you saw? |
48673 | Welcome, welcome, Moses; well, my boy, what have you brought us from the fair? |
48673 | What are you and---- doing? |
48673 | What are you doing to amuse yourself?" |
48673 | What could she do? |
48673 | What do you mean by being"better off"--merely"healthier"or"happier"or"more secure"? |
48673 | What do you mean by"playing Indians"? |
48673 | What do you think should go in a diary? |
48673 | What good wind brings you here?" |
48673 | What is a handicap? |
48673 | What is composition? |
48673 | What is the difference between the sentences in this extract and ordinary prose sentences? |
48673 | What kind of animals? |
48673 | What kind of history? |
48673 | What makes popcorn pop? |
48673 | What man is he that lustest to live, And would fain see good days? |
48673 | What sentences shall come first? |
48673 | What slang expression do you use most frequently? |
48673 | What sorts of sentences should you try not to make? |
48673 | Where are you? |
48673 | Where have you been so long? |
48673 | Which words in the following sentences should begin with capitals? |
48673 | Why are fishhooks made in the form they are? |
48673 | Why does a chimney"draw"? |
48673 | Why does an ice house keep the ice from melting? |
48673 | Why have you opened this wicked box?" |
48673 | Why? |
48673 | Will the seventh grade of your school join ours in a nature- study excursion to the river next Saturday? |
48673 | Will these principles still hold if you speak your thoughts for others to hear? |
48673 | Will you telegraph us if there is anything we can do to help you? |
48673 | Will your debating society be willing to meet ours, on the 27th of this month, in our class room? |
48673 | Would they not spare a little for the dumb creature that really had as much right to his small share of God''s bounty as they themselves to theirs? |
48673 | You can test the unity of your paragraph by asking with respect to each sentence that you construct,"Does it relate to the subject of my paragraph?" |
48673 | You remember my big cousin who goes to the State University, do n''t you? |
48673 | You were saying that-- I suppose-- but why should I tell you? |
48673 | _ A boy''s club should not study history._ What kind of boys? |
48673 | _ All girls should learn to be housekeepers._ What do you mean by"housekeeper"? |
48673 | _ Animals in captivity are better off than in their natural state._ What kind of captivity? |
48673 | _ Composition is the subject that has to do with the best expression of thought by language._ But how, then, does composition differ from grammar? |
48673 | _ It is not harmful for children to read fairy tales._ How about nervous, excitable children who can not sleep after a fairy story? |
48673 | _ It is wrong to kill animals._ Do you include noxious and dangerous ones? |
48673 | _ Unbroken._"Have you any money?" |
48673 | a well sweep? |
48673 | a windmill? |
48673 | baseballs? |
48673 | complex? |
48673 | compound? |
48673 | exclaimed Alice, in a startled tone, what do you mean? |
48673 | glass? |
48673 | gold leaf? |
48673 | hairbrushes? |
48673 | ink? |
48673 | iron? |
48673 | mirrors? |
48673 | paper? |
48673 | phrases? |
48673 | said the caliph to the barber:"was not that your agreement?" |
48673 | said the other, in great amazement;"who ever heard of such a bargain? |
48673 | saws? |
48673 | scissors? |
48673 | sentences? |
48673 | shingles? |
48673 | steel? |
48673 | wheels? |
14766 | Am I? 14766 An echo, dear mother? |
14766 | And where are they? 14766 And you saved them for your sick mother, did you?" |
14766 | But how could you weigh an elephant? |
14766 | But she did n''t mean to do it; she did n''t know it would fall, did she, papa? |
14766 | But supposing I should pick a dozen quarts,thought she,"how much should I earn then?" |
14766 | But what makes you look so pale? |
14766 | Crying for what? |
14766 | Did you never hear an echo? |
14766 | Do n''t you hate splitting wood? |
14766 | Do n''t you? |
14766 | Do you call that wicked? |
14766 | Do you think so? |
14766 | How many are you, then? |
14766 | How many? 14766 How much do you want, my good woman?" |
14766 | I do not mean how much apiece,said the man,"but how much for all of them? |
14766 | I love you, mother,again they said-- Three little children going to bed; How do you think that mother guessed Which of them really loved her best? |
14766 | If I bring it home full, mamma,she said,"wo n''t you make some berry cakes for tea?" |
14766 | Is that you, George? 14766 Is this yours?" |
14766 | It was I, was n''t it? |
14766 | Mamma,said Susie Dean, one summer''s morning,"may I go to the woods, and pick berries?" |
14766 | Mother, who made the stars, which light The beautiful blue sky? 14766 No, they wo n''t,"replied the chicken,"And no matter if they do; Eggs are really good for nothing; What''s an egg to me or you?" |
14766 | Pray, Miss Puss, what do you suppose I am? |
14766 | Shall I save them for her? |
14766 | Shall we ever go back to mother? |
14766 | Sisters and brothers, little maid, How many may you be? |
14766 | This is a great deal better than crying, is n''t it? |
14766 | Tom,said he, one day at recess,"did n''t you say you thought you knew who owned that knife I found?" |
14766 | Uncle Philip, as the day is fine, will you take a walk with us this morning? |
14766 | Well, that is a funny horse,said Tom;"where did you buy it?" |
14766 | What can it be? |
14766 | What is snow, mother? |
14766 | What was it? |
14766 | What''s all the trouble here? |
14766 | When shall I be your own little girl again? |
14766 | Where are we to go? |
14766 | Where is my work? |
14766 | Why should I not make a watch? |
14766 | Why, Susan is to wear it, of course,said Rose:"is she not said to be the best girl in school and the most obedient at home?" |
14766 | Why, father,little Gracie said"Where can the birdie be? |
14766 | Why, mother, how can that be? |
14766 | Why, what is the matter? |
14766 | Will you come with us, Susan? |
14766 | Wo n''t you come in, good folk? |
14766 | You remember how that lecturer talked to us about''holding the fort''? 14766 You want some breakfast, too?" |
14766 | 11 Did you ride to town yesterday? |
14766 | 153 Mr. L. If you had a dime now, what would you do with it? |
14766 | 155 Mr. L. What do yon do when it rains? |
14766 | 181 soon, Susan?" |
14766 | 193 You yourself were in an eggshell Just one little month ago? |
14766 | Am I not nearer it by keeping a little bit of a book than I should be if I did n''t keep any book at all?" |
14766 | An Interrogation Point(?) |
14766 | And is that all the trouble?" |
14766 | Are you sorry, my daughter, when you see the flowers and the trees growing in the garden? |
14766 | At last he said to the boy,"How much do you ask for your birds?" |
14766 | B. Playthings? |
14766 | But George would have said,"Do you think that 1 care for your laughing? |
14766 | But how was he to get the materials out of which to make the wheels and the mainspring? |
14766 | But what about the wheels? |
14766 | But what were you doing in the field? |
14766 | But who is this through the doorway comes? |
14766 | But, you ask, why are they called humming birds? |
14766 | By sawing wood?" |
14766 | Can it really be she-- This ill- looking, beggar- like cat that I see? |
14766 | Could the eating of the strawberries have given George half the happiness he felt at this moment? |
14766 | Did she not give him some of the lunch? |
14766 | Did yon ride to town yesterday? |
14766 | Did you ever see a chestnut tree? |
14766 | Did you never meet, far down the street, With plumes and banners gay, While the kettle, for the kettledrum, Played your march, march away? |
14766 | Did you ride to town yesterday? |
14766 | Did you ride to town yesterday? |
14766 | Did you say there were four eggs in the nest, or three? |
14766 | Do n''t you see, Mr. Owl, that I have no feathers, and that I am covered with hair like a mouse?" |
14766 | Do n''t you want a new pair? |
14766 | Do you know poor old Tom Smith?" |
14766 | Do you know why it is called Indian corn? |
14766 | Do you not think they would die, if they had no water to drink? |
14766 | Do you suppose Fred took any comfort in that knife? |
14766 | Do you think George is a coward? |
14766 | Do you think the trees and flowers would grow, if they never had any water on them? |
14766 | Do you want to know what became of John? |
14766 | Had the boy a hat on his head, or a cap? |
14766 | Have you seen James or John lately? |
14766 | His mother said,"James, why do you not come in? |
14766 | His uncle went up to him, and kindly taking away his hands, said,"James, will you not bid me welcome?" |
14766 | How do you expect to get your money? |
14766 | I asked,"''What''s your name, little girl?" |
14766 | I say, Is it George or his brother who is sick? |
14766 | I suppose your father sells two tables and six chairs, some days, does n''t he?" |
14766 | In great surprise, he said with a loud voice,"Who are you?" |
14766 | It is easy to say this; but do you know what great things have come from thinking? |
14766 | May I? |
14766 | Mr. L. Are you not hungry? |
14766 | Mr. L. But if there is none? |
14766 | Mr. L. But would you not rather play? |
14766 | Mr. L. Do you like to work? |
14766 | Mr. L. Do you want nothing else? |
14766 | Mr. L. Have you no playthings? |
14766 | Mr. L. How long have you been here? |
14766 | Mr. L. How old are you? |
14766 | Mr. L. What do you do, if you are hungry before it is time to go home? |
14766 | Mr. L. What is your name? |
14766 | Mr. L. Who set you to work? |
14766 | Mr. L. Would you not like a knife to cut sticks? |
14766 | Mr. L. You want nothing? |
14766 | Must I stay in doors all day? |
14766 | Oh, were you ne''er a schoolboy, And did you never train, And feel that swelling of the heart You ne''er can feel again? |
14766 | Oh, who are so happy as we?" |
14766 | One day he said to Amy, whose parents were quite poor,"Would you like to earn some money?" |
14766 | Rose, what is our bread made of? |
14766 | Shall I show you that way?" |
14766 | Shall I tell you what the difference is?" |
14766 | So, quick I released him,--do you think that it pleased him? |
14766 | Soon she said to herself,"What harm can there be in moving the mark grandmother put in the stocking? |
14766 | Sorry? |
14766 | The Money Amy did n''t Earn 123 48. Who Made the Stars? |
14766 | The boy, in great surprise, cried,"What did you do that for, sir? |
14766 | The boys thought the woman looked very pale and tired; so they said,"Are you going to town? |
14766 | Then he said,"Let me in; let me in; will you not let me in this garden?" |
14766 | Up comes her little gray, coaxing cat, With her little pink nose, and she mews,"What''s that?" |
14766 | Upon this, the bat began to squeal terribly; and he said to the owl,"Pray, what do you take me for, that you use me thus?" |
14766 | Upon this, the same words came back,"Who are you?" |
14766 | WHICH LOVED BEST? |
14766 | WHO MADE THE STARS? |
14766 | Well, are you sorry when you see the horses, cows, or sheep drinking at the brook to quench their thirst? |
14766 | Were the eggs white or blue? |
14766 | Were you ever at school? |
14766 | What are they? |
14766 | What if I should fasten a light to it, though? |
14766 | What is it?" |
14766 | What shall I do? |
14766 | What shall I give you for your trouble? |
14766 | Which Loved Best? |
14766 | Who are you? |
14766 | Who made the moon, so clear and bright, That rises up so high?" |
14766 | Why have you left your dear, old grandmother?" |
14766 | Why, George, are you turning coward? |
14766 | Why, Rose, are you sorry that you had any bread and butter for breakfast, this morning? |
14766 | Wo n''t you come out to the meadow, Where the grass with seeds is filled?" |
14766 | cried Lily;"you would make a weighing machine of the boat?" |
14766 | denotes a question; as, Has he come? |
14766 | do tell me what it is; is it sugar? |
14766 | said I,"If they two are in heaven?" |
14766 | she teased him with the question,"Can you weigh an elephant, Teddy?" |
14766 | the girls cried, when she joined their company;"but what is the matter? |
14766 | what made me say,"Little girl, what do you want?" |
12421 | ''Got any luck?'' 12421 If I will that he_ tarry_ till I come, what is that to thee?" |
12421 | O ye sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame? 12421 Who_ besides_ us knows this?" |
12421 | Wife, dost---- know that all the world seems queer except---- and me; and sometimes I think even---- art a little queer? |
12421 | Will I go? |
12421 | _ we substitute for the nounsinging"another noun,"song;"thus,"Do you remember_ Katharine( Katharine''s) song? |
12421 | ---- I fetch a chair for you? |
12421 | ---- I find you at home? |
12421 | ---- I have another piece of cake? |
12421 | ---- I have some more lemonade? |
12421 | ---- I have the use of your sled? |
12421 | ---- I leave the room? |
12421 | ---- I put more coal on the fire? |
12421 | ---- I trouble you to get me a glass of water? |
12421 | ---- I write at your desk? |
12421 | ---- am I supposed to be? |
12421 | ---- are you going to call on next? |
12421 | ---- are you going to give that to? |
12421 | ---- are you going to vote for? |
12421 | ---- can this letter be from? |
12421 | ---- did he refer to, he( him) or I( me)? |
12421 | ---- did you expect to see? |
12421 | ---- did you say went with you? |
12421 | ---- did you see at the village? |
12421 | ---- did you suppose it was? |
12421 | ---- do men say that I am? |
12421 | ---- do men think me to be? |
12421 | ---- do you take me to be? |
12421 | ---- do you think I saw in Paris? |
12421 | ---- do you think it was that called? |
12421 | ---- do you think she looks like? |
12421 | ---- do you think they will select? |
12421 | ---- do you think will be elected? |
12421 | ---- does he think it could have been? |
12421 | ---- either of you going to the village? |
12421 | ---- he find gold there? |
12421 | ---- he have time to get his ticket? |
12421 | ---- is that for? |
12421 | ---- there be time to get our tickets? |
12421 | ---- we by searching find out God? |
12421 | ---- we find any? |
12421 | ---- we have time to get our tickets? |
12421 | ---- we hear a good lecture if we go? |
12421 | ---- were you talking to just now? |
12421 | ---- what does happiness consist? |
12421 | ---- whom can I rely? |
12421 | ---- whom did they rent the house? |
12421 | ---- you be at leisure after dinner? |
12421 | ---- you be elected? |
12421 | ---- you be sorry to leave Boston? |
12421 | ---- you be surprised to hear it? |
12421 | ---- you do me the favor to reply by return mail? |
12421 | ---- you have time to get your ticket? |
12421 | ---- you tell me which is Mr. Ames''s house? |
12421 | 11. Who is there? |
12421 | 11. Who was that fat old---- who kept us all laughing? |
12421 | 25. Who first asserted that virtue_ is_(_ was_) its own reward? |
12421 | 33. Who would have thought it possible_ to receive_(_ to have received_) a reply from India so soon? |
12421 | 5.--- it seem strange that they--- come? |
12421 | 9. Who---- hears Professor C. read the court scene from"Pick wick"does not go away delighted? |
12421 | Are you not afraid that you---- miss the train? |
12421 | Are you surprised at it( its) being him( he)? |
12421 | At about what time will father return? |
12421 | BESIDE, BESIDES.--_Beside_ means"by the side of;"_ besides_ is now used only in the sense of"in addition to,""other than:"as,"Who sits_ beside_ you?" |
12421 | Ca n''t you remember---- you gave it to? |
12421 | Did Macaulay die of---- heart disease? |
12421 | Did he graduate---- Oxford or---- Cambridge? |
12421 | Did you hear Ruth( Ruth''s) singing? |
12421 | Did you hear that Waldo has-- his leg? |
12421 | Did you never bear false witness against---- neighbor? |
12421 | Did you see him( his) riding? |
12421 | Did you watch him( his) entering the room? |
12421 | Did you_ suspect_(_ expect_) us? |
12421 | Did your father bring the boat to Harry? |
12421 | Do n''t you----strawberry short- cake? |
12421 | Do you know that man---- is just entering the car? |
12421 | Do you know---- you can get to take my trunk? |
12421 | Do you like---- sort of pen? |
12421 | Do you remember my( me) speaking to you about your penmanship? |
12421 | Do you remember---- he married? |
12421 | Do you think I should( would) go under the circumstances? |
12421 | Do you think we---- have rain? |
12421 | Do you_ allow_ to go to town to- day? |
12421 | Dost---- talk of revenge? |
12421 | Had you not better-- down a while? |
12421 | Has Edward-- you his yacht? |
12421 | Has everybody finished---- exercise? |
12421 | Has the last bell--? |
12421 | Has the---- of Professor Richard''s house been fixed? |
12421 | Has---- of you two gentlemen a fountain- pen? |
12421 | Has---- of you who have just come from the ball- field seen Julian? |
12421 | Have you any doubt of Kathleen( Kathleen''s) being happy? |
12421 | Have you ever---- on a bicycle? |
12421 | Have you nothing to tell us---- what we have already heard? |
12421 | Have you read the--- novel? |
12421 | Have you seen my pincers? |
12421 | Have you seen the picture of-- three girls in a boat, taken by Mr. B.? |
12421 | Have you-- your brother? |
12421 | He speaks---- well, does n''t he? |
12421 | His host burst out laughing and said,"Of course; did you think of taking them out of your mouth and leaving them at home? |
12421 | How are we to---- to labor its due honor? |
12421 | How can we tell---- to trust? |
12421 | How can you thus address me,--, who am your friend? |
12421 | How do you like---- style of shoe? |
12421 | How is this passage in Virgil to be----d? |
12421 | How many shot( shots) did you count? |
12421 | How---- of your peaches have you sold? |
12421 | If I fail on this examination,---- I be allowed to take it over again? |
12421 | If he---- come to- day, would( should) you be ready? |
12421 | If she did not take after Anne,---- did she take after? |
12421 | In the midst of some preparations for a fishing excursion he said to his host,"Shall I take my_ gums_ along?" |
12421 | In what---- is he held by his townsmen? |
12421 | In which seat did you----? |
12421 | Is he very sick? |
12421 | Is it-- you wish to see? |
12421 | Is the Governor''s wife_ stopping_ at the Springs Hotel? |
12421 | Is the---- that wants a carriage at dinner or in his room? |
12421 | Is this a dagger---- I see before me? |
12421 | May John and-- go to the ball- game? |
12421 | OF GOOD USE Why is it that for the purposes of English composition one word is not so good as another? |
12421 | STAY, STOP.--"_Stay,_ as in''At what hotel are you staying?'' |
12421 | Shall I give your son a stimulus( stimulant)? |
12421 | Shall he come? |
12421 | Shall you be glad to come? |
12421 | Shall( will) you be a candidate? |
12421 | Shall( will) you stay at home to- night? |
12421 | Tell me in sadness---- is she you love? |
12421 | The next question that presents itself to one who wishes to use English correctly is, How am I to know what words and expressions are in good use? |
12421 | The reason for this becomes evident if, in the sentence"Do you remember_ Katharine( Katharine''s) singing? |
12421 | Thus,_ Teacher_: Who was Benjamin Franklin? |
12421 | Was it you or the wind---- made those noises? |
12421 | Was it-- that you saw? |
12421 | Was it---- that did it? |
12421 | What building_ is_(_ was_) that which we just passed? |
12421 | What do you think about this cloth( cloth''s) wearing well? |
12421 | What do you think of Marguerite( Marguerite''s) studying Latin? |
12421 | What if Nemesis---- repayment? |
12421 | What is my grief in comparison---- that which she bears? |
12421 | What is the good of your( you) going now? |
12421 | What is---- but the power of doing a thing? |
12421 | What put this idea---- your head? |
12421 | What shall I---- you from Paris? |
12421 | What use is there in a man( man''s) swearing? |
12421 | What use is this piece of ribbon? |
12421 | What was the matter---- him? |
12421 | What were you and---- talking about? |
12421 | What---- of paper is needed for one issue of_ Harper''s Weekly_? |
12421 | What---- we do without our friends? |
12421 | What_ is_(_ are_) the gender, the number, and the person of the following words? |
12421 | When shall we arrive---- Rome? |
12421 | When---- I come to get my paper? |
12421 | When---- we have peace? |
12421 | When---- we three meet again? |
12421 | Where did you say Gettysburg_ is_(_ was_)? |
12421 | Where did you say Pike''s Peak_ is_(_ was_)? |
12421 | Which can run the_ faster( fastest),_ your horse or mine? |
12421 | Which do you prefer most, apples or oranges? |
12421 | Which is the_ better( best)_ of the two? |
12421 | Which is the_ farther( farthest)_ east, Boston New York, or Philadelphia? |
12421 | Which is the_ larger( largest)_ number, the minuend or the subtrahend? |
12421 | Which word in the following pairs should an American prefer? |
12421 | Whom can I trust, if not----? |
12421 | Whose Greek grammar do you prefer-- Goodwin or Hadley? |
12421 | Why did you not---- the gift? |
12421 | Why do you--- your house go to ruin? |
12421 | Why--- he answer? |
12421 | Why--- she come? |
12421 | Will Mr. L.---- his reasons for disagreeing with the rest of the committee? |
12421 | Will either of you gentlemen lend me----( third person) pencil? |
12421 | Will he come? |
12421 | Will he let us look at( the) stars through the( a) telescope? |
12421 | Will you dine with me to- morrow? |
12421 | Will you let Brown and-- have your boat? |
12421 | Will you---- my factory against fire? |
12421 | Will you_ loan_ me your sled for this afternoon? |
12421 | Will your brother be there, too? |
12421 | Will( shall) he who fails be allowed to try again? |
12421 | Will( shall) the admission fee be twenty- five or fifty cents? |
12421 | Would he have been willing_ to go_(_ to have gone_) with you? |
12421 | Would you go, if you were--? |
12421 | [ 39] Is"relationships"the proper word here? |
12421 | _ Which of the following forms is preferable? |
12421 | _ Which of the following forms should be used? |
12421 | _ Which of the italicized words is preferable? |
12421 | _ Which, of the italicized forms is preferable? |
12421 | how long will ye love vanity, and seek after_ leasing_?" |
12421 | the lessons are equally short and the emphasis is unceasingly laid on the question"Why?" |
12421 | would mean,"Is it my intention to go?" |
6473 | Can I sell or use the property to good advantage? |
6473 | Have I the money to invest? |
6473 | How do you know it will? |
6473 | How does it affect the college as a whole? |
6473 | How much pleasure shall I derive from it? |
6473 | What makes you think so? |
6473 | What will be its effect upon bossism? |
6473 | Will the system encourage bribery and graft, or will it tend to do away with these evils? |
6473 | ( 2)_ Is the evidence first- hand or hearsay evidence?_ It is universally recognized that hearsay evidence is unreliable. |
6473 | ( 3)_ Can the evidence be considered as especially valuable?_( a)_ Hurtful admissions_ constitute an especially valuable kind of evidence. |
6473 | ARGUMENT AND BRIEF SHOULD IMMIGRATION BE RESTRICTED? |
6473 | An argument on government ownership of railroads would have to answer the question,"Under which system will fewer accidents occur?" |
6473 | And he answered and said unto them, I also will ask you a question; and tell me: The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or from men? |
6473 | And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say, From heaven; he will say, Why did ye not believe him? |
6473 | And third, where shall Greek be taught? |
6473 | And when in Manchester I saw those huge placards,"Who is Henry Ward Beecher?" |
6473 | Are both premises true? |
6473 | Are the present laws satisfactory? |
6473 | But is this really the case? |
6473 | C. Can the evidence be classed as especially valuable? |
6473 | C. Is the control of Egypt by England a benefit to the whole world? |
6473 | C. Is the witness prejudiced? |
6473 | Could the observed effect have resulted from any other cause than the one assigned? |
6473 | D. Does the witness have a good reputation for honesty and accuracy? |
6473 | DOES COLONIZATION PAY? |
6473 | DOES THE PRESENT SYSTEM CONTAIN SERIOUS EVILS? |
6473 | DOES THE PROPOSITION STATE A POSSIBLE TRUTH? |
6473 | DOES THE PROPOSITION STATE A PROBABLE TRUTH? |
6473 | Do the combined tests of argument from effect to cause and from cause to effect hold? |
6473 | Do the issues, taken collectively, consider all phases of the proposition? |
6473 | Does each issue comprise only disputed matter? |
6473 | Does each issue really bear upon the proposition? |
6473 | Does football benefit or injure the college as a whole? |
6473 | Does football benefit or injure the player? |
6473 | Does he have any personal interest in the case? |
6473 | Does it consist of hurtful admissions? |
6473 | Does it reform the criminal? |
6473 | Does the present system contain serious defects? |
6473 | Does the student in the lonely country college form more lasting friendships? |
6473 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine?.... |
6473 | For instance, if he considers the purchase of a certain piece of real estate, he says to himself:"Is the price fair?" |
6473 | HOW HAS THE PLAN SUCCEEDED WHERE IT HAS BEEN TRIED? |
6473 | Has the government the right to take the roads without the consent of the present owners? |
6473 | Have enough instances been investigated to establish the probable existence of a general law? |
6473 | Have enough instances of the class under consideration been investigated to establish the existence of a general law? |
6473 | Have the results of the laws been satisfactory? |
6473 | IF THE PRESENT SYSTEM CONTAINS SERIOUS EVILS, IS THE PROPOSED SYSTEM THE ONLY REMEDY? |
6473 | IF THE PRESENT SYSTEM DOES CONTAIN SERIOUS EVILS, WILL THE PROPOSED SYSTEM REMOVE THEM? |
6473 | IS THE PLAN PRACTICABLE? |
6473 | IS THERE ANY DIRECT EVIDENCE BEARING ON THE PROPOSITION? |
6473 | If an inspector condemns a bridge as unsafe, the question arises,"What has made it so?" |
6473 | If so, in what way should the check or limit be applied? |
6473 | If there is such a need, would the educational test accomplish this further restriction in a proper manner? |
6473 | In arriving at a decision, they are confronted with these questions:"Is the game beneficial or detrimental to the player?" |
6473 | In the light of such conflicting advice, what will determine the proper course for a student to follow? |
6473 | Is Egypt benefited by the control of England? |
6473 | Is coeducation a benefit to both sexes? |
6473 | Is compulsory education practicable? |
6473 | Is each issue a subdivision of the proposition, or is it the proposition itself formulated in different language? |
6473 | Is it an anchor which fastens the ship of state in one place, or a rudder to guide it on its voyage? |
6473 | Is it first- hand evidence? |
6473 | Is it for the advantage of the United States that immigration be further checked or limited? |
6473 | Is it negative evidence? |
6473 | Is it undesigned evidence? |
6473 | Is the assigned cause adequate to produce the observed effect? |
6473 | Is the assigned cause of sufficient strength to produce the alleged effect? |
6473 | Is the evidence consistent( a) with itself,( b) with known facts,( c) with human experience? |
6473 | Is the fact stated in the minor premise an instance of the general law expressed in the major premise? |
6473 | Is the government financially able to buy the roads? |
6473 | Is the proposed plan practicable? |
6473 | Is the reformatory system practicable? |
6473 | Is the student able to enter athletics? |
6473 | Is the suzerainty of England over Egypt the only practical solution of the problem? |
6473 | Is the witness an acknowledged authority on the subject about which he testifies? |
6473 | Is the witness competent to give a trustworthy account of the matter? |
6473 | Is the witness willing to give an accurate account? |
6473 | Is there a need for further restriction of immigration? |
6473 | Is there any fundamental difference between the case in hand and the case cited as an example? |
6473 | Is vivisection humane? |
6473 | Is vivisection of great assistance to medicine? |
6473 | Is voting a privilege or a natural right? |
6473 | Is woman''s education as important as man''s? |
6473 | May some other cause intervene and prevent the action of the assigned cause? |
6473 | Now the question arises, How is it possible to conciliate the audience? |
6473 | On the other hand, a man well off-- how is it with him? |
6473 | Ought illiterates to be excluded from the polls? |
6473 | SHALL GREEK BE TAUGHT IN HIGH SCHOOLS? |
6473 | SHOULD IMMIGRATION BE RESTRICTED? |
6473 | Second, if so, in what way should the check or limit be applied? |
6473 | Should the motorman anticipate that persons of mature age will station their wagons across the tracks? |
6473 | Such would be the error if the question,"Would the change be desirable?" |
6473 | The arguer must ask,"Is any direct evidence available?" |
6473 | The issue may take some such form as,"How will the system affect the country politically?" |
6473 | The only question left to be settled now is: Are women persons? |
6473 | The points to be considered in determining the somewhat mercenary question,"Does Colonization Pay?" |
6473 | The question of national expansion presents the issue,"Will such a course add to the glory, the prestige, or the wealth of the nation?" |
6473 | The question that now confronts us is,"Which plan should be adopted?" |
6473 | The real question to be answered is, Should the direct method be substituted for the present method? |
6473 | To the ignorant and poor, or to the educated and prosperous? |
6473 | To whom do the tradesmen of Liverpool sell the most goods at the highest profit? |
6473 | WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A MATERIAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT? |
6473 | WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A MORAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT TO THOSE CONCERNED? |
6473 | WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A PHYSICAL BENEFIT OR DETTRIMENT? |
6473 | WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A POLITICAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT? |
6473 | WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE AN INTELLECTUAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT? |
6473 | Was there ever a formal and regular laying out of a street here? |
6473 | What are the conclusions to which the view of these facts brings us? |
6473 | What is the result? |
6473 | What must be the result? |
6473 | Which college location is more favorable to health and intellectual development? |
6473 | Which is the better location? |
6473 | Which is the cheaper? |
6473 | Which method would have the better effect upon the general welfare of the nation? |
6473 | Which side has the better analysis? |
6473 | Which side has the better delivery? |
6473 | Which side has the stronger proof? |
6473 | Which side offers the better refutation? |
6473 | Which would be the more practicable? |
6473 | Which would give the voter fuller enjoyment of his right of suffrage? |
6473 | Who are the Northern laborers? |
6473 | Who can now say that education does not injure the negro? |
6473 | Why not then open our doors to her and admit her products? |
6473 | Why, then, not get our lumber from Canada and preserve what few forests we do have? |
6473 | Why? |
6473 | Will compulsory education benefit the child? |
6473 | Will it benefit the people? |
6473 | Will the proposed system remove these defects without bringing in new evils equally serious? |
6473 | Would it assist or retard the growth of other qualities which a college course should develop? |
6473 | Would it not be of distinct advantage to us? |
6473 | Would the system raise or lower the standard of scholarship? |
6473 | and"If there is any, what is its value?" |
6473 | and"Is the enlargement of the army the_ only_ means of rendering the nation safe from invasion?" |
6473 | and"Should a murderer be punished by death?" |
6473 | c. Is coeducation a benefit to the college? |
6473 | c. Is it right for us as human beings to sanction the many forms of needless and excessive cruelty practised by vivisectors? |
6473 | c. What has been its success thus far? |
6473 | c. Will compulsory education benefit the public? |
6473 | c. Would a change be wise? |
6473 | c. Would the test be unfair to any class of citizens? |
6473 | d. Could such a test be easily incorporated into our laws? |
6473 | d. Is it in accordance with modern civilization? |
6473 | d. Is the desirable system of separate education worth the extra money it costs? |
6473 | or was there ever a regular and sufficient dedication and acceptance? |
6473 | or who is he that gave thee this authority? |
6473 | second, if so, in what way should the check or limit be applied? |
17470 | ''But,''it is sometimes urged,''why not leave this new study of English to the younger Universities now being set up all over the country?'' |
17470 | ''English Art?'' |
17470 | ''Have you ever,''writes Pliny to his friend Romanus-- Have you ever seen the source of the Clitumnus? |
17470 | ''That Style in writing is much the same thing as good manners in other human intercourse?'' |
17470 | ''The Section or Sections( if any)''--But, how, if they are not any, could they be indicated by a mark however convenient? |
17470 | ''Untrue,''you say? |
17470 | ''What am_ I_ doing? |
17470 | ''What are these things we call good and evil, life, love, death?'' |
17470 | ''What is his purpose? |
17470 | ''_ Granted the rhythmical antithesis, where is the real antithesis, the difference, the improvement? |
17470 | ( always in the sense, unsuspected by Cicero, of''What is the profit?'') |
17470 | -- And wilt thou leave me thus? |
17470 | --For what purpose does the poet wish for a thousand tongues, but to sing? |
17470 | --how shall we answer the divine men? |
17470 | All this of which I am speaking is Art: and Literature being an Art, do you not see how personal a thing it is-- how it can not escape being personal? |
17470 | And then he proceeds to preach the Old Masters.--But how?--why?--to what end? |
17470 | And when you point with pride to Milton''s and those other mulberry trees in your Academe, bethink you''What poets are they shading to- day? |
17470 | And will anyone in this room tell me that what Reynolds said of painting is not to- day, for us, applicable to writing? |
17470 | And will you refuse a hearing when I claim that the Roman came in too? |
17470 | And wilt thou leave me thus? |
17470 | And, in fine, what is it all about? |
17470 | Another of my questions was about the so- called spurious books; had he written them or not? |
17470 | Art thou rich, yet is thy mind perplex''d? |
17470 | Brother mine, art a- waking or a- sleeping: Mind''st thou the merry moon a many summers fled? |
17470 | But beauty vanishes, beauty passes, However rare, rare it be; And when I crumble who shall remember That lady of the West Country? |
17470 | But if you had to_ make_ a beetle, as men are making poetry, how much would classification help? |
17470 | But may I urge-- and remember please that my credit is pledged to_ you_ now-- may I urge that this is not a wholly convincing answer? |
17470 | But now suppose that, having practised it, our candidate was able to speak like this:--''But what( says the Financier) is peace to us without money? |
17470 | But what of that? |
17470 | But what were they playing at? |
17470 | But where has he helped us to write with beauty, with charm, with distinction? |
17470 | But why do you practise it in your Essays? |
17470 | But why, like Dogberry, have''had losses''? |
17470 | But you are shy of such heights? |
17470 | But you will ask,''_ Why_ should verse and prose employ diction so different? |
17470 | Can he, indeed?... |
17470 | Can ye say nay But that you said That I alway Should be obeyed? |
17470 | Can you-- can anyone-- compare the two passages and miss to see that they belong to two different kingdoms of poetry? |
17470 | Can_ you,_ sir? |
17470 | Canst drink the waters of the crystal spring? |
17470 | Carlyle, in his explosive way, once demanded of his countrymen,''Shakespeare or India? |
17470 | Deeth, where is thy stynge? |
17470 | Do n''t you admire that?"'' |
17470 | Do you remember that tessellated pavement with its emblems and images of the younger gods? |
17470 | Do you wonder? |
17470 | Does he recite lists of names, dates, with formulae concerning styles? |
17470 | Does he recommend his old masters for copying, then?--for mere imitation? |
17470 | Does it not follow that by drilling ourselves to write perspicuously we train our minds to clarify their thought? |
17470 | Does it not follow, then, that the more accurately we use words the closer definition we shall give to our thoughts? |
17470 | Does the difference, then, perchance lie in ourselves? |
17470 | Dost thou laugh to see how fools are vex''d To add to golden numbers golden numbers? |
17470 | Eh? |
17470 | Example is the school of mankind, and they will learn at no other-- or Our dignity? |
17470 | For to turn so oft; To bring that lowest that was most aloft: And to fall highest, yet to light soft? |
17470 | Give thanks to whom? |
17470 | Has a Minister to say''No''in the House of Commons? |
17470 | Has it not hitherto been true in the Colonies? |
17470 | Have you begun to detect the two main vices of Jargon? |
17470 | He lives, and why? |
17470 | He visited the bountiful, everlasting source, and of what did he sing? |
17470 | Hell, where is thy victory? |
17470 | How does it begin? |
17470 | I know not to what wiseacre we owe that pronouncement: but what do you think of it, after the lyric I have just quoted? |
17470 | I thanked him, but could not forbear asking''Why do they keep this gate closed?'' |
17470 | If a battle there must be, how is burning better than garments rolled in blood? |
17470 | If not exceptional, monstrous, why should this particular slaughter have lingered so ineffaceably in their memories? |
17470 | If you had to surrender one to retain the other, which would you choose?'' |
17470 | If you need further argument( but what serves it to slay the slain?) |
17470 | Instances? |
17470 | Is Walt Whitman a poet? |
17470 | Is it consonant with the high dignity of science to make her talk like a cheap showman advertising a''picture- drome''? |
17470 | Is it not true in Ireland? |
17470 | Is it possible? |
17470 | Is it unfair to instance Marlowe, who died young? |
17470 | It dallies with Latinity--''sub silentio,''''de die in diem,''''cui bono?'' |
17470 | It is called Logos; what does Logos mean? |
17470 | It means both at once: why? |
17470 | Let us take this admired passage from his"Duchess of Malfy":--_ Ferdinand._ How doth our sister Duchess bear herself In her imprisonment? |
17470 | May I follow up this experience of his with one of my own, as a preface or brief apology for this lecture? |
17470 | May we collect and send you notices of it appearing in the World''s Press? |
17470 | Might it, indeed? |
17470 | Mind''st thou the green and the dancing and the leaping? |
17470 | Mind''st thou the haycocks and the moon above them creeping?... |
17470 | No: I have yet to mention the straightest, most natural of them all, and will read it to you in full-- What should I say? |
17470 | No? |
17470 | Now gin a body meet a body for our protection and in this gallant spirit, need a body reward him with this hybrid label? |
17470 | Now hear how the lyric treats it, in these lines of Dekker-- Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers? |
17470 | O Death, where is thy sting? |
17470 | O death, where is thy sting? |
17470 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
17470 | O grave, where is thy victory?] |
17470 | Or are their leaves but feeding worms to spin gowns to drape Doctors of Letters?'' |
17470 | Or are you, perhaps, overawed by the printed book? |
17470 | Or what of Physiology? |
17470 | Or who shall determine its range, whether of thought or of music? |
17470 | Perhaps they can pay you the silent compliment of supposing that you are perfectly acquainted with it?... |
17470 | Praise whom? |
17470 | Should I be led With doubleness? |
17470 | Since Faith is dead And Truth away From you is fled? |
17470 | So I revert to the larger question,''What is Style? |
17470 | So why not say''I was careless if I won or lost,''and have done with it? |
17470 | Specially might I speak to you of the music of its monosyllables--''"What sawest you there?" |
17470 | Suppose, sir, that you wish to become a journalist? |
17470 | Surely either one of these should be mentioned before rapidity, in itself not comparable as a virtue with either?'' |
17470 | Surely no Cambridge man would willingly be a sloven in speech, oral or written? |
17470 | Swim''st thou in wealth, yet sink''st in thine own tears? |
17470 | Take the lines_ Is it possible?_-- Is it possible? |
17470 | That is plainly said, I hope? |
17470 | That is positive enough, I hope? |
17470 | The same to you?'' |
17470 | The unpleasant aspect? |
17470 | Then for what, in fine, will he have them studied? |
17470 | Then if we insist on this way with the tongues of Homer and Virgil, why do we avoid it with the tongue of Shakespeare, our own living tongue? |
17470 | They filled his literature: for why? |
17470 | To_ whom_ did our Greek train all his members to render adoration? |
17470 | Was not this love indeed? |
17470 | Well, and why not? |
17470 | Well, and why not? |
17470 | What am I urging? |
17470 | What are the great poetical names of the last hundred years or so? |
17470 | What are they? |
17470 | What became of it all?--of that easy colonial life, of the men and women who trod those tessellated pavements? |
17470 | What do I argue from this? |
17470 | What follows, but that in speaking or writing we have an obligation to put ourselves into the hearer''s or reader''s place? |
17470 | What has happened? |
17470 | What is your will about these matters?'' |
17470 | What its[ Greek: to ti en einai], its essence, the law of its being?'' |
17470 | What materialises? |
17470 | What of Electricity, for example? |
17470 | What? |
17470 | What_ is_ an international character, and what would you give for one? |
17470 | Where would Latin literature be, for example, if you could cut Venus out of it? |
17470 | Who made them?'' |
17470 | Who, at any rate, does not seek after Persuasion? |
17470 | Why are_ we_ mortal? |
17470 | Why do_ I_ love_ thee_?'' |
17470 | Why should men start upon the more difficult form and proceed to the easier? |
17470 | Why should you presume that in any country a body duly constituted for any function will neglect to perform its duty and abdicate its trust? |
17470 | Why? |
17470 | Will you not agree with me that here is no writing, here is no prose, here is not even English, but merely a flux of words to the pen? |
17470 | Will you suggest that he did this because they were pretty? |
17470 | Will you tell me,''Oh, painting is a special art, whereas anyone can write prose passably well''? |
17470 | Would you have your mother University, Gentlemen, undecorated by some true study of your mother- English? |
17470 | Yes, and among the unnatural sciences, what of Political Economy? |
17470 | You perceive that the style is actually worse than in the sample quoted before; it has become flabby whereas that other was at any rate nervous? |
17470 | You saw? |
17470 | You will not ask me''What miracle?'' |
17470 | _ Accuracy._--Did I not remind myself in my first lecture, that Cambridge is the home of accurate scholarship? |
17470 | _ Duke._ And what''s her history? |
17470 | _ Why_ should the one invert the order of words in a fashion not permitted to the other?'' |
17470 | deeth, where is thi pricke? |
17470 | for what purpose a thousand hands, but to pluck the wires? |
17470 | his destiny?'' |
17470 | how d''ye do?'' |
17470 | of yesterday? |
17470 | or again( can personal note go straighter?) |
17470 | or the things? |
63292 | Acheté vous des BEy y any aples? |
63292 | And ey also, But where about do Mais où vous pensez Bout houêr abaut dou you mynde to take vous embarquer? |
63292 | Are you ready Syr? |
63292 | Are you ready? |
63292 | Are you willing to Voulez vous acheter àr you ouilling tou buye? |
63292 | BVuy you any apples? |
63292 | Be her affaires so Sont ses affaires si By hêr affêres so great that she may grandes qu''elle ne grét, dat chy mê not not come? |
63292 | Button your ierkin Boutonnez vostre Botton you ierkin Peter: where be your colet: Pierre Où sont Pìter houêr by yor garters? |
63292 | Cent? |
63292 | Combien pour vn Haù many for a peny? |
63292 | Combien y a il d''icy Haù far is tou Rìe? |
63292 | Combien? |
63292 | Comment iourons nous? |
63292 | Comment vous est- il? |
63292 | Comment vous portez Haù dou you? |
63292 | Could you not mache Sçauriez vous Coùld you not match this collour? |
63292 | D''où venez vous? |
63292 | Did you say your Auez- vous dit voz Did you sê yor prêrs? |
63292 | Do you call vs all Nous appellez vous Dou you càl vs ready? |
63292 | Doe you call? |
63292 | Doe you lacke any Vous faut- il quelque Dou you lak any tink? |
63292 | Dou you càl? |
63292 | En is no mòr: Chàl ouy Shall we haue an aurons nous encores hàf an oder peint? |
63292 | Estes vous prest àr you rédy Sèr? |
63292 | Estes- vous prestz? |
63292 | From houens com y? |
63292 | From whence come you? |
63292 | Geue me my pantables, Donnez moy mes Gif me mey pantables, and my pompes: But mulles,& mes and mey pamps: Bout where be my sockes? |
63292 | God be here: Dieu soit ceans: God by hiér: Shall we lodge with Logerons nous ceans, Chàl ouy lodge ouy you, this night? |
63292 | Goe Ferez- vous? |
63292 | Good hay? |
63292 | Good stables? |
63292 | Goud stèbles? |
63292 | Haue you any beadyng? |
63292 | Haù How like you this vous semble de ce leik you dis oueìn? |
63292 | Haù chàl ouy plê? |
63292 | Haù is it ouis you? |
63292 | Haù mutch? |
63292 | Haù sêl you dem? |
63292 | Here ye my frend: Escoutez mon amy: Hiér y mey frìnd: Is this the ready way Est ce cy le droit Is dis dé red ouê tou to goe to Rye? |
63292 | Houat did you ouis all? |
63292 | Houat dou ouy aù: What haue we to pay? |
63292 | Houat dou y beìj? |
63292 | Houat dou you beì? |
63292 | Houat dou you lak? |
63292 | Houat is tou pê? |
63292 | Houat ist a clak? |
63292 | Houat ist a clàk? |
63292 | Houat lak y? |
63292 | Houat must you hàf? |
63292 | Houat nùùs? |
63292 | Houat nùùs? |
63292 | Houitch of dem? |
63292 | Houèr by dem? |
63292 | Houéder chàl ouy go? |
63292 | Houéder go you Ser? |
63292 | Houéder go you? |
63292 | Houêr did you pout it? |
63292 | Houêr is mey bouk? |
63292 | How doe you? |
63292 | How doth your Comment se portent Haù dous yor mèster, maister, and your vostre maistre,& and yor méstris? |
63292 | How farre is to Rye? |
63292 | How is it with you? |
63292 | How many for a peny? |
63292 | How much will you Combien en voulez Haù mutch ouil y hàf? |
63292 | How much? |
63292 | How now children, Comment enfans, Haù nau tchildren, will you not rise to voulez vous point ouil you not reis tou day? |
63292 | How sell you the Qu''en vendez vous le Haù sell y dé hundreth? |
63292 | How sell you the yard Combien en vendez Haù sell you dé yêrd of it? |
63292 | How sell you them? |
63292 | How shall we play? |
63292 | How should I be Comment seroy- ie Haù choùld ey by ready? |
63292 | Hoù chàl déél? |
63292 | I goe by and by: But I''y vay tantost Mais Ey go bey and bey: is it so late as you est- il bien si tard Bout is it so làt às say? |
63292 | Ie vens auiourd''huy Ey sell dis dê Robin Robin- hoodes peners: au prix de houds peners: Chàl ey Shall I fleae them? |
63292 | Is is a hasell wanne? |
63292 | Is it a fayre way? |
63292 | Is it a fêr ouêder? |
63292 | Is it not tyme to goe Est- il point temps Is it not teìm tou go to the market? |
63292 | It hangeth there Elle y pend desia: It hangs dêr àlrédy: already? |
63292 | Le chemin est il Is it a fêr ouê? |
63292 | Les fléé dem? |
63292 | Lesquelles? |
63292 | Let Let vs pray God? |
63292 | Let vs haue a Ayons vn conte: Let vs hàf a rékning: reakening: What is to pay? |
63292 | Monsieur: Be we not out of our Sommes nous point By ouy not aut of way? |
63292 | Ouil dé com? |
63292 | Où allez- vous? |
63292 | Où est vostre Houèr is yor keursi? |
63292 | Où sont- ilz? |
63292 | Où yrons nous? |
63292 | Pìter, houêr lêd yor you your night cap? |
63292 | Qu''achettez vous? |
63292 | Qu''auons nous à Houat hàf ouy tou pê? |
63292 | Qu''y à- il à payer? |
63292 | Que deuons nous? |
63292 | Que les vendez vous? |
63292 | Que ne nòting: houey dou you not gyrt you Stephen? |
63292 | Que vous defaut- il? |
63292 | Que vous faut il? |
63292 | Que vous faut il? |
63292 | Quel est vostre is yor plêsur? |
63292 | Quelle haste auez Houat hàst, hàf you? |
63292 | Quelle heure est il? |
63292 | Quelles nouuelles? |
63292 | Quelles nouuelles? |
63292 | Shal I haue thirtie En auray- ie Trente au Chàl ey hàf serty for for a peny? |
63292 | Shall we play at Iourons nous à la Chàl ouy plê at Trumpe? |
63292 | Shall we then play at Iourons nous donques Chàl ouy den plê at boules? |
63292 | Sire? |
63292 | Syr, Is it not yet Monsieur est- il point Sèr, Is it not yet tyme to goe? |
63292 | Triomfe? |
63292 | Voulez vous any tink? |
63292 | What did you with Qu''en auez vous fait? |
63292 | What doe we owe? |
63292 | What doe you buy? |
63292 | What doe you buye? |
63292 | What doe you lacke? |
63292 | What game shal we A quel ieu iourons Houat gêm chàl ouy play at? |
63292 | What hast haue you? |
63292 | What is it of the Qu''elle heure est- il? |
63292 | What is it of the Quelle heure est il? |
63292 | What ist a clock? |
63292 | What lacke ye? |
63292 | What lake you? |
63292 | What must you haue? |
63292 | What newes? |
63292 | What newes? |
63292 | What shall coast me Que m''en coustera Houat chàl còst my dé the elle? |
63292 | What to doe? |
63292 | What will you haue? |
63292 | Where be them? |
63292 | Where did you put it? |
63292 | Where is my booke? |
63292 | Where is the showing Où est le Houêr is dé chouing horne? |
63292 | Where is your cutsie? |
63292 | Where will you haue Où les mettrez vous? |
63292 | Whether goe you? |
63292 | Whether shall we goe? |
63292 | Which of them? |
63292 | Who buye of my Qui achette mes Hoù beì of mey aples? |
63292 | Who shal deale? |
63292 | Why do you not beleue Pourquoy ne me croiez Houey dou you bilìf me? |
63292 | Why doe you not put Que ne vous chaussez Houey dou you not on your showes? |
63292 | Why is not come my Que n''est venue ma Houey is not com mey gossip your wife? |
63292 | Will they come? |
63292 | Will ye doe so? |
63292 | Will you eate vin voulez vous drinke? |
63292 | Will you haue it so Le voulez vous ainsi Ouil you hàf it so, Stephen? |
63292 | Will you neuer be Serez vous iamais las Ouil you neuer be weary of playing: de iouer? |
63292 | Yes, what doth it Ouy, combien est- ce Eys, houat dous it waight? |
63292 | You be well come: Vous estés les You by ouel com: What wine will you tresbien venuz Quel Houat ouein ouil y drinke? |
63292 | You brought me prest? |
63292 | a peint of ouein ouel drawen? |
63292 | a peny? |
63292 | acchetter? |
63292 | affaire? |
63292 | auiourd''huy? |
63292 | baùles? |
63292 | be? |
63292 | beau? |
63292 | boire? |
63292 | cestuy- cy? |
63292 | chause- pied? |
63292 | chemin pour aller à go tou Reì? |
63292 | chippìng? |
63292 | chose, appellez vous? |
63292 | cinq? |
63292 | clocke? |
63292 | countrey? |
63292 | d''aller au marché? |
63292 | de meilleur? |
63292 | denier? |
63292 | denier? |
63292 | dis neict? |
63292 | drap? |
63292 | drààn? |
63292 | encor temps de teim tou go? |
63292 | escarpins: Mais où ouêr by mey sakes? |
63292 | escorcheray ie? |
63292 | fiue? |
63292 | gassip yor oueif? |
63292 | guerters? |
63292 | haùld seìd? |
63292 | hondred? |
63292 | horn? |
63292 | my? |
63292 | mê lodge? |
63292 | not a kêk? |
63292 | not guert you? |
63292 | of it? |
63292 | other pynt? |
63292 | ouèèct? |
63292 | paier? |
63292 | plaisir? |
63292 | plé at? |
63292 | point? |
63292 | pour meshuy? |
63292 | prayers? |
63292 | prieres? |
63292 | puisse venir com? |
63292 | qu''il poise? |
63292 | sont mes chaussons? |
63292 | thinke? |
63292 | tou dé market? |
63292 | vin? |
63292 | vn gasteau? |
63292 | vous allez pout en your choùs? |
63292 | vous iartez vous? |
63292 | vous leuer dê? |
63292 | vous m''auez redy? |
63292 | vous point? |
63292 | vous? |
63292 | voz iartieres? |
63292 | wine? |
63292 | you meind tou tàk shipping? |
63292 | you neict kêp? |
63292 | you sê? |
63292 | you vous? |
63292 | àl? |
63292 | àr you rédy? |
41243 | Are there any good stories in it? |
41243 | If the bee had not helped us, what could we have done? |
41243 | What are you going to do there? |
41243 | What can you do? 41243 What is that?" |
41243 | Where are the cows, Robert? |
41243 | Will you not drive them home? 41243 Am I a good boy? 41243 Are you going far? 41243 Are you going to school? 41243 Ca n''t they fly? 41243 Can Don take care of the baby? 41243 Can I see a fan? 41243 Can I see the dog? 41243 Can one boy play as well as two? 41243 Can the boy catch the ball? 41243 Can the boy get the flag? 41243 Can the boy get the hat? 41243 Can the dog get the drum? 41243 Can the dog have the cap? 41243 Can the dog have the flag? 41243 Can the dog see the fan? 41243 Can the girl play ball? 41243 Can the little boy jump? 41243 Can you count them, Marian? 41243 Can you count them? 41243 Can you drink it? 41243 Can you drink like my dogs? 41243 Can you fly like me? 41243 Can you fly, little girl? 41243 Can you guess what it is? 41243 Can you hop to me, little boy? 41243 Can you make a cradle, little boy? 41243 Can you not see me? 41243 Can you play ball with Bennie? 41243 Can you read? 41243 Can you ride to that town? 41243 Can you run to me? 41243 Can you see me, little boy? 41243 Can you see the bird in the nest? 41243 Can you sing to me? 41243 Can you spin it, Grace? 41243 Can you tell what they find? 41243 Can you write? 41243 Did he go to get some flowers? 41243 Did you catch five fish for mother? 41243 Did you catch ten? 41243 Did you ever hear it? 41243 Do n''t you think it is pretty? 41243 Do n''t you, mother? 41243 Do you go to school? 41243 Do you go to school? 41243 Do you have a pretty bed like the doll? 41243 Do you know what a clock does? 41243 Do you know what the owl says? 41243 Do you know where he is going? 41243 Do you know where the flowers grow? 41243 Do you know why I think so? 41243 Do you know? 41243 Do you like bread and butter? 41243 Do you like it? 41243 Do you like milk, little rabbit? 41243 Do you like milk? 41243 Do you like the rain, Bennie? 41243 Do you like to look at pictures? 41243 Do you like to play? 41243 Do you like to read? 41243 Do you like to see the sun? 41243 Do you see all my sheep and lambs? 41243 Do you see it in the tree? 41243 Do you see it? 41243 Do you see our train? 41243 Do you see the dogs in the bed? 41243 Do you see the train she made? 41243 Do you see this pretty book? 41243 Does a bird make its nest on the ground? 41243 Does your dog go to school with you? 41243 Has he any little kittens? 41243 Have they no wings? 41243 Have you a baby at home? 41243 Have you a baby sister? 41243 Have you a flag at your school? 41243 Have you a little kitten? 41243 Have you any books? 41243 Have you ever seen a farm? 41243 His mother said to him:Where are you going, Ned?" |
41243 | How did Bopeep find her sheep? |
41243 | How do birds drink? |
41243 | How do dogs drink? |
41243 | How do you like to be a horse? |
41243 | How does Robert''s mother make butter? |
41243 | How far did you go? |
41243 | How many chickens can you count? |
41243 | How many chickens have you? |
41243 | How many do you see? |
41243 | How many dogs have you? |
41243 | How many fish did you catch, Jack? |
41243 | How many little girls do you know? |
41243 | How many rabbits do you see? |
41243 | How old are you? |
41243 | Is Marian at home? |
41243 | Is he going to school, mother? |
41243 | Is it a book? |
41243 | Is it a picture? |
41243 | Is it a red rose? |
41243 | Is it a yellow kitten? |
41243 | Is it far, far away? |
41243 | Is it going to Shut Eye Town? |
41243 | Is it good? |
41243 | Is it not a pretty doll? |
41243 | Is it something you have bought for me? |
41243 | Is not Jack a fine sailor boy? |
41243 | Is she not a pretty child? |
41243 | Is that all you do, Ned? |
41243 | Is the nest for me? |
41243 | May I take it for our baby? |
41243 | May I take your nest? |
41243 | May he go with me in my wagon? |
41243 | Now, is not that a pretty song? |
41243 | Oh, here he is, sleeping, do n''t you see?" |
41243 | REVIEW Where do pretty flowers grow? |
41243 | Shall I run and get them? |
41243 | Shall I sing it to you? |
41243 | Shut Eye Town sleep say Can you tell where the baby is going? |
41243 | Well, then, did you catch one fish for sister? |
41243 | What are trees good for, Robert? |
41243 | What bird can fly about at night? |
41243 | What can Bennie build with sand? |
41243 | What can birds do? |
41243 | What can fly but has no wings? |
41243 | What can it do? |
41243 | What can little kittens do? |
41243 | What can she see under the books? |
41243 | What can the mother cat see? |
41243 | What can they see? |
41243 | What can you make, little bird? |
41243 | What did you see? |
41243 | What do boys and girls do at school? |
41243 | What do they see now? |
41243 | What do you do at school? |
41243 | What do you do at school? |
41243 | What do you do on Christmas day? |
41243 | What do you think she saw? |
41243 | What does a farmer do? |
41243 | What does it say when it sings? |
41243 | What does the clock tell Marian? |
41243 | What does the pretty clock say? |
41243 | What has wings but can not fly? |
41243 | What have you found, Grace? |
41243 | What is Marian doing this morning? |
41243 | What is as white as snow? |
41243 | What is as white as snow? |
41243 | What is that, Grace? |
41243 | What is your doll''s name? |
41243 | What is your name, little bird? |
41243 | What is your name? |
41243 | What runs all day but has no feet? |
41243 | What shines bright and gives us light? |
41243 | What things are made of wood? |
41243 | When does the snow fall? |
41243 | When does the sun shine? |
41243 | Where are you going this fine day? |
41243 | Where can red roses be found? |
41243 | Where can the baby go? |
41243 | Where did you get this wagon, Ned? |
41243 | Where do fishes live? |
41243 | Where do the birds go in winter? |
41243 | Where do the birds go when winter comes?" |
41243 | Where do the fishes live? |
41243 | Where do the robins live? |
41243 | Where does the snow come from?" |
41243 | Where is Shut Eye Town, mother? |
41243 | Where is Shut Eye Town? |
41243 | Where is this train going? |
41243 | Where shall we go then, Ned? |
41243 | Where shall we go? |
41243 | Where will he go with Rose? |
41243 | Where will you sail your boat, Robert? |
41243 | Where will your horse go now? |
41243 | Where, where can the little boy be? |
41243 | Which do you like best? |
41243 | Which do you like best? |
41243 | Who has an umbrella? |
41243 | Who is going to Shut Eye Town? |
41243 | Why did Ned go to the brook? |
41243 | Why do they come home at night? |
41243 | Why do you love your home? |
41243 | Why do you run all the time, little brook? |
41243 | Why do you stand in the brook? |
41243 | Why do you walk in the grass? |
41243 | Why does she stand in the water? |
41243 | Why would you like to be a sailor? |
41243 | Will he go into school with you? |
41243 | Will it fly to the sun? |
41243 | Will you give it to me, mother? |
41243 | Will you go in? |
41243 | Will you go with him, Marian? |
41243 | Will you not come with me? |
41243 | Will you sing me a pretty song? |
41243 | [ Illustration] Is the nest for you? |
41243 | [ Illustration] REVIEW Do you live in the city? |
41243 | [ Illustration] REVIEW Where do you live, Grace? |
41243 | [ Illustration] Rose wagon horse fine that What little girl is this? |
41243 | [ Illustration] Well, Ned, how many fish did you catch? |
41243 | [ Illustration] any oh no her we How many birds are in this nest? |
41243 | [ Illustration] boat sail ship carry THE BOAT Will you make me a boat, father? |
41243 | [ Illustration] bought brought thought robin What do you think I have, Grace? |
41243 | [ Illustration] taking shall Where are you going, Marian? |
41243 | [ Illustration] walk talk far your Can our baby walk? |
41243 | [ Illustration] will song Will you sing to me, Grace? |
41243 | butter cream bread churn dish pans fresh turns MAKING BUTTER Do you know how I make butter? |
41243 | o''clock every everything Well, Ned, where are you going now? |
41243 | owl says who[ Illustration] What is this? |
41243 | read father gave write What do you do at school, Marian? |
41243 | story heard horn corn meadow LITTLE BOY BLUE"Oh, Ned,"said Rose one day,"what do you think I have? |
41243 | to our dog Jo? |
41243 | who? |
41243 | wind blow hear loud roar Do you hear the wind, Bennie? |
34251 | ; butHow many acres of garden?"'' |
34251 | '':--''Whose owe is this book?'' |
34251 | ''Ah Father O''Leary, have you heard the bad news?'' |
34251 | ''And how is he living?'' |
34251 | ''And"Oh sailor dear,"said she,"How came you here by me?" |
34251 | ''Are people buried there now?'' |
34251 | ''Are you going away now?'' |
34251 | ''Are you going to the fair to- day?'' |
34251 | ''Are you not going to lend me any money at all?'' |
34251 | ''Are you well protected in that coat?'' |
34251 | ''Bedad,''says he,''this sight is queer, My eyes it does bedizen-- O; What_ call_ have you marauding here, Or how daar you leave your prison-- O?'' |
34251 | ''Biddy, are the potatoes boiling?'' |
34251 | ''Can he read a Latin book?'' |
34251 | ''Did God always exist?'' |
34251 | ''Did Johnny give you any of his sugar- stick?'' |
34251 | ''Did Mick sell his cows to- day at the fair?'' |
34251 | ''Did Tom do your work as satisfactorily as Davy?'' |
34251 | ''Did he really walk that distance in a day?'' |
34251 | ''Did he treat you hospitably?'' |
34251 | ''Did last night''s storm injure your house?'' |
34251 | ''Did you ever see the devil With the wooden spade and shovel Digging praties for his supper And his tail cocked up?'' |
34251 | ''Did you meet your cousin James in the fair to- day?'' |
34251 | ''Did you see e''er a word of a black- avised( black- visaged) man travelling the road you came?'' |
34251 | ''Did you sell your turf- rick to Bill Fennessy?'' |
34251 | ''Do you know Bill Finnerty well?'' |
34251 | ''Do you know your Catechism?'' |
34251 | ''Do you like the new American bacon?'' |
34251 | ''Do you like your new house?'' |
34251 | ''Do you mean to say he is a thief?'' |
34251 | ''Do you really mean to drive that horse of William''s to pound?'' |
34251 | ''Do you think you can make that lock all right?'' |
34251 | ''Does your father keep on the old business still?'' |
34251 | ''Hallo, mother,''said he with a lofty air and a killing Cockney accent,''What''s yon long- tailed fellow in yon_ cawner_?'' |
34251 | ''Has he the old white horse now?'' |
34251 | ''Has n''t Dick great spunk to face that big fellow, twice his size?'' |
34251 | ''Have you got a shilling to spare for a friend?'' |
34251 | ''How are you to- day, James?'' |
34251 | ''How are your potato gardens going on this year?'' |
34251 | ''How could you expect Davy to do the work_ and him so very sick_?'' |
34251 | ''How could you see{ 34} me there_ and I to be in bed at the time_?'' |
34251 | ''How did the mare get that hurt?'' |
34251 | ''How did you come by all that money?'' |
34251 | ''How did you know him-- did you see his horns?'' |
34251 | ''How did you travel to town?'' |
34251 | ''How do you like your new horse?'' |
34251 | ''How is she[ the sick girl] coming on?'' |
34251 | ''How is your mother these times?'' |
34251 | ''How is your sick boy doing?'' |
34251 | ''How much shall I put into this cup for you?'' |
34251 | ''How was that, Lowry?'' |
34251 | ''I want the loan of £20 badly to help to stock my farm, but how am I to get it?'' |
34251 | ''In the land courts we never asked"How many acres of potatoes? |
34251 | ''Is Frank Magaveen there?'' |
34251 | ''Is Mr. O''Mahony good to his people?'' |
34251 | ''Is it cold outside doors?'' |
34251 | ''Is it raining, Kitty?'' |
34251 | ''Is the Son God?'' |
34251 | ''Is this razor sharp?'' |
34251 | ''Is your present farm as large as the one you left?'' |
34251 | ''Man,''says the pretty mermaid to Dick Fitzgerald, when he had captured her from the sea,''man will you eat me?'' |
34251 | ''No, but did you?'' |
34251 | ''Not a taste'':''Could you give me the least taste in life of a bit of soap?'' |
34251 | ''Oh yes certainly he does: how could he get on without it?'' |
34251 | ''Oh you young thief of the world, why did you do that?'' |
34251 | ''Old woman, old woman, old woman,''says I,''Where are you going up so high?'' |
34251 | ''Shall I do so and so?'' |
34251 | ''Sure{ 339} you wo n''t forget to call here on your way back?'' |
34251 | ''Well Hyland, are the bullocks sold?'' |
34251 | ''Well Jack how are you these times?'' |
34251 | ''Well James are you quite recovered now?'' |
34251 | ''Well my good fellow, what have you got in that cask?'' |
34251 | ''Well now Father O''Leary I want to ask what have you to say about purgatory?'' |
34251 | ''Well, Mrs. Lahy, how is she?'' |
34251 | ''Well, how did he get out of it?'' |
34251 | ''Well, my good fellow, what is your name please?'' |
34251 | ''Were you talking to Tim in town to- day?'' |
34251 | ''What about the toast?'' |
34251 | ''What are you doing there?'' |
34251 | ''What did he do to you?'' |
34251 | ''What did you get from him?'' |
34251 | ''What do you want, James?'' |
34251 | ''What else have you to do to- day?'' |
34251 | ''What hurry is on you?'' |
34251 | ''What in the world kept you out so long?'' |
34251 | ''What kind is he Charlie? |
34251 | ''What on earth is wrong with you?'' |
34251 | ''What would prevent you?'' |
34251 | ''What[ is it] that takes[ anything] from you though ye speak to her,''as much as to say,''what harm will it do you if you speak to her?'' |
34251 | ''When did you see your brother John?'' |
34251 | ''Where are you going now?'' |
34251 | ''Where are you going now_ aroo_?'' |
34251 | ''Where did he get the whiskey?'' |
34251 | ''Where do you keep all your money?'' |
34251 | ''Where is the tooth?'' |
34251 | ''Who is your landlord?'' |
34251 | ''Why are you shouting that way?'' |
34251 | ''Why but you speak your mind out?'' |
34251 | ''Why in the world did you lend him such a large sum of money?'' |
34251 | ''Why not?'' |
34251 | ''Why should you not?'' |
34251 | ''Why then I met him yesterday at the fair'':''Which do you like best, tea or coffee?'' |
34251 | ''Why then Pat is that you; and how is_ every rope''s length_ of you?'' |
34251 | ''Why then''tis the way your honour,''says Paddy, looking as innocent as a lamb,''I did n''t like to make so bould as I was n''t axed to show it?'' |
34251 | ''Will God reward the good and punish the wicked?'' |
34251 | ''Will I sing you a song?'' |
34251 | ''Would you know him if you saw him?'' |
34251 | ''You would n''t like to have a cup of tea, would you?'' |
34251 | ''_ Wor_ you at the fair-- did you see the wonder-- Did you see Moll Roe riding on the gander?'' |
34251 | ''what need of talking?'') |
34251 | ''what?'' |
34251 | ( Ulster), which is exactly the English of_ Cad à © sin ort_? |
34251 | (''Knocknagow'')''I''m wet to the skin'': reply:--''''Tis a good deed: why did you go out without your overcoat?'' |
34251 | (''Knocknagow''), which would stand in correct Irish_ An tusa atà ¡ ann_? |
34251 | (''Knocknagow''):''Is it reading you are?'' |
34251 | --instead of''Shall I?'') |
34251 | A Dublin boy asked me one day:--''Maybe you would n''t have e''er a penny that you''d give me, sir?'' |
34251 | A happy little family party round the farmer''s fire with a big jug on the table( a jug of what, do you think?) |
34251 | A similar tendency is in the sound of_ whine_, which in Munster is always made_ wheen_:''What''s that poor child_ wheening_ for?'' |
34251 | A usual inquiry is''How are your gardens going on?'' |
34251 | A very common inquiry when you meet a friend is:--''How are all your care?'' |
34251 | A weak sort of assent is often expressed in this way:--''Will you bring Nelly''s book to her when you are going home, Dan?'' |
34251 | Answer,''What would ail me not to know it?'' |
34251 | Ariel:--''Presently?'' |
34251 | Barney is bringing home a heavy load, and is lamenting that he did not bring his ass:--''''Tis a good deed: where was I coming without Bobby?'' |
34251 | Bill lends some money to Joe, who never returns it, and a friend says:--''''Tis a good deed Bill, why did you trust such a schemer?'' |
34251 | Dinneen), same sound and meaning: from_ snáth_, a thread: but how comes in_ gabh_? |
34251 | Havverick; a rudely built house, or an old ruined house hastily and roughly restored:--''How can people live in that old havverick?'' |
34251 | He gathered himself up as best he could; but before he had time to open his mouth the priest asked,''Did you feel that Jack?'' |
34251 | How are your new stock of books selling? |
34251 | How did he look? |
34251 | I asked a man one day:''Well, how is the young doctor going on in his new place?'' |
34251 | I asked an Irishman who had returned from America and settled down again here and did well:--''Why did you come back from America?'' |
34251 | If a person wishes to ask''What ails you?'' |
34251 | If you ask a person for a pin, he will inquire''Is it a brass pin or a writing_ pin_ you want?'' |
34251 | In Derry porridge or stirabout always takes the plural:''Have you dished_ them_ yet?'' |
34251 | In Ulster they say:--''When are you going?'' |
34251 | In Waterford and South Wexford the people often use such verbal forms as is seen in the following:--''Does your father grow wheat still?'' |
34251 | In either case the answer is,''Would a duck swim?'' |
34251 | In the South,''What hurry are you in?'' |
34251 | In the very old tale_ The Voyage of Maildune_, Maildune''s people ask,''Shall we speak to her[ the lady]?'' |
34251 | Is it ginger? |
34251 | Is it mustard? |
34251 | Is it pepper? |
34251 | It is correct in Irish, but it is often heard echoed in our English where it is incorrect:--And says he to James''where are you going now?'' |
34251 | It is used as a sort of emphatic expletive carrying accent or emphasis:--''Will you keep that farm?'' |
34251 | It was usual to hear such English expressions as--''Are you going to the duty?'' |
34251 | Jaw; impudent talk:_ jawing_; scolding, abusing:--''He looked in my face and he gave me some jaw, Saying"what brought you over from Erin- go- braw?"'' |
34251 | Just as he was about to fall to, the cock said--''Won''t you thank God?'' |
34251 | Just: often used as a final expletive-- more in{ 279} Ulster than elsewhere:--''Will you send anyone?'' |
34251 | Manus is a common Christian name among the Catholics round Derry, who are nearly all very poor: how could they be otherwise? |
34251 | Mrs. Donovan says to Bessy Morris:--''Is it yourself that''s_ in it_?'' |
34251 | Mrs. Slattery gets a harmless fall off the form she is sitting on, and is so frightened that she asks of the person who helps her up,''Am I killed?'' |
34251 | My car- driver asked me one time:--''Can an inspector of National Schools be broke, sir?'' |
34251 | Now which of these two was the vulgarian? |
34251 | Once during a high wind the ship''s captain neatly distinguished it when a frightened lady asked him:--''Is there any fear, sir?'' |
34251 | Opening the diningroom door he thrust in his head and called out in the hearing of all:--''Masther, are ye ready for the_ roasthers_?'' |
34251 | Our people often express this query by the single word''which?'' |
34251 | Paul''s Epistle to the_ Protestants_''? |
34251 | Rings; often used as follows:--''Did I sleep at all?'' |
34251 | Short_ e_ is always sounded before_ n_ and_ m_, and sometimes in other positions, like short_ i_:''How many arrived?'' |
34251 | So also you say to the hotel- keeper:--''Can I have breakfast please to- morrow morning at 7 o''clock?'' |
34251 | So also:--''How is poor Jack Fox to- day?'' |
34251 | Sometimes two prepositions are used where one would do:--''The dog got_ in under_ the bed:''''Where is James? |
34251 | Stoon; a fit, the worst of a fit: same as English_ stound_: a sting of pain:--''Well Bridget how is the toothache?'' |
34251 | Taste; a small bit or amount of anything:--''He has no taste of pride'':''Are n''t you ashamed of yourself?'' |
34251 | The bad fellow says''Will you have some lunch?'' |
34251 | The gauger was astounded:''Why the d---- did n''t you show me that before?'' |
34251 | The incorrect use of_ will_ in questions in the first person singular(''Will I light the fire ma''am?'' |
34251 | The recruit replied:--''Who are you, and what right have you to ask my name?'' |
34251 | Then what was I to do? |
34251 | They always use_ ye_ in the plural whenever possible: both as a nominative and as an objective:''Where are ye going to- day?'' |
34251 | This is merely a translation of the common Irish inquiry,_ Cionnos tà ¡ do chúram go là © ir_? |
34251 | This word is often used in Munster, Leinster, and Connaught, in the sense of to occupy, to be master of:''Who is in the Knockea farm?'' |
34251 | Three score and ten, Will we be there by candle light? |
34251 | Travel; used in Ulster for walking as distinguished from driving or riding:--''Did you drive to Derry?'' |
34251 | Well, you were at the dance yesterday-- who were there? |
34251 | When a person does not quite catch what another says, there is generally a query:--''eh?'' |
34251 | When a person shows himself very cute and clever another says to him''Who let you out?'' |
34251 | Whose owe? |
34251 | Why are you in such a blazing hurry? |
34251 | Why but? |
34251 | Why did you keep me waiting[ at night] so long at the door, Pat?'' |
34251 | Why for? |
34251 | Why then; used very much in the South to begin a sentence, especially a reply, much as_ indeed_ is used in English:--''When did you see John Dunn?'' |
34251 | Why; a sort of terminal expletive used in some of the Munster counties:--''Tom is a strong boy why'':''Are you going to Ennis why?'' |
34251 | _ Cid tracht_(''what talking?'' |
34251 | _ E''er_ and_ ne''er_ are in constant use in Munster:--''Have you e''er a penny to give me sir? |
34251 | _ Punch_ represents an Irish waiter with hand on dish- cover, asking:--''Will I sthrip ma''am?'' |
34251 | does he look like a fellow wanting money?'' |
34251 | from his position as_ bo- aire_ or chief)?'' |
34251 | he often{ 31} gives it the form of''What is on you?'' |
34251 | i.e., is it possible you did so? |
34251 | i.e.,''Have you a penny to give me?'' |
34251 | is translated with perfect correctness into the equally common Irish- English salute,''What way are you?'' |
34251 | meaning''How are you?'' |
34251 | meaning''How are your potato crops doing?'' |
34251 | or''Are you going to the bal?'' |
34251 | or''Tom, will you dance with my sister in the next round?'' |
34251 | or''what''s that you say?'' |
34251 | shall I do so now?] |
34251 | the mistress] at home Jenny?'' |
34251 | the same as''who owns? |
34251 | used in Ulster as an equivalent to''for what?'' |
34251 | { 187} Riddle me, riddle me right: What did I see last night? |
34251 | { 199}''How did poor Jack get that mark on his face?'' |
34251 | { 295} Mind; often used in this way:--''Will you write that letter to- day?'' |
34251 | { 298} Nicely: often used in Ireland as shown here:--''Well, how is your[ sick] mother to- day?'' |
34251 | { 325} Then ochone I''m going to Skellig: O Moreen, what will I do? |
34251 | { 81}_ See_ is very often used for_ saw_:--''Did you ever see a cluricaun Molly?'' |
15170 | And where are you going? |
15170 | And where did you get the gold? |
15170 | And yet who knows? 15170 And, friends, would you rather have insects in the hay? |
15170 | And, what is more, how can I teach your children gentleness and mercy when you contradict the very thing I teach? |
15170 | Are you joking? |
15170 | Are you ready? |
15170 | Brother Rabbit,Great Bear asked,"what do you think about this matter?" |
15170 | But how could you unwind the threads? |
15170 | Ca n''t you see that Billy has smashed the looking- glass? |
15170 | Can I go all alone to the front of the church and lay this small gift on the altar? |
15170 | Can anybody be happier? |
15170 | Can you lend us a saucepan? |
15170 | Did he know that he was looking in a looking- glass, or would n''t he speak to another bird? |
15170 | Did you ever see anything so funny? |
15170 | Did your horse kill this man''s horse? |
15170 | Do you mean to tell me that those animals have all been looking at themselves and finding fault with their own looks? |
15170 | Do you never think who made them and who taught them their songs of love? 15170 Do you think this is all the world?" |
15170 | Epaminondas, do n''t you know that''s no way to carry cake? 15170 Every day? |
15170 | Has my brother no ears? |
15170 | Has the horse not served you for many years? 15170 Have you come to stay?" |
15170 | How can I find out which princess ate the honey? |
15170 | How did you do it? |
15170 | How do I know that you have one penny in your purse? |
15170 | How do you do it? 15170 How far are you going?" |
15170 | How is this? |
15170 | I know it is late, but would you give an old man some breakfast? |
15170 | In a glass case, are you? |
15170 | Is he to have one? |
15170 | Is it as pretty as the Eagle Dance? |
15170 | Is it as pretty as the Turkey Dance? |
15170 | Is that the way a blackbird whistles? 15170 Is there nothing of which you are afraid?" |
15170 | Is there nothing that can hurt you? |
15170 | Mary,said John one bright spring day,"do n''t you think the blossoms are finer than usual this year?" |
15170 | Nottingham? 15170 Now, what do you make out of that?" |
15170 | Now,he asked,"where in the world did they get you? |
15170 | Oh, how can I? 15170 Oh, how did you find it?" |
15170 | They were a present from my dear uncle; why should I give them to you? |
15170 | Thought it was another dog, did n''t you? |
15170 | Well, and what do you think of me? |
15170 | Well, how goes it? |
15170 | Well, where did you come from? |
15170 | Well,he said,"how did_ you_ enjoy Teddy''s scare box?" |
15170 | What are you doing here, Gray Wolf? |
15170 | What are you doing here? |
15170 | What are you doing, good old woman? |
15170 | What are you seeking? |
15170 | What are you talking about? |
15170 | What are you thinking of? |
15170 | What can I do for my country in this small village? |
15170 | What did he say? |
15170 | What do I hear? |
15170 | What does the teacher know of such things? |
15170 | What have you brought, Epaminondas? |
15170 | What is it? |
15170 | What more can I do? |
15170 | What news, Brother Wolf? |
15170 | What shall be done? |
15170 | What will become of us? |
15170 | What will you call your doll, Hope? |
15170 | What will you give me if I find the twelfth man? |
15170 | When did I tell you to sing? |
15170 | When? |
15170 | Where are you going? |
15170 | Where did you get the silver? |
15170 | Where do you live? 15170 Where is it?" |
15170 | Where is my toad stool? |
15170 | Where? 15170 Which tree is it under?" |
15170 | Who are you? |
15170 | Who are you? |
15170 | Whose horse is this? |
15170 | Why did n''t you take the trouble to notice? |
15170 | Will it have ruffles on it like Sue''s? 15170 Will you have gold?" |
15170 | Will you have some of our diamonds? |
15170 | Will you not give a stranger lodging? |
15170 | Wo n''t you please go and put my gift on the altar, Little Brother? 15170 You slay them all, and why? |
15170 | ( Boy stands still, looking worried,) KING: Well, why do n''t you go? |
15170 | A week or two afterward, the mother said,"Oh, what do you think has happened? |
15170 | ALI(_ kissing the ground_): It is true, O caliph, such was the agreement, but who ever made a companion of a donkey before? |
15170 | After a while he asked,"Is the new dance as pretty as the Snake Dance?" |
15170 | Ah, which was the youngest? |
15170 | All in a moment the town is laid low, Block upon block lying scattered and free, What is there left of my town by the sea? |
15170 | And has he not saved your life? |
15170 | And how many buttons will you put on it? |
15170 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs hid by me in the juniper tree? |
15170 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
15170 | Are n''t they funny?" |
15170 | Are you ready? |
15170 | Are you ready? |
15170 | At last Monkey said to himself,"Why should I perish here with hunger? |
15170 | At last the mother bird asked,"Why do n''t you sing?" |
15170 | BLOCK CITY What are you able to build with your blocks? |
15170 | BOY: Why, who would be so foolish as to give me a gold piece just for running half a mile for a book? |
15170 | But how can I get it? |
15170 | But what sound was that? |
15170 | But what was this he saw in the clear water? |
15170 | But what would become of the geese while I am away? |
15170 | But where was Squeaky? |
15170 | By and by five little speckled eggs were in the nest, and the mother bird asked,"Is there anything in all the world as pretty as my eggs?" |
15170 | CALIPH: Tell me, good man, what brought you here? |
15170 | CALIPH: True enough, but who ever thought of saying that a pack saddle is a part of a load of wood? |
15170 | CALIPH: Well, my friend, did you do as I told you? |
15170 | CALIPH: Why did you refuse to shave this man''s companion? |
15170 | Ca n''t you see? |
15170 | Can you not talk?" |
15170 | Can you weave some very fine cloth?" |
15170 | Could it be the bell of justice? |
15170 | Did such a thing ever happen in a blackbird family before? |
15170 | Do I whistle that way?" |
15170 | Do n''t you hear? |
15170 | Do n''t you know how to carry butter? |
15170 | Do n''t you wish me to teach it to you?" |
15170 | Do you expect me to dance all night?" |
15170 | Elephant,"he said,"you are big and strong; will you have the kindness to do me a favor?" |
15170 | Epaminondas said to himself,"What was it mammy said? |
15170 | Great Bear asked again,"What do you think about it, Brother Rabbit? |
15170 | HARE: Are you speaking to me? |
15170 | HARE: How dare you speak to me? |
15170 | HARE: Well, are you ready? |
15170 | HARE: What does this mean? |
15170 | HARE: What is strange? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Are you afraid to run with me? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Certainly; do you see any one else around? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Fine crop, is n''t it? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Shall we run again? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: What are they doing now? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: What did they do? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Wife, have you dressed the children yet? |
15170 | HEDGEHOG: Will you call my wife and children names any more? |
15170 | Has any one done you a wrong? |
15170 | Have any of you seen it?" |
15170 | Have you lost your senses? |
15170 | He may stay with us, may he not, good wife?" |
15170 | He said,"Did one ever see so many birds? |
15170 | He went to work saying,"What difference does it make if I cut all the roots? |
15170 | How could you be so foolish?" |
15170 | How many do you suppose she worked? |
15170 | II HEDGEHOG: Wife, wife, did you hear what I said to the hare? |
15170 | Is he hailing some comrade as blithe as he? |
15170 | Is it good wood? |
15170 | Is it not enough that I should lower myself by touching you? |
15170 | KING: What''s the matter now? |
15170 | King Lion rose and asked,"What say you? |
15170 | Little Brother, clinging to Pedro in fear, cried,"What is it, Pedro, what is it?" |
15170 | Looking at him hard, his mammy said,"Epaminondas, what in the world is that dripping from your hat?" |
15170 | Making a bow, Brother Rabbit said,"0, mighty and wonderful Whale, will you do me a favor?" |
15170 | Now they are in the meadow; what will the boy say? |
15170 | One of the birds fell to singing, and the other bird said,"Who told you to sing?" |
15170 | Pedro ran across the street, and there under a small heap of snow, what do you think he found? |
15170 | People sometimes asked one another,"Do you suppose the bells ever did ring?" |
15170 | Shall we go to the place the ducks and geese have found, where there is plenty of water?" |
15170 | She pulled her little daughter down quickly and whispered,"Do you want the tithingman to come? |
15170 | So he went to him and said,"Donal, man, how did you get that beautiful violin?" |
15170 | Some one said to him one day,"How can you play so sweetly? |
15170 | Surely you can not mean what you say? |
15170 | The judge asked in surprise,"Are you dumb? |
15170 | The judge turned to the poor man and said,"My man, why did you not answer my questions?" |
15170 | The princess looked at him with wondering eyes and said:"Is it you, my prince? |
15170 | Then his mate asked,"What are you singing about?" |
15170 | Then how could you have told which one of us to believe? |
15170 | Then what do you suppose happened? |
15170 | There lay father''s Sunday coat; what warmer nest could she find for Mary Ellen than its big pocket? |
15170 | They would laugh and say,"Well, John, how much money did you get from the holes?" |
15170 | To whom do the bow and arrow belong?" |
15170 | Turning his head from side to side, he said,"What''s the use of looking so sad? |
15170 | WHO LOVES THE TREES BEST? |
15170 | WIFE: Did I hear? |
15170 | WIFE: Doing? |
15170 | WOODCUTTER: Ah, me, what shall I do? |
15170 | WOODCUTTER: How much will you charge? |
15170 | Was it friend or foe? |
15170 | Was not that your agreement? |
15170 | What are they not doing? |
15170 | What are you thinking of? |
15170 | What can you do? |
15170 | What do you know about a man''s business? |
15170 | What do you think was heard? |
15170 | What is it?" |
15170 | What is the matter? |
15170 | What makes you act so foolish? |
15170 | What shall I do? |
15170 | What should he do? |
15170 | What should they do if somebody wished to ring the bell before the new rope came? |
15170 | What would my courtiers say? |
15170 | When Wolf had told him the news, Monkey asked,"What have you been doing to- day?" |
15170 | When his mammy saw him, she said,"Epaminondas, what is that in your hands?" |
15170 | When his mammy saw him, she said,"What''s that, Epaminondas?" |
15170 | When she did, what do you suppose she saw? |
15170 | Where do you buy it?" |
15170 | Where is your companion? |
15170 | Which one is it?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who else will help?" |
15170 | Who ever heard of such a thing? |
15170 | Who knows but that you will find a greater work to do for your country right here?" |
15170 | Who knows?" |
15170 | Who loves the trees best? |
15170 | Who loves the trees best? |
15170 | Who loves the trees best? |
15170 | Who loves the trees best? |
15170 | Who thinks you stupid? |
15170 | Why are you in there?" |
15170 | Why should you be going to Nottingham? |
15170 | Will it have trimming on it? |
15170 | Will you be kind enough to start a merry tune, Mrs. Brown Hen?" |
15170 | Will you give me shelter for the night?" |
15170 | Will you have some of our silver?" |
15170 | Will you please get it for me? |
15170 | Would you dream all these dreams that are tiny and fleet? |
15170 | Would you like to buy it, good barber? |
15170 | You hear me, Epaminondas?" |
15170 | You hear me, Epaminondas?" |
15170 | You hear me, Epaminondas?" |
15170 | [ Illustration: A bird singing] WHO TOLD THE NEWS? |
15170 | [ Illustration: Ali and the woodcutter with the donkey] WOODCUTTER: Who ever heard of such a bargain? |
15170 | [ Illustration: The horseman speaks to Nahum]"Where is the blacksmith?" |
15170 | do n''t you see? |
15170 | he asked,"and why are you so sorrowful?" |
15170 | how can I?" |
15170 | little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark? |
15170 | little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? |
15170 | squeaked Squeaky;"why ca n''t we creep into the big room and see the tall Christmas tree? |
15170 | where?" |
15170 | you''re a sunflower? |
17594 | But_ what_ tired you? 17594 Did n''t I tell you_ to be_ here in a minute, and have not you_ remained_ where you were? |
17594 | Did you have a pleasant_ walk_ this morning? |
17594 | Do n''t you understand me? 17594 For what did you punish me so severely just now?" |
17594 | How did you get your_ walk_? |
17594 | How did you like the sermon, yesterday? |
17594 | How is that? 17594 If I will that he tarry_ till_( to the time) I come what is that to thee?" |
17594 | Oh no, master; how can that be? 17594 To what do you allude, you troublesome fellow, you? |
17594 | We walked it, to be sure; how did you think we got it? |
17594 | Well, did not I do what you told me? |
17594 | What did you ask me for then? |
17594 | What did you order me to do? |
17594 | What do you mean, you saucy boy? |
17594 | What have I done that is wrong? |
17594 | What is a_ neuter_ verb, master? |
17594 | Why did n''t you do so then? |
17594 | Yes, sir; and did not I do just what you told me to? |
17594 | You scoundrel,says he,"do you mean to disobey my orders and insult me?" |
17594 | [ 22] And what is a_ word_ with out_ sense_,pray tell us? |
17594 | _ If_ a pound of sugar cost ten cents, what will ten pounds cost? |
17594 | _ Stand_ by thyself, come not near me? |
17594 | --_Idem._ What is the difference whether a man_ thinks_ or not, if he produces no_ thoughts_? |
17594 | 1st, affirmatively,_ he writes_; 2d, negatively,_ he writes not_; 3d, interrogatively,_ does_ he write? |
17594 | An apple? |
17594 | And if it does not in_ fact_, how can we explain words to children, or to our own minds, so as to understand what is not true? |
17594 | And is not the object necessarily implied, whether expressed or not? |
17594 | And what is language without ideas? |
17594 | Are these only different forms of_ love_? |
17594 | Are they the_ property_ or in the_ possession_ of the boys? |
17594 | Are you then prepared to deny the principles for which we are contending? |
17594 | Ask for what end the heavenly bodies shine, Earth for whose use? |
17594 | Ask_ what_? |
17594 | Bracketed words, such as[ the? |
17594 | But did you never see the man dying of a consumption, when the pulmonary or breathing organs were nearly decayed? |
17594 | But does such a construction give the true meaning of the sentence? |
17594 | But does that expression_ indicate_ the act of_ going_? |
17594 | But how does he get his letters? |
17594 | But how does your mind arrive at that fact? |
17594 | But if the sun_ emits_ no_ rays_ of light, how shall it be known whether it shines or not? |
17594 | But is there no object after_ rains_? |
17594 | But suppose you talk to a person wholly unacquainted with these things, will he understand you? |
17594 | But what did he order them to do? |
17594 | But what does the desk do to_ support_ the book? |
17594 | But what if I should_ lie_(), intransitively? |
17594 | But what is that but saying, that with all his grammatical knowledge, he could not explain his own meaning? |
17594 | But who has corrected them? |
17594 | But who will dare deny that such effects do exist, and that they are produced by an efficient cause? |
17594 | But why are you not understood? |
17594 | Can a person_ sleep_, without procuring_ sleep_? |
17594 | Can grammarians follow their own rules? |
17594 | Can it_ sit_? |
17594 | Can we be surprised that people have not understood grammar? |
17594 | Comprenez vous? |
17594 | Davis''s straits, or Bass straits? |
17594 | Did the act of conquering pass_ transitively_ over from_ CÃ ¦ sar_ to Pompey? |
17594 | Did they_ eat_ and_ drink_,"take food and swallow liquors,"_ in_transitively; that is, without_ eating_ or_ drinking_ any thing? |
17594 | Do I command myself to_ let_ myself_ be_ quiet? |
17594 | Do the hats belong to the boys? |
17594 | Do you suppose fires never burn any thing belonging to neuter verb folks? |
17594 | Do you understand? |
17594 | Does he command the third person, the boy who_ has_ not the pencil? |
17594 | Does he make any motions or show any indications to write? |
17594 | Does he_ any thing_ to write? |
17594 | Does the child know it_ will_ burn? |
17594 | Does the stove perform this action? |
17594 | Does the_ door_ seat her? |
17594 | Does this mean that she is the agent, and the earthquake, evils, and thunder, are the objects which receive the_ effects_ which she produces? |
17594 | Does_ a_"point out"the garden, or"show how far its signification extends?" |
17594 | Every Frenchman is aroused: Oui, monsieur? |
17594 | From pride, from pride our very reas''ning springs; Account for moral as for nat''ral things: Why charge we heaven in those, in these acquit? |
17594 | Has he lost a knowledge of language? |
17594 | Has he the_ will_ or disposition to write? |
17594 | Have we not a right to expect, in return, that you will be equally honest to yourselves and the subject before us? |
17594 | Have you forgotten it?" |
17594 | Have you run nothing? |
17594 | How are they the wiser for your instruction? |
17594 | How can it be present time? |
17594 | How can the learner understand such a rule? |
17594 | How can you make a child discover any difference in the_ act of sleeping_, whether there is an object after it, or not? |
17594 | How could we describe it? |
17594 | How did the geese save the city? |
17594 | How did you procure it? |
17594 | How does he do it? |
17594 | How is the fact? |
17594 | How shall we account to him for this difference? |
17594 | How then should I have one charged to you? |
17594 | How then, can any word, in truth, or in thought, be known to_ qualify_ the action, as distinct from the object or agent? |
17594 | How will it apply? |
17594 | If he produced no_ actions_, how can it be known that he_ acted_ wisely or unwisely? |
17594 | If it did n''t, do you s''pose you''d need an umbrella to go out now into the storm? |
17594 | If that is false, whose fault is it? |
17594 | If the great end be human happiness, Then nature deviates-- and can man do less? |
17594 | If there is no action in sitting, why did she not remain as she was? |
17594 | If you had never seen a substance like it burn, why should you conclude this_ will_? |
17594 | If"words are the signs of ideas,"how, in the name of reason, can you give the sign and separate the sense? |
17594 | In the name of common sense, I ask, what can children learn by such instruction? |
17594 | Is he able--_knows_ he how to write? |
17594 | Is he right? |
17594 | Is it not the same? |
17594 | Is it possible in the nature of things? |
17594 | Is such the fact? |
17594 | Is the fight already commenced? |
17594 | Is there nothing rained? |
17594 | Is_ to obtain_ present tense? |
17594 | Knock_ what_? |
17594 | Let gravitation be removed, and how could the horse_ lay_ down? |
17594 | Now you ask, does that book perform any action in laying on the desk? |
17594 | Of the numberless attempts to simplify grammar, what has been the success? |
17594 | Of what avail is all such grammar teaching? |
17594 | On the system we are examining, what would they understand by such inactive expressions? |
17594 | Or who will descend into the still more dark and perplexing mazes of neuter verb grammars, and deny that matter has such a power to act? |
17594 | Seek_ what_? |
17594 | So far as the action is concerned, which it is the business of the verb to express, what is the difference whether"I_ run_, or_ run_ myself?" |
17594 | St. John''s church, or Episcopal church? |
17594 | Suppose the scholar should faint, would the teacher say to him you_ may_ go into the open air? |
17594 | That_ it_ may be opened? |
17594 | The log_ lies_ on you, does it not?" |
17594 | Then what relation is there of property or possession? |
17594 | To whom is the command given? |
17594 | To whom is this command given? |
17594 | Was he guilty of suicide? |
17594 | Was your sleep refreshing last night? |
17594 | We now say,"If I_ am_ there; am I a man, and_ receive_ such abuses? |
17594 | We talk of_ sun shine_ and moon shine, but if these bodies never produce_ effects_ how shall it be known whether such things are real? |
17594 | Were you tired on your return?" |
17594 | What agent, then, causes her_ passion_ or_ suffering_? |
17594 | What boots() thro space''s fartherest bourns to roam,_ If_ thou, O man, a stranger art at home?" |
17594 | What can you think or say of it? |
17594 | What could we say of it? |
17594 | What did he act? |
17594 | What did he_ act_? |
17594 | What did_ he_ do to_ lose_ the battle? |
17594 | What do the children do to_ inherit_ this property, of which they know nothing? |
17594 | What do you see? |
17594 | What does it connect? |
17594 | What does it mean? |
17594 | What does the expression signify? |
17594 | What good did his two or three years study of grammar do him? |
17594 | What has brought this object so vividly before you? |
17594 | What idea could the Pacha of Egypt form of ice, having never seen any till the french chemists succeeded in freezing water in his presence? |
17594 | What is my meaning? |
17594 | What is productive of no good? |
17594 | What is that? |
17594 | What is the agent of_ is_? |
17594 | What is the cause of this wonderful fact? |
17594 | What is the chaff to the wheat? |
17594 | What is the difference in the construction of language or the sense conveyed, between Hudson''_s_ river, and_ Hudson_ river? |
17594 | What is the possessive case? |
17594 | What is the possessive case? |
17594 | What is there in these examples, which"ascertain what_ particular_ thing or things are meant?" |
17594 | What matters it whether the action passes over to another object, or is confined within itself? |
17594 | What must be the conduct and condition of the family, if they have usurped the government of their head? |
17594 | What must that be? |
17594 | What nations? |
17594 | What occasion, then, is there to give these[ the?] |
17594 | What power is_ now_ operating on us to make us suffer or receive the action of being seated on our seats? |
17594 | What then could we reasonably expect to_ receive_ or_ find_? |
17594 | What transitive action do the windows perform to_ admit the light_; or the christians, to_ suffer insults_; or the miser, to_ leave his money_? |
17594 | What will children ever learn of language in this way? |
17594 | What would be impossible? |
17594 | What would the child know of arithmetic? |
17594 | What would they know about your words? |
17594 | What would they understand him to mean? |
17594 | What? |
17594 | Where is the difference in the action? |
17594 | Where now is the action? |
17594 | Wherein do modern"simplifiers"differ from Murray? |
17594 | Wherein would man be elevated above the brute? |
17594 | Which, think you, would be considered the most_ harmless_ expression? |
17594 | Which? |
17594 | Who can account for it? |
17594 | Who can discover any thing like_ transitive_ action-- a passing from the agent to the object-- in these cases? |
17594 | Who can suppose that this word"expresses no action,"when the very person incapable of it can not utter it, and no one else can speak it for him? |
17594 | Who can trace out the hidden cause; the"_ primum mobile_"of the Ptolmaic philosophy-- the secret spring of motion? |
17594 | Who does not know from the commonest experience, that the direct object of_ raining_ must follow as the necessary sequence? |
17594 | Who does not perceive the inconsistency and folly of such distinctions? |
17594 | Who does not see the absurdity? |
17594 | Who does not see, not only the bad, but also the false philosophy of such attempted distinctions? |
17594 | Who has not an acquaintance sufficiently extensive to know these things? |
17594 | Who is killed? |
17594 | Who shall teach children, in these days of light and improvement, the grovelling doctrine of neutrality, this relic of the peripatetic philosophy? |
17594 | Who will contend that the power of action is confined to the animal creation alone, and that inanimate matter can not act? |
17594 | Who would be content to adopt the astrology of the ancients, in preferance to astronomy as now taught, because the latter is more modern? |
17594 | Who would then say,"trees grow?" |
17594 | Who_ is_ printing it? |
17594 | Why did he fall? |
17594 | Why did it fall? |
17594 | Why do you say thus? |
17594 | Why have not the learned who have studied for many centuries, never seen and adopted them? |
17594 | Why then a Borgia, or a Cataline? |
17594 | Will parents send their children to school to learn falsehood? |
17594 | Will you give me an example of an_ intransitive_ verb? |
17594 | Will you parse_ if_? |
17594 | Will you parse_ is printed_? |
17594 | Will you parse_ supports_? |
17594 | Will you parse_ that_? |
17594 | Will you parse_ wrote_? |
17594 | Wish you to understand_ what_? |
17594 | Without it, what is life? |
17594 | Would he not correct them for disobeying his orders? |
17594 | ["] The resolution Lecture VIII object will be to ascertion[ ascertain]["] But wherefore_ sits he_ there? |
17594 | _ A lie?_ I hope you do not accuse_ me_ of lying. |
17594 | _ Be_ I a man, and_ receive_ such treatment? |
17594 | _ Birds fly._ We learned from our primers, that"The eagle''s_ flight_ Is out of sight,"How did the eagle succeed in producing a_ flight_? |
17594 | _ Burned what_ up? |
17594 | _ Can_ he write? |
17594 | _ Johnson''s Dictionary._***"_ I sleep._"Is sleep a neuter verb? |
17594 | _ Tragedy of Douglass._"But wherefore_ sits he_ there? |
17594 | _ Will_ he write? |
17594 | an_ active_ verb?" |
17594 | and did n''t you say you would_ be_ here?" |
17594 | causing it, in the present tense, to_ suffer_ or_ receive_ the action? |
17594 | conveyed nothing, moved nothing from one place to another? |
17594 | no change, no effect, nothing moved? |
17594 | no effect produced? |
17594 | or rather, are they not distinct, important, and original verbs, pure and perfect_ in_ and_ of_ themselves? |
17594 | or that they should_ change their state of being_ from play in the yard, to a state of being in their seats? |
17594 | or, what did it do to_ lose_ its capital, and_ suffer_ other injury? |
17594 | or_ writes_ he? |
17594 | or_ writes_ he? |
17594 | that it can never fail? |
17594 | that it is a dry, cold, and lifeless business? |
17594 | that they should stand still? |
17594 | the sun''s beams, or sun shine? |
17594 | what shall I say unto them? |
17594 | where? |
17594 | words a separate"part of speech,"since in character they do not differ from others in the language? |
15825 | And shall I see the Queen? |
15825 | And what do you think they were? 15825 And what is it?" |
15825 | And what then? |
15825 | And why, John, have you never taken your wife as well, to see the great sights? |
15825 | And will gunpowder grow like corn? |
15825 | Any thing else? |
15825 | Are you coming back again? |
15825 | But what did they mean? |
15825 | But what is magnetism? |
15825 | But what makes it pull iron? |
15825 | But, Alice, you will come to see me Christmas morning, will you not? |
15825 | But, John, you''ll take me, and go to see the King and Queen? |
15825 | But,said Lucy,"the earth is no more animate than they are; so how can it pull?" |
15825 | Catharine,said Gladwyn,"what troubles you to- day?" |
15825 | Did Sir Isaac Newton think of all these things, because he saw the apple fall? |
15825 | Did you get the cherries? |
15825 | Did you not know it? 15825 Do you never come up to London?" |
15825 | Do you not plant corn in the ground? |
15825 | Do you see that cake of ice with something black upon it, lads? |
15825 | Have n''t I watched every bit as you''ve used it? 15825 Have they?" |
15825 | He asked, would I betray him and see him put to death? |
15825 | How about this? |
15825 | How did it happen, Alice? 15825 How do you feel?" |
15825 | I am afraid it is too late to run, Hetty; where can I hide myself? |
15825 | I should be sorry to refuse you,replied the gentleman;"but why are you begging? |
15825 | If his Royal Highness does not give us notice of his coming, how can we entertain him in a proper manner? |
15825 | Is any thing the matter with it? |
15825 | Is this what you call growing? 15825 Is your mother living?" |
15825 | Is your name Hetty Marvin? |
15825 | Johnny,said his mamma, one day,"will you bring me an armful of wood?" |
15825 | Let us see what you have in this pile,I said, looking at the first little heap;"keys?" |
15825 | Let us see,said her father;"but first answer this question: What is an animate object?" |
15825 | May I hang my pods on you, so that they can ripen in the sun? |
15825 | Mother,said I,"what is that smoke yonder?" |
15825 | No? |
15825 | O sir,said the boy, as he looked upon the gentleman in amazement,"how can I thank you enough? |
15825 | Perhaps the man who ran past you was your cousin? |
15825 | Pray, what can you do? |
15825 | Taken a room, have you? 15825 The kingdom of what?" |
15825 | Then who or what made those mysterious noises? |
15825 | Then,said Lucy,"if this attraction is so powerful, why do we not stick to the ground?" |
15825 | Those were brave words, and I suppose he thanked you and ran down the road as fast as he could? |
15825 | Very good,said her father;"now, what is an inanimate object?" |
15825 | We are telling our names,said they;"did n''t you ask us to tell our names?" |
15825 | Well then, father,said Lucy,"if our power of motion can overcome the attraction, why can not we jump a mile high as well as a foot?" |
15825 | Well, Lucy, suppose there was not-- does it follow that it must come to the ground? |
15825 | Well, then,said Lucy;"did he find that the apple fell, because it was forced to fall?" |
15825 | Well, what else have you in that pile of things the magnet did not pull? |
15825 | What are these? |
15825 | What are you doing? |
15825 | What can it mean? 15825 What did you say makes it hold so hard?" |
15825 | What do you mean by growing? |
15825 | What do you mean? |
15825 | What do you wish, my little friend? |
15825 | What does it pull? |
15825 | What else have we in this pile? |
15825 | What is this from? |
15825 | What is to be done? |
15825 | What made it jump so? 15825 What made it jump so?" |
15825 | What next? |
15825 | What shall we do, Chitto? |
15825 | What troubles you to- day? |
15825 | What''s the matter? |
15825 | Where am I? |
15825 | Where are you going? |
15825 | Where did you pick that up, Jack? |
15825 | Where is the cottage? |
15825 | Which way did he go? |
15825 | Who in the world are you? |
15825 | Why do you plant it? |
15825 | Why, Alice, what is the matter? |
15825 | Why, Chitto,said I, in amazement,"where did you come from?" |
15825 | Why, certainly, Mrs. Reed; do you want to borrow my pocket- book? 15825 Why, you silly woman, do you think I should leave you behind, when I know you''re nearly crazed to go?" |
15825 | Why,said the bean,"do n''t you know what growing means? |
15825 | Would it be well to ask him to come to one of our homes? |
15825 | Would it, indeed? |
15825 | Would you betray me, Hetty, and see me put to death? 15825 You have seen as wonderful things as they did, have n''t you, father?" |
15825 | You want to know why this is called Indian Spring, Robbie? 15825 You''re glad, wife, that we''re going home?" |
15825 | _ Mother_,--O word that makes the home!--"_ Tell_ me, when will_ to- morrow_ come?" |
15825 | )[ 18] Should this lesson be read more slowly, or somewhat faster than conversation? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--In what manner should this lesson be read at the beginning-- quietly, or with much spirit? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--Should the second or third paragraph of the lesson be read the faster? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--Should this lesson be read with the same tone of voice as Lessons V. and VI.? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--What paragraphs should be read rapidly? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--What tone of voice should be used in reading the lesson? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--Which one of the stanzas should be read more slowly than the others? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--With what tone of voice should the prose part of the lesson be read? |
15825 | ***** Directions for Reading.--With what tone of voice should this lesson be read? |
15825 | ***** Language Lesson.--Which lines in each stanza end in similar sounds? |
15825 | ***** Language Lesson.--Why is the sea called_ cruel_ and its roar_ hungry?_ Give two examples of a similar use of words. |
15825 | -- Do n''t you think that winter''s Pleasanter than all? |
15825 | An officer saw the girl and called out to her in a loud voice--"Have you seen a man run this way?" |
15825 | And what do they mean by gray?" |
15825 | And what do you think they were? |
15825 | And what makes it stick? |
15825 | Are you sure you are not mistaken?" |
15825 | But it came again with the shades of night:"Will it be to- morrow when it is light?" |
15825 | But just then he heard a heavy foot- fall, and a great voice that sounded like a roar, saying,"Has he come? |
15825 | But then, how does all the bad air leave the towns and cities where men live, and get to the forests and meadows? |
15825 | But where does all this water come from? |
15825 | Butterflies? |
15825 | Butterflies? |
15825 | Can any thing pick the carbon and oxygen in it apart, and make them fit for us to use again? |
15825 | Can you tell me what it is?" |
15825 | Did not the Queen say she would give us dresses? |
15825 | Did you ever observe it in drops on the outside of a pitcher of cold water? |
15825 | Did you get him?" |
15825 | Do our feelings guide us when we speak slowly or rapidly?--when, we speak quietly or forcibly? |
15825 | Do you see?" |
15825 | Do you understand this?" |
15825 | Do you wish to walk? |
15825 | Do you wish to_ walk?_ No, I would rather_ ride_. |
15825 | Do you_ wish_ to walk? |
15825 | Do_ you_ wish to walk? |
15825 | Does the feeling require it? |
15825 | His father had trusted him to bring the camel, and what would he say if he should arrive at Suez without it? |
15825 | How are we to get rid of this bad air, and obtain fresh air, without being too cold? |
15825 | How could I raise it without planting?" |
15825 | How would the punctuation be changed? |
15825 | How would you read the third and fourth paragraphs?--the last paragraph? |
15825 | In the fifth paragraph on page 199, why are_ some_ and_ others_ emphatic? |
15825 | Is it you?" |
15825 | Is not this a wonderful arrangement? |
15825 | Is there a physician to be found near you?" |
15825 | Is there any thing else it does not pull?" |
15825 | Is your name Harry or John? |
15825 | John asked;"and you think I did well not to take some office in London?" |
15825 | Language Lesson.--What is the meaning of"Young America"? |
15825 | Larkin?" |
15825 | Larkin?" |
15825 | Little fairy snow- flakes Dancing in the flue; Old Mr. Santa Claus, What is keeping you? |
15825 | May I take it out?" |
15825 | Model.--"What is your name?" |
15825 | O, is he gone forever? |
15825 | O, why did you tell me which way you were going?" |
15825 | On page 77, beginning with the second stanza, is what Saint Peter says quiet and slow, or emphatic and somewhat rapid? |
15825 | One is tempted to ask:"Which is Holland-- the shores or the water?" |
15825 | Read words in dark type in the following sentences with more force than the other words:"Has he_ come?_ Did you_ get_ him?" |
15825 | Read words in dark type in the following sentences with more force than the other words:"Has he_ come?_ Did you_ get_ him?" |
15825 | Served him right, did n''t it?" |
15825 | Should the feelings expressed in the lesson be rendered in a quiet or loud tone? |
15825 | Should the rate of reading be slow or rapid? |
15825 | Should the slow and clear reading be kept up throughout pages 51 and 52, or should those pages be read more rapidly? |
15825 | The great, grand ship that bore him off, think you some tempest wrecked her?" |
15825 | The steeds rush on in plunging pride; But where are they the reins to guide? |
15825 | Then I took up two stones, one rusty red, the other black, and said:"What about these?" |
15825 | Was it loose?" |
15825 | Was it not a noble action?" |
15825 | Was it possible? |
15825 | Was not this a noble deed?" |
15825 | We must ask ourselves,"Which, words are of special importance to the meaning?" |
15825 | What becomes of the carbonic acid gas which the body throws off through our breath? |
15825 | What can it mean?" |
15825 | What did he say to you when, he came by?" |
15825 | What did your cousin say when he heard that you could not tell a lie to save his life?" |
15825 | What do they mean by blue? |
15825 | What effect has the repetition of the word_ now_, in the second and third lines? |
15825 | What effect will this change have upon the meaning? |
15825 | What if the rain comes down? |
15825 | What if the sky is clouded? |
15825 | What is it, my fine fellow, that you always say to your mamma when she asks you to do any thing for her? |
15825 | What is it? |
15825 | What is the effect of repeating the words_ to- day_ and_ to- morrow_, in the fourth and eighth lines of each stanza? |
15825 | What is the name of the mark which shows the omission of letters? |
15825 | What kind of an answer is expected to each question? |
15825 | What kind of birds are described in the lesson? |
15825 | What lines in the last two stanzas are to be joined in reading? |
15825 | What other lessons before this, have been read with the same tone of voice? |
15825 | What part of the year is described in each stanza? |
15825 | What then are these glittering drops of water? |
15825 | What tone of voice should be used in reading this lesson? |
15825 | What two lines in each stanza end with similar sounds? |
15825 | What voice was that which roused Ali just as he was falling asleep again? |
15825 | What was there wonderful about the apple falling?" |
15825 | What word in the last paragraph may be made very emphatic, even to the extent of using the_ calling tone_ of voice? |
15825 | What word is emphatic in the third paragraph? |
15825 | What word would be omitted? |
15825 | What''s that?" |
15825 | What, then, would be the youth''s fate, unless he soon overtook the child? |
15825 | When do we speak more rapidly-- in telling an exciting story, or in common conversation? |
15825 | When he recovered his senses, he fixed his eyes on his mother, and his first words were,"Did you get the medicine, mother?" |
15825 | Where am I?" |
15825 | Where do they come from? |
15825 | Where do you live? |
15825 | Where was he going to hide himself?" |
15825 | Which are the_ emphatic words_ in the following sentences? |
15825 | Which do they think represents the poet''s feelings? |
15825 | Which is the most_ emphatic word_ in the following sentence? |
15825 | Which method of reading the poem do the pupils prefer? |
15825 | Which words take the_ falling inflection_? |
15825 | While I am sad, though I''m a king, Beside the river Dee?" |
15825 | Why are you begging? |
15825 | Why did n''t you bring a piece home with you, father?" |
15825 | Why did they gather straws, stems, lint, feathers, and grasses? |
15825 | Why did you think there was iron in them?" |
15825 | [ 17] What effect has very strong_ emphasis_ upon_ inflection_? |
15825 | [ Illustration]"What shall it be about?" |
15825 | and do not these dresses look as if they had been given by a queen?" |
15825 | and have n''t I pretty near cried to see it go so slowly?" |
15825 | are you not here? |
15825 | asked mother, as she and I advanced to the side of the black steed upon which the little Sioux sat;"what are the Indians doing?" |
15825 | do I not always receive a kind word and a welcome smile from you?" |
15825 | do you ask? |
15825 | earth air fire water sleep rain rust fun fur stick What two words double their final letter before adding_ y_? |
15825 | exclaimed Hetty;"you frightened me-- where are you going?" |
15825 | like their mamma, only very much smaller? |
15825 | like their mamma, only very much smaller?" |
15825 | replied Alice;"how can you talk so? |
15825 | said he, in great surprise,"and what are you making such a noise about?" |
15825 | said her father,"that is the point: why must it fall?" |
15825 | she continued, as she took it in her hands and lifted the cover;"is it really for me?" |
15825 | that house at the end of the lane?" |
34595 | And as John fulfilled his course, he said,_ whom_ think ye that I am? |
34595 | Hvat er manna þat mér ókunnra, er mér hefir aukit erfit sinni? 34595 It may be asked if any damage will be done by this? |
34595 | Vegtamr ek heiti, sonr em ek Valtams, segðu mér or helju, ek mun or heimi: hveim eru bekkir baugum sánir, flet fagrlig flóð gulli? 34595 (?) 34595 ), and Classical stocks? 34595 ), and Classical stocks? 34595 ); the Bructeri Minores(? 34595 --| Beest? 34595 A lord off court, quhen he approchyt thar, Wnwisytly sperd, withoutyn prouision;Wallace, dar ye go fecht on our lioun?" |
34595 | A second question, however, arises out of it;_ viz._, whether_ every change of form constitute a case_? |
34595 | A.D. 321--Ravage Moesia( Inferior?) |
34595 | Aleyn answerde-- John wil_ ye_ swa? |
34595 | Aleyn spak first: Al heyle, Symond-- in fayth-- How fares thi fayre daughter and thi wyf? |
34595 | Aleyn welcome-- quod Symkyn-- be my lyf-- And John also-- how now, what do ye here? |
34595 | And this brings us to the following question-- with which of the two antecedents does the_ relative_ agree? |
34595 | And what other languages are so connected? |
34595 | And why should the reason be other than unexceptionable? |
34595 | Are the ideas of ordinalism in number, and of superlativeness in degree, allied? |
34595 | Are the notions, however,_ of a mistress_, and_ mistresses_, so allied? |
34595 | Are the words to be divided thus,_ ri- ver_,_ fe- ver_? |
34595 | Are there any reasons for believing that any older population preceded the Celtic? |
34595 | Are they genitive cases of a personal pronoun, as_ mei_ and_ tui_ are supposed to be in Latin, or are they possessive pronouns like_ meus_ and_ tuus_? |
34595 | As for ensample if a manne should aske Tindall himselfe: ys an heretike meete to translate Holy Scripture into Englishe? |
34595 | As this last objection impugns the evidence rather than the fact, the following question finds place:--{ 12} What were the Jutes of Germany? |
34595 | Brunswick? |
34595 | But and if the question be asked hym thus lo: is not an heretike mete to translate Holy Scripture into Englishe? |
34595 | But are these the proper objects of_ systematic_ teaching? |
34595 | But is this use of( ´) natural? |
34595 | But what is the case with the Middle Dutch? |
34595 | But,_ what_ cared_ I how fair the lady_ were,_ if she were not fair to her admirer_? |
34595 | But{ viii} what is it that is thus generally taught? |
34595 | Can a future be used for a present? |
34595 | Can a past tense, or combination, be used for a present? |
34595 | Chauci, from the Ems to the Weser; the greater(?) |
34595 | Did the Chauci represent a third, or were they part of the Frisian division? |
34595 | Did they belong to the same or to different confederations? |
34595 | Did they speak different languages?--different dialects of a common tongue!--or dialects absolutely identical? |
34595 | Does Buttmann''s Greek give so little to be unlearned as Grimm''s German? |
34595 | En zij werden allen verbaasd, zoodat zij onder elkander vraagden, zeggende: wat is dit? |
34595 | For instance, does the_ v_ in_ river_, and the_ v_ in_ fever_, belong to the first or the second syllable? |
34595 | Guest''s.--_Philological Transactions._"And he axed hem and seide,_ whom_ seien the people that I am? |
34595 | Has_-m_, or_-mes_, changed to ð, or has the second person superseded the first? |
34595 | Have any provincial dialects characteristics which are Jute rather than Angle? |
34595 | How does it make up for this? |
34595 | How essential that their grammars should exhibit nothing that may hereafter be unlearned? |
34595 | How far is there such a thing as gender in the English language? |
34595 | How is it that the accent has the effect of rendering such a syllable as the_ u_ in_ monumment_ dependent? |
34595 | How is this done? |
34595 | How shall we supply the almost total want of information respecting the first settlements? |
34595 | If not, which of the two grammatical systems is right?--the English and Latin on the one side, or the Greek on the other? |
34595 | If so, how is it explained? |
34595 | If so, what were their relations to the other German tribes? |
34595 | Ik} 2.? |
34595 | In literary treasures what other language can claim the superiority? |
34595 | In other words, why do we call_ him_ and_ them_{ 240} accusatives rather than datives or genitives? |
34595 | In what respect do they differ? |
34595 | Is it no sand? |
34595 | Is it not rather the substitution of one difficulty for another? |
34595 | Is it so really? |
34595 | Is it to be in the first person in order to agree with_ ego_, or in the_ third_ in order to agree with_ ille_? |
34595 | Is thar mar doggis at ye wald yeit haiff slayne? |
34595 | Is the Celtic Indo- European? |
34595 | Is the difference real? |
34595 | Is the grammatical science of even men like Mathiæ and Zump_ much_ above that of Wallis? |
34595 | Is the higher to be brought down to the level of the baser? |
34595 | Is there anything in English corresponding to the Greek patronymics? |
34595 | Is there reason to think that the uniformity was absolute? |
34595 | Is this form an oblique case or an adjective? |
34595 | Is this the dialect of the character, the dialect of the writer, or is it some conventional dialect appropriated to theatrical purposes? |
34595 | It is also the Moeso- Gothic that was spoken by the conquerors of ancient Rome; by the subjects of Hermanic, Alaric, Theodoric, Genseric(? |
34595 | It ought to run thus,--_what_ cared_ I how fair the lady_ might be,_ if she were not fair to her admirer_? |
34595 | Jesus takki na hem: mi mamma, hoeworko mi habi nanga joe? |
34595 | Jesus talk to him, me mamma how work me have with you? |
34595 | My woful child what flight_ maist thou to take_? |
34595 | Nevertheless, such expressions as_ whom do they say that it is?_ are common, especially in oblique questions. |
34595 | Now the second singular of the words in point is_ skal- t_,_ kan- t_,_ áih- t_,_ dar- t?__ mag- t_,_ man- t_, respectively.--Deutsche Grammatik, i. |
34595 | Now, what is the_-er_ in_ child- er_? |
34595 | Of the two elements of a compound word, which is the most important? |
34595 | On the other hand, to have written, What care I how fair she_ were_, If she were not kind as_ fair_? |
34595 | Or will it justify such expressions as_ I or they am in the wrong_? |
34595 | Or will it justify such expressions as_ either he or they is in the wrong_? |
34595 | Over what extent of language have we a plural? |
34595 | Quhat will ye mar? |
34595 | Samech Sigma? |
34595 | So narrow is the space to which your fame can be propagated, and even there how long will it remain?'' |
34595 | Specimens of the dialects in its older form-- Havelok[82] the Dane(? |
34595 | Syn to the King he raykyt in gret ire, And said on lowd;"Was this all your desyr, To wayr a Scot thus lychtly in to wayn? |
34595 | The Classical, Gothic, and Celtic(?) |
34595 | The Doric, Æolic, and Ionic for example, in the language of grammarians, are dialects of the Greek: to what does this assertion amount? |
34595 | The Gothic, Celtic(? |
34595 | The Sanskrit forms_ kataras_=_which of two persons?_ a comparative form;_ katamas_=_which of more than two persons?_ a superlative form. |
34595 | The Sanskrit forms_ kataras_=_which of two persons?_ a comparative form;_ katamas_=_which of more than two persons?_ a superlative form. |
34595 | The first is the question, How far one of two languages influenced the other? |
34595 | The participial form in_-and_; as_ goand_,_ slepand_,--Lincolnshire(? |
34595 | The philological denomination of the class which contains the Gothic, Celtic(? |
34595 | The prepositional construction_ give it_ to_ him_,--_to whom shall I give it?_ is unnecessary. |
34595 | The question presents itself,--to what extent have we numbers in English? |
34595 | The second asks, How far one of two languages had the opportunity of influencing the other? |
34595 | The sentence,_ what_ care_ I how fair the lady_ be,_ if she be not fair to her admirer_? |
34595 | The soft- flowing outline that steals from the_ eye_, Who threw o''er the surface? |
34595 | The ultimate known origin of many common words sometimes goes back to a great date, and points to extinct languages--_ Ancient Nubian(?)_--Barbarous. |
34595 | The_ Jutes_.--Were any of the German immigrants_ Jutes_? |
34595 | Thei answereden and seiden, Jon Baptist-- and he seide to hem, But_ whom_ seien ye that I am?" |
34595 | This leads to an interesting question,_ viz._, what notions are sufficiently allied to be expressed_ by_ the same form, and_ in_ the same case? |
34595 | This leads to the argument in its most general form-- should a language be named from the colony, or from the mother- country? |
34595 | Thus the full answer to_ whom do you say that they seek?_ is,_ I say that they seek him_. |
34595 | To have written, What care I how fair she_ is_ If she be not fair to me? |
34595 | To say_ give it to him_,_ to them_, is unnecessary and pedantic: neither do I object to the expression,_ whom shall I give it_? |
34595 | To the question,_ who is_ this? |
34595 | To these may be added, 1. the adverb_ why_, originally the ablative form_ hvi_(_ quo modo? |
34595 | Was one polity common to all? |
34595 | Were the Saxons one division of the German population, whilst the Angles were another? |
34595 | Were the civilizations similar? |
34595 | What are parts coming under the second of these conditions? |
34595 | What are the chief parts coming under the first of these conditions? |
34595 | What determines whether the two antecedents shall be in the same or in different propositions? |
34595 | What do we find as we ascend? |
34595 | What does this prove? |
34595 | What explanation have we to give of the alliance between Jutes, Angles, and Saxon, which preceded the invasions of England? |
34595 | What follows? |
34595 | What is taught? |
34595 | What is the nature of that affinity which connects languages so different as the Gothic, Celtic(? |
34595 | What is the next best vehicle for philological philosophy to our mother- tongue, whatever that mother- tongue maybe? |
34595 | What is the rule in English? |
34595 | What then are the powers of the numerous letters in alphabets like those of Arabia and Armenia? |
34595 | What were the Saxons of Germany-- what the Angles? |
34595 | What were the_ Langobardi_ with whom the Angles were connected by Tacitus? |
34595 | What were the_ Langobardi_, with whom the Angles were connected by Tacitus? |
34595 | What were the_ Suevi_, with whom the Angles were connected by Tacitus? |
34595 | What were the_ Werini_, with whom the Angles were connected in the_ Leges Anglorum et Werinorum_? |
34595 | What wol ye done while it is in hande? |
34595 | What-- whilke way is he goon? |
34595 | What{ 151} is the German_ ch_, and Irish_ gh_? |
34595 | Where are such remains to be sought? |
34595 | Whether feith schall_ mowe to save_ him? |
34595 | Why do we in spelling such a syllable double the consonant? |
34595 | Why ne hadde thou put the capel in the lathe? |
34595 | Why should it not be treated as such? |
34595 | Why then has their position in our inquiries been hitherto so subordinate to that of the Saxons? |
34595 | Why, however, is it that the_ u_ runs no chance of being pronounced, and the word of being sounded_ prorogwé_? |
34595 | Will any process reconcile this conflict of difficulties? |
34595 | Will this principle justify such expressions as_ either they or we is in the wrong_? |
34595 | With which does the verb agree? |
34595 | Would it be wrong to call it_ Sardinian_ when every Sarde_ could_ read them? |
34595 | [ Samekh][ Sigma]? |
34595 | [ Shin][ San] afterwards[ Sigma]? |
34595 | _ Ayn_ Either a vowel or--? |
34595 | _ Direct._--Who is he? |
34595 | _ Etymological evidence._--Assuming two_ powers_ for the words_ min_ and_ þin_, one genitive, and one adjectival, which is the original one? |
34595 | _ It is I, your master, who command you._ Query? |
34595 | _ Lussurioso._--What? |
34595 | _ Meaning of the note of interrogation(?) |
34595 | _ Oblique._--Who do you say that he is? |
34595 | _ Swear by your sword-- swear on your sword._--Which of these two expressions is right? |
34595 | _ The Chauci._--Connected with the Frisii.--Falling into two divisions-- the lesser(?) |
34595 | _ The determination of cases._--How do we determine cases? |
34595 | _ The wages of sin is death._ Query? |
34595 | _ What should I do?_ when asked in extreme perplexity, means that nothing can well be done. |
34595 | _ Whom do they say that it is?_ 428- 430 CHAPTER XI. |
34595 | _ a._ Were there Jutes in England? |
34595 | did you or did_ I_? |
34595 | is Apollo to be drest out in a coat and waistcoat? |
34595 | is the question,--over what extent of our language have we numbers? |
34595 | nor buttermilk? |
34595 | or Angle rather than Saxon? |
34595 | or thus,_ riv- er_,_ fev- er_? |
34595 | or were the Angles a section of the Saxons, so that the latter was a generic term, including the former? |
34595 | or with the pronoun which requires a first or second? |
34595 | quâ viâ?_). |
34595 | rather pure ætherial stream, Whose fountain who(_ no one_) shall tell? |
34595 | so that, thinking of the other, the alternative is,''shall he be restrained, or shall he be left to his own will?'' |
34595 | that the Smiths and Johnstons{ 72} are English in origin, and that O''Connors and O''Neils are Irish? |
34595 | three- and- twenty years in law? |
34595 | with the substantive which requires a third person? |
34595 | with_ I_ or with_ master_? |
34595 | would_ it is I, your master, who commands you_, be correct? |
34595 | would_ the wages of sin_ are_ death_ be correct? |
34595 | zijt gij gekomen, om ons to verderven? |
34595 | { 38}_ The Same, in English._ That is the third determination and concession of King Charles, that of all men each one possess his own goods( house?) |
34595 | § Different from the question, to what degree have we numbers? |
34595 | þik vil ek fregna, unz alkunna, vil ek enn vita: hverjar''ro þær meyjar, er at muni gráta ok á himin verpa hálsa skautum? |
34595 | þik vil ek fregna, unz alkunna, vil ek enn vita: hverr mun Baldri at bana verða, ok Oðins son aldri ræna? |
34595 | þik vil ek fregna, unz alkunna, vil ek enn vita: hverr mun heipt Heði hefnt of vinna eða Baldrs bana á bál vega? |
30559 | And be good to her, do you hear? 30559 And how if I refuse to shoot on such a wager?" |
30559 | And sayest thou so, my dear? |
30559 | And what is thy other reason? |
30559 | Are you in your senses? 30559 But how if this path should lead us out of the way?" |
30559 | But what is the song? |
30559 | Do you know me, my son? |
30559 | Do you not know me, my son? |
30559 | For whom is this, Miss Jemima? |
30559 | Have you completed all the necessary preparations incident to Miss Sedley''s departure? |
30559 | Here he comes, holds in mouth this time--What may the thing be? 30559 How can a lion come roaring at you, you silly thing? |
30559 | How could you let her do so? |
30559 | Hurt me? 30559 If I should leave the land of my fathers, whither shall I fly? |
30559 | Is n''t that grand? |
30559 | Look, doth it not go along by the wayside? |
30559 | More rabbits? 30559 Thanatopsis? |
30559 | Tom,she said timidly, when they were out of doors,"how much money did you give for your rabbits?" |
30559 | Well, do n''t you love dogs better? |
30559 | What for? |
30559 | What is it? |
30559 | What is that? |
30559 | When you came away from home at the end of the vacation,said Mrs. Creakle, after a pause,"were they all well?" |
30559 | You will select, instead of all this destructive array, a small box of wood, which you will term a ballot- box, and from what shall issue-- what? 30559 You''ve been naughty to her, I doubt, Tom?" |
30559 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
30559 | After another pause,"Was your mamma well?" |
30559 | And Aunt Eliza-- is there any keeping her out of mind? |
30559 | And did n''t those we loved best look oftenest? |
30559 | And for what reason? |
30559 | And here''s hooks; see here!--I say, wo n''t we go and fish to- morrow down by the Round Pool? |
30559 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
30559 | And when they grow up, I wonder whom they''ll have to thank for knowing nothing-- who, indeed, but their father? |
30559 | And will you give me leave? |
30559 | And you shall catch your own fish, Maggie, and put the worms on, and everything-- won''t it be fun?" |
30559 | Answer these questions by reading from the poem: Where was the child? |
30559 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
30559 | Are n''t I a good brother to you?" |
30559 | Are they of similar length? |
30559 | As a poet, how does he compare with Longfellow? |
30559 | But what do you care for that? |
30559 | But when he had been called in to tea, his father said,"Why, where''s the little wench?" |
30559 | But when shall we be stronger? |
30559 | But, Mary, what do you think is most like it?" |
30559 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
30559 | Can we imagine a hydrant or a water faucet talking as this town pump did? |
30559 | Champagne? |
30559 | Clear away? |
30559 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
30559 | Dark? |
30559 | Did Dick whisper to me as we went in,"Get next to me, old fellow"? |
30559 | Did n''t I give Dick an awful pinch in the leg, when I lay_ perdu_ under the sofa in another one of those tremendous games? |
30559 | Did n''t I know little Floy in that pea- green silk, with my hands clasped round her waist and my eyes blinded-- ever so fast? |
30559 | Did n''t he make faces at me, till he caught a warning from Aunt Polly''s uplifted finger? |
30559 | Did n''t it hurt you?" |
30559 | Did we pass by the beautiful things in nature without seeing them? |
30559 | Did you ever see a town pump? |
30559 | Do n''t they always? |
30559 | Do the lines rime? |
30559 | Do you agree with all the statements made by the author? |
30559 | Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? |
30559 | Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? |
30559 | Do you not hear it crying yet to God? |
30559 | Do you think there is much music in them? |
30559 | Does he travel by easy stages from bush to bush and from wood to wood? |
30559 | Doth he not claim a broader span For the soul''s love of home than this? |
30559 | Doth not the yearning spirit scorn In such scant borders to be spanned? |
30559 | EXPRESSION: In what does the humor of this selection consist? |
30559 | EXPRESSION: What holidays are named in this selection? |
30559 | EXPRESSION: What peculiarities do you observe in Bunyan''s style of writing? |
30559 | EXPRESSION: Which of these poems do you like best? |
30559 | EXPRESSION: Which one of these three poems requires to be read with most spirit and enthusiasm? |
30559 | For what was it used? |
30559 | Had n''t she wanted to give him the money, and said how very sorry she was? |
30559 | Had we been blind then? |
30559 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
30559 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
30559 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
30559 | Have you ever listened to the song of a bird and tried to attune your own thoughts to its unrestrained and untaught melodies? |
30559 | Have you ever noticed the delicious odor which comes from beds of mignonette, mint, or sweet alyssum? |
30559 | Have you not observed that different flowers open and close at different times? |
30559 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill; Did this in Cæsar seem ambitious? |
30559 | He return the umbrella? |
30559 | How could my father sell that which the Great Spirit sent me into the world to live upon? |
30559 | How does it differ from any or all of these? |
30559 | I ask, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
30559 | I say, DO YOU HEAR IT? |
30559 | I say, DO YOU HEAR THE RAIN? |
30559 | IN MEMORY OF GEORGE WASHINGTON[52] How, my fellow- citizens, shall I single to your grateful hearts his preëminent worth? |
30559 | If Hawthorne were writing to- day, would he represent the town pump as the"chief person of the municipality"? |
30559 | If a man ca n''t speak honestly of cousinhood, to the third or fourth degree, what_ can_ he speak honestly of? |
30559 | If there came a lion roaring at me, I think you''d fight him-- wouldn''t you, Tom?" |
30559 | If this enormous sum were expended in this manner, know you what would happen? |
30559 | In the cities and larger towns, what has taken its place? |
30559 | In what respect do the two accounts differ? |
30559 | In what respect does the second story differ most strongly from the first? |
30559 | In what respects does it differ from other forms of verse? |
30559 | In what respects does this legend differ from some other accounts of his boyhood? |
30559 | In what respects is the style of the third story different from that of either of the others? |
30559 | In what state is the Chattahoochee River? |
30559 | Is it a true poem? |
30559 | Is it alone where freedom is, Where God is God, and man is man? |
30559 | Is it marbles or cobnuts?" |
30559 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
30559 | Is it where he by chance is born? |
30559 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
30559 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
30559 | Jowler, did your worship ever have the gout? |
30559 | NATIONAL RETRIBUTION[54] Do you know how empires find their end? |
30559 | NOTE: Which of the various specimens of humor here presented do you enjoy most? |
30559 | Need n''t I wear them, then? |
30559 | Now, did you ever? |
30559 | O manly, majestic Rome, with thy sevenfold mural crown all broken at thy feet, why art thou here? |
30559 | Of the three prose extracts, which is the most interesting to you? |
30559 | Only a little glimpse of feathers and a half- musical note or two-- why all this ado? |
30559 | Prince John colored as he put the question,"What is thy name, yeoman?" |
30559 | Remembering your definition of poetry( page 138), what is the real poetical value of this delightful composition? |
30559 | Shall I descend? |
30559 | Shall I fly to the east? |
30559 | Shall I go to the south, and dwell among the graves of the Pequots? |
30559 | Shall I speak of his warlike achievements, all springing from obedience to his country''s will-- all directed to his country''s good? |
30559 | Shall I wander to the west? |
30559 | Shall she be slandered for such an act? |
30559 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
30559 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
30559 | Shall we try argument? |
30559 | Smell you the buckwheat, where the bees were lately buzzing?) |
30559 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
30559 | THE CHARIOT RACE[33] Orestes? |
30559 | THE FATHERLAND[43] Where is the true man''s fatherland? |
30559 | THE OWL CRITIC[37]"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
30559 | Take cold? |
30559 | That is it, is it? |
30559 | The Soldier''s Dream_ Thomas Campbell_ 75 V. How Sleep the Brave? |
30559 | Then said Hopeful,"Where are we now?" |
30559 | There''s yet Another child to save? |
30559 | V. HOME[44] But where to find that happiest spot below, Who can direct when all pretend to know? |
30559 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
30559 | Was it a high old time, or did we only pretend that it was? |
30559 | Was there coffee, and were there olives? |
30559 | Was there punch, or any strong liquors? |
30559 | Was this ambition? |
30559 | Were our eyes and ears so dull? |
30559 | Were there oranges? |
30559 | What can you say about the meter? |
30559 | What did another say when the dog came up? |
30559 | What did he say when the dog went back? |
30559 | What did one bystander say? |
30559 | What did she do? |
30559 | What did some one cry out? |
30559 | What did the dog do? |
30559 | What do you think is the reason of this? |
30559 | What effect is produced by the use of these unusual forms? |
30559 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
30559 | What holidays do you know about that were not present at this dinner? |
30559 | What ignorance of pain? |
30559 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
30559 | What is it that makes our earth a fit abode for us who live upon it? |
30559 | What is poetry? |
30559 | What is said in one that is not said in the other? |
30559 | What is the leading sentiment inculcated by each? |
30559 | What is the title?" |
30559 | What is your opinion of him? |
30559 | What laid thee low? |
30559 | What love of thine own kind? |
30559 | What matter how the night behaved? |
30559 | What matter how the north wind raved? |
30559 | What mental pictures are called up by reading the fourth poem? |
30559 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
30559 | What other pleasant ideas of life are expressed? |
30559 | What peculiarities do you notice in the style of the language employed? |
30559 | What peculiarities do you observe in it? |
30559 | What sentiment is emphasized by all of them? |
30559 | What shall I do?" |
30559 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
30559 | What should you do, Tom?" |
30559 | What terms shall we find, which have not been already exhausted? |
30559 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
30559 | What traits of character are alluded to in the first poem? |
30559 | What use was anything, if Tom did n''t love her? |
30559 | What were you to do? |
30559 | What would they have? |
30559 | What''s the use of talking?" |
30559 | What, off again? |
30559 | When was it built? |
30559 | Where do you think the money''s to come from? |
30559 | Where now were the senators of Rome, her matrons, and her virgins? |
30559 | Where shall I begin in opening to your view a character throughout sublime? |
30559 | Where were the Christian martyrs that died with prayers upon their lips, amid the jeers and imprecations of their fellow men? |
30559 | Where were the barbarian gladiators, brought forth to the festival of blood, and"butchered to make a Roman holiday"? |
30559 | Wherefore art thou so fallen? |
30559 | Which calls up the most pleasing mental pictures? |
30559 | Which do you like best? |
30559 | Which is the best simply as a description? |
30559 | Which is the most humorous? |
30559 | Which is the most musical? |
30559 | Which is the most musical? |
30559 | Which is the most pathetic? |
30559 | Which is the most pathetic? |
30559 | Which of the three stories is the most interesting to you? |
30559 | Which of these two stories do you prefer? |
30559 | Which passages require the most animation in reading? |
30559 | Which poem appeals the most strongly to your own emotions? |
30559 | Which sounds the best when read aloud? |
30559 | Who are the persons pictured to your imagination after reading it? |
30559 | Who can blame them? |
30559 | Who else? |
30559 | Who is there that has forgotten the vales of Brandywine, the fields of Germantown, or the plains of Monmouth? |
30559 | Who knoweth the power of thine anger? |
30559 | Who next? |
30559 | Who saw them come? |
30559 | Who saw them depart? |
30559 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand? |
30559 | Why did not the bystanders help? |
30559 | Why stand we here idle? |
30559 | Why? |
30559 | Why? |
30559 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
30559 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
30559 | Will you stay awhile? |
30559 | Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted? |
30559 | You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you, then, to mourn for him? |
30559 | _ Ant._ Will you be patient? |
30559 | _ Ant._ You will compel me, then, to read the will? |
30559 | and Mrs. Tulliver, almost at the same moment, said,"Where''s your little sister?" |
30559 | are you there?" |
30559 | by whom? |
30559 | do you love cats?" |
30559 | half asleep? |
30559 | has n''t she been playing with you all this while?" |
30559 | or has that compact little body force and courage to brave the night and the upper air, and so achieve leagues at one pull? |
30559 | start so soon? |
30559 | the fifth? |
30559 | the second? |
30559 | thou who trod the people under thee, bridged the Hellespont with ships, and poured thy temple- wasting millions on the western world? |
30559 | weep you when you but behold Our Cæsar''s vesture wounded? |
30559 | what did anybody care for what Dick said? |
30559 | what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band, That knits me to thy rugged strand? |
30559 | with Browning? |
30559 | with Walt Whitman? |
30559 | with Whittier? |
10073 | Did you see that ardent bumpkin embracing his sweetheart? |
10073 | Do you,asked the barber,"wish your hair____ or____?" |
10073 | If Caesar hide himself, shall they not whisper''Lo, Caesar is____''? |
10073 | If you prick us, do we not bleed? 10073 What is the gross sum that I owe thee?" |
10073 | What''s Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba That he should____ for her? |
10073 | What''s in a[n]____? 10073 ( 2) Of what family or families was it born? 10073 ( Shakespeare:_ A Midsummer Night''s Dream_) Is it so_ nominated_ in the bond? 10073 < Can, may.> Can I stay at home this afternoon, papa? 10073 < Cold, frigid.> Which is the more popular word? 10073 < Compulsion, obligation.> Who does not feel within him a compulsion to help the weak? 10073 < What Words to Learn First> What, then, is your first task? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?> First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?> First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?> In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or a vocabulary for writing? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?> In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or a vocabulary for writing? 10073 A blacksmith is beating iron; does the iron grow cold or frigid? 10073 A facile, readily used one? 10073 A prospective customer walks into your store; does he buy the goods you show him? 10073 A single standard for the sexes-- how it can be attained( or approximated) Should the divorce laws be made more stringent? 10073 Ai n''t it fierce the way they swipe umbrellas? 10073 An accurate one? 10073 And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? 10073 Another question: Which word is the more inclusive in meaning? 10073 Are its detailed applications effective? 10073 Are substantial, home- keeping girls or girls rather fast and frivolous the more likely to obtain good husbands? 10073 Are the courts equally just to labor and capital? 10073 Are the figures appropriate to the subject matter? 10073 Are the people being spoken of favorably, unfavorably, or neutrally? 10073 Are there enough of them? 10073 Are these figures effective? 10073 Are you not very____ of your family connections? 10073 Are you to sulk, to withhold yourself from further exertion on the plea of a vocabulary- builder''s eight- hour day? 10073 Because you have studied the issues of the campaign and reached a well- reasoned conclusion how the general interests may be served? 10073 Betty, will you____ this cucumber? 10073 But are not such ways arbitrary, haphazard? 10073 But do we use them with precise and masterly understanding? 10073 But does that man kiss his mother, or salute the flag, or pay much heed to either? 10073 But how shall we____ the cause of this disease? 10073 But what shall we say of legerdemain( light, or sleight, of hand), maintain, coup de main, and the like? 10073 But, assuming that you have done your part, what have you gained? 10073 Can the other member be substituted without affecting the meaning of the sentence? 10073 Can you add to the list? 10073 Can you beat it? 10073 Can you bring to mind other words that embody it? 10073 Can you express the following ideas in other words without sacrifice of emotional suggestion? 10073 Can you properly contrast mortal with immortal existence? 10073 Can you substitute_ altitude_? 10073 Can you think of a proof that is surer? 10073 Can you think of circumstances in which a young girl might be so placed that the favorable synonyms might be applied to her? 10073 Can you trace a connection between the_ pastor_ of a church and a_ pastoral_ life? 10073 Can you, when the occasion comes, use them?-use them promptly and well? 10073 Can you____ the reason for your absence? 10073 Canst thou deny it? 10073 Could he have effected this purpose so well had he employed more figures of speech? 10073 Could he with reason murmur at his case Himself sole author of his own_ disgrace_? 10073 Could we say that a rich miser lives in affluence? 10073 Could_ height_ be substituted? 10073 Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly? 10073 Did the heretic____? 10073 Did you____ only seven thousand dollars for your house? 10073 Do any of the terms fail to make sense at all? 10073 Do the changes in substance make these changes in tone desirable? 10073 Do these add force, definiteness to the picture Shakespeare is drawing at that moment? 10073 Do you find collecting coins a pleasant____? 10073 Do you know exactly what they mean? 10073 Do you know what a_ fellow_, etymologically speaking, is? 10073 Do you know what a_ nickname_ is? 10073 Do you know what an_ umpire_ is? 10073 Do you often hear the word_ bucolic_? 10073 Do you regard it as written simply, with force and natural feeling? 10073 Do you sayThis exceeds the other in height"or"This exceeds the other in altitude"? |
10073 | Do you say"This exceeds the other in height"or"This exceeds the other in altitude"? |
10073 | Do you think words will not respond to cordiality like this? |
10073 | Do you yourself use the term? |
10073 | Do you____ the devil and all his works? |
10073 | Do you____ your claim in this mine? |
10073 | Does Lord Chesterfield''s saying"Whoever is in a_ hurry_ shows that the thing he is about is too big for him"help explain the distinction? |
10073 | Does each keep the tone it adopts( that is, except for desirable changes)? |
10073 | Does he mean an enjoyable one in general? |
10073 | Does he sing a simple, perhaps tender, song in a low tone( as a lullaby to an infant)? |
10073 | Does he sing gladly, spontaneously, high- spiritedly, as if his heart were pouring over with joy? |
10073 | Does he sing loudly and freely? |
10073 | Does he sing with his lips closed? |
10073 | Does he sing with peculiar modulations from the regular into a falsetto voice? |
10073 | Does he sing with vibratory notes and little runs, as in bird- music? |
10073 | Does he utter the short, perhaps sharp, notes of certain birds and insects? |
10073 | Does it appear, perhaps in disguised form, in any of the words immediately preceding or following? |
10073 | Does it, as Shakespeare intends, bring vividly to your consciousness the course, motives, stages, evolution of a human being''s life? |
10073 | Does not our knowledge fall short of that expected of well- informed men in this present age? |
10073 | Does that mean that the privileges of the city are at your disposal, so that you have merely to reach forth your hand and pluck them? |
10073 | Does the magnitude or importance of the object( Galveston) compensate for its lack of elevation and thus justify_ altitude_? |
10073 | Does the original employ terms unfamiliar to you? |
10073 | Does the person sing solemnly in a more or less uniform tone? |
10073 | Does the word_ frigid_ carry for you a geographical suggestion( to the frigid zone)? |
10073 | Does this answer our question? |
10073 | Does this fact give you a further clue as to the distinction between the two words? |
10073 | Does_ altitude_ betoken great height? |
10073 | Does_ compensate_ not sound the more soothing? |
10073 | Have you met any of the_ Eu''s_ elsewhere? |
10073 | Hence you on meeting_ eulogy_ can exclaim:"How do you do, Mr. Eu? |
10073 | How are Grandfather Gen and Grandmother Ology? |
10073 | How are our listeners, our readers to take us? |
10073 | How could such reproaches fail to____ my feelings? |
10073 | How did we learn this? |
10073 | How do you account for this fact? |
10073 | How does Shakespeare reconcile the general poetic tone with such expressions as those quoted? |
10073 | How does it affect the meaning of the word? |
10073 | How many of the first twenty- five words in your description appeal to one or another of the five senses? |
10073 | How many of them are"color"words? |
10073 | How many"motion"words? |
10073 | How much? |
10073 | How would the meaning be affected if they were called_ rustic_ inhabitants? |
10073 | How? |
10073 | If his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
10073 | If not, why not? |
10073 | If not, why not? |
10073 | If so, do you use it chiefly( perhaps entirely) in connection with human temperament or demeanor? |
10073 | If so, does Hamlet speak jestingly when he greets the player,"Your ladyship is nearer heaven than when I saw you last, by the altitude of a chopine?" |
10073 | If so, would the words_ above sea- level_ have to follow it? |
10073 | If you substitute_ affluence_, what different impression do you get? |
10073 | In each instance how is the meaning affected? |
10073 | In what mood is it oftenest uttered? |
10073 | In which way would you prefer for your employee to go about his task-- with_ haste_, with_ speed_, or with_ despatch_? |
10073 | Income taxes-- what exemptions should be granted? |
10073 | Is Goldsmith''s description of the village preacher--"passing rich with forty pounds a year"--as effective if_ wealthy_ is substituted? |
10073 | Is a_ rustic_ bridge something to be ashamed of? |
10073 | Is it desirable for a young man to take out life insurance? |
10073 | Is it your custom to watch the clock while you eat? |
10073 | Is it____ and____ alike? |
10073 | Is it____ to spend money thus lavishly? |
10073 | Is modesty rather than self- assertion regarding his own merits and abilities the better policy for an employee? |
10073 | Is mortal existence also porcine? |
10073 | Is n''t that man____ in his carriage? |
10073 | Is porcine existence also mortal? |
10073 | Is self- education better than collegiate training? |
10073 | Is the Golden Rule practicable in the modern business world? |
10073 | Is the division of men into strongly contrasted groups as to wealth one of nature''s necessities, or is it the result of a social and economic system? |
10073 | Is the main figure effective? |
10073 | Is the meaning exactly the same? |
10073 | Is the style one you would like to cultivate for your own use? |
10073 | Is the$ 1500 you would save worth the risk you would be obliged to take? |
10073 | Is there for honest_ poverty_ That hings[ hangs] his head, and a''that? |
10073 | Is there kinship between the two sets of words? |
10073 | Is_ altitude_ used of persons? |
10073 | Is_ cold_ used thus figuratively also? |
10073 | Milton:_ Lycidas_) Can honor''s voice_ provoke_ the silent dust? |
10073 | Now is n''t that assumption of omniscience____? |
10073 | On the other hand, may that same term represent a temperature far beyond mere coolness? |
10073 | Or does it show lack of spontaneity?--suffer from an unnatural and self- conscious manner of writing? |
10073 | Or one as nearly as may be comprehensive? |
10073 | Shall we try to____ their fears by telling them the accident may have been less calamitous than they have heard? |
10073 | Should a divorced person be prohibited from remarrying? |
10073 | Should all cities be required to establish zoölogical gardens, as well as schools, for the children? |
10073 | Should one always tell the truth? |
10073 | Should we have a high tariff at this juncture? |
10073 | Since we____ the enemy to advance, would it not be wise to____ him? |
10073 | So be it,--but which two? |
10073 | Some one must arrange these papers for publication; will you be their____? |
10073 | Some shortcomings of the labor unions Are the shortcomings of the labor unions accidental or inherent? |
10073 | The first two in the dictionary, or hitherto left untouched in your systematic conquest of the dictionary? |
10073 | The first two that stare at you from casual, everyday print? |
10073 | The first two you can ferret from some technical jargon, some special department of human interest or endeavor? |
10073 | The first two you hear spoken? |
10073 | The precise meaning? |
10073 | The right basis for business-- competition or coöperation? |
10073 | There is such a thing as froth of utterance, but who has respect therefor or is deceived thereby? |
10073 | To what extent shall the church concern itself with social and economic problems? |
10073 | To what extent should osteopathy( chiropractic) be permitted( or protected) by law? |
10073 | To what extent, if at all, shall Sunday diversions be restricted? |
10073 | To what is it applied when debased, impure, spurious, alloyed, counterfeit could be used? |
10073 | To what is_ base_ applied when inferior, cheap, worthless could be used as its synonyms? |
10073 | To what is_ severe_ applied when harsh, stern, rigorous, drastic, austere, hard could be substituted for it? |
10073 | To what profit? |
10073 | What adjective pertaining to mankind forms a true contrast to_ porcine_? |
10073 | What are the primary colors? |
10073 | What are the results of these methods? |
10073 | What are these facts and topics? |
10073 | What became of these duplicates? |
10073 | What besides the possession of wealth does_ affluent_ suggest? |
10073 | What better proof that he is____ do you ask than that he babbles constantly about what happened when he was young? |
10073 | What better than to insure the possession of the words regarding which you know this already, that you need them and should make them yours? |
10073 | What can we learn from a rapid scrutiny of each? |
10073 | What could glittering phraseology add to them? |
10073 | What did John Wesley mean by saying,"Though I am always in_ haste_, I am never in a_ hurry_"? |
10073 | What do these sentences suggest to you as to the social and mental qualifications of the person who employs them? |
10073 | What do these words as thus used mean? |
10073 | What does it suggest to you as to Burke''s social and mental qualifications? |
10073 | What does this strain signify? |
10073 | What does_ despatch_ suggest about getting work done that_ haste_ or_ speed_ does not? |
10073 | What further marriage restrictions should be placed upon the physically or mentally unfit? |
10073 | What further measures should be taken by the cities( states, nation) for the protection of motherhood? |
10073 | What if he has n''t? |
10073 | What is a synonym for_ mortal_ in its broad sense? |
10073 | What is the central meaning of the word today? |
10073 | What is the difference between_ riches_ and_ wealth_? |
10073 | What is the number usually given? |
10073 | What is their true meaning? |
10073 | What is wrong with the connotation of the following? |
10073 | What is_ wedlock_ forced, but a hell, An age of discord and continual strife? |
10073 | What of the sentence:"The altitude of Galveston was not sufficient to protect it from the tidal wave"? |
10073 | What power does this suggest that he has besides the possession of a great deal of money? |
10073 | What proportion of its synonyms were you able to think up unaided? |
10073 | What relation to you is your grandfather''s brother? |
10073 | What significance does this relationship possess? |
10073 | What then? |
10073 | What was the last element discovered, and by whom? |
10073 | What will be the result that comes out of it all? |
10073 | What, then, is the degree of reproach that attaches to each of the two adjectives? |
10073 | What, then, is the net result of our investigation? |
10073 | What, then, is the principle upon which, at the outset, you should proceed? |
10073 | When acute, violent, extreme, intense, sharp, distressing, afflictive could be substituted? |
10073 | When ignoble, servile, slavish, groveling, menial could be used? |
10073 | When keen, cutting, biting, stinging, caustic, critical, trenchant could be substituted? |
10073 | When mean, despicable, contemptible, shameful, disgraceful, dishonorable, discreditable, scandalous, infamous, villainous, low- minded could be used? |
10073 | When plain, unembellished, unadorned, chaste could be substituted? |
10073 | When plebeian, obscure, untitled, vulgar, lowly, nameless, humble, unknown could be used? |
10073 | When the two adjectives may be employed, is one of them unflattering? |
10073 | Wherein do_ pastoral_ scenes differ from_ rural_? |
10073 | Wherein? |
10073 | Which expression of the thought would be the more easily understood by the average person? |
10073 | Which implies the greater degree of possession, which the more permanence and stability? |
10073 | Which is the more literary? |
10073 | Which is the more often thus used? |
10073 | Which narrative is the more concrete? |
10073 | Which of the four adjectives best fits into Goldsmith''s dignified lament:"And____ mirth and manners are no more"? |
10073 | Which of the two statements is the more forceful? |
10073 | Which one? |
10073 | Which term do you think the right one? |
10073 | Which term, then, approaches the closer in meaning to the idea of mere coolness? |
10073 | Which word suggests the more personal relationship with money? |
10073 | Which word the more definitely denotes money or its immediate equivalent? |
10073 | Which would you yourself remember the longer? |
10073 | Who are you, that you should fret and rage, and bite the chains of nature? |
10073 | Who would not____ a slimy creature like Uriah Heep? |
10073 | Why did Prescott use the former in his_ Ferdinand and Isabella_? |
10073 | Why did words having the same meaning find lodgment in the language in the first place? |
10073 | Why do we say"get- rich- quick schemes"rather than"get- wealthy- quick schemes"? |
10073 | Why is it that this use of_ expedition_ in Milton''s lines is apt? |
10073 | Why should they not be as scrupulous to receive what they are entitled to in the medium of language as of money? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | Why? |
10073 | With what realities must we more carefully reckon? |
10073 | Words not realities? |
10073 | Would the man in the street be more likely to use one than the other? |
10073 | Would you believe the passage is poetry?--that its total effect is one of poetic elevation? |
10073 | Would you ordinarily speak of the_ rural_ or the_ rustic_ population to distinguish it from the urban? |
10073 | Would you speak of a morning as bitterly cold or bitterly frigid? |
10073 | Would you speak of_ rural_ or_ rustic_ activities? |
10073 | Would_ despatch_ have served as well? |
10073 | Would_ height_ be more natural? |
10073 | You are always putting off until tomorrow what you could do today; do you think it pays to____ thus? |
10073 | You are told that a major has command of a battalion; does that tell you anything about him? |
10073 | You are told that he has command of a squadron, of a brigade, of a platoon; do these changes in circumstances have any import for you? |
10073 | You call one civilian colonel and another major; which have you paid the higher compliment? |
10073 | You enter the drawing room of one of the elite; are you invited again and again? |
10073 | You interview a potential investor; does he accept your proposition or not? |
10073 | You must form the habit of asking two questions about it:( 1) Is it married? |
10073 | _ Can_ it convey as wide meanings, or is it limited in range? |
10073 | _ Is_ it poetry? |
10073 | _ Mother, the flag_--what sooner than an insult coupled with these terms will rouse a man to fight? |
10073 | _ pastoral_ amusements from_ rustic_? |
10073 | _ rural_ or_ rustic_ manners? |
10073 | a profitable or lucrative one, in case I have business in hand? |
10073 | a successful one, if I am selling stocks or buying a house? |
10073 | a_ rustic_ chair? |
10073 | a_ rustic_ gate? |
10073 | ai n''t you up yet?" |
10073 | how was it possible I could get on shore? |
10073 | if you tickle us, do we not____?" |
10073 | in its narrow sense? |
10073 | mortal with porcine existence? |
10073 | the degree of commendation? |
10073 | the secondary colors? |
10073 | what act, That____ so loud and____ in the index?" |
10073 | your cousin''s daughter? |
42580 | But Miss Isabella,she remarked with reason,"if you do n''t_ look_ cross when you_ are_ cross, how is any one to know you are cross?" |
42580 | But what need of ceremony among friends? |
42580 | Have you seen the print of me after Sir Joshua Reynolds? |
42580 | How did this originate, what caused it, where is it going, what will it do, how is it operated? |
42580 | Oh, did you see that? 42580 The state? |
42580 | Was ever poet,Johnson asked,"so trusted before?" |
42580 | What is this? |
42580 | Who are you? |
42580 | Why,he said,"will you believe me that I sometimes make a breakfast of apples?" |
42580 | A fellow- cockney near me murmured:"They''re solemn- looking blokes, ai n''t they?" |
42580 | An ounce of either, we are told, is equivalent to-- how many pounds? |
42580 | And how do his friends react to him? |
42580 | And if by deeds, by what kind of action shall their loyalty be determined? |
42580 | And is not the person who is trying to learn much alive, with the pit of his stomach nervously aware of the hardness of the bench? |
42580 | And was n''t it characteristic? |
42580 | And what did we ask in return for these many unnoticed renunciations? |
42580 | And when he replied:"What news?" |
42580 | And when one stops to think of it, is it not remarkable that from a soft thing like milk a hard thing like a button should be made? |
42580 | And when some one asked Goldsmith, referring to Boswell,"Who is this Scotch cur at Johnson''s heels?" |
42580 | And why was it necessary to make us unhappy if they did n''t have a cup of tea? |
42580 | Any one who has been connected with a college library knows that the notorious questions such as"Have you Homer''s Eyelid?" |
42580 | Are the definitions fair? |
42580 | Are the following statements true definitions? |
42580 | Are the general statements that serve as background true? |
42580 | Are the two statements which follow definitions? |
42580 | Ask yourself,"What does this mean that I have written?" |
42580 | At what point can you draw the line between analysis and mere"remarks"about a subject? |
42580 | Besides, what have deep thinking and moralizing to do with the most necessary and least questionable side of law? |
42580 | Better? |
42580 | But did you ever see anything there that you had never seen before? |
42580 | But does he know? |
42580 | But has not the Sultan a complete defense, according to Captain Mahan''s doctrine? |
42580 | But was I allowed to stay under the table? |
42580 | But what becomes of the cradle? |
42580 | But when we know that to the Englishman who remarked,"In England, you know, no gentleman blacks his own shoes,"he replied,"Whose does he black, then?" |
42580 | By what standards is the work of Lowell as United States Minister to England criticized? |
42580 | CHAPTER VI CRITICISM Few of us pass a day without answering such questions as,"What do you think of the Hudson car?" |
42580 | Can a State University afford to maintain the kind of honor that forces it to"remain loyal to unpopular causes and painful truths"? |
42580 | Can a writer profitably criticize such a reality as_ national sentiment_ without introducing emotion? |
42580 | Can there be any possible interest in a carpet layer? |
42580 | Can you establish any final general law about the relation of dates and qualities? |
42580 | Cherries or Robins? |
42580 | Could it be that I had eaten, and eaten sufficiently,_ without paying_? |
42580 | Could the author have made the subject clear in a sensible extent of space? |
42580 | Could the explanation have been made as well without this list? |
42580 | Could you, for example, so illustrate_ courage_ as to seem to exclude a really courageous person? |
42580 | Did he"greet the unknown with a cheer"or did he like a doubtful bather shrink back from plunging into the stream of activity? |
42580 | Do n''t, if you wish to learn about ship subsidies, for example, stroll in and inquire for"Some''n''bout boats?" |
42580 | Do these standards exhaust the qualifications of an admirable minister? |
42580 | Do you believe the following statement by a well- known musical critic? |
42580 | Do you discover any overlapping of parts? |
42580 | Do you find any stimulus toward_ thinking_ about the subject? |
42580 | Do you find any_ pattern- designers_ among novelists, poets, architects, landscape gardeners? |
42580 | Do you find other members which, though not really necessary, are so interesting as to be worth including? |
42580 | Do you know as much about_ The Tempest_, from this criticism, as you would like to? |
42580 | Do you think that Thackeray overemphasizes the sentimental appeal of Goldsmith''s weaknesses and his mellow kindness? |
42580 | Do you understand what the author says? |
42580 | Do your results justify Bagehot''s statements? |
42580 | Does Gissing here allow his natural bias as an Englishman to sway him too much? |
42580 | Does any one of the three seem to claim completeness? |
42580 | Does he regard friends as useful instruments, as pleasant companions, or as objects of devoted affection? |
42580 | Does he work out his problem in a narrowly restricted field, or does he call in the powers of a wide range of significant pursuits? |
42580 | Does she show tact in approaching the reader? |
42580 | Does the Christian religion tend to make a man act on his own original ideas? |
42580 | Does the author show traces of influence from the intended readers, the American public? |
42580 | Does the author take too much for granted in the reader, or not enough? |
42580 | Does the criticism prove anything about military drill? |
42580 | Does the following selection serve to define_ honor_ as too difficult of attainment, as too closely bound up with fighting? |
42580 | Does the method, the order, have any really close connection with the value of the explanation? |
42580 | Does the omission, if there is any, vitally harm the analysis? |
42580 | Does the personality merely receive the events, or does it master chance? |
42580 | Does the style of the definition of moral atmosphere( page 9) fit well with the subject? |
42580 | For what kind of audience was the article written? |
42580 | For what kind of reader do you judge that the following partition of the orchestra was written? |
42580 | For who shall say exactly what a lyric poem shall do? |
42580 | For whom? |
42580 | From what grade would you select examples for a similar paragraph if you intended the creation of despair as your controlling purpose? |
42580 | Had he done so, where would now have been the power and the charm? |
42580 | Have I not with my own eyes seen it turning, turning on the spit? |
42580 | Have you not had the same experience? |
42580 | How can it be done? |
42580 | How can it really serve me in my writing? |
42580 | How did men at that time regard the Indian? |
42580 | How does he bring out his conception of Goldsmith? |
42580 | How does it differ from an appreciative criticism of the orchestra as a musical instrument? |
42580 | How far is definition by illustration concerned with_ morality_? |
42580 | How far ought a writer to allow purely_ personal_ reaction to determine his judgment in criticism? |
42580 | How is it gained? |
42580 | How long would you say, wise reader, it takes to make an American? |
42580 | How many words do you have to look up in the dictionary before you understand the article? |
42580 | How much basis have you for making an estimate of the people of whom the following were said, if you limit your knowledge to the remark? |
42580 | How much justification would you feel in using the remarks as basis for biographical estimate? |
42580 | How much material is common to all the outlines on the same subject? |
42580 | How was he affected, what influence did he exert, what offices or positions of trust did he hold? |
42580 | How would the choice of material have differed had the author desired an opposite effect? |
42580 | How would you criticize them in general? |
42580 | If Gissing had been criticizing English cooking from the point of view of a dietitian, what standards would he have chosen? |
42580 | If he goes too fast he soon finds himself asking helplessly,"What ought I to do?" |
42580 | If it comes to that in the end, what is the use of bothering about all these preliminaries of right and law? |
42580 | If it is appreciative, has it any of the value that we commonly attribute to criticism by standards? |
42580 | If it is criticism by standards, does it approach the appreciative? |
42580 | If not, what does he omit? |
42580 | If not, what other standards would you suggest? |
42580 | If not, why not? |
42580 | If not, why not? |
42580 | If the statement is true, how far is it possible to extend it, to how many forms of art or business? |
42580 | If you were writing an appreciative criticism of the working of a rock drill, how would you change the style of writing? |
42580 | If, in total ignorance, a resident of India asks you,"What is ragtime?" |
42580 | If, then, you feel like confidential writing, what may your subjects be? |
42580 | In a subject like this is so strong a personal reaction justified? |
42580 | In fact, almost a sufficient answer to such an exclamation would be,"Well, what of it?" |
42580 | In how far does the whole selection depend for its validity upon the truth of these general statements? |
42580 | In the following account of an emotional and mental process what root principle do you find? |
42580 | In the following definitions[26] what are the genera? |
42580 | In the following selection how many definitions occur, or how many things are defined? |
42580 | In the following selection what does Mr. Shaw analyze? |
42580 | In the light of your answer to the preceding question do you think that the article is really fair? |
42580 | In view of the fact that Gissing uses so slight an illustration to fix his ideal, what makes the definition valuable? |
42580 | In view of the fact that the text suggests avoidance of a beginning list of parts of a machine, what is your opinion of the list in this selection? |
42580 | In view of this_ controlling purpose_, are the standards which the criticism includes sufficient? |
42580 | Is Gissing fair or sensible in his attitude? |
42580 | Is Religion Declining? |
42580 | Is a believer in Unitarianism a Christian? |
42580 | Is a man who serves the state in legislative or judicial capacity and at the same time writes novels to be called a statesman or a man of letters? |
42580 | Is a similar list of novels or plays or symphonies as difficult to make? |
42580 | Is any definition of_ privilege_ implied? |
42580 | Is enough given in each case to make sufficient knowledge on the reader''s part? |
42580 | Is he not an earthquake, too? |
42580 | Is he not to be envied that his reaction was too keen to leave the tool lifeless? |
42580 | Is he thorough? |
42580 | Is it possibly of real value? |
42580 | Is n''t man, after all, rather ingenious? |
42580 | Is not that a fight, looked at philosophically, to make one stand aghast? |
42580 | Is the analysis so incomplete as to be of slight value? |
42580 | Is the definition of a_ Responsible Statesman_ any the less sound because the differentia are duties rather than facts? |
42580 | Is the following selection properly a definition by the method of comparison? |
42580 | Is the honor that seeks"to maintain faith even with the devil"foolish? |
42580 | Is the partition complete? |
42580 | Is the result an improvement or a drawback? |
42580 | Is there a more splendid monument of talent and industry than the_ Times_? |
42580 | Is there any lack of imaginative sympathy on the part of Thackeray? |
42580 | Is this common material made of essential or non- essential facts? |
42580 | Is this criticism fair and unbiased? |
42580 | It is the answer to the question,"What am I trying to accomplish?" |
42580 | Much better it would be to ask, How came this man to write thus? |
42580 | O Immanence, That reasonest not In putting forth all things begot, Thou buildest Thy house in space-- for what? |
42580 | O Loveless, Hateless!--past the sense Of kindly- eyed benevolence, To what tune danceth this Immense? |
42580 | Oh, Father Tucker, worshiper of Liberty, where shall we find a land where the thinking and moralizing can be done without division of labor? |
42580 | On what basis is the following analysis of the farmer''s life made? |
42580 | On what basis? |
42580 | On which can you more surely depend for making a just estimate? |
42580 | Or who shall bound the field of landscape painting? |
42580 | Our very conversation is infected: where are now the bold humor, the explicit statement, the grasping dogmatism of former days? |
42580 | Out of the million articles that every one has read, can any one person trace a single marked idea to a single article? |
42580 | Perhaps the most interesting question in the world is the never- ending"What does this mean to me, how does it affect me, how can I use it?" |
42580 | Phrase call you it? |
42580 | Quite truly Carlyle demolishes such objection:"What make ye of Parson White of Selborne? |
42580 | So, when a child asks,"What is Switzerland?" |
42580 | Starvation or a New Cook? |
42580 | Suppose that an efficient business man had written the article, would Goldsmith''s lack of responsibility have escaped so easily? |
42580 | The Controlling Purpose_ What, then, is the controlling purpose? |
42580 | The Form of the Outline Shall an outline be written in words and phrases or in complete sentences? |
42580 | The counter- question,"What difference does it make who my reader is?" |
42580 | The first question should be,"Is this interesting?" |
42580 | The first question to ask is-- and it is also the last and the intervening question--"What am I trying to accomplish?" |
42580 | The question is, what did he do that was peculiar to himself, what reaction to life did he alone, of all the myriads, make? |
42580 | The question then arises, since this form of writing is always with us how can we make it effective and enjoyable? |
42580 | The second consideration, then, is,"What does this subject mean to me?" |
42580 | There should not be any room for such talk as this:"I think Mrs. Blank sang very well, did n''t you?" |
42580 | They may appeal to posterity; but of what use is posterity? |
42580 | This we can do, in large measure, by asking the famous three questions of Coleridge: First, What did the author intend to do? |
42580 | To what profession or kind of work does he turn? |
42580 | Tous ceux qu''ainsi j''amuse, Ne m''aimeront- ils pas?" |
42580 | V. What relation do you find between personality and character? |
42580 | Was n''t it amusing? |
42580 | We could n''t expect our venerable aunt, or our delicate cousin, or our dignified grandmother to swing up into an upper berth, could we? |
42580 | Were his deeds actuated by generous motives, or by petty? |
42580 | What Shall We Do with Sunday? |
42580 | What are they but puppets in the hand of some passionless fate, loveless and hateless, whose purposes are beyond all human vision? |
42580 | What are your hobbies-- and have you any follies? |
42580 | What attitude does the author try to create in the reader? |
42580 | What causes any weakness that they may have? |
42580 | What common qualities are found in_ all_ Stevenson''s examples through the selection? |
42580 | What conclusion do you draw as to the usefulness of general remarks about character? |
42580 | What did it mean? |
42580 | What difference in the reader might make this change advisable? |
42580 | What does Coleridge mean by his statement"Language thinks for us"? |
42580 | What does this will that seeks power genuinely desire? |
42580 | What espionage of despotism comes to your door so effectually as the eye of the man who lives at your door? |
42580 | What feeling do you have as to the fairness of the three treatments? |
42580 | What is a clearing- house? |
42580 | What is defined? |
42580 | What is the Primary Function of a Successful Novel? |
42580 | What is the basis on which it is made? |
42580 | What is the central motive in Goldsmith''s life as found by Thackeray? |
42580 | What is the chief value of the following selection as a real definition? |
42580 | What is the controlling purpose in the following selection from Mr. John Masefield''s volume of_ Gallipoli_? |
42580 | What is the controlling purpose in the following selection? |
42580 | What is the power that is worthy to be mine? |
42580 | What is the value of having the heart of the definition stated before the theme is begun? |
42580 | What is the_ controlling purpose_ of the criticism? |
42580 | What law is so cruel as the law of doing what he does? |
42580 | What light do the following remarks throw upon the speakers? |
42580 | What light does the following paragraph which appears at the beginning of the book throw upon the controlling purpose? |
42580 | What light does this shed on the individual life without regard to station in society? |
42580 | What light does your estimate throw upon the advice to make the actors in a process specific? |
42580 | What light does your explanation throw upon the duties and dangers of writing biography? |
42580 | What method shall you pursue? |
42580 | What more could America give a child? |
42580 | What necessity in employing this method does your answer to the preceding question indicate? |
42580 | What was the author''s controlling purpose? |
42580 | What weak heart, confident before trial, may not succumb under temptation invincible? |
42580 | What would be the effect of the use of definitions of this type in argument? |
42580 | What would you say is the chief virtue of the selection? |
42580 | What would you say, as the result of this investigation, about the value of definitions? |
42580 | What yoke is so galling as the necessity of being like him? |
42580 | When did he write? |
42580 | When his profession is chosen, what are his interests? |
42580 | Where but in the essay could a man uphold the belief that Faith is Nonsense and perhaps Nonsense is Faith? |
42580 | Where does he find the satisfaction for his energy that searches an outlet? |
42580 | Wherein does the difference in material consist? |
42580 | Wherein does their worth consist? |
42580 | Whether does my full heart turn to the great Enchanter, or to the Island upon which he has laid his spell? |
42580 | Which do contemporaries of a subject for biography usually emphasize? |
42580 | Which is more difficult to make? |
42580 | Which is most nearly complete? |
42580 | Which is of greater value, this selection or the kind of definition that would be found in a text on geography? |
42580 | Which is the more significant? |
42580 | Which method of treatment is more effective? |
42580 | Which of the criticisms, as judged from these headings, would be of most value to a reader of intelligence? |
42580 | Who am I, and, What do I want? |
42580 | Who could harm the kind vagrant harper? |
42580 | Who does not know every story about Goldsmith? |
42580 | Who in the world ever thought of milk buttons? |
42580 | Who knows? |
42580 | Who of the millions whom he has amused does n''t love him? |
42580 | Who shall write of problems of heredity and leave us unstirred? |
42580 | Who that has once met Falstaff forgets the roaring, jolly old knave? |
42580 | Whom did he ever hurt? |
42580 | Whose diamond was it? |
42580 | Whose turn may it be to- morrow? |
42580 | Why Has Epic Poetry Passed from Favor? |
42580 | Why I am a Republican, or Democrat, or Pessimist, or Agnostic, or Humanist, or Rebel in general, or Agitator or-- whatnot? |
42580 | Why do students enjoy reading the writings of William James? |
42580 | Why does he strive for this quality? |
42580 | Why is it thus? |
42580 | Why meddle with the loom and its flying shuttle? |
42580 | Why, from the point of view of analysis, is it difficult to select a list of"the greatest ten"living men, or women? |
42580 | Why, then, exclude the humor? |
42580 | Why, then, make him a wooden automaton, or worse, a dead agent? |
42580 | Why? |
42580 | Why? |
42580 | Why? |
42580 | Why? |
42580 | Why? |
42580 | Will not all those whom I thus amuse love me? |
42580 | Would Mr. Russell''s criticism be of more value if it showed more emotion, if it were less detached? |
42580 | Would the criticism of Captain Mahan''s doctrine be sounder if he had been a German? |
42580 | Would the definition be more effective if written in a more formal style? |
42580 | Would the kind of treatment that the second receives be fitting for the first? |
42580 | Would the result in the reader''s mind be as good, or better, if the author specified a larger number of qualities? |
42580 | Would you be willing to lay down a general rule about the method of treatment? |
42580 | Would you classify the following selection as formal or informal classification or partition? |
42580 | Would you describe this as appreciative criticism or criticism by standards? |
42580 | You can imitate war, but how are you going to imitate peace? |
42580 | You ought to write so that your reader will never pucker his brow and say,"What is this?" |
42580 | You will ask me:"Why have them at all?" |
42580 | Your catechism should be: Have I hugged my fact close and told the truth about it?, and, Have I really covered the ground? |
42580 | Your catechism should be: Have I hugged my fact close and told the truth about it?, and, Have I really covered the ground? |
42580 | Your friends are likely to ask"Why?" |
42580 | [ 53][ 53] W. H. Henderson:_ What is Good Music_? |
42580 | [ 81][ 81] W. H. Henderson:_ What is Good Music_? |
42580 | _ Selection of Material_ The first question is, What, and how many, forces shall I choose for the attack? |
42580 | _ b.__ Interests_ Then when your hero grows up, what are his interests? |
42580 | _ c.__ The Reader_ The third consideration is,"Who is my reader, and what are his characteristics?" |
42580 | and then the second question may follow,"How shall I bring out the interest?" |
42580 | and what will the effect be? |
42580 | or,"Do you like the X disc harrow?" |
42580 | or,"How did Kreisler''s playing strike you?" |
42580 | or,"What is your opinion of the work of Thackeray or Alice Brown or Booth Tarkington?" |
42580 | say, does that Star- Spangled Banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave?" |
42580 | second, How did he accomplish his purpose, well or ill? |
42580 | third, Was the purpose worth striving for? |
42580 | what is wrong with the finances of this club? |
42580 | why is this site suitable for a playground? |
22577 | ( Does_ which_ or_ that_ have the more pleasing sound here?) |
22577 | ---- I ask for your mail? |
22577 | ---- I bring my opera glasses? |
22577 | ---- I go home? |
22577 | ---- I go or remain at home? |
22577 | ---- I go with you? |
22577 | ---- I put more wood on the fire? |
22577 | ---- John go with me? |
22577 | ---- can have done it? |
22577 | ---- did they seek? |
22577 | ---- does he expect of us? |
22577 | ---- is nominated, will you vote for him? |
22577 | ---- it make any difference to you? |
22577 | ---- my men begin work to- day? |
22577 | ---- the mountain be climbed? |
22577 | ---- they dare to attempt opposition? |
22577 | ---- they probably be there? |
22577 | ---- thing is it---- you want? |
22577 | ---- we be permitted to go? |
22577 | ---- we come into your office? |
22577 | ---- we ever see you again? |
22577 | ---- we get tickets at that store? |
22577 | ---- we stop for you on our way downtown? |
22577 | ---- you be busy to- night? |
22577 | ---- you be sure to be there? |
22577 | ---- you finish the work in an hour? |
22577 | ---- you like to see the game? |
22577 | ---- you please fetch me a paper? |
22577 | ---- you promise me to sing at the concert to- night? |
22577 | ---- you stop at Chicago on your way West? |
22577 | ---- you think him capable of such a trick? |
22577 | ---- you, who else was there? |
22577 | 10. Who is it---- is worthy of that honor? |
22577 | 122. Who do you want? |
22577 | 14. Who_ learned_ her to sing? |
22577 | 19. Who was it---- lost the book? |
22577 | 21. Who---- that on the table? |
22577 | 43. Who did the man say he was? |
22577 | 5. Who made that noise? |
22577 | 58. Who_ throws_ paper on the floor? |
22577 | 7. Who---- so early, this morning? |
22577 | 9. Who spoke? |
22577 | After two nouns connected by_ or_? |
22577 | After_ some one_? |
22577 | After_ some people_? |
22577 | After_ they_? |
22577 | An auxiliary? |
22577 | An intransitive verb? |
22577 | Are they those kind of people? |
22577 | As the object of a preposition is a participle or gerund used? |
22577 | By the way, did you see Mary? |
22577 | By what are independent clauses connected? |
22577 | By what pronouns are they referred to? |
22577 | By whom has the lamp been---- there? |
22577 | By_ and_? |
22577 | By_ each_? |
22577 | By_ nor_? |
22577 | By_ two_? |
22577 | By_ various_? |
22577 | Can I use your pencil? |
22577 | Can it be_ she her_? |
22577 | Dear Sirs: Will you please send me a price list and descriptive catalogue of your tapestries and carpets? |
22577 | Dependent clauses? |
22577 | Did you have a---- time? |
22577 | Do you ever remember to have seen the man before? |
22577 | Do you feel_ like a little candy_? |
22577 | Do you know what they_ mean_ by that? |
22577 | Do you like_ light- complected_ people? |
22577 | Do you not know_ whom who_ it was? |
22577 | Do you remember_ me my_ speaking about it? |
22577 | Do you say that you---- be present? |
22577 | Do you still---- that you were born in America? |
22577 | Do you think you will stop at Chicago? |
22577 | Do you think_ I me_ to be_ her she who whom_ you call Kate? |
22577 | Do you use---- horses on the farm? |
22577 | Do you_ callate_ to get there before noon? |
22577 | Does John write what he---- promise to do in the matter? |
22577 | Does a transitive or does an intransitive verb have both voices? |
22577 | Does he say that he---- surely come? |
22577 | Does n''t, Ca n''t, What''s the matter? |
22577 | Does she look---- me? |
22577 | Does she say that she---- come? |
22577 | Does the form of the subject always determine its number? |
22577 | Dost thou know what you doest? |
22577 | During the meal the hostess asked:"Dr. Johnson, what do you think of our Scotch broth?" |
22577 | Have you heard these news? |
22577 | Have you no books---- these? |
22577 | Have you not seen the anxious look( almost mesmeric) which such persons fix on the article? |
22577 | He said,"Is it I whom you seek?" |
22577 | How can he associate with those sort of men? |
22577 | How can he---- that? |
22577 | How can one tell_ who whom_ is at home now? |
22577 | How can she---- still for so long? |
22577 | How can you say that when thou knowest better? |
22577 | How can you tell but what it will rain? |
22577 | How do other verbs differ in the form of the subjunctive? |
22577 | How does the mouse save---- self( selves) from being caught? |
22577 | How is the feminine gender formed from the masculine? |
22577 | How is the plural of most nouns formed? |
22577 | How is the possessive case of most nouns formed? |
22577 | How many were there who was there? |
22577 | How shall you answer him? |
22577 | How was the bank---- by the indictment of its president? |
22577 | How would next Wednesday at six o''clock suit you? |
22577 | How---- marbles did the boy have? |
22577 | How---- you go about it? |
22577 | How---- you say such a thing? |
22577 | I am pleased to meet you, Captain-- what did you say your name is? |
22577 | INTERROGATIVE; a sentence that asks a question; as,_ Is that book mine?_ 4. |
22577 | If he shall ask, shall I refer him to you? |
22577 | If we---- come late,---- it make any difference? |
22577 | If you can come at that time, will you please write or telephone to me sometime before Tuesday? |
22577 | If you were I, what should you do? |
22577 | If you were I, what would you do? |
22577 | In contingent clauses? |
22577 | In the objective case? |
22577 | In what respects should a verb agree with its subject? |
22577 | In what way and where does the subjunctive of_ be_ differ from the indicative in its forms? |
22577 | In_ f_ or_ fe_? |
22577 | In_ o_? |
22577 | In_ y_? |
22577 | Is a singular or plural noun demanded by_ every_? |
22577 | Is he the man for_ who whom_ the city is named? |
22577 | Is he---- to write to us? |
22577 | Is it an error? |
22577 | Is the work---- finished? |
22577 | Is the_ con''verse_ true? |
22577 | Is there nothing---- this to do? |
22577 | Is this thing we call life, with all its troubles, pains, and woes, after all, worth living? |
22577 | John, when was you in the city? |
22577 | Mary, where was you yesterday? |
22577 | May I and Mary go to the concert? |
22577 | May James and_ I me_ go to the circus? |
22577 | May one say,_ He is the largest of the two?_ Reason? |
22577 | May one say,_ He is the largest of the two?_ Reason? |
22577 | May one say,_ Paris is larger than any city?_ Reason? |
22577 | May one say,_ Paris is larger than any city?_ Reason? |
22577 | May the gerund be correctly used without any grammatical connection to the rest of the sentence? |
22577 | May_ and_ or_ but_ be used to join a dependent clause to a principal clause? |
22577 | May_ so, then_, or_ also_ be used alone as conjunctive adverbs? |
22577 | May_ them_ be used adjectively? |
22577 | May_ thou_ and_ you_ be used in the same sentence? |
22577 | May_ which_ and_ that_, or_ who_ and_ that_ be used in the same sentence with the same antecedent? |
22577 | May_ which_ be used with a clause as an antecedent? |
22577 | Need the parts of a compound predicate agree in tense? |
22577 | Of a compound noun or of a group of words? |
22577 | Of compound nouns? |
22577 | Of letters, figures, etc.? |
22577 | Of nouns ending in_ s, ch, sh, x_, or_ z_? |
22577 | Of nouns ending in_ s_ or in an_ s_ sound? |
22577 | Of proper names and titles? |
22577 | On what date---- that come? |
22577 | Properly limited:_ A College Education as an Aid to Earning Power, Does College Life Make Loafers? |
22577 | Right: Can you_ guess_ the riddle? |
22577 | Right: Do you know_ who_ it is? |
22577 | Right: Is Mrs. Johnson a colored_ woman_? |
22577 | Right: Will your mother_ let_ you go? |
22577 | Right:"Can you come?" |
22577 | Right:_ May_ I speak to you for a moment? |
22577 | Right:_ Whence_ have you come? |
22577 | Say,_ Whom are you looking for?_ not,_ Who are you looking for?_ NOTE. |
22577 | Say,_ Whom are you looking for?_ not,_ Who are you looking for?_ NOTE. |
22577 | See §69 Wrong:_ Can_ I speak to you for a minute? |
22577 | Shall Final Examinations be Abolished? |
22577 | Shall Foreign Immigration be Restricted? |
22577 | Shall my work soon begin? |
22577 | Shall you be there? |
22577 | Shall you_ except_ the invitation? |
22577 | Should a singular or a plural pronoun be used after_ everybody_? |
22577 | Should a_ when_ clause be used in a subordinate or in the principal part of the sentence? |
22577 | Should you have been willing_ to go to have gone_ with us? |
22577 | Should_ neither_ be followed by_ nor_ or_ or_? |
22577 | The objective? |
22577 | The possessive? |
22577 | To animals? |
22577 | To antecedents that are collective nouns of unity? |
22577 | To_ who whom_ did you give it? |
22577 | Was it necessary, I should jump? |
22577 | Was it you or the cat---- made that noise? |
22577 | Was it_ I me_ that you asked for? |
22577 | Was the river froze enough for skating? |
22577 | Were either of these men elected? |
22577 | What are nouns of common gender? |
22577 | What are relative pronouns? |
22577 | What are the different parts of speech? |
22577 | What are the four kinds of sentences? |
22577 | What are the principal parts of a verb? |
22577 | What are you driving_ at_? |
22577 | What case should follow_ than_ or_ as_? |
22577 | What class of subjects may not be used with_ do n''t, ca n''t_, etc.? |
22577 | What determines whether to use a singular or a plural verb after_ who_,_ which_, and_ that_? |
22577 | What dost_ thou thee_ know? |
22577 | What form is used in dependent clauses introduced by_ that_, expressed or understood? |
22577 | What form of the verb is used after_ you_? |
22577 | What is a principal verb? |
22577 | What is a pronoun? |
22577 | What is a transitive verb? |
22577 | What is a verb? |
22577 | What is a"dangling participle"? |
22577 | What is a"split infinitive"? |
22577 | What is an attribute complement? |
22577 | What is an interrogative pronoun? |
22577 | What is an object complement? |
22577 | What is comparison? |
22577 | What is gender? |
22577 | What is its effect? |
22577 | What is meant by a double negative? |
22577 | What is meant by"person"in pronouns? |
22577 | What is the antecedent of a pronoun? |
22577 | What is the definite article? |
22577 | What is the difference between a clause and a phrase? |
22577 | What is the difference between a principal clause and a subordinate clause? |
22577 | What is the difference between active and passive voice? |
22577 | What is the difference between common and proper nouns? |
22577 | What is the difference between singular and plural number? |
22577 | What is the difference between the explanatory relative and the restrictive relative? |
22577 | What is the general rule for the use of the subjunctive mode? |
22577 | What is the object of_ Mary Mary''s_ studying French? |
22577 | What is the positive degree, the comparative, the superlative? |
22577 | What is the rule for their agreement? |
22577 | What is the use of_ them they their_ talking so much? |
22577 | What is the use of_ you your_ reading that? |
22577 | What means were used to gain his vote? |
22577 | What part of the city will they settle_ in_? |
22577 | What pronouns may be used only in the nominative case? |
22577 | What pronouns may be used to refer to antecedents that stand for persons of either sex? |
22577 | What should be the guide in determining whether to use a singular or plural verb? |
22577 | What sort of a student are you? |
22577 | What was the house built_ for_? |
22577 | What will---- come of it? |
22577 | What would they do in the city? |
22577 | What---- he do to prevent it? |
22577 | What---- not be done in a week? |
22577 | When WERE the brothers here( not_ when was_)? |
22577 | When are_ shall_ and_ should_ used with_ I_ and_ we_? |
22577 | When do you---- to finish the work? |
22577 | When it is dependent on another verb, in what case should the present infinitive be used? |
22577 | When should the nominative case be used? |
22577 | When should_ but that_ be used, and when_ but what_? |
22577 | When the perfect infinitive? |
22577 | When was you there? |
22577 | When with other subjects? |
22577 | When---- I find you in your office? |
22577 | When---- we hand in the work? |
22577 | When---- you be twenty years of age? |
22577 | Where did you get that kind of a notion? |
22577 | Where should the adjective or adverb be placed in the sentence? |
22577 | Where---- we join you? |
22577 | Which can run the_ fastest faster_, John or Henry? |
22577 | Which has been of most importance, steam or electricity? |
22577 | Which is the best of the two? |
22577 | Which is the larger of the three? |
22577 | Which is the_ best better_ of the six? |
22577 | Which is the_ larger largest_ of the two? |
22577 | Which is the_ more most_ desirable, health or wealth? |
22577 | Which is used adjectively? |
22577 | Which may be used in connection with a possessive substantive as a modifier? |
22577 | Which of the two is her''s? |
22577 | Which was the_ hotter hottest_, yesterday or to- day? |
22577 | Whoever is nominated, will you vote for him? |
22577 | Whom did the man say he was? |
22577 | Whom do you consider to be the brighter man in the class? |
22577 | Whom do you think is the brightest man? |
22577 | Why did he not ask_ whomever whoever_ was there? |
22577 | Will all be there? |
22577 | Will he let_ us we_ go? |
22577 | Will he who fails be allowed to have a reexamination? |
22577 | Will it not be well for you to---- down for a while? |
22577 | Will the dog bite? |
22577 | Will you be there? |
22577 | Will you permit James and_ I me_ to go to the play? |
22577 | Will you please tell me if this is true? |
22577 | Will you please---- the window? |
22577 | Will you---- me your knife? |
22577 | Will your plan---- a reform from the present condition? |
22577 | With how many objects may_ either_ be used? |
22577 | With what is the s- form used? |
22577 | With what kind of antecedents may each be used? |
22577 | With which form can no auxiliary be used? |
22577 | Wrong: Do you know_ whom_ it is? |
22577 | Wrong: Is Mrs. Johnson a colored_ lady_? |
22577 | Wrong: Will your mother_ leave_ you go? |
22577 | Wrong:"Can you come,"she asked? |
22577 | Wrong:_ From whence_ have you come? |
22577 | You say that you have never---- after nine? |
22577 | You was there, John, was you not? |
22577 | _ From where_ have you come? |
22577 | _ He is the larger of the three?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ He is the larger of the three?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ He is the largest of all?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ He is the largest of all?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ If you shall_ go away, who will run the farm? |
22577 | _ Neither_? |
22577 | _ Paris is larger than all cities?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ Paris is larger than all cities?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ Paris is the largest of any other city?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ Paris is the largest of any other city?_ Reason? |
22577 | _ Shall_ I miss the car? |
22577 | _ Shall_ you be there? |
22577 | _ Shall_ your son obey the teacher? |
22577 | _ The Interrogation Point_(?) |
22577 | _ Well_ is usually an adverb, though sometimes an adjective; as,_ Are you well to- day?_ 1. |
22577 | _ Who whom_ am I said to be? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ are you going to collect it from? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ can tell the difference? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ did he say the judge suspected? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ did he say the man was? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ did you say did it? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ did you see? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do men say that he is? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do you consider to be the brightest man? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do you think I saw there? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do you think is the brightest man? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do you think_ him he_ to be? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ do you wish to see? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ is that for? |
22577 | _ Who whom_ was it you saw? |
22577 | _ Whom who_ was called"The Rail Splitter?" |
22577 | _ Will_ he do it? |
22577 | _ Will_ you promise to come? |
22577 | converse Did you_ converse''_ with him? |
40550 | ''Why, how call you these grunting brutes running about on their four legs?'' 40550 And is mine one?" |
40550 | But why,the speaker was asked,"should you make such a statement?" |
40550 | Can I have a piece of pie? |
40550 | Captain, what do you think,I asked,"Of the part your soldiers play?" |
40550 | Do you think you should shoot a patriot down, And help a tyrant slay? |
40550 | Do you think your conscience was meant to die, And your brains to rot away? |
40550 | Is it possible? |
40550 | Is it so with all? |
40550 | It is the robe for the coronation of the young King,he answered;"What is that to thee?" |
40550 | May I? |
40550 | Who is thy master? |
40550 | + A pronoun may also be used as the object of a verb.+ For example: Will you not teach_ me_? |
40550 | + Do not use_ what for_ when you mean_ why_.+ Do not say: What did you do that for? |
40550 | + Words used instead of a question+; as,_ Eh?__ Hey?_ 3. |
40550 | + Words used instead of a question+; as,_ Eh?__ Hey?_ 3. |
40550 | +14.+ Which of these combinations of words are sentences and which are not? |
40550 | +201.++ Do not say_ says I_ or_ thinks I_.+ Says I,"Will you go?" |
40550 | +410.+ The direct object of the verb always answers the question_ what?_ As for example, the tailor made_ what?_--_a coat_. |
40550 | ...... Could you find a better way to spend your time than in study? |
40550 | ...... Did not every nation claim a war for defense? |
40550 | ...... Do the majority want social justice? |
40550 | ...... Do you know that two per cent of the people own sixty per cent of the wealth? |
40550 | ...... Is a world of happiness but a Utopian dream? |
40550 | ...... Is it glorious to die for our country? |
40550 | ...... What are the rights of a child? |
40550 | ...... What can I do, being alone? |
40550 | ...... What is the highest good? |
40550 | ...... What ought to be the attitude of the workers toward war? |
40550 | ...... do you think I am? |
40550 | 13. Who is the tallest, you or John? |
40550 | 2. Who will sign the Emancipation Proclamation of the Proletariat? |
40550 | And God bent and said,"My children-- what is it that you seek?" |
40550 | And I said to God,"What is that?" |
40550 | And I said,"And if they had fallen as they climbed--?" |
40550 | And a great terror seized upon him, and he said to the weaver,"What robe is this that thou art weaving?" |
40550 | And all the while, as they talked, the bird sat motionless,"Suppose we let the creature loose to see what it will do?" |
40550 | And the weaver looked at him angrily and said,"Why art thou watching me? |
40550 | Are these the books that you ordered? |
40550 | Are they adverb or noun clauses? |
40550 | Are you coming with me, Mother? |
40550 | Are you sure it was......? |
40550 | Art thou a spy set on us by our master?" |
40550 | As, for example: What men are the people talking_ about_? |
40550 | As, for example: Will you accept_ of_ this kindness? |
40550 | Ask the question_ what?_ after each verb to determine whether it is complete or incomplete. |
40550 | At what corner did you stop at? |
40550 | But could you make anyone understand_ why_ you are glad, by these signs and gestures? |
40550 | But we say instead: Does he come with them? |
40550 | But what are these things to thee? |
40550 | But will any two words make a sentence-- express a complete thought? |
40550 | Can dungeon''s bolts and bars confine thee? |
40550 | Can dungeons''bolts and bars confine thee, Or whip thy noble spirit tame? |
40550 | Can man resign thee? |
40550 | Can the_ work_ be accomplished quickly? |
40550 | Can you blame...... who have always stood by you? |
40550 | Can you discover the reason? |
40550 | Can you find a word in this sentence which is a connective word besides the preposition_ for_? |
40550 | Can you not readily see the difference in the meaning expressed in_ I work every day_, and_ I have worked every day_? |
40550 | Can you not see a difference in saying,_ I shall work thirty days when pay- day comes_, and_ I shall have worked thirty days when pay- day comes_? |
40550 | Can you notice any difference in the following sentences? |
40550 | Can you save...... you earn? |
40550 | Can you suppose that a thing can do a thing which no one has ever seen it do?" |
40550 | Can you tell...... Germany has a million fighting men? |
40550 | Can you think of any other way in which you could express the same thought? |
40550 | Co- ordinate conjunctions may connect two pronouns used as the_ object_ of the verb, as for example: Did you call_ her_ or_ me_? |
40550 | Could you use_ might_ or_ must_ or_ ought_ anywhere and strengthen the emphasis? |
40550 | Did he say,"Will you come now"? |
40550 | Did they find the book? |
40550 | Did you ask him or me? |
40550 | Did you ever consider how we think in pictures? |
40550 | Did you ever read Emerson''s definition of genius? |
40550 | Did you ever stop to think that we could have internationalism in language as well as in other things? |
40550 | Did you ever stop to think that when we think clearly we think in words? |
40550 | Did you ever stop to think what a wonderful step it was in evolution when man first began to use the spoken word? |
40550 | Did you notice that little word_ and_? |
40550 | Did you study yesterday? |
40550 | Do the co- ordinate conjunctions connect words, phrases or clauses? |
40550 | Do you approve his action? |
40550 | Do you approve_ of_ his action? |
40550 | Do you believe him to be your friend? |
40550 | Do you find any simple or compound sentences in this poem? |
40550 | Do you hear the children weeping, O my brothers? |
40550 | Do you hear the_ singing_ of the birds? |
40550 | Do you know the table of 4''s? |
40550 | Do you know whether these statements are true or false? |
40550 | Do you not remember the day?_+ Imperative;+_ Oh come! |
40550 | Do you not see that this was not an eye picture but an ear picture? |
40550 | Do you notice any difference in the meaning of these sentences? |
40550 | Do you notice any difference in the verbs used in these sentences? |
40550 | Do you notice any difference in their form? |
40550 | Do you notice any word in these sentences which does not belong to any of the classes of words which we have studied? |
40550 | Do you remember this third kind of verb? |
40550 | Do you see any difference in the words which are used to modify the noun_ men_? |
40550 | Do you see flaws in the ancient structure of respectability and law and order? |
40550 | Do you think it is true? |
40550 | Do you understand the three basic principles of Socialism-- the class struggle, economic determinism and surplus value? |
40550 | Does the open road attract you? |
40550 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the Presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
40550 | Exercise 1 Underline the correct word in the following: 1. Who did-- done it? |
40550 | Exercise 2 Which of the following pronouns refer to the person speaking, which to the person spoken to, and which to the person or thing spoken of? |
40550 | Exercise 2 Which phrases in the following sentences are used as adjectives and which phrases are used as adverbs? |
40550 | For example, we do not say: Comes he with them? |
40550 | For example, we say: Where did you go to? |
40550 | For example: He said,"Will you come now?" |
40550 | For example: How late did he stay? |
40550 | For example: In 1858(?) |
40550 | For example: Is there universal education-- education for every child beneath the flag? |
40550 | For example: The question,_ Shall we be involved in war?_, should be settled by the people. |
40550 | For example: To whom will you go? |
40550 | For example: We are all of us( who can deny it?) |
40550 | For example: When will this work be commenced? |
40550 | For example: Who did you see? |
40550 | For example: Will you go with us? |
40550 | For example:_ How_ did it happen? |
40550 | For example:_ Which_ book did you enjoy most? |
40550 | For whom are you looking? |
40550 | For...... did you work? |
40550 | Found they the book? |
40550 | Free labor will give us wealth, and has given us wealth, and why? |
40550 | GOOD ENGLISH-- WHAT IS IT? |
40550 | God said,"How is it you are here together today?" |
40550 | God said,"How is this?" |
40550 | God said,"What has he done?" |
40550 | God said,"Where will you go?" |
40550 | God said,"Whom are you now come to accuse before Me?" |
40550 | God said,"_ On what?_"I was silent, and let my robe fall. |
40550 | Had these men any quarrel? |
40550 | Have we realized the ideal? |
40550 | Have you doubts about your creed? |
40550 | Have you ever sang-- sung this tune? |
40550 | Have you never seen a man suddenly called upon to make a formal speech or introduced into the company of distinguished men and women? |
40550 | Have you not experienced this? |
40550 | He asked,"_ what_ do you want?" |
40550 | He could draw a picture of the sun, but how could he indicate light? |
40550 | How can_ I_, without money or friends, succeed? |
40550 | How could he indicate the different professions in which men engaged, such as the farmer and priest, etc.? |
40550 | How have the_ people_ been managing? |
40550 | How large is the house? |
40550 | How many concrete? |
40550 | How many plural? |
40550 | How many singular? |
40550 | How then? |
40550 | How_ could_ I_ reconcile_ this world of fact with the bright world of my_ imagining_? |
40550 | I can say love when others say hate; I can say every man when others say one man; What can I do? |
40550 | I said to God,"How is it so quiet?" |
40550 | I said to God,"Is it a wind?" |
40550 | I said,"But what_ is_ the message?" |
40550 | I said,"Do not they on the other side hear it?" |
40550 | I said,"How came they by their jars of wine?" |
40550 | If ye do not feel the chain, When it works a brother''s pain, Are ye not base slaves indeed, Slaves unworthy to be freed? |
40550 | If you should write this in assertive form, it would be: This work will be commenced when? |
40550 | If you were...... would you go? |
40550 | If...... and I join you, will you go? |
40550 | Is it not worth living for? |
40550 | Is it possible? |
40550 | Is it so bad then to be misunderstood? |
40550 | Is n''t the verb a wonderfully accommodating member of the co- operative commonwealth of words? |
40550 | Is that Mary? |
40550 | Is that the best you can do? |
40550 | Is that yours? |
40550 | Is there education for every child beneath the flag? |
40550 | Is there universal education? |
40550 | Is this Truth? |
40550 | Is true Freedom but to break Fetters for our own dear sake, And, with leathern hearts, forget That we owe mankind a debt? |
40550 | John(?) |
40550 | May my friend and...... call? |
40550 | May...... and I go with you? |
40550 | Men began to inquire,"By what right does a crowned robber make me work for him?" |
40550 | Must our_ youth_ end so quickly? |
40550 | Note the following sentences: Shall we be men_ or_ machines? |
40550 | Notice the use of these three pronouns in the following sentences:_ Who_ wrote the Communist Manifesto? |
40550 | Now that, by their help, one man can do the work of a score, why_ have we_ not plenty for all, with only enough work to keep us happy? |
40550 | OUR LANGUAGE+5.+ Did you ever stop to think what the world would be if we had no way of communicating, one with another? |
40550 | On my saying,"What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within?" |
40550 | On...... are you depending? |
40550 | Or worse still, What for did you do that? |
40550 | Ought we to fear, who know the truth? |
40550 | Say instead: I said,"Will you go?" |
40550 | Say: Why did you do that? |
40550 | See how many times this week you hear people use such phrases as: At which store do you trade at? |
40550 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischief breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band,-- Affright and desolate the land, While peace and liberty lie bleeding? |
40550 | Shall not we demand our own? |
40550 | Shall our education be controlled by_ wealthy_ men? |
40550 | Studied you yesterday? |
40550 | The Interrogation Point? |
40550 | The boat''s keel, or the keel of the boat? |
40550 | The class struggle being a fact why should we hesitate to join our class? |
40550 | The correct form is: Whom did you see? |
40550 | The correct form of these sentences is: Where did you go? |
40550 | The destruction of Louvain, or Louvain''s destruction? |
40550 | The infinitive also has an object, to learn--_what?__ My lesson_ is the object of the infinitive_ to learn_. |
40550 | The predicate complement may also be:+431.++ A pronoun+; as, Who is she? |
40550 | The siege of Antwerp, or Antwerp''s siege? |
40550 | Then shall they longer lash and goad us? |
40550 | Then the child asked,"May I have a piece of pie?" |
40550 | Then we ask,_ how_ do men live? |
40550 | Then we might ask,_ when_ has it not diminished? |
40550 | Then you might ask_ what sort of_ efficiency and_ whose_ efficiency? |
40550 | These sentences should read: Will you accept this kindness? |
40550 | They saw?" |
40550 | Think you it is true? |
40550 | This should be,_ Which is the older, John or Henry?_ Use the_ comparative_ form always when comparing_ two_ objects. |
40550 | This shuddering thing in tattered clothes, and almost naked? |
40550 | Thus, if you ask me the question,_ Will you come?_ I may say_ Yes_, meaning,_ I will come_; or,_ No_, meaning,_ I will not come_. |
40550 | To seek the truth, to love the truth, to live the truth? |
40550 | To which class do you belong? |
40550 | To which class do you belong? |
40550 | To whom shall I give this letter;_ or_, Who shall I give this letter to? |
40550 | WHO IS A CHRISTIAN? |
40550 | We are wondering_ busy men do what?_ But,_ men travel_ is a complete thought. |
40550 | What can I do? |
40550 | What did the Doctor say, Comrade Smith? |
40550 | What did you say that for? |
40550 | What dost thou think of that, friend Gurth, ha?'' |
40550 | What has efficiency done? |
40550 | What have ye done to overcome him? |
40550 | What is the ape to the man? |
40550 | What is the difference in the meaning of_ I think_ and_ I thought_? |
40550 | What is the matter_ with_ this? |
40550 | What serious harm could happen to us then? |
40550 | What shall we do then for our food?" |
40550 | What will the_ children_ do then? |
40550 | What_ are_ the_ machines saying_, a hundred of them in one long room? |
40550 | What_ are_ the_ machines saying_? |
40550 | When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
40550 | When I say,_ To which class do you belong?_ I am asking a question. |
40550 | When did you come? |
40550 | When shall peace reign again? |
40550 | When strength and justice_ are_ true yoke fellows, where can we find a mightier pair than they? |
40550 | When will you understand? |
40550 | When will_ we_ hear from you? |
40550 | When...... the workers organize? |
40550 | Where am I at? |
40550 | Where am I? |
40550 | Where did he......? |
40550 | Where did you stop at? |
40550 | Where did you stop? |
40550 | Where did you...... it? |
40550 | Where is the woman for whom you would make such a sacrifice? |
40550 | Which are singular, which plural? |
40550 | Which disgust? |
40550 | Which express surprise? |
40550 | Which is the largest end? |
40550 | Which joy? |
40550 | Which person did you write_ to_? |
40550 | Which sorrow? |
40550 | Who is a Christian? |
40550 | Who was short,_ A_ or_ B_? |
40550 | Why do you not go? |
40550 | Why should it fly? |
40550 | Why should war continue? |
40550 | Why should we live in shacks, dress in shoddy, talk in slang? |
40550 | Why then do millions of modern men live more miserably than the cave- man lived? |
40550 | Will the_ students_ come later? |
40550 | Will you come or stay? |
40550 | Will you not pursue the acquaintanceship and become real friends with these men and women? |
40550 | Will you study English or arithmetic? |
40550 | Will you try to recollect it? |
40550 | Will you try to recollect_ of_ it? |
40550 | With...... are you going? |
40550 | Would you be pleased...... the United States should intervene in Mexico? |
40550 | Would you say: The invention of gunpowder, or gunpowder''s invention? |
40550 | Yet would it be possible to express the meaning in these sentences without these words? |
40550 | You could not say_ The corn grows-- what?_ for it does not grow anything. |
40550 | You inquire of a stranger,"Can you tell me who lives in the house on the corner?" |
40550 | You was disappointed, was n''t you? |
40550 | _ Did_ you_ spell_ the word correctly? |
40550 | _ Ella Wheeler Wilcox_"Who is a Christian in this Christian land Of many churches and of lofty spires? |
40550 | _ Has_ he_ studied_ grammar? |
40550 | _ Shall_ you_ complain_ who_ are_ the world, Of what the world_ may do_? |
40550 | _ Shall_ you_ complain_ who_ feed_ the world, Who_ clothe_ the world, Who_ house_ the world? |
40550 | _ The class struggle being a fact_, why should we hesitate to join our class? |
40550 | _ What_ are the closing words of this famous document? |
40550 | _ What_ machine did you order? |
40550 | _ What_ work are you doing now? |
40550 | _ When_ did he come? |
40550 | _ Whence_ came he? |
40550 | _ Where_ are you going? |
40550 | _ Which is the larger end?_ is correct. |
40550 | _ Which is the largest end?_ is incorrect. |
40550 | _ Which is the oldest, John or Henry?_ is also incorrect. |
40550 | _ Which_ of the two men is the better known? |
40550 | _ Whither_ are you going? |
40550 | _ Who could have foreseen_ all the ills of our factory workers and of those who are displaced and cast aside by factory work? |
40550 | _ Why_ did you do it? |
40550 | are you fit to be Mothers of the brave and free? |
40550 | can man resign thee, Once having felt thy generous flame? |
40550 | of_ I work_ and_ I worked_? |
40550 | who would have believed it?" |
40550 | whose boast it is that ye Come of fathers brave and free, If there breathe on earth a slave, Are you truly free and brave? |
10811 | A saddler, eh? 10811 Ah, bird of the forest, was it then thy song?" |
10811 | All workingmen? 10811 Always have been?" |
10811 | And how did little Tim behave? |
10811 | And what did you do, then, my darling boy? |
10811 | And what excels the tongue? |
10811 | And what,she exclaimed,"did you answer, my dear son?" |
10811 | And whence do you bring them, my boy? |
10811 | And who is he, my child, that was so displeased, and wherefore? |
10811 | And will each man have a good spade? |
10811 | And your brother, Tiny Tim? 10811 Are all the twinkling stars which one sees on a fine clear night, planets?" |
10811 | Are they all to begin their work at the same time? |
10811 | Are you quite certain? |
10811 | Are you quite sure of that? 10811 Aye; what for, indeed, you little vagabond?" |
10811 | But then, Peter, have you money to buy the paper and pencils? |
10811 | But what,said Growler,"what is the cause?" |
10811 | Ca n''t come? 10811 Ca n''t what?" |
10811 | Ca n''t you give me a little bit? |
10811 | Can it be possible? |
10811 | Child, are you happy? |
10811 | Day dawned, yet the visions lasted; All too weak to rise he lay; Did he dream that none spake harshly,-- All were strangely kind that day? 10811 Did he say aught to you, or do?" |
10811 | Did you compose it? |
10811 | Did you not hear him read aloud what I have written down? |
10811 | Do n''t you know that? |
10811 | Do n''t you like the bread? |
10811 | Do n''t you see him among the haymakers? |
10811 | Does this land on which you are working so hard belong to you? |
10811 | Excuse the liberty I take,Modestus said, with archness on his brow,"Pray, why did not your father make A gentleman of you?" |
10811 | Frank, what do you mean? |
10811 | Good- morning, my fine little lad,said the stranger;"whence do you come so early, and whither are you going?" |
10811 | Has anything gone wrong? |
10811 | Has n''t she beaten me, and called me a thief, and threatened to be the death of me? |
10811 | Has one just as much ground to dig as another? |
10811 | Have n''t I told you? |
10811 | Have you any money? |
10811 | How did he get in? |
10811 | How do you know that you can not? |
10811 | How is that? |
10811 | How much do you get a day? |
10811 | How, may I ask? |
10811 | How, sir,said Xanthus,"should tongues be the best of meat one day and the worst another?" |
10811 | I think Katy is a very good girl, do n''t you? |
10811 | I''m very, very hungry, sir; could n''t you spare me a bit of bread before I go? |
10811 | In pensive mood? |
10811 | Inward eye? |
10811 | Is it possible? |
10811 | Is my master a workingman; and has he a master of his own? 10811 Is that a little ball, Frank?" |
10811 | Is the earth the only planet that has a moon? |
10811 | It is a little bird,said the dear little fellow;"or perhaps the bread sings when it bakes, as apples do?" |
10811 | Ma''am,said the little boy,"what is it that sings?" |
10811 | Mother, I-- climb the ladder;--I? |
10811 | Now, Norman, let us suppose that I have three baskets to send to a distance by three persons; shall I act fairly if I give each a basket to carry? |
10811 | Of what land do you speak? |
10811 | Please, Father Kennedy, was n''t it an_ Archangel?_inquired Maggie, still determined to surpass her brother. |
10811 | Please, ma''am, may I help you, it''s so bad here? |
10811 | Shall I take back my gift? |
10811 | Stay one moment, dear child,she said, putting herself in his way;"tell me thy name, and where do thy parents live?" |
10811 | Tell me, Norman,he said one day, as they sat together,"if I have a cake to divide among three persons, how ought I to proceed?" |
10811 | That is not much,replied the king;"can you get along with that?" |
10811 | The head of what? |
10811 | Then why do you keep looking at them, child? |
10811 | Then you think, that if I had divided the cake into three equal parts, it would have been quite fair? |
10811 | These flowers are for you,said he;"will you not take them?" |
10811 | Tom,said his wife, as he came near,"art tired to- day?" |
10811 | Want? |
10811 | We just want one to make up the game; where shall we get him? |
10811 | What are you doing there? |
10811 | What did you keep us waiting in the rain for? |
10811 | What good child is this,the angel said,"That, with happy heart, beside her bed Prays so lovingly?" |
10811 | What has ever kept your precious father, then? |
10811 | What is it? 10811 What is that you seem to be carrying so carefully in your bosom? |
10811 | What''s the matter? |
10811 | What''s your business? |
10811 | What, then,interrupted the mother,"is Cassianus a Christian? |
10811 | What,replied Aesop,"can be worse than the tongue? |
10811 | Who are you sir? |
10811 | Who are you,said Tom,"and how dare you call me a slave?" |
10811 | Who lives here? |
10811 | Who will catch us? |
10811 | Who''s that? |
10811 | Why do n''t you sell your feather? |
10811 | Why does your poor mamma cry? |
10811 | Why not? 10811 Why, do n''t you see,"came the reply,"I''m busy helping mother? |
10811 | Why, what_ is_ the matter? |
10811 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
10811 | You have as much to eat as you want here, then? |
10811 | Young man,said he,"by what art, craft, or trade, Did your good father gain a livelihood?" |
10811 | Your cap, sir? |
10811 | _ My_ father''s_ trade?_ Heavens! 10811 ***** In the words_ suit_( s[=u]t) and_ soon_( s[=oo]n), have the marked vowels the same sound? 10811 ***** What is meant byhaughty feeling"? |
10811 | ***** Where is Palos? |
10811 | *****"Who, do you say, is waiting for me?" |
10811 | *****_ 67_ WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
10811 | --a dog climb a tree?--I ask a favor? |
10811 | 2d stanza: How does the poet tell what a great crowd of daffodils there were? |
10811 | 3d stanza: What is said of the waves? |
10811 | 4th stanza: What does"in vacant mood"mean? |
10811 | And Admiral Schley? |
10811 | And now, sweet mother,"murmured the boy, in soft, gentle accents, into his parent''s bosom,"do you think I may call this a happy day?" |
10811 | And the words?--Would you like to come to my concert?" |
10811 | And what dost thou seek here, coming from the dead among us, the living?" |
10811 | Are not you of much more value than they?... |
10811 | Are the last syllables of the words_ principle_ and_ principal_ pronounced alike? |
10811 | At what time of day? |
10811 | But who is this, Theophilus?" |
10811 | Can you name any others? |
10811 | Come, Tarcisius,"he added, stopping him by seizing his arm,"whither so fast? |
10811 | Could it be that the grand lady, glittering with jewels, and whom everybody seemed to worship, would really sing his little song? |
10811 | Define_ cloudless, matchless, motionless._ What class of people does Mr. Wind remind you of? |
10811 | Did I not cut it into three parts?" |
10811 | Did I not divide the cake according to your advice? |
10811 | Did the dreams become facts? |
10811 | Do these fixed stars all go around the sun?" |
10811 | Do you admire the eloquent speech that the worm made to the bird? |
10811 | Do you fancy you are the poet? |
10811 | Do you find any humorous passages in the selection? |
10811 | Do you know any boy like him? |
10811 | Do you not see what pretty crinkly leaves it has? |
10811 | Do you promise to obey?" |
10811 | Do you think the sun moves?" |
10811 | Even in the poorest and most numerous families, what parent could think of parting with a child for any sum of money? |
10811 | Have you ever seen me before?" |
10811 | He has many masters; else why was he nearly ruined last year?" |
10811 | Here Maggie exclaimed,"Please, Father Kennedy, may I have till next Sunday to search out some angels? |
10811 | How did he dress the boughs of the trees? |
10811 | How did she look? |
10811 | How did the Queen of Spain assist him? |
10811 | How did the little girl close the day? |
10811 | How did the monks of this convent assist Columbus? |
10811 | How do you make that out?" |
10811 | How do"Asters by the brookside make asters in the brook"? |
10811 | How does he say the daffodils were arranged? |
10811 | How does this inward eye make bliss for us in solitude? |
10811 | How long may I stay?" |
10811 | How many daffodils did he see? |
10811 | How old is he? |
10811 | How old was she? |
10811 | How should a word be broken or divided when there is not room for all of it at the end of a line? |
10811 | How would you tell it? |
10811 | I love it, I love it; and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old Arm- chair? |
10811 | If I cut off a very thin slice for you, and divide what is left between your brother and sister, will that be fair?" |
10811 | If she is darting about like lightning, why is it that she scarcely seems to move more than an inch in ten minutes?" |
10811 | In the Temple at Jerusalem, what was the Holy of Holies? |
10811 | In the first stanza what are the marks called that enclose_ Little Bell?_ Why are these marks used here? |
10811 | In the first stanza what are the marks called that enclose_ Little Bell?_ Why are these marks used here? |
10811 | In the line"The traveler''s dreams he heard,"who was the traveler? |
10811 | In this stanza, what does he say they were doing? |
10811 | In what did the daffodils surpass the waves? |
10811 | In what kind of weather does he work? |
10811 | In what season of the year? |
10811 | In what way? |
10811 | In what words does the blackbird address the"pretty maid, slowly wandering"his way? |
10811 | Insert_ may_ or_ can_ properly where you see a dash in the following: The boy said,"--I leave the room?" |
10811 | Is Jack Frost an artist? |
10811 | Is"bloom"in the third stanza an action- word or a name- word? |
10811 | Memorize:"How shall I a habit break?" |
10811 | Memorize:"What is the real good?" |
10811 | Now the question is, how are you going to study?" |
10811 | One drop out of me is enough for half a page of paper; and what can not be contained in half a page? |
10811 | Only say, do you wish to hear_ all_ that has befallen me to- day, or only the cause of my late return home?" |
10811 | Our outward life requires them not, Then wherefore had they birth? |
10811 | Piped the blackbird on the beech- wood spray:"Pretty maid, slow wandering this way, What''s your name?" |
10811 | Pray, why did not your father make A saddler, sir, of you?" |
10811 | RE[:E]CHOED( reëchoed): What is the mark placed over the second_ à «_ called, and what does it denote? |
10811 | Recite the words--"Oh, my lord, what will become of poor Peter?" |
10811 | Seated amid the fern, what did Little Bell ask the squirrel to do? |
10811 | Seated beneath the rocks, what does Little Bell ask the blackbird to do? |
10811 | Suppose one of the three persons is a strong man, another a weak woman, and the third a little child?" |
10811 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
10811 | The Wind he took to his revels once more; On down, in town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and holloed with whistle and roar,--"What''s that?" |
10811 | The abbot only( but not his abbot) stopped, and stretching a crucifix before him, exclaimed,"In the name of Christ, who art thou, spirit or mortal? |
10811 | The baker''s wife went up to him, and gave him a friendly tap on the shoulder,"What_ are_ you thinking about?" |
10811 | The parents considered the offer, looked into each other''s faces and asked,"Which shall it be?" |
10811 | The second? |
10811 | The terrier''s whining out in the sun--"Where''s my comrade?" |
10811 | Thou wilt keep safely God''s sacred gifts?" |
10811 | To what does the poet compare his loneliness? |
10811 | WHAT word is the opposite in meaning of each of these new words? |
10811 | Were his apprehensions well grounded?" |
10811 | What are some of the important lessons it teaches? |
10811 | What are the drops of balsam called? |
10811 | What cared he for money now? |
10811 | What changed the wanderer''s loneliness, as told at the beginning of the poem, to gayety, as told towards the end? |
10811 | What companions did she meet? |
10811 | What could be seen after he had worked on"the windows of those who slept?" |
10811 | What countries does the island of Great Britain comprise? |
10811 | What did Jack Frost do when he went to the mountain? |
10811 | What did he spread over the lake? |
10811 | What did the artist desire to tell? |
10811 | What did the poet see"all at once?" |
10811 | What did the three friends do? |
10811 | What did they mean by this? |
10811 | What do the following expressions mean: tilting rim, lilting melody, softest sleep, gurgle and refrain, a happiness as keen to him as pain? |
10811 | What do the third and fourth lines of this stanza mean? |
10811 | What do we see there? |
10811 | What do you know of the author? |
10811 | What do you want, sir?" |
10811 | What does Hiawatha call the bark of the birch tree? |
10811 | What does the author say"the noble gold"is? |
10811 | What does the suffix_ less_ mean? |
10811 | What does"Rome was not built in a day"mean? |
10811 | What does"he walked as if moving on air"mean? |
10811 | What does"manna of celestial words"mean? |
10811 | What does"never struck his flag"mean? |
10811 | What does"with heavy duties rated"mean? |
10811 | What does_ margin_ mean? |
10811 | What does_ revealed_ mean? |
10811 | What duty does Blanco teach his master? |
10811 | What feelings did the thought of what he saw awaken in the heart of the poet? |
10811 | What further said or did Corvinus?" |
10811 | What have you come to Florence for?" |
10811 | What hinders?" |
10811 | What impresses you most about him? |
10811 | What invitation did the squirrel receive from Little Bell? |
10811 | What is a lullaby? |
10811 | What is a sanctuary? |
10811 | What is a suffix? |
10811 | What is it noted for? |
10811 | What is meant by the Congress of the U.S.? |
10811 | What is meant by"Memory flows with lava tide?" |
10811 | What is meant by"building castles in the air?" |
10811 | What is the central object? |
10811 | What is the lesson the poet wishes us to learn from this poem? |
10811 | What is the number of senators, and how are they chosen? |
10811 | What is the real or literal meaning of the word_ gem_? |
10811 | What is the singular form of seraphim? |
10811 | What is their meaning? |
10811 | What kind of man did he very likely grow up to be? |
10811 | What mark of punctuation always follows the first kind? |
10811 | What mischief did he do in the cupboard, and why? |
10811 | What one word may you use instead of"laborer in the domain of science?" |
10811 | What picture do the first two lines bring to mind? |
10811 | What promises did the angel make to this good child? |
10811 | What time of the day and of the year does it show? |
10811 | What two bodies compose it? |
10811 | What use did he put these to? |
10811 | What virtues does the poem recommend? |
10811 | What were the daffodils doing? |
10811 | What were the effects of his song on"the little childish heart below?" |
10811 | What wickedness is there under the sun that it has not a part in? |
10811 | What will the next thing be? |
10811 | What words are made emphatic by contrast in the following sentence:"How should tongues be the best of meat one day and the worst another?" |
10811 | What"lowly flowers are often fairest"? |
10811 | What"lowly"virtue does the following stanza suggest? |
10811 | What''s all the gold that glitters cold, When linked to hard or haughty feeling? |
10811 | When night came, was the boy sorry that he had missed so much fun? |
10811 | Where did Admiral Dewey specially distinguish himself? |
10811 | Where did he get the balsam and resin? |
10811 | Where does the poem bring us"at the close of day?" |
10811 | Where does the poem first take us? |
10811 | Where is the scene of the picture placed? |
10811 | Where? |
10811 | Which shall it be? |
10811 | Which shall it be? |
10811 | Which was the most notable sea fight of Commodore John Paul Jones? |
10811 | Which will bring a person more happiness,--to have kind words said to him, or for him to say them to another? |
10811 | Which word is better, yours or the author''s? |
10811 | Who is she? |
10811 | Who was the"good man"spoken of in the poem? |
10811 | Why are the sanctuaries of Catholic churches so supremely holy? |
10811 | Why are they called dreams? |
10811 | Why are"eddying bays"dangerous to the swimmer? |
10811 | Why are"sweet childish days"as long"As twenty days are now?" |
10811 | Why did he make such beautiful promises? |
10811 | Why did the bird sing so sweetly? |
10811 | Why does he work generally at night? |
10811 | Why is it that in the geography of our country we meet with so many Catholic names? |
10811 | Why not, I''d like to know? |
10811 | Why, blockhead, are you mad? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Why? |
10811 | Without the crickets, and his good little heart, would this happy change have taken place in his mother''s fortunes? |
10811 | Write a composition on the story from the following hints: Where did Little Bell go? |
10811 | You see the sun there, do n''t you-- the great shining sun? |
10811 | _ Charles Dickens__ 67_ WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
10811 | _ Saint_.--Tell me what brings you, gentle youth, to Rome? |
10811 | _ St_.-- Be it so,-- What next? |
10811 | _ St_.--And when you are one, what do you intend? |
10811 | _ St_.--Suppose it so; what have you next in view? |
10811 | _ St_.--Suppose it was; what then? |
10811 | _ St_.--Well, having worn the miter and red hat, And triple crown, what follows after that? |
10811 | _ St_.--Well; and what then? |
10811 | _ William Cowper._ Why did the nightingale feel"The keen demands of appetite?" |
10811 | _ Y_.-- Why, who can say But I''ve a chance of being pope one day? |
10811 | _ cloister_? |
10811 | asked his wife;"what''s the matter?" |
10811 | bad Dick, our wayward son-- Turbulent, restless, idle one-- Could he be spared? |
10811 | did I say? |
10811 | did you hear papa say the devil was an angel?" |
10811 | have n''t you noticed that they are called fixed stars to show that they do not move like planets? |
10811 | he cried,"how can I thank you for your magic gift? |
10811 | if one was full of lead, and the other two were filled with feathers?" |
10811 | must you die? |
10811 | my lord, what will become of poor Peter?" |
10811 | quoth he,--"What''s your name? |
10811 | repeated Tom;"is anything the matter? |
10811 | said Growler;"pray what has brought it about?" |
10811 | said Schwartz;"do you suppose we''ve nothing to do with our bread but to give it to such fellows as you?" |
10811 | said the baker''s wife, smiling;"what in the world would you do with a cricket, my little friend? |
10811 | said the child;"are they really crickets?" |
10811 | she exclaimed with terror,"is that Tarcisius, whom I met a few moments ago, so fair and lovely?" |
10811 | what can it be?" |
10811 | what truth can they possess, and what inducements can they have to die for any of their vain opinions? |
12025 | A glass? 12025 Ah, have you been in love? |
12025 | And do you, then, suppose me such a creature? |
12025 | And grace? |
12025 | And why not? |
12025 | Are we grown old again, so soon? |
12025 | But did Ponce De Leon ever find it? |
12025 | Did you call me? |
12025 | Did you never hear of the''Fountain of Youth''? |
12025 | Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 12025 For what price?" |
12025 | Have you not tried it? |
12025 | In any one? |
12025 | My dear old friends,repeated Dr. Heidegger,"may I reckon on your aid in performing an exceedingly curious experiment?" |
12025 | Not charitable? |
12025 | Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 12025 Still your uncle''s cabinet? |
12025 | That being so,he said,"shall I show you the money?" |
12025 | To me? |
12025 | Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn? |
12025 | Well, then, what matter? |
12025 | What are you driving at? |
12025 | What are you? |
12025 | Where is the hurry? |
12025 | Who can do so? 12025 Why not a glass?" |
12025 | You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think? |
12025 | You ask me why not? |
12025 | You know me? |
12025 | [ 27] Who now reads the ancient writers? 12025 _ Utri creditis, Quirites?_"When he had said these words, he was absolved by the assembly of the people. |
12025 | (_ d_) Josiah Royce,_ What is Vital_ in Christianity? |
12025 | Again the study of history is said to enlarge and enlighten the mind, and why? |
12025 | All have their disguises on; and how can there be sympathy between masks? |
12025 | And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind? |
12025 | And if they have it and exercise it,_ how_ do they exercise it, so as to exert an influence upon man''s sense for conduct, his sense for beauty? |
12025 | And if this be so, has Christ failed? |
12025 | And if we ask-- Why this intense desire? |
12025 | And now, what is the ultimate fate, and what the origin, of the matter of life? |
12025 | And now, when all is said, the question will still recur, though now in quite another sense, What does poetry mean? |
12025 | And what has Christianity added to our theoretic knowledge of morality? |
12025 | And what is the dire necessity and"iron"law under which men groan? |
12025 | And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow? |
12025 | And,_ à fortiori_[49], between all four? |
12025 | Another question, here naturally arising, is--"Are not these evils growing worse?" |
12025 | Are they base, miserable things? |
12025 | Are they_ my_ poor? |
12025 | Are we likely to be more pained by their faults and deficiencies than he was? |
12025 | Be helped by you? |
12025 | But I know some sceptical critics will ask, does not the way in which he is accustomed to regard mountains rather deaden their poetical influence? |
12025 | But by whose experience? |
12025 | But call it worship, call it what you will, is it not a right glorious thing, and set of things, this that Shakespeare has brought us? |
12025 | But can you not look within? |
12025 | But does not the very Fox know something of Nature? |
12025 | But here, within the house, was he alone? |
12025 | But how are we to know the best; how are we to gain this definite idea of the vast world of letters? |
12025 | But how do we human beings get at what we call natural truth? |
12025 | But how to give to the meagre and narrow hearts of men such enlargement? |
12025 | But indeed that strange outbudding of our whole English Existence, which we call the Elizabethan Era, did not it too come as of its own accord? |
12025 | But is this the whole truth? |
12025 | But the question which most concerns us is, not whether the morals of trade are better or worse than they have been, but rather-- why are they so bad? |
12025 | But then,_ how_ do they exercise it so as to affect man''s sense for conduct, his sense for beauty? |
12025 | But what do we mean by a born naturalist? |
12025 | But what is all we really know, and can know, about the latter phenomenon? |
12025 | But what is the study of natural science? |
12025 | But what, but what? |
12025 | But why should you keep your head over your shoulder? |
12025 | Can it, therefore, be said that chemical analysis teaches nothing about the chemical composition of calc- spar? |
12025 | Can the man say,_ Fiat lux_, Let there be light; and out of chaos make a world? |
12025 | Can we wonder at the perpetual hostilities of tribes and clans? |
12025 | Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?" |
12025 | Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry, although too often disregarded? |
12025 | Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me? |
12025 | Compared with any speaker or singer one knows, even with Aeschylus or Homer, why should he not, for veracity and universality, last like them? |
12025 | Creative, we said: poetic creation, what is this too but_ seeing_ the thing sufficiently? |
12025 | Dear God, man, is that all?" |
12025 | Did not Christ do this? |
12025 | Did the command to love go forth to those who had never seen a human being they could revere? |
12025 | Did you mean it? |
12025 | Do I not know beforehand that not possibly can he say a new and spontaneous word? |
12025 | Do I not know that he is pledged to himself not to look but at one side, the permitted side, not as a man, but as a parish minister? |
12025 | Do I not know that with all this ostentation of examining the grounds of the institution he will do no such thing? |
12025 | Do I say that I follow sins? |
12025 | Do you like to see it? |
12025 | Does like join itself to like; does the spirit of method stir in that confusion, so that its embroilment becomes order? |
12025 | Does n''t he come to look at them as mere instruments of sport, and overlook their more spiritual teaching? |
12025 | Does not all this put the problems of our philosophy of life in a new light? |
12025 | Does the condemnation come through the press? |
12025 | Euripides is there accused of lowering the tragic art by introducing-- what? |
12025 | Fact I know; and Law I know; but what is this Necessity save an empty shadow of my own mind''s throwing? |
12025 | First, have poetry and eloquence the power of calling out the emotions? |
12025 | For Christmas? |
12025 | For instance, what is the true signification of that immense mass of territory and population, known by the name of China, to us? |
12025 | For our honour among foreign nations, as an ornament to our English Household, what item is there that we would not surrender rather than him? |
12025 | For what can a book be more than the man who wrote it? |
12025 | For what do they evidently imply? |
12025 | For what is the fortune of any detached self as compared with the one cause of the whole country? |
12025 | For, after all, what do we know of this terrible"matter,"except as a name for the unknown and hypothetical cause of states of our own consciousness? |
12025 | From what source was this inspiration to be derived? |
12025 | Goethe has condensed a survey of all powers of mankind into the well- known epigram:--"Warum treibt sich das Volk so und schreit? |
12025 | Had the changes of a lifetime been crowded into so brief a space, and were they now four aged people, sitting with their old friend, Dr. Heidegger? |
12025 | Had you a thought in your mind? |
12025 | Has he not been conspicuously honoured by being twice elected mayor of his town? |
12025 | Has the verb to love really an imperative mood? |
12025 | Have humane letters, then, have poetry and eloquence, the power here attributed to them of engaging the emotions, and do they exercise it? |
12025 | Have we no access whatever to any other aspect of reality than the one which this naturalistic view emphasizes? |
12025 | How are the seeming contradictions to be reconciled? |
12025 | How are you likely to have agreeable converse with the gentleman who is fuming internally because he is not placed next to the hostess? |
12025 | How can you expect the birds to sing when their groves are cut down? |
12025 | How could a man travel forward from rustic deer- poaching to such tragedy- writing, and not fall- in with sorrows by the way? |
12025 | How do they get this rapid knowledge, even before they speak, of each other''s power and dispositions? |
12025 | How does this difference of effect arise? |
12025 | How in this mountain of literature am I to find the really useful book? |
12025 | How is this to be explained? |
12025 | How long would he be left uneducated? |
12025 | How shall we choose our books? |
12025 | How to make them capable of a universal sympathy? |
12025 | How, when I have found it, and found its value, am I to get others to read it? |
12025 | I have been constantly asked, with a covert sneer,"Did it repay you?" |
12025 | I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?" |
12025 | I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself? |
12025 | I see by its face that it is visited by the same reflection; and I can almost say, Walden, is it you? |
12025 | If causes are realities, then in what sort of a real world do you live? |
12025 | If he have not the justice to put down his own selfishness at every turn, the courage to stand by the dangerous true at every turn, how shall he know? |
12025 | If malice and vanity wear the coat of philanthropy, shall that pass? |
12025 | If the poet already knew exactly what he meant to say, why should he write the poem? |
12025 | If we do not climb the Alps to gain notoriety, for what purpose can we possibly climb them? |
12025 | If your cause is a reality, what kind of a being is it? |
12025 | In other words, are_ acquirements_ and_ attainments_ the scope of a university education? |
12025 | In sum, are we merely stones that deflect the stream for a while, until the waters wear them away? |
12025 | Is any such unity predicable of their forms? |
12025 | Is it a barrister? |
12025 | Is it a solicitor who comments on their misdoings? |
12025 | Is it both; or is it neither? |
12025 | Is it built up of ordinary matter, and again resolved into ordinary matter when its work is done? |
12025 | Is it so bad then to be misunderstood? |
12025 | Is it surprising that the whole value should then be found in the form? |
12025 | Is not this wild rose sweet without a comment? |
12025 | Is our standard higher than his? |
12025 | Is that all? |
12025 | Is the acorn better than the oak which is its fulness and completion? |
12025 | Is the parent better than the child into whom he has cast his ripened being? |
12025 | Is this a plant; or is it an animal? |
12025 | Is this, then, your experience of mankind? |
12025 | It may have made men practically more moral, but has it added anything to Aristotle''s Ethics?" |
12025 | Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask? |
12025 | Literature may perhaps be needed in education, they say; but why on earth should it be Greek literature? |
12025 | May we not call Shakespeare the still more melodious Priest of a_ true_ Catholicism, the"Universal Church"of the Future and of all times? |
12025 | Morality itself, what we call the moral quality of a man, what is this but another_ side_ of the one vital Force whereby he is and works? |
12025 | Must not we of the colleges see to it that no historian shall ever say anything like this? |
12025 | Nay,"has not an Englishman models in his own literature of every kind of excellence?" |
12025 | Next, do they exercise it? |
12025 | Now, exactly how much does this signify? |
12025 | Now, what is supposed to be the line of us who have the higher college training? |
12025 | Now, what is the difference between such actions, when performed by an uncultivated man, and by one of the higher animals? |
12025 | Now, who can be absolutely certain that this may not be the career of democracy? |
12025 | Now, would you deem it possible that this rose of half a century could ever bloom again?" |
12025 | On my saying, What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within? |
12025 | Or are there spiritual hopes of humanity which the mechanism of nature can not destroy? |
12025 | Or, is the matter of life composed of ordinary matter, differing from it only in the manner in which its atoms are aggregated? |
12025 | Otherwise how can you ask the question, In which of them does the value lie? |
12025 | Our democratic problem thus is statable in ultra- simple terms: Who are the kind of men from whom our majorities shall take their cue? |
12025 | Shall I help you; I, who know all? |
12025 | Shall I tell you where to find the money?" |
12025 | Suppose they were virtuous; did they wear out virtue? |
12025 | Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then? |
12025 | Surely not?" |
12025 | THE SOCIAL VALUE OF THE COLLEGE- BRED[43] WILLIAM JAMES Of what use is a college training? |
12025 | The crabbed old Schoolmaster used to ask, when they brought him a new pupil,"But are ye sure he''s_ not a dunce_?" |
12025 | The end had ceased to charm, and how could there ever again be any interest in the means? |
12025 | The human Reynard, very frequent everywhere in the world, what more does he know but this and the like of this? |
12025 | The law of human progress, what is it but the moral law? |
12025 | To a belief in a merely mechanical reality? |
12025 | To a doctrine that the real world is foreign to our ideals? |
12025 | To an assurance that life is vain? |
12025 | To him a palace, a statue, or a costly book has an alien and forbidding air, much like a gay equipage, and seems to say like that,"Who are you, sir?" |
12025 | To one whose wealth has been gained by a life of frauds, what matters it that his name is in all circles a synonym of roguery? |
12025 | Turns from these-- to what? |
12025 | Under these circumstances it may well be asked, how is one mass of non- nucleated protoplasm to be distinguished from another? |
12025 | WHAT IS EDUCATION? |
12025 | Was it an illusion? |
12025 | Was it delusion? |
12025 | What Act of Parliament, debate at St. Stephen''s,[82] on the hustings or elsewhere, was it that brought this Shakespeare into being? |
12025 | What are the subjects, what are the class of books we are to read, in what order, with what connection, to what ultimate use or object? |
12025 | What are they but thought entering the hands and feet, controlling the movements of the body, the speech and behavior? |
12025 | What better philosophical status has"vitality"than"aquosity"? |
12025 | What chance is there of getting any genuine response from the lady who is thinking of your stupidity in taking her in to dinner on the wrong arm? |
12025 | What finest hands would not be clumsy to sketch the genial precepts of the young girl''s demeanor? |
12025 | What has become here of the substance of_ Paradise Lost_--the story, scenery, characters, sentiments as they are in the poem? |
12025 | What have they to conceal? |
12025 | What have they to exhibit? |
12025 | What indeed are faculties? |
12025 | What is Art? |
12025 | What is it that we want? |
12025 | What is the aboriginal Self, on which a universal reliance may be grounded? |
12025 | What is the talent of that character so common,--the successful man of the world,--in all marts, senates, and drawing- rooms? |
12025 | What is the usual plea put in for giving and attending these tedious assemblies? |
12025 | What is this good, which in former times, as well as our own, has been found worth the notice, the appropriation of the Catholic Church? |
12025 | What is this so potent agency which almost neutralises the discipline of education, of law, of religion? |
12025 | What light can a study of the spirit of loyalty, as I just defined loyalty-- what light, I say, can such a study throw upon this problem? |
12025 | What makes the majesty of the heroes of the senate and the field, which so fills the imagination? |
12025 | What merchant would spend an additional hour at his office daily, merely that he might move into a larger house in a better quarter? |
12025 | What of that? |
12025 | What recollection have we of the sunsets which delighted us last year? |
12025 | What then does the formula"Poetry for poetry''s sake"tell us about this experience? |
12025 | What treat can we have now? |
12025 | What, indeed, is the use of giving measures in feet to any but the scientific mind? |
12025 | What, now, is the secret of this perpetual miscarriage and disappointment? |
12025 | What, then, are the causes of this paralysis of the heart? |
12025 | What, truly, can seem to be more obviously different from one another, in faculty, in form, and in substance, than the various kinds of living beings? |
12025 | Whence then this worship of the past? |
12025 | Where is he now? |
12025 | Which Englishman we ever made, in this land of ours, which million of Englishmen, would we not give- up rather than the Stratford Peasant? |
12025 | Which are the best, the eternal, indispensable books? |
12025 | Which do you believe, Romans?" |
12025 | Who cares whether the moon is 250,000 or 2,500,000 miles distant? |
12025 | Who is the Trustee? |
12025 | Who knows in how may unremembered nations''literatures this has been the Castalian Fountain? |
12025 | Who knows, we might become friends?" |
12025 | Who then shall say that the reform of our system of observances is unimportant? |
12025 | Who would undertake an extra burden of business for the purpose of getting a cellar of choice wines for his own drinking? |
12025 | Who, on calling to mind the occasions of his highest social enjoyments, does not find them to have been wholly informal, perhaps impromptu? |
12025 | Whom shall they treat as rightful leaders? |
12025 | Why all this deference to Alfred and Scanderbeg and Gustavus? |
12025 | Why are books as books, writers as writers, readers as readers, meritorious, apart from any good in them, or anything that we can get from them? |
12025 | Why drag about this monstrous corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place? |
12025 | Why has it fled? |
12025 | Why in this civilised state of ours, is there so much that betrays the cunning selfishness of the savage? |
12025 | Why not French or German? |
12025 | Why trouble ourselves about matters of which, however important they may be, we do know nothing, and can know nothing? |
12025 | Why, after the careful inculcations of rectitude during education, comes there in afterlife all this knavery? |
12025 | Why, in spite of all the exhortations to which the commercial classes listen every Sunday, do they next morning recommence their evil deeds? |
12025 | Will you take the glass?" |
12025 | Yet are all men desirable companions, much less teachers, able to give us advice, even of those who get reputation and command a hearing? |
12025 | Yet can any friendship or society be more important to us than that of the books which form so large a part of our minds and even of our characters? |
12025 | Yet do you? |
12025 | Yet if this position be really untenable, how is it possible to obey Christ''s commands? |
12025 | [ 66] or what nymphs presided over it in the Golden Age? |
12025 | [ 9] THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY What is education? |
12025 | [ Footnote 50: Why does the populace rush so and make clamor? |
12025 | _ Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence?_ No. |
12025 | and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?" |
12025 | asked Dr. Heidegger,"which Ponce De Leon, the Spanish adventurer, went in search of two or three centuries ago?" |
12025 | ay, and then? |
12025 | cried Markheim;"the devil?" |
12025 | do not these meannesses and dishonesties, and the moral degradation they imply, warrant the disrespect shown to men in business? |
12025 | in the next room who spoke so clear and emphatic? |
12025 | or can Christianity die? |
12025 | or how shall we follow its eternal changefulness of feeling? |
12025 | or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness? |
12025 | or something besides these three? |
12025 | or_ expertness in particular arts_ and_ pursuits_? |
12025 | or_ moral and religious proficiency_? |
12025 | remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?" |
12025 | said Colonel Killigrew, who believed not a word of the doctor''s story;"and what may be the effect of this fluid on the human frame?" |
12025 | turned this line into,"Can you not wait upon the lunatic?" |
12025 | was,"Can you not wait upon the lunatic?" |
12025 | what is grasp of mind but acquirement? |
12025 | where shall philosophical repose be found, but in the consciousness and enjoyment of large intellectual possessions? |
12025 | why call one"plant"and the other"animal"? |
15040 | Agnes, have we said anything that could hurt his feelings? |
15040 | Ai n''t it, Nickleby? |
15040 | And is mine one? |
15040 | And now, I suppose, you will make her happy? |
15040 | Are the soldiers loaded? |
15040 | Are they going to fire upon the inhabitants? |
15040 | As to that,said the dial,"is there not a window in your house on purpose for you to look through?" |
15040 | But did he ever smile again? |
15040 | But how are you off in the meantime? |
15040 | But what good came of it at last? |
15040 | Come, why do n''t we start? |
15040 | Come,said Squeers,"let''s go to the schoolroom; and lend me a hand with my school coat, will you?" |
15040 | Did you ever get up in a chair to look on some high shelf, so that your head was brought near the ceiling of a heated room, in winter? 15040 Did you ever hear of Beethoven? |
15040 | Did you not know that you should not have fired without the order of a civil magistrate? |
15040 | Did you tell anybody? |
15040 | Do you hear that, my beloved Agnes? |
15040 | Do you say that he is the friend''of virtue? |
15040 | Had he any brother? |
15040 | Have you a wife? |
15040 | Have you any questions to ask me in the other branches, sir? |
15040 | Have you not noticed that the little girl never comes without looking wistfully at the opening buds? 15040 His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride, When they have slain her lover?" |
15040 | How does the water Come down at Lodore? |
15040 | How far is it to G--? |
15040 | Is it an auctioneer''s list of goods to be sold that you are hurrying over? 15040 Is it possible''?" |
15040 | Know? |
15040 | Now, who be ye would cross Loch- Gyle This dark and stormy water? |
15040 | Now,resumed the dial,"may I be allowed to inquire if that exertion is at all fatiguing or disagreeable to you?" |
15040 | Oh, speak, speak,said Agnes;"yet why need you speak? |
15040 | Shall I feel that pleasure? |
15040 | Shall I have naught that is fair? |
15040 | Sir,he gasped,"is Martin Kroller on the engine?" |
15040 | The man who found out so lunch about bees? |
15040 | Then you think this iron is heavier than as much water as would fill the place of it, do you? |
15040 | There was Nang- chung: what became of him? 15040 There, you saw that water rise to the top of the cup, did you?" |
15040 | Third boy, what''s a horse? |
15040 | To what branch of philosophy do you allude, sir? |
15040 | Very well, what caused it to do so? |
15040 | Was he your father, Madam? |
15040 | Well, and what else? |
15040 | Well, cousin, you know the little pale girl to whom we give sewing? |
15040 | Well, what else? |
15040 | What ails you? |
15040 | What are you doing there? |
15040 | What is it, my dear? |
15040 | What is that? |
15040 | What is the matter? |
15040 | What makes you lie there? |
15040 | Who dares--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name, For her to live, for her to die?" |
15040 | Who''s that? |
15040 | Whom can it be to? 15040 William Reed from Kingston, near Taunton? |
15040 | William Reed? |
15040 | You are somewhat nervous just now, are you not? |
15040 | You do n''t understand what I mean, do you? |
15040 | ----------------- Did you walk into the city yesterday? |
15040 | 1. Who has not heard of the rattlesnake or copperhead? |
15040 | 1788?, d.1879) was born in Newport, N.H. |
15040 | 8. Who next? |
15040 | A body of soldiers came up Royal Exchange Lane, crying,"Where are the cowards?" |
15040 | A greedy dog; why, what did he get he liked so well? |
15040 | A look of intense delight broke over her countenance; she grasped my hand, drew me toward her, and exclaimed:"Dinna ye hear it? |
15040 | A son? |
15040 | Am I not named first in her will? |
15040 | And do n''t you remember, the other morning she asked me so prettily if I would let her mother come and see it, she was so fond of flowers?" |
15040 | And fix''d his eyes upon you? |
15040 | And hast a family? |
15040 | And if He were, art thou so lost to nature, as To send me forth to die before his face? |
15040 | And if the war must go on, why put off the Declaration of Independence? |
15040 | And so the active breath of life Should stir our dull and sluggard wills; For are we not created rife With health, that stagnant torpor kills? |
15040 | And we are free? |
15040 | And what is he more, if atheism be true? |
15040 | And what of that? |
15040 | And what will this poor Robin do? |
15040 | And what''s my thanks? |
15040 | And where is he, that tower of strength, Whose fate with hers for life was joined? |
15040 | And where is she whose diamond eyes Golconda''s purest gems outshone? |
15040 | And years have flown; but where are now The guests who round that table met? |
15040 | Are they living/, or dead''? |
15040 | Arm''d, say you? |
15040 | Art married? |
15040 | Art sure? |
15040 | Ask you of all these woes the cause? |
15040 | Besides, would not the murderer have carried off these things? |
15040 | Both inflections are exhibited in the following question: Did you walk''or ride''? |
15040 | But is that reason a sufficient one?" |
15040 | But what is it you dread the most?" |
15040 | But what is your affair in Elsinore? |
15040 | But what, in faith, make you from Wittenberg? |
15040 | But where was this? |
15040 | But why did you tell me? |
15040 | But why do you call him our friend? |
15040 | But, madam,"said he, continuing,"do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your last mouthful to a stranger?" |
15040 | Buy their lands of them? |
15040 | Ca n''t you distinguish her any way? |
15040 | Can I believe My eyes? |
15040 | Can it more than kill? |
15040 | Can your pure spirits fear The God ye never could offend? |
15040 | Canst tell me any? |
15040 | Canst thou fill his skin with barbed irons? |
15040 | Cut off from all hope of royal clemency, what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws? |
15040 | D''ye hear? |
15040 | Dare they talk of that? |
15040 | Darest thou not answer? |
15040 | Darest thou question me? |
15040 | Did I not lend her a new chaise every time she wished to ride? |
15040 | Did he act properly'', or improperly''? |
15040 | Did he behave properly'', or improperly''? |
15040 | Did you RIDE''or did you WALK''?] |
15040 | Did you say statute'', or statue''? |
15040 | Did you say valor'', or value''? |
15040 | Did you speak to it? |
15040 | Did you walk into the city yesterday? |
15040 | Did you walk into the city yesterday? |
15040 | Did you walk into the city yesterday? |
15040 | Do I hear? |
15040 | Do You know for what? |
15040 | Do let you rest? |
15040 | Do n''t sulk away from our sight, Like a common, contemptible fowl; You bird of joy and delight, Why behave like an owl? |
15040 | Do not these show that the human heart yearns for the beautiful in all ranks of life? |
15040 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
15040 | Do you hear those three half- plaintive notes, quickly and clearly poured out? |
15040 | Do you laugh at me? |
15040 | Do you shoot? |
15040 | Do you understand philosophy?" |
15040 | Does God, having made his creatures, take no further''care of them, or does he preserve and guide them''? |
15040 | Does he consent? |
15040 | Does he hear? |
15040 | Does he take warning and reform? |
15040 | Does he tremble? |
15040 | Does the law condemn him''? |
15040 | Does the law condemn him''? |
15040 | Dost thou consent? |
15040 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold; And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
15040 | Fierce Anger Burned Marmion''s swarthy cheek like fire, And shook his very frame for ire, And--"This to me?" |
15040 | For what Hid you that arrow in your breast? |
15040 | For what else would he have murdered her? |
15040 | For what? |
15040 | For what? |
15040 | From heaven? |
15040 | From ten to twenty boys came after them, asking,"Where are they? |
15040 | From top to toe? |
15040 | From whence? |
15040 | Gay, guiltless pair, What seek ye from the fields of heaven? |
15040 | Guessed it Instinctively? |
15040 | Guessed the trial You''d have me make? |
15040 | H. After what? |
15040 | H. And why were they overworked, pray? |
15040 | H. Did he? |
15040 | H. Heard of what? |
15040 | H. My father gone, too? |
15040 | Had the old lady her senses when she departed? |
15040 | Had you any hint from the Squire what disposition she made of her property? |
15040 | Has he arrived''? |
15040 | Has he arrived''? |
15040 | Has she no Christian name? |
15040 | Has she, good soul, has she? |
15040 | Have I a friend among the lookers- on? |
15040 | Have you attended to it?" |
15040 | He is thy child? |
15040 | He must needs strike out fire at once, with iron and flint; and did he die in his bed? |
15040 | Here hung those lips that I have kissed'', I know not how oft'', Where be your gibes''now? |
15040 | His beard was grizzled,--no? |
15040 | His will, is it? |
15040 | Hit a hair Of thee, and cleave thy mother''s heart? |
15040 | Hit thee? |
15040 | Hit thee? |
15040 | How beats his heart, once honor''s throne? |
15040 | How came he to die? |
15040 | How came they on me? |
15040 | How can it go up hill? |
15040 | How do things go on at home? |
15040 | How do you get on? |
15040 | How does that appear? |
15040 | How high has soared his daring mind? |
15040 | How holds the chain which friendship wove? |
15040 | How looks he? |
15040 | How then will you get their lands? |
15040 | How, man? |
15040 | I do, what would you have me see? |
15040 | I have found out what makes smoke go up-- is n''t it curious?" |
15040 | I have sold you a noble province in North America; but still, I suppose you have no thoughts of going thither yourself? |
15040 | I knew that country in my young days, What say you, Mr. Mayne? |
15040 | I repeated, somewhat puzzled;"what do you mean? |
15040 | I should like to know where were your buttons then? |
15040 | I uttered,"are you an engineer?" |
15040 | If thou canst bear it, should not I? |
15040 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war? |
15040 | Indeed, indeed, sirs, but this troubles me, Hold you the watch to- night? |
15040 | Irony? |
15040 | Is he rich'', or poor''? |
15040 | Is he thy son? |
15040 | Is it not plain as the sun in the heaven, that Lucy has been stolen by some wretched gypsy beggar?" |
15040 | Is it not so, Francis? |
15040 | Is it so you pick an arrow, friend? |
15040 | Is my boy to hold it? |
15040 | Is the line a true one? |
15040 | Is there anything in the paper? |
15040 | Is this your love so warm''? |
15040 | Is''t mine? |
15040 | It is this: what makes the earth freeze harder and deeper under a trodden path than the untrodden earth around it? |
15040 | Jowler, did your worship ever have the gout? |
15040 | K. C. I must say, friend William, that I should; how can I say otherwise? |
15040 | Let me see; where was I? |
15040 | Look upon My boy as though I guessed it? |
15040 | Look upon my boy? |
15040 | May I not speak with him before I go? |
15040 | Mr. Shaw, a busy- looking gentleman, said,"How do you do, my dear? |
15040 | Mrs. B. Cooke? |
15040 | Mrs. B. Emma Cooke? |
15040 | Mrs. B. Mr. Granby? |
15040 | Mrs. B. Mrs. Nettleby? |
15040 | Murder his child with his own hand? |
15040 | My dear, what did I say that was like this? |
15040 | My name? |
15040 | NOTES.--What make you from Wittenberg? |
15040 | No, indeed? |
15040 | No? |
15040 | Nobody ever knew so much of me? |
15040 | Not one'', now, to mock your own grinning''? |
15040 | Now, then, where''s the first boy?" |
15040 | Now, whose work is this? |
15040 | Of what? |
15040 | Oh, do you? |
15040 | Oh, you must get somebody else to sew''em, must you? |
15040 | Or would you not rather suppose that their Father gave them something better to do than they had planned for themselves?" |
15040 | Or, if thine eye escape, Mangle the cheek I''ve seen thy mother''s lips Cover with kisses? |
15040 | Or, missing that, Shoot out an eye? |
15040 | P. And why not among them as well as others? |
15040 | P. No, friend Charles, no right; no right at all: what right hast thou to their lands? |
15040 | P. The right of discovery? |
15040 | P. Well, then, how can I, who call myself a Christian, do what I should abhor even in the heathen? |
15040 | Pale or red? |
15040 | Perhaps she wo n''t have any fine dresses in a week or so, eh?''" |
15040 | Polly thought that a very odd speech, and could n''t help saying,"Are n''t Fan and Maud little girls, too?" |
15040 | Pray, my dear, how came you to see so much of her? |
15040 | REMARK.--Where or is used conjunctively, this rule does not apply; as, Will the law of kindness''or of justice''justify such conduct''? |
15040 | Rises their sun as gloriously As on the banquet''s eve it set? |
15040 | S. Horseflesh, sir; he died of eating horseflesh, H. How came he to get so much horseflesh? |
15040 | Saw? |
15040 | Say, where is she, the beauteous one? |
15040 | Send The arrow through thy brain? |
15040 | Shall we ask him now?" |
15040 | Shall we try argument? |
15040 | Sir, my good friend; I''ll change that name with you: And what make you from Wittenberg, Horatio?-- Macellus? |
15040 | So the viper hath; And yet, who spares it for the mother''s sake? |
15040 | Stay''d it long? |
15040 | Steward, how are you, my old boy? |
15040 | Tell? |
15040 | Thank me? |
15040 | That''s our system, Nickleby: what do you think of it?" |
15040 | That-- that my father? |
15040 | The Rising Inflection is that in which the voice slides upward, and is marked thus(''); as, Did you walk''? |
15040 | The boy? |
15040 | The court, my lord? |
15040 | The hand I''ve led him, when an infant, by? |
15040 | The roadside blackberries, growing ripe, And in the woods the Indian pipe? |
15040 | The traveler drew near the board, but when he saw the scanty fare, he raised his eyes toward heaven with astonishment:"And is this all your store?" |
15040 | The window vines that clamber yet, Whose blooms the bee still rifles? |
15040 | Then saw you not his face? |
15040 | Then, my dear, how could you decide that she was cut out for a good wife? |
15040 | They come to you, straining their little eyes, and, clustering together and answering, seem to say,"Where is she? |
15040 | Think upon my chains? |
15040 | Thinkest thou he hath the courage To stand it? |
15040 | This hand? |
15040 | Thou wilt not fail thy master, wilt thou? |
15040 | Thy name? |
15040 | To a dungeon? |
15040 | To die? |
15040 | True or not, what is''t to thee? |
15040 | Vengeance? |
15040 | Was I not fortunate? |
15040 | Was that, indeed, the secret of her power? |
15040 | Was there magic in that touch? |
15040 | Was there not an the father in that look? |
15040 | Well days, sound nights-- oh, can there be A life more rational and free? |
15040 | Well, whose was the other marriage? |
15040 | What are you going to do?" |
15040 | What boy? |
15040 | What do they then? |
15040 | What do you say? |
15040 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
15040 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
15040 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
15040 | What else?" |
15040 | What had her parents to fear? |
15040 | What has he done''? |
15040 | What have you got there, I say?" |
15040 | What in the world can people in their circumstances want with flowers?" |
15040 | What is all this? |
15040 | What is his name? |
15040 | What is there in human nature to awaken respect and tenderness, if man is the unprotected insect of a day? |
15040 | What is your name?" |
15040 | What is''t to me? |
15040 | What matter whether to or from the sun? |
15040 | What mean you? |
15040 | What should I seem? |
15040 | What speak I of? |
15040 | What was to be done? |
15040 | What was to be done? |
15040 | What was your father''s name?" |
15040 | What would become of those who carry burdens on their backs? |
15040 | What would you? |
15040 | What''s that you''ve done to me? |
15040 | What, could it proceed from? |
15040 | What, look''d he frowningly? |
15040 | What? |
15040 | Whattis sis sname? |
15040 | When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers; the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained; what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
15040 | When did he go''? |
15040 | When he had finished his complaint, there was a pause, and his mother said,"Hugh, you have heard of Huber?" |
15040 | Whence comest thou? |
15040 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood? |
15040 | Where has he gone''? |
15040 | Where is it? |
15040 | Where now is the picture that Fancy touched bright,-- Thy parents''fond pressure, and love''s honeyed kiss? |
15040 | Where''s the second boy?" |
15040 | Where''s thy abode? |
15040 | Where, my lord? |
15040 | Who did this''? |
15040 | Who was she? |
15040 | Who would have thought the old lady was so near her end? |
15040 | Who would venture''? |
15040 | Who? |
15040 | Who? |
15040 | Who? |
15040 | Whose roseate lips of Eden breathed? |
15040 | Why did you not make me guess? |
15040 | Why do n''t I hold my tongue? |
15040 | Why do n''t you smite him for that look? |
15040 | Why do you keep the newspaper all to yourself, my dear? |
15040 | Why perch ye here, Where mortals to their Maker bend? |
15040 | Why so? |
15040 | Why speakest thou not? |
15040 | Why then should we defer the declaration? |
15040 | Why, I could run an engine of my construction to the moon in four and twenty hours?" |
15040 | Why, if once in your life a button''s off your shirt-- what do you cry"oh"at? |
15040 | Why, man, what security have you that you will not be in their war kettle in two hours after setting foot on their shores? |
15040 | Why, then, do we not change this from a civil to a national war? |
15040 | Will he return''? |
15040 | Will he return''? |
15040 | Will you not save me, father? |
15040 | William Tell? |
15040 | Wilt thou do it? |
15040 | Wonder? |
15040 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanking chains above their head? |
15040 | Would you now do me the favor to give about half a dozen strokes to illustrate my argument?" |
15040 | Would you suppose that they were hardly treated? |
15040 | Wouldst thou learn What news from thence? |
15040 | You bird of beauty and love, Why behave like a goose? |
15040 | You did n''t swear? |
15040 | You do n''t mean that we are humbugged? |
15040 | You grant him life? |
15040 | You marked the boy? |
15040 | You mean to get their hunting grounds, too, I suppose? |
15040 | You must get somebody else to sew''em, must you? |
15040 | You were not in a passion, wer''n''t you? |
15040 | You''re not snoring? |
15040 | Youths of America, would you know the name of this reptile? |
15040 | [ 1] Is he sick'', or is he well''? |
15040 | and did I not furnish her with my best small beer for more than six months? |
15040 | and did you notice any difference between the air up there and the air near the floor?" |
15040 | and have they netted my young fledgeling? |
15040 | and how came it set on fire? |
15040 | and the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
15040 | and what were they carrying water for? |
15040 | are they dead, too? |
15040 | are you reciting a lesson in the elementary sounds? |
15040 | asked the King;"do n''t you know how to read?" |
15040 | but were they patient?" |
15040 | but you must be eating fire, and I know not what? |
15040 | can I forget The least of thy sweet trifles? |
15040 | cried one of the guards, coming in at that moment,"what is that fellow doing? |
15040 | d''ye hear?" |
15040 | did n''t you know him?" |
15040 | dinna ye hear it? |
15040 | echoed the stranger:"William Reed? |
15040 | he, so famed''bove all his countrymen, For guiding o''er the stormy lake the boat? |
15040 | how will you avoid it? |
15040 | i.e., what are you doing away from Wittenberg? |
15040 | in winter dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? |
15040 | little Mary Stephens? |
15040 | must I endure all this? |
15040 | no right to their lands? |
15040 | quite chopfallen''? |
15040 | said he;"and a share of this do you offer to one you know not? |
15040 | saith he;"Have naught but the bearded grain? |
15040 | the image of her mother-- a sweet woman-- how is she, dear?" |
15040 | they who had cruelly been made the laughingstock of the public, forget the wrong and favor the wrongdoer? |
15040 | what fire? |
15040 | what have we here, So very round, and smooth, and sharp? |
15040 | what is that sound that now''larums his ear? |
15040 | what may that be? |
15040 | what torches? |
15040 | what''s the use? |
15040 | when is that? |
15040 | whence is that flame which now bursts on his eye? |
15040 | where are they? |
15040 | where are they?" |
15040 | which seemed their watchword, and,"Where are they? |
15040 | who? |
15040 | why do n''t you turn cut?" |
15040 | will it catch? |
15040 | you?" |
15040 | your flashes of merriment'', that were wo nt to set the table on a roar''? |
15040 | your gambols''? |
15040 | your songs''? |
6441 | ''Master of Life,''he cried,''must our lives depend on these things?'' 6441 ''The groves were God''s first temples,''"he said to himself, and then, turning to the others, asked,"Who wants to go for a walk?" |
6441 | And underneath that? |
6441 | Are n''t shadows funny? |
6441 | Are not these stories from the Big Book as wonderful as miracles? 6441 Are seeds alive?" |
6441 | Are there any deltas in this part of the river? |
6441 | Are there any other plants that make leaves out of the seeds, uncle? |
6441 | Are they, uncle? 6441 Are you sure none goes out?" |
6441 | Are you sure, uncle? |
6441 | But air ca n''t grow bigger, can it? |
6441 | But does the sun make it warm in the winter? |
6441 | But how can the sap flow up the tree? |
6441 | But if in some way it could be shut off so that it would only press in one direction? |
6441 | But it would n''t bring down enough to make all that field, would it? |
6441 | But what is that we see over the bottom land yonder? |
6441 | But what made it come up out of the pail? |
6441 | But what makes all this happen just now? |
6441 | But what makes it spring, little girl? |
6441 | But what makes the leaves turn yellow and red just before they fall off? |
6441 | But where does it all go to? |
6441 | But you help take care of all the animals, do n''t you? |
6441 | But, Uncle Robert,said Donald,"what if wagon tires, apples, and air do swell up when they are hot? |
6441 | But, uncle, is it all solid rock for eight thousand miles? |
6441 | But, uncle,asked Donald,"why do we see so many colors in the rainbow? |
6441 | But, uncle,said Donald,"how can the air be weighed if it presses the same in all directions? |
6441 | Buttercups so early? |
6441 | By the way,he said,"is there anything in this bottle? |
6441 | Ca n''t some one show me on paper how it is? |
6441 | Ca n''t you draw your garden to- morrow? |
6441 | Ca n''t you extend your map, Frank, so as to put in the river to the village, showing the milldam and the island? |
6441 | Can we read about that in the Big Book? |
6441 | Can you find one that is exactly round? |
6441 | Can you spare us a little time this morning? 6441 Can you tell a tree by its shape when you look at it from a distance?" |
6441 | Can you tell the direction of the winds that blow the strongest and longest by the shape of the trees? |
6441 | Could n''t we make a sun dial? |
6441 | Did it come from away up the river-- a long way? |
6441 | Did it last all day? |
6441 | Did it? |
6441 | Did the ice make these pebbles? |
6441 | Did these boulders come down the river too? |
6441 | Did those clouds we had this morning come all the way from the ocean? |
6441 | Did you ever hear the story the poet Longfellow tells about how the corn came to the Indians? 6441 Do all seeds grow in the same way?" |
6441 | Do many trains stop here? |
6441 | Do n''t they look like it? |
6441 | Do n''t you know sometimes if the bread does n''t rise, mother says it is because it is too cold? |
6441 | Do n''t you know you have to thank the worms for keeping it so? |
6441 | Do n''t you remember that fog we had early last spring? 6441 Do n''t you remember, Frank,"said Susie,"two or three sheds came down, too?" |
6441 | Do n''t you see it-- there? |
6441 | Do n''t you think this baby had better go back to bed? |
6441 | Do n''t you want to see Susie''s garden, Robert? |
6441 | Do the birds know when it is Sunday? |
6441 | Do they always go that way? |
6441 | Do they stay all summer? |
6441 | Do we need to do anything to the ground,asked Uncle Robert,"before the seeds are put in?" |
6441 | Do you always keep the horses in the barn when they are not in use? |
6441 | Do you go on the river much? |
6441 | Do you keep many cows? |
6441 | Do you know how much a quart or gallon is, Susie? |
6441 | Do you know how the end of a log looks when it is sawed off straight? |
6441 | Do you know the names of all the flowers in your bouquet? |
6441 | Do you know the names of all these trees? |
6441 | Do you know,said Uncle Robert,"there are places all over the United States where such records are kept? |
6441 | Do you mean if it had stayed on the ground where it fell it would have been that deep all over? |
6441 | Do you mean moccasin flower, father? |
6441 | Do you really mean, uncle,cried Susie, with shining eyes,"that the sweet peas I have planted in that bed are the children of those I had last year?" |
6441 | Do you remember that day last winter when Peter froze his ears driving to town? |
6441 | Do you remember what I told you about the bowlders on the island? |
6441 | Do you remember, Robert, what a quantity of sap it took to make just a little sugar? |
6441 | Do you think I have enough, uncle? |
6441 | Do you want a drink? |
6441 | Do you want some company, boys? |
6441 | Does any one know how large the garden is? |
6441 | Does any one know how much land they cover? |
6441 | Does it all go into the air? |
6441 | Does it always stay at the same height in the tube? |
6441 | Does it always? |
6441 | Does it dry up? |
6441 | Does it go outdoors? |
6441 | Does that come out of the inside of the earth? |
6441 | Does that mean,asked Susie,"that if the rain had stayed on the ground it would be an inch and a half deep all over?" |
6441 | Does the air in the bottle pull the rubber in with it? |
6441 | Does the sun paint them then? |
6441 | Does your father sell the milk there now? |
6441 | Drops of water; but that is dew, is n''t it? |
6441 | Especially when you think of the weeds,said Uncle Robert, smiling,"How many square inches would that be, Frank?" |
6441 | Expecting some one to- day, sir? 6441 Father, ca n''t we have a picnic on the river?" |
6441 | Has Susie a calf too? |
6441 | Have both wells the same depth? |
6441 | Have some of my candy, Jennie? |
6441 | Have you any now Jennie? |
6441 | Have you any poppies? |
6441 | Have you ducks and geese, too? |
6441 | Have you never been in a cloud? |
6441 | How big is the garden? |
6441 | How can it be farther away? |
6441 | How can it be? |
6441 | How can that be? |
6441 | How can we make it go to the bottom? |
6441 | How can we tell just how warm it is at any time? |
6441 | How can we? |
6441 | How can we? |
6441 | How cold, uncle? |
6441 | How could I? 6441 How could the river make the flood- plain?" |
6441 | How deep do you have to dig to find water-- to China? |
6441 | How deep do you think the water will dig into the path if we do not fill it up? |
6441 | How deep down into the ground? |
6441 | How deep is the ocean? |
6441 | How did it go away? |
6441 | How did they get here? 6441 How do we know that the atmosphere is so deep?" |
6441 | How do you know that is so, uncle? |
6441 | How do you know when a tree is dying? |
6441 | How do you know when it is noon? |
6441 | How do you know when it is noon? |
6441 | How does it get into the ground? |
6441 | How far down does it go? |
6441 | How far down does some of it go? |
6441 | How high is it, father? |
6441 | How high is the bank? |
6441 | How is it out of doors? |
6441 | How is it when you have a long wet spell? |
6441 | How is that? |
6441 | How large an island is it? |
6441 | How large is the earth, uncle? |
6441 | How long will it be before it gets as big as these trees, uncle? |
6441 | How long will the stove stay hot? |
6441 | How many birds do you know? |
6441 | How many does that make in all? |
6441 | How many have you? |
6441 | How many kinds of apples have you? |
6441 | How many little chickens are there? |
6441 | How much colder is it than it was in the house? |
6441 | How much in the clover field? |
6441 | How shall we find out? |
6441 | How was it made? |
6441 | How? |
6441 | I do n''t see how they could come so far? |
6441 | I know,was the reply,"but have you never seen anything near the ground that looked at all like a cloud?" |
6441 | I think it''s ever so much more fun, do n''t you, uncle? |
6441 | I think that was a very wonderful discovery, do n''t you? |
6441 | I wonder if it has risen much to- day? |
6441 | I wonder what makes it warm? |
6441 | I wonder what they are doing? 6441 If I should call the bottom land a flood- plain,"said Uncle Robert,"would you know why?" |
6441 | If it''s air,said Donald,"why did n''t it go down before the glass was put over it? |
6441 | If the glass was longer would the water stay in it just the same? |
6441 | If these seed leaves are real leaves, uncle,asked Donald,"what feeds the baby morning glories?" |
6441 | If you put an axe or scythe on a dry grindstone and turn the crank, what do you see? |
6441 | If you were going to water the garden with the new two- gallon pail,said Uncle Robert,"how many times would you have to fill it?" |
6441 | If you were to bring a pail of water from the spring,said Uncle Robert,"would you say you had so many inches of water?" |
6441 | Is it always soft like this? |
6441 | Is it of any use? |
6441 | Is it right to shoot the pretty squirrels, Uncle Robert? |
6441 | Is n''t it fun? 6441 Is n''t it nice that it takes such a long time to make a rain- gauge?" |
6441 | Is n''t it strange how everything changes, and how all the changes help us? |
6441 | Is n''t it too early for them? |
6441 | Is n''t that wonderful? 6441 Is n''t that wonderful?" |
6441 | Is n''t this a tiny tree? |
6441 | Is that the way the nice white sand is made? |
6441 | Is that what a barometer is? |
6441 | Is there one at the mouth of our creek? |
6441 | Islands? |
6441 | It is heat that makes the bread rise, is n''t it? |
6441 | It makes quite a delta, does n''t it? |
6441 | It wo n''t hurt the thermometer, will it? |
6441 | It''s always there, is n''t it? |
6441 | Jane,asked Uncle Robert,"have you a candle?" |
6441 | Most of the dirt or-- what did you call it-- silt goes down the river, does n''t it? |
6441 | Now what made that flood- plain? |
6441 | Now,said Uncle Robert,"can you find how many two hundred thirty- one cubic inches there are in two hundred and sixteen thousand cubic inches?" |
6441 | Oh, did you, Don? 6441 Oh, uncle, when are you going to tell it to us? |
6441 | Oh? 6441 Shall we go to see them? |
6441 | Shall we go to the cornfield? |
6441 | Shall we have time to get dinner? |
6441 | Shall we take a walk now? |
6441 | Shall we take the boat? |
6441 | So soon? |
6441 | So we might think of it as a row across the garden of forty square feet, might we not? |
6441 | Susie, while these other people are busy tomorrow, shall we drive to the village and see if we can get the tinsmith to help us make a rain- gauge? 6441 Susie, would you know one if you saw it?" |
6441 | That is because the mercury goes up when it is hot, and down when it is cold, is n''t it? |
6441 | That is n''t cold, is it, uncle? |
6441 | That showed that the weight on it was less, did n''t it, uncle? |
6441 | That would make it rise, would n''t it? |
6441 | That would spoil the creek, would n''t it, father? |
6441 | That''s a wild geranium,said Susie;"but do you think it looks- much like a geranium? |
6441 | That''s when the wind blows, is n''t it, uncle? |
6441 | The house faces east, does n''t it? |
6441 | The house might do,said Uncle Robert;"but would n''t it be better to have a shadow stick?" |
6441 | The violets are just as pretty as when I came, are n''t they? |
6441 | The wind brings the clouds, does n''t it, uncle? |
6441 | Then it was winter, was n''t it? |
6441 | Then the great pieces of rock rub against the air when they whiz through it, and that makes the sparks? |
6441 | Then the watches do n''t tell the true time, do they? |
6441 | Then,said Frank,"when it gets cooler here in the fall it is growing warmer there, and that would make their spring come in September, would n''t it? |
6441 | Then,said Uncle Robert,"if there are one hundred forty- four square inches in one foot, how many in one thousand feet?" |
6441 | Then,said Uncle Robert,"if you call them rows of twelve square inches, how many rows would there be?" |
6441 | There are twenty acres in the wood lot, are n''t there, father? |
6441 | They march pretty well, do n''t they? |
6441 | Uncle,asked Donald,"is n''t the room full of air already?" |
6441 | Uncle,asked Donald,"when it is winter here, is it summer in some other part of the world?" |
6441 | Uncle,said Frank,"is it truly the air that holds the paper on and keeps the water in the glass? |
6441 | Vapor? |
6441 | Was n''t it always there? |
6441 | Was n''t it dreadful? 6441 We might measure a gallon,"said Donald,"and then if we could empty it into a flat pan could n''t we measure that?" |
6441 | Well, then, where has the water gone that fell to- day? |
6441 | Well,said Uncle Robert,"can you find out how many inches there are in all?" |
6441 | Well,said Uncle Robert,"the house, the cornfield, and the woods-- is that all of the farm?" |
6441 | What are clouds made of, uncle? |
6441 | What are you fellows doing? |
6441 | What becomes of all the heat? |
6441 | What becomes of the rest of the seed? |
6441 | What becomes of the stuff that is worn off from them? |
6441 | What book? |
6441 | What did you think it meant? |
6441 | What difference would that make? |
6441 | What do you mean by drying up? |
6441 | What do you mean by mi- grat- ing birds? |
6441 | What do you raise besides corn? |
6441 | What do you suppose made the freshet? |
6441 | What do you think makes the pebbles round? |
6441 | What do you think, Susie? |
6441 | What does it do then? |
6441 | What does it say? |
6441 | What goes here? |
6441 | What happens to the apples when they bake? |
6441 | What is a barometer, uncle? 6441 What is it made of?" |
6441 | What is it that moves up and down in the thermometer? |
6441 | What is our earth made of? |
6441 | What is sap? |
6441 | What is that hole for? |
6441 | What is that in the west now? |
6441 | What is the color of the potato sprouts in the cellar? |
6441 | What is the difference in degrees between the cold and the hot water? |
6441 | What is this? |
6441 | What kind of inches did we call them, Donald? |
6441 | What kind of weather was it when you had to jump to it? |
6441 | What lies between the house and the river? |
6441 | What makes it do that? |
6441 | What makes it warm? |
6441 | What makes the corn such a beautiful green? |
6441 | What makes the difference in degrees? |
6441 | What makes the leaves green? |
6441 | What makes the water boil? |
6441 | What makes the water boil? |
6441 | What makes the water swift? |
6441 | What makes us know that it is spring? |
6441 | What makes you think it will go up by the stove? |
6441 | What makes you think they will be different? |
6441 | What makes you think you''ll have mignonette there? |
6441 | What raises the lid? |
6441 | What shall it be? |
6441 | What shall we do now? |
6441 | What time of the year do the trees grow the most? |
6441 | What was it? |
6441 | What will make it break? |
6441 | What''s back of the barn? |
6441 | When and where does it come out of the ground? |
6441 | When does it come out of the ground? |
6441 | When is it coolest? |
6441 | When is it warmest? |
6441 | When is your shadow the longest? |
6441 | When is your shadow the shortest? |
6441 | When may we begin? |
6441 | When was the first one made? |
6441 | When would it be that time in Denver? |
6441 | When you take up a board that has lain on the grass, what is the color of the grass? |
6441 | Where are the mills? |
6441 | Where are you going to get poppies? |
6441 | Where can we get one? |
6441 | Where do they come from, and where do they go? |
6441 | Where do you suppose this little white pebble came from? |
6441 | Where do you think the weight of the wood would be the greater? 6441 Where does all the rain come from?" |
6441 | Where does it go after it reaches the leaves? |
6441 | Where does that dirt come from? |
6441 | Where does the creek come from? |
6441 | Where does the water in the wells come from? |
6441 | Where does this water come from? |
6441 | Where is the current down there? |
6441 | Where is the deepest part of the river? |
6441 | Where would the cattle drink in the summer? |
6441 | Where''s the bean? |
6441 | Why did n''t the water run over when it was cold? |
6441 | Why do n''t they go around by the path? |
6441 | Why do n''t we call it that? |
6441 | Why do n''t you make it stand up straight? |
6441 | Why do you put grease or oil upon the axles of your buggy? |
6441 | Why do you suppose the current is over there? |
6441 | Why does Jane set the kettle of cold water on the stove? |
6441 | Why does the water run along the path? |
6441 | Why is mercury used, uncle? |
6441 | Why not? |
6441 | Why would n''t this gray stuff in the thermometer get bigger when it''s hot, if everything else does? |
6441 | Why, father,exclaimed Susie,"how could you tell?" |
6441 | Why? |
6441 | Why? |
6441 | Will the gully get deeper every time it rains? |
6441 | Would it be the same in New York, Frank? |
6441 | Would n''t it be green in the ground? |
6441 | Would n''t it he funny,he said,"if father made us follow him that way?" |
6441 | Would that be very much? |
6441 | Would that have been very much? |
6441 | Would the air pressing on the water around the glass make it do so, uncle? |
6441 | Would the corn more than pay for the loss of the water? |
6441 | Would the weather make any difference? |
6441 | Would there be very many more worms than there are now,asked Susie,"if the birds should go away?" |
6441 | Would you like to know? |
6441 | Yes, do n''t you remember when the wells all dried up last summer,said Frank,"that the spring was all right?" |
6441 | Yes,replied Uncle Robert,"but where are your nasturtiums?" |
6441 | Yes,said Frank;"and if we do that there will be twenty- five rows just like it, wo n''t there?" |
6441 | Yes,said Uncle Robert,"shadows are queer, but, if we take one that does n''t jump as yours does, do n''t you think we can measure it?" |
6441 | Yes,said his uncle;"but how shall we make this stand up?" |
6441 | You know how strong the current is over on your side? 6441 You know why we put our plants in the south window in winter?" |
6441 | You saw the limestone down by the spring? |
6441 | You thought of draining off the water and turning the pond into a cornfield, did n''t you, father? |
6441 | A pupil of his thought he would try the same thing with the heaviest liquid known----""That was mercury, was n''t it, uncle?" |
6441 | And the buttercups, did n''t you see them in the glass, too?" |
6441 | Are n''t the clouds lovely sometimes, uncle? |
6441 | Are n''t they cunning? |
6441 | Are these cars ice boxes, uncle?" |
6441 | Are they any good that way, uncle?" |
6441 | Are you, mother?" |
6441 | As they looked at the bright and perfect arch that lay against the dark mass of clouds, Susie asked,"What makes rainbows, uncle?" |
6441 | As they sat around the dinner table Uncle Robert asked:"Do you find it hot in the meadow to- day?" |
6441 | But I want to know what makes the bottom land richer than the land up on the prairie?" |
6441 | But how do you think people told the time before they had clocks?" |
6441 | But you have other fruits besides apples, have n''t you?" |
6441 | But, uncle, what makes them look just like fire?" |
6441 | Could I lift it clear out that way?" |
6441 | Do n''t they look like funny little faces in bonnets?" |
6441 | Do n''t those tomato plants look nice?" |
6441 | Do n''t you know how yellow the grass gets if a board lies on it, and what yellow stalks the potatoes have when they sprout in the cellar? |
6441 | Do n''t you remember about the pebbles?" |
6441 | Do n''t you think they''ll grow, uncle?" |
6441 | Do n''t you think, uncle, it will be nice to have the mignonette in with them?" |
6441 | Do you feel it pressing on your hand?" |
6441 | Do you see, Susie?" |
6441 | Do you think it will grow, uncle?" |
6441 | Does it feel any heavier now?" |
6441 | Donald soon returned, and when Susie saw what he had in his hand she exclaimed:"Is that a thermometer? |
6441 | Frank, will you get a pail of water? |
6441 | Franklin looked straight at the forked lightning and asked,''What are you?'' |
6441 | Have you ever noticed when you were eating corn the little hard bud that grows in each grain close to the cob?" |
6441 | How can people know them by their names?" |
6441 | How can they tell when it is so little?" |
6441 | How could it get up here?" |
6441 | How did it look then?" |
6441 | How do they ever get through all these leaves? |
6441 | How do you explain that?" |
6441 | How much would one and one- half cubic inches be?" |
6441 | How will that do? |
6441 | If it presses that way everywhere, why do n''t we feel it?" |
6441 | Is it like a thermometer?" |
6441 | Is n''t it big and white? |
6441 | Is n''t that right?" |
6441 | Is that it?" |
6441 | Is that so, uncle?" |
6441 | Is there a tinsmith in the village?" |
6441 | Now shall I draw it again and make the lines straighter?" |
6441 | On the ground or halfway to the top?" |
6441 | See?" |
6441 | Should we not read what He says there?" |
6441 | So we would expect his to be nearer like this than yours, would n''t we?" |
6441 | Susie, did those violets on my table grow in your garden?" |
6441 | That is what your book says, does it not?" |
6441 | That took a long time, did n''t it, uncle? |
6441 | They do n''t look like it, that''s a fact, but they surely would n''t grow if they were dead, would they?" |
6441 | To- night?" |
6441 | Were they truly red, or just yellow?" |
6441 | What are they for? |
6441 | What do you see on the corn leaves in the early morning?" |
6441 | What do you think they will do when the sun goes down and the air gets cool?" |
6441 | What does that mean?" |
6441 | Where are all these other fields?" |
6441 | Where did you find it?" |
6441 | Where would the noon shadow fall, Susie?" |
6441 | Who can tell how many acres there are in each of these lots?" |
6441 | Why is n''t it straight, uncle?" |
6441 | Why, uncle, air does n''t weigh anything, does it?" |
6441 | You have read about volcanoes, and of the lava that is thrown out of them?" |
6441 | You have seen falling stars, have n''t you?" |
6441 | You see the work this bit of a stream has done in the path? |
6441 | [ Illustration]"Are they very wild?" |
6441 | [ Illustration]"In the middle, would n''t it?" |
6441 | asked Uncle Robert--"large enough to have a picnic there while I am here?" |
6441 | said Uncle Robert,"how many quarts are there in one gallon?" |
6441 | that river away down there? |
12088 | ''Claptrap''--''clap''is so( he struck his hands together);''trap''is for rats-- what is, then,''claptrap''? |
12088 | A what? |
12088 | And what the dev-- what can I do for you? |
12088 | And who are you? |
12088 | But where is the station? |
12088 | Can you tell me where I can find''Rienzi''s Address''? |
12088 | Have I said it so that it will be clear to the listener? |
12088 | Have I said what I intended to say? |
12088 | Have n''t you anything? |
12088 | Have you any business to set foot upon my property? |
12088 | Have, eh? |
12088 | Is that all the proposin''you''ve done in the last five mouths, Hull Parsons? |
12088 | Madame,he said,"please tell me why shall a man, like me, like any man, be a''bluenose''?" |
12088 | Mr. Mountain, I believe? |
12088 | Oh,said the lad;"turtles, are they?" |
12088 | S''pose I had n''t oughter tell on''em, but-- er-- can you keep a secret, widdy? |
12088 | S''pose all them women had n''t refused you, Hull Parsons, what then? |
12088 | What are you doing? 12088 What business have you got with me?" |
12088 | What''s that? |
12088 | Who so base as be a slave? |
12088 | Will, eh? |
12088 | You ai n''t asked every old maid for miles around to marry you, have you, Hull Parsons? 12088 You see those marks?" |
12088 | ( 3) Adverb: What other grief is_ as_ hard to bear? |
12088 | ( 3) Interrogative Adjective:_ What_ game do you prefer? |
12088 | ( Are the facts you use true? |
12088 | ( Are your reasons true and pertinent? |
12088 | ( Are your sentences so arranged that the relation in thought is clear? |
12088 | ( Can you render the meaning more clear by uniting short sentences into longer ones, or by separating long sentences into shorter ones? |
12088 | ( Can you suggest any other comparisons which you might have used? |
12088 | ( Did you find it necessary to make use of any other method of explanation? |
12088 | ( Do the details bear upon the main idea? |
12088 | ( Do you need more than one paragraph? |
12088 | ( Do you think the reader will form the images you wish him to form? |
12088 | ( Do your specific instances really illustrate the topic statement? |
12088 | ( Have the repetitions really made the idea of the topic sentence clearer or more emphatic or more definite? |
12088 | ( Have you arranged your details with reference to their proper time- order? |
12088 | ( Have you introduced technical terms without making the necessary explanations? |
12088 | ( Have you made clear the correct use of the words under discussion? |
12088 | ( Have you made your meaning clear? |
12088 | ( Have you mentioned all important divisions of your subject? |
12088 | ( Have you proved possibility, probability, or actuality? |
12088 | ( Have you said what you intended to say? |
12088 | ( Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | ( Have you told exactly what was done? |
12088 | ( Have you used any method besides that of repetition? |
12088 | ( Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example? |
12088 | ( Have you used comparison or contrast? |
12088 | ( Have you used particulars sufficient to make your meaning clear? |
12088 | ( How many series of events have you in your narrative? |
12088 | ( Is your definition exact, or only approximately so? |
12088 | ( Is your narrative told in an interesting way? |
12088 | ( Should_ all_ athletic exercises be abolished?) |
12088 | ( Where is the incentive moment? |
12088 | ( Which sentence gives the general impression and which sentences give the details? |
12088 | ( Which sentences state causes and which state effects? |
12088 | ( Will the reader form the impression of character which you wish him to form? |
12088 | (_ Better_ for what purpose? |
12088 | + Theme CVI.+--_Write a debate on some question assigned by the teacher._( To what points should you give attention in correcting your theme? |
12088 | + Theme LXVI.+--_Write a description of some animal, bird, or fish._( What questions should you ask yourself about each description you write?) |
12088 | + Theme XXXII.+--_Write a paragraph about one of narrowed subjects._( Does your paragraph have unity of thought? |
12088 | --Walter Camp:_ Winning a"Y"_("Outlook") In which of the preceding accounts were you more interested? |
12088 | :[ What kind of man is he? |
12088 | A barn| is a building|? |
12088 | A better- trained pupil, on meeting such a term as_ serrated_, will ask himself:"Have I ever seen such a leaf? |
12088 | A bicycle| is a machine|? |
12088 | A circle| is a portion of a plane|? |
12088 | A conclusion?) |
12088 | A condition regarded as doubtful:[ If it be true, what shall we think? |
12088 | A dog| is an animal|? |
12088 | A hawk| is a bird|? |
12088 | A lady| is a woman|? |
12088 | A point? |
12088 | A quadrilateral| is a plane figure|? |
12088 | A sneak| is a person|? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ manner_ answer the question How? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ place_ answer the question Where? |
12088 | Adverbs of_ time_ answer the question When? |
12088 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
12088 | Am I not free? |
12088 | An argument which aims to answer the question, Is it expedient? |
12088 | An_ interrogative_ sentence is one that asks a question:[ Who wrote_ Mother Goose_?]. |
12088 | Are any facts necessary to the clear understanding of it omitted?) |
12088 | Are any of them too short or too long?) |
12088 | Are any unnecessary details introduced?) |
12088 | Are not these outlines of American destiny in the near- by future rational? |
12088 | Are the arguments sufficient to bring conviction to the reader that the hero decided rightly?) |
12088 | Are the details arranged with reference to their position in space? |
12088 | Are the details arranged with reference to their real space order? |
12088 | Are the following propositions true or false? |
12088 | Are the personal pronouns and pronominal adjectives used so as to avoid ambiguity? |
12088 | Are there some sickly locust trees there that cast a tremulous and decrepit shade upon the mangy grass plots? |
12088 | Are they arranged with reference to the principles of arrangement? |
12088 | Are they pertinent? |
12088 | Are they well connected? |
12088 | Are your details arranged with regard to their proper position in space? |
12088 | Arguments? |
12088 | Assume that the reader understands the game._( Will the reader get the whole contest clearly in mind? |
12088 | Assuming that they are true, are they pertinent to the proposition? |
12088 | At what point in the following selection is the interest greatest? |
12088 | Before writing it is well to ask, For whom am I writing? |
12088 | But is this proposition true of pupils in the grades as well as in the high schools? |
12088 | But my mind was sot all along, d''ye see, widdy?" |
12088 | But where was Lang? |
12088 | But with brightening eyes he caught up the sentence and continued:"And the people have blue noses, eh? |
12088 | But, when shall we be stronger? |
12088 | By changing the order of the sentences, can you improve the paragraph?) |
12088 | Can I form an image of it?" |
12088 | Can a single adjective or phrase be substituted for a whole sentence? |
12088 | Can any be omitted? |
12088 | Can any of them be improved by re- arranging them? |
12088 | Can anything be omitted without affecting the clearness?) |
12088 | Can the following selection be improved by reparagraphing? |
12088 | Can the paragraph be improved by rearranging them? |
12088 | Can the reader follow the thread of your story to its chief point?) |
12088 | Can the reader follow the thread of your story? |
12088 | Can you by the choice of suitable words show more plainly the way in which it was done? |
12088 | Can you change any of those words? |
12088 | Can you determine from the picture anything about the character of the person? |
12088 | Can you give examples which do not follow the dictionaries so closely as do the illustrative reports above?) |
12088 | Can you imagine the circumstances that preceded the situation shown by the picture? |
12088 | Can you improve it?) |
12088 | Can you improve the description by using a different point of view? |
12088 | Can you improve the euphony by a different choice of words?) |
12088 | Can you improve your choice of words? |
12088 | Can you improve your theme? |
12088 | Can you lead up to it without too long a delay? |
12088 | Can you make the impression of character stronger by adding some description?) |
12088 | Can you omit any words or sentences? |
12088 | Can you omit any_ ands_? |
12088 | Can you picture them all at the same time, or must you turn your attention from one image to another? |
12088 | Can you restate the following propositions so that the meaning of each will be made more definite? |
12088 | Can you rewrite them so as to give variety?) |
12088 | Can you say anything that will make them want to know what the point is without really telling them? |
12088 | Can you shorten the account? |
12088 | Can you shorten the theme without affecting the clearness or interest? |
12088 | Can you shorten your theme without weakening it?) |
12088 | Can you state this proposition so that it will express your own belief on the subject? |
12088 | Can you stop when the point has been made?) |
12088 | Can you tell for what kind of an audience each of the following is intended? |
12088 | Can you think of a better comparison or a better example? |
12088 | Can you think of other illustrations?) |
12088 | Can your meaning be made clearer, or be more effectively presented, by arranging your material in a different order?) |
12088 | Could the same object be described for the purpose of giving information? |
12088 | Did the writers of Charles''s faction delight in making their opponents appear contemptible? |
12088 | Did you form clear mental images? |
12088 | Did you make use of description in any place?) |
12088 | Do all of the incidents in your story seem probable?) |
12088 | Do men fail when they quit their own province for another? |
12088 | Do they add anything to your picture? |
12088 | Do they show that the proposition is always true or merely that it is true for certain cases? |
12088 | Do you believe the affirmative or the negative? |
12088 | Do you form complete images in every case? |
12088 | Do you know of facts that would tend to show that your proposition is not true?) |
12088 | Do you need to change the sentence length either for the sake of clearness or for the sake of variety? |
12088 | Do you think that when the members of the class hear your theme, each will form the same images that you had in mind when writing? |
12088 | Does each paragraph have a topic statement? |
12088 | Does he dare blow into it and risk our jeers if it is dumb? |
12088 | Does he draw conclusions or leave that for his listeners to do? |
12088 | Does it fulfill the requirements of Chapter IX? |
12088 | Does it read smoothly? |
12088 | Does it read smoothly? |
12088 | Does the definition apply to them? |
12088 | Does the introduction of persuasion affect the order of arrangement?) |
12088 | Does this definition apply to your paragraphs?) |
12088 | Does this theme need to have an introduction? |
12088 | Does your example really illustrate the topic statement? |
12088 | Does your paragraph really explain the proposition?) |
12088 | Does your pet dog differ from others of the same breed in appearance? |
12088 | Does your story relate real events or imaginary ones? |
12088 | Does_ then_ occur too frequently?) |
12088 | EXERCISE Which of the following are exact? |
12088 | EXERCISES Are the images which you form made more vivid by the use of the figures in the following selections? |
12088 | EXERCISES What advantages and disadvantages can you think of for each of the following propositions? |
12088 | EXERCISES What facts or instances do you know which would lead you to believe either the following propositions or their opposites? |
12088 | EXERCISES What methods of paragraph development, or what combinations of methods, are used in the following selections? |
12088 | EXERCISES Which of the following are incorrect? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ About which of the following subjects do you now possess a sufficient knowledge to enable you to write a paragraph? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ Can you tell which of the following are classifications? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ If you were to write three paragraphs describing a man, which of the following details should be included in each paragraph? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ To which of the two general classes of composition would each of the following belong? |
12088 | EXERCISES_ A._ Which sentences make the general statements, and which furnish specific instances, in the following paragraphs? |
12088 | Excuse me, then, but is a milksop a man from some state, or some country, too?" |
12088 | Explanations? |
12088 | Exposition answers such questions as how? |
12088 | For example, in answer to the question, What is exposition? |
12088 | For what class of people do you think it was written? |
12088 | For which can you furnish different illustrations? |
12088 | For your wishing to attend college? |
12088 | For your wishing to go into business after leaving the high school? |
12088 | Has anything been said in the beginning of any of them which suggests what the point will be, or which helps you to appreciate it when you come to it? |
12088 | Has murder stained his hands with gore? |
12088 | Has the story a point?) |
12088 | Have historians been given to exaggerating the villainy of Machiavelli? |
12088 | Have you been careful in your selection of facts and arrangement?) |
12088 | Have you chosen the one best suited to your purpose?) |
12088 | Have you developed the paragraph so that the reader will understand fully your topic statement? |
12088 | Have you explained so many terms that your narrative is rendered tedious? |
12088 | Have you expressed it clearly? |
12088 | Have you expressed the transitions with the proper time relations? |
12088 | Have you given undue prominence to any? |
12088 | Have you included any minor and unimportant divisions? |
12088 | Have you included enough to make your meaning clear?) |
12088 | Have you introduced any of the other methods of development? |
12088 | Have you introduced sentences which do not bear upon this topic statement? |
12088 | Have you introduced unnecessary details? |
12088 | Have you mentioned any unnecessary points?) |
12088 | Have you needed to use figures? |
12088 | Have you related what really happened, and in the proper time order? |
12088 | Have you said what you intended to say? |
12088 | Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | Have you said what you meant to say? |
12088 | Have you selected a subject which will be of interest to your readers?) |
12088 | Have you shown that they are true?) |
12088 | Have you told it so that the hearers will understand you? |
12088 | Have you told the event exactly as it occurred? |
12088 | Have you told what actually happened? |
12088 | Have you used any unnecessary particulars? |
12088 | Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example? |
12088 | Have you used comparisons or figures, and if so, do they improve your description? |
12088 | Have you used the same expression too often?) |
12088 | Have you used words that your reader will understand? |
12088 | Have you used_ and_ or_ got_ unnecessarily?). |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity of thought?) |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity? |
12088 | Have your paragraphs unity? |
12088 | He is, then, in English a''clap- trapper,''is he not?" |
12088 | How alike? |
12088 | How came they to deserve that term, mamma? |
12088 | How can you tell an oak tree from an elm tree? |
12088 | How different? |
12088 | How do two books that you have read differ? |
12088 | How have you made its meaning clear? |
12088 | How many of the sentences begin with the same word? |
12088 | How many of them can you explain? |
12088 | How many paragraphs would you make and what would you include in each? |
12088 | How many substitutes for"He said"can you name? |
12088 | If imaginary events are related, have you made them seem probable?) |
12088 | If not, why not? |
12088 | If so, have you used them in accordance with the suggestions on page 55? |
12088 | If so, is each a group of sentences treating of a single topic? |
12088 | If you ask yourself the question, What leads me to believe as I do? |
12088 | If you have used the word_ only_, is it placed so as to give the correct meaning?) |
12088 | In actions? |
12088 | In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But, being season''d with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
12088 | In laying a railroad track, why is there a space left between the ends of the rails? |
12088 | In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament? |
12088 | In telling about a runaway accident, what points would you mention if you were writing a short account for a newspaper? |
12088 | In what order shall they occur? |
12088 | In what respect does the Methodist church in your city differ from the other church buildings? |
12088 | In what way is the school like a factory? |
12088 | In which of the following selections is the point of view merely implied? |
12088 | In which of them are you interested? |
12088 | Is a lie ever justifiable? |
12088 | Is an action that is right for one person ever wrong for another? |
12088 | Is it a trade, a commercial business, or a profession? |
12088 | Is it introduced naturally?) |
12088 | Is it necessary to add anything to the story? |
12088 | Is its meaning clear? |
12088 | Is life so dear, is peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
12088 | Is the main thought of the two paragraphs the same even though they begin with the same sentence?) |
12088 | Is the mind held in suspense until the climax is reached? |
12088 | Is there any appeal to his son''s feelings? |
12088 | Is vivisection justifiable? |
12088 | Is what I say precisely what I mean? |
12088 | Is what I say so shaped that it can readily be assimilated by him who hears? |
12088 | Is your argument deductive or inductive?) |
12088 | Just what feature in each helps you in this? |
12088 | Just which word or words in each of the following sentences keep you from understanding the full meaning of the sentence? |
12088 | Likewise we feel that another has mastered the topic statement of a paragraph if he can answer the question, Why is this so? |
12088 | Lismore._ You are quite breathless, Charles; where have you been running so violently? |
12088 | Narration| is that form of discourse|? |
12088 | Nay, he''s a thief, too; have you not heard men say, That time comes stealing on by night and day? |
12088 | Notice that the following selection answers neither the question_ how_? |
12088 | Or again, can you not begin with that situation and imagine what would be done next? |
12088 | Or is it true only of the upper classes in the high school or only of college students? |
12088 | Physiography| is the science|? |
12088 | Plan of the Book.+--What is government? |
12088 | Pronoun:_ What_ shall I do? |
12088 | Scarcely drawing rein, Lord Blantyre shouted,"Which way?" |
12088 | Shall I write a letter?]. |
12088 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
12088 | Should anything be added? |
12088 | Should others be added? |
12088 | Should some of them be united into a longer one?) |
12088 | Should they be taught to_ all_ high school pupils?) |
12088 | Should two pupils ever study together? |
12088 | The Basis of Belief.+--If you ask yourself, Why do I believe this? |
12088 | The implied question in the sentence, I know whom you saw, is, Whom did you see? |
12088 | The second sentence causes us to ask, what was it? |
12088 | Their understanding of it may be helped further by telling such of the attendant circumstances as will answer the question,_ Why_? |
12088 | They may be classified into two kinds:( 1) those which answer the question, Is it right? |
12088 | Thus the request for permission should be,"May I?" |
12088 | To their curiosity? |
12088 | To their gratitude? |
12088 | To what extent does the descriptive matter help you determine his character? |
12088 | To what extent have you shown character by action? |
12088 | To what feelings have you appealed?) |
12088 | To what feelings have you appealed?) |
12088 | To what general theories have you appealed? |
12088 | To what particular feeling or feelings would you appeal in each case? |
12088 | Urge him to come to the high school._( What arguments have you made? |
12088 | Was Shylock''s punishment too severe? |
12088 | Was it possible that a hundred serpents could have surrounded the camp? |
12088 | Was this ambition? |
12088 | We may describe a particular lake; but if we answer the question, What is a lake? |
12088 | Were you so interested in anything yesterday that you told it to your parents or friends? |
12088 | What are two or three of the strong arguments in favor of woman suffrage? |
12088 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
12088 | What can you say of the suitability of the words in the following selection, taken from an old school reader? |
12088 | What colors? |
12088 | What connection is there between occupation and height above the sea level, and why? |
12088 | What did you notice most vividly? |
12088 | What does The Government do? |
12088 | What effect would it have on the interest aroused by the preceding story to begin it as follows? |
12088 | What elements have you introduced which you did not have in the other? |
12088 | What has the gray- haired prisoner done? |
12088 | What is a journalist? |
12088 | What is journalism? |
12088 | What is the result in each case of the various appeals? |
12088 | What kind of man is Silas Marner? |
12088 | What leads you to think as you do? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used? |
12088 | What methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What must you tell first in order to enable the hearers to understand the point? |
12088 | What other methods of development have you used?) |
12088 | What other questions should you ask yourself while correcting this theme?) |
12088 | What patterns do you notice that you did not see at first? |
12088 | What points would you add if you were writing to some one who was acquainted with the persons in the accident? |
12088 | What qualifications should a good class president have? |
12088 | What seems to be the purpose of it? |
12088 | What three arguments does Antony advance to prove that Caesar was not ambitious? |
12088 | What was I to do? |
12088 | What words have you used to show the time- order of the different events?) |
12088 | What would you select as its characteristic feature? |
12088 | What, in your mind, is the strongest reason why you wish to graduate from a high school? |
12088 | When asked to do something we should at once ask ourselves, Is it right? |
12088 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
12088 | When you have written anything, it is well to ask yourself the question, Have I used words with which_ the reader_ is probably familiar? |
12088 | Where is there an appeal to their pity? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Where? |
12088 | Which are defective? |
12088 | Which are important enough to become topic statements? |
12088 | Which are partitions? |
12088 | Which for a newspaper report? |
12088 | Which items in the following should be omitted as not necessary to the complete treatment of the subject indicated by the title? |
12088 | Which made the more vivid impression? |
12088 | Which may be grouped together in one paragraph? |
12088 | Which of the illustrations might be omitted from a recitation? |
12088 | Which sentence gives the general outline? |
12088 | Which way had she turned? |
12088 | Which would be better suited for a school class composed of boys and girls? |
12088 | Which would you need to"read up"about? |
12088 | Who did you say_ is_ president of your society?]. |
12088 | Who has lost_ his_ book? |
12088 | Who is the government? |
12088 | Why did the American colonies revolt against England? |
12088 | Why did the early settlers of New England persecute the Quakers? |
12088 | Why do fish bite better on a cloudy day than on a bright one? |
12088 | Why do n''t you say something? |
12088 | Why do we lose a day in going from America to China? |
12088 | Why do you believe or refuse to believe each? |
12088 | Why does a baseball curve? |
12088 | Why is the arrangement of your topics easy in this theme?) |
12088 | Why is the expression,"before the fog had lifted,"used near the beginning of the story? |
12088 | Why should trees be planted either in early spring or late autumn? |
12088 | Why should we study history? |
12088 | Why stand we here, idle? |
12088 | Why was Pitkin mad? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Why? |
12088 | Will he need to change the fundamental image as your description proceeds?) |
12088 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
12088 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
12088 | Will it go? |
12088 | Will the entire description enable the reader to form a clear and accurate image?) |
12088 | Will the reader form a vivid picture-- just the one you mean him to have?) |
12088 | Will the reader form at once a correct general outline? |
12088 | Will the reader form the mental image you wish him to form?) |
12088 | Will the reader get from it at once a correct general outline of the object to be described? |
12088 | Will this combination of words or that make the meaning clear? |
12088 | Will this order of presentation facilitate swiftness of apprehension or will it clog the movement? |
12088 | With ill- suppressed laughter I asked,"Do you know Nova Scotia and Newfoundland?" |
12088 | Would a description of the appearance of the house, the barn, or the persons add to the interest aroused by the story? |
12088 | Would an ordinary account of a bicycle or automobile trip be interesting? |
12088 | Would the effects which you have stated really follow the given causes?) |
12088 | Would your argument cause another to believe the proposition?) |
12088 | Write a theme appealing to both feeling and intellect._( Are your facts true and pertinent? |
12088 | Write a theme on the subject chosen._( Have you made use of either general description or general narration? |
12088 | You did n''t say that, now, did you, Hull Parsons?" |
12088 | _ Adverbs of degree_ answer the question To what extent? |
12088 | _ B._ Could a description be written for the purpose of entertaining? |
12088 | _ B._ Where is the climax in the following selection? |
12088 | _ Better_ for whom?) |
12088 | _ C._ In the following paragraphs which sentences give the general outline and which give details? |
12088 | _ C._ To which general class do narratives belong? |
12088 | _ Interrogative_ adverbs are used to ask questions:[_ When_ shall you come? |
12088 | _ Sounds or the use of sounds._ And the noise of Niagara? |
12088 | _ Trees and plants._ How shall kinnikinnick be told to them who know it not? |
12088 | _ Which_ book did you choose?]. |
12088 | _ Whose_ child is this? |
12088 | and( 2) those which answer the question, Is it expedient? |
12088 | but explains what journalism is:-- JOURNALISM What is a journal? |
12088 | he said,"where''s my sister?" |
12088 | nor_ why_? |
12088 | not"Can I?" |
12088 | or, What will result from this? |
12088 | or_ how_? |
12088 | what does it mean? |
12088 | what is it used for? |
12088 | what should such a fool Do with so good a wife?" |
12088 | why? |
14880 | Ah,said he,"you remember my bamboo, a very pretty cane which was given me by my father, do you not? |
14880 | And be late to school? |
14880 | And is that all that you can spell? |
14880 | Anything else? |
14880 | Are they for me? |
14880 | But my composition, mother,said Susie;"when shall I begin that?" |
14880 | But what can I do, then? |
14880 | Ca n''t get over? |
14880 | Can you swim? |
14880 | Can you tell me what the Bible is? |
14880 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
14880 | Confound you, Brown; what''s that for? |
14880 | Did you ever take an oath? |
14880 | Did you use to live in the country? |
14880 | Do I know about ghosts? |
14880 | Do you believe this? |
14880 | Do you ever read in it? |
14880 | Do you have to sit here all day? |
14880 | Do you know that book, my daughter? |
14880 | Does n''t it hurt you,she asked one,"to be heated--?" |
14880 | Four? |
14880 | Has anyone talked with you about being a witness in court here against this man? |
14880 | Has he, dear? |
14880 | Have I seen one? |
14880 | Have to have them? |
14880 | He never did anything to make a stir in the world, did he? |
14880 | He was n''t rich, was he? |
14880 | He was only good? |
14880 | How can power he a bad thing? |
14880 | How do you know this? |
14880 | How shall we reach him? |
14880 | I do not mean that,said the judge, who saw her mistake;"I mean were you ever a witness?" |
14880 | If we were to run all the way, would you be too late? |
14880 | In what room? |
14880 | Is it nice to be a sprite? |
14880 | Is it truly so? |
14880 | John, what is the meaning of this fire? |
14880 | Mother,he whispered,"is n''t God good to make everybody so rich?" |
14880 | Mr. Toil, the old schoolmaster,answered Hugh;"do n''t you see him among the haymakers?" |
14880 | Nay, no stopping,say you? |
14880 | No, no,replied Annie, half- vexed;"I remember, that is boiling point-- but I mean, to be heated as you all are, and then to fly off in the cold?" |
14880 | Nothing, mother,and the telltale tears sprang to his eyes,"only I guess we are very poor, are n''t we?" |
14880 | Now, Emily,said the counsel for the prisoner,"I wish to know if you understand the nature of an oath?" |
14880 | Now, boys, what shall we do? |
14880 | Now,said the judge,"you have been sworn as a witness; will you tell me what will befall you if you do not tell the truth?" |
14880 | Only what, Harry? |
14880 | Our time is short,one faint voice said;"To- day we''ve done our best On different sides: what matters now? |
14880 | Please, Brown,he whispered,"may I wash my face and hands?" |
14880 | Shall we come out to- morrow, aunt, after lessons, and try again? |
14880 | Shall you dread to be melted? |
14880 | There, Harry,said Uncle Ben,"do n''t you think you are foolish not to accept some of my offers?" |
14880 | Thou of the God- lent crown, Shall these vile creatures dare Murmur against thee where The knees of kings kneel down? |
14880 | Two bills? 14880 Very pleasant; do n''t you think so?" |
14880 | Well, Susie,said she, with a smile,"how does that composition come on?" |
14880 | Well, my boy, what of that? |
14880 | Well, what made you move here? |
14880 | Well, who is to blame now? |
14880 | What can this mean? |
14880 | What did they say? |
14880 | What do you want now? |
14880 | What is that, mamma,--smiles? |
14880 | What is the danger? |
14880 | What is the matter, my dear child? |
14880 | What shall we do? |
14880 | What''s the use? |
14880 | When I came across after breakfast it was there, and now it''s over on the other side, and how can I get back home? |
14880 | When it has n''t even a subject? |
14880 | Where did you get all these things? |
14880 | Where in the world have you been? |
14880 | Where is Katy? |
14880 | Where must I look? |
14880 | Who are you? |
14880 | Who can have set fire to the fallow? |
14880 | Who is that,said Stephen,"on whom you intend to be revenged?" |
14880 | Who will catch us? |
14880 | Why what''s the matter? |
14880 | Why, then, did you not close with us at once? |
14880 | Will you give my kite a lift? |
14880 | With that, an old fellow in the wagon, who was buried up under an old hat, bawled out,''Why do you frighten my horse?'' 14880 You will go with me, Andy, wo n''t you?" |
14880 | You wish you knew? 14880 ''Do you hear that?'' 14880 ''What will you take for your pony?'' 14880 ''What''s the price of oats, old man?'' 14880 ''Why do n''t you turn out, then?'' 14880 169 Which? 14880 A. O papa, how can you make that out? 14880 A? |
14880 | About a hand''s breadth, did you say? |
14880 | About our conduct to others? |
14880 | All that other folks can do, Why, with patience, should not you? |
14880 | And after it was in his throat, how could it untangle itself, and wind itself off so evenly? |
14880 | And have the lips of a sister fair Been baptized in the waves of light? |
14880 | And how came they to be buds at all? |
14880 | And how did the buds know when it was time to take off their little green hoods, and see what there was in the world around them? |
14880 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
14880 | And in the darkness, and the rapidity with which they were borne along, how should help come? |
14880 | And now, what should they do? |
14880 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs hid by me in the juniper tree? |
14880 | And then came the more subtle temptation,"shall I not be showing myself braver than others by doing this? |
14880 | And what art thou doing this cold winter day? |
14880 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
14880 | And what secret was it they were lisping to each other with their pleasant voices? |
14880 | And where had the bluebird flown from, across the snow banks down to the shore of the blue sea? |
14880 | And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother''s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? |
14880 | And, away in the twilight, lonesomely,("What is the twilight?" |
14880 | Are not animals always made better by kind treatment? |
14880 | Are the apples sweet'', or sour''? |
14880 | Are they here''? |
14880 | Are they old, or young? |
14880 | Are you sick or well? |
14880 | Are you sick''? |
14880 | As glorious? |
14880 | As strong? |
14880 | As you slip aside to allow him to take your place at the fire, will he not feel that you are kind? |
14880 | Boys, if you have nothing to do, will you unpack these parcels for me? |
14880 | But again the voice of the tempter whispered,"He gave it, and how do you know that he did not intend to make you a present of it? |
14880 | But his little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
14880 | But how did the music get in his throat? |
14880 | But it came again with the shades of night;"Will it be to- morrow when it is light?" |
14880 | But long it wo n''t be, Do n''t you know? |
14880 | But now you are coming to kiss me, you say: Well, what is it for? |
14880 | But perhaps some child who reads this, asks,"Does God notice little children in school?" |
14880 | But what makes thee seem so unconscious of care? |
14880 | But where? |
14880 | But, Uncle Thomas, are all horses originally wild? |
14880 | By"expansion of soul,"twelfth paragraph? |
14880 | Can a man be perfectly honest and still not follow the Golden Rule? |
14880 | Can they be tamed? |
14880 | Can they be taught to use them? |
14880 | Can we be happy without friends? |
14880 | Can you define tomorrow? |
14880 | Can you give her composition a proper subject? |
14880 | Can you tell what name is given to this kind of story? |
14880 | Canst thou minister to a mind diseased? |
14880 | Come, Tim, what do you say? |
14880 | Comrade, where wilt thou be to- night, When the loosed storm breaks furiously? |
14880 | D. And shall I call at Thumper''s and get the mare shod? |
14880 | D. But what are you to do for meal? |
14880 | D. Well, is there not a blacksmith hard by? |
14880 | Did Charles succeed at college? |
14880 | Did Fred show any lack of manliness when tested? |
14880 | Did he carry out his resolve? |
14880 | Did he ride, or walk? |
14880 | Did she know, at the time, that it was? |
14880 | Did they bloom in another world before they sprung up here?--and did they know, themselves, what kind of flowers they should blossom into? |
14880 | Did they forgive each other? |
14880 | Did you ever go far out upon the great ocean? |
14880 | Did you hear What happened to Piccola, children dear? |
14880 | Did you hear what those gentlemen said to Grandpa to- day? |
14880 | Did you not hear the rules? |
14880 | Did you say am, or ham? |
14880 | Did you say and'', or hand''? |
14880 | Did you say cap, or cat? |
14880 | Did you say play'', or pray''? |
14880 | Do monkeys in their native state know how to use sticks as weapons? |
14880 | Do n''t You hear? |
14880 | Do n''t you like to wonder?" |
14880 | Do n''t you see? |
14880 | Do n''t you see? |
14880 | Do you not think, sir, that knowledge is all excellent thing?" |
14880 | Do you think he would have been happy if the little boy or girl had robbed the nest? |
14880 | Do you think such a man would follow the Golden Rule? |
14880 | Do you think the old man would have told him if the poor man had not been so polite? |
14880 | Do you wish to know how? |
14880 | EXERCISE.--What do the first two stanzas describe? |
14880 | EXERCISES-- What is the subject of this lesson? |
14880 | EXERCISES-- What is the subject of this lesson? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Of what country is the giraffe a native? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--To whose school was Hugh Idle sent? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What country first supplied coffee? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What did Matilda do? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What did Ned like? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What did little Pearl ask of the strawberries? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What did the frost say? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What does the mark before"''T is"mean? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is a composition? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is a thrush? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is a"fairy tale"? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is described as beautiful? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is meant by the phrase"to apply himself,"in the fourth paragraph? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is meant by"dancing eyes"in the second stanza? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is meant by"driving the wolf from the door"? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is revenge? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is the Golden Rule? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is the subject of this lesson? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is the subject of this lesson? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is this lesson about? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is this lesson about? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is this lesson designed to teach? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What is this story about? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What kind of an animal is a monkey? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What was the character of George Jones? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--What were Arthur''s feelings the first night at Rugby? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Where are wild horses found? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Who delivered this sermon? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Who was the author of"The Old Oaken Bucket"? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Why could not Jenny cross the stream? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--Why did Fred offer to wash the dishes? |
14880 | EXERCISES.--With what is the snow man compared in this poem? |
14880 | Examples Has he come''? |
14880 | F. Have all the leaves those stings? |
14880 | F. What is curious? |
14880 | For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? |
14880 | For what are we placed in this world? |
14880 | For what purpose are they taken? |
14880 | From what sunny clime hast thou wandered away? |
14880 | Had flowers souls, like little girls, that would live in another world when their forms had faded away in this? |
14880 | Has he gone? |
14880 | Have I any right to begin it now? |
14880 | He knows that you give up to oblige him, and how can he help liking you for it? |
14880 | He stopped in front of her window, and, smiling very pleasantly, said,"How shall I find the way to your room?" |
14880 | His teeth? |
14880 | How are the plants cultivated? |
14880 | How are they taken? |
14880 | How are vessels warned of danger in a fog? |
14880 | How can we win the love of those about us? |
14880 | How could he bear it? |
14880 | How did Charles differ from him in these respects? |
14880 | How did George West make the day pleasant for Jennie? |
14880 | How did George appear in the class at school? |
14880 | How did Tom and James differ in character? |
14880 | How did he behave at recess? |
14880 | How did he feel over it? |
14880 | How did he obtain boards? |
14880 | How did his schoolmates show their lack of manliness? |
14880 | How did the plant come to be grown in other countries? |
14880 | How did the poor man find the way to the land of the dwarfs? |
14880 | How did the poor man treat his rich brother in return for his unkindness? |
14880 | How does it defend itself? |
14880 | How is this, Ben? |
14880 | How should I ever find them there? |
14880 | How should we treat our enemies? |
14880 | How should we treat such persons? |
14880 | How was Susan tempted? |
14880 | How was he rewarded? |
14880 | How was she punished? |
14880 | How was the greed of the dishonest merchant punished? |
14880 | How was this shown? |
14880 | I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky; For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I? |
14880 | I hear the church bells ring, Oh say, what may it be?" |
14880 | I hear the sound of guns, Oh say, what may it be?" |
14880 | I see a gleaming light, Oh say, what may it be?" |
14880 | I suppose she is past five?" |
14880 | I suppose you all, my boys, are looking for some sort of success in life; it is right that you should; but what are your notions of success? |
14880 | If a mother can feel so much, what must be the feelings of our Father in heaven for those who have strayed from his love? |
14880 | If man can feel so deep a sympathy, what must be the emotions which glow in the bosom of angels? |
14880 | If we use the powers that God has given us for bad purposes, what will our knowledge prove to be? |
14880 | In a few moments she said,"Mother, shall I read you what I have written?" |
14880 | In the third stanza, what does"St."before Nicholas mean? |
14880 | In what country are the finest horses raised? |
14880 | In what situation are they most likely to be saved? |
14880 | Is he rich, or poor? |
14880 | Is it always blessing? |
14880 | Is it black, or white? |
14880 | Is it right to envy any person? |
14880 | Is it right to swear? |
14880 | Is it right to take revenge on those who injure us? |
14880 | Is knowledge always a power? |
14880 | Is not Frisk a fine, grateful fellow? |
14880 | Is the dog white'', or black''? |
14880 | Is the tide high'', or low''? |
14880 | Is the tree large'', or small''? |
14880 | Is thoughtlessness any excuse for rudeness or unkindness? |
14880 | Mag- a- zine'', a storehouse, EXERCISES.--How did Robinson Crusoe make a house? |
14880 | Malicious little boys who had n''t been allowed to buy tickets to my theater used to cry out after me in the street,-"''Who killed Cock Robin?''" |
14880 | Not five words could he say,--the bell mocked him; he was listening for every whisper in the room,--what were they all thinking of him? |
14880 | Of Charles Bullard? |
14880 | Of what did he make a chair and table? |
14880 | Of what name are"Eddie"and"Ted"nicknames? |
14880 | On being asked if he would sell her,"What will you give me?" |
14880 | On what does it live? |
14880 | Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? |
14880 | Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? |
14880 | Or loop up your sleeve in a prettier way? |
14880 | Or was there a strong stem away behind it in the sky, that reached down below the sea, to a root, nobody could guess where? |
14880 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
14880 | S. Do you hear that, neighbor? |
14880 | S. Fifty dollars, did you say? |
14880 | S. What, that tinker, Dobson? |
14880 | Shall I tie your shoe? |
14880 | She smiled, and said,"You, Fred, you wash dishes?" |
14880 | Should we judge others harshly? |
14880 | Should you not then be diligent in your studies? |
14880 | Somebody''s hand has rested there; Was it a mother''s, soft and white? |
14880 | That is very curious, indeed; and I see the use of the little cloud and the flower; but the leaf that stung me, of what use can that be? |
14880 | The Interrogation point(?) |
14880 | The flower, papa? |
14880 | The lake? |
14880 | The pitcher? |
14880 | The trees? |
14880 | There was but one thought in every mind:"What has become of the lost child?" |
14880 | Think''st thou so meanly of my Phocion? |
14880 | To get rich as soon as possible, without regard to the means by which your wealth is acquired? |
14880 | To what age do lions live? |
14880 | To what height does it attain when full grown? |
14880 | To what warm shelter canst thou fly? |
14880 | WHICH? |
14880 | Was Tom right in defending Arthur from insult? |
14880 | Was it a composition? |
14880 | Was it a disgraceful thing to do? |
14880 | Was it courageous in him to stop saying his prayers? |
14880 | Was it found a mangled corpse? |
14880 | Was she a fit person to be a witness? |
14880 | Was there nothing to be done? |
14880 | Well, is the pain lessened? |
14880 | Well, my boys, have you undone the parcels for me? |
14880 | Well, what do you see? |
14880 | Were the boys ill- natured or only thoughtless? |
14880 | What about the life- saving stations? |
14880 | What are the three principal kinds of coffee used, and how are they valued? |
14880 | What became of him? |
14880 | What can you tell about Andrew? |
14880 | What changed her intention? |
14880 | What could I do without my eyes? |
14880 | What could be more sensible and straightforward than such a plan? |
14880 | What did Eddie''s mother advise him to do? |
14880 | What did Jennie tell George about her life? |
14880 | What did Jenny wish Andrew to do? |
14880 | What did Piccola find in her shoe on Christmas morning? |
14880 | What did Susie write? |
14880 | What did he do to the mountain? |
14880 | What did he do to the window? |
14880 | What did he do with Maria''s doll? |
14880 | What did he finally do? |
14880 | What did he learn from it? |
14880 | What did he not like? |
14880 | What did he resolve to do? |
14880 | What did her mother have her do? |
14880 | What did his mother suggest? |
14880 | What did his, aunt say to him? |
14880 | What did one soldier say to the other? |
14880 | What did she first think of doing? |
14880 | What did she wonder about each? |
14880 | What did the elders say to him, when they heard his reason for not giving them the diamonds at first? |
14880 | What did the other boy do with his? |
14880 | What did they reply? |
14880 | What do I say, father? |
14880 | What do sailors then do? |
14880 | What do you mean by emulation? |
14880 | What do you say to that?" |
14880 | What do you say? |
14880 | What do you think of the boy who threw the slipper? |
14880 | What does Jesus say of him who finds faults in his neighbor, but does not see his own? |
14880 | What does it imply? |
14880 | What does the lesson teach? |
14880 | What does the poem describe? |
14880 | What does the third? |
14880 | What does this lesson teach us in regard to perseverance? |
14880 | What does this lesson teach us to do in case of trouble? |
14880 | What does this lesson teach? |
14880 | What effect did her action have? |
14880 | What effect did it have on her? |
14880 | What fairy people are told about in this story? |
14880 | What fault did she find with it? |
14880 | What friends had he there? |
14880 | What good did it do him? |
14880 | What happened next day? |
14880 | What is a"coat of mail"? |
14880 | What is botany, papa? |
14880 | What is envy? |
14880 | What is in your parcel? |
14880 | What is it called? |
14880 | What is meant by a man with"a frozen heart"? |
14880 | What is meant by"a generous manhood,"tenth paragraph? |
14880 | What is meant by"strangers from foreign parts"? |
14880 | What is meant by"the shades of night,"in the seventh stanza? |
14880 | What is meant by"to any purpose,"in paragraph four? |
14880 | What is said about prayer? |
14880 | What is said about the roasting of coffee? |
14880 | What is said of a sailor''s life? |
14880 | What is said of his strength? |
14880 | What is said of the fruit? |
14880 | What is said of the idle? |
14880 | What is said of the industrious? |
14880 | What is said of this piece? |
14880 | What is still more wonderful than all that at which Margery wondered? |
14880 | What is the book which we may all read? |
14880 | What is your name, darling?" |
14880 | What lesson is taught by this story? |
14880 | What lesson was taught the boy who watched the eagle''s actions? |
14880 | What made the grass come up so green out of the black earth? |
14880 | What makes everything so pretty and so glad? |
14880 | What may we learn from this? |
14880 | What parable is a perfect illustration of its meaning? |
14880 | What point is used after the word"case"in the second stanza? |
14880 | What rule will surely gain us love and friendship if we always follow it? |
14880 | What shall we do for strings? |
14880 | What should be our motto if we expect to be successful? |
14880 | What should it teach us? |
14880 | What story is told about the two rivals? |
14880 | What troubled Eddie? |
14880 | What two lessons was he taught? |
14880 | What was he doing? |
14880 | What was that? |
14880 | What was the consequence? |
14880 | What was the result of Emily''s testimony? |
14880 | What was to be done? |
14880 | What was to be done? |
14880 | When is it dangerous to be at sea? |
14880 | Where are Denmark and Norway? |
14880 | Where did the lady find the monkey one day? |
14880 | Where did the waves come from? |
14880 | Where was his home? |
14880 | Where was the home of the other soldier? |
14880 | Which commandment forbids us to bear false witness? |
14880 | Which of the boys preserved his whipcord? |
14880 | Which of them do you think more worthy of imitation? |
14880 | Which shall it be? |
14880 | Which shall it be? |
14880 | Which? |
14880 | Who are blessed? |
14880 | Who are you? |
14880 | Who is St. Nicholas? |
14880 | Who is more beautiful than the rose, stronger than the lion, and more glorious than the sun? |
14880 | Who waited for him? |
14880 | Who was Jenny Murdock? |
14880 | Who was down there under the blue wall of the horizon, with the hoarse, hollow voice, urging and pushing them across the beach at her feet? |
14880 | Who watches all our actions wherever we may be? |
14880 | Whom did she ask to help her? |
14880 | Whose fault is it if we are not loved? |
14880 | Why are the horses so excellent there? |
14880 | Why could he not go with her? |
14880 | Why could she not write about"Time,""Temperance,"or"Industry"? |
14880 | Why did he run away? |
14880 | Why did the counsel wish to have Emily refused as a witness? |
14880 | Why did you not bring it back sooner?" |
14880 | Why was John discouraged in his attempts to fly his kite? |
14880 | Why was Susie so troubled? |
14880 | Why was the thrush so happy? |
14880 | Why would not the Arab sell his horse? |
14880 | Why, Ben, how did you get yours undone? |
14880 | Why, I could n''t hear a single word if I were deaf, could I?" |
14880 | Why? |
14880 | Will the dog listen to his voice? |
14880 | Will you go''? |
14880 | Will you go, or stay? |
14880 | Would it have been right for Andrew to have told an untruth even to help Jenny out of trouble? |
14880 | You can get a piece of whipcord twice as long as that for three cents; and who cares for three cents? |
14880 | and does he not deserve a share of Harry''s breakfast, whether he begs for it or not? |
14880 | and what feeling does it express? |
14880 | and what''s the matter now?" |
14880 | and why? |
14880 | cried Ching;"do you think I can not read?" |
14880 | dark- eyed darling, what is it you see? |
14880 | denotes a question; as, Has he come? |
14880 | did I? |
14880 | do n''t ye hear it roar now? |
14880 | do not even the publicans so? |
14880 | do not even the publicans the same? |
14880 | exclaimed Susie,"is that a composition?" |
14880 | have I hurt them?" |
14880 | in the seventh paragraph? |
14880 | is this water boiling? |
14880 | let me see; well, so I did; but did you just find it out? |
14880 | or can the hunter reach him in time to seize and control him? |
14880 | or was it alive and well? |
14880 | our wayward son, Turbulent, reckless, idle one-- Could he be spared? |
14880 | said she,"what are you doing down there?" |
14880 | said the stranger; and his voice seemed hard and severe, yet had a sort of kindness in it;"whence do you come so early, and whither are you going?" |
14880 | what signifies a bit of pack thread? |
14880 | what signifies a bit of whipcord? |
14880 | what will become of thee, poor little bird? |
14880 | would you give up the sport, after all the pains we have taken both to make and to fly the kite? |
7188 | How goes the day with us? |
7188 | What have I done? |
7188 | Where is Abel, thy brother? |
7188 | ( Can you find a word that would here sound better than_ that_?) |
7188 | ( Is it not the writer''s poetical conception of"the green ivy"that the reader is supposed not to possess?) |
7188 | ( Where is the conjunction omitted?) |
7188 | *****+ The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--Do the phrases in 1, paragraph 1, stand in their usual order, or are they transposed? |
7188 | + Direction+.--_Construct sentences by supplying a predicate to each of the following subjects_:-- Ask yourselves the question, Glycerine does what? |
7188 | + Examples+.--_Have you_ your lesson? |
7188 | + Examples+.--_Who_ came last evening? |
7188 | + Examples+.--_Whom_ did you see? |
7188 | + Examples+.--_Why_ is the forum crowded? |
7188 | + The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--How can you make the last part of 1 express more directly the cause of becoming disabled? |
7188 | + The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--In the first sentence_ seemed_ asserts something about what two things? |
7188 | ---- he be allowed to go on? |
7188 | ---- you be unhappy, if I do not come? |
7188 | 10. Who will go? |
7188 | 19. Who should I meet the other day but my old friend? |
7188 | 2. Who knows but what we may fail? |
7188 | 20. Who did he refer to, he or I? |
7188 | 21. Who did he choose? |
7188 | 3. Who can doubt but that there is a God? |
7188 | 3. Who servest thou under? |
7188 | 3. Who who saw him did not pity him? |
7188 | 30. Who did you suppose it to be? |
7188 | 30. Who doubts but what two and two are four? |
7188 | 8. Who knows if one of the Pleiads is really missing? |
7188 | An abstract noun? |
7188 | And--"This to me?" |
7188 | Are 7 and 8 identical in meaning? |
7188 | Are the quotation marks now needed? |
7188 | Are the sentences generally long, or generally short? |
7188 | Are these the words that bind the parts of 3 together? |
7188 | Are you a captain? |
7188 | Are you here? |
7188 | Are you prepared to recite? |
7188 | Are you_ excavating a subterranean canal?_ 5. |
7188 | Are_ negligence_,_ falsehood_, and_ mendacity_, in 5, used as subjects? |
7188 | Art thou gone? |
7188 | As a part of the sentence what is each of these words called? |
7188 | Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage-- what are they? |
7188 | At what wharf does the boat stop at? |
7188 | But is_ crowding_ any more adverbial here than are_ pale_ and_ trembling_ in"The natives came_ pale_ and_ trembling_"?] |
7188 | But may we not deal with words as we do with plants? |
7188 | By the aid of what pronouns are inanimate things personified? |
7188 | By what states is Kentucky bounded by? |
7188 | By_ which_ in 4? |
7188 | Can I speak to you? |
7188 | Can all adjectives be compared? |
7188 | Can all verbs be conjugated in this form? |
7188 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin? |
7188 | Can the leopard change his spots? |
7188 | Can you accommodate me in one of those? |
7188 | Can you change 3 so as to make the reference of_ it_ clearer? |
7188 | Can you find any other arrangement by which 3 will follow 2 so naturally? |
7188 | Can you find anything in the meaning of_ provided_ that makes previously unnecessary? |
7188 | Can you make a sentence of this group? |
7188 | Can you make a sentence of this object complement? |
7188 | Can you name any writers whose humor or satire is coarse? |
7188 | Can you see any similar effect from introducing_ their covert_ in the tenth sentence? |
7188 | Can you show that the author''s style has+ Variety+? |
7188 | Can you tell why? |
7188 | Canst thou wonder? |
7188 | Could Webster have done more to make his thought seen and felt? |
7188 | Did he choose you and I? |
7188 | Direction.--_Correct these errors, and give your reasons:--_ 1. Who was Joseph''s and Benjamin''s mother? |
7188 | Do the paragraphs above stand such tests? |
7188 | Do the words_ busily resounding_ joined to_ flail_ bring into our imagination men, grain, pounding, sound, and perhaps other things? |
7188 | Do they differ in logical force? |
7188 | Do you know that gentleman that is speaking? |
7188 | Do you now understand what Lowell meant when, in praise of Dryden, he said,"His phrase is always a short cut to his sense"? |
7188 | Do you see how? |
7188 | Do you think an unskillful artist would have used_ in gay festoons?_ Read the seventh and make it more common but less quaint. |
7188 | Do you think the picture gains, or loses, by representing the door as"ajar"instead of wide open? |
7188 | Do you think the word_ wondering_ well chosen and suggestive? |
7188 | Does either phrase need to be transposed for emphasis or for clearness? |
7188 | Does he make us laugh with, or does he make us laugh at, the plumbers? |
7188 | Does it stop short of making its object grotesque, or not? |
7188 | Does the author speak of them in a genial and lenient way? |
7188 | Does the clause following the semicolon modify anything? |
7188 | Does the writer make an unexpected turn after_ talk_? |
7188 | Does_ convoying_ assert anything about the squadron? |
7188 | Does_ other_ properly mean one of three things? |
7188 | For the period? |
7188 | Has it been decided? |
7188 | Have English nouns a neuter form? |
7188 | Have English words many inflections? |
7188 | Have all English nouns a masculine and a feminine form? |
7188 | Have birds any sense of why they sing? |
7188 | Have they lost any? |
7188 | Have ye brave sons? |
7188 | Have you ever seen what could be neatly said in three or four lines"padded out"to fill a page of composition paper or a column in a newspaper? |
7188 | Have you read_ Lamb''s Essays_? |
7188 | Have you_ read Froude_ or_ Freeman?_ 12. |
7188 | He adds,"The old Scotch interrogative,''What_ for_?'' |
7188 | He put the question thus:"_ Can you do it_?" |
7188 | How are adjectives of more than one syllable generally compared? |
7188 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
7188 | How are degrees of diminution expressed? |
7188 | How are some adverbs compared? |
7188 | How can brethren partake of their Father''s blessing that curse each other? |
7188 | How do compounds form the plural? |
7188 | How does the alternation of short sentences with long throughout the extract affect you? |
7188 | How is a similar effect produced in the ninth and the tenth sentence? |
7188 | How is a transitive verb conjugated in the passive voice? |
7188 | How is a verb conjugated in the emphatic form? |
7188 | How is the paragraph indicated to the eye? |
7188 | How is the plural of nouns regularly formed? |
7188 | How is the possessive of nouns in the singular formed? |
7188 | How is this shown to the eye? |
7188 | How is this shown to the eye? |
7188 | How many have regular verbs? |
7188 | How many parts of speech are there? |
7188 | How many predicate verbs do you find, each asserting something about the pigeons represented by_ others_? |
7188 | How may a question with negation be expressed in the indicative and potential modes? |
7188 | How may an intransitive verb sometimes be made transitive? |
7188 | How wide do you think that the Atlantic ocean is? |
7188 | I the weaker vessel? |
7188 | If a conjunction is used, would you change the punctuation? |
7188 | If he---- come by noon,---- you be ready? |
7188 | If not, where is it obscure? |
7188 | If so, why? |
7188 | If the speaker is ignorant of the name of a person or a thing and asks for it, he uses_ who_,_ which_, or_ what_; as,_ Who_ did that? |
7188 | If the uses of the original participles have been extended, why may we not carry over the name? |
7188 | If(=_ since_) it rains, why do you go? |
7188 | In 1, paragraph 2, who is described as gazing about? |
7188 | In 3, paragraph 3, how are the words borrowed from Paul marked? |
7188 | In 4 would_ his_ in place of_ the_ before_ aged_ and before_ heart_ be ambiguous? |
7188 | In making separate sentences of 3 what words do you change or drop? |
7188 | In personification, when is the masculine pronoun used, and when is the feminine? |
7188 | In quoting a question, the interrogation point must stand within the quotation marks; as, He asked,"What are you living for?" |
7188 | In the eleventh sentence what two things does_ decorated_ tell something about? |
7188 | In the fifth_ turned up as if watching the weather_ describes what? |
7188 | In the fourth sentence does the expression_ ready to be spun_ tell what is actually seen, or what is only suggested? |
7188 | In the fourth sentence what group of words shows where the bag stood? |
7188 | In the fourth what word tells what the rows were enjoying? |
7188 | In the second person? |
7188 | In the seventh sentence_ these_ stands for what two nouns, or names, found in the preceding sentence? |
7188 | In the sixth sentence what word says, or asserts, something about both ears and strings? |
7188 | In the tenth sentence_ convoying whole fleets of ducks_ describes what? |
7188 | In the third sentence what two nouns form the subject of_ skimmed?_ What connects these two nouns? |
7188 | In the third sentence what two nouns form the subject of_ skimmed?_ What connects these two nouns? |
7188 | In the third sentence what word tells where the dazzling occurred? |
7188 | In the third sentence would you prefer_ skimmed_ to_ flew_? |
7188 | In what different places may they stand? |
7188 | In what latitude is Boston in? |
7188 | In what sentence is the style made+ energetic+ by the aid of short predicates? |
7188 | In what three ways may the masculine of nouns be distinguished from the feminine? |
7188 | In what ways may the plural be formed irregularly? |
7188 | In"Who did it?" |
7188 | In,_ Who_ did it? |
7188 | Instead of naming things a speaker may indicate them by words pointing them out as near or remote; as, Is_ that_ a man? |
7188 | Instead of the possessive form, what may be used? |
7188 | Into what may the passive form be resolved? |
7188 | Into what three classes are co- ordinate connectives subdivided? |
7188 | Intransitive? |
7188 | Irregular? |
7188 | Is Mr. Warner here giving us a bit of his own experience? |
7188 | Is a real squadron referred to in the tenth sentence? |
7188 | Is it made interesting and entertaining? |
7188 | Is our author''s use of it delicate and refined? |
7188 | Is the person of nouns marked by form? |
7188 | Is the story clearly told throughout? |
7188 | Is_ me_, or_ visits_, the object complement of_ make_? |
7188 | It is a story of what? |
7188 | It is not because he can not conjugate the verb or decline the pronoun that he falls into such errors as"How many sounds_ have_ each of the vowels?" |
7188 | It may also be noted here that adverbs are used interrogatively; as,_ How, when_, and_ where_ is this to be done? |
7188 | It should be remembered that_ which_ and_ what_ may also be interrogative adjectives; as,_ Which_ side won? |
7188 | It will ask of you,"What can you do?" |
7188 | Lovest thou me more than these? |
7188 | May the predicate contain more than one word? |
7188 | Negatively? |
7188 | Of What Use are Flowers? |
7188 | Of a noun or pronoun used as attribute complement? |
7188 | Of an explanatory modifier? |
7188 | Of an objective complement? |
7188 | Of certain compound prepositions? |
7188 | Of nouns in the plural? |
7188 | Of what class of verbs is it a modification? |
7188 | Of what is something thought? |
7188 | Of what is the air composed of? |
7188 | Of_ but_,_ except_, and_ save_? |
7188 | Of_ to_ with the infinitive? |
7188 | Or do you think he is drawing upon his imagination? |
7188 | Ordinarily, and while clinging to their derivation, they are so used, but are they always, and must they be? |
7188 | Shall you be able to sell them boots? |
7188 | Shall you be at liberty to- day? |
7188 | Shine, sir? |
7188 | Some one has said that the milkman''s favorite song should be,"Shall we gather at the river?" |
7188 | Suppose, for instance, you have formed an idea of a day; could you express this by a tone, a look, or a gesture? |
7188 | Synopsis? |
7188 | The adverb_ so_, modified by the adverb clause_ that the mercury froze_, answers the question, Cold to what degree? |
7188 | The alternation of plain with figurative sentences? |
7188 | The analysis of a sentence? |
7188 | The clause_ if he borrows_ is joined like an adverb to what verb? |
7188 | The connectives of adverb clauses are subdivided into what classes? |
7188 | The first_ as_, modified by the adverb clause, answers the question, Good to what extent or degree? |
7188 | The force of_ yes_ may be illustrated by substituting_ certainly_--Will you go? |
7188 | The gender of English nouns follows what? |
7188 | The group of words_ bursting forth with the treasures of the farm_ describes what? |
7188 | The group of words_ from this piazza_ goes with what word? |
7188 | The infinitive phrase in 1, paragraph 2, modifies what? |
7188 | The office of_ there_? |
7188 | The phrase_ to enjoy the rich morsel which he had discovered_ tells the purpose of what? |
7188 | The predicate of a sentence? |
7188 | The pupil asked,"When shall I use_ O_, and when shall I use_ oh?_"3. |
7188 | The question ever asked and never answered is,"Where and how am I to exist in the Hereafter?" |
7188 | The question is( see Caution for collective nouns), Is the number four thought of as a whole, or are the individual units composing it thought of? |
7188 | The two words_ window_ and_ crevice_ are joined together by what word? |
7188 | They seem to modify words omitted in the answer but contained in the question; as, Did you see him? |
7188 | Think''st thou this heart could feel a moment''s joy, thou being absent? |
7188 | Thou art sad, have you heard bad news? |
7188 | To what class of words does each of these chief parts belong? |
7188 | To what class of words, or part of speech, does each belong? |
7188 | To what does_ it_ refer in,_ it_ rains; How is_ it_ with you? |
7188 | To what may Italy be likened to? |
7188 | To which word of compound names or of groups of words treated as such is the sign added? |
7188 | Tweed''s defiant question was,"What are you going to do about it?" |
7188 | Was Cabot the discoverer of America, or was he not the discoverer of America? |
7188 | We say,_ Does he love?__ I do not know_. |
7188 | We say,_ Is it right? |
7188 | Were the wings actually burnished? |
7188 | What Does a Proper Care for One''s Health Demand? |
7188 | What Does a Proper Observance of Sunday Require of One? |
7188 | What adjective may be used in place of_ good_ in_ a good deal_? |
7188 | What adjective pronouns are declined wholly or in part? |
7188 | What adjectives do not limit? |
7188 | What are Books Good for? |
7188 | What are adverbs that connect called? |
7188 | What are auxiliary verbs? |
7188 | What are its principal parts? |
7188 | What are its two parts? |
7188 | What are redundant and what are defective verbs? |
7188 | What are regular verbs? |
7188 | What are the Rules for Spelling? |
7188 | What are the classes of pronouns? |
7188 | What are the faults or foibles of these real or fancied plumbers? |
7188 | What are the nominative, and what the objective, forms of the pronouns? |
7188 | What are the number and person of a verb? |
7188 | What are the principal parts of a verb? |
7188 | What are the several classes of adverbs? |
7188 | What are the two great classes of conjunctions, and what is their difference? |
7188 | What are transitive verbs? |
7188 | What art thou, execrable shape, that darest advance? |
7188 | What calls back the past like the rich pumpkin- pie? |
7188 | What can they possibly be but the forms that all grammarians call_ participles_ extended to new uses? |
7188 | What can you say of this use of_ burnished_? |
7188 | What can you say of_ regiments_ in the eleventh? |
7188 | What classes of words have distinctive person forms? |
7188 | What connects these two nouns? |
7188 | What connects these two phrases? |
7188 | What connects this group to_ work_? |
7188 | What distinction can you make between the use of the semicolon and the use of the comma in 3? |
7188 | What distinction is made between the object and the object complement? |
7188 | What does each of the two phrases_ under their wings_ and_ buried in their bosoms_ describe? |
7188 | What does it imply? |
7188 | What does the expression_ knowingly left open_ suggest to you? |
7188 | What does the progressive form denote? |
7188 | What does_ forth_ modify? |
7188 | What does_ gazing about_ modify? |
7188 | What does_ of the mansion_ go with? |
7188 | What does_ of usual residence_ describe? |
7188 | What does_ that_ in 1, paragraph 4, stand for? |
7188 | What does_ with the treasures of the farm_ modify? |
7188 | What explains_ it_ in 10? |
7188 | What group of words in 5 is used like an adjective to modify_ hurry_? |
7188 | What group of words tells the position of the rows? |
7188 | What have you learned about the commas used with these nouns? |
7188 | What help is it to the reader to have a composition paragraphed? |
7188 | What if he is poor? |
7188 | What if the bee love not these barren boughs? |
7188 | What is Case? |
7188 | What is Comparison? |
7188 | What is English grammar? |
7188 | What is Number? |
7188 | What is Tense? |
7188 | What is a collective noun? |
7188 | What is a conjunctive adverb? |
7188 | What is a diagram? |
7188 | What is a sentence? |
7188 | What is an antecedent? |
7188 | What is gained by this expression and by_ just from the loom_ in the next sentence? |
7188 | What is his coming or going_ to you_? |
7188 | What is language proper? |
7188 | What is said of some prepositions ending in_ ing_? |
7188 | What is said of the number of collective nouns? |
7188 | What is said of the participle in_ have written_,_ had written_, etc.? |
7188 | What is said of the subjunctive mode? |
7188 | What is the Caution relating to gender? |
7188 | What is the case of a noun used independently? |
7188 | What is the difference between sex and gender? |
7188 | What is the distinction between a common and a proper noun? |
7188 | What is the matter of him? |
7188 | What is the object complement of_ can afford_ in 7? |
7188 | What is the object complement of_ could do_? |
7188 | What is the office of the_ though_ clause? |
7188 | What is the office of the_ till_ clause? |
7188 | What is the possessive sign? |
7188 | What is the predicate of this modifying group? |
7188 | What is the subject of a sentence? |
7188 | What is the subject of_ was_? |
7188 | What is_ this_? |
7188 | What kind of clause is introduced by_ where_ in 3? |
7188 | What long complex phrase modifies_ deal_? |
7188 | What love equals a mother''s? |
7188 | What may be mistaken for a verb in the passive voice? |
7188 | What means that hand upon that breast of thine? |
7188 | What merits of the paragraph, already treated, are admirably illustrated in this extract? |
7188 | What modifies_ refused_ by telling when? |
7188 | What need is there of the man swearing? |
7188 | What noun is used adverbially after_ gave_? |
7188 | What noun? |
7188 | What other parts of speech besides conjunctions connect? |
7188 | What per cent does he gain? |
7188 | What phrase belongs to_ went_, telling where? |
7188 | What phrase can you put in place of the pronoun_ it_ without changing the sense? |
7188 | What phrase tells the cause of crowing? |
7188 | What power shall blanch the sullied snow of character? |
7188 | What pronoun more indefinite than_ your_ might take its place in 4? |
7188 | What quality do you think they impart to one''s style?] |
7188 | What rule has been given for the use of capital letters? |
7188 | What shows that the parts of 2 are not closely connected? |
7188 | What sounds have each of the vowels? |
7188 | What three kinds of clauses are connected by subordinate connectives? |
7188 | What three parts of speech may connect clauses? |
7188 | What to me fame? |
7188 | What two classes are there? |
7188 | What two nouns form the principal part of the phrase in the eighth sentence? |
7188 | What use is this to him? |
7188 | What was said, and who said it? |
7188 | What word or words does the phrase_ of the vast barn_ make more definite in meaning? |
7188 | What word usually follows the comparative, and what the superlative? |
7188 | What word, then, binds these two sentences into one? |
7188 | What word, then, must have made an adjective of this sentence and joined it to_ hurry_? |
7188 | What, by telling_ why_? |
7188 | What, in general, is the difference between_ in_ and_ into_? |
7188 | What, to the writer to know that he must write in paragraphs? |
7188 | When 5 is divided into two sentences, what word is dropped? |
7188 | When do prepositions become adverbs? |
7188 | When does a conditional or a concessive clause require the verb to be in the indicative? |
7188 | When is a noun in the first person? |
7188 | When is the neuter pronoun_ it_ used? |
7188 | When is the one voice used, and when the other? |
7188 | When is the pronoun of the masculine gender used? |
7188 | When is the subjunctive used? |
7188 | When judges accept bribes, what may we expect from common people? |
7188 | When shall we meet together? |
7188 | When will we get through this tedious controversy? |
7188 | Where are you going to? |
7188 | Where hast been these six months? |
7188 | Where have you been to? |
7188 | Where was you? |
7188 | Where will I leave you? |
7188 | Which are the two more important ranges of mountains in North America? |
7188 | Which book is wanted? |
7188 | Which do you prefer, the first sentence above, or this substitute for it:"The large barn was entirely full of the products of the farm"? |
7188 | Which read more closely together, and are more closely connected, the parts of 2, or of 1? |
7188 | Which word tells what is thought? |
7188 | Whither are you going so early? |
7188 | Who is represented as intending? |
7188 | Who sailed, conquered, etc.? |
7188 | Whom did you suppose it was? |
7188 | Whom should I obey but thee? |
7188 | Whose footsteps these? |
7188 | Why are dust and ashes proud? |
7188 | Why are these verbs not separated by commas? |
7188 | Why does the very murderer, his victim sleeping before him, and his glaring eye taking the measure of the blow, strike wide of the mortal part? |
7188 | Why dost stare so? |
7188 | Why is person regarded in grammar? |
7188 | Why is this a sentence? |
7188 | Why is_ music_ a common noun? |
7188 | Why so unkind? |
7188 | Why? |
7188 | Why? |
7188 | Why? |
7188 | Will I be in time? |
7188 | Will you take your chance? |
7188 | Would a conjunction bring them more closely together? |
7188 | Would you call Mr. Warner''s quality of style+ Humor+? |
7188 | Would you call such a clause_ dependent_, or would you call it_ independent_? |
7188 | Would you call the style plain, or does it abound with metaphors, similes, or other figures of speech? |
7188 | Would you use a semicolon to separate the sentences thus joined, or would you use a comma? |
7188 | [ Footnote: In"Are you going?" |
7188 | _ A_ and_ huge_ are attached to what? |
7188 | _ As if watching the weather_ goes with what? |
7188 | _ As we had in Boston_ goes with what? |
7188 | _ Clapping, crowing, tearing_, and_ calling_, in the thirteenth, all describe what? |
7188 | _ Every_ goes with what word or words? |
7188 | _ Has the gentleman_ finished? |
7188 | _ He directed me to( whom)_ belongs to what? |
7188 | _ If he begs and gets_? |
7188 | _ If they had been made by the job_ is joined like an adverb to what verb? |
7188 | _ Intending such as we had in Boston_ belongs to what? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 112.--What are Modifications? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 116.--In what four ways may the number of nouns be determined? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 117.--What is Gender? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 118.--How is gender in grammar important? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 119.--What is Person? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 121.--What is Parsing? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 122.--How many case forms have nouns, and what are they? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 123.--In what case alone can mistakes in the construction of nouns occur? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 124.--What is Declension? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 125.--What words in the language have each three different case forms? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 127.--What one modification have adjectives? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 128.--To how many things does the comparative degree refer? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 129.--What is Voice? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 130.--In changing a verb from the active to the passive, what does the object complement become? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 131.--What is Mode? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 132.--What is Conjugation? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 134.--How many inflectional forms may irregular verbs have? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 136.--How is a verb conjugated in the progressive form? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 137.--How may a verb be conjugated interrogatively? |
7188 | _ Lesson_ 138.--Into what may the compound, or periphrastic, forms of the verb be resolved? |
7188 | _ No_= I did_ no_(_ not_) see him; Will you go? |
7188 | _ Of wool ready to be spun_ describes what? |
7188 | _ Ought you to go_? |
7188 | _ Shall_ I_ go?_ Here the speaker puts himself under the control of some external influence-- the will of another. |
7188 | _ Shall_ he_ go?_ Ans. |
7188 | _ Shall_ you_ go_? |
7188 | _ The_ and_ wondering_ in the first sentence go with what noun? |
7188 | _ What star_ shines brightest? |
7188 | _ What_ are personal consequences? |
7188 | _ What_ did he say? |
7188 | _ What_ man is happy with the toothache? |
7188 | _ What_ news have you? |
7188 | _ Where_ are the flowers, the fair young flowers? |
7188 | _ Which course_ will you choose? |
7188 | _ Which he had discovered_ limits the meaning of what? |
7188 | _ Which_ of them did you see? |
7188 | _ Will_ he_ go?_ Ans. |
7188 | _ Will_ you_ go_? |
7188 | and from Steele,"_ Who_ should I meet?" |
7188 | and were the geese actually convoying fleets? |
7188 | but, when a question contains a quotation, this order is reversed; as, May we not find"sermons in stones"? |
7188 | form the plural? |
7188 | or is he hostile, and does he hold up their foibles to scorn and derision? |
7188 | or is it gross and coarse? |
7188 | or that+ form of wit+ known as+ Satire+? |
7188 | or"You are going?" |
7188 | you a lion? |
16751 | And your father''s name? |
16751 | Are there any winged ants in Jidda? |
16751 | But how shall I get admitted to you, my lord? 16751 But why do I talk of Death? |
16751 | Did you see how all the people looked, one after another, so indifferently at that couple, and evidently forgot them the next instant? 16751 Do you still feel like fainting?" |
16751 | Front de Boeuf? |
16751 | I now postponed my purpose of traveling; for why should I go abroad, while so much remained to be learned at home? 16751 Is he dead?" |
16751 | My dear friend, why do you ask for such a trifling employment? |
16751 | O Omar, have you saved me only to cast me down from the highest pinnacle of joy to the depths of despair? 16751 Pelham,""The Caxtons,""My Novel,""What will he do with it?" |
16751 | Seem there no other leaders? |
16751 | Shall I do it? |
16751 | So soon d''ye call it? |
16751 | Ten what? |
16751 | The assailants have won the barriers, have they not? |
16751 | The bridge-- the bridge which communicates with the castle-- have they won that pass? |
16751 | To what end, then,he asks,"should I study languages, and traverse countries, to learn so simple truths?" |
16751 | Under what banner? |
16751 | Well, who are they? 16751 What are we,"thought the musing prince,"that we should fill the world with ourselves-- we kings? |
16751 | What are you doing? |
16751 | What do they now, maiden? |
16751 | What do you call your picture? |
16751 | What dost thou see, Rebecca? |
16751 | What is going on? |
16751 | What is this that ye do, my children? 16751 What is your name, my good woman?" |
16751 | What signifies sadness, sir? 16751 What will become of me?" |
16751 | What''s that? |
16751 | What''s the subject? |
16751 | When did he die? |
16751 | Where is Perry''s Hotel? |
16751 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
16751 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
16751 | Who bids at three thalers? 16751 Why is that man expiring? |
16751 | Will it find a purchaser? |
16751 | You remember my garden, Henry? |
16751 | Young man,said the cadi to the Banian,"have you witnesses to prove that Ali deceived you? |
16751 | ### Did you ever ride on a snowplow? |
16751 | ### Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
16751 | ### What constitutes a state? |
16751 | ### Who is there that has forgotten the vales of Brandywine, the fields of Germantown, or the plains of Monmouth? |
16751 | ###"Pray, Mr. Opie, may I ask you what you mix your colors with?" |
16751 | ''T is time you should know it, for you have been my clumsy, two- fisted valet these thirty years: can you deny that? |
16751 | ''What will become of me?'' |
16751 | ( 130) Is then the dreadful measure of your cruelty not yet complete? |
16751 | ( 19) Does he read correctly''or incorrectly''? |
16751 | ( 20) Do they act prudently'', or imprudently''? |
16751 | ( 25) 1, Can''you be so blind to your interest? |
16751 | A statesman''? |
16751 | A student came up to the new master,"How should I do this, sir?" |
16751 | Advance, or retreat?" |
16751 | All? |
16751 | Am I Dromio''? |
16751 | Am I myself''? |
16751 | Am I your man''? |
16751 | Among the impure is there none pure? |
16751 | And Joab said unto the man that told him, And, behold, thou sawest him, and why didst thou not smite him there to the ground? |
16751 | And Joab said, Wherefore wilt thou run, my son, seeing that thou hast no tidings ready? |
16751 | And hop''st thou hence unscathed to go? |
16751 | And is this the way that you are to show yourselves the advocates of order? |
16751 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
16751 | And shall they ever meet again? |
16751 | And the king said unto Cushi, Is the young man Absalom safe? |
16751 | And the king said, Is the young man Absalom safe? |
16751 | And was this a time to be poring over musty books in a dark room, slighted by the very sun itself? |
16751 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
16751 | And where are they? |
16751 | And where art thou, My country? |
16751 | And which is the nobler benefactor, patriot, and philanthropist? |
16751 | And who commanded( and the silence came), Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest? |
16751 | And who does not rejoice that it would be impossible thus to welcome this primitive Christian, the founder of Sunday schools? |
16751 | And why not? |
16751 | Answer me to that; and Poins there? |
16751 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation''? |
16751 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
16751 | Are his days so determined? |
16751 | Are the thoughts, and the works, and the prayers of men Only sparrows that light on God''s telegraph strings, Holding a moment, and gone again? |
16751 | Are they at home'', or abroad''? |
16751 | Are you engaged'', or at leisure''? |
16751 | Are you not a coward? |
16751 | Art thou mad? |
16751 | Awaked you not with this sore agony? |
16751 | Be we men, And suffer such dishonor? |
16751 | Bedrooms? |
16751 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
16751 | But man dieth, and his power is gone; He is taken away, and where is he? |
16751 | But was it such? |
16751 | But what have I lost? |
16751 | But when shall we be stronger? |
16751 | But where is the ironbound prisoner? |
16751 | But where''s my nephew Frederic? |
16751 | Can Honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull, cold ear of Death? |
16751 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
16751 | Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others, or have we found angels, in the form of kings, to govern him? |
16751 | Can storied urn, or animated bust, Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
16751 | Can thy spirit wonder, A great man should decline? |
16751 | Chairs? |
16751 | Come, tell us your reason; what sayest thou to this? |
16751 | Coward, can she reign and conquer If we thus her glory dim? |
16751 | Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition: By that sin fell the angels; how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by it? |
16751 | Did I force the stranger to leave the casket in my hands? |
16751 | Did he do it voluntarily'', or involuntarily''? |
16751 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake? |
16751 | Did you say Europe'', or Asia''? |
16751 | Do n''t you think he is a little like me, Humphrey? |
16751 | Do you confess so much? |
16751 | Do you seek wealth'', or power''? |
16751 | Does anyone suppose that the payment of twenty shillings, would have ruined Mr. Hampden''s fortune? |
16751 | Does he say able'', or table''? |
16751 | Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
16751 | Does the gentleman suppose it is in his power'', to exhibit in Carolina a name so bright''as to produce envy''in my bosom? |
16751 | Dost thou hear me, Hal? |
16751 | Drunk? |
16751 | Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
16751 | Etty?" |
16751 | Fierce he broke forth,--"And dar''st thou then To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall? |
16751 | Had you such leisure in the time of death, To gaze upon the secrets of the deep? |
16751 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
16751 | Hast thou dared think of matrimony, too? |
16751 | Hast thou numbered his months, And set fast his bounds for him Which he can never pass? |
16751 | Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief, and blood ill- tempered, vexeth him? |
16751 | Hath a dog-- money? |
16751 | Have I been idle, or have I nothing to show for all my labor and pains? |
16751 | Have I broken my word, and has he kept his?" |
16751 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
16751 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
16751 | Have ye brave sons''? |
16751 | Have ye brave sons? |
16751 | Have ye fair daughters''? |
16751 | Have ye fair daughters? |
16751 | Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humor which my mother gave me Makes me forgetful? |
16751 | Have you so soon forgotten all the lessons of love and forgiveness? |
16751 | He counted them at break of day,-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
16751 | He had no courage to ask after any more friends, but cried out in despair,"Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle?" |
16751 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in Caesar seem ambitious? |
16751 | He knew he must die of want if he remained there alone; but to whom could he apply for aid? |
16751 | He said hazy''not lazy''? |
16751 | Heard ye those loud contending waves, That shook Cecropia''s pillar''d state''? |
16751 | Hence it is a good rule to ask ourselves frequently,"Why am I reading this book, essay, or poem? |
16751 | His father, my brother Job, is of as tame a spirit-- Humphrey, you remember my brother Job? |
16751 | His sweet regrets, his delicate compassion, his soft smile, his tremulous sympathy, the weakness which he owns? |
16751 | Horror- struck, we ask, wherefore this hateful contest? |
16751 | Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? |
16751 | How are you, Joe? |
16751 | How does your grace? |
16751 | How many books did he purchase''? |
16751 | How now, woolsack? |
16751 | How should I tell fortunes else?" |
16751 | How was it, meanwhile, with Duhobret, while this exciting scene was going on? |
16751 | I ask again, is''there no hope of reconciliation? |
16751 | I ask, gentlemen, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us into submission? |
16751 | I call thee coward? |
16751 | I durst not? |
16751 | I fear not death, and shall I then fear thee? |
16751 | If it be admitted, that strict integrity is not the shortest way to success, is it not the surest'', the happiest'', the best''? |
16751 | In buckram? |
16751 | In reading this sentence, the voice should slide somewhat as represented in the following diagram: Does he read cor- rectly or incorrect- ly? |
16751 | Is a snowplow a public conveyance? |
16751 | Is he rich'', or poor''? |
16751 | Is he sick''? |
16751 | Is it come to this? |
16751 | Is it possible-- A cur can lend three-- thousand-- ducats? |
16751 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
16751 | Is it then a trifling power we see at work, or is it not something next to miraculous? |
16751 | Is life only wires and lightning, then, Apart from that which about it clings? |
16751 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
16751 | Is not the truth the truth? |
16751 | Is not the whole land before thee? |
16751 | Is not thy wine a poison? |
16751 | Is that the way you talk to me, you old boor? |
16751 | Is the glory of Heaven to be sung only by gentlemen in black coats? |
16751 | Is the great chain upheld by God'', or thee''? |
16751 | Is the reward of virtue bread? |
16751 | Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
16751 | Is there no one thing in which I can challenge competition, that I can bring as an instance of exact perfection, in which others can not find a flaw? |
16751 | Is there no virtue extant? |
16751 | Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens, To wash this crimson hand as white as snow''? |
16751 | Is this the fruit of my toils, of my vigils and prayers and privations? |
16751 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
16751 | Is''t possible? |
16751 | Is''t possible? |
16751 | Kind souls, what, weep you when you but behold Our Caesar''s vesture wounded? |
16751 | Listen to him: from your childhood you have known the verses; but who can hear their sacred music without love and awe? |
16751 | May one be pardoned, and retain-- the offense? |
16751 | Might Rome have been taken''? |
16751 | Must I budge? |
16751 | Must I crouch beneath your testy humor? |
16751 | Must I endure all this? |
16751 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
16751 | Must I needs forego So good, so noble, and so true a master? |
16751 | Must I observe you? |
16751 | Must I observe you? |
16751 | Must I say flat'', or flat''? |
16751 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor? |
16751 | Must we but blush? |
16751 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
16751 | Must''we abandon all our fond anticipations? |
16751 | My father'', must I stay''? |
16751 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
16751 | My mother, when I learned that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
16751 | Need I say that I allude to the visit of Lafayette to America? |
16751 | No matter; while our home is here, No sounding name is half so dear; When fades at length our lingering day, Who cares what pompous tombstones say? |
16751 | No one is deceived by hearing the son oppose the Father, and who has ever doubted Mansour''s experience and generosity?" |
16751 | O my lord, Must I, then, leave you? |
16751 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
16751 | Of vice or virtue, whether blest or curst, Which meets contempt, or which compassion first? |
16751 | Off they go!-- How are you, Bill? |
16751 | Omar smiled, and while Ali was enjoying the success of his ruse, he approached the stranger, and asked,"Do you wish me to help you gain the suit?" |
16751 | On your knees? |
16751 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into naught? |
16751 | Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? |
16751 | Prince H. Where is''it, Jack, where is''it? |
16751 | Rebecca, by which the Black Knight may be distinguished?" |
16751 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
16751 | Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
16751 | Rome taken when I was consul''? |
16751 | Saw ye the mighty from their graves Look up'', and tremble at your fate''? |
16751 | Saw, who? |
16751 | Say, in pursuit of profit or delight, Who risk the most, that take wrong means or right? |
16751 | Say, mounts he the ocean wave, banished, forlorn, Like a limb from his country, cast bleeding and torn? |
16751 | Say, rushed the bold eagle exultingly forth From his home in the dark- rolling clouds of the north? |
16751 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocky billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
16751 | Seest thou who they be that act as leaders?" |
16751 | Seven? |
16751 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
16751 | Shall I say plain'', or pain''? |
16751 | Shall burning AEtna, if a sage requires, Forget to thunder, and recall her fires? |
16751 | Shall theirs be the Christian''s heaven, the kingdom of the Redeemer? |
16751 | Shall we advance'', or retreat''? |
16751 | Shall we crown''the author of these public calamities with garlands'', or shall we wrest''from him his ill- deserved authority''? |
16751 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
16751 | Shall we have a play extempore? |
16751 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
16751 | Shall we return to our allegiance while we may do so with safety and honor'', or shall we wait until the ax of the executioner is at our throats''? |
16751 | Shall we try argument? |
16751 | Should I have answered Caius Cassius so? |
16751 | Should I turn upon the true prince? |
16751 | Sir R. An''t I a baronet? |
16751 | Sir R. And pray, what made you forget it? |
16751 | Sir R. And so he sends to me for assistance? |
16751 | Sir R. And what may you be going to say to him? |
16751 | Sir R. Do n''t I? |
16751 | Sir R. Hem? |
16751 | Sir R. Now who had the familiar impudence to tell you that? |
16751 | Sir R. Who bid you caper over my beauty? |
16751 | Sir R. Why Humphrey, you did n''t? |
16751 | Sir R. Why wo n''t the vicar give him another nag? |
16751 | Sir R. Wo n''t I? |
16751 | Sir R. You rogue, where are you running now? |
16751 | Sir Robert Bramble, of Blackberry Hall, in the county of Kent? |
16751 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit in Carolina a name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
16751 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
16751 | So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
16751 | Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again? |
16751 | Speak, sirs; how was it? |
16751 | The downward or falling inflection is a downward slide of the voice, and is marked by the grave accent, thus,(''); as, Where is London''? |
16751 | The king, my father? |
16751 | The necklace is worth a hundred thousand piasters, is it not, Mansour? |
16751 | The stranger bowed his head, and murmured,"What can I fear after having lost all?" |
16751 | The upward or rising inflection is an upward slide of the voice, and is marked by the acute accent, thus,(''); as, Did you call''? |
16751 | The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
16751 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band: Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
16751 | Think we, like some weak prince, the Eternal Cause, Prone for his favorites to reverse his laws? |
16751 | This earthen jar A touch can make, a touch can mar; And shall it to the Potter say, What makest thou? |
16751 | This is the house of the Prince of Peace, and would you profane it Thus with violent deeds and hearts overflowing with hatred? |
16751 | Thou hast no hand? |
16751 | Through what variety of untried being, Through what new scenes and changes must we pass? |
16751 | To be read thus: Did he do it voluntarily, or involuntarily? |
16751 | To his first question,"Is the Duke at home?" |
16751 | To whom did you say the blame was to be imputed''? |
16751 | To whom then, first incensed, Adam replied,"Is this thy love, is this the recompense Of mine to thee, ungrateful Eve?" |
16751 | Towels? |
16751 | Upon such dost thou open thine eye, And bring me unto judgment with thee? |
16751 | WHAT CONSTITUTES A STATE? |
16751 | Was this ambition? |
16751 | Washstands? |
16751 | We are coaxed, flattered, and duped, from morn to eve, from birth to death; and where is the old eye that ever saw through the deception? |
16751 | Well, sir, on Friday-- what, on Friday? |
16751 | What Constitutes a State? |
16751 | What are creditors? |
16751 | What awful sounds assail my ears? |
16751 | What do we give to our beloved? |
16751 | What do you call flummery? |
16751 | What do you mean by hem? |
16751 | What do you want of a chair in a bedroom which has a bed in it? |
16751 | What else have we upon the list? |
16751 | What had he done to you? |
16751 | What have I been doing all my life? |
16751 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
16751 | What is the charm of his verse, of his style, and humor? |
16751 | What is the difference between probability and possibility? |
16751 | What is this?" |
16751 | What is''he? |
16751 | What matters it what I gave the slave? |
16751 | What means this implacable fury?" |
16751 | What more? |
16751 | What mutter you? |
16751 | What news abroad? |
16751 | What see''you, that you frown so heavily to- day''? |
16751 | What sought they thus afar? |
16751 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
16751 | What then? |
16751 | What trick hast thou now? |
16751 | What trick, what device, what starting hole, canst thou now find out to hide thee from this open and apparent shame? |
16751 | What villain touched his body, that did stab, And not for justice? |
16751 | What was he that you followed with your sword? |
16751 | What was your dream? |
16751 | What will become of me? |
16751 | What word in the first paragraph that would probably not be used by an elegant writer of the present day? |
16751 | What would become of the world of debtors, if it did not steal a march upon this rapacious class? |
16751 | What would they have? |
16751 | What would we give to our beloved? |
16751 | What''is he? |
16751 | What''s my name? |
16751 | What''s the matter''? |
16751 | What''s the matter''? |
16751 | What''s the matter? |
16751 | What''s the matter? |
16751 | What''s the matter? |
16751 | What, all? |
16751 | What, amazed At my misfortunes? |
16751 | What, are you hurt, lieutenant? |
16751 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South, during the Revolution? |
16751 | What, then? |
16751 | What, upon compulsion? |
16751 | What? |
16751 | When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers; the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
16751 | When the loose mountain trembles from on high, Shall gravitation cease, if you go by? |
16751 | Whence this pleasing hope'', this fond desire'', This longing after immortality''? |
16751 | Where are your dispatches?" |
16751 | Where be your gibes''now? |
16751 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
16751 | Where did you say he had gone''? |
16751 | Where grows'', where grows it not''? |
16751 | Where hast thou been? |
16751 | Where have you been''? |
16751 | Where is it, Jack? |
16751 | Where is it? |
16751 | Where is the child that would willingly forget a tender parent, though to remember be but to lament? |
16751 | Where is the city? |
16751 | Where is the mother who would willingly forget the infant that has perished like a blossom from her arms, though every recollection is a pang? |
16751 | Where is''it? |
16751 | Where were the traces of her early cares, her sufferings, and fatigues? |
16751 | Where? |
16751 | Which shall I begin with? |
16751 | Which shall yield, the poet or established usage? |
16751 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
16751 | Who bids that dawning sun In strength and beauty rise? |
16751 | Who bids?" |
16751 | Who could harm the kind vagrant harper? |
16751 | Who ever heard the"poor creditor,"the"unfortunate creditor"spoken of? |
16751 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
16751 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
16751 | Who guides the moon to run In silence through the skies? |
16751 | Who is he that does not always find himself doing something less than his best task? |
16751 | Who lit their ceaseless fire? |
16751 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
16751 | Who made you glorious as the gates of Heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
16751 | Who push their way?" |
16751 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
16751 | Who taught those orbs to move? |
16751 | Who yield? |
16751 | Who, even in the hour of agony, would forget the friend over whom he mourns? |
16751 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
16751 | Whom did he ever hurt? |
16751 | Why do n''t you answer my question? |
16751 | Why does he accuse me of treachery? |
16751 | Why flames the far summit? |
16751 | Why is that other writhing with agony? |
16751 | Why looks your grace so heavily to- day? |
16751 | Why not? |
16751 | Why reason ye these things in your hearts''? |
16751 | Why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars from the firmament cast? |
16751 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
16751 | Why stand we here idle? |
16751 | Why wouldst thou have made me A thoroughfare, for thy whole shop to pass through? |
16751 | Why, bear ye, my masters: was it for me to kill the heir apparent? |
16751 | Why, but you are now well enough: how came you thus recovered? |
16751 | Why, how couldst thou know these men in Kendal green, when it was so dark thou couldst not see thy hand? |
16751 | Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
16751 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
16751 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
16751 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
16751 | Will you be patient? |
16751 | Will you deny''it? |
16751 | Will you deny''it? |
16751 | Will you stay awhile? |
16751 | Will''you rush headlong to destruction? |
16751 | You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you, then, to mourn for him? |
16751 | You are straight enough in the shoulders, you care not who sees your back: call you that backing of your friends? |
16751 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet; Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
16751 | You have the letters Cadmus gave; Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
16751 | You will come soon, very soon now, wo n''t you?" |
16751 | You will compel me, then, to read the will? |
16751 | You wrong me every way; you wrong me, Brutus; I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say"better"? |
16751 | Your commands, sir? |
16751 | a hundred, man? |
16751 | against whom? |
16751 | and discourse fustian with one''s own shadow? |
16751 | and quit my Susan''s side? |
16751 | and speak parrot? |
16751 | and squabble? |
16751 | and the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
16751 | attempt ye still to rise, By mountains piled on mountains, to the skies? |
16751 | comes there from the pyramids, And from Siberian wastes of snow, And Europe''s hills, a voice that bids The world he awed to mourn him? |
16751 | did he say no? |
16751 | did he say no? |
16751 | durst not tempt him? |
16751 | ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save? |
16751 | exclaimed Ivanhoe;"does he blench from the helm when the wind blows highest?" |
16751 | exclaimed his grace, rubbing his eyes, and scarcely awakened from dreaming of the King of Spain,"Is he dead?" |
16751 | fought ye with them all? |
16751 | four? |
16751 | if a man die Shall he live again? |
16751 | if thou goest first'', Wilt thou no more revisit me below''? |
16751 | is thy boy? |
16751 | laugh''st thou, Lochiel, my vision to scorn? |
16751 | laughest thou, Lochiel, my vision to scorn? |
16751 | men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
16751 | must I endure all this? |
16751 | must I not speak to these? |
16751 | must the bowels of Great Britain be torn out, her best blood spilt, her treasures wasted, that you may make an experiment? |
16751 | no form is near: Thine eyes I see thee raise, But where doth God appear? |
16751 | or why am I reading it at the present time rather than any other?" |
16751 | pensive scholar, what is fame? |
16751 | said the knight;"do the false yeomen give way?" |
16751 | said the schoolmaster, drawing near her chair,"is it so bad as this?" |
16751 | shall we be merry? |
16751 | silent still and silent all? |
16751 | swagger? |
16751 | swear? |
16751 | through the fast- flashing lightning of war, What steed to the desert flies frantic and far? |
16751 | weep you when you but behold Our Caesar''s vesture wounded? |
16751 | what is it? |
16751 | what is that flame which now bursts on his eye''? |
16751 | what madness has seized you? |
16751 | where are the pills? |
16751 | where is it? |
16751 | where thy rod, That smote the foes of Zion and of God? |
16751 | whispered the old man, anxious to rouse him, for dullness seemed gathering upon the child,"and how pleasant it used to be in the evening time? |
16751 | who feels for creditors? |
16751 | why did they take me thence? |
16751 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar''? |
16751 | your gambols''? |
16751 | your songs''? |
7010 | The owlet Atheism, hooting at the glorious sun in heaven, cries out,''Where is it?'' |
7010 | What are you making? |
7010 | + Adverbs of Degree are those that generally answer the question+, To what extent? |
7010 | + Adverbs of Manner are those that generally answer the question+, In what way?_ SENTENCE- BUILDING. |
7010 | + Example+.--King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? |
7010 | + Hints for Oral Instruction+.--In the sentence,_ The robin''s eggs are blue_, the noun_ robin''s_ does what? |
7010 | + Observation Lesson+.--Of what are the lines above a picture? |
7010 | + Observation Lesson+.--When the interrogative word is subject or a modifier of it, is the order natural, or transposed? |
7010 | + Paragraphs+.--Does every sentence in the first paragraph aid in picturing the helplessness of the old grandfather? |
7010 | + Paragraphs+.--Which paragraph puts before you the dog as a whole? |
7010 | + T+.--A_ spoken word_ then is the sign of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Did you see the thing when you were thinking of it? |
7010 | + T+.--Do you see any connection between these ideas? |
7010 | + T+.--Does this complement express the quality of the subject, or does it name the same thing that the subject names? |
7010 | + T+.--Does_ Florida_ alone, tell where he marched? |
7010 | + T+.--Does_ into_ alone, tell where he marched? |
7010 | + T+.--If they stand for the same idea, how do they differ? |
7010 | + T+.--If we call the other word_ bud_ a_ spoken_ word, what shall we call this? |
7010 | + T+.--In the sentence,_ A man who is wise will be honored_, the word_ who_ stands for what? |
7010 | + T+.--Is_ Florida_ joined directly to the predicate, as rapidly was in Lesson 25? |
7010 | + T+.--It is equivalent then to what part of speech? |
7010 | + T+.--It then performs the office of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Letters then are the signs of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Then what part of speech is it? |
7010 | + T+.--This clause then performs the office of what part of speech? |
7010 | + T+.--What does it do? |
7010 | + T+.--What does_ falling_ do? |
7010 | + T+.--What is the object complement of_ teach_? |
7010 | + T+.--What is the principal word of the group? |
7010 | + T+.--What little word comes in to unite the modifier to_ marched?_+ P+.--_Into_. |
7010 | + T+.--What office then does it perform? |
7010 | + T+.--What office then does this clause perform? |
7010 | + T+.--What tells where De Soto marched? |
7010 | + T+.--What then are the words_ too_ and_ hastily?_+ P+.--Adverbs. |
7010 | + T+.--What then is the attribute complement? |
7010 | + T+.--What then is the subject of_ is taught_? |
7010 | + T+.--What then is_ too?_+ P+.--An adverb. |
7010 | + T+.--What word names the owner or possessor? |
7010 | + T+.--What word names the things owned or possessed? |
7010 | + T+.--What word tells how hastily? |
7010 | + T+.--What word_ does_ tell what is thought of leaves? |
7010 | + T+.--What_ part of speech_ is_ much?_+ P+.--An adjective. |
7010 | + T+.--When I say,_ Falling leaves rustle_, does_ falling_ tell what is thought of leaves? |
7010 | + T+.--When I say,_ God is_, what does_ is_ express? |
7010 | + T+.--When I utter the two words_ bud_ and_ swelling_, thus:_ bud swelling_, do you see any connection in the ideas they stand for? |
7010 | + T+.--Why is_ too_ in the first sentence an adverb? |
7010 | + T+.--Why? |
7010 | + T--+Suppose that a boy should inform me that all of the boys on that seat had whispered, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should accuse several of you of whispering, and one should speak for himself and for the others whispering with him, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should ask who whispered, and some boy should promptly confess, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should tell that boy to close his book, when his book was already closed, what would he say without mentioning the word book? |
7010 | + T.--+Suppose that I had_ spoken to_ that boy and had accused him of whispering, how should I have addressed him without mentioning his name? |
7010 | + T.--+Suppose that, without using his name, I had told you what he did, what should I have said? |
7010 | + T.--+What then do these letters, taken separately, picture to your eye? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would be used instead of the name of the boy_ to_ whom I spoke? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would have been used instead of the name of the boy_ of_ whom I spoke? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would he use instead? |
7010 | + T.--+Would he mention his own name? |
7010 | + Teacher+.--What did you learn in the previous Lesson? |
7010 | + Teacher+.--When I pronounce the two words_ star_ and_ bud_ thus:_ star bud_, how many ideas, or mental pictures, do I call up to you? |
7010 | + The Description+.--How does the description above impress you? |
7010 | + The Paragraphs+.--What have you learned about the sentences that make up one paragraph? |
7010 | + The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--What is the order of subject and predicate in the first sentence of this selection? |
7010 | +_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where? |
7010 | +_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where? |
7010 | 30. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? |
7010 | A phrase modifying a predicate is equivalent to what? |
7010 | A phrase modifying a subject is equivalent to what? |
7010 | A_ spoken_ word is the sign of what? |
7010 | A_ written_ word is the sign of what? |
7010 | After having been told that your answers were correct, would it be a disappointment to be told that they were not all correct? |
7010 | Are a habit, a result of it, and a cause of it related in thought, or meaning? |
7010 | Are only characteristic parts and features selected? |
7010 | Are prepositions and interjections subdivided? |
7010 | Are the adjectives that precede the name of this object of the same rank? |
7010 | Are the clauses separated by the semicolon as closely connected as those divided by the comma? |
7010 | Are the paragraphs more, or less, closely related than the sentences of each paragraph? |
7010 | Are these few features enough to give you a distinct and vivid picture of Rab? |
7010 | Are these letters, taken separately, signs to you of anything? |
7010 | Are those that follow of the same rank? |
7010 | Ask yourself the question, Artists do what? |
7010 | Ask yourself the question, What swim, sink, hunt, etc.? |
7010 | Besides the first word, what words begin with capitals in each of these three groups? |
7010 | Can a noun be an attribute complement? |
7010 | Can any other class of pronouns be used to connect clauses? |
7010 | Can girls skate? |
7010 | Can the order anywhere be changed without throwing the story out of joint? |
7010 | Can the pronoun_ I_ be used to stand for the one spoken to?--the one spoken of? |
7010 | Can you illustrate this classification? |
7010 | Can you name them? |
7010 | Did you sleep good? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the first paragraph all help to tell of a certain habit of angleworms? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the second paragraph tell what results from this habit? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the third paragraph tell what is thought to be the cause of this habit? |
7010 | Do these touches of fancy or imagination help the picture? |
7010 | Do these two words express two ideas merely associated, or do they express a thought? |
7010 | Do they all_ mean_ the same thing? |
7010 | Do they show that the author was in love with her work? |
7010 | Do those that she does mention suggest to you everything else? |
7010 | Do we ordinarily speak of looking anything? |
7010 | Do you find any choice in the four positions of this phrase? |
7010 | Do you not think that each sub- topic must suggest some thoughts that the general topic alone would not suggest? |
7010 | Do you think that such a_ framework_ helps a writer to tell his story? |
7010 | Does Mary sing? |
7010 | Does he instruct? |
7010 | Does he try to get us to do something? |
7010 | Does it assert action? |
7010 | Does it contain an unnecessary sentence? |
7010 | Does not some of the charm of a description lie in the reader''s having something left him to supply? |
7010 | Does the relative pronoun distinguish by its_ form_ the speaker, the one spoken to, and the one spoken of? |
7010 | Does the semicolon show that this connection is close? |
7010 | Does this clause read so closely as not to need a comma before_ who_? |
7010 | Does_ bowed_ assert action? |
7010 | Does_ brook hidden_, in 3, contain a predicate? |
7010 | Does_ coming_ express action? |
7010 | Does_ forgetful_ describe the persons represented by_ who_? |
7010 | Does_ the whistles completed_ make complete sense? |
7010 | Does_ to grasp_ assert action? |
7010 | For what do interrogative pronouns stand? |
7010 | Has the North Pole been reached? |
7010 | Have you ever heard stories badly told? |
7010 | Have you got time to help me? |
7010 | Have you not had some experience that you can work up into a good story? |
7010 | Have you now two sentences, or one? |
7010 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
7010 | How are adverbs compared? |
7010 | How are sentences classified with respect to form? |
7010 | How are sentences classified with respect to meaning? |
7010 | How are the forms_ mine, yours_, etc., now used? |
7010 | How are the parts marked? |
7010 | How are the two kinds of_ consonant_ sounds made? |
7010 | How are these adjective clauses connected with one another? |
7010 | How are they separated on the page? |
7010 | How are_ vowel_ sounds made? |
7010 | How can girls skate? |
7010 | How do they differ? |
7010 | How do they help? |
7010 | How do they help? |
7010 | How do they stretch? |
7010 | How do you determine the case of an explanatory noun or pronoun? |
7010 | How do you determine the number, gender, and person of pronouns? |
7010 | How does a participle differ from a predicate verb? |
7010 | How does a verb agree with its subject? |
7010 | How does it differ from the others as to punctuation and the first letter? |
7010 | How is a noun parsed? |
7010 | How is this shown by the punctuation? |
7010 | How many capitals do you find in each of the names just mentioned? |
7010 | How many cases are there? |
7010 | How many degrees of comparison are there? |
7010 | How many different kinds of participles are there? |
7010 | How many genders are there? |
7010 | How many modes are there? |
7010 | How many modifications have nouns and pronouns? |
7010 | How many modifications have verbs? |
7010 | How many numbers are there? |
7010 | How many paragraphs do you find in the selection above? |
7010 | How many parts of speech are there? |
7010 | How many persons are there? |
7010 | How many tenses are there? |
7010 | How many voices are there? |
7010 | How many, when it is in the middle? |
7010 | How much trouble one has, do n''t they? |
7010 | If one of these noun clauses were not itself divided into clauses by the comma, would the semicolon be needed? |
7010 | If so, what were the faults? |
7010 | If this clause were placed after its principal clause, would the comma be needed? |
7010 | If(_ h_) were an answer to the question, When did you meet him? |
7010 | In how many ways are the genders distinguished? |
7010 | In the expression,_ Peter, turning, said_, what word expresses an action as_ assumed_, and which_ asserts_ an action? |
7010 | In the sentence,_ The squirrel ran up a tree_, what word shows the relation of the act of running, to the tree? |
7010 | In the sentence,_ We started at sunrise_, what phrase is used like an adverb? |
7010 | In this group of words used as object complement can you find a subject, a predicate, and a complement? |
7010 | In this same paragraph what words are quoted exactly as the old man uttered them? |
7010 | In what two ways may nouns be used as modifiers? |
7010 | In which is a question merely referred to? |
7010 | In which is a question quoted just as it would be asked? |
7010 | In which of the above sentences is a quotation interrupted by a parenthetical clause? |
7010 | In( 8) do you find a period after_ Miss_?--after_ Mrs._? |
7010 | In_ who are looking reproach_, what is the object complement of_ are looking_? |
7010 | Into what classes are letters divided? |
7010 | Into what may a participial phrase be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may a phrase used as an adverb be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may an adjective be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may some participles be changed? |
7010 | Is a preposition needed before_ day?_ In the same sentence_ years_ is used adverbially to modify the adjective_ old_. |
7010 | Is one of these divisions itself divided into parts by commas? |
7010 | Is the body of water mentioned in( 1) known as_ Michigan_, or_ Lake Michigan_? |
7010 | Is the interest in a story best kept up by first telling the important points and then the unimportant particulars? |
7010 | Is the last sentence now joined to the first as a modifier, or are they two separate sentences? |
7010 | Is the order of these paragraphs the right one? |
7010 | Is the picture complete? |
7010 | Is the same thought expressed in both? |
7010 | Is the town mentioned in( 2) named_ Jersey_, or_ Jersey City_? |
7010 | Is_ Chicago_, or_ City of Chicago_ the name of the steamer mentioned in( 2)? |
7010 | Is_ Irish_, or_ Irish Sea_ the name of the body of water mentioned in( 4)? |
7010 | It is not because he can not conjugate the verb or decline the pronoun that he falls into such errors as"How many sounds_ have_ each of the vowels?" |
7010 | Let the pupils compare"I proved it to be_ him_"with"I proved that it was_ he;_""_ Whom_ did you suppose it to be?" |
7010 | Letters are the signs of what? |
7010 | May a verb consist of more than one word? |
7010 | May the subject be modified? |
7010 | May we not find"sermons in stones and good in everything"? |
7010 | Nouns and pronouns denoting possession may sometimes be changed into what? |
7010 | Of what do you think when you hear the word_ bud_? |
7010 | Of what is something thought? |
7010 | Of what two parts does a sentence consist? |
7010 | Of what use are the phrases_ at first_ and_ toward the brook_ in sentence 2? |
7010 | Omitting_ till_, would this group of words be a sentence? |
7010 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
7010 | Should, then, some mark of wider separation be put between the main divisions of 2? |
7010 | The clause_ beyond... stomach_ goes with what word? |
7010 | The group of words_ as deeply as Toddie was( imbedded)_ is joined to what? |
7010 | The group_ almost motionless_ describes what things? |
7010 | The group_ close beneath the mouths of their burrows_, used like a single adverb, tells what? |
7010 | The infinitive phrase modifies what? |
7010 | The infinitive phrase modifies what? |
7010 | The interrogative pronoun stands for the unknown name, and asks for it; as,_ Who_ comes here? |
7010 | The phrase beginning with_ at_ and ending with_ earth_ does what? |
7010 | The question is,"Can law make people honest?" |
7010 | The subject of inquiry was, Who invented printing? |
7010 | To what four different things did we call attention in Lesson 1? |
7010 | Verbs are the only words that do what? |
7010 | We give the following questions to illustrate our method of conducting an+ Observation Lesson+.--Are_ city_ and_ Albany_ both names? |
7010 | We have often occasion for thanksgiving, Now this is to be done how? |
7010 | We must ask, What are we living for? |
7010 | Were you there? |
7010 | What adjectives are sometimes called articles? |
7010 | What adjectives can not be compared? |
7010 | What are all names? |
7010 | What are auxiliaries? |
7010 | What are consonants? |
7010 | What are modifications of the parts of speech? |
7010 | What are parts of speech? |
7010 | What are prepositions? |
7010 | What are sometimes substituted for nouns? |
7010 | What are such classes called? |
7010 | What are such words called? |
7010 | What are the cautions for the position of the adverb? |
7010 | What are the cautions for the use of the adverb and the adjective? |
7010 | What are the number and the person of a verb? |
7010 | What are the principal parts of a verb? |
7010 | What are the subject and the predicate of this added sentence? |
7010 | What are the words_ an_ or_ a_, and_ the_ called by some grammarians? |
7010 | What are vowels? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of color? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of form? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of number? |
7010 | What called up this idea? |
7010 | What can you say of_ hidden?_ Find a noun in 3 used to complete the predicate and make the meaning of the subject plainer. |
7010 | What comparisons do you find? |
7010 | What conjunction connects these? |
7010 | What conjunction introduces each of these clauses? |
7010 | What conjunction joins on another expression that by itself would make a complete sentence? |
7010 | What conjunction joins them together? |
7010 | What connects each to_ man_? |
7010 | What connects this group to_ looked_? |
7010 | What did you hear? |
7010 | What difference can you discover in meaning? |
7010 | What difference is found in the punctuation of these several groups? |
7010 | What different offices may a noun perform? |
7010 | What do astronomers teach? |
7010 | What do the horses stretch? |
7010 | What do you call it? |
7010 | What do you call it? |
7010 | What do you discover in the names found in( 11)? |
7010 | What do you say I have in my hand? |
7010 | What do you see? |
7010 | What do you understand by a compound predicate? |
7010 | What do you understand by a compound subject? |
7010 | What do you understand by a participle? |
7010 | What do you understand by natural language? |
7010 | What does each of the other paragraphs describe? |
7010 | What does the group of words_ for hours_ do? |
7010 | What does the last phrase of(_ j_) modify? |
7010 | What does the second_ their_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ by looking down into their burrows_ tell? |
7010 | What does_ home_ do? |
7010 | What does_ is_ assert of teaching? |
7010 | What does_ just_ do? |
7010 | What does_ occasionally_ do? |
7010 | What does_ of shrieks_ modify? |
7010 | What does_ often_ do? |
7010 | What does_ one day_ do in the third paragraph? |
7010 | What does_ same_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ suddenly_ do? |
7010 | What does_ suddenly_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ those_ mean? |
7010 | What does_ till he has fed his horses_ do? |
7010 | What five as the subject of a school composition? |
7010 | What four as the title of a poem? |
7010 | What girls can skate?_ You are happy. |
7010 | What group of adjectives modifies_ place_? |
7010 | What group of eight words tells in what way Mr. Darwin noticed this fact? |
7010 | What group of words goes with_ was diverted_ to tell when? |
7010 | What group of words in( 6) is treated as an individual name? |
7010 | What group of words is joined to_ looked_ to tell on what occasion or how often? |
7010 | What help to the narrative do these descriptive touches give? |
7010 | What in form? |
7010 | What in( 8)? |
7010 | What is English Grammar? |
7010 | What is English grammar? |
7010 | What is a clause? |
7010 | What is a complex sentence? |
7010 | What is a compound sentence? |
7010 | What is a conjunction? |
7010 | What is a conjunction? |
7010 | What is a declarative sentence? |
7010 | What is a dependent clause? |
7010 | What is a diagram? |
7010 | What is a diagram? |
7010 | What is a letter? |
7010 | What is a modifier? |
7010 | What is a modifier? |
7010 | What is a noun? |
7010 | What is a noun? |
7010 | What is a participle? |
7010 | What is a phrase? |
7010 | What is a phrase? |
7010 | What is a preposition? |
7010 | What is a pronoun? |
7010 | What is a pronoun? |
7010 | What is a sentence? |
7010 | What is a sentence? |
7010 | What is a simple sentence? |
7010 | What is a verb? |
7010 | What is a verb? |
7010 | What is a word? |
7010 | What is an adjective? |
7010 | What is an adjective? |
7010 | What is an adverb? |
7010 | What is an adverb? |
7010 | What is an attribute complement? |
7010 | What is an attribute complement? |
7010 | What is an exclamatory sentence? |
7010 | What is an idea? |
7010 | What is an imperative sentence? |
7010 | What is an independent clause? |
7010 | What is an infinitive? |
7010 | What is an interjection? |
7010 | What is an interjection? |
7010 | What is an interrogative sentence? |
7010 | What is an object complement? |
7010 | What is an object complement? |
7010 | What is artificial language, or language proper? |
7010 | What is artificial language? |
7010 | What is comparison? |
7010 | What is conjugation? |
7010 | What is declension? |
7010 | What is gender? |
7010 | What is it? |
7010 | What is mode? |
7010 | What is number? |
7010 | What is poetry? |
7010 | What is synopsis? |
7010 | What is taught by astronomers? |
7010 | What is tense? |
7010 | What is the analysis of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the analysis of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the difference between the two expressions,_ ripe apples_ and_ apples are ripe_? |
7010 | What is the first step in parsing? |
7010 | What is the foundation on which every sentence is built? |
7010 | What is the modified predicate? |
7010 | What is the modified subject? |
7010 | What is the name of the island mentioned in( 3)?--in( 4)? |
7010 | What is the object complement of this verb? |
7010 | What is the office of the dependent clause in the next sentence? |
7010 | What is the office of_ minute_ in the second sentence of the first paragraph? |
7010 | What is the office of_ the_,_ ejected_, and the group_ over the burrows_? |
7010 | What is the predicate of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the principal office of a verb? |
7010 | What is the rule for forming the possessive case? |
7010 | What is the rule for the exclamation point? |
7010 | What is the rule for writing abbreviations? |
7010 | What is the rule for writing individual names? |
7010 | What is the subject of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the subject of_ look_ in 4? |
7010 | What is_ Old Testament_ the particular name of? |
7010 | What long adjective clause is joined to_ those_ by_ who_? |
7010 | What long group of words made up of two sentences tells why the beasts are looking reproach? |
7010 | What long phrase describes_ place_? |
7010 | What mark of punctuation between? |
7010 | What modification have adjectives? |
7010 | What must every predicate contain? |
7010 | What must every predicate contain? |
7010 | What names in( 7) usually denote relationship? |
7010 | What new subject begins with page 95? |
7010 | What new use of the period have you discovered in this exercise? |
7010 | What new way of varying the meaning of words is introduced in Lesson 78? |
7010 | What noun by three adjectives two of which are of the same rank? |
7010 | What noun follows this verb to tell what Mr. Darwin noticed? |
7010 | What noun is modified by three adjectives of different rank? |
7010 | What object is pictured by the help of five adjectives? |
7010 | What offices does an infinitive phrase perform? |
7010 | What offices does the infinitive phrase perform? |
7010 | What offices may be performed by a phrase? |
7010 | What other change do you find necessary? |
7010 | What other office has this connective? |
7010 | What other word can you use? |
7010 | What other words can I use to modify_ coin_? |
7010 | What part of speech is used as subject and object? |
7010 | What parts of speech are explained in the preceding Lessons? |
7010 | What parts of speech may connect clauses? |
7010 | What peculiar use of capitals do you discover in these lines of poetry? |
7010 | What phrase is joined to_ was imbedded_ to tell where? |
7010 | What preposition could be put in? |
7010 | What rule for the period? |
7010 | What rule for the use of capital letters have you learned? |
7010 | What states border on the Gulf of Mexico? |
7010 | What then do you think of placing this phrase at the end? |
7010 | What things that the author imagined but did not really see are mentioned in the third paragraph? |
7010 | What three kinds of expressions are spoken of in Lessons 3 and 4? |
7010 | What three words in this exercise are used together as the title of a book? |
7010 | What two long noun clauses aroused to complete_ should remember_? |
7010 | What two parts must every sentence have? |
7010 | What two sentences does_ and_ here bring together? |
7010 | What two sentences does_ but_ here bring together? |
7010 | What two words are used to join 3 and 4 together? |
7010 | What whole sentence does_ this_ take the place of? |
7010 | What word here helps to bring two sentences together? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ direction_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ manner_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ time_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is there one- half of which is_ p''s_? |
7010 | What word may be used for the phrase,_ to that place?_+ P+.--_There_. |
7010 | What word may be used for the phrase_ of the morning?_+ P+.--_Morning_. |
7010 | What word modifies_ much_ by telling how much? |
7010 | What word tells how she decided? |
7010 | What word, then, makes an adjective modifier of this sentence and joins it to_ feet_? |
7010 | What words are used only in the nominative case? |
7010 | What words are used only in the objective case? |
7010 | What words in( 9) and( 10) are used as names of the Deity? |
7010 | What, by a clause? |
7010 | What, different offices may an adjective perform? |
7010 | What, then, joins this group, and makes it do the work of an adverb? |
7010 | When I say,_ Plants grow_, is_ grow_ the name of anything? |
7010 | When a verb has two or more subjects, how does it agree? |
7010 | When is_ a_ used, and when_ an?_ Give examples of their misuse. |
7010 | When is_ a_ used? |
7010 | When is_ an_ used? |
7010 | When the interrogative word is an adverb, what is the order? |
7010 | When the interrogative word is object or attribute complement, or a modifier of either, what is the order? |
7010 | When the phrase is at the beginning or at the end of the sentence, how many commas do you need to set it off? |
7010 | When there is no interrogative word, what is the order? |
7010 | When was America discovered? |
7010 | Where do they stretch their shoulders? |
7010 | Where may the antecedent of an interrogative pronoun generally be found? |
7010 | Where must this paragraph naturally stand? |
7010 | Where was you when I called? |
7010 | Where, and in what kind of house, do you think this picture was seen? |
7010 | Which are_ individual_ names? |
7010 | Which course will you choose? |
7010 | Which is the largest city in the world? |
7010 | Which is the longer of the rivers of America? |
7010 | Which is the more northerly, Maine, Oregon, or Minnesota? |
7010 | Which of the following expressions contain words that have_ no connection_, which contain words_ merely associated_, and which are_ sentences_? |
7010 | Which of the names just written are_ class_ names? |
7010 | Which of these four objects has Mr. Beecher in the paragraphs we quote? |
7010 | Which paragraph describes Rab''s character? |
7010 | Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_? |
7010 | Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_? |
7010 | Which word tells what is thought? |
7010 | Which words indicate the time of sailing? |
7010 | Which words of these groups are regarded as the most important? |
7010 | Which, the manner? |
7010 | Which, the place? |
7010 | Who did you ask for? |
7010 | Who did you mean, when you said that? |
7010 | Who did you see? |
7010 | Who did you speak to just now? |
7010 | Who is there? |
7010 | Who was that? |
7010 | Who will catch this? |
7010 | Whom did you say that it was? |
7010 | Whom did you see? |
7010 | Why are such expressions as_ a wooden pretty bowl_ faulty? |
7010 | Why are the days shorter in winter? |
7010 | Why are they so called? |
7010 | Why do they stretch with more energy? |
7010 | Why is a comma used before_ forgetful_? |
7010 | Why is this a_ sentence?_ Ans.--Because it expresses a thought. |
7010 | Why is_ an enthusiastic, noisy, large crowd_ faulty? |
7010 | Why is_ hastily_ an adverb? |
7010 | Why is_ hear, o israel_, wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ i may be Mistaken_ wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ them books_ wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ too_ in the second sentence an adverb? |
7010 | Why stand we here idle? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | With a good framework clearly before you, must not your story move along in an orderly way from a beginning to an end? |
7010 | With respect to what, do we classify words( Lesson 14)? |
7010 | With what kind of letter~(4)~_ each_ of these names~begin~? |
7010 | With what mark~(4)~ imperative_ sentences_~end~? |
7010 | Would it help you to have clearly before you from the beginning the object you are seeking to accomplish? |
7010 | You are here told to see what? |
7010 | ] spoken by Moses? |
7010 | _ Across a large fern_ is joined like an adverb to what? |
7010 | _ Bowed under the heavy collar_ describes what? |
7010 | _ By a piercing shriek of delight_ does what? |
7010 | _ By some exquisite ferns_ is joined to what? |
7010 | _ Coming home with sacks of grain_ does what? |
7010 | _ Does_ either landlord or tenant profit by this bill? |
7010 | _ In a great deal of agony_ modifies what? |
7010 | _ Of the worm''s body_ modifies what? |
7010 | _ That bore the"Jacks"_ does what? |
7010 | _ That seem to grasp the firm earth_ goes with what? |
7010 | _ Then_ and_ very often_ do what? |
7010 | _ What_ did he attempt? |
7010 | _ What_ is base? |
7010 | _ What_ is this? |
7010 | _ When... stomach_ modifies what verb? |
7010 | and do they therefore stimulate your fancy or imagination? |
7010 | are You going home? |
7010 | crooked| five| some| all| What words here modify_ boys_ by adding the idea of size? |
7010 | or would you prefer some other wording of it? |
7010 | with"_ Who_ did you suppose it was?" |
19721 | All what, sir? |
19721 | And afterward? |
19721 | And all those messages came from you? |
19721 | And if he be the devil,said De Bracy,"would you fly from him into the mouth of hell? |
19721 | And is there any prospect, then, of rescue from without? |
19721 | And must the world wait longer yet? |
19721 | And now,cried Doggie, his young face distorted and reddened, his sleek hair ruffled, and his hands appealingly outstretched,"what am I going to do?" |
19721 | And now,said Oliver,"do n''t you think you''re a bit of a fool, Doggie?" |
19721 | And pray, Mr. Tunison, who is''Old Sandy''? |
19721 | And pray, why are we here? |
19721 | And the means of getting free? |
19721 | And these-- are they to be valued as common pebbles? |
19721 | And what follows, if you guess truly, good yeoman? |
19721 | And where is Allan- a- Dale? |
19721 | And where is the friar? |
19721 | And who shall bear such a message? |
19721 | And why not? 19721 And why?" |
19721 | And your father''s name? |
19721 | Another use, my dear; and what do you know about money? |
19721 | Anything the matter? |
19721 | Are not those thoughts divine? |
19721 | Are you Ralph Percy? |
19721 | Are you all right? |
19721 | Are you residing permanently in London? |
19721 | Are you sure you can manage, sir? |
19721 | Art sure it is not a dream, Nantaquas? 19721 Art thou in thy senses, Israelite?" |
19721 | As a Tommy? |
19721 | Ay, right,answered Front- de- Boeuf;"and canst thou tell me, the number of those banditti?" |
19721 | But are n''t you going to dress for dinner, sir? |
19721 | But tell me, Roland-- tell me; have you been successful? |
19721 | But this air must be rapidly used? |
19721 | But what friend? |
19721 | But who is he? |
19721 | But who, in the saint''s name, ever expected to have heard such a jolly chant come from a hermit''s cell at midnight? |
19721 | Can I rescue thee? |
19721 | Can you give a traveler a night''s lodging? |
19721 | Did ye git it? |
19721 | Do any of the ladies go with us? |
19721 | Do n''t I know what we owe you fellows? 19721 Do n''t you know?" |
19721 | Do they think to use those logs they carry as battering rams? |
19721 | Do you give ground, base knaves? |
19721 | Do you know me? |
19721 | Do you like it? |
19721 | Do you mean to say you left that rifle behind? 19721 Do you say that, too?" |
19721 | Do you think I''m shamming so as to get out of serving in the army? |
19721 | Dogs and villains, why leave ye this knave unfettered? |
19721 | Ef I go on this errand fur ye,he said, looking very sharp indeed,"will ye gimme one o''the whings of that thar wild tur- r- key?" |
19721 | Eh? |
19721 | Enlist? |
19721 | Enlist? |
19721 | Enter freely,said Cedric to the friar;"with what intent art thou come hither?" |
19721 | Front- de- Boeuf? |
19721 | Gallants of England,said Front- de- Boeuf,"how relish ye your entertainment at Torquilstone? |
19721 | Git what? |
19721 | Gobbler or hen? |
19721 | Hast thy flesh and blood a charm against heated iron and scalding oil? |
19721 | Hearest thou this, Athelstane? |
19721 | Here you are-- what are you going to do with yourself? |
19721 | Hev Ethan fell off, sure enough? |
19721 | Hey, who is there? |
19721 | How die? |
19721 | How goes it? |
19721 | How long has this been planned? |
19721 | How meanest thou, knave? |
19721 | How now, sir friar,replied Front- de- Boeuf,"thy speech, me thinks, smacks of the rude Saxon tongue?" |
19721 | How,cried I,"is that all you are to have for your two shillings? |
19721 | I am bound by my vow to do so,replied the knight;"but I would willingly know who you are who request my assistance in their behalf?" |
19721 | I got--"Yes? |
19721 | I will only ask one thing, captain-- how can you light your road at the bottom of the sea? |
19721 | In the name of God,demanded Gurth,"how came they prisoners? |
19721 | Is Harry going away? 19721 Is my grandfather-- is he sick?" |
19721 | Leave you? |
19721 | Look here, tell me, as man to man, what are you going to do with your life? 19721 Most accursed dog,"he said, awakening with his deep and sullen voice the echoes of the dungeon vault,"seest thou these scales?" |
19721 | My dear Doggie,he said,"is that your family?" |
19721 | Nantaquas? |
19721 | No grub? |
19721 | O majestic friend,he said, addressing the Great Stone Face,"is not this man worthy to resemble thee?" |
19721 | Of hornets? |
19721 | Oh, is grandfather waiting? |
19721 | Oh, then the gentleman is going on[ v]_terra firma_? |
19721 | Roland,she cried,"are you going down into that shaft for more of them?" |
19721 | Seem there no other leaders? |
19721 | Seest thou, Isaac,said Front- de- Boeuf,"the range of iron bars above that glowing charcoal? |
19721 | Shall I ever see Jamestown again, Nantaquas? |
19721 | Shall we stay, Gurth? |
19721 | Suppose the waiter came and had to look for them? 19721 That is what I expect,"returned she;"but I think, my dear, we ought to appear there as decently as possible, for who knows what may happen?" |
19721 | The assailants have won the barriers, have they not? |
19721 | The bridge-- the bridge which communicates with the castle-- have they won that pass? |
19721 | The leg''s better? |
19721 | Then it is an air- gun? |
19721 | Then we should make for Jamestown as for life,I said,"not sleeping or eating or making pause?" |
19721 | Thou dost not fear,said the Templar,"that they can assemble in force sufficient to attempt the castle?" |
19721 | Uncle Edward, is n''t he a hundred times the man he was? |
19721 | Under what banner? |
19721 | Well, have I not my Rouquayrol reservoir, which can furnish it at need? 19721 Well, my girls, how have you sped? |
19721 | Well, now, Sophy, my child,said I,"and what sort of husband are you to have?" |
19721 | Well, why not? |
19721 | Well-- who are they? 19721 Whar did ye happen ter see Ethan?" |
19721 | What air ye doin''down thar? 19721 What air ye doin''on this side o''the mounting, ef ye air a- goin''ter the mill? |
19721 | What devil''s[ v]matins are you after at this hour? |
19721 | What do they now, maiden? |
19721 | What do you want to take me there for? 19721 What dost thou see?" |
19721 | What friend? |
19721 | What fur? |
19721 | What is the matter, my friend? |
19721 | What is the matter? |
19721 | What is the meaning of all this? |
19721 | What is the substance? |
19721 | What is the trouble? |
19721 | What is to be done? |
19721 | What is your name, my good woman? |
19721 | What mean these cries and that clashing of swords? |
19721 | What means this knave? |
19721 | What prophecy do you mean, dear mother? |
19721 | What says the scroll? |
19721 | What were you crying about? |
19721 | What were you going on about? |
19721 | What''s all this? |
19721 | What''s this hyar thing at the end o''the rope? |
19721 | What? |
19721 | Where are we going? |
19721 | Where is the miller? |
19721 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
19721 | Where''s Van Brummel, the schoolmaster? |
19721 | Where? |
19721 | Wherefore are you sad? |
19721 | Whither, and for what purpose? |
19721 | Who and whence art thou, priest? |
19721 | Who are prisoners? |
19721 | Who are they that rifle and ransom and make prisoners in these forests? |
19721 | Who got him a rope ter pull up by? |
19721 | Who is down? |
19721 | Who is he? |
19721 | Who''s to find out? |
19721 | Why do n''t they teach a girl to handle an ax? |
19721 | Why do n''t you apply for the Cadet Corps and get a commission again? |
19721 | Why does Opechancanough send us back to the settlements? |
19721 | Why have we been kept at all? 19721 Why, hermit,"was the yeoman''s first question as soon as he beheld the knight,"what boon companion hast thou here?" |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Will I come? 19721 Will you excuse me?" |
19721 | With how many? |
19721 | Wo n''t you please go now? |
19721 | Wood? |
19721 | Yes, is n''t it? |
19721 | Yes, the diamond is almost pure[ v]carbon; why should it not burn? 19721 You jest, sir knight,"answered the baron;"but to whom shall I send? |
19721 | You want shoot those bears yourself? |
19721 | You will be with your people in the war? |
19721 | You wish to murder me? |
19721 | You''ve shot twenty- nine bears? 19721 _ Bon jour_,"he said;"do you come from far?" |
19721 | _Is n''t it about time you were recognizing me?" |
19721 | _Ma''am?" |
19721 | 277 accomodated changed to accommodated 278 rescue?'' |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= Do you know any of the stars or the constellations mentioned? |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= What experience did Everett describe? |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= What happened to Clewe''s automatic shell? |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= What was the hunt to which the adventurers were invited? |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= When did the snow begin? |
19721 | = HELPS TO STUDY= When did this storm begin? |
19721 | And how''s the wound?" |
19721 | And now, may I, without impertinent curiosity, again ask what you meant when you said you had come down to bed- rock?" |
19721 | And was there, indeed, such a resemblance as the crowd had testified? |
19721 | And what was the Great Stone Face? |
19721 | And what were these words he was beginning to remember faintly? |
19721 | And you, sir, had you not better go back to the alehouse?" |
19721 | Andrey, buttoning his coat, said with a grimace,"Well, Yakovlev, the mines are behind us, but what are we going to do now?" |
19721 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
19721 | At length-- but why go any further? |
19721 | At what point did Twain drop his fun and begin a beautiful tribute to a New England landscape? |
19721 | At what point were you most sorry for Ariel? |
19721 | At what time did it begin? |
19721 | But what on earth is the point of these little dogs?" |
19721 | But when he came at length to the words Priscilla had spoken, Words so tender and cruel:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
19721 | But why not fire a shot to let him know she was near? |
19721 | But,"he added, taking a step aside,"art thou mad-- to give admittance to a knight thou dost not know? |
19721 | Can you guess who the Black Knight was? |
19721 | Compare him with Mr. Gathergold and decide which was the greater character? |
19721 | Could he look to any human being for deliverance? |
19721 | Do n''t you know that he does n''t like me-- that he has stopped speaking to me?" |
19721 | Do you like Rip? |
19721 | Do you see?" |
19721 | Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
19721 | Had not the[ v]circuit- rider said in his last sermon that not even a sparrow falls to the ground unmarked of God? |
19721 | Had she ever passed any trees? |
19721 | Hast thou forgotten our agreement?" |
19721 | Hast thou prepared them for death?" |
19721 | He came down to my bunk and said,"Where''s that Henry?" |
19721 | He had no courage to ask after any more friends, but cried out in despair,"Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle?" |
19721 | He had"made good"in the eyes of one of the finest soldiers in the British army, and what else mattered? |
19721 | He was no longer in a shaft; but where was he? |
19721 | He would keep up as long and as bravely as he could, and if the worst should come,--was he indeed so solitary? |
19721 | Her daughter Beatrix was his daughter, and had his eyes-- were there ever such beautiful eyes in the world? |
19721 | Here, fellow,"he added to one of his attendants,"hast thou sent out to see by what force this precious challenge is to be supported?" |
19721 | How I know what Marse Tom want, an''tel I know, whar I gwineter git um? |
19721 | How can I retrace the impression left upon me by that walk under the waters? |
19721 | How could it be immovable when there was nothing under it-- when it rested on air? |
19721 | How did Cedric act his part? |
19721 | How did Gurth show his true character? |
19721 | How did McTodd show his shrewdness, even if he was not a good hunter? |
19721 | How did Nantaquas come to the rescue of the white men a second time? |
19721 | How did Peter Vanderdonk explain the strange happening? |
19721 | How did Rebecca describe him? |
19721 | How did Rip still account for the peculiar happenings? |
19721 | How did Standish receive Alden''s report? |
19721 | How did he account for the stiffness of his joints? |
19721 | How did he at last learn of the lapse of time? |
19721 | How did he discover the alteration in his own appearance? |
19721 | How did he explain to himself the change in his gun and the disappearance of Wolf? |
19721 | How did he extricate himself from each difficulty he encountered? |
19721 | How did he fulfill his task? |
19721 | How did it end? |
19721 | How did the children and dogs treat him? |
19721 | How did they answer it? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How do you know? |
19721 | How does the reappearing of the cloud unbuild it? |
19721 | How does the tribute close? |
19721 | How had he become so? |
19721 | How is the cloud"the daughter of the earth and water"? |
19721 | How shall I bear myself like a reverend brother?" |
19721 | How was Ernest comforted in his second disappointment? |
19721 | How was Front- de- Boeuf interrupted? |
19721 | How was Front- de- Boeuf prevented from doing Wamba harm? |
19721 | How was he affected by New England weather? |
19721 | How was he received? |
19721 | How was he rescued? |
19721 | How was it executed? |
19721 | How was it received? |
19721 | How was its accomplishment prevented? |
19721 | How was the dog affected? |
19721 | How was the mystery explained? |
19721 | How were her anticipations of the dance realized? |
19721 | How were the five days spent? |
19721 | How were these hopes encouraged? |
19721 | How were they interrupted? |
19721 | How would you have me manufacture gunpowder on board, without saltpeter, sulphur, or charcoal?" |
19721 | How"a nursling of the sky"? |
19721 | How? |
19721 | How? |
19721 | I ask of thee, as a good knight and a good Englishman, wilt thou aid in their rescue?" |
19721 | I want to laugh as they do--""To laugh, just to laugh, and not because there''s something funny?" |
19721 | If I drag, can you help?" |
19721 | If I went to sleep, as I proposed, how could the air in the chamber be renewed in the meanwhile? |
19721 | In another instant I might have slid-- where? |
19721 | In what latitude did Everett live? |
19721 | In what other way can a helpless, delicate being like myself show his gratitude and in some sort of way serve his country?" |
19721 | In what region was he when he saw the moon? |
19721 | In what way was Ernest great? |
19721 | In which paragraph do you learn when the incident related in the story took place? |
19721 | In which paragraph do you meet the principal characters? |
19721 | Is it a ghost from the grave, that has come to forbid the betrothal? |
19721 | Is it a phantom of air,--a bodiless, spectral illusion? |
19721 | Is not he the very picture of your Old Man of the Mountain?" |
19721 | Is snow still falling? |
19721 | It can not be that you have come down in the world?" |
19721 | Make a pack of all the strongest food-- strenthin''--strengthrin''food-- you know?" |
19721 | Margaret, will you look at these?" |
19721 | Meantime bear this scroll-- but soft-- canst thou read, sir priest?" |
19721 | Noble Cedric, wilt thou take the direction of those that remain?" |
19721 | Of the Black Knight? |
19721 | Of what Indian in_ The Last of the Mohicans_ does he remind you? |
19721 | Of what sorrow does the snow remind the poet? |
19721 | Of what was Clewe thinking so intently while making his ascent? |
19721 | Of whom does Opechancanough remind you? |
19721 | On what day did he see the North Pole? |
19721 | Once again I breathed with perfect freedom and ease-- and indeed why should I not? |
19721 | Or, are all of them but stout yeomen?" |
19721 | Put your filthy engine- room oil on my Henry''s locks, would you? |
19721 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
19721 | Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
19721 | Sally, saidst thou? |
19721 | See ye how dexterously they avail themselves of every cover which a tree or bush affords and avoid exposing themselves to the shot of our cross- bows? |
19721 | See? |
19721 | Seest thou who they are that act as leaders? |
19721 | Shall I be believed when I say that, at a depth of thirty feet, I could see as well as if I was in broad daylight? |
19721 | Should she go back to camp and get the tent? |
19721 | Should she take a load of wood with her? |
19721 | Should we ever go through the woods, pass through that gathering storm, reach Jamestown, warn them there of the death that was rushing upon them? |
19721 | Should we ever leave that hated village? |
19721 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war; Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
19721 | Speak out, ye Saxon dogs, what bid ye for your worthless lives? |
19721 | Taken at its best, how long was it to last? |
19721 | Tell me, Livy, has the fortune- teller given thee a penny- worth?" |
19721 | Tell what happened after the appearance of Nantaquas? |
19721 | The engineer seized the handle of a lever and asked,"Which way?" |
19721 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"On which side he voted?" |
19721 | The step paused at a safe distance, and the shrill pipe of a little boy demanded,"Whar is ye, Ethan Tynes?" |
19721 | Then I asked,"All die? |
19721 | Then taking Front- de- Boeuf aside,"Knowest thou the priest?" |
19721 | Thinkest thou I will part with thee until thy ransom is secure?" |
19721 | This story was written about the end of the nineteenth century: what great scientific discoveries have been made since then? |
19721 | Thy trade is to jest: canst thou jest now?" |
19721 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
19721 | V. How did Ivanhoe fall to the care of Rebecca? |
19721 | V. What changes did the hurrying years bring Ernest? |
19721 | Was he able to advise her? |
19721 | Was he young or old? |
19721 | Was she spoiled by her wealth? |
19721 | Was that possible? |
19721 | Was the bride willing to marry"the laggard in love"? |
19721 | What accident halted the boat? |
19721 | What adage did he use to show the difference between his age and Priscilla''s? |
19721 | What added to his bewilderment? |
19721 | What amused you most? |
19721 | What caused them to decide that he was not? |
19721 | What challenge did the knights receive? |
19721 | What change had been made in the sign over the inn? |
19721 | What change occurred in his life and now? |
19721 | What characteristic did this show? |
19721 | What comforted him? |
19721 | What comparisons are used by the poet in describing the snowfall? |
19721 | What conclusion did he reach as to the central part of the earth? |
19721 | What custom was followed in the marriage ceremony? |
19721 | What did Opechancanough do to try to deepen the impression of friendship? |
19721 | What did Wamba mean by"whether they be thy children''s coats or no"? |
19721 | What did he decide to do? |
19721 | What did he find when he reached that body? |
19721 | What did he have to prove the correctness of his theory? |
19721 | What did it matter for the moment if the dim snowheaps rose and rose about them? |
19721 | What did she do that impressed you most? |
19721 | What did the benign lips seem to say? |
19721 | What disposition was made of the prisoners? |
19721 | What do you learn about the Arctic region? |
19721 | What do you suppose was the"one word in her ear"? |
19721 | What do you think was the greatest part of Ariel''s"triumph?" |
19721 | What does your doctor say?" |
19721 | What figure comes into the story now? |
19721 | What flag was it that bore a black eagle? |
19721 | What further adventure befell the travelers? |
19721 | What happened on the way to Jamestown? |
19721 | What happened to prevent the sailors''getting to the hulk? |
19721 | What happened to raise the hopes of better days for the daughters? |
19721 | What happened when Rip made his innocent reply to the self- important gentleman? |
19721 | What healing thought does the storm bring to the poet? |
19721 | What human eyes were ever blessed with the sight of so great a mass of treasure? |
19721 | What important thing was taking place in the village? |
19721 | What impressed you most? |
19721 | What impresses the mood of the early morning? |
19721 | What impression do you get of Cedric''s character? |
19721 | What impression do you get of each person? |
19721 | What impression do you get of him? |
19721 | What impression do you get of the stranger? |
19721 | What interruption occurred? |
19721 | What is common wealth to what you have discovered? |
19721 | What is it that you have discovered?" |
19721 | What is the first impression you get of Miles Standish? |
19721 | What is the happy ending? |
19721 | What is the tale that is told? |
19721 | What is the thought the poet leaves with us in the last stanza? |
19721 | What kind of girl was Mamie Pike? |
19721 | What kind of gun did the hunters carry? |
19721 | What kind of man had Ernest become? |
19721 | What knight led the assault? |
19721 | What lines show that Standish had fought on foreign soil? |
19721 | What mistake did McTodd make in preparing for the hunt? |
19721 | What new character is now introduced? |
19721 | What next?" |
19721 | What occurred when he reached the end of the shaft? |
19721 | What opinion do you form of the"fair de Compton"? |
19721 | What other changes did he find? |
19721 | What picture do you get from Part I? |
19721 | What plan did he carry out? |
19721 | What plan did the Black Knight make? |
19721 | What plan for escape did the Templar have? |
19721 | What preparations did the Indians make for the death of the two men? |
19721 | What qualities did Ethan show in his hour of trial? |
19721 | What reason did Lochinvar give for coming to the feast? |
19721 | What reason had the people for thinking that the great man had come in the person of Mr. Gathergold? |
19721 | What remained unaltered? |
19721 | What report brought about the marriage of John Alden and Priscilla? |
19721 | What request did Standish make of Alden? |
19721 | What say you, you of Rotherwood?" |
19721 | What sentence indicates who the man of prophecy might be? |
19721 | What stars and constellations did he mention? |
19721 | What superstitions did the wife and daughters believe? |
19721 | What thought does cause amazement? |
19721 | What time is it now? |
19721 | What time of the year was it? |
19721 | What time of year was it? |
19721 | What trait of Ernest''s character is shown in the last sentence? |
19721 | What trees were these? |
19721 | What trouble did Harry bring upon the family? |
19721 | What unusual thing happened to Rip on his walk? |
19721 | What was De Bracy''s plan? |
19721 | What was his worst fear? |
19721 | What was it that this shell rested upon? |
19721 | What was still his chief fear? |
19721 | What was that? |
19721 | What was the fate of the ship bearing that flag? |
19721 | What was the first adventure the travelers had? |
19721 | What was the great danger? |
19721 | What was the result of the Indian attack? |
19721 | What was there in Mr. Gathergold''s appearance and action to disappoint Ernest? |
19721 | What was there to indicate that Ernest would become a great and good man? |
19721 | What was to be his fate? |
19721 | What were Priscilla''s feelings toward Alden? |
19721 | What were the main incidents in the return trip? |
19721 | What word is used instead of_ thicket_ in the second stanza? |
19721 | What would you have done in similar circumstances? |
19721 | What you come for? |
19721 | What you want?" |
19721 | What''s the use of fooling any longer?" |
19721 | When I returned to school, they asked,"Did you stop at''Suzanne''s''?" |
19721 | When and where must it be delivered?" |
19721 | When did she realize her failure? |
19721 | When did you learn this thing?" |
19721 | Where did Rebecca take her station? |
19721 | Where did he again look for comfort? |
19721 | Where did the_ Kate_ find anchorage? |
19721 | Where does it sit? |
19721 | Where is the scene laid? |
19721 | Where is the scene of the story laid? |
19721 | Where is the scene of this story laid? |
19721 | Where is the thunder? |
19721 | Wherein was Old Blood- and- Thunder lacking in resemblance to the Great Stone Face? |
19721 | Which comparison do you like best? |
19721 | Which lines do you like best? |
19721 | Which of the assailants proved themselves especial heroes? |
19721 | Who air ye ennyhow?" |
19721 | Who appeared at the end of the ceremony? |
19721 | Who came in the character of a priest? |
19721 | Who came to the aid of Gurth and Wamba? |
19721 | Who do you think Locksley was? |
19721 | Who ever heard, even in a minstrel''s tale, of such a sum as a thousand pounds of silver? |
19721 | Who had carved the face? |
19721 | Who had made Cedric''s party prisoners? |
19721 | Who is now introduced in the story? |
19721 | Who is telling the story? |
19721 | Who is the hero? |
19721 | Who was the first to recognize in Ernest the likeness to the Great Stone Face? |
19721 | Who was"the sick friend"the Jews were assisting? |
19721 | Who yield-- who push their way?" |
19721 | Whom did Ivanhoe think of when he said,"Methought there was but one man in England that might do such a deed"? |
19721 | Why ca n''t we be like the others? |
19721 | Why ca n''t we have some of the fun?" |
19721 | Why could he not let himself down to the ledge by those long, strong vines that hung over the edge of the cliff? |
19721 | Why did Alden accept the task? |
19721 | Why did Hawthorne have a poet to make the discovery? |
19721 | Why did he act as if he did not care? |
19721 | Why did he go at once to his office? |
19721 | Why did he not free us five days agone?" |
19721 | Why did he not understand the questions asked him? |
19721 | Why did he not wonder at the belief of the"ancient Magians"? |
19721 | Why did her father put his hand on his sword? |
19721 | Why did not Merrifield fire? |
19721 | Why did not Pete come? |
19721 | Why did the speech of the"lean fellow"seem"perfect jargon"to Rip? |
19721 | Why do you suppose the bride had consented? |
19721 | Why does Irving speak of the mountains as"fairy mountains"? |
19721 | Why does the bride turn pale, and hide her face on his shoulder? |
19721 | Why does the bridegroom start and stare at the strange apparition? |
19721 | Why had n''t he learned to ride as a boy? |
19721 | Why had not some of them spoken to him? |
19721 | Why is he here? |
19721 | Why is lightning spoken of as the pilot of the cloud? |
19721 | Why leave ye the good knight and noble Cedric to storm the pass alone? |
19721 | Why should the clear sky be the cloud''s cenotaph? |
19721 | Why should they not do something as well as we? |
19721 | Why was Ernest more disappointed than before? |
19721 | Why was Nantaquas spared? |
19721 | Why was every one so"cold and white"? |
19721 | Why was he brought in to disgrace our house? |
19721 | Why was he unwilling ever to make the descent again? |
19721 | Why was this particularly hard for Rip to understand? |
19721 | Why were the people willing to believe that Mr. Gathergold was the image of the Great Stone Face? |
19721 | Why, then, pure seeker of the good and true, shouldst thou hope to find me in yonder image of the divine?" |
19721 | Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Why? |
19721 | Will I have dinner? |
19721 | Will you deprive me of my sole remaining comfort in life?" |
19721 | Will you, when you lie at his feet, have him ask you,''Where is the friend of my friend, of my war chief?''" |
19721 | With what feeling did he turn homeward? |
19721 | With what question did Priscilla finally meet his eloquent appeal in behalf of his friend? |
19721 | With what startling news did the evening end? |
19721 | Would the morning ever come? |
19721 | Would the rise of the ground to the ribs of rock never come? |
19721 | Would you care to take a nap at the bottom of the sea? |
19721 | You do n''t mean to say you will go away?" |
19721 | Your name means nothing yet, but a year from now, perhaps, who can tell? |
19721 | a_ coward_? |
19721 | a_ loiterer_? |
19721 | and to whom?" |
19721 | asked Wamba;"or shall we give him[ v]leg- bail? |
19721 | called the furious Norman,"what villain have you brought me here?" |
19721 | changed to rescue?" |
19721 | cried Clewe,"how came you here?" |
19721 | cried De Bracy;"will ye let two men win our only pass for safety?" |
19721 | cried Front- de- Boeuf,"what have we here?" |
19721 | cried Ivanhoe;"tell me which has fallen?" |
19721 | exclaimed Ivanhoe;"does he blench from the helm when the wind blows highest?" |
19721 | exclaimed the knight;"do the false yeomen give way?" |
19721 | he shouted,"art thou there?" |
19721 | of Athelstane''s? |
19721 | of John Alden? |
19721 | returned the Jew, finding voice through the very extremity of his danger;"heard man ever such a demand? |
19721 | said my Lord, who was standing by the fireplace,"Rachel, what are you in a passion about? |
19721 | said the Templar, who came into the hall that moment,"muster the wasps so thick here? |
19721 | thought Rip;"what excuse shall I make to Dame Van Winkle?" |
41288 | Are there any mistakes in it? |
41288 | Can you guess it, mother? |
41288 | Could that have been little Proserpina I saw in Pluto''s[62] chariot--"In Pluto''s chariot? |
41288 | Dear ant,he began,"will you not help a poor fellow who has nothing to eat?" |
41288 | Do n''t you sometimes wish for the woods and moonlight nights? |
41288 | Have you seen a little girl around here to- day? |
41288 | How shall I make it bright? |
41288 | Is n''t it there now? |
41288 | Should you like to be here always? |
41288 | So it is you, is it? 41288 Tell me, what were you doing while the weather was warm? |
41288 | Well, what has happened? |
41288 | What do you think of it? |
41288 | What does Ceres want me to do? |
41288 | What has happened? |
41288 | What is it? |
41288 | What is this building? |
41288 | What kind of letters are they to be? |
41288 | What would she be doing in Pluto''s chariot? |
41288 | Where did you put it? |
41288 | Why do n''t you come with us and have some fun? |
41288 | Why do you keep on weeping day after day? |
41288 | You have nothing to eat? |
41288 | ---- I go home at three o''clock, Miss Smith? |
41288 | ---- you touch the ceiling when you are on the chair? |
41288 | 2. Who shall be the class postmaster? |
41288 | = Memory Exercise.= Which do you like better, this poem you have just studied or the part of another poem about fairies that is printed before this? |
41288 | = Oral Exercise.= 1. Who wrote the first of the following letters? |
41288 | = Oral Exercise.= Did Tom tell the class the same dream he told his mother? |
41288 | = Oral Exercise.= Do you think this riddle can be made better? |
41288 | = Oral Exercise.= How did the story end? |
41288 | = Oral Exercise.= Which of the two riddles do you like better? |
41288 | And should you not put in something to show that you do not mean a bird? |
41288 | Are there any mistakes in English? |
41288 | Are there any mistakes in the letter? |
41288 | Are there any sentences there that need another_ not_-word? |
41288 | Are there mistakes in any sentence? |
41288 | Are too many_ and''s_ used? |
41288 | Are you sorry that he must stay? |
41288 | Are you that one? |
41288 | Are_ rung_,_ sung_, and_ drunk_ used with_ have_ or_ has_ or_ had_? |
41288 | As the light- footed fairy? |
41288 | As the light- headed fairy? |
41288 | As the light- hearted fairy? |
41288 | As the light- hearted fairy? |
41288 | As they watch, who keeps them company? |
41288 | As you read the two lists above, do you see the reason for each Indian name? |
41288 | As you speak to your classmates, shall you play that you are an ant or a grasshopper? |
41288 | But can you guess the second one? |
41288 | But do you know that he is the most dangerous and cruel of all the wild animals? |
41288 | But which pupils can recite it best? |
41288 | But why not tell it in a bright way? |
41288 | Can anything be added to make the story interesting? |
41288 | Can better words be used for some of those in the story? |
41288 | Can it be easily tamed? |
41288 | Can you draw a picture of it on the board for those who do not know how it looks? |
41288 | Can you draw on the board a picture of a palm tree? |
41288 | Can you guess either one of the following riddles? |
41288 | Can you make a riddle of your own about the dandelion? |
41288 | Can you make a rule for the use of_ saw_ and_ seen_? |
41288 | Can you make up other names for the twelve months? |
41288 | Can you name the twelve months in order? |
41288 | Can you see the last grasshopper going from house to house, begging for food? |
41288 | Can you see the picture of the fairies in the following lines? |
41288 | Can you tell how it may be made better? |
41288 | Can you tell the class where to go to see a brook? |
41288 | Can you tell which is the better one? |
41288 | Can you tell why? |
41288 | Can you tell why? |
41288 | Can you tell why? |
41288 | Can you think of a good reason why the Eskimos have no such houses as ours? |
41288 | Can you think of any way in which you could make the Eskimo house warmer or safer? |
41288 | Can you think of anything the speakers might have said to make the telephone talk more interesting? |
41288 | Could anything be left out because it is not needed? |
41288 | Could he probably save the drowning boy if he were not tied? |
41288 | Could some suitable poems be recited? |
41288 | Could you think out a better one? |
41288 | Could you walk home that day? |
41288 | Did Santa Claus come to your home? |
41288 | Did he begin at the beginning or at the end of it? |
41288 | Did he leave anything out? |
41288 | Did he look back now and then to see where he was going? |
41288 | Did he make a stop at the end of every sentence and drop his voice there to show that the sentence was finished? |
41288 | Did he pencil, or trace, on your windows some of the pictures of which the poem speaks? |
41288 | Did he plan to give him another ring instead,--a ring that held three wishes instead of one? |
41288 | Did he speak so clearly that every one in the class could understand him? |
41288 | Did he use too many_ and''s_? |
41288 | Did he use too many_ and''s_? |
41288 | Did he want to see what Peter would do? |
41288 | Did one of them row the make- believe boat as if it were a real boat? |
41288 | Did the boys jump off their make- believe bicycles as if these were real? |
41288 | Did the boys row on and let the dog swim after them until he got tired and returned to shore? |
41288 | Did the elves clap their hands? |
41288 | Did the other children lay you both on sleds and slowly draw you to your homes? |
41288 | Did the players look and act like the persons in the story? |
41288 | Did the players say enough? |
41288 | Did the players speak clearly, distinctly, and loud enough? |
41288 | Did the players talk enough? |
41288 | Did the pupil playing Ceres ask each of the other players the same question in the same way? |
41288 | Did the pupil playing Ceres look very much worried over Proserpina''s not returning? |
41288 | Did the pupil playing Ceres talk enough? |
41288 | Did the pupil playing Ceres talk like a worried person? |
41288 | Did the pupil stand squarely on both feet, or was he so weak that he had to hold onto a chair or desk to keep from falling over? |
41288 | Did the pupil talk as he really would talk to his dog if the class were not there to hear him? |
41288 | Did the speaker leave out anything interesting? |
41288 | Did the speakers make any mistakes in English? |
41288 | Did the speakers say bright things that every one likes to hear? |
41288 | Did the speakers telephone in clear, pleasant voices that could easily be heard? |
41288 | Did they act and move as if they were sitting in a boat out on a lake or as if they were standing on dry land? |
41288 | Did they get into the boat carefully? |
41288 | Did they lean over the edge of the boat and look for fish? |
41288 | Did they lean them carefully against trees? |
41288 | Did they play games with you in the woods? |
41288 | Did they pronounce any words incorrectly? |
41288 | Did they put you to bed at once and run for the doctor? |
41288 | Did they see other boats on the water? |
41288 | Did they speak about how the shore looked from the middle of the lake? |
41288 | Did they talk together as if they were really on a day''s picnic? |
41288 | Did you ever have an accident with your sled? |
41288 | Did you ever see Mr. Nobody at your house? |
41288 | Did you ever see a brook? |
41288 | Did you ever telephone? |
41288 | Did you lay nothing by?" |
41288 | Did you paint the same pictures in all houses? |
41288 | Did you place a question mark at the end of the question you are asking? |
41288 | Did you see him? |
41288 | Did you see the circus come to town early in the morning? |
41288 | Did you see the men putting up the tents? |
41288 | Did you see the parade? |
41288 | Did you visit more than one home? |
41288 | Did your tribe make fewer mistakes than the other tribe? |
41288 | Do fairies always walk or run, or can they fly, or have they tiny horses and wagons? |
41288 | Do you find_ seen_ used in any sentence without_ have_ or_ has_? |
41288 | Do you know a suitable story that could be played by a group of pupils? |
41288 | Do you know any other children that are afraid of them? |
41288 | Do you know any place where some rare wild flower grows every year? |
41288 | Do you know any story in which a fairy helps good people? |
41288 | Do you know in what kind of houses the Indians lived? |
41288 | Do you know what they did learn? |
41288 | Do you like that? |
41288 | Do you like the Indian names as well as the names we use? |
41288 | Do you like the ending? |
41288 | Do you like the way it reads? |
41288 | Do you like the word_ frames_ in the second account? |
41288 | Do you like to have all the sentences begin the same way? |
41288 | Do you mean,"Will you permit me to go?" |
41288 | Do you not remember the two ways in which Tom told his dream? |
41288 | Do you own a sled? |
41288 | Do you remember that boy, Tom, who once dreamed about an owl and an elf? |
41288 | Do you remember what kind of boy Peter''s brother, Joseph, was? |
41288 | Do you see that the second sentence is only another way of saying the first? |
41288 | Do you see that when you say,"I can do this,"you mean,"I am able to do this"? |
41288 | Do you see the little mark(:) after the words_ Dear Jack_ and_ Dear Jill_ in these two letters? |
41288 | Do you sternly warn him not to leave his post? |
41288 | Do you think it is a good plan? |
41288 | Do you think that Tom told his dream very well? |
41288 | Do you think the third riddle is too long? |
41288 | Do you think you could catch sight of him if you looked in the mirror? |
41288 | Does George Smith seem to be a very polite boy? |
41288 | Does Mr. Nobody visit your house, too? |
41288 | Does Proserpina scream as the stranger picks her up? |
41288 | Does Tom''s story tell how he drove the owl away? |
41288 | Does Tom''s story tell what he was doing when he first saw the elf? |
41288 | Does every sentence begin with a capital letter? |
41288 | Does every sentence begin with a capital letter? |
41288 | Does every sentence end with a period or question mark? |
41288 | Does every sentence end with the right kind of mark? |
41288 | Does every sentence in the account begin with a capital letter? |
41288 | Does it begin with a capital letter? |
41288 | Does it tell how the elf looked? |
41288 | Does it tell that anything is in a box? |
41288 | Does the Eskimo way of building a house give you an idea of a good way of building a snow fort? |
41288 | Does the dog want to go along? |
41288 | Does the first line of the letter begin a little more to the right than the lines below it? |
41288 | Does the first riddle say anything about the box? |
41288 | Does the sentence begin with a capital letter? |
41288 | Does the sentence end with a period? |
41288 | Father,---- I go with John to the game? |
41288 | For example: TEACHER( to first pupil): Tom, what did you do? |
41288 | For instance, Fred says:"Tom, have you a position for me in your circus?" |
41288 | For whom is this? |
41288 | Has any one ever---- this grasshopper doing any work? |
41288 | Has he visited your house this winter? |
41288 | Have n''t you ever seen a circus? |
41288 | Have you begun the letter correctly? |
41288 | Have you ever read about fairies? |
41288 | Have you ever seen such a place? |
41288 | Have you ever---- spring water? |
41288 | Have you ever---- the school bell? |
41288 | Have you ever_ drunk_ apple juice? |
41288 | Have you ever_ rung_ it? |
41288 | Have you ever_ seen_ a grasshopper at work? |
41288 | Have you ever_ sung_ it? |
41288 | Have you written your own name in the right place at the end of the letter? |
41288 | Have you---- the ants carrying grain this summer? |
41288 | He asks his classmates a question beginning with the words_ What did you see?_ He might say: 1. |
41288 | He will ask one after another in the circle,"Have you the moccasin?" |
41288 | How are the Indians of to- day different from the Indians whom the first white men saw? |
41288 | How can you tell? |
41288 | How could it be made brighter? |
41288 | How could the invitation be made more polite? |
41288 | How did Jack Frost get into the house? |
41288 | How did Peter find the strange little old man? |
41288 | How did he show that he was glad that you had saved the life of one of his elves? |
41288 | How did he talk? |
41288 | How did the boat happen to upset? |
41288 | How do you show that? |
41288 | How do you wish it had ended? |
41288 | How does Apollo look and what does he say when Ceres declares that nothing shall grow on earth until Proserpina is returned? |
41288 | How does every sentence in it begin? |
41288 | How does he look? |
41288 | How does it live? |
41288 | How does it obtain its food? |
41288 | How does she look and what does she say when she sees the deep hole that grows wider and deeper every moment? |
41288 | How is it different from a river or a lake? |
41288 | How many mistakes have all the Indians in your tribe made? |
41288 | How many punctuation marks have you forgotten? |
41288 | How many times have you written small letters where there should be capitals? |
41288 | How might the story have been played better? |
41288 | How shall the class post office be run? |
41288 | How shall visitors be invited? |
41288 | How shall we banish their schoolroom timidity and self- consciousness? |
41288 | How shall we inoculate them against common errors in English? |
41288 | How shall we interest them in the improvement of their speech? |
41288 | How shall we obtain from them a ready flow of thought expressed in fitting words? |
41288 | How tall do you think they are? |
41288 | How were the Indian babies taken care of? |
41288 | How will you make sure that you have spelled it right? |
41288 | How will you prove to your parents and to your teacher that it will do you more good to spend the afternoon at the circus than in school? |
41288 | If the word_ I_ is used, is it written as a capital letter? |
41288 | If you had only snow and the skins and bones of animals to work with, what kind of house should you make? |
41288 | If you were old enough to travel with a circus, and if your parents would allow you to go, what should you most like to be? |
41288 | In any of the sentences above do you find_ saw_ used with_ have_ or_ has_? |
41288 | In the first line, why is the mountain called_ airy_? |
41288 | In which of the following questions are you interested most? |
41288 | Is anything important left out? |
41288 | Is anything important left out? |
41288 | Is anything important left out? |
41288 | Is every sentence followed by the right kind of punctuation mark? |
41288 | Is every word correctly spelled? |
41288 | Is every word spelled correctly? |
41288 | Is it a bright letter? |
41288 | Is it bright enough? |
41288 | Is it nearer the right or the left edge of the envelope? |
41288 | Is it placed exactly in the middle of the envelope? |
41288 | Is it placed nearer the top or the bottom edge of the envelope? |
41288 | Is some one thinking of buying you by the pound, as if you were a little pig or a calf? |
41288 | Is the animal very different from most wild animals in any important ways? |
41288 | Is the letter as good as it might be? |
41288 | Is the name of the month spelled correctly? |
41288 | Is the second line of the address exactly under the first line? |
41288 | Is the third line exactly under the second line? |
41288 | Is there any mark after it? |
41288 | Is this dog a good swimmer? |
41288 | Is this true of the word_ did_ also? |
41288 | Is_ orange_ the best word for a dandelion? |
41288 | JOHN( to a classmate): Have you that flower in your desk? |
41288 | John,---- you spell_ Eskimo_? |
41288 | Just as Tom reached out his hand to open the door in the tree, what do you think happened? |
41288 | Look for three things:( 1) Capital letters( 2) The mark at the end of each sentence( 3) The spelling of words Did you have everything right? |
41288 | Making a Little Book= Would it not be pleasant for you and your classmates to make a class picture book? |
41288 | Mary,---- you find that book for me? |
41288 | May I read the book Santa Claus gave you? |
41288 | May I run over to George''s house, mother? |
41288 | May I write my name in your notebook? |
41288 | Miss Brown,---- I change my seat? |
41288 | Miss Brown,---- you see me when I stand here? |
41288 | Miss Smith,---- I borrow a pencil of Ruth? |
41288 | Miss Smith,---- I have another sheet of paper? |
41288 | Miss Smith,---- you speak French? |
41288 | Next, do you see how the first line in each letter is different from the other lines? |
41288 | Now that spring is here, shall you be going into the fields and woods to gather flowers? |
41288 | Now, what animals shall take the place of the grasshoppers? |
41288 | Of all the riddles of the box of crayons, which do you think is the best? |
41288 | Oh, tell me, have you seen her? |
41288 | Or did they take the wet animal into the boat and leave the bicycles to take care of themselves? |
41288 | Or do you want to be one of the letter carriers? |
41288 | Or will you be a butterfly? |
41288 | Or will you tell the fable as if you were a bird or a field mouse that saw all that happened and heard all that was said? |
41288 | Perhaps red- paper borders could be pasted around the edges of the letters? |
41288 | SECOND GUESSER: Are you a turtle, John? |
41288 | Shall each pupil write a letter inviting somebody and mail it in the United States Post Office? |
41288 | Shall the festival be held in the schoolroom or outdoors? |
41288 | Shall the festival begin with a march by the pupils? |
41288 | Shall there be letter carriers? |
41288 | Shall we go together? |
41288 | Shall we have another letter- writing day? |
41288 | Shall you decorate the room with spring flowers? |
41288 | Shall you go on a picnic to a pleasant place? |
41288 | Shall you go swimming or boating? |
41288 | Shall you go to any city parks? |
41288 | Shall you go to the public library? |
41288 | Shall you put a roof over it? |
41288 | Shall you take a trip away from home? |
41288 | She walks up and down the aisles and asks each of her children this question:"Have you done your work?" |
41288 | Should he not be one of the players? |
41288 | Should it be made longer? |
41288 | Should it be made shorter? |
41288 | Should some of the_ and''s_ be left out? |
41288 | Should this player grow more worried and more excited all the time? |
41288 | Should you be a little afraid to open the door if you were Tom? |
41288 | Should you be thinking, now and then, of the long, cold winter ahead? |
41288 | Should you like to be a horseback rider? |
41288 | Should you like to be a juggler, a tightrope walker, or a clown? |
41288 | Should you like to be an animal trainer? |
41288 | Should you look wide- awake? |
41288 | Should you probably speak of the pleasure of seeing the grain pile up in the storehouses? |
41288 | Should you speak of the sunny day, of the pleasant field, of the fun of working together? |
41288 | Somebody= Oral Exercise.= What do you think of Tom''s letter to Fred? |
41288 | Somebody= Oral Exercise.= Which of the letters that Tom wrote do you like better? |
41288 | Still More Telling about Indians= What boy would not be an Indian for a while when he thinks of the freest life in the world? |
41288 | Story- Telling== Oral Exercise.= Did you ever see a sign with the words SAFETY FIRST? |
41288 | Study of a Fable== Oral Exercise.= Did you ever read the story or fable of the ants and the grasshoppers? |
41288 | TEACHER( to the next pupil): Mary, what did you do? |
41288 | THIRD GUESSER: Are you a song sparrow, John? |
41288 | Talking over Plans= Why could n''t the class plan a spring festival? |
41288 | Telling Interesting Things[63]= THE RETURN OF SPRING Have you noticed any signs that spring is coming? |
41288 | The fifth or the sixth? |
41288 | The following conversation shows this:"Mother, can I eat another piece of pie?" |
41288 | The game moves along as follows: FIRST GUESSER: Are you a dandelion, John? |
41288 | The papers always are mislaid, Who had them last but he? |
41288 | The seventh or the eighth? |
41288 | The teacher points to one pupil after another and asks each,"What did you see on your way to school?" |
41288 | The third or the fourth? |
41288 | Then Nellie asks:"Tom, have you a position for me in your circus?" |
41288 | This time she asks each one,"What were you doing while I was gone?" |
41288 | To whom is it written? |
41288 | To whom is the first written? |
41288 | Tom answers:"What kind of work can you do well, Fred?" |
41288 | Tom answers:"What kind of work can you do well, Nellie?" |
41288 | UNKNOWN Would it not be pleasant to dance in a ring with your classmates? |
41288 | Was any poor English used? |
41288 | Was it new or old? |
41288 | Was the wish fulfilled, or did a fairy appear to punish the boy? |
41288 | Were the bicycles still there when the boys returned from their boat ride? |
41288 | Were the speakers polite to each other? |
41288 | Were the voices of the speakers pleasant? |
41288 | Were you and the teacher the only brave ones in the room? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What am I? |
41288 | What animals shall we have in our story to take the place of the ants? |
41288 | What are they? |
41288 | What are we? |
41288 | What are we? |
41288 | What are we? |
41288 | What bright thought might be put in the letter? |
41288 | What can one do with a sled besides go coasting? |
41288 | What can you see and do there? |
41288 | What can you see out there? |
41288 | What can you tell your classmates about them? |
41288 | What could be added to make the account better? |
41288 | What could be added to make the talk more interesting? |
41288 | What did Indian boys and girls enjoy that you do not have? |
41288 | What did he add? |
41288 | What did he do? |
41288 | What did he say? |
41288 | What did he say? |
41288 | What did the Indians use for money? |
41288 | What did the Indians wear? |
41288 | What did the doctor do and say? |
41288 | What did you do? |
41288 | What did you like best in this story? |
41288 | What did you like best of all you saw and heard? |
41288 | What did you paint on the windowpanes? |
41288 | What did you see at church last Sunday? |
41288 | What did you see first when you entered the tent? |
41288 | What did you see when you visited your grandfather? |
41288 | What did you see when you went to the woods? |
41288 | What did your mother do and say when she saw you coming? |
41288 | What do fairies drink? |
41288 | What do some of them do all the night? |
41288 | What do they do and say? |
41288 | What do they eat? |
41288 | What do they try to do? |
41288 | What do those lines tell you about fairies that you did not know before? |
41288 | What do you like about this poem? |
41288 | What do you like best in it? |
41288 | What do you like in the first account? |
41288 | What do you mean when you say,"May I go to the moving- picture theater, Mother?" |
41288 | What do you say to each other? |
41288 | What do you say? |
41288 | What do you think Mr. Brown will say when he receives it? |
41288 | What do you think Peter himself wished when Christmas morning came? |
41288 | What do you think he is saying to Tom? |
41288 | What do you think he would have done if he, instead of Peter, had been in that workshop? |
41288 | What do you think of butterflies for this part? |
41288 | What do you think she was thinking then? |
41288 | What do you think the mother is saying to Tom? |
41288 | What do you try to do? |
41288 | What does Ceres say? |
41288 | What does Proserpina say? |
41288 | What does each say, and what do you decide? |
41288 | What does he say at each door? |
41288 | What does it tell you that Tom left out? |
41288 | What does she say as she pulls away at it? |
41288 | What does she say when she sees that? |
41288 | What does that mean? |
41288 | What does the animal look like? |
41288 | What does the last one say to himself and decide to do? |
41288 | What else does it tell that is interesting to you? |
41288 | What games do you think would be best? |
41288 | What games do you think you will play during the summer? |
41288 | What happened then? |
41288 | What happened then? |
41288 | What happened then? |
41288 | What happens next morning when the master of each dog learns what took place during the night? |
41288 | What happens next? |
41288 | What interested you most as you read the story about Peter? |
41288 | What interesting thing was said by the speakers? |
41288 | What is a castle? |
41288 | What is a knight''s armor? |
41288 | What is a knight''s plume? |
41288 | What is a knight? |
41288 | What is happening in the first picture on the next page? |
41288 | What is happening? |
41288 | What is he doing? |
41288 | What is he doing? |
41288 | What is he shouting? |
41288 | What is in the third riddle that you do not find in the second? |
41288 | What is it? |
41288 | What is it? |
41288 | What is its size, color, and shape? |
41288 | What is meant in the poem by the line,_ The night is his noon_? |
41288 | What is the best part of the account on the board? |
41288 | What is the difference in meaning between_ dangerous_ and_ cruel_? |
41288 | What is the fairies''sunlight? |
41288 | What is the lesson of that fable? |
41288 | What is the most beautiful wild flower you have ever found or seen? |
41288 | What is the name of the one you like best? |
41288 | What is the name of the poem? |
41288 | What kind of clothes do they wear? |
41288 | What kind of dog should you like to have for your pet? |
41288 | What kind of picture should you make with colored crayons for the part of the story you liked best? |
41288 | What might Tom answer? |
41288 | What might Tom have said about this? |
41288 | What might have been said that the speakers did not say? |
41288 | What might have happened then? |
41288 | What might have happened to him? |
41288 | What might he have said that he left out? |
41288 | What might she say as she looks out of the window now and then? |
41288 | What might she say when she finds the unfinished wreath? |
41288 | What might she say when she sees Proserpina''s footprint and, a little farther along, the beautiful shrub pulled out of the ground? |
41288 | What might the others say? |
41288 | What might the owl say if it could talk? |
41288 | What might these say that none of the players said? |
41288 | What might they ask you? |
41288 | What might they be whispering to each other? |
41288 | What might you ants be saying to each other while you work? |
41288 | What might you grasshoppers be saying to each other about the weather? |
41288 | What might you say about it? |
41288 | What might you say about the busy ants you see passing by with loads on their backs? |
41288 | What might you say about the coming winter? |
41288 | What might you say in a low tone to yourself to express this surprise? |
41288 | What might you say to each other about the summer that is gone? |
41288 | What might you say to each other as you pass the grasshoppers loafing by the roadside? |
41288 | What might you say when you notice the owl and the elf? |
41288 | What more could each one have said? |
41288 | What plan are the boys carrying out in the first picture on the next page? |
41288 | What plan does Tom follow in writing letters? |
41288 | What pleasant things do you enjoy that the Indian children had never heard of before the white men came to this country? |
41288 | What questions might Tom ask before he opens it? |
41288 | What questions might you ask them? |
41288 | What shall he do? |
41288 | What should the invitation tell about the spring festival? |
41288 | What sort of automobile was it? |
41288 | What sort of boat did Indians use and how did they make it? |
41288 | What toys and things will you make? |
41288 | What was that wish? |
41288 | What was the best fun you ever had with your sled? |
41288 | What was the best fun you had during the Christmas vacation? |
41288 | What was the best thing he said? |
41288 | What was the best thing in the talk? |
41288 | What were his three wishes on Christmas morning? |
41288 | What will happen next? |
41288 | What will you do? |
41288 | What will you say to the class? |
41288 | What will you tell them? |
41288 | What would be your one big wish? |
41288 | What would happen if an Eskimo placed our kind of stove in his house and started a roaring fire in it? |
41288 | When and where did he receive the more wonderful ring? |
41288 | When did you last go to the circus? |
41288 | When that one returns to the room, he asks each of his classmates in turn,"George( or Fred or Mary), have you seen my pencil?" |
41288 | When you meet them, what might you say to them? |
41288 | When you read this poem, does it seem to be a song? |
41288 | Where can a sentence or two be added to make the story better? |
41288 | Where can better words be used than those of the writer? |
41288 | Where did you buy your ticket? |
41288 | Where do you think the fairies live? |
41288 | Where does the animal live? |
41288 | Where shall you meet him? |
41288 | Where was it? |
41288 | Where were you? |
41288 | Where''s Jill?" |
41288 | Which Indian name do you like best of all? |
41288 | Which additions do you like most? |
41288 | Which are not used with them? |
41288 | Which do you care for least? |
41288 | Which do you think could be improved? |
41288 | Which is the poorest? |
41288 | Which is the second best? |
41288 | Which line tells us that? |
41288 | Which lines in the first part of the poem tell about fairies? |
41288 | Which of Tom''s three riddles do you like the best? |
41288 | Which of the following ideas will you use in your talk? |
41288 | Which of the six words that you have been studying in this lesson are used with_ have_ or_ has_ or_ had_? |
41288 | Which of them has he done at your house? |
41288 | Which of these words do you already know? |
41288 | Which one of the three letters by Tom do you like best? |
41288 | Which ones? |
41288 | Which part do you like best? |
41288 | Which part of this story do you like best? |
41288 | Which part, or stanza, of the poem do you like best? |
41288 | Which sentence do you like better, the first or the second? |
41288 | Which two boys played the picture best? |
41288 | Which two talked the best? |
41288 | Who made the fewer mistakes? |
41288 | Who might have found it? |
41288 | Who shall be Peter? |
41288 | Who shall be the bakers? |
41288 | Who shall be the fairies at the saws? |
41288 | Who shall be the painters? |
41288 | Who was in it? |
41288 | Who wrote the second? |
41288 | Whom do you want for that position? |
41288 | Why could not your class plan a special good time for that day? |
41288 | Why did he decide to follow this plan? |
41288 | Why did he do this? |
41288 | Why did knights have shields? |
41288 | Why did the strange little old man help Peter? |
41288 | Why do the boys not take him? |
41288 | Why have they no fine large coal or wood stoves in that cold country? |
41288 | Why is he surprised? |
41288 | Why is this? |
41288 | Why not say instead,''I am as round and fat as a ball of butter''? |
41288 | Why? |
41288 | Why? |
41288 | Will you let me? |
41288 | Will you tell it as if you were one of the bees? |
41288 | Will you walk lazily to and fro before the class, one of you twanging a guitar, another singing, and the third dancing about? |
41288 | Would bees do? |
41288 | Would it be a good plan to have each pupil play that he is a spring flower or a bird and make a riddle about himself for the visitors to guess? |
41288 | Would it be a good plan to have some one play the dog? |
41288 | Would it be a good plan to write your letter over so that it will be one of the best and neatest letters in the class post office? |
41288 | Would it be better if this player asked the question differently of different persons? |
41288 | Would it be more fun for pupils to send short notes to each other than valentines bought at the store? |
41288 | Would it be right to make the following rule? |
41288 | Would it not be a good plan, before going on with this game of telephoning, for the class to make a telephone directory? |
41288 | Would it not be fun for each pupil to tell the class his favorite fairy story? |
41288 | Would not that be much brighter than''I am four feet three inches tall''? |
41288 | Would one of the boys kindly be my guide through the woods?" |
41288 | Would your walk be brisk? |
41288 | Writing Dates= If you were asked to write on a slip of paper your name and the date of your birth, could you do it? |
41288 | [ 12] How many mistakes in spelling have you made? |
41288 | [ 16] How can each of them be made better? |
41288 | [ 25] Do you think that there is any one in the class who can make such an exact copy? |
41288 | [ 3] What should you probably say? |
41288 | [ 8] How might Tom have begun his story? |
41288 | [ Illustration]"Can this be Santa Claus?" |
41288 | [ Illustration]"What brings you here before sunrise, Mother Ceres?" |
41288 | _ Can it be done?_ This is the question before the class. |
41288 | _ Has_ your brother_ seen_ the ant hill in the field? |
41288 | _ Have_ you_ done_ your work? |
41288 | _ Have_ you_ seen_ them? |
41288 | that is called a period, and some with a mark(?) |
41288 | |||| George Smith|||= Oral Exercise.= What do you think of George Smith''s invitation? |
28097 | A German officer, who spoke French like a son of France, demanded of her:--''Where are your soldiers?'' |
28097 | Am I a coward? |
28097 | At what inaudible summons, at what gentle touch of Nature, are all these sleepers thus recalled in the same hour to life? 28097 Base_ dog!_ why shouldst thou stand here?" |
28097 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? 28097 Hath a dog money? |
28097 | Have not the Indians been kindly and justly treated? 28097 Is all that true? |
28097 | Love,as a general proposition, is beautiful; but what more can a young writer say about it? |
28097 | Snow- Bound,narrative or descriptive?, 4. |
28097 | Tiger, Tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Framed thy fearful symmetry? |
28097 | To know Him, to serve Him, to enjoy Him,--what is it but the"pure worship"of the fourth? |
28097 | Travels with a Donkey,narrative or descriptive? |
28097 | What... shall we do with it? |
28097 | Who shall say, of us who know only of rest and peace by toil and strife? |
28097 | [ 11] InThe Vision of Sir Launfal"Lowell opens his beautiful description with the words,"And what is so rare as a day in June?" |
28097 | [ 46] Which shall be used? 28097 he,"of the third, to what of the second? |
28097 | thus it wasto what before? |
28097 | ( Does this figure change to another in its course?) |
28097 | )[ 3] Of what value are they in composition? |
28097 | 1. Who become tramps? |
28097 | 29 In what Order? |
28097 | 52), does Irving proceed from far to near in the landscape? |
28097 | 52)? |
28097 | 67 and 68, do the details produce the effect upon you which they did upon Poe? |
28097 | ? |
28097 | And have they not, instead thereof, been taught to set their affections on things above?" |
28097 | And what, after all, are the virtues ascribed to Charles? |
28097 | Are Irving''s sentences long? |
28097 | Are both effective in the essay? |
28097 | Are his Words General or Specific? |
28097 | Are negroes usually profane? |
28097 | Are the Details arranged in a Natural Order? |
28097 | Are the Details treated in Proper Proportion? |
28097 | Are the Figures Effective? |
28097 | Are the Sentences dovetailed together? |
28097 | Are the arguments from 48 to 64 more in the nature of direct or indirect proofs? |
28097 | Are the descriptions to accent the mood of the story? |
28097 | Are the details in the description of the apparition on p. 41 in the order in which they would be noted? |
28097 | Are the incidents related in the order in which they occurred? |
28097 | Are the likenesses to common things? |
28097 | Are there more in narrative or descriptive passages? |
28097 | Are there narrative portions in"The Old Manse"? |
28097 | Are they description or exposition? |
28097 | Are they interesting? |
28097 | Are they narration or description? |
28097 | Are they useful? |
28097 | Are time and place definitely stated in the poem? |
28097 | Are you ever astray regarding Burke''s meaning? |
28097 | Are you sure? |
28097 | As the paragraph stands, is the sentence loose or periodic? |
28097 | As you read along do the paragraphs run into one another? |
28097 | At the bottom of page 183 why was it necessary to crowd so much into one sentence? |
28097 | At the bottom of page 45 what is the reason for putting first in the sentence,"of those principles"? |
28097 | At the bottom of page 67, do you think the first sentence of the paragraph the topic? |
28097 | At the opening of the paragraph beginning on page 29, do you like the figure? |
28097 | At what paragraph of this Essay on Milton does the introduction end? |
28097 | At what point? |
28097 | Between poetry and a magic- lantern? |
28097 | By contrasts to what has Hawthorne brought out better the character of the Apple Dealer? |
28097 | By what steps has the author approached the definite time? |
28097 | C. What must be done? |
28097 | Can the paragraphs of exposition usually be divided? |
28097 | Can the process be analyzed and drawn out, or does it act like a dose or a charm which comes into general use empirically? |
28097 | Can you describe a voice without using comparison? |
28097 | Can you detect any difference in the movement of the different parts of the story? |
28097 | Can you divide the paragraph filling the middle of page 8? |
28097 | Can you divide this paragraph on pages 14 and 15? |
28097 | Can you feel any difference between the movement of this story and the movement in"The Gentle Boy"? |
28097 | Can you find anything in the paragraphs to develop the thought that he was shrewd? |
28097 | Can you find examples of sentences beginning with a loose structure, and having within them examples of the periodic structure? |
28097 | Can you find one sentence on the second page of the story that foreshadows the result? |
28097 | Can you find passages of exposition and description in this narrative? |
28097 | Can you unite the paragraphs on p. 25? |
28097 | Canto V.? |
28097 | Could all of them be put into one? |
28097 | Could it not be omitted? |
28097 | Could not the quarrel between Godfrey and Dunsey been omitted? |
28097 | Could this paragraph be divided? |
28097 | Could you break up the sixth sentence of section 31 so that it would be better? |
28097 | Could you improve it by a change of punctuation? |
28097 | Could you include all the main topics that Ruskin has included, and by a change in proportion keep the essay on the subject? |
28097 | Could you suggest a new arrangement of details in lines 341- 362 that would be as good as the present? |
28097 | Did you find any use of comparisons in the piece? |
28097 | Do all details enforce this idea? |
28097 | Do all other Incidents converge to it? |
28097 | Do not digress; tell one story at a time; let no incident into your story which can not answer the question,"Why are you here?" |
28097 | Do the details enumerated arouse such feelings in you? |
28097 | Do the four precedents which he cites of Ireland, Wales, Durham, and Chester prove that his plan will work in America? |
28097 | Do the introductions to the several cantos form any part of the story? |
28097 | Do the other incidents serve to develop the character of"the gentle boy"? |
28097 | Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies? |
28097 | Do the trifles mentioned at the end of the paragraph on page 55 make an anticlimax? |
28097 | Do these help in the development of Ernest''s character? |
28097 | Do they bear out Lowell''s estimate of himself? |
28097 | Do they come into the story again? |
28097 | Do they seem long? |
28097 | Do they violate unity? |
28097 | Do you approve this method of scattering the description along through the story? |
28097 | Do you call this plot more complicated than those of the other tales studied? |
28097 | Do you consider all the incidents necessary? |
28097 | Do you find it later? |
28097 | Do you find more in narrative or descriptive passages? |
28097 | Do you know Scrooge? |
28097 | Do you know as well how George Eliot''s characters look as how they think and feel? |
28097 | Do you like the second sentence of the next paragraph? |
28097 | Do you see him? |
28097 | Do you see how relating the story in the first person helped him to throw the main incident last? |
28097 | Do you see the Picture distinctly? |
28097 | Do you term the whole narration, description, or exposition? |
28097 | Do you think a large part of section 30 a digression? |
28097 | Do you think colons are used too frequently in Silas Marner? |
28097 | Do you think it would be just as well to put the second sentence of this paragraph last? |
28097 | Do you think one of the incidents could be omitted? |
28097 | Do you think that such a felicitous result just happened? |
28097 | Do you think the conversation is natural? |
28097 | Do you think the first paragraph too long? |
28097 | Do you think the last sentence of section 9 upon the topic announced in the first sentence? |
28097 | Do you think the outline of this as distinct as that of Macaulay''s Essay on Milton? |
28097 | Do you think the plot good? |
28097 | Do you think the specific closing of the paragraph worthy of the position? |
28097 | Do you think the title good? |
28097 | Do you think there is a grammatical error in the third sentence of this paragraph? |
28097 | Do you think this plot as good as those of Hawthorne''s stories? |
28097 | Do you think this plot more complicated than that of"The Great Stone Face"? |
28097 | Does Dickens use slang? |
28097 | Does Hawthorne generally introduce his descriptions by giving the feeling aroused by the object described, a method very common with Poe? |
28097 | Does Irving use many comparisons? |
28097 | Does Jupiter''s general character lead you to expect profanity from him? |
28097 | Does Macaulay frequently use epigrams? |
28097 | Does Macaulay frequently use this introduction? |
28097 | Does Macaulay give a definition of poetry on page 13, or is it an exposition of the term? |
28097 | Does Poe tell any other stories in the first person? |
28097 | Does Poe use description to accent the mood of the narrative, or to make concrete the places and persons? |
28097 | Does each Paragraph treat a Single Topic? |
28097 | Does he close his paragraphs with a repetition of the topic more frequently than with a single detail emphasizing the topic? |
28097 | Does he demolish it? |
28097 | Does he ever use an argument from cause to establish a probability? |
28097 | Does he frequently use transition sentences? |
28097 | Does he hold to his Point and so gain Unity Does he arrange his Material so as to secure Emphasis? |
28097 | Does he place the topic sentence near the beginning of the paragraphs? |
28097 | Does he prove that criminal procedure against the colonies would fail, by sign or by deduction? |
28097 | Does he repeat words? |
28097 | Does he seek for a climax in the arrangement of the parts of his brief? |
28097 | Does he seem to you to have digressed from his topic? |
28097 | Does he succeed? |
28097 | Does he use deduction more frequently than sign? |
28097 | Does he use figures as frequently as Macaulay? |
28097 | Does he use many pronouns and conjunctions? |
28097 | Does he use the same method in the Essay on Addison? |
28097 | Does it add clearness? |
28097 | Does it add to the interest of the story? |
28097 | Does it help to explain the theme? |
28097 | Does one Paragraph grow out of another? |
28097 | Does the Author employ Figures? |
28097 | Does the Author keep his Point of View? |
28097 | Does the Author use Figures? |
28097 | Does the author begin at once, and close when the story is told? |
28097 | Does the example of the prisoner on page 60 prove anything? |
28097 | Does the last detail give the finishing touch to the paragraph? |
28097 | Does the story end when it is finished? |
28097 | Does the tale related by the host break the unity of the whole? |
28097 | Examining the words used by Dickens and Hawthorne, which are longer? |
28097 | For what Purpose has the Author used Description? |
28097 | For what purpose does he frequently use questions? |
28097 | For what purpose is the first paragraph of section 5 introduced? |
28097 | Free to do what? |
28097 | From the fragments about his appearance, do you get a clear idea of how Marner looks? |
28097 | From the use on pages 24 and 25, what do you gather as to the rule for paragraphing where dialogue is reported? |
28097 | From what sentence does the last of this paragraph arise? |
28097 | Granting that this estimate is true, what kind of a proof is it of the proposition that"his very talents will be a hindrance to him"? |
28097 | Granting that you can not conceive"a good man and an unnatural father,"does that prove anything about the first sentence at the bottom of page 55? |
28097 | Has Lowell used too many figures? |
28097 | Has any Detail a Supreme Importance? |
28097 | Has it Force? |
28097 | Has the Whole a Unity of Effect? |
28097 | Has the paragraph in which the figure occurs unity? |
28097 | Has the story a plot? |
28097 | Has this description Unity? |
28097 | Have the others topics? |
28097 | Helpless on the water, how was she to be saved? |
28097 | How can other matters be emphasized? |
28097 | How can they? |
28097 | How could the arguments have made"the conclusion irresistible"? |
28097 | How could you know the time, if the first page were not there? |
28097 | How did Irving know where to paragraph? |
28097 | How do Men explain? |
28097 | How do you know that Usher did not say"him"? |
28097 | How do you know the time of"Marmion"? |
28097 | How does he establish the competence of the colony assemblies? |
28097 | How does he prove that Americans were grieved by taxes? |
28097 | How does the author pass from the fourth paragraph to the fifth? |
28097 | How free? |
28097 | How has he gained these Ends? |
28097 | How has he made it so? |
28097 | How has rapidity been gained? |
28097 | How has the author expressed the intensity of the situation? |
28097 | How many chapters could you divide the story into? |
28097 | How many incidents or episodes contribute to the story? |
28097 | How many of the descriptions of persons in"Marmion"begin with the face? |
28097 | How many paragraphs are given to his simple credulity? |
28097 | How many paragraphs are given to this topic? |
28097 | How many periodic sentences in this paragraph? |
28097 | How many sentences in the first paragraph are periodic? |
28097 | How many similes? |
28097 | How many times are they of the face only? |
28097 | How shall Important Matters be emphasized? |
28097 | How shall a better be obtained? |
28097 | How shall a vocabulary be accumulated? |
28097 | However, this,"Can a partisan be a patriot?" |
28097 | If a friend is telling you a story, do you care more for it if it is about a third party or about himself? |
28097 | If his audience had been hostile to him would he have been fortunate in some of his assertions? |
28097 | If it is deductive, what is the suppressed premise? |
28097 | If not, upon what principle can you divide them? |
28097 | If not, what is the matter with it? |
28097 | If not, what is the use of them? |
28097 | If not, what principle of narrative construction would be violated by its omission? |
28097 | If so, is there no other word to express the thought? |
28097 | If so, why had he left a light? |
28097 | If the field has been covered, then why write a book at all? |
28097 | If the forms of discourse are to be studied one after another, which shall be taken up first? |
28097 | If the thought is to be repeated, why not some other word? |
28097 | If they have nothing to do with it, what principle of structure do they violate? |
28097 | If this poem needed it, why not the other? |
28097 | If you must concede,--the conclusion of the first half,--what will be the nature of your concession? |
28097 | In all the descriptions of buildings by Irving that you have read, what are the first things mentioned,--size, shape, color, or what? |
28097 | In how many is the last sentence a repetition of the topic? |
28097 | In how many paragraphs is the last sentence short? |
28097 | In how many with a general characterization? |
28097 | In paragraph 127 is the one example cited enough to prove the rule? |
28097 | In paragraph 129 what does Burke mention as arguments of value? |
28097 | In paragraph 18 why has he used the word"interest"more than once? |
28097 | In paragraph 7 why would it be a blemish to write,"That we may keep alive similar sentiments"? |
28097 | In paragraph 8? |
28097 | In relation to the whole story, in what place does it stand? |
28097 | In section 3 what purpose does the first paragraph fulfill? |
28097 | In the eighth sentence of paragraph 21 is the structure periodic or loose? |
28097 | In the first prelude is Lowell describing a landscape of New England or Old England? |
28097 | In the first stanza where is the topic sentence? |
28097 | In the last sentence of paragraph 6 where does loose structure change to the periodic? |
28097 | In the long sentence in paragraph 25 do the he''s and him''s all refer to the same person? |
28097 | In the next paragraph, why is Macaulay''s way better than this:"He was neither Puritan, free thinker, nor royalist"? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of p. 17, why are the clothes of the man mentioned first? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of p. 18, what do you think of the selection of material? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 19, what do you think of the selection of material? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 42, what advantage is there in the exclamatory sentences? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 45, what is the method of development? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 55, what method of development has been used? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 94, what is the topic sentence? |
28097 | In the paragraph beginning on page 13, what is the purpose of the first two sentences? |
28097 | In the paragraph on page 11, what is the relation between the first and last sentences? |
28097 | In the paragraph on page 40, what reason has Irving for saying"therefore"? |
28097 | In the second sentence"bound volume"goes back to what words in the first sentence? |
28097 | In the"Legend of Sleepy Hollow"how many paragraphs of description close with an important detail? |
28097 | In this poem what purpose is served by the first two stanzas? |
28097 | In this story is profanity artistic? |
28097 | In what Order? |
28097 | In what lines do you find the main incident? |
28097 | In what order are the elements of the story introduced? |
28097 | In what paragraph does Dickens tell where the story occurs? |
28097 | In what paragraphs is the main incident? |
28097 | In what person are"Treasure Island"and"Kidnapped"told? |
28097 | Is Ruskin wise in disclosing his subject at once? |
28097 | Is Usher described at all when Poe says,"I gazed upon him with a feeling half of pity, half of awe"? |
28097 | Is an uncivilized state of society the cause of good poetry, or only an attendant circumstance? |
28097 | Is anything gained by his oaths? |
28097 | Is anything sacrificed? |
28097 | Is either an argument that is convincing? |
28097 | Is his last sentence, in case it is a repetition of the topic, longer or shorter than the topic sentence? |
28097 | Is his treatment of the subject concrete? |
28097 | Is it Clear? |
28097 | Is it a delicate way of telling"when"? |
28097 | Is it a fair deduction? |
28097 | Is it a real climax? |
28097 | Is it a relation of cause and effect? |
28097 | Is it a uniform phenomenon that as civilization advances, poetry declines? |
28097 | Is it at the right place in the paragraph, and why? |
28097 | Is it better or worse? |
28097 | Is it better so? |
28097 | Is it clear? |
28097 | Is it complicated? |
28097 | Is it conclusive? |
28097 | Is it effective? |
28097 | Is it good in the last sentence of this paragraph? |
28097 | Is it good there? |
28097 | Is it right to say,"He would have liked to spring,"or would it be better to say,"He would have liked to have sprung"? |
28097 | Is it the custom to use a capital letter in such a case? |
28097 | Is it"another story"? |
28097 | Is one the cause of another? |
28097 | Is paragraph 55 direct or indirect argument? |
28097 | Is paragraph 79 in itself exposition or argument? |
28097 | Is such a condition good? |
28097 | Is such a contrast in the thought? |
28097 | Is the Diction Elegant? |
28097 | Is the Interest centred in Characters or Plot? |
28097 | Is the Order a Sequence of Time alone? |
28097 | Is the argument good? |
28097 | Is the arrangement of the details in the last two lines of the first paragraph stronger than the arrangement of the same details on p. 63? |
28097 | Is the description of Mrs. Fezziwig on p. 52 successful? |
28097 | Is the detail at the end of the paragraph beginning on the middle of page 71 upon the topic of the paragraph? |
28097 | Is the example in section 36 a fair one, and does it prove the case? |
28097 | Is the first sentence of the paragraph beginning in the middle of page 36 periodic or loose? |
28097 | Is the last detail important? |
28097 | Is the last paragraph of this section a digression? |
28097 | Is the last sentence in paragraph 3 clear? |
28097 | Is the opening such as to catch the attention? |
28097 | Is the parallel construction in the last sentence beginning on page 77 good? |
28097 | Is the piece exposition, or argument, or persuasion? |
28097 | Is their arrangement effective? |
28097 | Is there a Main Incident? |
28097 | Is there a change of movement between the beginning and the end of the story? |
28097 | Is there any difference in the length of the sentences? |
28097 | Is there any difference in the proportion of verbs and verbals? |
28097 | Is there any place where the movement of the story is rapid? |
28097 | Is there one of the minor incidents that could be omitted? |
28097 | Is there, then, any advantage in this method of opening a description? |
28097 | Is there, then, no reason why one should be first rather than another? |
28097 | Is this common? |
28097 | Is this piece description or exposition? |
28097 | Is this story as good as"The Gold- Bug"? |
28097 | OF WHAT NATURE OUGHT THE CONCESSION TO BE? |
28097 | OUGHT YOU TO CONCEDE? |
28097 | Of the paragraph on page 73, what sentence is the topic? |
28097 | Of the paragraph on pages 16 and 17, what is the relation of the last three sentences to the topic? |
28097 | Of the three common ways of giving uncertainty to a plot, which has been used? |
28097 | On p. 80, should Poe write"previously to its final interment"? |
28097 | On page 14, does it seem to you that Hawthorne had forgotten the Old Manse enough so that it could be called a digression? |
28097 | On page 26 could you make two sentences of the sentence beginning,"Raveloe lay low among the bushy trees"? |
28097 | On page 35 do the three parts of the compound sentence beginning,"He would have liked,"etc., belong to one sentence? |
28097 | On page 60 why did he not say,"She grovels like a beast, she hisses like a serpent, she stings like a scorpion"? |
28097 | Or with gladness are they full, For the night so beautiful, And longing for those far- off spheres? |
28097 | Shall the incidents be arranged in order of time? |
28097 | Should it be two essays? |
28097 | Should it be? |
28097 | Should there be two paragraphs? |
28097 | Should they? |
28097 | Still, is such an explanation exposition or argument? |
28097 | The Prussian asked:--"''How did it take fire?'' |
28097 | The following from Newman illustrates the method:"Now what is Theology? |
28097 | The old example is as good as any: shall we say as the French do, a horse black; or shall we say as the English do, a black horse? |
28097 | There are some persons who say that other languages are taught by the word and sentence method; then why not English? |
28097 | These conditions, answering the questions Who? |
28097 | Thine eyes are full of tears; Are they wet Even yet With the thought of other years? |
28097 | This costs work, it is true; but what is there worth having which has not cost some one work? |
28097 | This is the end; what was the beginning,--the conditions necessary to bring about this deplorable result? |
28097 | Thou''lt come no more, Never, never, never, never, never!-- Pray you, undo this button:--thank you, sir.-- Do you see this? |
28097 | Title: Who was the Criminal? |
28097 | To establish a fact? |
28097 | To gain this climax what kind of arguments should precede? |
28097 | Upon what general principle do all arguments from example depend? |
28097 | Was Oliver Cromwell, his bitterest enemies themselves being the judges, destitute of private virtues? |
28097 | Was it necessary to attach the last stanza? |
28097 | Was the main incident the last to occur in order of time? |
28097 | Was the weaver gone to bed, then? |
28097 | Were all that precedes omitted, would"The Battle"be as interesting? |
28097 | What advantage is there in such treatment? |
28097 | What advantage is there in the short sentences on page 68? |
28097 | What advantage to the story is the appearance in Scrooge''s office of his nephew and the two gentlemen? |
28097 | What aids its expression? |
28097 | What are some of the disadvantages? |
28097 | What are the last four lines for? |
28097 | What are the words that deserve the distinction of opening and closing a paragraph? |
28097 | What are"the true nature and the peculiar circumstances of the object which we have before us?" |
28097 | What argument does Burke use to prove that hedging in the population is not practicable? |
28097 | What arrangement of clauses in the first sentence in the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 66? |
28097 | What arrangement of sentences in the paragraph does he use most, individual or serial? |
28097 | What begins and what ends a Paragraph? |
28097 | What bill? |
28097 | What cantos contain the main incident? |
28097 | What comment have you to make upon these facts? |
28097 | What comment would you make upon the last sentence of the paragraph ending at the top of page 25? |
28097 | What connection in thought is there between the second, third, and fourth stanzas? |
28097 | What connective and what punctuation will you use? |
28097 | What did it demand in 1772? |
28097 | What do you gather from this fact? |
28097 | What do you think of Macaulay''s estimate of Wordsworth? |
28097 | What do you think of the last sentence of Chapter IV.? |
28097 | What do you think of the length of the sentence quoted on p. 85? |
28097 | What do you think of the massing of the whole sentence? |
28097 | What do you think of the structure of sentences 4 and 8 in section 32? |
28097 | What figure at the bottom of page 15? |
28097 | What figure at the end of paragraph 40? |
28097 | What figure do you find in section 14? |
28097 | What figure in the last sentence of Chapter X.? |
28097 | What figure of speech do you find in the last sentence of the paragraph on page 43? |
28097 | What figure of speech in the word"axe"in paragraph 32, and"bayonet"in paragraph 36? |
28097 | What form of wit does Poe attempt? |
28097 | What gives the peculiar interest to this tale? |
28097 | What good was done by describing Usher as Poe knew him in youth? |
28097 | What has been made emphatic? |
28097 | What has he done to gain clearness? |
28097 | What have guided in the inclusion and exclusion of details? |
28097 | What have these stanzas to do with the story? |
28097 | What helps express rapidity of movement in the paragraph at the bottom of p. 53? |
28097 | What is Lowell''s criticism upon himself? |
28097 | What is a plot? |
28097 | What is a tramp? |
28097 | What is a very common method with Ruskin of connecting paragraphs? |
28097 | What is the basis of division? |
28097 | What is the conclusion? |
28097 | What is the difference in effect? |
28097 | What is the effect of position upon the phrase,"Even in his hands,"on page 67? |
28097 | What is the effect of the change? |
28097 | What is the effect of the supposed case at the end of section 33? |
28097 | What is the effect of this paragraph? |
28097 | What is the effect upon his style? |
28097 | What is the effect? |
28097 | What is the effect? |
28097 | What is the essential idea in the description of Scrooge? |
28097 | What is the last part of the first sentence of this paragraph? |
28097 | What is the law of their arrangement? |
28097 | What is the main incident? |
28097 | What is the main incident? |
28097 | What is the need of the last chapter? |
28097 | What is the purpose of the first stanza? |
28097 | What is the relation between the first sentence and the last in the paragraph at the bottom of page 11? |
28097 | What is the relation between the opening and the close of the paragraph? |
28097 | What is the relation of the first sentence of the first paragraph on page 55 to the last? |
28097 | What is the result? |
28097 | What is the tendency in regard to the length of paragraphs in recent literature? |
28097 | What is the test of the length of a paragraph? |
28097 | What is the topic of each of the new paragraphs? |
28097 | What is the topic of the next paragraph? |
28097 | What is the topic of the second paragraph? |
28097 | What is the use of the analogy in section 13? |
28097 | What is the use of the description beginning"And what is so rare as a day in June"? |
28097 | What is the use of the description of"the great stone face"? |
28097 | What is the use of the description on p. 31? |
28097 | What is the use of the first two pages of the story? |
28097 | What is there about the form that leads a person to sing verses of poetry? |
28097 | What is there disagreeable in it? |
28097 | What kind of arguments in paragraphs 128 to 136? |
28097 | What kind of development in paragraph 27? |
28097 | What kind of sentences in paragraph 10? |
28097 | What led Ruskin into this long criticism of English character? |
28097 | What makes up the introduction of this essay? |
28097 | What method in section 4? |
28097 | What method is adopted in lines 125- 128? |
28097 | What method is adopted in paragraph 88 to prove that the principle of concession is applicable to America? |
28097 | What method of development in the paragraph? |
28097 | What method of development is adopted in the next paragraph? |
28097 | What method of development is used in paragraph 7? |
28097 | What method of exposition is adopted in the last paragraph? |
28097 | What method of paragraph development has Poe adopted in the paragraph beginning in the middle of page 81? |
28097 | What method of paragraph development is adopted in the paragraph beginning in the middle of page 23? |
28097 | What method of proof have you used in both? |
28097 | What method of proof is adopted on pages 34 and 35? |
28097 | What more do you want to know? |
28097 | What of its close? |
28097 | What of the number of figures used in the last canto compared with those used in any other canto? |
28097 | What of the rapidity of movement when they are digging? |
28097 | What one of the relations of a compound sentence does the second part bear to the first? |
28097 | What part in the development of the narrative does Fitz- Eustace''s song make? |
28097 | What parts of speech have almost disappeared? |
28097 | What phrase in the first paragraph allows the author to begin the second with the words,"Nor, in truth, had the Old Manse,"etc.? |
28097 | What poems are you familiar with that use this verse- form?) |
28097 | What poets with whom you are familiar have philosophized too much? |
28097 | What principle of argument is stated in paragraph 114? |
28097 | What principle of structure do they violate? |
28097 | What principle would it violate to omit these little matters? |
28097 | What proportion of the paragraphs have topic sentences? |
28097 | What purpose is served in paragraphs 8, 9, and 10? |
28097 | What relation has the last sentence to the first? |
28097 | What relation has the second sentence of paragraph 1 to the first? |
28097 | What relation to the whole has the first sentence of paragraph three? |
28097 | What shall be excluded? |
28097 | What shall be included? |
28097 | What value has it? |
28097 | What value is there in an analogy between experimental sciences and imitative arts? |
28097 | What value is there in an indirect argument? |
28097 | What value is there in it? |
28097 | What was it? |
28097 | What word is the topic of the last paragraph on p. 73? |
28097 | What words at the beginning of each paragraph are especially helpful in joining the parts? |
28097 | What would have been the consequence? |
28097 | What would you say of Burke''s use of pronouns? |
28097 | What, then, are the methods of explaining a proposition? |
28097 | What, then, is generally interesting? |
28097 | What, then, is the advantage of making an actor the narrator? |
28097 | What, then, is the main incident? |
28097 | What, then, shall stand in this place? |
28097 | When Macaulay begins to discuss"the public conduct of Milton,"what method of introduction does he adopt? |
28097 | When Macaulay inverts the order of a sentence does he usually do it for emphasis or to secure coherence? |
28097 | When can contrasts help? |
28097 | When he says that they will occupy territory because they have done so, is that an inductive or deductive argument, or is it an argument from sign? |
28097 | When may it be done? |
28097 | When? |
28097 | When? |
28097 | When? |
28097 | Whenever Burke states a general truth it forms a part of what? |
28097 | Where are introduced the time, place, and the principal character? |
28097 | Where are they? |
28097 | Where can you divide it? |
28097 | Where could you divide it? |
28097 | Where does Ruskin begin to treat the second topic? |
28097 | Where does the story really begin? |
28097 | Where has he used the ear instead of the eye to suggest his picture? |
28097 | Where in the landscape does the author begin? |
28097 | Where in the second paragraph is found the words which are the source of"my design,"mentioned in the third? |
28097 | Where is it in the description? |
28097 | Where is it told? |
28097 | Where is the fault? |
28097 | Where is the first mention of De Wilton? |
28097 | Where is the story laid? |
28097 | Where would you divide the paragraph in section 37? |
28097 | Where, in such paragraphs, is the topic sentence? |
28097 | Where? |
28097 | Where? |
28097 | Where? |
28097 | Where? |
28097 | Where? |
28097 | Which are most effectual? |
28097 | Which in this story? |
28097 | Which instance of its use do you prefer? |
28097 | Which is the most important detail? |
28097 | Which method does Macaulay use oftenest? |
28097 | Which one could you most easily spare? |
28097 | Which one? |
28097 | Which one? |
28097 | Which premise does Macaulay attack? |
28097 | Which seems most effective? |
28097 | Which shall be used, loose sentences or periodic? |
28097 | Which way does he progress? |
28097 | Who could paint this from Hawthorne? |
28097 | Who? |
28097 | Why are there so few topic sentences in this essay? |
28097 | Why are they arranged in this order? |
28097 | Why could he not tell it before? |
28097 | Why could the incident in the first paragraph on p. 50 not be omitted? |
28097 | Why did Poe delay telling it until the end? |
28097 | Why did he not substitute synonyms? |
28097 | Why did not Hawthorne tell the result of the shot at once? |
28097 | Why do the Roman laborers wheel their barrows so slow in the Forum? |
28097 | Why do you call it narration? |
28097 | Why do you think so? |
28097 | Why do you think so? |
28097 | Why does Scott not tell of Marmion''s encounter with the Elfin Knight in Canto III.? |
28097 | Why does he repeat"We wish"so many times? |
28097 | Why does not Chapter V. go on with Dunsey''s story? |
28097 | Why does the author note the change in Tobias''s circumstances? |
28097 | Why does the author say, at the top of p. 72,"necessary preface"? |
28097 | Why does the author tell only what"was reported"of the interior of Mr. Gathergold''s palace? |
28097 | Why does"here"stand first in the next sentence? |
28097 | Why has Irving given four pages to the description of Sleepy Hollow before he introduces Ichabod Crane? |
28097 | Why has he introduced the last paragraph on p. 74 reaching over to p. 75? |
28097 | Why has the author introduced the fact that Ilbrahim gently cared for the little boy who fell from the tree? |
28097 | Why is he a tramp? |
28097 | Why is not the early history of Silas Marner related first in the story? |
28097 | Why is paragraph 3 introduced? |
28097 | Why is the chanticleer mentioned last? |
28097 | Why is the first paragraph needed? |
28097 | Why is the middle needed? |
28097 | Why is the middle of the paragraph introduced? |
28097 | Why is the parenthetical clause on p. 72 necessary? |
28097 | Why is the story of Lady Clare reserved until Canto V.? |
28097 | Why is the"blue jay"mentioned last? |
28097 | Why is"The Haunted Palace"introduced into the story? |
28097 | Why now? |
28097 | Why should Sally Oates and her dropsy be admitted to the story? |
28097 | Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all? |
28097 | Why should they be, or not be? |
28097 | Why so many? |
28097 | Why there? |
28097 | Why was it necessary to have"a day of remarkable chilliness"( p. 3), and a Newfoundland dog rushing into the room( p. 6)? |
28097 | Why, or why not? |
28097 | Why, or why not? |
28097 | Why, then, seven pages to Ichabod before the story begins? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Why? |
28097 | Will a Courser of the Sun work softly in the harness of a Dray- horse? |
28097 | Will ye to your homes retire?" |
28097 | Would Lowell be likely to do this? |
28097 | Would it be as well to change them about? |
28097 | Would it be as well to divide the next paragraph into three sentences? |
28097 | Would it be as well to omit it? |
28097 | Would it be as well? |
28097 | Would it be better? |
28097 | Would the feeling have been called forth if it had not been suggested by Poe? |
28097 | Would the story be better with them, or without them? |
28097 | Would the story be complete without the preludes? |
28097 | Would the teaching be understood without them? |
28097 | Would they be just as good anywhere else? |
28097 | Would you have been satisfied if the story had stopped when the treasure was discovered? |
28097 | Would you omit it? |
28097 | Would you prefer to know how tall Eppie was, what kind of clothes she wore, etc., to the knowledge you gain of her on p. 178? |
28097 | Yet when has the experiment been tried on so large a scale as to justify such anticipations? |
28097 | and Why? |
28097 | antitheses? |
28097 | examples of personification? |
28097 | introduced at all? |
28097 | is it possible A cur can lend three thousand ducats?" |
28097 | metaphors? |
28097 | no private virtues? |
28097 | occur after those related in I.? |
28097 | of Canto I. would better precede stanza v.? |
28097 | of Canto II.? |
28097 | of Constance? |
28097 | of the story? |
28097 | or are they introduced to open up to the reader that character? |
28097 | or are they primarily to make concrete and real the persons and places? |
28097 | or did Hawthorne plan it? |
28097 | or do you think that the delightful, rambling character of the essay permits it? |
28097 | or is it the last sentence? |
28097 | or shall other considerations govern? |
28097 | or this,"A faint sound, more like a moving coolness than a stream of air"? |
28097 | paragraphs of exposition? |
28097 | put after Canto I.? |
28097 | the first intimation of Clara de Clare? |
28097 | the last? |
28097 | why do the Lazzaroni of Naples lie so listlessly on the beach? |
9106 | Ai n''t goin''to see the celebration? |
9106 | And can be inside of it? |
9106 | And how happens that? 9106 And pray what would satisfy you?" |
9106 | And what is there in this magnificent golden rose to make you cry? |
9106 | And what of it? |
9106 | And what should I do there? |
9106 | And what will you do if you lose your lands? |
9106 | And where did it come from? |
9106 | And will you never regret the possession of it? |
9106 | And will you stay with us,asked Epimetheus,"for ever and ever?" |
9106 | And will you, my man,said he, patting me on the head,"get me a little hot water?" |
9106 | Are not the boats lost on your shore now and then? |
9106 | Are you willing,said he,"to return and complete your work?" |
9106 | Birds can fly, An''why ca n''t I? 9106 But what can I do to aid you? |
9106 | But who gave it to you? |
9106 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
9106 | Did you not tell me you would like to go back? |
9106 | Do they come here? |
9106 | Hast thou thy land again? |
9106 | Have they firearms? |
9106 | Have you been here with them twice? |
9106 | Have you brought my money? |
9106 | Have you fallen into the river, that your clothes are wet? |
9106 | Have you no one who would stay surety for you? |
9106 | How could it fail? |
9106 | How did this evil come to pass? |
9106 | How is he to get here? |
9106 | How long will it be before we may expect Turk''s return? |
9106 | How many pieces,added he,"have you like this, that my wife found sticking to the bottom of the measure yesterday?" |
9106 | How old are you- and what''s your name? |
9106 | How, then, can I tell you what is inside? |
9106 | I go? 9106 I presume then that you will be glad of a job and will work cheap?" |
9106 | Mother,said he,"have I an uncle?" |
9106 | My dear Epimetheus,cried Pandora,"have you heard this little voice?" |
9106 | My dear uncle,he cried,"what have I done to deserve so severe a blow?" |
9106 | My pretty boy,said he,"has your father a grindstone?" |
9106 | No cross? 9106 Pandora, what are you thinking of?" |
9106 | Pray what is the matter with you this bright morning? |
9106 | Pray, who are you, beautiful creature? |
9106 | Pray,said he,"who occupied this house formerly?" |
9106 | Reynold Greenleaf,cried the Sheriff,"what are you doing here, and where have you been?" |
9106 | Shall I lift the lid again? |
9106 | Tell me,he said,"can you shoot with a bow?" |
9106 | The Golden Touch,asked the stranger,"or your own little Marygold, warm, soft, and loving, as she was an hour ago?" |
9106 | The Golden Touch,continued the stranger,"or a crust of bread?" |
9106 | Then will you go back to your land with me? |
9106 | Then you are not satisfied? |
9106 | Was it your dog that worried my poor dog last night when he was upon a message of trust? 9106 Well, Aladdin,"said the magician,"what business do you follow?" |
9106 | Well, and what do the men do with those they take? |
9106 | Well, friend Midas,said the stranger,"pray how do you succeed with the Golden Touch?" |
9106 | Well, then,said I,"how came they to let their foes take you?" |
9106 | Well,said he,"what must I do? |
9106 | What ails you? |
9106 | What are you going to do? |
9106 | What can have become of that dog? |
9106 | What can it be? |
9106 | What can that be? |
9106 | What can this mark mean? |
9106 | What could induce me? |
9106 | What do you mean? 9106 What do you say?" |
9106 | What do you see? |
9106 | What is the matter, father? |
9106 | What is the sum? |
9106 | What sort of staff had he? |
9106 | What tidings, Little John? |
9106 | What will Epimetheus say? 9106 What would you do there? |
9106 | When shall we meet again? |
9106 | Whence can the box have come? |
9106 | Whence come you? |
9106 | Where are your friends? |
9106 | Where have they gone? |
9106 | White is for purity--in what way does this express the ideals of the founders of our country? |
9106 | Who are you, inside of this naughty box? |
9106 | Who are you? |
9106 | Who is your master? |
9106 | Who of you can kill a hart five hundred paces off? |
9106 | Why you grieve mad with your man? |
9106 | Why, Friday,said I,"do you think they are going to eat them, then?" |
9106 | Why, Turk, old boy, what has been the matter? 9106 Will you, let me grind my ax on it?" |
9106 | Would you shoot a man who has no arms but a staff? |
9106 | You can see for yourselves that this strange tale must be true, however improbable it sounds, or else how could it possibly have happened? |
9106 | -- Who gave you the name of Old Glory-- O- ho!-- Who gave you the name of Old Glory? |
9106 | 1. Who is supposed to be speaking in the first two lines? |
9106 | 15.. How did the old men spend the evening? |
9106 | 18. Who is the cleverest person in the story? |
9106 | 2. Who asks the question in the third line? |
9106 | 2. Who make up the congregation when Jack in the pulpit preaches? |
9106 | 2. Who was General Braddock and for what was he sent to America? |
9106 | 2. Who was the governor of Plymouth at this time? |
9106 | 3. Who answers the question? |
9106 | 3. Who was Nawadaha? |
9106 | 4. Who broke the rules of the chase? |
9106 | 4. Who were the children whom the poet saw"Descending the broad hall stair"to enter his"castle wall"? |
9106 | 5. Who did he say should be invited to the feast? |
9106 | 5. Who was Nokomis? |
9106 | 6 What is the next picture? |
9106 | A BACKWARD LOOK As you look backward over the animal stories you have read in this group, which did you enjoy most? |
9106 | About his school life? |
9106 | Alas, what had he done? |
9106 | All the others in the stories you have read, boys and men, thought less of themselves than of others; of what did Ralph think? |
9106 | An''that''tother thing? |
9106 | And almost the first question which she put to him, after crossing the threshold, was this:"Epimetheus, what have you in that box?" |
9106 | And how can I possibly tie it up again?" |
9106 | And in that dream you will see- who knows? |
9106 | And now she watches the pathway, As yester eve she had done; But what does she see so strange and black Against the rising sun? |
9106 | And the brown thrush keeps singing--"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree? |
9106 | And what could that favor be, unless to multiply his heaps of treasure? |
9106 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
9106 | And what had they come for? |
9106 | And what have I done to deserve one so wretched?" |
9106 | And what was to be done? |
9106 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
9106 | And, truly, my dear little folks, did you ever hear of such a pitiable case in all your lives? |
9106 | As he came near it he cried,"Who will change old lamps for new?" |
9106 | As she drew near the first jar, the thief who was concealed within said in a low voice,"Is it time?" |
9106 | At length he said,"And what has become of the merchant?" |
9106 | At what time did Crusoe show the greatest courage? |
9106 | Away with a bellow fled the calf, And what was that? |
9106 | But are you quite sure that this will satisfy you?" |
9106 | But how was I to get on deck? |
9106 | But how was my raft to be got to land? |
9106 | But how were we to know this? |
9106 | But where was the child delaying? |
9106 | By what fancy does he increase our interest in the mystery of the box? |
9106 | Can a nation fight a great war without desire to add to its territory? |
9106 | Can the hedgehog really shoot his quills"like arrows"? |
9106 | Can you do anything to prevent this danger? |
9106 | Can you relate an instance in which a manly boy had a good influence upon another boy or Upon his companions? |
9106 | Can you require a stronger proof of his treachery?" |
9106 | Can you tell why you enjoyed this story? |
9106 | Can you tell why you enjoyed this story? |
9106 | Can you think of other incidents that illustrate what Franklin had in mind? |
9106 | Correct this fault? |
9106 | Did Ali Baba have a right to take the treasure from the robbers and keep it? |
9106 | Did Lincoln''s studies have the effect on his character that Mr. Roosevelt speaks about? |
9106 | Did he do other good deeds with his money? |
9106 | Did the gosling laugh? |
9106 | Did the laws seem made to give equal justice to all, or unfair advantages to the rich and powerful? |
9106 | Did you find in the school library or public library any of the books that are mentioned in the different biographies? |
9106 | Do n''t you hear? |
9106 | Do n''t you see? |
9106 | Do you know any person who has these qualities? |
9106 | Do you know the rules for the raising and lowering of the flag? |
9106 | Do you now see why he refused to eat salt with you? |
9106 | Do you owe anything, any return service, for what you receive and use? |
9106 | Do you thing Epimetheus was at fault? |
9106 | Do you think spring is"a time to be cloudy and sad"? |
9106 | Do you think that you should be less curious than Pandora? |
9106 | Do you think that you should be less curious than Pandora? |
9106 | Do you think the King was glad to get away from the Court? |
9106 | Do you think the football slogan given in the last sentence on page 137 is a good principle of life? |
9106 | Do you think they would have enjoyed the party more, or less, if there had been no"uninvited guest"? |
9106 | Do you think this national song cheered the American soldiers in the recent World War? |
9106 | Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old mustache as I am Is not a match for you all? |
9106 | Does he have all parts of America in mind, or some part that he knows well? |
9106 | Does the first paragraph fit America only, or could an Englishman say the same thing about his national flag, and a Frenchman of his? |
9106 | Does this picture seem real to you? |
9106 | Does your school belong to the Junior Red Cross, and does it try''to follow the motto,"Go forth to serve"? |
9106 | For what did Hiawatha love Kwasind? |
9106 | For what"days gone by"does the poet sigh? |
9106 | From what did he make his flutes? |
9106 | From what people? |
9106 | From whom had this treasure been taken? |
9106 | Had he done such things before? |
9106 | Has Hiawatha''s vision come true? |
9106 | Have I not faithfully kept my promise with you? |
9106 | Have you burned your mouth?" |
9106 | Have you ever seen clouds that seemed to chase one another? |
9106 | Have you never made the sunshine dance into dark corners by reflecting it from a bit of looking- glass? |
9106 | Have you not everything that your heart desired?" |
9106 | Have you nothing for me?" |
9106 | He must work hard and play hard"? |
9106 | He was not forgotten by his little friends, however, and"Where''s Jimmy?" |
9106 | Here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
9106 | Here is a story about a boy who saw a chance to do a service and did it; how was he different from his companions? |
9106 | His Majesty presented me with fifty purses containing two hundred pieces of gold did Gulliver capture the fleet from Blefuscu? |
9106 | His arrows? |
9106 | His brothers had walked but a little way When Jotham to Nathan chanced to say,"What on airth is he up to, hey?" |
9106 | His father? |
9106 | How am I to know whose goods I shall take, and whose I shall leave? |
9106 | How and where was Aladdin''s palace built? |
9106 | How are birds helpful to men? |
9106 | How are the"asters in the brook"made? |
9106 | How came you here?" |
9106 | How can the snow help keep the roots alive? |
9106 | How can you help to make the world"run over with joy"? |
9106 | How could I refuse? |
9106 | How could aught in the shape of a man come to that shore, and I not know it? |
9106 | How could blind men"see"the elephant? |
9106 | How could it have come there? |
9106 | How could you tell that this baby lived a long time ago? |
9106 | How did Aladdin persuade his mother to see the Sultan? |
9106 | How did Aladdin regain the lamp? |
9106 | How did Ali Baba make his living? |
9106 | How did Ali Baba reward her? |
9106 | How did Cassim feel toward Ali Baba when he heard the story? |
9106 | How did Gulliver get back to England? |
9106 | How did Gulliver learn of the plot against him? |
9106 | How did Hiawatha know it was all true? |
9106 | How did Hiawatha say they should receive the White Man when he came? |
9106 | How did Lincoln fix in his memory things that he wished to remember? |
9106 | How did Midas think he could best show his love for this daughter? |
9106 | How did Morgiana discover the plot and prevent it from being carried out? |
9106 | How did Morgiana save Ali Baba''s life? |
9106 | How did Peter find the danger? |
9106 | How did Robin Hood help him? |
9106 | How did Tubal Cain feel when he saw what men were doing with the products of his forge? |
9106 | How did Washington gain glory from the engagement? |
9106 | How did he accomplish his purpose? |
9106 | How did he discover the power of his lamp? |
9106 | How did he drive this thought away? |
9106 | How did he force Aladdin to obey him? |
9106 | How did he induce the Sheriff to follow him to the place where Robin Hood was? |
9106 | How did he plan to hide his gold after he returned home? |
9106 | How did he stop the leak in the dike? |
9106 | How did he try to take the side of the poor men who were thus unfairly dealt with by the government? |
9106 | How did he win the friendship of Little John? |
9106 | How did it happen that the boy was alone on the"burning deck"? |
9106 | How did the Captain manage to win the friendship of Ali Baba? |
9106 | How did the Emperor feel toward him after his refusal? |
9106 | How did the Knight show his gratitude after he regained his lands? |
9106 | How did the blind man think of Peter? |
9106 | How did the boy try to keep himself in good cheer? |
9106 | How did the magician gain possession of it? |
9106 | How did the mason find his way home? |
9106 | How did the mason find his way home? |
9106 | How did the mason show his quick wit? |
9106 | How did the mason show his quick wit? |
9106 | How did the woman feel toward the boy? |
9106 | How did this affect the Paradise of Children? |
9106 | How did your result compare with his? |
9106 | How do all these things affect the poet? |
9106 | How do you feel when you see them? |
9106 | How do you sometimes feel on a cold, rainy day? |
9106 | How do you think Franklin valued sincerity? |
9106 | How do you think Robin felt about these matters? |
9106 | How do you think his own mother would have felt if she had seen him? |
9106 | How do you think the birds know their friends? |
9106 | How do you value it? |
9106 | How does Hope"spiritualize"the earth, i.e., make it purer? |
9106 | How does his method of memorizing com- pare with yours? |
9106 | How does it apply to a man too fond of popularity? |
9106 | How does it prove his fidelity? |
9106 | How does the American Forestry Association protect trees? |
9106 | How does the habit of being useful in the home fit one for being a good citizen? |
9106 | How does the poet make the flowers seem like people? |
9106 | How does the present- day newspaper furnish fun for its readers? |
9106 | How does the story about life on the prairie illustrate the paragraph that begins,"The boy can best become a good man by being a good boy"? |
9106 | How does the writer let you know his feelings? |
9106 | How does this story differ as to its source from the Arabian Nights tales? |
9106 | How does this story prove the intelligence of Turk? |
9106 | How far was each"in the right"? |
9106 | How had these provisions been obtained? |
9106 | How long ago did Pandora and Epimetheus live? |
9106 | How long did Robin Hood live in the greenwood after he left the Court? |
9106 | How long did it take him to complete the vault? |
9106 | How long did it take him to complete the vault? |
9106 | How many are there now? |
9106 | How many days, think you, would he survive the fate of this rich fare? |
9106 | How many do you think he had? |
9106 | How many eyes does he say the heart has? |
9106 | How many eyes does the poet say the mind has? |
9106 | How many of the flowers described in this poem are familiar to you? |
9106 | How many stars were in the first American flag? |
9106 | How many stripes has the flag? |
9106 | How many times, in this poem, does the poet use the words golden and yellow, or speak of things that suggest these colors? |
9106 | How many voyages did Sindbad make to satisfy his love of adventure? |
9106 | How may these stories about Washington and Lincoln help you to be a worthy citizen of the country they helped to found and preserve? |
9106 | How may you encourage the birds to live near you? |
9106 | How shall I make him believe that I have not looked into the box?" |
9106 | How was Aladdin rescued from the cavern? |
9106 | How was Midas cured of the Golden Touch? |
9106 | How was Peter doing his part as a good citizen? |
9106 | How was Robin Hood captured by the Sheriff? |
9106 | How was this boy doing his part as a good citizen? |
9106 | How was this incident of use to him afterwards? |
9106 | How will the poet protect the tree? |
9106 | How would the warders protect the baby? |
9106 | How would you answer Captain Gulliver''s question about America? |
9106 | How would you have sought the boy''s help? |
9106 | How? |
9106 | I breathed a Song into the air; It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong That it can follow the flight of Song? |
9106 | I came as near them undiscovered as I could, and then, before any of them saw me, I called aloud to them in Spanish,"Who are ye, sirs?" |
9106 | I just wonder what they will do with all this power?" |
9106 | I put this to him:"Could I go from this isle and join those men?" |
9106 | I said,"Do you wish to be once more in your own land?" |
9106 | I ventured to raise my head, and what do you think had happened? |
9106 | I will drink your health, if only I can remember, and if you do n''t mind-- but perhaps you object? |
9106 | I''ll light on the libbe''ty- pole, an''crow; An''I''ll say to the gawpin''fools below,''What world''s this''ere That I''ve come near?'' |
9106 | If Crusoe had been attacked by robbers, what would have happened? |
9106 | If Crusoe had wished to go on a long journey, what would have been necessary? |
9106 | If Crusoe''s hut had taken fire, what would have happened? |
9106 | If Hindbad had desired to become as rich as Sindbad, what should he have done, and what price would he have paid? |
9106 | If all Americans would practice what Franklin advises, what would be the effect on the cost of living, and why? |
9106 | If still further you should ask me, Saying,"Who was Nawadaha? |
9106 | If we have all these things and do all these things, shall we need to hunt for the four- leaf clover to bring us good fortune? |
9106 | If you were left alone with the box, might you not feel a little tempted to lift the lid? |
9106 | If you were left alone with the box, might you not feel a little tempted to lift the lid? |
9106 | Imagine yourself telling your grandchildren about the home of your youth and about your home pleasures; what things would you mention? |
9106 | In what sense is the sun the"parent"of the violet? |
9106 | In what spirit did he start the plowing? |
9106 | In what stanza is this thought repeated? |
9106 | In what way does the author make his story humorous? |
9106 | In what way was it a blessing to Pandora? |
9106 | In what way was this incident of use to Franklin afterwards? |
9106 | In what ways can you save some of the pennies you might spend foolishly? |
9106 | In what words did the Arrow- maker give his consent? |
9106 | In what"other lands"do these fruits grow? |
9106 | In which line are we told what the eye of the heart is? |
9106 | In your class, who has read Baker''s True Tales for My Grandsons, or other selections mentioned in the biographies or elsewhere? |
9106 | In"A Narrow Escape"? |
9106 | In"How the Baron Saved Gibraltar"? |
9106 | Is a merchant who raises the price of food as high as he can, who makes huge profits while others suffer or starve, any better than Ralph the Rover? |
9106 | Is all corn"golden"? |
9106 | Is it better to make instruments of war or tools for industry? |
9106 | Is this true in all parts of the country? |
9106 | It fell out just as I wished, for I heard the men ask:"To whom must we yield, and where are they?" |
9106 | It now grew dark; and where was I to go for the night? |
9106 | Jest fold our hands an''see the swaller An''blackbird an''catbird beat us holler? |
9106 | Mother an author? |
9106 | Must a boy do some marvelous thing to be a hero? |
9106 | Must we give in,"Says he with a grin,"''T the bluebird an''phoebe Are smarter''n we be? |
9106 | No cross with me? |
9106 | November teaches Alice Caw a truth which she passes on to us; what is this truth? |
9106 | Of the song? |
9106 | Of what did Chibiabos sing? |
9106 | Of what did Hiawatha make his canoe? |
9106 | Of what was Hiawatha''s bow made? |
9106 | Of what was the Arrow- maker thinking when Hiawatha appeared? |
9106 | Of what were the children dreaming? |
9106 | Often some sensible truth is taught through a little nonsense; of which selections is this particularly true? |
9106 | On what conditions was it given to Epimetheus? |
9106 | One day I said,"Do the men of your tribe win in fight?" |
9106 | Or could it be the beating of her heart? |
9106 | ROBIN AT COURT"Have you any green cloth,"asked the King,"that you could sell to me?" |
9106 | Ralph the Rover was a pirate; why did he destroy the bell? |
9106 | Ralph was a free man-- what did"liberty"mean to him? |
9106 | Read again what is said on pages 19 and 20 about the poet as a magician; what beauty of Nature does the poet show you in the following lines? |
9106 | S. What do you know about Postal Savings deposits? |
9106 | S. What other name does he give the larch tree? |
9106 | STORIES IN LIGHTER VEIN A BACKWARD LOOK Why is it good for us, even in the midst of serious work, to read humorous stories from time to time? |
9106 | Saw the moon rise from the water Rippling, rounding from the water; Saw the flecks and shadows on it; Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
9106 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky, the rainbow; Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
9106 | She had heard her father praise him, Praise his courage and his wisdom; Would he come again for arrows To the Falls of Minnehaha? |
9106 | Since you began to use this book what progress have you hade in gaining ability to read silently with speed and understanding? |
9106 | So much for the preacher; The sermon comes next-- Shall we tell how he preached it And where was his text? |
9106 | So you have made a discovery since yesterday?" |
9106 | THE VIOLET AND THE BEE John Bannister Tabb"And pray, who are you?" |
9106 | TODAY Thomas Carlyle Lo, here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
9106 | Tell me, now, do you sincerely desire to rid yourself of this Golden Touch?" |
9106 | The Abbot of Aberbrothok was a man who lived up to the ideal of service; how did he do this, and why did men bless him? |
9106 | The Wind he took to his revels once more: On down, in town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and hallooed with whistle and roar--"What''s that?" |
9106 | The bluebird? |
9106 | The children? |
9106 | The cord? |
9106 | The flowers? |
9106 | The moon? |
9106 | The poems about home might be called memory- pictures of home; why do you think older people remember with so much fondness their childhood homes? |
9106 | The poet aims in this poem to amuse us; by what means does he do this? |
9106 | The poet tells us in the first stanza to"think"; what does he want us to think about? |
9106 | The robin? |
9106 | The second stanza? |
9106 | The sun? |
9106 | The tears ran down the poor man''s face as he said,"Is this a god, or is it but a man?" |
9106 | The writer shows by such words that Darius was not a well- educated boy; are persons often judged by the way they talk? |
9106 | The young George Washington showed remarkable bravery as Braddock''s chief assistant; what other fine quality did he show? |
9106 | Then addressing himself to Hindbad, he said,"Well, friend, did you ever hear of any person who had suffered as much as I have?" |
9106 | This Genius, who was so extremely tall that his head touched the roof, addressed these words to Aladdin:"What do you wish? |
9106 | This was not good news for me, but I went on, and said,"Where do they take them?" |
9106 | To the man of pleasure? |
9106 | To the miser? |
9106 | To the one who cares too much for appearance? |
9106 | To what did each compare the elephant? |
9106 | To what does he compare the rush made by the children? |
9106 | To what does the poet compare the eyes of birds? |
9106 | To what is the swiftness of the reindeer compared? |
9106 | To whom does"he"in the third stanza refer? |
9106 | To whom is the four- leaf clover supposed to bring good luck? |
9106 | To whom is the poet speaking in the first two stanzas? |
9106 | To whom is the poet speaking in these verses? |
9106 | Under what conditions do you think life in the forest would be pleasant? |
9106 | Was Ralph the Rover a brave man or a coward? |
9106 | Was he right? |
9106 | Was he working for money, or for service? |
9106 | Was his task harder than that of Peter or of the boy who helped"Somebody''s Mother"? |
9106 | Was n''t he also eager to do what they did? |
9106 | Was the mason''s poverty relieved by the pay he received from the stranger? |
9106 | Was the mason''s poverty relieved by the pay he received from the stranger? |
9106 | Was this true of the United States in the war recently fought?'' |
9106 | What are some of the things you can do to show your respect for the Flag? |
9106 | What are some of the things you remember about Lincoln''s boyhood? |
9106 | What are the colors of the woods and sky in this poem? |
9106 | What are the eyes of the night? |
9106 | What are the signs that Nature is glad? |
9106 | What are the"wayside things"usually called? |
9106 | What are we told about the education of children in Lilliput? |
9106 | What are we told about the spring in"October''s Bright Blue Weather"? |
9106 | What are you told on page 84 about the value to us of studying the lives of great Americans? |
9106 | What are"the hands of Spring"? |
9106 | What aroused the suspicions of his brother? |
9106 | What authors are in this group? |
9106 | What became of the arrow? |
9106 | What birds come to trees near your home? |
9106 | What body of water is called Gitche Gumee? |
9106 | What boy or girl of today would like to buy books at such a price? |
9106 | What can have been the matter?" |
9106 | What caused the magician to notice him? |
9106 | What characteristics of the boy help to explain why he afterwards became such a great man? |
9106 | What clusters are picked from vines? |
9106 | What colors are they in the poem"The Yellow Violet"? |
9106 | What comparison is made in the first stanza between June and October? |
9106 | What condition led the mason to undertake the stranger''s task? |
9106 | What condition led the mason to undertake the stranger''s task? |
9106 | What could a man do more than that? |
9106 | What could it be, indeed? |
9106 | What could it be, indeed? |
9106 | What could this mean? |
9106 | What could this mean? |
9106 | What crop was still ungathered? |
9106 | What did Aladdin see when he raised the stone? |
9106 | What did America do with its power in the World War? |
9106 | What did Cassim plan to do? |
9106 | What did Charles Sumner tell you about the meaning of the stars and the stripes and the colors of the Flag? |
9106 | What did Darius Green believe that men would soon be able to do? |
9106 | What did Darius determine to use as material for his machine? |
9106 | What did Hope mean by saying she was partly made of tears? |
9106 | What did James Whitcomb Riley tell you about how Old Glow got its name? |
9106 | What did Kwasind do to aid the canoeing? |
9106 | What did Kwasind''s mother say to him? |
9106 | What did Marygold think of the gold roses? |
9106 | What did Robin Hood tell him about the Sheriff of Nottingham? |
9106 | What did Tubal Cain first make on his forge? |
9106 | What did he decide to do? |
9106 | What did he determine to do after Robin Hood''s escape? |
9106 | What did he do then? |
9106 | What did he mean? |
9106 | What did he say about the way in which Robin was obeyed by his followers? |
9106 | What did he say was the unpleasant part of flying? |
9106 | What did he use for paddles for the canoe? |
9106 | What did men say about him? |
9106 | What did the Emperor of Lilliput wish to do when Gulliver had won the victory? |
9106 | What did the Violet ask the Bee? |
9106 | What did the boy ask his father? |
9106 | What did the brook say to Chibiabos? |
9106 | What did the colonists do"with glad accord"before they sat down to their feast? |
9106 | What did the governor say that God had done for the colony? |
9106 | What did the magician do to make Aladdin and his mother like him? |
9106 | What did the stranger ask him? |
9106 | What did the stranger ask when he came again? |
9106 | What did the wind do when he thought he had succeeded? |
9106 | What did they do there? |
9106 | What did they gain by living in the forest? |
9106 | What did they hear? |
9106 | What did they see? |
9106 | What did they think of a person who returns evil for good? |
9106 | What did you read in"A Forward Look,"pages 83- 86, about the value of the home festivals? |
9106 | What differences do you notice between this story of how the mason came upon great wealth and the stories of Aladdin and Ali Baba? |
9106 | What differences do you notice between this story of how the mason came upon great wealth and the stories of Aladdin and Ali Baba? |
9106 | What different ways of dealing with birds are spoken of? |
9106 | What directions did the magician give Aladdin before he descended the steps? |
9106 | What do good comrades like to do in October? |
9106 | What do we call the"apple from the pine"? |
9106 | What do we call the"broad, white road in heaven"? |
9106 | What do we learn about Sindbad''s character from his treatment of Hindbad? |
9106 | What do we learn about Sindbad''s character from the story of his voyages? |
9106 | What do you gain if you persuade them to do this? |
9106 | What do you know of the author? |
9106 | What do you know of the soil and climate of New England? |
9106 | What do you learn about Lincoln''s reading? |
9106 | What do you owe to Washington and Lincoln? |
9106 | What do you suppose Lincoln learned from the life of Washington? |
9106 | What do you suppose Longfellow had been doing in his study before the children came down to him? |
9106 | What do you think has happened? |
9106 | What do you think of Hiawatha''s character? |
9106 | What do you think of Little John''s treatment of the Sheriff of Nottingham after he had lived in his house? |
9106 | What do you think of the man? |
9106 | What do you think of the proof given by the author to prove the truthfulness of the last story? |
9106 | What do you think was the greatest happiness he had? |
9106 | What do you think was the reason the boys laughed when they looked up to the sky? |
9106 | What does Hope do for us? |
9106 | What does Irving say about the ease with which the wild horses were tamed? |
9106 | What does Longfellow mean by his"turret"? |
9106 | What does a love of these festivals do for us? |
9106 | What does he mean by"the long, slim loop"? |
9106 | What does he think of those who scorn the blessing of the corn? |
9106 | What does he wish to prevent? |
9106 | What does page 84 tell you of the value the love of home is to a nation? |
9106 | What does the Forward Look tell you about the source of this story? |
9106 | What does the author call this humor? |
9106 | What does the poem say we must do? |
9106 | What does the poem say we must have? |
9106 | What does the poet mean by"frosted leaves"? |
9106 | What does the poet mean when he speaks of the"Power that hath made and preserved us a nation,"line 4, page 105? |
9106 | What does the poet say he regrets? |
9106 | What does the poet say makes the forests beautiful? |
9106 | What does the poet say the sun will do for us? |
9106 | What does the poet say the violet''s"early smile"has often done for him? |
9106 | What does the second stanza tell us that the poet had at home and missed afterwards? |
9106 | What does"alone"add to the meaning of line 8, page 298? |
9106 | What effect did his good fortune have upon him? |
9106 | What evil thing about war does this incident show? |
9106 | What explanation did he give to Robin Hood for what he brought from the Sheriff''s house? |
9106 | What extravagant statements do you find in the story"The Savage Boar"? |
9106 | What facts peculiar to America does the second paragraph give you? |
9106 | What foods were prepared for the dinner which Robin Hood invited the Knight? |
9106 | What fortunate discovery did Gulliver make at Blefuscu? |
9106 | What fruit is meant by"pine"in line 12, page 93? |
9106 | What fruits did they have for the feast? |
9106 | What gains have you made in your ability to read silently with speed and understanding? |
9106 | What gave the beeches the appearance of being painted? |
9106 | What good American citizens that you know of have used their wealth to found libraries, hospitals, parks, and other public benefits? |
9106 | What great service do our mothers perform? |
9106 | What greeting did the bluebird give them? |
9106 | What had the frost done that made the woodlands gay? |
9106 | What happened to Ralph the Rover? |
9106 | What happened when Pandora opened the box a second time? |
9106 | What happened when Pandora raised the lid of the box? |
9106 | What happiness does the poet get because of his kindness to the birds? |
9106 | What harm can there be in opening the box? |
9106 | What has he done to obtain a lot so agreeable? |
9106 | What have you learned of Eastern customs from this story? |
9106 | What ideas of being useful home- members did you get from Hamlin Garland and Theodore Roosevelt? |
9106 | What in the world could we do without her? |
9106 | What is Longfellow''s purpose in this poem? |
9106 | What is compared to the wild rose? |
9106 | What is it that really makes home beautiful? |
9106 | What is it that the poet says"hallows,"or blesses, us when we are in our homes? |
9106 | What is meant by the harvest of the sedges? |
9106 | What is meant by the line,"Every bow you touch is broken"? |
9106 | What is meant by the word"here"in line 4, above? |
9106 | What is meant by the"beat"of the water? |
9106 | What is meant by"a laugh from the brook"? |
9106 | What is meant by"her train,"line 9, page 298? |
9106 | What is meant by"my beauty"? |
9106 | What is meant by"the ford across the river"? |
9106 | What is meant by"union past and present"? |
9106 | What is meant when we say of a person that he has"an ax to grind"? |
9106 | What is said on page 84 about the danger to our country in a time of peace? |
9106 | What is the Violet''s"eyeglass of dew"? |
9106 | What is the color of the woodbine leaves? |
9106 | What is the difference between being"a good boy"and"a goodygoody boy"? |
9106 | What is the difference between the sunshine of October and that of May? |
9106 | What is the eye of the day? |
9106 | What is the meaning of"thus"in line 1, page 105? |
9106 | What is the time"Between the dark and the daylight"usually called? |
9106 | What is the"yellow hair"the corn waves in summer? |
9106 | What is usually meant by"drink your health"? |
9106 | What is yours? |
9106 | What keeps you safe at night? |
9106 | What kind of boy was Aladdin? |
9106 | What land is the"heav''n- rescued land"? |
9106 | What led her to open the box? |
9106 | What lines in the poem are explained by the historical note above? |
9106 | What made Franklin do as the man wanted him to? |
9106 | What made him wish for freedom? |
9106 | What made his face"cheerful"at last? |
9106 | What made the"burst of thunder sound"? |
9106 | What make him realize that his little daughter was dearer to him than gold? |
9106 | What makes this poem humorous? |
9106 | What makes this story"exciting,"or"thrilling"? |
9106 | What may we learn from this story? |
9106 | What meat did the Pilgrims have at their first Thanksgiving dinner? |
9106 | What name does he give America? |
9106 | What natural changes in the shape of the moon take place each month? |
9106 | What offer did the King make to Robin Hood and his men? |
9106 | What other flowers come very early in the spring? |
9106 | What other kinds have you seen? |
9106 | What other name does he give the bark of the birch- tree? |
9106 | What other poem on the violet have you read? |
9106 | What other words or phrases in the poem suggest the same idea? |
9106 | What parts of our country are noted for pine forests? |
9106 | What parts of the story show that people in Sindbad''s time knew very little about geography? |
9106 | What picture do lines 6, 7, and 8, page 89, give you? |
9106 | What picture do the first eight lines of this poem give you? |
9106 | What picture do the first three paragraphs give you? |
9106 | What picture do you find in lines 7- 10, page 96? |
9106 | What picture do you see when you read the first stanza? |
9106 | What plan did the Captain of the robbers determine upon in order to have revenge upon Ali Baba? |
9106 | What play on the meaning of these words gives a humorous turn to them? |
9106 | What preparations did Irving''s party make for the hunt? |
9106 | What proclamation did he make? |
9106 | What progress have you made in silent reading? |
9106 | What proof of Roosevelt''s good sportsmanship is found in the second paragraph on page 34? |
9106 | What punishment did Robin Hood decide upon for the Sheriff? |
9106 | What purpose do the dikes of Holland serve? |
9106 | What quaint fancy has he about the way food was provided when the world was young? |
9106 | What qualities does this story give to the wind? |
9106 | What qualities in Epimetheus do you like? |
9106 | What qualities were most admired in men at the time of Robin Hood? |
9106 | What really caused it to disappear? |
9106 | What reason can you give for this? |
9106 | What reason do you think the King had for wanting to see Robin Hood? |
9106 | What reasons can you give for the"pause in the day''s occupations"? |
9106 | What remedy does the author suggest the doctor will prescribe for Gertrude? |
9106 | What season is described here? |
9106 | What secrets came to Hiawatha in the vision? |
9106 | What service did Casabianca do for all of us? |
9106 | What service did Peter''s mother call him to render? |
9106 | What service did our farmers and boys and girls on the farms perform during the World War? |
9106 | What should we lose if we did not celebrate them? |
9106 | What signs of autumn are mentioned in the first stanza? |
9106 | What signs of gladness are mentioned in the first two stanzas? |
9106 | What signs of the coming winter are mentioned in the second stanza? |
9106 | What stories had brought a bad name upon the landlord''s house? |
9106 | What stories had brought a bad name upon the landlord''s house? |
9106 | What story did the Knight tell to Robin Hood? |
9106 | What surprised the Violet? |
9106 | What tells you that the swing was near the bayou? |
9106 | What tells you this? |
9106 | What test of loyalty to our country, would prove such a man to be a"bad citizen"? |
9106 | What then is the thing that any flag represents to the citizen of the country to which he belongs? |
9106 | What things about America call forth the love of the poet? |
9106 | What things are mentioned as fragments which"strewed the sea"? |
9106 | What things mentioned in the first stanza show that the baby has great possessions? |
9106 | What things mentioned in this poem have you seen? |
9106 | What things mentioned in this story show that the manners and life of the people in England at this time were rough? |
9106 | What things that we eat depend on the work of the huskers? |
9106 | What think you-- shall I take a shop and furnish it for you?" |
9106 | What thought was constantly in Little John''s mind? |
9106 | What tidings from Nottingham, Little John?" |
9106 | What time of year is described in this poem? |
9106 | What two friends had Hiawatha"Singled out from all the others"? |
9106 | What under king required the most perseverance? |
9106 | What use did Aladdin make of the fruit he had gathered? |
9106 | What use did he make of it? |
9106 | What wall did they scale in order to reach him? |
9106 | What was Gulliver''s feeling about the proposal of the Emperor? |
9106 | What was Lincoln''s attitude toward study? |
9106 | What was Minnehaha''s answer? |
9106 | What was buried in it? |
9106 | What was buried in it? |
9106 | What was he told to do in order to restore Marygold to life? |
9106 | What was his chief pleasure? |
9106 | What was his object in doing this? |
9106 | What was it that set the sky"all afire beyond"? |
9106 | What was it that"wrapped the ship in splendor wild"? |
9106 | What was the Song doing"in the heart of a friend"? |
9106 | What was the congregation doing during the sermon? |
9106 | What was the discovery that Midas mad made since the stranger''s first visit? |
9106 | What was the effect of these stories upon Hindbad? |
9106 | What was the effect of this? |
9106 | What was the first book Lincoln owned, and how did he get it? |
9106 | What was the greatest disappointment that he had to bear while on the island? |
9106 | What was the greeting of the robin? |
9106 | What was the only gold he cared about after he was saved from the Golden Touch? |
9106 | What was the reason for this? |
9106 | What was the"bitter"water Iagoo told about? |
9106 | What was the"dreamy recollection"? |
9106 | What was the"dreamy recollection"? |
9106 | What were the circumstances under which Francis Scott Key wrote"The Star- Spangled Banner"? |
9106 | What were the hardships suffered by the young Lincoln in the Indiana wilderness? |
9106 | What were the results of his quick wit and courage? |
9106 | What were the"lightning"and the"thunder"that came from the"canoe with pinions"? |
9106 | What were these children whispering about? |
9106 | What were these men obliged to give up when they went into the forest to live? |
9106 | What were they interested in? |
9106 | What were they"contriving"? |
9106 | What will happen when the winter is over? |
9106 | What will make him unhappy? |
9106 | What will the trumpet and drum mean to him then? |
9106 | What will this baby have to do when he becomes a man? |
9106 | What wish does the poet express in the last stanza? |
9106 | What wonder of Nature, about which you read in A Forward Look, above, does the second stanza tell you? |
9106 | What word could be used instead of"blades"? |
9106 | What word do you use instead of sugarplums? |
9106 | What word tells that Hiawatha cut all around the birch- tree? |
9106 | What word tells the so sound of the water? |
9106 | What word tells the sound made by the leaves of the birch- tree? |
9106 | What word tells the sound of the pine- trees? |
9106 | What words did the Captain say to gain entrance to the cave? |
9106 | What words in the first stanza are repeated in the refrain, or chorus? |
9106 | What words in the second stanza explain the word"haze"in the third stanza? |
9106 | What words in the second stanza make you feel that the wood was some distance away? |
9106 | What words show how lightly the reindeer flew through the air? |
9106 | What words tell the difference between the buffaloes and the horses in flight? |
9106 | What work did the boy have to do? |
9106 | What work did the grasping landlord propose to the mason? |
9106 | What work did the grasping landlord propose to the mason? |
9106 | What would happen if your home should catch fire? |
9106 | What would have happened if he had grown afraid, or tired? |
9106 | What would many boys have done? |
9106 | What would you say? |
9106 | What"darker vision"did he see? |
9106 | What"summer grain"is mentioned in line 11, page 304? |
9106 | What''s he got on? |
9106 | When did Little John show himself a loyal friend? |
9106 | When did Midas first doubt whether riches are the most desirable thing in the world? |
9106 | When did Robin Hood show himself generous? |
9106 | When did Robin show himself merciful? |
9106 | When did he first see the robber band? |
9106 | When did he plan to try his machine? |
9106 | When did he receive his new power? |
9106 | When did he show himself hard and cruel? |
9106 | When did the events related in this story take place? |
9106 | When does the poet say the violet makes its appearance? |
9106 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
9106 | When he saw that none of the members of his cabinet joined in the laughter, he said with a sigh,"Gentlemen, why do n''t you laugh? |
9106 | When may we say the birds are our partners and when our servants? |
9106 | When the woods and fields are full of flowers, does he notice the violet? |
9106 | When? |
9106 | Where are these articles most used or valued? |
9106 | Where are you? |
9106 | Where can the wretch have got it?" |
9106 | Where did the box come from? |
9106 | Where did the husking take place? |
9106 | Where did the wigwam of Nokomis stand? |
9106 | Where did these stories come from? |
9106 | Where do you think he had seen these things? |
9106 | Where do you think the treasure chest was kept? |
9106 | Where does Longfellow say he will put the children now that he has captured them? |
9106 | Where does the swallow build his nest? |
9106 | Where had Aladdin left the lamp when he went on his hunting trip? |
9106 | Where have the birds gone? |
9106 | Where have you been? |
9106 | Where was Whittier''s home? |
9106 | Where was the Song found? |
9106 | Where was the arrow found? |
9106 | Where was the reflection of the flag seen? |
9106 | Where was the ship that brought him? |
9106 | Where were the harvesters at work? |
9106 | Where were the men who had brought them? |
9106 | Which author makes you feel most keenly his love for birds? |
9106 | Which do you like best? |
9106 | Which do you like better, stories in which animals are the actors, or stories about the hunting of animals? |
9106 | Which do you think will give greater happiness, to learn something by hard work or to gain it by chance? |
9106 | Which flower is most beautifully described? |
9106 | Which gave you the most worth- while ideas? |
9106 | Which lines in the last stanza tell us what September brings? |
9106 | Which newspaper cartoons do you look at regularly, and which are your favorites? |
9106 | Which of Hiawatha''s two friends do you like the better? |
9106 | Which of Sindbad''s seven voyages is the most interesting to you? |
9106 | Which of all the pictures in the entire poem can you see most distinctly? |
9106 | Which of all the stories in this poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which of the incidents mentioned do you think is the most ridiculous? |
9106 | Which of the problems that you have worked out did you find most interesting? |
9106 | Which of the sources of humor mentioned on page 58 does this story illustrate? |
9106 | Which of them did you learn to know in Book IV and which were new to you in this book? |
9106 | Which of these have you seen in springtime? |
9106 | Which of these laws do you like, and why? |
9106 | Which of these two things do you think is really worth the more-- the gift of the Golden Touch, or one cup of clear cold water?" |
9106 | Which one of the poems about birds has lines in it that sound like the bird''s song? |
9106 | Which one tells you of pleasures that birds enjoy? |
9106 | Which selection in this group gave you the heartiest laugh? |
9106 | Which stanza of the poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which stanza of this poem do you like best? |
9106 | Which story did you enjoy most? |
9106 | Which story would be the most interesting to tell to a younger brother or sister? |
9106 | Which voyage was undertaken to please someone else? |
9106 | Which way does the writer prefer? |
9106 | Who gave Peter his orders? |
9106 | Who is this that lights the wigwam, With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
9106 | Who would help you if you had to take such a journey? |
9106 | Who would pay for the help given you? |
9106 | Who wrote Cinderella, or Sleeping Beauty, or the Three Bears? |
9106 | Whom did Hiawatha say he would we d? |
9106 | Whom does he remember seeing under the tree? |
9106 | Whom shall I beat, and whom shall I refrain from beating?" |
9106 | Why are the brooks"dry and dumb"in November? |
9106 | Why are the wings of Hope like the rainbows? |
9106 | Why are we not told about the sermon? |
9106 | Why are we sorry to have October go? |
9106 | Why could not Cassim open the door after it closed upon him? |
9106 | Why could not the robbers find Ali Baba''s house after it had been marked with chalk? |
9106 | Why did Ali Baba wish to conceal the fact that Cassim was killed by the robbers? |
9106 | Why did Ali Baba wish to see the cave? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha ask the cedar tree for its boughs? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha love him more than all others? |
9106 | Why did Hiawatha"check"his pace on this journey? |
9106 | Why did Nokomis wish Hiawatha to we d a maiden of his own people? |
9106 | Why did Robin dislike living at Court? |
9106 | Why did Robin dislike the Sheriff? |
9106 | Why did Sindbad give money to his guest at the end of each story? |
9106 | Why did Sindbad tell the story of his voyages? |
9106 | Why did Washington do all he could to help General Braddock in spite of the fact that he knew Braddock was not acting wisely? |
9106 | Why did he not carry it out? |
9106 | Why did he not tell his brothers what he was trying to do? |
9106 | Why did he not use his strength against his enemies? |
9106 | Why did he remain in such great danger when he might have saved himself? |
9106 | Why did he say that he was not afraid of the Devil in the shape of a bag of money? |
9106 | Why did he say that he was not afraid of the Devil in the shape of a bag of money? |
9106 | Why did he stop and help the old woman? |
9106 | Why did he strain his eyes to stare at this land as if he had a wish to be there? |
9106 | Why did he think that his work was good? |
9106 | Why did his"sense of elation"soon disappear? |
9106 | Why did she call Hiawatha"my little owlet"? |
9106 | Why did the King make them such an offer? |
9106 | Why did the King take such an interest in Robin? |
9106 | Why did the Sheriff of Nottingham want Little John in his service? |
9106 | Why did the Sultan permit Aladdin to marry his daughter? |
9106 | Why did the people consider deceit worse than stealing? |
9106 | Why did the poet repeat these words? |
9106 | Why did the wind want to blow out the moon? |
9106 | Why do city boys and girls like to visit the country? |
9106 | Why do we celebrate Arbor Day? |
9106 | Why do you think so? |
9106 | Why do you think the children liked the bear? |
9106 | Why do you think the poet would"barter it all for one day''s romp"? |
9106 | Why do you think this boy had"eyes to see"? |
9106 | Why does Bryant say the violet''s seat is low? |
9106 | Why does Bryant stop to view the violet in April and pass it by in May? |
9106 | Why does Hiawatha call the bark of the birch- tree a cloak? |
9106 | Why does Hiawatha call the drops of balsam"tears"? |
9106 | Why does Longfellow call the pine trees"black and gloomy"? |
9106 | Why does it seem to the poet as if the sun wove with golden shuttle the yellow haze? |
9106 | Why does the author say that the springtime belongs to"the birds and me"? |
9106 | Why does the poet call the old plantation"The fairest spot of all creation"? |
9106 | Why does the violet make glad the heart of the poet? |
9106 | Why does this"echo deathless fame"? |
9106 | Why is comparison a common way of describing objects? |
9106 | Why is his father called the"chieftain"? |
9106 | Why is it a good thing for America to have a day set apart each year for us to give thanks for our blessings? |
9106 | Why is it a good thing for a nation to have its people love their homes and the festival days like Christmas and Thanksgiving? |
9106 | Why is it good for us to read such a poem as this? |
9106 | Why is it necessary to continue these efforts now? |
9106 | Why is our country called"The Land of Liberty"? |
9106 | Why is the bumblebee described as"loud"? |
9106 | Why is the corn a"hardy gift"? |
9106 | Why is the fir- tree spoken of as"somber"? |
9106 | Why is the little bird so happy? |
9106 | Why is the poet''s song compared to the flight of an arrow? |
9106 | Why is the tree dear to him? |
9106 | Why is the violet called a"modest"flower? |
9106 | Why is this incident a splendid example of service? |
9106 | Why send your man home to his own land, then?" |
9106 | Why should trees be cared for and protected? |
9106 | Why was Hope put into the box with the Troubles? |
9106 | Why was Jimmy not popular with the farmer''s wife? |
9106 | Why was Pandora interested in it? |
9106 | Why was Robin Hood obliged to live in the forest? |
9106 | Why was Tubal Cain happy when he made plows? |
9106 | Why was a tip of flint used on the arrows? |
9106 | Why was an ocean voyage so difficult and dangerous at the time when Robinson Crusoe was written? |
9106 | Why was his story laughed at as false by the Indians? |
9106 | Why was it so difficult to travel by water at the time Sindbad lived? |
9106 | Why was not Midas''s breakfast a success? |
9106 | Why was the mason blindfolded? |
9106 | Why was the mason blindfolded? |
9106 | Why were not all the people of Lilliput good when they had such good laws? |
9106 | Why were the efforts successful? |
9106 | Why were these blind men all"in the wrong"? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Why? |
9106 | Will you just turn a few minutes for me?" |
9106 | Will you undertake a job this very night?" |
9106 | With what does the poet compare this treatment of the violet? |
9106 | With what is he compared? |
9106 | With what word in the second stanza is"cottage"contrasted? |
9106 | Would he be less so by dinner- time? |
9106 | Would you turn wild, and be as you were?" |
9106 | You know very well that no one can make any demand of the Sultan without bringing a rich present, and where shall such poor folk as we find one?" |
9106 | You no doubt enjoyed reading this poem; can you tell why? |
9106 | You see, if I were to sit by you at breakfast, and to drink your tea, you would n''t like that, would you? |
9106 | asked Little John, going up to the messenger,"and can you give us tidings of an outlaw named Robin Hood, who was taken prisoner yesterday?" |
9106 | cried little Marygold, who was a very affectionate child,"pray, what is the matter? |
9106 | exclaimed Ali Baba,"what does all this mean? |
9106 | exclaimed Ali Baba,"what hast thou done? |
9106 | he cried in terror;"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
9106 | how de yeou like flyin''?" |
9106 | must I stay?" |
9106 | said the young men, As they sported in the meadow;"Why stand idly looking at us, Leaning on the rock behind you? |
9106 | thought Pandora,"Is there something alive in the box? |
9106 | thought she;"has anyone a spite against my master, or has it been done only for fun? |
9106 | what have we here So very round and smooth and sharp? |
9106 | where was he? |
14403 | What will you take for him? |
14403 | 27,_ What is Punctuation?_ The use of certain characters to aid the reader in determining the thought of the writer. |
14403 | 47_ What is a Figure of orthography?_ Any departure from the ordinary spelling of a word. |
14403 | 49_ What are they?_ Archaism and Mimesis. |
14403 | 9_ How many letters were in the original Alphabet?_ Sixteen. |
14403 | ?_ Amalgamation. |
14403 | ?_ American Colonization Society. |
14403 | ?_ Anglo- Saxon. |
14403 | ?_ County Court, or County Commissioner. |
14403 | ?_ Doctor of Civil Law. |
14403 | ?_ Doctor of Divinity. |
14403 | ?_ Doctor of Music. |
14403 | ?_ Fellow of the Connecticut Academy. |
14403 | ?_ Fellow of the Entomological Society. |
14403 | ?_ Here rests in peace. |
14403 | ?_ Holy Roman Empire. |
14403 | ?_ In the year of the city. |
14403 | ?_ Lord Chief Justice. |
14403 | ?_ Name unknown. |
14403 | ?_ Participial adjective. |
14403 | ?_ Post village. |
14403 | ?_ Query. |
14403 | ?_ Righthand page. |
14403 | ?_ Student of the Civil Law. |
14403 | ?_ Supreme Judicial Court. |
14403 | ?_ To preserve the hard sound of c. 13. |
14403 | ?_ United States Ship. |
14403 | ?_ Year Book. |
14403 | ?_ Zoölogy. |
14403 | Geoffrey immediately addressed her, saying, as he presented his card--"Pardon my apparent intrusiveness; but, prithee, have you lost a pet dog?" |
14403 | She said to her parent,"Mamma, shall we ever find my lost Leicester?" |
14403 | What''s the trouble? |
14403 | _ Are Letters ever used for reference?_ They are. |
14403 | _ Are the Combinations Mutes or Semi- vowels?_ They are all Semi- vowels. |
14403 | _ Are the rising and falling inflections both ever given to the same sound?_ They are. |
14403 | _ Are the words ox, calf, sheep, and pig of French or Saxon origin?_ Saxon. |
14403 | _ Are there any exceptions to these rules?_ There are. |
14403 | _ Are there any exceptions to these rules?_ There are; as advertise, from English, etc. |
14403 | _ Are there any exceptions?_ There are, as sac, arc, etc. |
14403 | _ Are there any exceptions?_ There are. |
14403 | _ Are there any other names for the inverted t?_ It has been given different names by different authors. |
14403 | _ Are there any other uses of the Period?_ There are. |
14403 | _ Are there many Epic poems?_ There are not; most nations have one. |
14403 | _ Are these marks ever doubled?_ They are. |
14403 | _ As a Numeral, what is the value of Q?_ 500. |
14403 | _ By what letters are the sounds of C represented?_ K and S. 58. |
14403 | _ By what other name are they known?_ Digraph. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ Several of the Ancient Nations of Europe. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The Ancients. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The Latins. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The Romans. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The ancient European Nations. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The ancient Greeks. |
14403 | _ By whom used?_ The ancient Romans. |
14403 | _ Can a word be compound and derivative at the same time?_ It can; as, ball- player. |
14403 | _ Can all the vowels form syllables themselves?_ All except W. 47. |
14403 | _ Can the sounds of the Consonants be given alone?_ They can by practice. |
14403 | _ Can there be a derivative word without an affix?_ There can; as, brought from bring. |
14403 | _ Can there be a syllable without it containing a vowel sound?_ There can not. |
14403 | _ Can we spell by Rules?_ We can not. |
14403 | _ Do all verses have the CÃ ¦ sura pause?_ They do if over three feet in length. |
14403 | _ Do the primary and secondary ever change places?_ They do. |
14403 | _ Do we ever have two sets of Antitheses in the same sentence?_ We do; as each member may contain an antithesis. |
14403 | _ Does Emphasis ever affect this rule?_ It does; often reversing it. |
14403 | _ Does Emphasis ever affect this rule?_ Relative emphasis sometimes reverses it. |
14403 | _ Does Emphasis ever reverse this rule?_ It does sometimes. |
14403 | _ Does adding a single consonant to a word ever make an additional syllable?_ It does. |
14403 | _ Does pluralizing a word ever change the accent?_ Sometimes it does. |
14403 | _ For the sake of harmony, what principle should govern the reader?_ When a sentence ends with the falling inflection, the rising should precede it. |
14403 | _ For what is it adapted?_ To express sublime and pathetic emotions. |
14403 | _ For what is the Dieresis used?_ To separate two vowels which would otherwise form a diphthong. |
14403 | _ For what purpose?_ To give it great force. |
14403 | _ From what is the word Orthography derived?_ Two Greek words, signifying"To write right." |
14403 | _ From what language are most words derived that end in less?_ Anglo- Saxon. |
14403 | _ From what language do the words beef, veal, mutton, and pork come?_ The Norman- French. |
14403 | _ From what language do we get most of our Scientific terms?_ The Greek. |
14403 | _ General statements require what inflection?_ The falling. |
14403 | _ Give an example of Echo._ What''s the trouble? |
14403 | _ Has the suffix Age any other signification?_ From the Latin ago, it means collection. |
14403 | _ Have all the letters Numerical value?_ All except J, U, W, and Y. |
14403 | _ Have monosyllables any accent?_ They have sometimes an emphatic, or poetic. |
14403 | _ How are Emphatic words distinguished?_ By different styles of printing. |
14403 | _ How are the Letters divided?_ Into Vowels and Consonants. |
14403 | _ How are they divided in reference to origin?_ Into primitive and derivative. |
14403 | _ How are words distinguished?_ By their forms and uses. |
14403 | _ How are words divided as regards Specie?_ Primitive and Derivative. |
14403 | _ How are words divided as to variety?_ Italic, Roman, Old English, etc. |
14403 | _ How are words divided in reference to form?_ Into simple and compound. |
14403 | _ How are written words marked that are to be printed in Capitals?_ By underscoring the words with two lines. |
14403 | _ How are written words marked that are to be printed in Italics?_ By underscoring the words with one line. |
14403 | _ How close can primary and secondary accent come together?_ Not closer than two syllables. |
14403 | _ How do we know when we have spelled a word correctly?_ By reference to the Dictionary? |
14403 | _ How do we know when we have spelled a word correctly?_ By reference to the Dictionary? |
14403 | _ How is such inflection marked?_ By the Circumflex. |
14403 | _ How many Digraphs are there?_ Twenty- five. |
14403 | _ How many Elementary sounds do the vowels represent?_ Fifteen. |
14403 | _ How many Elementary sounds in the English Language?_ About forty- three. |
14403 | _ How many English words begin with_ IN_ as a prefix?_ Two hundred and fifty. |
14403 | _ How many Figures are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Root words in the English language?_ Over one thousand. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has Ch?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has F?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has J?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has S?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has Sh?_ Six. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has T?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has V?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has W?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has X?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has Y?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has Z?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has Zh?_ Four. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has a broad?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has a long?_ Four. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has a middle?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has e long?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has e short?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has i long?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has i short?_ Six. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has o long?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has o short?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has u long?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has u medial?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Substitutes has u short?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many Tetragraphs are there?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many Trigraphs are there?_ Eight. |
14403 | _ How many accent marks are there?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many begin with i m?_ Seventy- five. |
14403 | _ How many begin with un?_ About two thousand. |
14403 | _ How many different kinds of Force?_ Five. |
14403 | _ How many do the Combinations represent?_ Seven. |
14403 | _ How many do the Consonants represent?_ Eighteen. |
14403 | _ How many do the Diphthongs represent?_ Only one, as oi and oy only repeat sounds already represented by a and i. |
14403 | _ How many forms have letters?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many in the Latin Alphabet?_ Twenty- five. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Aphthongs?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Artificial Language?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Circumflex?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Consonants are there?_ Two; single Letters and Combinations. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Delivery are there?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Derivation?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Derivatives are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Diphthongs are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Emphasis?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Inflection are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Movement?_ Six. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Oratory are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Poetry are there?_ Seven. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Reading are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Rhyme?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Series?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Spelling?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of Stress?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of accent?_ Common, Emphatic, and Discriminating. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of common accent?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of letters are used to denote emphasis?_ Three usually. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of metrical language?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of pauses are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of punctuation are there?_ Four. |
14403 | _ How many kinds of style in reading?_ Five. |
14403 | _ How many letters in the Chinese Alphabet?_ Over two hundred. |
14403 | _ How many letters in the English Alphabet?_ Twenty- six. |
14403 | _ How many letters in the English Phonetic Alphabet?_ Forty- three. |
14403 | _ How many methods of Syllabication are there?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many of the English words are derived from the Latin?_ About, three- fourths. |
14403 | _ How many positions are recognized for the hand when not used in gesticulating?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many primary accents can one word have?_ Only one. |
14403 | _ How many rules should be observed in the use of the CÃ ¦ sura?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many secondary accents can a word have?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many sets of Antitheses may be used in one sentence?_ Often three; but seldom more. |
14403 | _ How many sounds do they represent?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has A?_ Five. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has B?_ One; as heard in the word babe. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has C?_ None that may be properly called its own. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Ch?_ One; as heard in the word church. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has D?_ One; as heard in the word did. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has E?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has F?_ One; as heard in the word flew. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has G?_ Two; as heard in the words go and age. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has H?_ One; as heard in the word high. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has I?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has J?_ None of its own, but represents one; the sound of G. 35. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has K?_ One; as heard in the word key. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has L?_ One; as heard in the word lily. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has M?_ One; as heard in the word money. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has N?_ One; as heard in the word nat. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Ng?_ One; as heard in the word sing. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has O?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has P?_ One; as heard in the word pie. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has R?_ One; as heard in the word roar. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has S?_ One; as heard in the word same. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Sh?_ One; as heard in the word ash. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has T?_ One; as heard in the word tight. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Th?_ Two; as heard in the words thigh and the. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has U?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has V?_ One; as heard in the word view. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has W?_ One; as heard in the word we. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Wh?_ One; as heard in the word what. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has X?_ None of its own, as it is a redundant letter. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Z?_ One; as heard in the word ooze. |
14403 | _ How many sounds has Zh?_ One obscurely; represented by_ si_ in such words as fusion,_ zi_ in glazier. |
14403 | _ How many substitutes has Ng?_ One. |
14403 | _ How many syllables can a word have?_ As many as it has vowels or diphthongs sounded. |
14403 | _ How many uses has the Hyphen?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many uses has the Tilde?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many uses have Silent letters?_ Five. |
14403 | _ How many words contain all the vowels in regular order?_ Two. |
14403 | _ How many words end in Ceed?_ Three. |
14403 | _ How many words in the English language?_ About one hundred and twenty thousand. |
14403 | _ How many words of two syllables are changed from nouns to verbs by accent?_ About eighty. |
14403 | _ How may distinct Articulation be acquired?_ By continued practice of the elementary sounds. |
14403 | _ How may low tones be acquired?_ By continued practice in a lower key than the natural. |
14403 | _ How may the Compass of the voice be increased?_ By continued practice on a very low and very high key. |
14403 | _ How may the meaning of a word be changed?_ By accent; as Aug''ust, August''. |
14403 | _ How should the Parenthesis be read?_ In a lower tone and more rapidly. |
14403 | _ Imperative sentences have what inflection?_ Usually the falling. |
14403 | _ In all words ending in ation, where is the accent?_ On the syllable next to the last. |
14403 | _ In case of two secondary accents, where are they placed?_ On the first and third. |
14403 | _ In case of two secondary, where is the primary accent?_ On the last but two. |
14403 | _ In changing the word hoe to hoeing, why retain the e?_ To preserve its signification. |
14403 | _ In changing the word traffic to trafficked, why supply the letter k?_ To preserve the proper sound of c. 21. |
14403 | _ In faulty articulation what sounds are usually mispronounced?_ The vowel sounds of the unaccented syllables. |
14403 | _ In order to accomplish this, what should the Reader do?_ Endeavor to make the feelings and sentiments of the writer his own. |
14403 | _ In polysyllables, where is the accent?_ On the antepenult usually. |
14403 | _ In the words fleeing, seeing, etc., why retain both Es?_ To determine the proper meaning of the word. |
14403 | _ In trisyllables, what syllable is accented?_ Usually the first. |
14403 | _ In using Affixes, what rule should be observed?_ The affix and root should be from the same language. |
14403 | _ In what kind of language are gestures inappropriate?_ Didactic or unimpassioned discourse. |
14403 | _ In what kind of sentences is the Rotundity of the voice exemplified?_ In the hailing of vessels, and is used especially by sailors and officers. |
14403 | _ In what situation is gh always silent?_ After i in the same syllable. |
14403 | _ In what word is Z silent?_ Rendezvous. |
14403 | _ In what words is V silent?_ Sevennight and twelvemonth. |
14403 | _ In words of two syllables, where is the accent?_ Usually on the first. |
14403 | _ Is A as a prefix ever redundant?_ It is. |
14403 | _ Is A the first letter of all written alphabets?_ All but one, the Abyssinian. |
14403 | _ Is B the second letter of all alphabets?_ All except the Ethiopic. |
14403 | _ Is Z the last letter of all alphabets?_ All except the Greek, and Hebrew. |
14403 | _ Is a Satire personal?_ It is not. |
14403 | _ Is a line ever drawn beneath a letter for the same purpose?_ In some instances it is. |
14403 | _ Is a whole Phrase ever made emphatic?_ It is often. |
14403 | _ Is double A ever written together as a word?_ It is, as a proper noun. |
14403 | _ Is it correct to use the term verse in speaking of a division of prose?_ It is not. |
14403 | _ Is the Caret used in printed copy or manuscript?_ In manuscript. |
14403 | _ Is the English Alphabet Equivocal or Unequivocal?_ Equivocal. |
14403 | _ Is the English Language natural or artificial?_ Artificial. |
14403 | _ Is the English a perfect Alphabet?_ It is not. |
14403 | _ Is the letter y ever marked by Diacritical Marks?_ It is, sometimes. |
14403 | _ Is the same rule to be observed in forming Compound words?_ It is. |
14403 | _ Is the word outrun compound or derivative?_ It is derivative. |
14403 | _ Is the word outside compound or derivative?_ It is compound. |
14403 | _ Is there any Phonetic Alphabet of the English Language?_ There have been several published, but they are not in general use. |
14403 | _ Is there any exception to this rule?_ The word LEECLERCQ is sometimes given as an example, but in English it is spelled LEECLERC. |
14403 | _ Is there any other rhythmic pause than the Cà ¦ sura?_ There is; the demi- cà ¦ sura is sometimes used. |
14403 | _ May the terms Digraph, etc., be used with the Consonants?_ They may. |
14403 | _ Negative sentences require what kind of inflection?_ Rising. |
14403 | _ Of what does Orthography treat?_ The nature and power of letters, and correct spelling. |
14403 | _ Of what is a word composed?_ A syllable or combination of syllables. |
14403 | _ Should a Reader keep his eyes on the book constantly?_ He should not; but cast the eyes away from the page as often as possible. |
14403 | _ Should a Reader or Speaker drink any liquid while exercising the voice?_ He should not, for it is injurious to the vocal chords. |
14403 | _ Should a Reader or Speaker pay strict attention to the rules of elocution?_ He should not, but study nature rather. |
14403 | _ Should a Speaker begin to gesticulate as soon as he begins his discourse?_ Very seldom, before he has entered fully into the discourse. |
14403 | _ Should a gesture be made while the eyes are looking on the book?_ It should not. |
14403 | _ Should there be any difference in the tone of voice used in reading verse and prose?_ There should be a difference. |
14403 | _ Should words of English origin end in ise or ize?_ Ize; same as those from the Greek. |
14403 | _ The names of persons addressed in formal speech require what inflection?_ The falling should always be used in such cases. |
14403 | _ To what does Stress relate?_ Different modes of applying force. |
14403 | _ To whom does it belong to determine and record such usage?_ The Lexicographers. |
14403 | _ Under how many Divisions should the subject of reading be treated?_ Six. |
14403 | _ Under what condition is a consonant never doubled at the end of a word?_ When immediately following a diphthong.--_Webster._ 22. |
14403 | _ Were final E not silent, what would be the result?_ Another syllable would be formed. |
14403 | _ What Alphabet has the greatest number of letters?_ The Chinese. |
14403 | _ What Combination is both Aspirate and Subvocal?_ Th. |
14403 | _ What Consonants are often incorrectly dropped?_ The final consonants. |
14403 | _ What Language is called"Our mother tongue? |
14403 | _ What Letters name themselves?_ The vowels A, E, I, O, and U. |
14403 | _ What are Affixes?_ Prefixes and postfixes together are called affixes. |
14403 | _ What are Aspirates?_ Mere whispers made by the organs of speech and breath. |
14403 | _ What are Barbarisms?_ Same as mongrel. |
14403 | _ What are Cognate letters?_ Those which are produced by the same organs of speech in a similar position. |
14403 | _ What are Dentals?_ Those letters whose sounds are modified by the teeth. |
14403 | _ What are Descriptive gestures?_ Those used in describing objects. |
14403 | _ What are Diacritical Marks?_ Characters indicating the different sounds of letters. |
14403 | _ What are Equivalent letters?_ Letters representing the same sound. |
14403 | _ What are Explodents?_ Those letters whose sound can not be prolonged. |
14403 | _ What are Hybrid words?_ Mongrel compounds. |
14403 | _ What are Labials?_ Those letters whose sounds are modified by the lips. |
14403 | _ What are Linguals?_ Those letters whose sounds are modified by the tongue. |
14403 | _ What are Mutes?_ Those letters which admit of no escape of breath while the organs of speech are in contact. |
14403 | _ What are Palatals?_ Those letters whose sounds are modified by the palate. |
14403 | _ What are Pauses?_ Suspensions of the voice in reading or speaking. |
14403 | _ What are Quiescent letters?_ Those that are silent. |
14403 | _ What are Semi- vowels?_ Those letters that admit of an escape of breath while the organs of speech are in contact. |
14403 | _ What are Sibilants?_ Letters which have a hissing sound; as, S and Z. |
14403 | _ What are Significant gestures?_ Those which have special signification. |
14403 | _ What are Sonnets?_ A kind of Lyric Poems. |
14403 | _ What are Subvocals?_ Those Consonants which produce an undertone of voice when their sounds are uttered. |
14403 | _ What are Synonyms?_ Words having a similar signification. |
14403 | _ What are Travels?_ Records of journeys. |
14403 | _ What are Unarticulate sounds?_ The sounds of the vowels. |
14403 | _ What are Vowels?_ Those letters which represent only pure tones. |
14403 | _ What are regular sounds?_ The long sounds of the letters. |
14403 | _ What are some of the varieties of Prose?_ Letters, Essays, Travels, History, and Discourses. |
14403 | _ What are the Natural Divisions of Consonants?_ Subvocals and Aspirates. |
14403 | _ What are the Numerical values of M?_ As a Roman numeral, 1,000; Greek and Hebrew, 40. |
14403 | _ What are the Numerical values of Z?_ 7 in the Greek notation; and 2,000 in the Roman. |
14403 | _ What are the elements of spoken language?_ Vocal and articulate sounds. |
14403 | _ What are the messengers of thought?_ Sentences. |
14403 | _ What are the most prominent Elements of all words?_ The vowels. |
14403 | _ What are the principal styles of different reading selections?_ Descriptive, Narrative, Senatorial, Moral, Didactic, Dramatic, and Amusing. |
14403 | _ What are the principle organs of speech?_ Lips, teeth, tongue, and palate. |
14403 | _ What are the significant parts of a word?_ Root, prefix, and suffix. |
14403 | _ What are the sounds called?_ Diphthongal sounds. |
14403 | _ What are the uses of the Breve?_ Over vowels, it indicates their short sound, and over oo, its short sound. |
14403 | _ What are the values of X as a Numeral?_ In the Roman, 10; in the Greek, 60. |
14403 | _ What are these letters called?_ Redundant letters. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Absolute and relative. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Abstemious and Facetious. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Articulation, Inflection, Accent, Emphasis, the Voice, and Gesture. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Commencing and Concluding. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Description, Argument, Narration, Persuasion, Exhortation. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ English and American. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Epic, Dramatic, Lyric, Elegiac, Didactic, Satiric and Pastoral. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Exceed, proceed, and succeed. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Expulsive, Explosive, and Vanishing. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Grammatical and Rhetorical. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Grave, Acute, and Circumflex. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Hanging naturally at the side; resting upon the hip with the elbow thrown backward; and resting on your bosom. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Italics, small capitals, and capitals. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Long and Short. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Long and Short. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Long, Short, Medial, Flat, and Broad. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Long, Short, and Medial. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Long, Short, and Slender. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Orthographic and Phonic. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Paronymous and Historical. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Perfect and imperfect. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Placed over_ n_ it gives the sound of_ ny_ as, in cañon. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Prepared and Extempore. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Primary and secondary. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Regular and irregular. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Rhetorical, Etymological, for Reference, and for the Printer. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Rhyme and Blank Verse. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Rising and falling. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Rising and falling. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Separable and Inseparable. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Silent and Audible. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Small letters and Capitals. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Speaking, Declamation, and Oratory. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Suppressed, subdued, ordinary, energetic, and vehement. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ To separate the parts of a compound word; to separate a word into syllables; and to divide a word at the end of a line. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Very slow, slow, moderate, lively, rapid, and very rapid. |
14403 | _ What are they?_ Vowels, Consonants, and Combinations. |
14403 | _ What are they?_"The Perpendicular,""Suspended Macron,"etc. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ A_ in says; and_ u_ in bury. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ C_ soft, as in central; and_ z_ in quartz. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Ce_ in ocean;_ ci_ in social;_ si_ in mansion;_ ti_ in motion;_ ch_ in chaise; and_ s_ in sugar. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ E_ in her;_ i_ in sir; and_ o_ in son. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ E_ in tete;_ ei_ in feint;_ ey_ in they; and_ ao_ in gaol. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ E_ in there; and_ ei_ in heir. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Eau_ in beau; and_ ew_ in sew. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ G_ in rage;_ di_ in soldier; and_ d_ in verdure. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Gh_ in laugh; and_ ph_ in philosophy. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ I_ in marine;_ ie_ in fiend; and_ ay_ in quay. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ O_ in cord; and_ ou_ in sought. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ S_ in was;_ c_ in suffice; and_ x_ in xebec. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Si_ in fusion;_ zi_ in brazier;_ z_ in azure; and_ s_ in rasure. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Ti_ in question; and_ t_ in nature. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Y_ in chyme; and_ oi_ in choir. |
14403 | _ What are they?__ Y_ in hymn;_ e_ in England;_ u_ in busy;_ o_ in women;_ ee_ in been; and_ ai_ in captain. |
14403 | _ What attitude should be used in reading and speaking?_ Standing. |
14403 | _ What causes the exceptions?_ Emphasis. |
14403 | _ What causes these changes?_ Mostly national invasion. |
14403 | _ What changes the sound of a vowel from long to short?_ The absence of the accent. |
14403 | _ What combinations have no Substitutes?_ Th and Wh. |
14403 | _ What constitutes a Period in Language?_ Any great change in the Literature of a People. |
14403 | _ What determines Accent?_ The usage of our best speakers and writers of the present. |
14403 | _ What different style ought to be used?_ The monotone and rising inflection are more frequently used in verse than in prose. |
14403 | _ What does Ab signify?_ Away from. |
14403 | _ What does An signify?_ One who, or the person who acts, as equestrian, pedestrian, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ana signify?_ A collection of memorable sayings, as Franklinana-- the sayings of Franklin. |
14403 | _ What does Ant signify?_ Being, and has the force of ing, as dominant, verdant, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Anti signify?_ Against. |
14403 | _ What does Ary signify?_ Place where, or place which, as library, aviary, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ate signify?_ Full of, or abundance, as desolate, passionate, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Be signify?_ Upon. |
14403 | _ What does Bis signify?_ Twice. |
14403 | _ What does Circum signify?_ Around, as circumscribe. |
14403 | _ What does Di signify?_ Two, as ditone. |
14403 | _ What does Dys signify?_ Ill, or difficult, as dysentery and dyspepsia. |
14403 | _ What does Ed signify?_ When added to a verb it signifies did, as played; but to a participle, was, as completed. |
14403 | _ What does Ene signify?_ Belonging to, as terrene, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Enter signify?_ Between or among. |
14403 | _ What does Epi signify?_ On, as epitaph; during, as ephemeral. |
14403 | _ What does Erly signify?_ Direction of, as northerly. |
14403 | _ What does Es signify?_ More than one, as foxes, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Escent signify?_ Growing or becoming, as convalescent. |
14403 | _ What does Esque signify?_ Belonging to, or like, as picturesque, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ess signify?_ Feminine when added to nouns, as tigress. |
14403 | _ What does Est signify?_ Greatest or least, as largest, smallest, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Expression comprehend?_ The practical application of all the principles of reading and elocution. |
14403 | _ What does Extra signify?_ Beyond, as extraordinary. |
14403 | _ What does Gain signify?_ Against, as gainsay. |
14403 | _ What does Head signify?_ State or nature, as Godhead. |
14403 | _ What does Hyper signify?_ Over, as hypercriticism. |
14403 | _ What does Hypo signify?_ Under, or beneath, as hypotenuse and hypocrite. |
14403 | _ What does I ve signify?_ Able to do, as adhesive, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ics signify?_ Things relating to, as optics, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ides signify?_ Resemblance, as alkaloides, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ina signify?_ Feminine, as Czarina. |
14403 | _ What does Ing signify?_ Continuing, as singing, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Intra signify?_ Within, or on the inside of. |
14403 | _ What does Ion signify?_ State or act, as location. |
14403 | _ What does Ique signify?_ Belonging to, as antique. |
14403 | _ What does Isk signify?_ Little, as asterisk, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ism signify?_ Doctrine, as Calvinism, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ite signify?_ That which, as appetite. |
14403 | _ What does Ix signify?_ Feminine of nouns, as testatrix. |
14403 | _ What does Kin signify?_ A son of, or little, as lambkin. |
14403 | _ What does Kind signify?_ Race, as mankind. |
14403 | _ What does Less signify?_ Without, as guiltless, breathless, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ling signify?_ Young, as duckling, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ly signify?_ Like, or in a manner, as manly, calmly, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Mal signify?_ Bad, as malpractice and maladministration. |
14403 | _ What does Ment signify?_ State or act, as settlement, judgment, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Mis signify?_ Amiss, or wrong, as misapply and mishap. |
14403 | _ What does Most signify?_ Greatest or furthest, as hindmost. |
14403 | _ What does Ness signify?_ The quality of, or state of, as whiteness, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Non signify?_ Not, as nonsense, nonessential, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ob signify?_ In the way of, as obstruct. |
14403 | _ What does Ock signify?_ Small or young, as hillock, bullock, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Oct signify?_ Eight, as octagon. |
14403 | _ What does Oid signify?_ Likeness, as spheroid, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Omni signify?_ All, or complete, as omnipresent. |
14403 | _ What does On signify?_ Large, as million, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Or signify?_ One who, as actor, director, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ory signify?_ Having the quality of, as vibratory, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ot signify?_ Little, as idiot. |
14403 | _ What does Ous signify?_ Having the quality of, as solicitous. |
14403 | _ What does Over signify?_ Above, as overseer, overreach, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ovi signify?_ An egg, as oviform. |
14403 | _ What does Para signify?_ Beside, as parallel, paragraph, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Paradise Lost describe?_ The downfall of not only the Human but of the Angelic host. |
14403 | _ What does Per signify?_ Through, or by, as permit, perchance, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Peri signify?_ Around, as perimeter, periosteum. |
14403 | _ What does Pitch signify?_ The place in the musical scale on which an element is sounded. |
14403 | _ What does Pleni signify?_ Completeness, or full, as plenitude, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Post signify?_ After, or backwards, as postfix, and postpone. |
14403 | _ What does Pre signify?_ Before, as prefer, prefix, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Pros signify?_ To, as proselyte. |
14403 | _ What does Quad signify?_ Four, as quadrangle, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Quantity embrace?_ Force and rate. |
14403 | _ What does Re signify?_ Back, or again, as react, recollect, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Re signify?_ Same as_ Er_, as it is another form of it. |
14403 | _ What does Red signify?_ Those who, as kindred, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Retro signify?_ Backwards, as retrospect and retrograde. |
14403 | _ What does Ric signify?_ Office of, as bishopric. |
14403 | _ What does Ry signify?_ Place where, or things collectively. |
14403 | _ What does San signify?_ The person who, as partisan, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Se signify?_ By itself, as separate, seclude, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Se signify?_ To make, as cleanse. |
14403 | _ What does Ship signify?_ The condition, as professorship. |
14403 | _ What does Sine signify?_ Without, as sinecure. |
14403 | _ What does Some signify?_ Full, as quarrelsome. |
14403 | _ What does Ster signify?_ The person who, as teamster. |
14403 | _ What does Stereo signify?_ Solid, as stereotype. |
14403 | _ What does Sub signify?_ Under, or inferior, as subterranean and subordinate. |
14403 | _ What does Suf signify?_ Less or after, as suffix, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Super signify?_ Over, above, or beyond, as supernatural, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Supra signify?_ Same as Super. |
14403 | _ What does Sur signify?_ More than, as surcharge. |
14403 | _ What does Teen signify?_ Ten to be added, as fourteen. |
14403 | _ What does Tra signify?_ Across, as traverse. |
14403 | _ What does Trans signify?_ Beyond, across, and again, as transalpine, transatlantic, and transform. |
14403 | _ What does Ty signify?_ To multiply into, as seventy, forty, etc. |
14403 | _ What does U.K. signify?_ United Kingdom. |
14403 | _ What does Ude signify?_ Same as_ Tude_, the state of being. |
14403 | _ What does Ule signify?_ Little, as globule. |
14403 | _ What does Ultra signify?_ Beyond, as ultramarine. |
14403 | _ What does Un signify?_ Not, as unhappy, unable, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ve signify?_ No or not, as vehement. |
14403 | _ What does Vice signify?_ Instead of, as Vice- President. |
14403 | _ What does Ward signify?_ Direction of, as eastward, etc. |
14403 | _ What does Ways signify?_ Manner, as crossways, lengthways, etc. |
14403 | _ What does With signify?_ Against or back, as withstand, withdraw. |
14403 | _ What does it express?_ An intense degree of suppressed excitement, or personates old age. |
14403 | _ What does it express?_ Hatred, contempt, loathing, etc. |
14403 | _ What does the Iliad describe or narrate?_ The downfall of Troy, which was the most memorable event in the early history of the Trojans and Greeks. |
14403 | _ What does the prefix Ab signify?_ From. |
14403 | _ What does the suffix Ster signify?_ Feminine, as spinster. |
14403 | _ What does the suffix Y signify?_ Plenty, as smoky; also abounding in, as wealthy. |
14403 | _ What does the word England mean?_"The land of the Angles." |
14403 | _ What does the à � neid narrate?_ The perils and labors of à � neas, who was the reputed founder of the Roman race. |
14403 | _ What effect does Tobacco have on the voice?_ It enfeebles the nervous system and breathing organs, and makes the voice dry, harsh, and ungovernable. |
14403 | _ What effect does final E have on the preceding vowel?_ It usually preserves its long sound. |
14403 | _ What effect does it have on a letter as a numeral to repeat it?_ Repeats its value as often as it is repeated. |
14403 | _ What effect does it have on the value of a letter to draw a line above it?_ In most cases it increases its value a thousand times. |
14403 | _ What establishes a rule for Capitals?_ Good usage, or custom. |
14403 | _ What inflection is given to the members of a commencing series?_ The rising. |
14403 | _ What inflection is given to the members of a concluding series?_ The falling. |
14403 | _ What inflection should be given to members of sentences connected disjunctively?_ First member, the rising; second member, the falling. |
14403 | _ What is Aa the name of?_ About forty small rivers in Europe.--_Cyclopedia._ 5. |
14403 | _ What is Absolute emphasis?_ Emphasis made without any contrast with other words. |
14403 | _ What is Accent in reading?_ Increase of force on certain syllables of a word. |
14403 | _ What is Accent?_ A greater stress of voice placed on one syllable of a word than the others. |
14403 | _ What is Analysis?_ Separating a word or syllable into its elements or parts. |
14403 | _ What is Anti- climax?_ A series of particulars decreasing in importance to the last. |
14403 | _ What is Antithesis?_ Two or more words opposed to each other in meaning. |
14403 | _ What is Antithetic emphasis?_ Same as Relative. |
14403 | _ What is Archaism?_ The spelling of a word according to ancient usage. |
14403 | _ What is Articulation?_ Distinct utterance of the elementary sounds, and of the combinations. |
14403 | _ What is Artificial Language?_ That which must be learned before it can be used. |
14403 | _ What is Audible Reading?_ The utterance of thought and feeling, as seen expressed in written Language. |
14403 | _ What is Blank Verse?_ A kind of metrical language in which there is no similarity of sound. |
14403 | _ What is Cadence?_ The natural dropping of the voice at the end of a sentence, denoting completeness of thought. |
14403 | _ What is Dactylology?_ The art of spelling words with the fingers. |
14403 | _ What is Declamation?_ The delivery of another''s composition. |
14403 | _ What is Derivation?_ That branch of etymology which treats of the sources of the words of a language. |
14403 | _ What is Discriminating accent?_ That used to determine parts of speech. |
14403 | _ What is Elocution?_ The science and art of the delivery of composition. |
14403 | _ What is Emphasis?_ Giving force and energy to certain words. |
14403 | _ What is Emphatic accent?_ Accent used for emphatic distinction. |
14403 | _ What is Emphatic repetition?_ Words repeated for emphasis. |
14403 | _ What is Enunciation?_ The utterance of words. |
14403 | _ What is Etymological punctuation?_ That used in Orthography and Orthoepy. |
14403 | _ What is Etymology?_ That science which treats of the origin and derivation of words. |
14403 | _ What is Extempore oratory?_ That which is accomplished simultaneously with the delivery. |
14403 | _ What is Force?_ That property of the voice which relates to loudness of sound. |
14403 | _ What is Gesture?_ Expression given to language by movements of the body, limbs, etc. |
14403 | _ What is Historical derivation?_ That part of etymology which treats of the foreign sources of the English language. |
14403 | _ What is History?_ A record of past events. |
14403 | _ What is Inflection?_ Sliding of the voice upward or downward. |
14403 | _ What is Language?_ Any method for the communication of thought and feeling. |
14403 | _ What is Lexicology?_ That science which treats of the meaning of words. |
14403 | _ What is Lyric Poetry?_ It is the oldest kind of poetry, and was originally intended to be sung to the accompaniment of the lyre. |
14403 | _ What is Meditative Poetry?_ A kind of Didactic poetry. |
14403 | _ What is Mimesis?_ The spelling of a word in imitation of a false pronunciation. |
14403 | _ What is Modulation?_ Variation of the voice in speaking and reading. |
14403 | _ What is Movement?_ The degree of rapidity with which the voice moves from one word to another. |
14403 | _ What is Natural Language?_ Instinctive methods of communicating thought or feeling. |
14403 | _ What is Oratory?_ The delivery of one''s own composition. |
14403 | _ What is Orthoepy?_ That science which treats of the elementary sounds and the pronunciation of words. |
14403 | _ What is Orthogeny?_ That science which treats of the classification of words into parts of speech. |
14403 | _ What is Orthographic spelling?_ An expression of the letters of a written or printed word in their proper order. |
14403 | _ What is Orthography?_ The science and art of the Letters of a language. |
14403 | _ What is Paronymous derivation?_ That part of etymology which treats of present sources of English words. |
14403 | _ What is Personation?_ One person imitating the actions and manners of some other person or persons. |
14403 | _ What is Philology?_ The science of language. |
14403 | _ What is Phonic spelling?_ An expression of the elementary sounds of a word in their proper order, according to established usage. |
14403 | _ What is Phonology?_ The science of the elementary sounds uttered by the human voice in speech. |
14403 | _ What is Poetry?_ A discourse written in verse and metrical language. |
14403 | _ What is Prepared oratory?_ That which has been studied previous to delivery. |
14403 | _ What is Pronunciation?_ The distinct utterance of the sounds of a word. |
14403 | _ What is Prosody?_ That science which treats of punctuation and the laws of versification. |
14403 | _ What is Pure tone?_ A clear, flowing sound, with moderate pitch. |
14403 | _ What is Quality?_ That property which relates to the kind of voice. |
14403 | _ What is Reading?_ Silent perusal or distinct utterance of thought and feeling, as seen expressed in written language. |
14403 | _ What is Reference punctuation?_ That used to refer the reader to the margin of the page. |
14403 | _ What is Relative emphasis?_ Emphasis used where there is antithesis either expressed or implied. |
14403 | _ What is Rhetorical punctuation?_ That used for rhetorical effect. |
14403 | _ What is Rhyme?_ That language in which the concluding syllables of the verses have a similarity of sound. |
14403 | _ What is Rule 1 for the use of Capitals?_ Title pages and headings of chapters should be entirely in capitals. |
14403 | _ What is Silent Reading?_ The perusal of Language without utterance. |
14403 | _ What is Sound?_ A sensation produced on the auditory nerve by the rapid vibratory motion of any elastic substance. |
14403 | _ What is Speaking?_ The utterance of thought and feeling without reference to the written page. |
14403 | _ What is Spelling?_ A distinct expression of the letters or sounds of a word in their proper order. |
14403 | _ What is Spoken Language?_ That produced by the vocal organs. |
14403 | _ What is Suspensive quantity?_ Prolongation of the voice at the end of a word without making an actual pause. |
14403 | _ What is Syllabication?_ That branch of etymology which treats of the division of words into syllables. |
14403 | _ What is Syntax?_ That science which treats of the relation and connection of words in the construction of a sentence. |
14403 | _ What is Synthesis?_ The process of combining elements to form syllables and words. |
14403 | _ What is Terminology?_ A treatise on technicalities. |
14403 | _ What is Vocal Culture?_ The training of the organs of speech for effective delivery. |
14403 | _ What is Voice?_ Sound produced by the vocal chords. |
14403 | _ What is Written Language?_ Any method of communicating thought or feeling by the use of written or printed characters. |
14403 | _ What is a Capital letter?_ A large letter. |
14403 | _ What is a Climax?_ A series of particulars increasing in importance to the last. |
14403 | _ What is a Coalescent?_ An articulate sound that always precedes and unites with a vocal. |
14403 | _ What is a Commencing Series?_ One that commences a sentence. |
14403 | _ What is a Compound word?_ One that is composed of two or more distinct words. |
14403 | _ What is a Concluding Series?_ One that concludes a sentence. |
14403 | _ What is a Consonant?_ A letter that represents an interruption of sound or breath. |
14403 | _ What is a Derivative word?_ One formed by joining to a primitive some letter or letters to modify its meaning. |
14403 | _ What is a Didactic poem?_ One the aim of which is to give instruction. |
14403 | _ What is a Diphthong?_ Two vowels sounded together in the same syllable. |
14403 | _ What is a Discourse?_ A performance read or spoken to an audience. |
14403 | _ What is a Drama called that is set to music?_ An opera. |
14403 | _ What is a Dramatic poem?_ One similar in many respects to an Epic. |
14403 | _ What is a Guttural sound?_ One that is modified by the soft palate. |
14403 | _ What is a Lampoon?_ A poem that attacks individuals. |
14403 | _ What is a Letter as a variety of prose?_ A written communication addressed by the writer to some other person. |
14403 | _ What is a Letter?_ A character used to represent an elementary sound, or combination of sounds. |
14403 | _ What is a Lexicographer?_ An author of a dictionary. |
14403 | _ What is a Lexicon?_ A Dictionary. |
14403 | _ What is a Melodrama?_ A dramatic poem some parts of which are spoken and some are sung. |
14403 | _ What is a Mongrel compound word?_ One formed contrary to the rule. |
14403 | _ What is a Monotone?_ Reading without sliding the voice either upward or downward. |
14403 | _ What is a Parenthesis in reading?_ A sentence, or clause, set off by curves from the context. |
14403 | _ What is a Pastoral poem?_ One that describes country life. |
14403 | _ What is a Perfect Alphabet?_ One which contains the same number of letters that it has elementary sounds. |
14403 | _ What is a Perfect rhyme?_ Where the vowels have the same sound. |
14403 | _ What is a Phonetic Alphabet?_ One in which there is a separate character for each elementary sound. |
14403 | _ What is a Postfix?_ That part of a derivative word placed after the root. |
14403 | _ What is a Prefix?_ That part of a derivative word placed before the root. |
14403 | _ What is a Primitive word?_ One in no way derived from another in the same language. |
14403 | _ What is a Radical word?_ Same as primitive. |
14403 | _ What is a Redundant prefix?_ One that does not change the signification of the root; as,_ a_ in the word adry. |
14403 | _ What is a Rhetorical pause?_ A suspension of the voice for rhetorical effect. |
14403 | _ What is a Satire?_ One that holds up the follies of men to ridicule. |
14403 | _ What is a Sentence?_ An assemblage of words conveying a thought. |
14403 | _ What is a Series?_ A number of particulars following one another in the same construction. |
14403 | _ What is a Simple Series in reading?_ A series of particulars that is composed of single words. |
14403 | _ What is a Simple word?_ One that is not composed of two or more whole words. |
14403 | _ What is a Sonant sound?_ One uttered with intonated or resonant breath. |
14403 | _ What is a Stanza?_ A number of metrical lines, or verses, combined according to a regular system. |
14403 | _ What is a Substitute?_ A letter representing a sound usually represented by another. |
14403 | _ What is a Suffix?_ Same as a postfix. |
14403 | _ What is a Syllable?_ A letter or letters uttered by a single impulse of the voice. |
14403 | _ What is a Synonymicon?_ A dictionary of synonymous words. |
14403 | _ What is a Tetragraph?_ Union of four vowels in one syllable. |
14403 | _ What is a Trigraph?_ A union of three vowels in one syllable, two of which are silent, or all three representing one sound. |
14403 | _ What is a Univocal Alphabet?_ One that has a separate character for each elementary sound. |
14403 | _ What is a Verse?_ A single line of metrical language. |
14403 | _ What is a Vocal sound?_ One that is modified but not obstructed by the articulatory organs. |
14403 | _ What is a Word?_ A sign of an idea. |
14403 | _ What is a common fault with most public speakers?_ To run the voice into too high a key, and thus weary the hearers. |
14403 | _ What is a good method to break up this habit?_ Reduce the selection to prose, and deliver it in an earnest, conversational style. |
14403 | _ What is a good rule by which to govern the voice?_ To start on a key lower than the natural, and thus avoid running too high. |
14403 | _ What is a long syllable?_ One in which the vowel has the long sound. |
14403 | _ What is a new word?_ One that has recently come into use. |
14403 | _ What is a regular Triphthong?_ A vowel trigraph in which all three of the vowels are sounded. |
14403 | _ What is a short syllable?_ One in which the vowel has the short sound. |
14403 | _ What is a simple Vocal sound?_ One made without any change in the position of the articulatory organs during its emission. |
14403 | _ What is a word of more than three syllables called?_ A polysyllable. |
14403 | _ What is a word of one syllable called?_ A monosyllable. |
14403 | _ What is a word of three syllables called?_ A trisyllable. |
14403 | _ What is a word of two syllables called?_ A dissyllable. |
14403 | _ What is an Affix?_ That part of a derivative word attached to the root. |
14403 | _ What is an Alphabet of a Language?_ A complete list of its letters. |
14403 | _ What is an Alphabetic Language?_ A language in which the characters represent separate articulate sounds. |
14403 | _ What is an Anacoluthic word?_ One that is unnecessary to the completion of a sentence. |
14403 | _ What is an Aphthong?_ A silent letter or combination. |
14403 | _ What is an Articulate sound?_ One made by the organs of speech and used in language. |
14403 | _ What is an Elegy?_ A poem of a mournful kind, usually celebrating the virtues of some person deceased. |
14403 | _ What is an Elementary sound?_ One that can not be divided so as to be represented by two or more letters. |
14403 | _ What is an Epic poem?_ A poetical recital of some great and heroic enterprise. |
14403 | _ What is an Epitaph?_ A short Elegy inscribed on a monument, or written in praise of any one. |
14403 | _ What is an Equivocal Alphabet?_ An Imperfect one. |
14403 | _ What is an Essay?_ A written discourse on some special subject. |
14403 | _ What is an Exclamation?_ A statement denoting strong emotions. |
14403 | _ What is an Ideographical language?_ One in which the characters represent ideas rather than sounds. |
14403 | _ What is an Idiomatic word?_ A word belonging to an individual language. |
14403 | _ What is an Imperfect Alphabet?_ One in which the number of sounds exceeds the number of letters. |
14403 | _ What is an Imperfect rhyme?_ Where the vowels have a different sound. |
14403 | _ What is an Improper Diphthong?_ The union of two vowels in a syllable, one of which is silent. |
14403 | _ What is an Interrogation?_ A statement, or assertion, put in the form of a question. |
14403 | _ What is an Irregular derivative?_ One in which the letters of the primitive part are changed. |
14403 | _ What is an Italic letter?_ A form of oblique letters derived from the Italians. |
14403 | _ What is an Obsolete word?_ One gone out of date. |
14403 | _ What is an Unequivocal Alphabet?_ Same as Perfect. |
14403 | _ What is an abbreviation?_ One or more of the letters of a word standing for the whole word. |
14403 | _ What is an irregular derivative?_ One in which the letters of the root are changed in forming the derivative. |
14403 | _ What is an irregular sound?_ Sound of a Redundant letter. |
14403 | _ What is common accent?_ Ordinary accent of spelling. |
14403 | _ What is diction?_ Diction treats of the selection and right use of words. |
14403 | _ What is it that constitutes the melody of a poem?_ The pauses and accents chiefly. |
14403 | _ What is it?_ N generally before palate sounds; as, conquer, etc. |
14403 | _ What is it?_ Ueue in the word Queue. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ A_ in what. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ Ed_ final, after any aspirate except t. 36. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ Ew_ in new. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ F_ in of. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ I_ in alien. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ Ks_ in exist. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ O_ in wolf. |
14403 | _ What is it?__ U_ in quick. |
14403 | _ What is its place in the Greek alphabet?_ Sixth. |
14403 | _ What is its place in the Hebrew?_ Seventh. |
14403 | _ What is meant by Antecedent part of a syllable?_ That part before the vowel. |
14403 | _ What is meant by Organical division of the consonants?_ Pertaining to those particular organs used in their pronunciation. |
14403 | _ What is meant by Prose?_ All composition which is not written in verse. |
14403 | _ What is meant by Quantity?_ Length of time the voice dwells on a word. |
14403 | _ What is meant by Rotundity of the voice?_ That peculiar form of tone which the Romans called"Ore rotundo,"which signifies"Round mouth." |
14403 | _ What is meant by Transition?_ Any sudden change in reading. |
14403 | _ What is meant by a Compound Series?_ One that is composed of clauses is called compound. |
14403 | _ What is meant by a Foot in verse?_ A certain portion of a line divided according to accent. |
14403 | _ What is meant by a reputable word?_ One that is used by educated people. |
14403 | _ What is meant by an Echo in reading?_ Interrogative exclamations, where the question is repeated. |
14403 | _ What is meant by an Element of Speech?_ An indivisible portion of language. |
14403 | _ What is meant by good usage?_ The usage, or custom, of the best speakers and writers of the times. |
14403 | _ What is meant by idiom?_ A peculiar mode of expression. |
14403 | _ What is meant by style of letters?_ Different type; as, Roman, Script, Italics, etc. |
14403 | _ What is meant by suspended animation of a word?_ A word that passes out of use for a while and then resumes its place in literature. |
14403 | _ What is meant by the Compass of the voice?_ The range in which it can be properly controlled. |
14403 | _ What is meant by the Numerical value of letters?_ Its value as a numeral used in the notation of different languages. |
14403 | _ What is meant by the term"Good Bye"?_ God be with you. |
14403 | _ What is primary accent?_ The principal accent. |
14403 | _ What is punctuation for the Printer?_ That used by the writer to inform the printer the kind of type to use. |
14403 | _ What is secondary accent?_ The partial accent. |
14403 | _ What is spelling of Z in England?_ Zed, and also Izzard. |
14403 | _ What is the Antepenultimate syllable?_ The last syllable but two in a word. |
14403 | _ What is the Aspirated tone?_ An expulsion of breath, the words being spoken in a whisper. |
14403 | _ What is the Base of a Compound word?_ That word representing the fundamental idea. |
14403 | _ What is the Base of a Derivative word?_ The primitive from which it is derived. |
14403 | _ What is the Consequent part of a syllable?_ That part which follows the vowel. |
14403 | _ What is the CÃ ¦ sura pause?_ A rhythmic pause occurring in a verse. |
14403 | _ What is the Emphatic pause?_ Pause made for emphasis. |
14403 | _ What is the Falling Circumflex?_ The sliding of the voice upward and then downward on the same sound. |
14403 | _ What is the Falling inflection?_ A downward slide of the voice. |
14403 | _ What is the Guttural quality?_ Deep undertone. |
14403 | _ What is the Modifier in a Compound word?_ That word which describes the other. |
14403 | _ What is the Modifier in a Derivative word?_ The affix. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of A?_ 500. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of B?_ 300. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of C?_ 100 in the Roman notation. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of D?_ 500 in the Roman notation. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of E?_ 5. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of F?_ 40 in some of the Ancient notations; 80 in the Arabian; and 10,000 in the Armenian. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of G?_ 400. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of H?_ 100 in the Greek notation; and 200 in the Latin. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of I?_ 1 in the Roman notation; and 100 in some of the Ancient notations. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of K?_ 20 in the Greek notation; and 60 in the Semitic. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of O?_ 70 in the Greek; and 11 in the Ancient Latins. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of R?_ 80 25. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of S?_ 7 27. |
14403 | _ What is the Numerical value of V?_ 5 in the Roman notation. |
14403 | _ What is the Orotund?_ Pure tone intensified. |
14403 | _ What is the Penultimate syllable?_ Next to the last syllable in a word. |
14403 | _ What is the Preantepenultimate syllable?_ The last syllable but three in a word. |
14403 | _ What is the Pythagorean letter?_ Y.--_Am. |
14403 | _ What is the Rising Circumflex?_ The sliding of the voice downward and then upward on the same sound. |
14403 | _ What is the Rising inflection?_ An upward slide of the voice. |
14403 | _ What is the Slur?_ The smooth gliding of the voice in parenthetic clauses, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the Soul of Oratory?_ Emotion. |
14403 | _ What is the Trembling tone?_ A constant waver of the voice. |
14403 | _ What is the Ultimate syllable of a word?_ The last syllable. |
14403 | _ What is the best method of strengthening the natural key?_ By speaking and reading strong, animated passages in a small room. |
14403 | _ What is the difference between a Letter and its Name?_ The letter is the character, and the name is its appellation. |
14403 | _ What is the difference between the Latin Alphabet and the English?_ The Latin omits the letter W. 16. |
14403 | _ What is the essential part of a syllable?_ A vowel. |
14403 | _ What is the greatest number that can be heard?_ About forty thousand per second. |
14403 | _ What is the least number of vibrations that will produce an audible sound?_ Sixteen per second. |
14403 | _ What is the meaning of Cis?_ On this side, as cisalpine. |
14403 | _ What is the name of a Letter?_ The appellation by which it is known. |
14403 | _ What is the object of the American method?_ To indicate the proper pronunciation by separating affixes from the roots. |
14403 | _ What is the object of the English method?_ To separate words into their elementary parts without regard to pronunciation; as, a- tom. |
14403 | _ What is the origin of the suffix less?_ Anglo- Saxon. |
14403 | _ What is the origin of the word Alphabet?_ It is derived from the first two letters of the Greek Alphabet: Alpha and Beta. |
14403 | _ What is the origin of the word English?_ It is derived from the word Angles. |
14403 | _ What is the rule for Digraphs?_ A digraph must have one vowel silent. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of A as a Prefix?_ On, in, at, to, or towards. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Age?_ Act of, as marriage, passage, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Ante?_ Before. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Celli?_ Little, as vermicelli, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Eous?_ Full of, as beauteous, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Er?_ More or often, as brighter, glimmer, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Eu?_ Well, or agreeable, as euphony. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Hex?_ Six, as Hexagon. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of I m?_ More than one, as cherubim. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Inter?_ In the midst of, or between, as intellect and intermarry. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Ior?_ More, as superior. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Ish?_ Like, as boyish, girlish, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Juxta?_ Joined to, or next, as juxtaposition. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Meta?_ In the middle, after, and with. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Mono?_ One, as monotheistic. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Out?_ Beyond, as outlaw, outbid, outbalance, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Pene?_ Almost, as peninsula-- almost an island. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Preter?_ Beyond, as preternatural. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Pro?_ Before, forth, and for. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Proto?_ First, as protocol, protoplasm, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Ress?_ Feminine of nouns, as instructress. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Tri?_ Three, as trisyllable, triangle, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Tude?_ The state of being, as similitude. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of Under?_ Below, as undercurrent, underrate, etc. |
14403 | _ What is the signification of the suffix Art?_ One who, as braggart. |
14403 | _ What is the source of the greatest defect in Articulation?_ Improper sounding of the consonants. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Acute accent?_ To mark the primary accent, and the rising inflection. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Apostrophe?_ To indicate the omission of a letter, or letters, of a word. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Breve?_ To mark the short quantity of syllables. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Caret?_ To correct an error of omission. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Circumflex?_ To express irony, or sarcasm. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Circumflex?_ To mark the peculiar inflection of the voice in the pronunciation of a word. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Grave accent?_ To mark the falling inflection. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Macron?_ To mark the long quantity of syllables. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Monotones?_ To produce an effect in grave and solemn subjects. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the Period?_ To denote an abbreviation. |
14403 | _ What is the use of the inverted[ T]?_ Under s, it gives it the sound of z; under x, it gives the sound of gz. |
14403 | _ What is the value of N as a Numeral?_ In the Greek notation, 50; Roman, 90; and by some other, 900. |
14403 | _ What key of the voice should be most diligently improved?_ The natural key, or that which is used most. |
14403 | _ What kind of Gesture is most appropriate?_ That which is natural. |
14403 | _ What kind of Inflection is generally given to words of great emphasis?_ The falling; unless the sentiment requires the rising. |
14403 | _ What kind of a mark is the Tilde?_ A Spanish mark. |
14403 | _ What kind of accent is essential to every word of more than one syllable?_ Primary. |
14403 | _ What kind of inflection should be used at the end of an interrogative sentence?_ Falling, if it can not be answered by yes or no. |
14403 | _ What kind of new words should be avoided?_ Any word formed contrary to the genius of the language. |
14403 | _ What kind of words end in ise?_ Most words derived from the French. |
14403 | _ What kind of words end in ize?_ Verbs derived from the Greek. |
14403 | _ What kind of words have no accent?_ Monosyllables. |
14403 | _ What kind of words require opposite inflection?_ Words or members expressing antithesis or contrast. |
14403 | _ What language has two letters representing the sound of Z?_ The Russian. |
14403 | _ What language were these poems written in?_ The Iliad in Greek, Ã � neid in Latin, and Paradise Lost in English. |
14403 | _ What letter ends no English word?_ J. DEFINITIONS AND WORDS. |
14403 | _ What letter is called the Mute Sibilant?_ The letter X. |
14403 | _ What letter is omitted in the word o''clock?_ The letter f. 37. |
14403 | _ What letter is the Sonorous counterpart of T?_ The letter D.--_Cyclopedia._ 9. |
14403 | _ What letter is the sonorous counterpart of S?_ The letter Z.--_Cyclopedia._ 55. |
14403 | _ What letters are called Liquids?_ L, M, N, and R. 51. |
14403 | _ What letters are called Nasals?_ M, N, and Ng. |
14403 | _ What letters are called the Twins?_ Q and U. |
14403 | _ What letters are called the pivots?_ Y and w. 88. |
14403 | _ What letters are never doubled?_ X and H. 100. |
14403 | _ What letters are never silent?_ F, J, Q, R, and X. |
14403 | _ What letters are never silent?_ F, J, Q, and R. 33. |
14403 | _ What letters have no Organical classification?_ H, and all the vowels. |
14403 | _ What letters have no Substitutes?_ B, D, G, H, L, M, N, P, and R. 55. |
14403 | _ What letters of themselves form words?_ A, I, and O. |
14403 | _ What letters represent no sound of their own?_ C, Q, and X. |
14403 | _ What letters represent the sound X?_ Ks. |
14403 | _ What letters represent the sound of Q?_ Kw. |
14403 | _ What makes a rule in Orthography?_ Whenever a letter is silent, or usually so, a rule is formed. |
14403 | _ What mark is used to cancel silent letters?_ Short bar, similar to the Macron. |
14403 | _ What marks are used for y?_ Macron and Breve. |
14403 | _ What meaning is always suggested by the Circumflex?_ Doubtful or double meaning. |
14403 | _ What number is A in the Abyssinian alphabet?_ The thirteenth. |
14403 | _ What number is B in the Ethiopic?_ Ninth. |
14403 | _ What other prefix means the same as Intra?_ Intro. |
14403 | _ What other prefix means the same?_ Dis, from the Greek. |
14403 | _ What other prefixes signify Not?_ Neg, as in negative, and ne, as in nefarious. |
14403 | _ What other signification has With in some words?_ Near, as within; together, as withal, etc. |
14403 | _ What other suffixes also signify Little?_ Cle, cule, el, en, kin, let, ot, ling, ock, and ie. |
14403 | _ What other term is often applied to the Mutes?_ Close Consonant. |
14403 | _ What other term is often applied to the Semi- vowels?_ Loose Consonant. |
14403 | _ What other way may the syllables be described?_ In their numerical order; as, first, second, etc. |
14403 | _ What prefix signifies Equal?_ Equi, as equidistant. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Against?_ Contra and counter. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Half?_ Semi, demi, and hemi, as semicircle, demitone, and hemisphere. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Many?_ Multi and poly, as multiform and polysyllable. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Not or In?_ In, i m, il, and ir. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Out of, or From?_ E, and ex. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Right?_ Rect and Recti. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify Together?_ Syn, sy, syl, and sym, as in syntax, system, syllable, and symbol. |
14403 | _ What prefixes signify With?_ Con, com, co, col, and cor. |
14403 | _ What properties do Substitutes assume?_ The properties of the letter whose sound it represents. |
14403 | _ What quality of voice is mostly used in speaking and reading?_ Pure tone. |
14403 | _ What rule should govern the reader in the use of pauses and accents?_ Use variety, and not make them too prominent. |
14403 | _ What should be characteristic of the Argumentative style?_ Directness and earnestness. |
14403 | _ What should be the primary object in Audible reading?_ To convey to the hearer the ideas and sentiments of the writer. |
14403 | _ What should characterize the Exhortative?_ The performer should appeal, beseech, and implore, as the case may require. |
14403 | _ What should characterize the Narrative?_ The Reader should proceed as though relating his own experience. |
14403 | _ What should we call such division?_ Paragraph or Division. |
14403 | _ What style and tone are best adapted to the reading of Dramatic selections?_ A style and tone which are entirely imitative in character. |
14403 | _ What style is the best adapted to Senatorial reading?_ An imitative style and tone, being careful in the use of the emphatic pause. |
14403 | _ What suffixes signify rank, or office?_ Acy, ate, ric; dom, and ship, as in curacy, pontificate, bishopric, kingdom, and clerkship. |
14403 | _ What suffixes signify"able to be"?_ Able, ible, and ile, as curable, audible, and visible. |
14403 | _ What the Persuasive?_ Those tones, looks, and gestures which bring conviction to the hearer. |
14403 | _ What tone of voice should be used in reading a Descriptive selection?_ The ordinary, natural tone, with a careful use of emphasis. |
14403 | _ What tone of voice should be used in reading a Simile in poetry?_ The simile should be read in a lower tone than the rest of the passage. |
14403 | _ What tone of voice should be used in the expression of Love?_ Soft, smooth, and languishing voice. |
14403 | _ What tone of voice should be used to express Anger?_ Strong, vehement, and elevated voice. |
14403 | _ What was the first Alphabet ever used?_ The Hebrew. |
14403 | _ What was the last letter added to the English Alphabet?_ W. 12. |
14403 | _ What word contains a consonant Tetragraph?_ Phthisic. |
14403 | _ What, with regard to the voice, is an important object to every speaker and reader?_ The important object is to have a full, even tone of voice. |
14403 | _ When do words, ending in double e, drop one e on taking an additional syllable?_ When the suffix begins with e. 28. |
14403 | _ When has R a rough sound?_ When it begins a word. |
14403 | _ When is B silent?_ Before_ t_, or after_ m_, in the same syllable. |
14403 | _ When is C followed by K in spelling?_ Words ending with the sound of k, and in which c follows the vowel. |
14403 | _ When is C silent?_ Before_ k_ in the same syllable; also, before_ z_,_ l_, or_ t_, in a few words. |
14403 | _ When is Ch silent?_ In a few words; as,_ drachm_,_ yacht_, etc. |
14403 | _ When is D silent?_ Before_ g_ in the same syllable. |
14403 | _ When is G silent?_ Before_ m_ or_ n_ in the same syllable. |
14403 | _ When is Gh silent?_ After_ i_ in the same syllable; also, after_ au_ and_ ou_ in some words. |
14403 | _ When is L silent?_ After_ a_ when followed by_ f_,_ m_,_ k_, or_ v_, except in the word valve; also, before_ d_ in could, etc. |
14403 | _ When is M silent?_ Before_ n_ in a few words. |
14403 | _ When is N silent?_ Final after_ l_ or_ m_. |
14403 | _ When is P silent?_ Initial before_ n_,_ s_, or_ t_. |
14403 | _ When is S silent?_ In a few irregular words; as,_ isle_,_ puisne_,_ viscount_,_ corps_, etc. |
14403 | _ When is T silent?_ Before_ ch_ in the same syllable; also, in_ Christmas_,_ eclat_,_ mortgage_, etc. |
14403 | _ When is V silent?_ In two words only--_Sevennight_ and_ Twelvemonth_. |
14403 | _ When is W silent?_ Before_ r_ in the same syllable also, in_ whoop_,_ sword_,_ two_, etc. |
14403 | _ When is Z silent?_ In one word only--_Rendezvous_. |
14403 | _ When is final E dropped in spelling?_ Before vowel terminations mostly. |
14403 | _ When is i used as a consonant?_ When followed by a vowel in the same syllable; as in alien, etc. |
14403 | _ When is ie changed to y?_ Before the ending_ ing_. |
14403 | _ When is our diction pure?_ When we use only such words as belong to the idiom of our language. |
14403 | _ When is the Inflection of a question changed from the falling to the rising?_ When it is repeated or made emphatic. |
14403 | _ When is ue final, silent?_ After g and q; as fatigue and oblique. |
14403 | _ When is y final changed to e?_ Before the suffix ous; as in beauteous. |
14403 | _ When is y final changed to i?_ Before the suffix ful; as in beautiful. |
14403 | _ When melody comes in contact with accent, which should yield?_ Accent. |
14403 | _ When sentences commence with verbs, what inflection is required?_ Mostly the rising. |
14403 | _ When several Emphatic words or members come together, how should they be inflected?_ The most emphatic, the falling; and the others the rising. |
14403 | _ When should the Hyphen be used in a compound word?_ When the word has not become permanently compounded. |
14403 | _ When use Oh?_ In all cases where it is not followed by nouns, or pronouns, in the vocative case.--[_Ridpath._] ABBREVIATIONS. |
14403 | _ When use ie in spelling?_ Ie follows consonants( except c soft), and ends words. |
14403 | _ When use the digraph ei in spelling?_ Ei follows c soft, and begins words. |
14403 | _ When use the hyphen in Compound words?_ When they are not permanently compounded. |
14403 | _ When was the letter W first used?_ About the end of the Seventh Century. |
14403 | _ Where did the Alphabet originate?_ The English comes from the Greek, which was brought by Cadmus from Phoenicia, about the year 1490 B.C. |
14403 | _ Where did the other letters originate?_ They have been added since the time of Cadmus, as their use became necessary. |
14403 | _ Where else is the Period used?_ In Rhetorical punctuation. |
14403 | _ Where is the Cedilla used?_ Under c, to give it the sound of s. 9. |
14403 | _ Where is the Tilde used?_ Over n in Spanish words it indicates that the sound of y immediately follows. |
14403 | _ Where is the best place to practice elocution and reading?_ In the open air, or in a well ventilated room. |
14403 | _ Where the sense is dependent, what inflection is generally used?_ The rising. |
14403 | _ Which hand should hold the book?_ The left, if possible. |
14403 | _ Which ones are Separable?_ Oi and Oy. |
14403 | _ Which sounds should be practiced first?_ The vowels; as they are the most easily uttered. |
14403 | _ Who were the Angles?_ They were a tribe of people who came from the land of the Low Germans and settled in Britain in the fifth century. |
14403 | _ Why are the Liquids so called?_ Because of their flowing sound, which readily unites with the sound of other letters. |
14403 | _ Why are they so called?_ Because of their peculiar sounds in changing from vowels to consonants. |
14403 | _ Why are they so named?_ Because they are not necessary for the completion of the Alphabet. |
14403 | _ Why called Consonants?_ Because they can not be used alone in a word, but must be connected with a Vowel. |
14403 | _ Why do Consonants ever unite?_ To form complex sounds: as rr in Burr. |
14403 | _ Why do words in the English language become obsolete?_ Because it is a living language. |
14403 | _ Why is X never doubled?_ It already represents the sounds of K and S. 57. |
14403 | _ Why is a word divided into syllables?_ For the purpose of showing their proper pronunciation and etymological composition. |
14403 | _ Why is our language sometimes called the"Teutonic language"?_ Because it is derived from the ancient Germans, who were called Teutons. |
14403 | _ Why is the English called a Composite Language?_ Because it is derived from so many different sources. |
14403 | _ Why is the final E retained in such words as changeable and traceable?_ To preserve the soft sound of the c or g. 46. |
14403 | _ Why is the word Humbugged spelt with two g''s?_ To prevent sounding the g like j. |
14403 | _ Why so called?_ Because Q is always followed by U in English spelling. |
14403 | _ Why so called?_ Because its Greek original represents the sacred triad used to designate the diverging paths of virtue and vice. |
14403 | _ Why was it called W?_ On account of it being composed of two u''s, or a double u. |
14403 | _ Why?_ Accent implies comparison, and there can be no comparison with one syllable. |
14403 | _ Why?_ Because there are too many exceptions. |
14403 | _ Why?_ To prevent three e''s coming together. |
14403 | cried Winthrop, stepping outside and confronting them, adding the inquiry,"Whose dog is that?" |
14403 | signify?_ Christ. |
14403 | signify?_ Christmas. |
14403 | signify?_ For example. |
14403 | signify?_ Queen Victoria. |
14403 | signify?_ That. |
9078 | And what do you wish to see me about, my lad? |
9078 | And, no doubt, you can tell how many rings it has? |
9078 | But, do you know what are the forces of our republic, by sea and by land, and what are those of our enemies''? 9078 Did you wish to see me?" |
9078 | Do you see that cake of ice with something black upon it, my lads? 9078 For whose sake is it that you make all wanderers welcome?" |
9078 | Have you a father living''? |
9078 | How far is it from here to the sun? |
9078 | I am a red man, and the pale faces are our enemies: why should I speak? |
9078 | Is Mr. Harris in''? |
9078 | Is it_ possible_ that only a mile from us, we shall find the water in the turbulence which it must show near the Falls''? |
9078 | Is there an American staying at your house? |
9078 | May I ask who taught you such noble principles''? |
9078 | My good woman,said he,"will you grant a poor traveler the shelter of your roof to- night''?" |
9078 | Strange`,cried I'',"whence is it`?" |
9078 | Tell me, then, I beseech you, what is the first service that you intend to render the state? |
9078 | WHOM HAVE I IN HEAVEN BUT THEE? 9078 WHOM HAVE I IN HEAVEN BUT THEE?" |
9078 | Well, my boy, what are the books which were forgotten? |
9078 | What is it? |
9078 | What is it? |
9078 | What is your name? |
9078 | What new calamity is this? |
9078 | Where do you reside? |
9078 | Where is your sheep? |
9078 | Where shall I find her''? |
9078 | Who are you? |
9078 | Who''ll cut the hawser? |
9078 | Why did you not return before, and rectify the mistake? |
9078 | Why not? |
9078 | Wilt thou name the traitor? 9078 Wilt thou name the traitor? |
9078 | Wilt thou name,said the old Indian,"the red man who betrayed his tribe? |
9078 | You have a desire to govern the republic? |
9078 | _ Cur_? |
9078 | _ Rich aunt''_? |
9078 | _ You''!_--are_ you_ our king''? |
9078 | ''Tis all in vain`;--the world will ne''er inquire On such a score`:--why should it take the pains? |
9078 | ''Tis lithe in every limb, � To your blood''tis a busy fan, How can the flame burn dim? |
9078 | ( f.) Be we_ men_, And suffer such dishonor''? |
9078 | ('''')"And did they come, the pretty deer''? |
9078 | () The Parenthesis includes words not properly a part of the main sentence; as, I like these people( who would not?) |
9078 | (<) Shall man alone, for whom all else revives, No resurrection know? |
9078 | (_ waking_) Where am I? |
9078 | (_''''_) What''s that? |
9078 | --"But will you swear?" |
9078 | --"Not if my tribe should_ kill you_ for not telling?" |
9078 | --"Will you swear by your Great Spirit that you will tell none but your husband?" |
9078 | 1. Who dares to scorn the meanest thing, The humblest weed that grows, While pleasure spreads its joyous wing On every breeze that blows? |
9078 | 1. Who opened up to men the great distant navigation? |
9078 | 1. Who would scorn his humble fellow For the coat he wears? |
9078 | 2, What is meant by a"_ stag of ten?_"3. Who did the stranger prove to be? |
9078 | 2, What is meant by a"_ stag of ten?_"3. Who did the stranger prove to be? |
9078 | 2. Who are weaving the web of history? |
9078 | 2. Who became her husband? |
9078 | 2. Who fails, and who wins? |
9078 | 2. Who hath the hurried step, the anxious eye, Avoids the public haunt and open street, And anxious waits for evening? |
9078 | 2. Who is called his twin brother? |
9078 | 2. Who toil at the anvil? |
9078 | 2. Who was Arnold? |
9078 | 2. Who was his opponent in the first cause he tried? |
9078 | 2. Who went in search of them? |
9078 | 2. Who, when vice or crime repentant, With a grief sincere, Asked for pardon, would refuse it, More than heaven severe? |
9078 | 3 Do you read His holy word-- the Bible''? |
9078 | 3. Who always rejoices in our successes, and is affected in our reverses? |
9078 | 3. Who seemed most to enjoy the sport? |
9078 | 3. Who succeeded in making him change his resolution? |
9078 | 3. Who till the stubborn soil? |
9078 | 3. Who warred against them? |
9078 | 3. Who was the writer of this account? |
9078 | 4. Who joined Bruce? |
9078 | 4. Who plow the sea''s blue wave? |
9078 | 4. Who was Sisera, and what account is given of him? |
9078 | 4. Who would give a cause his efforts When the cause is strong; But desert it on its failure, Whether right or wrong`? |
9078 | 5. Who have reason to fear? |
9078 | 5. Who toil mentally? |
9078 | 5. Who was Warren? |
9078 | 5. Who went to their rescue? |
9078 | 5. Who would lend his arm to strengthen Warfare with the right`? |
9078 | 6. Who labor for the souls of men? |
9078 | 7. Who did the stranger prove to be? |
9078 | 7. Who did this youth prove to be? |
9078 | 7. Who was her father`? |
9078 | 8. Who could help bringing to mind the sublimities of Job and of David,--"The hoary frost of heaven, who hath engendered it? |
9078 | ? |
9078 | A father and a son, Is''t not? |
9078 | A man may lend his store Of gold or silver ore, But wisdom none can borrow, none can lend?" |
9078 | A new world discovered? |
9078 | ALCOHOL? |
9078 | Above the nobler, shall less nobler rise? |
9078 | All being agreed, the eager priest Said:--"Stranger, what do you call this beast?" |
9078 | An Ayrshire_ plowman!_ What was he in after life, in the estimation of his countrymen, and the world? |
9078 | An ignorant sailor from Genoa in the right, and all our learned doctors and philosophers in the wrong? |
9078 | An unknown coast reached by steering west? |
9078 | And did I roar at you, when we met, because you had done these things''? |
9078 | And did they drink the water here''?" |
9078 | And do you never make provoking blunders''? |
9078 | And how the woman sent him out Long after sun was down''? |
9078 | And no doubt you can tell how many moons Jupiter has? |
9078 | And vainly struggled, vainly toiled, For what some win with ease''? |
9078 | And"what are those wild waves saying?" |
9078 | Any news from thence''? |
9078 | Are friendship''s pleasures to be sold''? |
9078 | Are friendship''s pleasures to be sold? |
9078 | Are not such acts as these convincing proofs of the divinity of human nature''? |
9078 | Are there any in that group who can say,"this was_ our_ country''s father''?" |
9078 | Are they gone, all gone from the sunny hill? |
9078 | Are they to rise''? |
9078 | Are they willing to remain at home''? |
9078 | Are you tired of them? |
9078 | Art thou a Christian? |
9078 | Art thou a father''? |
9078 | Art thou not Melchtal-- he whose eyes,''tis said, The tyrant has torn out''? |
9078 | Be we_ men_, And suffer such dishonor? |
9078 | Born to such an inheritance, will you wantonly cast it away? |
9078 | But am I, indeed, the petulant, disagreeable fellow, you would make me out? |
9078 | But good sir, can you tell me who has the ring? |
9078 | But how much did you pay for this precious information? |
9078 | But the boat!--had she gone to the bottom, carrying brave souls with her? |
9078 | But what hast thou done beside, To tell thy mother at eventide`? |
9078 | By what test did Mr. Slocum prove that she was his sister? |
9078 | By whom had Newfoundland been discovered? |
9078 | By whom was Andre detected? |
9078 | By whom was he found? |
9078 | By whom was this poetry written? |
9078 | By whom wore those children taken captive? |
9078 | C._ But how shall I obtain it again? |
9078 | C._ Oh, he told me I was a widow, and lived in Boston, and had an adopted daughter,--and----_ Friend._ But you knew all this before, did you not? |
9078 | C._ Yes; but how should_ he_ know it? |
9078 | Can Henry go with us? |
9078 | Can gold remove the mortal hour''? |
9078 | Can gold remove the mortal hour? |
9078 | Can it be? |
9078 | Can mortal tongue tell? |
9078 | Can there be a_n a_im more lofty? |
9078 | Can there be_ a n_ame more lofty? |
9078 | Can you explain this difficult sentence''? |
9078 | Can you wonder at my losing my temper? |
9078 | Columbus returned? |
9078 | Could a ship accomplish it with even the most favorable wind''? |
9078 | Could the hunter reach him in time to seize and control him? |
9078 | Courage''? |
9078 | Credulous._ Are you the fortune- teller, sir, that knows every thing? |
9078 | Cried Edward, with a wondering eye:"Now, mother, tell to me, Was John about as_ large_ as I''? |
9078 | Describe the appearance of the panther, as they came near him after the first shot? |
9078 | Did Mrs. Stacy tell who had informed her? |
9078 | Did Stacy''s family make their escape? |
9078 | Did he finally succeed in saving the child? |
9078 | Did he serve more than one term as President? |
9078 | Did n''t you send a carriage for me to the cars, half an hour too late, so that I had to hire one myself, after great trouble''? |
9078 | Did n''t you send me five pounds of Hyson tea, when I wrote for Souchong''? |
9078 | Did the plan succeed? |
9078 | Did the sailors allow the lion to go on board the ship? |
9078 | Did they finally succeed in killing the panther? |
9078 | Did they finally succeed in rescuing the children? |
9078 | Did you admire his discourse? |
9078 | Did you intend to visit Boston''? |
9078 | Did you not dispel darkness by giving away light? |
9078 | Did you say that all will soon be sleeping? |
9078 | Do you apply this proverb in getting your lessons? |
9078 | Do you despise your humble station, and repine that Providence has not placed you in some nobler sphere''? |
9078 | Do you know that cheerfulness, like mercy, is twice blessed; blessing"him that gives, and him that takes''?" |
9078 | Do you know that good manners, as well as good sense, demand that we should look at objects on their bright side''? |
9078 | Do you know that it is contemptible selfishness in you to shed gloom and sorrow over a whole family by your moroseness and ill- humor''? |
9078 | Do you know that longevity is promoted by a tranquil, happy habit of thought and temper''? |
9078 | Do you know who is the author of the 11th verse? |
9078 | Do you think, foul knave, that I''m asleep?" |
9078 | Does he study for amusement'', or improvement`? |
9078 | Does his conduct deserve_ ap''_probation or_ rep''_robation? |
9078 | Does suffering weigh down your might''? |
9078 | Does the bud fear to become a blossom, or the blossom shudder as it swells into fruit; and shall the redeemed weep that they must become glorified''? |
9078 | Does the iron hand of misfortune press hard upon you, and disappointments well- nigh sink your despairing soul''? |
9078 | Don Gomez, do you believe in the existence of a world of spirits? |
9078 | Enterprise''? |
9078 | Ever siding with the upmost, Letting downmost lie? |
9078 | Father, what fearful noise is that, Now thundering in the clouds? |
9078 | For example; if a person, under great excitement, asks another: t? |
9078 | For his daily cares? |
9078 | For the poverty he suffers? |
9078 | For what did Hartly receive a prize from his teacher? |
9078 | For what moves mind, but mind? |
9078 | Grim made? |
9078 | Grim offended? |
9078 | Had he ever grieved his mother? |
9078 | Had he overpaid for the books he purchased? |
9078 | Had she a brother''? |
9078 | Had she a sister''? |
9078 | Has James seen his brother_ to- day_? |
9078 | Has James seen his_ brother_ to- day? |
9078 | Has James seen_ his_ brother to- day? |
9078 | Has James_ seen_ his brother to- day? |
9078 | Has your majesty ever seen an ambassador from this unknown coast? |
9078 | Has_ James_ seen his brother to- day? |
9078 | Hast thou been long and often foiled(<) By adverse wind and seas''? |
9078 | Hast thou not a greeting for me, Heaven''s own happy minstrel- bird''? |
9078 | Have ye brave sons? |
9078 | Have ye fair daughters? |
9078 | Have ye poverty''s pinching to cope with''? |
9078 | Have ye vices that ask a destroyer, Or passions that need your control? |
9078 | Have you ever seen an ambassador from that unknown world? |
9078 | He caught at a rope, found it impossible to save himself alone, and then for the first time said,--"I am injured; can any one help me?" |
9078 | He told me, too, that I had lost a ring,--_ Friend._ Did he tell you where to find it? |
9078 | He was first a_ brick- layer, or mason!_ What was he in after years? |
9078 | His mother, finding he did not return from the battle,"looked out at a window, and cried through the lattice, Why is his chariot so long in coming?" |
9078 | Hope ye mercy still? |
9078 | How are the words to be read, which are printed in Italics and in capitals? |
9078 | How are they rewarded, who press on? |
9078 | How are whales generally discovered? |
9078 | How came it to be shot? |
9078 | How came the two boys to be on that cake of ice? |
9078 | How dare you talk to me in that style? |
9078 | How did Hartly receive it? |
9078 | How did Now act? |
9078 | How did Sious''ka avenge the death of her husband? |
9078 | How did Socrates do this? |
9078 | How did he become wealthy? |
9078 | How did he get silver to coin? |
9078 | How did he obtain that sword? |
9078 | How did he often behave at the table? |
9078 | How did he wish to live and die? |
9078 | How did the city and other objects appear to him? |
9078 | How did the son treat his father after he got the deed? |
9078 | How did the spectators manifest their approbation of Hartly''s conduct? |
9078 | How did their commander address the army? |
9078 | How did this boy obtain his first jack- knife? |
9078 | How do we know there is such a land? |
9078 | How do you account for the different inflections in the last line of the second verse? |
9078 | How does it appear farther up? |
9078 | How does it next appear? |
9078 | How does the Ocean address itself to man? |
9078 | How does the suffix_ less,_ affect the meaning of the words_ cease, view, hymn,_& c.? |
9078 | How does the water appear just above the Falls? |
9078 | How far did you travel yesterday`? |
9078 | How far do they sometimes descend in the ocean? |
9078 | How far had the men proceeded before they saw the panther? |
9078 | How far is it?" |
9078 | How far off are the rapids?" |
9078 | How far was this Old Eagle tree from the seashore? |
9078 | How high did he ascend? |
9078 | How is knowledge best acquired? |
9078 | How long after this, before he again called on Mr. Harris? |
9078 | How many men perished? |
9078 | How many signed the Declaration of Independence? |
9078 | How many times did the spider try, before it succeeded? |
9078 | How many years after her capture before she was found? |
9078 | How many years after, before he revisited this country? |
9078 | How may it be corrected? |
9078 | How may we be supported under trials? |
9078 | How much for the chaise? |
9078 | How ought the world to be regarded? |
9078 | How ought we to act and labor? |
9078 | How ought you to treat your competitors? |
9078 | How ought you to treat your mother, in order to avoid the reproaches of your own conscience? |
9078 | How should a part of the 8th and 10th verses be read, according to the notation marks? |
9078 | How should passages, within a parenthesis, be read? |
9078 | How was his fate to be decided? |
9078 | How was it done? |
9078 | How was it with Herman? |
9078 | How was she told she must get her ring? |
9078 | How was that possible, when every wave washed clean over the deck? |
9078 | How with thy faults has duty striven`? |
9078 | How, according to the notation mark, should the first part of the third verse be read? |
9078 | How, according to the notation mark, should the last verse be read? |
9078 | I said to a gentleman,"What river is that, sir?" |
9078 | I stole into the room, and placing my lips close to hers, whispered:"Mother, dear mother, wo n''t you kiss me?" |
9078 | I wish that_ I_ was now a man,_ I''d free my country_ too, And cheer as loudly as the rest; But, father, why do n''t_ you_? |
9078 | If it come from the Fountain of all truth, shall it not be good? |
9078 | If the question can be answered by_ yes_ or_ no_, the voice rises; if not, it falls; as, Where is your map`;? |
9078 | In getting rich, what precept have men obeyed? |
9078 | In how many battles had Bruce been defeated? |
9078 | In life, can love be bought with gold''? |
9078 | In life, can love be bought with gold? |
9078 | In what condition did the writer say the Roman people were? |
9078 | In what condition was this country when he came to join our army? |
9078 | In what month and year was the_ new world_ discovered? |
9078 | In what respect is adversity better than prosperity? |
9078 | In what respects may men be like birds? |
9078 | In what way did Mr. Harris manifest his approval of Edward''s conduct? |
9078 | In what way did Vincent try to make derision of Hartly? |
9078 | In what way did he seek revenge? |
9078 | In what way did the workmen obtain the fish she brought for her young? |
9078 | In what way did they do this? |
9078 | In what way is the pole- star useful to man? |
9078 | Is honor''s lofty soul forever fled''? |
9078 | Is it a tale of mere romance''? |
9078 | Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath- days'', or to do evil`? |
9078 | Is martial ardor dead''? |
9078 | Is n''t it nice? |
9078 | Is not this the real sorrow of us all? |
9078 | Is the boy Come back''? |
9078 | Is there a lake near that village? |
9078 | Is there no heart where worth and valor dwell''? |
9078 | Is this a time for imbecility and inaction''? |
9078 | Is this thy cottage''? |
9078 | Is virtue lost''? |
9078 | Is''t bondage''? |
9078 | Is''t day yet''? |
9078 | Is''t far on the night''? |
9078 | Its moral is the same,-- A light and trivial circumstance''? |
9078 | Just then Harmon Lee came into the shop, and, approaching James, said, for the purpose of teasing him,"How big round is the earth, James?" |
9078 | King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets''? |
9078 | Know''st the signal when the hills shall rise''? |
9078 | Knowest thou where they have concealed them''? |
9078 | Knowest thou, O king, if thy people have taken my children''? |
9078 | Konwell shook his head as he inquired,"Why I had shot?" |
9078 | Larkin?" |
9078 | Larkin?" |
9078 | Let me ask you if our rich men, who ride in their own carriages, who have fine houses, and who count by millions, are not our_ great_ men? |
9078 | Let to- morrow take care of to- morrow; Leave things of the future to fate; What''s the use to anticipate sorrow? |
9078 | Life is short, at the best; why not make it cheerful? |
9078 | Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; While wonderment guesses Where was her home? |
9078 | MEN, and wash not The stain away in BLOOD? |
9078 | MEN, and wash not The stain away in blood''? |
9078 | Many have struck the redeeming blow for their own freedom; but who, like this man, has bared his bosom in the cause of strangers? |
9078 | Matter immortal? |
9078 | May I ask your highness what you_ would_ like to be? |
9078 | Mention some of the things which he did here? |
9078 | More breezes? |
9078 | Morley?" |
9078 | Mr. Harris looked at the boy earnestly for a moment, and then asked:"When did you discover this mistake?" |
9078 | My child, What dost thou with a lighted brand? |
9078 | My father''s trade? |
9078 | My father''s trade? |
9078 | No patriot WALLACE''? |
9078 | No undaunted TELL''? |
9078 | Nor thy husband''? |
9078 | Now wo n''t you tell me_ all about_ The death of little John''? |
9078 | Now, will you learn with me the second lesson of the night? |
9078 | O thou that rollest above, round as the shield of my fathers: whence are thy beams, O sun, thy everlasting light? |
9078 | Of Ben Jonson? |
9078 | Of Burns? |
9078 | Of Freedom? |
9078 | Of Powhatan? |
9078 | Of Washington? |
9078 | Of all the myriads that have come and gone, what cherished minion ever ruled an hour like this? |
9078 | Of one-- Or two? |
9078 | Of ships? |
9078 | Of the avalanche and tempest? |
9078 | Of the human mind? |
9078 | Of the ocean? |
9078 | Of what country was La Fayette a native? |
9078 | Of what do the stars remind us? |
9078 | Of what is our flag a symbol? |
9078 | Of what is the eagle a type? |
9078 | Of what is the snowflake an emblem? |
9078 | Of what was he convinced? |
9078 | On what has kindness an influence? |
9078 | Or else, as at the glorious Nile, Hold grappling ships, that strive the while, For death or victory''? |
9078 | Or, that rogues are not dishonest If they dine off plate''? |
9078 | Or, was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other''? |
9078 | Or, will you learn one more? |
9078 | Others have lived in the love of their own people; but who, like this man, has drank his sweetest cup of welcome with another? |
9078 | Over what does the sea roll? |
9078 | Playing`? |
9078 | Pray tell, how_ big_ was he''?" |
9078 | Reputation''? |
9078 | Restlessly Tosses upon his bed, and dreads the approach Of the tell- tale morning sunlight? |
9078 | Say, brothers of the dusky brow, What are your strong arms forging now? |
9078 | Say, on what sands these links shall sleep, Fathoms beneath the solemn deep`? |
9078 | Say, shall they feel the vessel reel, When, to the battery''s deadly peal, The crashing broadside makes reply''? |
9078 | See you not the Weaver leaving Finished work behind in weaving''? |
9078 | Seest thou not there a sentinel, set by the Eternal, at the northern gate of heaven,--the pole- star? |
9078 | She mourned not for the dead; for they were at rest: but little Frances, her lost darling, where was she? |
9078 | Stranger, hast thou killed her? |
9078 | Suddenly, some one cries out from the bank,"_ Young men, ahoy!_""What is it?" |
9078 | Suppose these millions should come, one by one, to you, and light each his lamp by yours, would they rob you of any light? |
9078 | Talents''? |
9078 | Tell me I_ hate_ the bowl? |
9078 | The Indian monarch, fixing on him a piercing glance, said:"Knowest thou me''? |
9078 | The Interrogation is used at the end of a question; as, Is the sky blue''? |
9078 | The RISING INFLECTION is an upward turn, or slide of the voice, used in reading or speaking; as, s? |
9078 | The captain starts on deck in an instant, and inquires_"Where away? |
9078 | The earth a globe, and men standing with their heads down in space? |
9078 | The last kind word is spoken,-- Why did''st thou die? |
9078 | The sun has hid its rays These many days; Will dreary hours never leave the earth? |
9078 | The warrior''s red right arm was bared, His eyes flashed deep and wild: Was there a foreign footstep dared To seek his home and child''? |
9078 | The work she_ had_ done, the work she_ was_ to do, rose before us: might there not be a possibility of saving her yet? |
9078 | Their numbers who can count,--their twinkling beauty who can describe, as onward they roll in the deep blue of midnight? |
9078 | These glorious constellations wheel their mighty course unchanged, while"man dieth and wasteth away, yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he?" |
9078 | Think you he would exchange his joys for the pleasures of sense''? |
9078 | Thinkest thou that the red man can forget kindness''? |
9078 | Thou whose voice, like some sweet angel''s, Viewless, in the cloud is heard''? |
9078 | To purchase Heaven has gold the power''? |
9078 | To purchase heaven has gold the power''? |
9078 | To what are we compared? |
9078 | To what did the young people of Athens aspire? |
9078 | To what is life compared, first verse? |
9078 | Upon what was Whang, the miller, dependent for support? |
9078 | Virtue''? |
9078 | WHAT IS FAME? |
9078 | WHAT IS FAME? |
9078 | WHEN SHALL I ANSWER NO? |
9078 | Was John an orphan, or half orphan? |
9078 | Was he drowned at night, or in the daytime? |
9078 | Was he esteemed for his wealth'', or for his wisdom`? |
9078 | Was his life spared? |
9078 | Was it an act of moral courage'', or cowardice`, for Cato to fall on his sword`? |
9078 | Was she a bright dame? |
9078 | Was there not_ true heroism_ in this boy''s conduct? |
9078 | Well, Mary, what does the fortune- teller say? |
9078 | Were the children restored to their father? |
9078 | Were the tribes of this country, when first discovered, making any progress in arts and civilization''? |
9078 | What advice is given_ if you chance to fall behind?_ 3. |
9078 | What am I indebted to you? |
9078 | What answer did_ Then_ make, when_ Now_ asked her why she waited? |
9078 | What are some of the attractions of winter in the city? |
9078 | What are some of the delights of winter in the country? |
9078 | What are some of the duties of women? |
9078 | What are some of the pleasures of winter? |
9078 | What are some of the treasures of the deep? |
9078 | What are the full forms of the words_ you''re,''prentice?_***** LESSON XLVII. |
9078 | What are the people exhorted to do? |
9078 | What are three great forms of Nature? |
9078 | What are we constantly expecting from youth to age? |
9078 | What argument did Columbus present in proof that it was? |
9078 | What argument did he offer for so doing? |
9078 | What argument did he offer? |
9078 | What became of Andre and Arnold? |
9078 | What became of him? |
9078 | What bequest did he make to him? |
9078 | What birds seem to love the neighborhood of man? |
9078 | What books were not charged in the bill? |
9078 | What boy has not often watched the flight of the bird of his country in this way? |
9078 | What by_ two little buds, from a broken, buried stem_, same paragraph? |
9078 | What chance had one whose right arm hung a dead weight, when strong men with their two hands, went down before him? |
9078 | What change takes place in the leaf? |
9078 | What circumstance induced her to write it? |
9078 | What color do you prefer? |
9078 | What considerate man can enter a school, and not reflect, with awe, that it is a seminary where immortal minds are training for eternity''? |
9078 | What could he hear? |
9078 | What counsel was given to the artist who wondered what the fates would work out for him? |
9078 | What custom is alluded to, in the passage"_ I will cause you to pass under the rod?_"See note. |
9078 | What demonstrations were made by the people as the aeronaut began to ascend? |
9078 | What demonstrations were made by the people, as he went to New York to take the oath of office? |
9078 | What demonstrations were manifested by the people? |
9078 | What did Bruce and his men then do? |
9078 | What did Caroline regret? |
9078 | What did Caroline wish to be? |
9078 | What did Columbus do on landing? |
9078 | What did Cousin Mary finally say to him? |
9078 | What did Cousin Mary say would be fortunate for him? |
9078 | What did Daniel wish to do with him? |
9078 | What did Edward finally become? |
9078 | What did Ezekiel propose to do with the woodchuck after he was caught? |
9078 | What did Glaucon believe he possessed? |
9078 | What did Horace say constituted true nobility? |
9078 | What did James finally become? |
9078 | What did Joseph say when she returned with another fish? |
9078 | What did Mr. Larkin say to them? |
9078 | What did Mr. Larkin say, when the captain asked him how he felt? |
9078 | What did Naoman say? |
9078 | What did Queen Isabella resolve to do? |
9078 | What did Sir Walter discover as he was riding over the Syrian waste? |
9078 | What did Socrates finally say to him? |
9078 | What did he desire to tell her? |
9078 | What did he do with his carrier- pigeon? |
9078 | What did he do? |
9078 | What did he do? |
9078 | What did he do? |
9078 | What did he dream three nights successively? |
9078 | What did he resolve to do? |
9078 | What did he say of himself when a child? |
9078 | What did he say of his_ faults_, after his mother''s death? |
9078 | What did he say to Talleyrand? |
9078 | What did he say to himself, after the information he had received from a neighbor? |
9078 | What did he say to his son- in- law, after weighing her with shillings? |
9078 | What did he say to his son? |
9078 | What did he say to the king of the tribe? |
9078 | What did he say when Mr. Harris told him he deserved a recompense? |
9078 | What did his father say to him, when he told how he had earned it? |
9078 | What did it forget, and what remember? |
9078 | What did she pay the fortune- teller? |
9078 | What did she say when she became old? |
9078 | What did she tell the child would come? |
9078 | What did she then do? |
9078 | What did the Indians do with Naoman and Stacy''s family? |
9078 | What did the boy do? |
9078 | What did the captain say to Mr. Larkin, as he retired to rest? |
9078 | What did the captain say to the rowers of the boat? |
9078 | What did the captain''s son do, on board the Ironsides? |
9078 | What did the father say and do? |
9078 | What did the king then do? |
9078 | What did the lion do, after being released? |
9078 | What did the lion then do? |
9078 | What did the mother say to him? |
9078 | What did the mutineers do? |
9078 | What did the old gentleman do? |
9078 | What did the panther do after the men both fired at him? |
9078 | What did the patriot soldier say to the Tory, when he cried,_ Quarter_? |
9078 | What did the rich boy say of the poor boy? |
9078 | What did the sergeant say to his men, after parting with the Indians? |
9078 | What did the son promise to do? |
9078 | What did the woman say to the young man? |
9078 | What did the writer imagine them to be, in boyhood? |
9078 | What did the writer tell Robert and John to do with the book, given them? |
9078 | What did the young man do? |
9078 | What did they discover on a cake of ice, floating out to sea? |
9078 | What did_ Now_ finally say to_ Then_? |
9078 | What disaster occurred to them? |
9078 | What do all these examples prove? |
9078 | What do the seasons teach? |
9078 | What do you feed her on? |
9078 | What do you mean? |
9078 | What do you think of that? |
9078 | What do_ it_ and_ them_ refer to, third verse, last line? |
9078 | What does Dr. Johnson say of such men? |
9078 | What does she say of her mother? |
9078 | What does society demand of a young man? |
9078 | What does the writer call on the sea to restore? |
9078 | What does this exploit of the army illustrate? |
9078 | What does"_ I can_"do? |
9078 | What effect did his shot produce? |
9078 | What effect had her marriage upon the rejected Oneida chief? |
9078 | What effect had such reflections upon him? |
9078 | What effect has the emphasis on the place of the accent in the words_ unhappy_ and_ disagreeable_, 13th paragraph? |
9078 | What efforts were made to find her? |
9078 | What encouragement is given to the Christian? |
9078 | What encouragement is given to those who press on? |
9078 | What encouragement is given to young men? |
9078 | What evidences had Columbus that land was near? |
9078 | What extra lessons is it that night gives thirteen times a year? |
9078 | What fear''st thou, man? |
9078 | What had Konwell driven into a den? |
9078 | What had Mrs. Credulous said, by which the fortune- teller knew all the circumstances relative to the loss of her ring? |
9078 | What had the child been doing? |
9078 | What happened to a certain Persian king? |
9078 | What has been done by the whaler? |
9078 | What hast thou done this livelong day`? |
9078 | What hast thou learned by field and hill, By greenwood path, and by singing rill`? |
9078 | What hid''st thou in thy treasure- caves and cells? |
9078 | What history did she relate of herself? |
9078 | What important lesson is taught youth? |
9078 | What incident suggested these thoughts to the writer? |
9078 | What influence had it upon the little flower? |
9078 | What influence has the ocean on man? |
9078 | What instances are mentioned of individuals"_ passing under the rod_?" |
9078 | What instances can you mention in which its truth has been realized? |
9078 | What is a general rule of Providence? |
9078 | What is a sure sign of an unmanly and cowardly spirit? |
9078 | What is a very common failing? |
9078 | What is fame`? |
9078 | What is glory`? |
9078 | What is man''s most noble dower? |
9078 | What is meant by the_ New World_, 9th paragraph? |
9078 | What is meant by the_ jewelry of the mind,_ first paragraph? |
9078 | What is meant by_ Freedom''s jubilee_? |
9078 | What is meant by_ God''s warning on the wall?_ See the 5th chap. |
9078 | What is meant by_ New World_? |
9078 | What is meant by_ coral tomb_, 2d verse? |
9078 | What is meant by_ eve to a longer day_, third verse? |
9078 | What is meant by_ minstrel- bird?_ Ans. |
9078 | What is one of the most delightful emotions of the heart`? |
9078 | What is one of the saddest events in the history of the American Revolution? |
9078 | What is said about the eagle that came near him? |
9078 | What is said about_ aristocracy_? |
9078 | What is said of Arnold? |
9078 | What is said of Cincinnatus? |
9078 | What is said of Horace, after his return? |
9078 | What is said of Naoman and Stacy''s family? |
9078 | What is said of Washington''s tomb? |
9078 | What is said of an unbending will? |
9078 | What is said of change? |
9078 | What is said of cruelty? |
9078 | What is said of death? |
9078 | What is said of discontent and murmuring? |
9078 | What is said of goodness? |
9078 | What is said of heroic deeds? |
9078 | What is said of his fame? |
9078 | What is said of imaginary evils? |
9078 | What is said of knowledge? |
9078 | What is said of legal and moral suasion? |
9078 | What is said of that land far away? |
9078 | What is said of the Air- ocean? |
9078 | What is said of the appearance of shrubs, bushes,& c.? |
9078 | What is said of the boy who succeeded after six hours of hard study? |
9078 | What is said of the colter? |
9078 | What is said of the courage of the whaler? |
9078 | What is said of the drapery of rocks? |
9078 | What is said of the eagle? |
9078 | What is said of the eaglets and the parent bird, when she returned to the nest? |
9078 | What is said of the few on Bunker''s Hight? |
9078 | What is said of the lion? |
9078 | What is said of the natives? |
9078 | What is said of the officers and crew? |
9078 | What is said of the old gunner? |
9078 | What is said of the past and the future? |
9078 | What is said of the poor in winter? |
9078 | What is said of the skies? |
9078 | What is said of the stars? |
9078 | What is said of the student? |
9078 | What is said of the two in contrast? |
9078 | What is said of the volcano and earthquake? |
9078 | What is said of the word_ Higher_, first paragraph? |
9078 | What is said of this boy when he came to be three- score years old? |
9078 | What is said of those who are_ sowing the seeds of word and deed?_ 3. |
9078 | What is said of those who never dread to meet danger and death? |
9078 | What is said of_ careless words_? |
9078 | What is said of_ the power of habit?_***** LESSON XLI. |
9078 | What is said to all these different laborers? |
9078 | What is the first lesson a young man should learn? |
9078 | What is the first sign of the coming of winter? |
9078 | What is the giving of knowledge like? |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ dom_, in the word_ thralldom?_ See ANALYSIS, page 142, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ en_, in the words_ strengthen_,_ blacken?_ See SANDERS and McELLIGOTT''S ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH WORDS, p. 132, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ ing_, in such words as_ longing, striving, lighting_,& c.? |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ ing_, in such words as_ tripping, dancing, laughing_,& c.? |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ less_ in the word_ restless?_ See SANDERS& McELLIGOTT''S ANALYSIS, page 140, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ less_, in the word_ harmless?_ See page 140, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ less_, in the words_ careless, heedless_? |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffix_ let_, in the word_ leaflet?_ See page 240, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of the suffixes_ let_ and_ et,_ in the words_ streamlet_ and_ floweret?_ See SANDERS& McELLIGOTT''S ANALYSIS, page 140, Ex. |
9078 | What is the meaning of this proverb,"_ Where there''s a WILL there''s a WAY?_"2. |
9078 | What is the meaning of_ monomaniac?_ Ans. |
9078 | What is the next lesson he should learn? |
9078 | What is the place called where he was drowned? |
9078 | What is the subject of this dialogue? |
9078 | What is the use of the apostrophe in the word_ repining''s_, fifth verse? |
9078 | What is the use of the apostrophe in_ wak''ning_, third verse? |
9078 | What is the use of the apostrophes in the words_ autumn''s, o''er, pleasure''s,''midst,_& c.? |
9078 | What is the use of the apostrophes in the words_ o''er, ne''er, twilight''s_,& c.? |
9078 | What is the use of the hyphen in such words as_ water- fall, amber- colored_,& c.? |
9078 | What is the use of the hyphen in the word_ re- enforcements?_ See SANDERS''NEW SPELLER, page 165. |
9078 | What is there peculiar in the construction of the first, third, and fifth lines of each verse? |
9078 | What keeps him? |
9078 | What kind of words are_ straw- roofed, heath- flower, wood- note,_& c.? |
9078 | What kind word to thy playmates spoken`? |
9078 | What man could reach it alive? |
9078 | What may all write? |
9078 | What may the mother write in the Life- Book? |
9078 | What measures did he adopt to do this? |
9078 | What measures did the Indians adopt, to make her tell? |
9078 | What moral is taught in this fable? |
9078 | What more hath she to dread, who reads thy looks, And knows the most has come? |
9078 | What motto ought you to adopt? |
9078 | What must they do, to escape destruction? |
9078 | What objection did his officers make to this? |
9078 | What order had been given by the captain of the vessel? |
9078 | What orders had Napoleon given to Marshal Macdonald? |
9078 | What other examples are cited of eminent men who were once poor? |
9078 | What ought we not to forget? |
9078 | What ought we to consult? |
9078 | What ought we to do in life, in order to have a joyful and peaceful death? |
9078 | What passage of Scripture teaches the same idea? |
9078 | What passages of Scripture did the scene bring to mind? |
9078 | What plan did the sergeant propose for their preservation? |
9078 | What plan had Horace determined to pursue while traveling? |
9078 | What portion of the money coined, was he to receive? |
9078 | What precept must be obeyed in getting knowledge? |
9078 | What preparation did he make, before entering into the cavern? |
9078 | What profession did James study, after he had learned his trade? |
9078 | What promise of morn is left unbroken`? |
9078 | What proof is given that there is a north- western passage, by water, from the Atlantic to the Pacific? |
9078 | What proposal was made to him? |
9078 | What proposition did the father make to his son? |
9078 | What proved the justice of the decision? |
9078 | What questions did the mother ask? |
9078 | What really rewards the labor of study? |
9078 | What reason is assigned why he plotted treason against his country? |
9078 | What reasons are assigned why we should arouse to effort_ now, to- day?_ 2. |
9078 | What reasons did Don Gomez advance in proof that the earth is not a sphere? |
9078 | What reasons does she assign for her hatred of alcoholic drink? |
9078 | What renders a burial at sea peculiarly melancholy and impressive? |
9078 | What renders home doubly endearing? |
9078 | What reply are the young men represented as making, when first told the rapids were below them? |
9078 | What reply did Horace make? |
9078 | What reply did the Indian monarch make? |
9078 | What reply did the poor boy make? |
9078 | What request did the old veteran make of his son? |
9078 | What river rises in that lake? |
9078 | What rule for changing_ y_ into_ i_ in the word_ beautiful?_ See ANALYSIS, page 13, Rule XI. |
9078 | What rule for doubling the_ r_ and_ d_ in such words as_ occurred_,_ saddened_,& c.? |
9078 | What rule for spelling the word_ traveling_ with one_ l_? |
9078 | What rule for the falling inflection on_ arise?_ See Rule VIII., page 33. |
9078 | What rule for the falling inflection on_ condescension_? |
9078 | What rule for the falling inflection on_ no_? |
9078 | What rule for the falling inflection on_ playing_, second verse? |
9078 | What rule for the falling inflections, fifth verse? |
9078 | What rule for the rising and falling inflections, first verse? |
9078 | What rule for the rising inflection on_ father_? |
9078 | What rule for the rising inflection on_ restless one_, first verse? |
9078 | What rule for the rising inflections in the fourth verse? |
9078 | What rule for the rising inflections, third verse? |
9078 | What sad results are mentioned, in consequence of being_ behind time?_ 2. |
9078 | What say''st thy news? |
9078 | What signal service had she rendered? |
9078 | What sound can break the silence of despair? |
9078 | What special cases are mentioned? |
9078 | What story illustrates this fact? |
9078 | What tends to shorten life? |
9078 | What terrible thing has happened now, Cousin Grim? |
9078 | What things are mentioned as being forged? |
9078 | What things are mentioned, that contribute to our comfort and happiness? |
9078 | What time of year was it? |
9078 | What treasures has the sea won from trading vessels? |
9078 | What trick did the three rogues play off on the Brahmin? |
9078 | What two men are said to have engaged in deadly combat? |
9078 | What two words are represented as holding a controversy? |
9078 | What use did he make of his knife? |
9078 | What use did he tell them to make of Youth? |
9078 | What virtue should be cultivated, and what error avoided? |
9078 | What vow did he then make? |
9078 | What warning does it give to the people of this country? |
9078 | What was Burns? |
9078 | What was Captain John Hull''s business? |
9078 | What was Herman''s plan? |
9078 | What was he? |
9078 | What was her ring worth? |
9078 | What was his course of life? |
9078 | What was his position at home? |
9078 | What was the adage of the old Greek? |
9078 | What was the age of the person represented in this piece? |
9078 | What was the appearance at sunset? |
9078 | What was the conduct of the officers and seamen? |
9078 | What was the famous Ben Jonson? |
9078 | What was the result? |
9078 | What was the sage''s decision? |
9078 | What was their father''s decision? |
9078 | What was to be done? |
9078 | What was_ Now''s_ reply? |
9078 | What will make skillful and brave men? |
9078 | What will you take for all the gold on her horns? |
9078 | What would content you`? |
9078 | What wrongs are complained of? |
9078 | What''s the matter? |
9078 | What''s the matter? |
9078 | What''s the mercy_ despots_ feel? |
9078 | What''s your price?" |
9078 | What, Messiah''s messengers? |
9078 | What, by_ intellectual wealth,_ fifth paragraph? |
9078 | What, by_ quiet sleep_, same verse? |
9078 | What, in man? |
9078 | What, of death at sea? |
9078 | What, of the boy who gave up, after the first trial? |
9078 | What, of the iron cable? |
9078 | What, of the sword? |
9078 | What, of the weight sustained by a single tree? |
9078 | What, of those who are sowing the_ seeds of care?_ 4. |
9078 | What, of_ sweet words_? |
9078 | What, the brother? |
9078 | What, the father? |
9078 | What, the second? |
9078 | What, the sister? |
9078 | What, the sun and moon? |
9078 | What, the third? |
9078 | What, the trees? |
9078 | What, then, would be the youth''s fate, unless he soon overtook the child? |
9078 | What, upon the little bird? |
9078 | What, when he arrives at manhood? |
9078 | What, when he becomes old? |
9078 | What, when his mother died? |
9078 | What, when the Tory told him he had a wife and child? |
9078 | What, when told the second time? |
9078 | When all the men and the women are asleep, must we keep awake to learn lessons? |
9078 | When and where was the Monitor lost? |
9078 | When did the little girl think she would be happy? |
9078 | When did_ Then_ propose to do something? |
9078 | When do you expect to return? |
9078 | When does the school- boy say Higher? |
9078 | When is a young man in a fair position for beginning life? |
9078 | When makes the tyrant trial of his skill? |
9078 | When will Charles graduate at college`? |
9078 | When_ did you say''? |
9078 | Whence come you` friend''? |
9078 | Whence proceed half our troubles? |
9078 | Where are the Niagara Falls? |
9078 | Where are the fagots, child, for such a blaze? |
9078 | Where are the passages to be found, quoted in the 7th, 8th, and 13th paragraphs? |
9078 | Where are the swallows fled? |
9078 | Where are we always welcome? |
9078 | Where did the lady reside who kept this pet fawn? |
9078 | Where did they find her? |
9078 | Where do you intend to spend the summer`? |
9078 | Where does it love to dwell? |
9078 | Where does the eagle build its nest? |
9078 | Where have naval battles been fought? |
9078 | Where is Havre? |
9078 | Where is Mount Vernon? |
9078 | Where is Murderer''s Creek? |
9078 | Where is Palestine? |
9078 | Where is Paris? |
9078 | Where is that passage found in the Scriptures? |
9078 | Where is the Hellespont? |
9078 | Where is the Wyoming Valley? |
9078 | Where is the passage within the quotation to be found? |
9078 | Where is the quotation in the 3d paragraph to be found? |
9078 | Where is the town of Tangier? |
9078 | Where were they taken? |
9078 | Where, the quotation in the sixth paragraph? |
9078 | Which gained the mastery? |
9078 | Which of you brought this beautiful bouquet`? |
9078 | Which way shall we walk? |
9078 | Which won the case? |
9078 | Who are meant by_ godlike men of old_? |
9078 | Who are meant by_ they_ in this lesson? |
9078 | Who can forget that for ten years, Ramon, in vain, sought to reach Mount Perdu though often within sight of it? |
9078 | Who discovered the secrets of the globe? |
9078 | Who is benefited in studying? |
9078 | Who raised the anthem of the free on Plymouth Rock? |
9078 | Who revealed the ocean, and marked out its zones and its liquid highways? |
9078 | Who was Sious''ka? |
9078 | Who was Talleyrand? |
9078 | Who was her mother`? |
9078 | Who watches over us when asleep? |
9078 | Who would give his pen to blacken Freedom''s page of light`? |
9078 | Who would lend his tongue to utter Praise of tyranny? |
9078 | Who would pass him in the foot- way With averted eye? |
9078 | Who would say Success and Merit Ne''er part company? |
9078 | Who would suspect that they had ever been bred in such a flue? |
9078 | Who, did the writer think, were happy? |
9078 | Who, to erring woman''s sorrow, Would with taunts reply? |
9078 | Whom did he seek at Havre? |
9078 | Whom hast thou pitied, and whom forgiven`? |
9078 | Why are half quotations used in the 3d and 8th verses? |
9078 | Why are some words and sentences printed in Italics and Capitals? |
9078 | Why are there no quotation marks at the beginning of the 2d verse? |
9078 | Why are_ r_ and_ m_ doubled in the words_ stirred, dimmed?_ See Rule IX. |
9078 | Why cling to that which bore us? |
9078 | Why could he not, at first, talk with Mr. Harris? |
9078 | Why did Edward Delong wish to see Mr. Harris? |
9078 | Why did Mr. Larkin wake up the captain? |
9078 | Why did Naoman, at first, refuse to tell Mrs. Stacy of her danger? |
9078 | Why did he wish to see the stranger? |
9078 | Why did they flee to this country? |
9078 | Why do they come to the surface of the water? |
9078 | Why do they, cheering, wave their hat, And rush along in crowds? |
9078 | Why does it commence with a half quotation? |
9078 | Why have I been permitted to see for a moment that immense flood of light? |
9078 | Why may we not go to sleep, instead of learning Night''s lessons? |
9078 | Why must the flowers die? |
9078 | Why not be cheerful, sunny, genial, in little things? |
9078 | Why not labor,--ay, labor,--to have those around you happy and contented, by reflecting from yourself such a frame of mind upon them? |
9078 | Why not look on the bright side? |
9078 | Why not present an unruffled front to petty annoyances? |
9078 | Why ought we not to speak harshly? |
9078 | Why shouldst thou faint? |
9078 | Why sigh we not for softer climes? |
9078 | Why turn we to our mountain homes With more than filial feeling? |
9078 | Why was he not satisfied? |
9078 | Why was he obliged to flee from Paris? |
9078 | Why would not the men release the woman? |
9078 | Why wouldst thou leave me, O gentle child? |
9078 | Why, blockhead, are you mad? |
9078 | Will any merciless hand endeavor to tear away from our hearts, this last, this sweetest consolation? |
9078 | Will he attempt to conceal hi_s acts?_ Will he attempt to conceal hi_s sacks?_ 2. |
9078 | Will he attempt to conceal hi_s acts?_ Will he attempt to conceal hi_s sacks?_ 2. |
9078 | Will smooth seas and favoring gales make a skillful mariner? |
9078 | Will ye look for_ greener graves_? |
9078 | Will you be there to learn them? |
9078 | Will you come to- morrow''or next day''? |
9078 | Will you come to- morrow,''or next day`? |
9078 | Will you meet me at the depot''? |
9078 | With earth in possession, and Heaven in reversion, will you go sorrowing and downcast, because here and there a pearl or ruby fails you? |
9078 | With such a goal in prospect, will you suffer yourself to be turned aside by the sheen and shimmer of tinsel fruit? |
9078 | With what tone of voice should the last verse be read? |
9078 | With whom, and where did he make the agreement? |
9078 | Would less of it shine on your own path? |
9078 | Would not the coming back be all up- hill''? |
9078 | Would not you like to go and beg your life of that widow and her children?" |
9078 | Would the dog listen to his voice? |
9078 | Would you darken the only avenue through which one ray of hope can enter? |
9078 | Would you deprive the dying of their only source of consolation? |
9078 | Would you let loose the flood- gates of every vice, and bring back upon the earth the horrors of superstition, or the atrocities of atheism? |
9078 | Would you rob the world of its richest treasure? |
9078 | Would you say that Vice is Virtue In a hall of state''? |
9078 | Would you tear from the aged and infirm poor the only prop on which their souls can repose in peace? |
9078 | Would you, brother''? |
9078 | Would your lamp burn more dimly for lighting a thousand millions? |
9078 | Would_ you_, brother''? |
9078 | Would_ you_, brother''? |
9078 | Would_ you_, brother''? |
9078 | Wouldst thou not hare the fatal arrow speed, Rather than watch it hanging in the string? |
9078 | You will give me a letter to one of your friends? |
9078 | Your will? |
9078 | [ Headnote 3] was there no pride in the deadly hurling of the smooth pebble, which sank deep into the forehead of your enemy''? |
9078 | \i\m y,\p\p l/\r\r t/\u\u n/\d\d e/\e\e d/\n\n u/\t\t r/\l\l Did he act p/ or\y? |
9078 | \u\n y,\w\w l/\i\i g/\l\l n/\l\l i/\i\i l/\n\n l/\g\g i/\l\l Did they go w/ or\y? |
9078 | _ And thou knowest not this brow''?_ I could tell_ thine_ at midnight, if but a single star trembled through the clouds. |
9078 | _ C_a_n__ cr_a_v_e_n__ c_owa_rds_ e_x_pe_ct_ to_ c_o_nq_ue_r__ th_e_ c_ou_ntr_y? |
9078 | _ Can_` such inconsistent measures be adopted`? |
9078 | _ D_i_d__ y_ou_ d_esi_r_e to_ h_ea_r__ h_i_s__ d_a_rk_ a_nd__ d_o_l_e_f_u_l__ dr_ea_ms_? |
9078 | _ Did_` you ever hear of such cruel barbarities`? |
9078 | _ Don G._ A presentiment? |
9078 | _ Friend._ How much was the ring worth? |
9078 | _ Is_ it humanity`? |
9078 | _ Is_ this reason`? |
9078 | _ Is_` he not a bold and eloquent speaker`? |
9078 | _ Is_` it law`? |
9078 | _ Was_` not the gentleman''s argument conclusive`? |
9078 | _ What keeps him?_ Erni would sure be found by him,--he knows The track, well as he knows the road to Altorf! |
9078 | _ Where_ did you say William had gone''? |
9078 | _ the ground''s your own_, my braves,-- Will ye give it up to_ slaves_? |
9078 | a prowling wolf? |
9078 | and shall spirit die? |
9078 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him?" |
9078 | are there not some cherished tones In the deep heart enshrined? |
9078 | ask a_ cracker_ and receive a_ loaf''_? |
9078 | be sown in barren ground, Less privileged than grain, on which he feeds? |
9078 | can mortal heart feel, the sublimity of that coming? |
9078 | clang!--again, my mates, what glows Beneath the hammer''s potent blows? |
9078 | clang!--once more, what glows, Dark brothers of the forge, beneath The iron tempest of your blows The furnace''s fiery breath? |
9078 | confer a crown on the author of the public calamities? |
9078 | feed a child''s body, and let his soul hunger''? |
9078 | have you a statement of them in writing''? |
9078 | he cried, as the strange man retreated to the next room:"your name?" |
9078 | let woof be strong And firm, that has to last so long? |
9078 | pamper his limbs, and starve his faculties''? |
9078 | s e n r a Are you in e the degree of inflection would be much greater, t? |
9078 | said a pleasant- looking man, stepping up to the clerk;"what does the boy want?" |
9078 | shall it be forever''? |
9078 | shall the frown Of fortune cause dismay''? |
9078 | she inquired, sinking on her knees, and reverently kissing his hand;"where, then, are your followers, and why are you thus alone?" |
9078 | shear a wolf? |
9078 | sir, were you acquainted with my deceased husband? |
9078 | tell the hidden meaning Of the rays thou lettest fall; Are they lessons writ in burning, Like God''s warning on the wall? |
9078 | the snow, the beautiful snow, How the flakes gather and laugh as they go? |
9078 | to save life'', or to kill`? |
9078 | was there no pride in dying like a philosopher''? |
9078 | was there no pride in your addresses to the boundless and roaring ocean''? |
9078 | what are Words? |
9078 | what could she now do? |
9078 | what is it ye would whisper, With your pure and holy light? |
9078 | what is the price of milk? |
9078 | what is this you tell me? |
9078 | what though upon the ground Thy love has been poured out like rain? |
9078 | what''s this That fills my heart with horrible alarm? |
9078 | wo n''t you buy A beautiful sheep? |
28900 | ---- doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
28900 | Also between the antonyms_ cast away_,_ decline_,_ dismiss_,_ refuse_,_ repudiate_? |
28900 | And the antonyms_ consequence_? |
28900 | And what is so---- as a day in June? |
28900 | Are all_ liquids__ fluids_? |
28900 | Are the people of one country while residing in their own land_ foreigners_ or_ aliens_ to the people of other lands? |
28900 | Are the words properly interchangeable? |
28900 | Are there any_ synonymous_ words in the strict sense of the term? |
28900 | Are these words applied to matters decidedly bad, foul, or evil? |
28900 | Are these words used in the favorable or the unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Are they ever used as equivalent, and how? |
28900 | Are_ blame_,_ censure_, and_ disapproval_ spoken or silent? |
28900 | Are_ comment_ and_ criticism_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | Are_ comment_,_ criticism_,_ rebuke_,_ reflection_,_ reprehension_, and_ reproof_ expressed or not? |
28900 | Are_ gases_ ever_ liquids_? |
28900 | Are_ gases__ fluids_? |
28900 | Are_ lively_ and_ animated_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Are_ odd_ and_ singular_ precise equivalents? |
28900 | Are_ shout_ and_ scream_ more or less expressive than_ call_? |
28900 | As regards results what is the difference between_ include_,_ imply_, and_ involve_? |
28900 | As regards succession in time, what is the difference between_ follow_ and_ ensue_? |
28900 | As regards the use of words, what does_ language_ denote in the general and in the restricted sense? |
28900 | But what are these moral sermons[ of Seneca]? |
28900 | By how many is it given, and how is it expressed? |
28900 | By what authority is a_ requirement_ made? |
28900 | By what characteristics are the_ morose_ distinguished? |
28900 | By what class of persons is_ insurrection_ made? |
28900 | By what general name are they popularly known? |
28900 | By what is one_ frightened_? |
28900 | By what is_ complaining_ prompted? |
28900 | By what processes does one_ acquire_? |
28900 | By what qualities is_ awe_ inspired? |
28900 | By what special element does_ procure_ differ from_ obtain_? |
28900 | By what word is_ cultivation_ now largely superseded? |
28900 | By whom may one be said to be_ banished_? |
28900 | CAIUS.--Vere is mine host_ de Jarterre_? |
28900 | Can a modern building be_ antiquated_? |
28900 | Can a soul like mine, Unus''d to power, and form''d for humbler scenes,---- the splendid miseries of greatness? |
28900 | Can a_ prototype_ be equivalent to an_ archetype_? |
28900 | Can any one of a number of things of the same kind be_ unique_? |
28900 | Can anybody remember when the right sort of men and the right sort of women were----? |
28900 | Can it be_ antique_? |
28900 | Can one be_ amused_ or_ entertained_ who is not_ diverted_? |
28900 | Can one be_ daunted_ who is not_ abashed_? |
28900 | Can one who is_ preoccupied_ be said to be_ listless_ or_ thoughtless_? |
28900 | Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special----? |
28900 | Can that which is worthy or beautiful in itself ever be otherwise than_ becoming_ or_ suitable_? |
28900 | Can the same thing be both an_ emblem_ and a_ symbol_? |
28900 | Can the two words be used of the same person and the same act? |
28900 | Can there be_ order_ without_ regularity_ or_ regularity_ without_ order_, and how? |
28900 | Can we have an_ abbreviation_ of a book, paragraph, or sentence? |
28900 | Can we speak of the_ speech_ of animals? |
28900 | Can we_ give_ what is undesired? |
28900 | Can we_ give_ what we are paid for? |
28900 | Can you contrast_ calm_ and_ quiet_? |
28900 | Can you distinguish between_ modify_ and_ qualify_? |
28900 | Can you give more than one sense of_ cry_? |
28900 | Can you give some figurative uses of_ carry_? |
28900 | Can you give some instances of the use of_ circumstance_? |
28900 | Can you give some of the senses of_ care_? |
28900 | Can you give the distinction between a_ copy_ and a_ duplicate_? |
28900 | Can you state the similarity between_ artless_,_ guileless_,_ naive_,_ simple_, and_ unsophisticated_? |
28900 | Can_ beautiful_ be said of that which is harsh and ragged, however grand? |
28900 | Do all of these apply to conduct as well as to speech? |
28900 | Do large gatherings of people_ consult_, or_ meditate_, or_ deliberate_? |
28900 | Do the antonyms_ boisterous_,_ excited_,_ ruffled_,_ turbulent_, and_ wild_, also apply to the same? |
28900 | Do the distinctions of_ gender_ correspond to the distinctions of_ sex_? |
28900 | Do the three latter words apply to the living or the dead? |
28900 | Do they imply superiority on the part of commentator or critic? |
28900 | Do we apply_ doubt_,_ distrust_,_ surmise_, and_ suspect_ mostly to persons and things, or to motives and intentions? |
28900 | Do we ever apply_ bellow_ and_ roar_ to human sounds? |
28900 | Do we speak of associates in crime or wrong? |
28900 | Do we use_ compute_ or_ estimate_ of numbers exactly known? |
28900 | Do we use_ duty_ and_ right_ of civil things? |
28900 | Do we_ aid_ or_ help_ the helpless? |
28900 | Do we_ reflect_ on things past or things to come? |
28900 | Do you think it necessary to provide for every---- before taking the first step? |
28900 | Do_ misemploy_,_ misuse_, and_ pervert_ apply to persons or things? |
28900 | Do_ reflection_ and_ reprehension_ imply such superiority? |
28900 | Do_ truth_ and_ verity_ apply to thought and speech or to persons? |
28900 | Does a person always_ get_ what he_ earns_ or always_ earn_ what he_ gets_? |
28900 | Does a_ revolution_ necessarily involve war? |
28900 | Does an_ analysis_ of a treatise deal with what is expressed, or with what is implied? |
28900 | Does it apply chiefly to the past or the future? |
28900 | Does it apply to action or condition? |
28900 | Does it involve_ foreordination_ or_ predestination_? |
28900 | Does it necessarily denote the absence of all action? |
28900 | Does it now necessarily imply having or gaining superiority to another person, or securing anything at another''s expense? |
28900 | Does it refer to a state of mind or to some act or other object of thought? |
28900 | Does it require_ meter_? |
28900 | Does one person_ actuate_ or_ influence_ another? |
28900 | Does the good or the bad sense commonly attach to the words_ artifice_,_ contrivance_,_ ruse_,_ blind_,_ device_, and_ finesse_? |
28900 | Does the legal agree with the popular sense? |
28900 | Does this word imply authority or superiority? |
28900 | Does_ affection_ apply to persons or things? |
28900 | Does_ allot_ refer to time, place, or person? |
28900 | Does_ assume_ apply to that which is rightfully or wrongfully taken? |
28900 | Does_ coincidence_ necessarily involve_ resemblance_ or_ likeness_? |
28900 | Does_ conceal_ evince intention? |
28900 | Does_ conceit_ differ from_ self- conceit_, and how? |
28900 | Does_ danger_ or_ peril_ suggest the more immediate evil? |
28900 | Does_ help_ include_ aid_ or does_ aid_ include_ help_? |
28900 | Does_ misfortune_ suggest as serious a condition as any of the foregoing? |
28900 | Does_ orderly_ apply to persons or things, and in what sense? |
28900 | Does_ perplexity_ involve anxiety? |
28900 | Does_ poetry_ involve_ rime_? |
28900 | Does_ purpose_ suggest more power to execute than_ design_? |
28900 | Does_ responsibility_ imply connection with any other person or thing? |
28900 | Does_ select_ imply more care or judgment than_ choose_? |
28900 | Does_ terminate_ refer to reaching an arbitrary or an appropriate end? |
28900 | For what are those associated who constitute a_ company_? |
28900 | For what class of objects does one_ ask_? |
28900 | For what does he_ beg_? |
28900 | For what is a_ chase_ or_ pursuit_ conducted? |
28900 | For what is the_ proposition_ designed? |
28900 | For what is_ alert_ more properly a synonym? |
28900 | For what is_ salary_ paid? |
28900 | From what are_ rural_ and_ rustic_ alike derived? |
28900 | From what do_ eminence_ and_ distinction_ result? |
28900 | From what does_ amazement_ result? |
28900 | From what is the_ real_ distinguished? |
28900 | From what is_ adroitness_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ aptitude_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what is_ argue_ derived, and what does it mean? |
28900 | From what is_ buy_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ company_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ damage_ derived, and with what original sense? |
28900 | From what is_ durable_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ ephemeral_ derived, and with what sense? |
28900 | From what is_ fine_ derived, and what is its original meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ lunacy_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ marine_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ naval_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ parade_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ pernicious_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what is_ real_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ renounce_ derived, and in what sense used? |
28900 | From what is_ spirit_ used in special contradistinction? |
28900 | From what is_ state_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ topic_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ utility_ derived, and what is its primary meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ venal_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ venial_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what land may one be_ banished_? |
28900 | From what language have_ adieu_ and_ congé_ been adopted into English? |
28900 | From what language is_ acute_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ astute_ derived, and what was its original meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ beginning_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ burden_ derived, and with what primary meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ dip_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ emblem_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ epithet_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ flat_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ home_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ hypocrite_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ idea_ derived, and what did it originally mean? |
28900 | From what language is_ idle_ derived, and what is its original meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ imminent_ derived and with what primary sense? |
28900 | From what language is_ infinite_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ injury_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ involve_ derived, and with what primary meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ journey_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ keen_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ pretense_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what language is_ purchase_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ wedlock_ derived? |
28900 | From what_ dexterity_? |
28900 | From what_ expatriated_ or_ exiled_? |
28900 | Has_ emulation_ a good side? |
28900 | Has_ partisan_ a good or a bad sense, and why? |
28900 | Have_ craft_ and_ cunning_ always a moral element? |
28900 | He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words by adding fuel to the----? |
28900 | Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
28900 | How are the terms_ dissenter_ and_ non- conformist_ usually applied? |
28900 | How are the words applied in special cases? |
28900 | How are the words_ cause_,_ condition_, and_ occasion_ illustrated by the fall of an avalanche? |
28900 | How are these four words discriminated the one from another? |
28900 | How are these two words discriminated? |
28900 | How are these words and the word_ spicy_ used in reference to literary products? |
28900 | How are these words illustrated in the case of a mountain? |
28900 | How are these words now commonly differentiated? |
28900 | How are these words used in the figurative senses? |
28900 | How are they discriminated in use? |
28900 | How are they distinguished from one another? |
28900 | How are they related to_ talent_? |
28900 | How are they used in a modified sense? |
28900 | How are_ accident_,_ misadventure_, and_ mishap_ distinguished? |
28900 | How are_ apprehension_,_ disquietude_,_ dread_, and_ misgiving_ related to the danger that excites them? |
28900 | How are_ crave_ and_ request_ distinguished? |
28900 | How are_ expediency_ and_ utility_ used as regards moral action? |
28900 | How are_ female_ and_ feminine_ discriminated? |
28900 | How are_ fount_,_ fountain_, and_ spring_ used in the figurative sense? |
28900 | How are_ hypocrite_ and_ dissembler_ contrasted with each other? |
28900 | How are_ idea_ and_ ideal_ contrasted? |
28900 | How are_ instrument_ and_ tool_ contrasted in figurative use? |
28900 | How are_ jeopardy_ and_ risk_ distinguished from_ danger_ and_ peril_? |
28900 | How are_ knowledge_ and_ learning_ related to_ education_? |
28900 | How are_ lucky_ and_ fortunate_ discriminated? |
28900 | How are_ mercenary_ and_ venal_ discriminated from_ hireling_? |
28900 | How are_ origin_ and_ source_ related to_ cause_? |
28900 | How are_ rhythm_ and_ meter_ produced? |
28900 | How are_ susceptibility_ and_ sensitiveness_ discriminated in physics? |
28900 | How are_ unity_ and_ union_ contrasted? |
28900 | How are_ womanly_ and_ womanish_ discriminated in use? |
28900 | How as to the completeness of the action? |
28900 | How as to the continuance of the object in or under the liquid? |
28900 | How can a_ loss_ be said to be partial? |
28900 | How can one residing in a_ foreign_ country cease to be an_ alien_ in that country? |
28900 | How caused, and with what intent? |
28900 | How close an approach to exactness and certainty does_ approximation_ imply? |
28900 | How could money be better spent than in erecting a---- building for the greatest library in the country? |
28900 | How do a_ heretic_ and a_ schismatic_ often differ in action? |
28900 | How do all these fall short of the meaning of_ fraud_? |
28900 | How do both the above words differ from_ ally_? |
28900 | How do both these words compare with_ associate_? |
28900 | How do both_ befall_ and_ betide_ differ from_ happen_ in grammatical construction? |
28900 | How do the above words compare with_ mention_ as to explicitness? |
28900 | How do the figurative uses of these words compare with the literal? |
28900 | How do the two compare with each other? |
28900 | How do the two words agree in general signification? |
28900 | How do the two words compare as now used? |
28900 | How do the two words compare in present use? |
28900 | How do the two words compare? |
28900 | How do the two words compare? |
28900 | How do the two words differ from each other? |
28900 | How do the two words differ in application and use? |
28900 | How do the two words differ in dignity? |
28900 | How do the two words differ? |
28900 | How do the two words differ? |
28900 | How do the words above mentioned compare with_ exalted_? |
28900 | How do these qualities compare with_ pride_? |
28900 | How do these two words agree and differ? |
28900 | How do these two words compare with each other? |
28900 | How do these two words differ from each other? |
28900 | How do these two words differ from one another? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these words compare in actual use? |
28900 | How do these words compare in dignity with_ contention_,_ contest_,_ controversy_, and_ dissension_? |
28900 | How do these words compare with_ injury_? |
28900 | How do these words compare with_ mercy_? |
28900 | How do these words differ from_ charge_? |
28900 | How do these words differ from_ venturesome_? |
28900 | How do these words differ in meaning? |
28900 | How do they compare in interest and utility? |
28900 | How do they compare with each other? |
28900 | How do they compare with_ entertainment_ and_ recreation_? |
28900 | How do they differ as a class from the words above referred to? |
28900 | How do they differ from each other in use? |
28900 | How do they differ from each other? |
28900 | How do they differ from one another? |
28900 | How do they differ in the derived senses? |
28900 | How do they differ in the source of the power exerted? |
28900 | How do they differ, and to what are they applied? |
28900 | How do they differ? |
28900 | How do they differ? |
28900 | How do they respectively treat the material objects or images with which they deal? |
28900 | How do we discriminate between_ fulfil_,_ realize_,_ effect_, and_ execute_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ chagrin_,_ disappointment_,_ humiliation_,_ mortification_, and_ shame_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ character_ and_ reputation_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ count_ and_ calculate_? |
28900 | How do_ abstracted_,_ absorbed_, and_ preoccupied_ differ from_ absent- minded_? |
28900 | How do_ accident_ and_ casualty_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ active_ and_ restless_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ advance_,_ better_, and_ improve_ differ from_ amend_? |
28900 | How do_ agreeable_,_ attractive_, and_ charming_ differ from_ amiable_? |
28900 | How do_ allow_ and_ permit_ compare with the words just mentioned? |
28900 | How do_ amusement_ and_ enjoyment_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ amusement_ and_ pastime_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ apparent_ and_ evident_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ argue_ and_ advocate_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ argument_ and_ argumentation_ compare with_ reasoning_ as regards logical form? |
28900 | How do_ arrogate_ and_ usurp_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ assail_ and_ assault_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ avaricious_ and_ covetous_ differ from_ miserly_,_ niggardly_,_ parsimonious_, and_ penurious_? |
28900 | How do_ avenging_ and_ retribution_ differ from_ retaliation_,_ revenge_, and_ vengeance_? |
28900 | How do_ avouch_ and_ avow_ differ from_ aver_ in construction? |
28900 | How do_ behavior_ and_ conduct_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ bewilderment_ and_ confusion_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ bleach_ and_ blanch_ differ from_ whiten_? |
28900 | How do_ bodily_ and_ corporal_ differ from_ corporeal_? |
28900 | How do_ buy_ and_ purchase_ agree in meaning? |
28900 | How do_ buy_ and_ purchase_ differ in use? |
28900 | How do_ cloak_ and_ palliate_ agree in original meaning? |
28900 | How do_ command_ and_ control_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ concord_ and_ accord_ compare with_ harmony_ and with each other? |
28900 | How do_ concur_ and_ coincide_ differ in range of meaning? |
28900 | How do_ consent_ and_ concurrence_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ cooperate_ and_ assist_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ cost_ and_ price_ ordinarily differ? |
28900 | How do_ countless_,_ innumerable_, and_ numberless_ compare with_ infinite_? |
28900 | How do_ deduction_ and_ induction_ compare as to the certainty of the conclusion? |
28900 | How do_ discover_ and_ invent_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ doubtful_ and_ dubious_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ duration_ and_ succession_ compare with_ time_? |
28900 | How do_ each_ and_ every_ differ from_ all_? |
28900 | How do_ elevated_ and_ eminent_ compare in the literal sense? |
28900 | How do_ end_ and_ object_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ entreat_ and_ beseech_ compare with_ ask_? |
28900 | How do_ event_ and_ incident_ differ etymologically? |
28900 | How do_ falsehood_ and_ fabrication_ differ from the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How do_ folly_ and_ foolishness_ compare with_ idiocy_? |
28900 | How do_ foreign_ and_ alien_ differ in their figurative use? |
28900 | How do_ foresight_ and_ forethought_ compare with each other, and both with_ providence_? |
28900 | How do_ foresight_ and_ forethought_ go beyond the meaning of_ anticipation_? |
28900 | How do_ freedom_ and_ liberty_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ hint_ and_ insinuate_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ imminent_ and_ impending_ differ in present use? |
28900 | How do_ inevitable_ and_ unavoidable_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ mimicry_ and_ imitation_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ monstrous_ and_ preposterous_ compare with_ absurd_? |
28900 | How do_ motto_ and_ maxim_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ native_ and_ indigenous_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ needed_ and_ needful_ compare with_ necessary_? |
28900 | How do_ novice_ and_ tyro_ differ from_ amateur_? |
28900 | How do_ obstinate_ and_ stubborn_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ old_ and_ ancient_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ pardon_ and_ forgive_ differ in use in accordance with the difference in meaning? |
28900 | How do_ persecute_ and_ oppress_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ pledge_ and_ security_ differ from_ earnest_? |
28900 | How do_ presumable_ and_ probable_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ pride_ and_ vanity_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ put up with_ and_ tolerate_ compare with_ allow_ and_ permit_? |
28900 | How do_ resemblance_ and_ similarity_ differ from_ analogy_? |
28900 | How do_ resolution_ and_ endurance_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ result_ and_ issue_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ reverence_ and_ veneration_ differ from_ awe_ or_ dread_? |
28900 | How do_ risk_ and_ venture_ compare with_ chance_ and_ hazard_, and with each other? |
28900 | How do_ rule_ and_ govern_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ sacrament_ and_ ordinance_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ sample_ and_ specimen_ compare as indications of the quality of that which they respectively represent? |
28900 | How do_ self- respect_ and_ self- esteem_ compare with each other and with the other words of the group? |
28900 | How do_ sharpness_,_ acuteness_,_ penetration_, and_ insight_ compare with_ acumen_? |
28900 | How do_ slander_ and_ libel_ differ in legal signification from the other words? |
28900 | How do_ talkative_ and_ loquacious_ differ from_ garrulous_, and from each other? |
28900 | How do_ transactions_ differ from_ proceedings_? |
28900 | How do_ voluntary_ and_ involuntary_ compare with each other? |
28900 | How do_ yet_ and_ still_ compare with_ notwithstanding_? |
28900 | How does Archbishop Trench illustrate the difference between_ abhor_ and_ shun_? |
28900 | How does a mechanical_ drawing_ differ from a_ draft_? |
28900 | How does a_ class_ differ from a_ caste_? |
28900 | How does a_ conceit_ differ from a_ fancy_? |
28900 | How does a_ confederacy_ or_ federation_ differ from a_ union_? |
28900 | How does a_ deposition_ differ from an_ affidavit_? |
28900 | How does a_ fiction_ differ from a_ novel_? |
28900 | How does a_ fortress_ specifically differ from a_ fortification_? |
28900 | How does a_ mishap_ compare with a_ catastrophe_, a_ calamity_, or a_ disaster_? |
28900 | How does a_ myth_ differ from a_ legend_? |
28900 | How does a_ persuasion_ compare with an_ opinion_? |
28900 | How does a_ sign_ suggest something other than itself? |
28900 | How does a_ sketch_ in this sense compare with an_ outline_? |
28900 | How does a_ skilled_ compare with a_ skilful_ workman? |
28900 | How does an_ abomination_ differ from an_ offense_? |
28900 | How does an_ abridgment_ differ from an_ outline_ or a_ synopsis_? |
28900 | How does an_ abstract_ or_ digest_ differ from an_ outline_ or a_ synopsis_? |
28900 | How does an_ adherent_ differ from a_ supporter_? |
28900 | How does an_ answer_ to a charge, an argument, or the like, differ from a_ reply_ or_ rejoinder_? |
28900 | How does an_ apology_ differ from an_ excuse_? |
28900 | How does an_ associate_ compare in rank with a principal? |
28900 | How does an_ emotion_ differ from a_ sensation_? |
28900 | How does an_ explanation_ compare with an_ exposition_? |
28900 | How does an_ induction_ compare with an_ inference_? |
28900 | How does an_ order_ in the commercial sense become authoritative? |
28900 | How does each of the above words differ from_ bank_? |
28900 | How does it come into connection with the words of this group? |
28900 | How does it come into connection with_ clarified_,_ clear_,_ pure_,_ refined_? |
28900 | How does it compare in strength with_ evident_? |
28900 | How does it compare with an_ outline_ or_ sketch_? |
28900 | How does it compare with the_ ideal_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ aspiration_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ authority_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ boasting_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ chatter_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ conjecture_ or_ suppose_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ courage_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ diction_ or_ language_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ distress_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ evidence_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ fright_ and_ terror_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ frugality_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ guard_ or_ defend_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ hinder_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ holy_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ idiocy_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ level_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ liberty_ and_ freedom_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ load_ and_ burden_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ model_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ outline_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ patience_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ pleasant_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ righteous_,_ upright_, or_ virtuous_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ rule_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ sensitiveness_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ clique_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ dialect_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ flaw_ or_ taint_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ motto_ or_ maxim_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ precedent_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ pretext_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ surname_? |
28900 | How does it differ from an_ oath_? |
28900 | How does it differ from an_ obstacle_ or_ obstruction_? |
28900 | How does it differ from the Saxon word_ unfeelingness_? |
28900 | How does it differ from the other words of the group? |
28900 | How does it differ from, and how does it agree with_ attitude_ and_ posture_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ acquit_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ adherence_ or_ adhesion_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ antipathy_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ applause_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ apprehension_,_ fear_,_ dread_, etc., in this regard? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ beggary_ and_ mendicancy_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ chance_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ consanguinity_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ control_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ deceit_ or_ deception_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ exercise_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ farming_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ fitting_ or_ befitting_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ generous_ as regards dealing with insults or injuries? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ idle_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ illegal_ or_ unlawful_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ indignation_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ indispensable_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ information_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ inherent_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ intellect_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ journey_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ long_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ mark_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ meddle_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ meter_,_ measure_, and_ rhythm_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ multiply_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ pardon_ as regards the person acquitted or pardoned? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ product_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ progress_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ repartee_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ self- conceit_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ soul_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ stubborn_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ wages_? |
28900 | How does it differ in general from_ design_,_ endeavor_, or_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does it differ in usage from_ bound_ or_ bounds_? |
28900 | How does it differ in usage from_ chance_? |
28900 | How does it differ in use from_ associate_? |
28900 | How does it differ in use from_ odd_ or_ queer_? |
28900 | How does it exceed the meaning of_ drawing_? |
28900 | How does it happen that"To be frank,"or"To be candid"often precedes the utterance of something disagreeable? |
28900 | How does it relate events? |
28900 | How does market_ value_ differ from intrinsic_ value_? |
28900 | How does the adjective_ friendly_ compare in strength with the noun_ friend_? |
28900 | How does the popular term_ feeling_ compare with_ sensation_ and_ emotion_? |
28900 | How does the_ affidavit_ differ from the_ oath_? |
28900 | How does the_ impromptu_ remark often differ from the_ extemporaneous_? |
28900 | How does_ abase_ differ from_ debase_? |
28900 | How does_ abet_ differ from_ incite_ and_ instigate_ as to the time of the action? |
28900 | How does_ ability_ compare with_ power_? |
28900 | How does_ abomination_ differ from_ aversion_ or_ disgust_? |
28900 | How does_ abstinence_ differ from_ abstemiousness_? |
28900 | How does_ abstract_, when said of the mind, differ from_ divert_? |
28900 | How does_ abuse_ differ from_ harm_? |
28900 | How does_ accede_ compare with_ consent_? |
28900 | How does_ acerbity_ differ from_ asperity_? |
28900 | How does_ acquaintance_ differ from_ companionship_? |
28900 | How does_ active_ differ from_ busy_? |
28900 | How does_ admire_ compare with_ revere_? |
28900 | How does_ admonish_ compare with the other words in the group? |
28900 | How does_ adoration_ compare with_ veneration_? |
28900 | How does_ adorn_ differ from_ ornament_? |
28900 | How does_ adroitness_ differ in use from_ dexterity_? |
28900 | How does_ affectation_ compare with_ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | How does_ affront_ compare with_ insult_? |
28900 | How does_ agent_ in the philosophical sense compare with_ mover_ or_ doer_? |
28900 | How does_ air_ differ from_ appearance_? |
28900 | How does_ airy_ agree with and differ from_ aerial_? |
28900 | How does_ alert_ compare with_ nimble_? |
28900 | How does_ alien_ differ from_ foreign_? |
28900 | How does_ alike_ compare with_ similar_? |
28900 | How does_ allegory_ compare with_ simile_? |
28900 | How does_ alleviate_ compare with_ allay_? |
28900 | How does_ alleviate_ differ from_ relieve_? |
28900 | How does_ allure_ differ from_ attract_? |
28900 | How does_ ambition_ differ from_ aspiration_? |
28900 | How does_ animosity_ differ from_ enmity_? |
28900 | How does_ antagonism_ compare with the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How does_ anticipate_ differ from_ expect_? |
28900 | How does_ anticipation_ differ from_ presentiment_? |
28900 | How does_ anxiety_ differ from_ anguish_? |
28900 | How does_ anxious_ in this acceptation differ from both_ eager_ and_ earnest_? |
28900 | How does_ any_ differ from_ each_ and_ every_? |
28900 | How does_ appliance_ compare with_ tool_? |
28900 | How does_ application_ compare with_ assiduity_? |
28900 | How does_ apprehend_ differ in scope from_ perceive_? |
28900 | How does_ approbation_ differ from_ praise_? |
28900 | How does_ approximation_ differ from_ resemblance_ and_ similarity_? |
28900 | How does_ approximation_, as regards the class of objects to which it is applied, differ from_ nearness_,_ neighborhood_, or_ propinquity_? |
28900 | How does_ art_ compare with_ science_? |
28900 | How does_ assume_ differ from_ postulate_ as regards debate or reasoning of any kind? |
28900 | How does_ assurance_ compare with_ impudence_? |
28900 | How does_ attack_ differ from_ aggression_? |
28900 | How does_ attain_ differ from_ obtain_? |
28900 | How does_ attempt_ differ from_ effort_? |
28900 | How does_ attribute_ differ from_ refer_ and_ ascribe_? |
28900 | How does_ autocratic_ differ from_ arbitrary_? |
28900 | How does_ avenge_ differ from_ revenge_? |
28900 | How does_ avow_ compare with_ confess_? |
28900 | How does_ award_ differ from_ allot_,_ appoint_, and_ assign_? |
28900 | How does_ barbarous_ in general use differ from both the above words? |
28900 | How does_ be in possession_ compare with_ possess_? |
28900 | How does_ brave_ differ from_ courageous_? |
28900 | How does_ busy_ differ from_ industrious_? |
28900 | How does_ care_ compare with_ prudence_ and_ providence_? |
28900 | How does_ case_ fall short of the meaning of_ precedent_? |
28900 | How does_ cause_ differ from_ reason_ in the strict sense of each of the two words? |
28900 | How does_ celebrity_ compare with_ fame_? |
28900 | How does_ circumstance_ compare with_ incident_? |
28900 | How does_ cite_ differ from_ quote_? |
28900 | How does_ clear_ differ from_ transparent_ as regards a substance that may be a medium of vision? |
28900 | How does_ coax_ compare with_ persuade_? |
28900 | How does_ combat_ differ? |
28900 | How does_ comfort_ differ from_ enjoyment_? |
28900 | How does_ command_ compare with_ order_? |
28900 | How does_ commensurate_ specifically differ from the other two words? |
28900 | How does_ commiseration_ differ from_ compassion_? |
28900 | How does_ compassion_ compare with_ mercy_ and_ pity_? |
28900 | How does_ complex_ differ from_ compound_? |
28900 | How does_ complicated_ differ from_ intricate_? |
28900 | How does_ compliment_ compare with_ praise_? |
28900 | How does_ composed_ differ from_ calm_? |
28900 | How does_ comprehend_ compare with_ apprehend_? |
28900 | How does_ confession_ differ from_ apology_? |
28900 | How does_ confuse_ differ from_ abash_? |
28900 | How does_ conjecture_ differ from_ suppose_? |
28900 | How does_ consequence_ differ from_ effect_? |
28900 | How does_ constrain_ differ from_ restrain_? |
28900 | How does_ consume_ differ from_ absorb_? |
28900 | How does_ continuous_ differ from_ continual_? |
28900 | How does_ conversation_ differ from_ talk_? |
28900 | How does_ courteous_ compare with_ civil_? |
28900 | How does_ credence_ compare with_ belief_? |
28900 | How does_ damage_ compare with_ loss_? |
28900 | How does_ despondency_ especially differ from_ despair_? |
28900 | How does_ destine_ differ from_ appoint_? |
28900 | How does_ dexterous_ compare with_ skilful_? |
28900 | How does_ discernible_ compare with_ visible_? |
28900 | How does_ disinterested_ compare with_ generous_? |
28900 | How does_ distress_ rank as compared with_ pain_ and_ suffering_? |
28900 | How does_ each_ compare with_ every_? |
28900 | How does_ effrontery_ compare with these words? |
28900 | How does_ elongate_ differ from_ protract_? |
28900 | How does_ endless_ agree with and differ from_ everlasting_? |
28900 | How does_ enduring_ compare with_ durable_? |
28900 | How does_ engagement_ differ from_ battle_? |
28900 | How does_ ephemeral_ differ from_ transient_ or_ transitory_? |
28900 | How does_ erratic_ compare with_ eccentric_? |
28900 | How does_ essay_ differ from_ attempt_ and_ endeavor_ in its view of the results of the action? |
28900 | How does_ event_ differ from_ end_? |
28900 | How does_ example_ differ from_ sample_? |
28900 | How does_ excusable_ differ from the above words? |
28900 | How does_ exemplar_ agree with, and differ from_ example_? |
28900 | How does_ exercise_ in that sense differ from_ exertion_? |
28900 | How does_ extremity_ compare with_ end_? |
28900 | How does_ extremity_ differ in use from the two latter words? |
28900 | How does_ fate_ differ from_ predestination_? |
28900 | How does_ fellowship_ differ from_ friendship_? |
28900 | How does_ fine_ come to be a synonym for_ minute_,_ comminuted_? |
28900 | How does_ fine_ differ from_ comminuted_? |
28900 | How does_ foe_ compare with_ enemy_? |
28900 | How does_ follow_ compare with_ chase_ and_ pursue_? |
28900 | How does_ forbid_ compare with_ prohibit_? |
28900 | How does_ formidable_ differ from_ dangerous_? |
28900 | How does_ fortunate_ compare with_ successful_? |
28900 | How does_ friendship_ differ from_ love_? |
28900 | How does_ general_ compare with_ universal_? |
28900 | How does_ generous_ differ from_ liberal_? |
28900 | How does_ goodness_ differ from_ virtue_? |
28900 | How does_ grief_ compare with_ sorrow_? |
28900 | How does_ grotesque_ especially differ from the_ fanciful_ or_ fantastic_? |
28900 | How does_ hallucination_ differ from both? |
28900 | How does_ happiness_ compare with_ gratification_,_ satisfaction_,_ comfort_, and_ pleasure_? |
28900 | How does_ happiness_ differ from_ comfort_? |
28900 | How does_ harmony_ compare with_ agreement_? |
28900 | How does_ harvest_ compare with_ crop_? |
28900 | How does_ hatred_ compare with_ aversion_ as applied to persons? |
28900 | How does_ hazard_ compare with_ danger_? |
28900 | How does_ headstrong_ differ from_ obstinate_ and_ stubborn_? |
28900 | How does_ high_ compare with_ deep_? |
28900 | How does_ hinder_ compare with_ prevent_? |
28900 | How does_ hinder_ differ from_ delay_? |
28900 | How does_ hire_ compare with_ employ_? |
28900 | How does_ history_ differ from_ annals_ or_ chronicles_? |
28900 | How does_ hoard_ differ from_ store_? |
28900 | How does_ incident_ differ from both? |
28900 | How does_ indolent_ compare with_ slothful_? |
28900 | How does_ industry_ compare with_ diligence_? |
28900 | How does_ insanity_ differ from_ idiocy_ or_ imbecility_? |
28900 | How does_ instruct_ surpass_ teach_ in signification? |
28900 | How does_ instrument_ compare in meaning with_ tool_? |
28900 | How does_ intent_ specifically differ from_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does_ intercede_ differ from_ interpose_? |
28900 | How does_ involve_ compare with_ implicate_? |
28900 | How does_ keep_ compare with_ preserve_? |
28900 | How does_ kind_ compare with_ kin_? |
28900 | How does_ large_ compare with_ great_? |
28900 | How does_ love_ differ from_ affection_? |
28900 | How does_ maintain_ compare with_ support_ as to fulness and as to dignity? |
28900 | How does_ mangle_ compare with_ lacerate_? |
28900 | How does_ meeting_ agree with and differ from it? |
28900 | How does_ meter_ differ from_ rhythm_? |
28900 | How does_ mien_ differ from_ air_? |
28900 | How does_ miscellaneous_ differ from_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | How does_ motion_ differ from_ movement_? |
28900 | How does_ necessity_ compare with_ need_? |
28900 | How does_ need_ compare with_ want_? |
28900 | How does_ negotiate_ compare with_ treat_? |
28900 | How does_ nice_ compare with_ neat_? |
28900 | How does_ notwithstanding_ as a preposition differ from_ despite_ or_ in spite of_? |
28900 | How does_ noxious_ compare with_ noisome_? |
28900 | How does_ obscure_ compare with_ complicated_? |
28900 | How does_ obstacle_ differ from_ obstruction_? |
28900 | How does_ obstruct_ compare with_ impede_? |
28900 | How does_ obtain_ differ from_ get_? |
28900 | How does_ obtain_ differ from_ procure_? |
28900 | How does_ ocean_, used adjectively, differ from_ oceanic_? |
28900 | How does_ order_ compare with_ direction_? |
28900 | How does_ ought_ compare with_ should_? |
28900 | How does_ own_ compare with_ possess_ or with_ be in possession_? |
28900 | How does_ parade_ compare with_ ostentation_? |
28900 | How does_ patience_ compare with_ submission_ and_ endurance_? |
28900 | How does_ pecuniary_ agree with and differ from_ monetary_? |
28900 | How does_ performance_ differ from_ execution_? |
28900 | How does_ permission_ compare with_ allowance_? |
28900 | How does_ pernicious_ compare with_ injurious_? |
28900 | How does_ piquant_ differ from_ pungent_? |
28900 | How does_ pitiful_ differ in use from_ pitiable_? |
28900 | How does_ pity_ differ from_ mercy_? |
28900 | How does_ pleasant_ compare with_ kind_? |
28900 | How does_ pleasure_ compare with_ comfort_ and_ enjoyment_? |
28900 | How does_ policy_ in such use compare with_ expediency_ and_ utility_? |
28900 | How does_ position_ as regards the human body differ from_ attitude_,_ posture_, or_ pose_? |
28900 | How does_ posture_ differ from_ attitude_? |
28900 | How does_ prattling_ differ from_ chatting_? |
28900 | How does_ preceding_ differ from_ antecedent_ and_ previous_? |
28900 | How does_ pretty_ compare with_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How does_ prohibit_ compare with_ prevent_? |
28900 | How does_ prohibit_ differ from_ abolish_? |
28900 | How does_ property_ differ from_ money_? |
28900 | How does_ property_ ordinarily differ from_ quality_? |
28900 | How does_ propose_ in its most frequent use differ from_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does_ protect_ surpass_ guard_ and_ defend_? |
28900 | How does_ providence_ differ from_ prudence_? |
28900 | How does_ pure_ compare with_ innocent_? |
28900 | How does_ purpose_ compare with_ intention_? |
28900 | How does_ quarrel_ compare in importance with the other words cited? |
28900 | How does_ ready_ differ from_ alert_? |
28900 | How does_ reasoning_ differ from both the above words in this respect? |
28900 | How does_ rebellion_ differ from_ revolution_? |
28900 | How does_ recent_ compare with_ new_? |
28900 | How does_ reliable_ compare with these words? |
28900 | How does_ renown_ compare with_ fame_? |
28900 | How does_ repentance_ surpass the meaning of_ penitence_,_ regret_,_ sorrow_, etc.? |
28900 | How does_ repose_ compare with_ rest_? |
28900 | How does_ repress_ compare with_ restrain_? |
28900 | How does_ requisite_ compare with_ essential_ and_ indispensable_? |
28900 | How does_ restrain_ differ from_ restrict_? |
28900 | How does_ retaliation_ compare with_ revenge_? |
28900 | How does_ revoke_ compare with_ recall_ in original meaning and in present use? |
28900 | How does_ rigorous_ compare with_ rigid_? |
28900 | How does_ salute_ differ from_ accost_ or_ greet_? |
28900 | How does_ science_ compare with_ knowledge_? |
28900 | How does_ secrete_ compare with_ conceal_? |
28900 | How does_ security_ differ from_ pledge_? |
28900 | How does_ seduce_ differ from_ tempt_? |
28900 | How does_ sensible_ compare with the above- mentioned words? |
28900 | How does_ shelter_ compare with_ cover_? |
28900 | How does_ skill_ differ from_ dexterity_? |
28900 | How does_ sleep_ compare with_ repose_ and_ rest_? |
28900 | How does_ solicit_ compare with the above words? |
28900 | How does_ stoicism_ differ from_ apathy_? |
28900 | How does_ sufficient_ compare with_ enough_? |
28900 | How does_ sullen_ differ from_ sulky_? |
28900 | How does_ superintendence_ compare with_ oversight_? |
28900 | How does_ surprise_ differ from_ astonishment_ and_ amazement_? |
28900 | How does_ sustain_ surpass_ support_ in meaning and force? |
28900 | How does_ sympathy_ in its exercise differ from_ pity_? |
28900 | How does_ term_ in ordinary use compare with_ word_,_ expression_, or_ phrase_? |
28900 | How does_ threatening_ differ from the two words above given? |
28900 | How does_ trade_ differ from_ commerce_? |
28900 | How does_ training_ differ from_ teaching_? |
28900 | How does_ transact_ differ from_ do_? |
28900 | How does_ transact_ differ from_ treat_ and_ negotiate_? |
28900 | How does_ transient_ differ in signification from_ transitory_? |
28900 | How does_ transparent_ differ from_ translucent_? |
28900 | How does_ try_ compare with the other words of the group? |
28900 | How does_ unlettered_ compare with_ illiterate_? |
28900 | How does_ unpremeditated_ compare with the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How does_ value_ differ from_ worth_? |
28900 | How does_ venial_ compare with_ pardonable_? |
28900 | How does_ visionary_ differ from_ fanciful_? |
28900 | How does_ wrong_ differ from_ injustice_ in legal use? |
28900 | How does_ zeal_ differ from_ enthusiasm_? |
28900 | How for_ filmy_,_ tenuous_? |
28900 | How in popular use? |
28900 | How inclusive a word is_ injury_? |
28900 | How is it chiefly used? |
28900 | How is it conceived of with reference to events? |
28900 | How is it connected with_ dainty_,_ delicate_, and_ exquisite_? |
28900 | How is it especially distinguished from_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How is it now used, and how does it differ from_ uncertain_? |
28900 | How is it now used? |
28900 | How is it ordinarily contrasted with_ science_? |
28900 | How is it technically used in educational work? |
28900 | How is one said to_ win_ a suit at law? |
28900 | How is one_ indicted_? |
28900 | How is_ acrimony_ distinguished from_ malignity_? |
28900 | How is_ act_ distinguished from_ action_? |
28900 | How is_ add_ related to_ increase_? |
28900 | How is_ amass_ distinguished from_ accumulate_? |
28900 | How is_ anterior_ commonly used? |
28900 | How is_ antipathy_ to be distinguished from_ dislike_? |
28900 | How is_ badinage_ distinguished from_ banter_? |
28900 | How is_ beautiful_ related to our powers of appreciation? |
28900 | How is_ belief_ discriminated from_ faith_ in the strict religious sense? |
28900 | How is_ belief_ often used in popular language as a precise equivalent of_ faith_? |
28900 | How is_ contrast_ related to_ compare_? |
28900 | How is_ convincing_ related to_ persuasion_? |
28900 | How is_ copious_ used? |
28900 | How is_ deceit_ distinguished from_ deception_? |
28900 | How is_ discourse_ related to_ conversation_? |
28900 | How is_ dissimulation_ distinguished from_ duplicity_? |
28900 | How is_ faint_ a synonym of_ feeble_ or_ purposeless_? |
28900 | How is_ fear_ contrasted with_ fright_ and_ terror_ in actual or possible effects? |
28900 | How is_ frugality_ related to_ prudence_? |
28900 | How is_ gain_ related to those words? |
28900 | How is_ get_ related to expectation or desire? |
28900 | How is_ give_ always understood when there is no limitation in the context? |
28900 | How is_ honesty_ used in a sense higher than the commercial? |
28900 | How is_ imagination_ defined? |
28900 | How is_ independence_ used in distinction from_ freedom_ and_ liberty_? |
28900 | How is_ instruction_ or_ teaching_ related to_ education_? |
28900 | How is_ make_ allied with_ compose_ or_ constitute_? |
28900 | How is_ make_ allied with_ create_? |
28900 | How is_ practise_ discriminated from such theory or profession? |
28900 | How is_ prevent_ at present used? |
28900 | How is_ primordial_ used? |
28900 | How is_ propose_ used so as to be nearly equivalent to_ purpose_? |
28900 | How is_ question_ used in a similar sense, and why? |
28900 | How is_ reason_ often used so as to be a partial equivalent of_ cause_? |
28900 | How is_ theology_ related to_ religion_? |
28900 | How is_ transgression_ discriminated from_ sin_ in the general sense? |
28900 | How is_ utility_ discriminated from_ use_ and_ usefulness_? |
28900 | How long did that usage prevail? |
28900 | How long may a_ battle_ last? |
28900 | How many of the preceding adjectives can be applied to water? |
28900 | How many parts are required for_ harmony_? |
28900 | How many persons are necessarily implied in_ consult_,_ confer_, and_ debate_ as commonly used? |
28900 | How may_ acid_,_ bitter_, and_ acrid_ be distinguished? |
28900 | How may_ exercise_ be brought up to the full meaning of_ exertion_? |
28900 | How may_ literature_ include_ science_? |
28900 | How might each be rendered? |
28900 | How much does one admit when he speaks of an_ alleged_ fact, document, signature, or the like? |
28900 | How much of certainty is implied in_ allege_? |
28900 | How of_ admonition_ and_ animadversion_? |
28900 | How related to_ artist_ and_ artisan_? |
28900 | How wide is its present meaning? |
28900 | How wide is its range of meaning? |
28900 | How wide is its range? |
28900 | How wide is the range of_ visible_? |
28900 | How widely are the words now applied? |
28900 | How widely inclusive a word is it? |
28900 | How will the merely_ honest_ and the truly_ honorable_ man differ in action? |
28900 | How with reference to expression in action? |
28900 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
28900 | How, accordingly, do they rank among the lighter matters of life? |
28900 | How, from this primary meaning does_ fine_ become a synonym of_ excellent_ and_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How, in this sense, does it differ from_ honorable_? |
28900 | How? |
28900 | How_ arraigned_? |
28900 | Human law must---- many things that human administration of law can not absolutely----; is not this true also of the divine government? |
28900 | If so, why? |
28900 | In how general a sense is_ fasten_ used? |
28900 | In metaphorical use, how are_ harsh_ and_ bitter_ distinguished? |
28900 | In present use what does_ astute_ add to the meaning of_ acute_ or_ keen_? |
28900 | In the more limited sense, how does a_ name_ differ from an_ appellation_? |
28900 | In view of what class of dangers? |
28900 | In what are the_ spy_ and the_ scout_ alike? |
28900 | In what are_ all_ and_ both_ alike? |
28900 | In what connection can_ manly_ be used where_ manful_ could not be substituted? |
28900 | In what connection is_ armor_ used in modern warfare? |
28900 | In what connection is_ fiscal_ most commonly used? |
28900 | In what connection is_ rank_ used? |
28900 | In what connection is_ rive_ used, and in what sense? |
28900 | In what contrasted meanings is the word_ sense_ employed? |
28900 | In what derived sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what do the_ proverb_ and the_ adage_ agree? |
28900 | In what do they differ? |
28900 | In what do they differ? |
28900 | In what do_ anathema_,_ curse_,_ execration_, and_ imprecation_ agree? |
28900 | In what do_ axiom_ and_ truism_ agree? |
28900 | In what do_ convey_,_ transmit_, and_ transport_ agree? |
28900 | In what does a_ heretic_ differ from his church or religious body? |
28900 | In what does_ everlasting_ fall short of the meaning of_ eternal_? |
28900 | In what exceptional case may_ cost_ and_ price_ agree? |
28900 | In what favorable sense is it used? |
28900 | In what inferior senses are_ everlasting_ and_ interminable_ used? |
28900 | In what less opprobrious sense may_ barbarous_ and_ savage_ be used? |
28900 | In what lighter and more familiar sense may_ pray_ be used? |
28900 | In what mental actions is it manifested? |
28900 | In what one characteristic do_ swerve_ and_ veer_ differ from_ oscillate_,_ fluctuate_,_ undulate_, and_ waver_? |
28900 | In what one quality does it differ from_ affection_,_ attachment_,_ devotion_, and_ friendliness_? |
28900 | In what order might_ despair_,_ desperation_,_ discouragement_, and_ hopelessness_ follow, each as the result of the previous condition? |
28900 | In what other respects do_ imagination_ and_ fancy_ agree? |
28900 | In what other sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what realm does_ slothful_ belong, and what does it denote? |
28900 | In what respect has_ interpretation_ a wider meaning than_ translation_? |
28900 | In what respects do they differ? |
28900 | In what secondary sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what secondary sense is_ ought_ sometimes used? |
28900 | In what sense are material substances said to be_ pure_? |
28900 | In what sense are_ bluff_,_ frank_, and_ open_ used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ blunt_,_ brusk_,_ rough_, and_ rude_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense are_ cheat_,_ maneuver_, and_ imposture_ always used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ finish_ and_ complete_ used, and how are they discriminated from each other? |
28900 | In what sense are_ follower_,_ henchman_, and_ retainer_ used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ gray_,_ hoary_, and_ olden_ used of material objects? |
28900 | In what sense are_ lavish_ and_ profuse_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense do some hold a miracle to be_ supernatural_? |
28900 | In what sense is it now used? |
28900 | In what sense is the verb_ harbor_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ benevolence_ now most commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ consequent_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ divine_ loosely used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ elderly_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ homogeneous_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ host_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ innocent_ applied to inanimate substances? |
28900 | In what sense is_ jabber_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ move_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense is_ polished_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ prohibition_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ questionable_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ repudiate_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ requirement_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ salubrious_ used, and to what is it applied? |
28900 | In what sense is_ student_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense is_ suspicious_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ trick_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ vacuous_ used? |
28900 | In what sense may a person be called_ faithful_? |
28900 | In what sense may one be called_ trusty_? |
28900 | In what sense may the earth be said to_ revolve_? |
28900 | In what sense was_ admire_ formerly used? |
28900 | In what sense was_ enthusiasm_ formerly used? |
28900 | In what special application is the word commonly used? |
28900 | In what special connection are_ draft_ and_ plan_ used? |
28900 | In what special connection is_ formula_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what special feature does the one differ from the other? |
28900 | In what special relations is the word used? |
28900 | In what special sense are the words_ affliction_,_ chastening_,_ trial_, and_ tribulation_ used? |
28900 | In what special sense, and with what reference are_ favored_ and_ prospered_ used? |
28900 | In what specific sense is the word also used? |
28900 | In what style and sense is_ bourn_ used? |
28900 | In what style of writing is it most commonly used? |
28900 | In what two applications may_ immaculate_,_ pure_, and_ sinless_ be used? |
28900 | In what two contrasted senses is_ oversight_ used? |
28900 | In what usage do_ property_ and_ quality_ become exact synonyms, and how are_ properties_ then distinguished? |
28900 | In what use does_ assume_ correspond with_ arrogate_ and_ usurp_? |
28900 | In what way does a_ suggestion_ bring a matter before the mind? |
28900 | In what way does_ proposition_ come to have nearly the sense of_ proposal_ in certain uses? |
28900 | In what way is_ happy_ a synonym of_ blessed_? |
28900 | In what ways may a discourse or treatise be_ amplified_? |
28900 | In what wider sense is the word often used? |
28900 | In what wider sense is_ answer_ used? |
28900 | In what wider significations is_ mercy_ used? |
28900 | In which sense does_ art_ transcend rule? |
28900 | In which sense is_ art_ a system of rules? |
28900 | Into what two classes may the words in this group of synonyms be divided, and what words will be found in each class? |
28900 | Into what two groups are the synonyms for_ also_ naturally divided? |
28900 | Into what two parts was_ imagination_ divided in the old psychology? |
28900 | Into what two sections are_ fluids_ divided? |
28900 | Is a draft- horse distinctively_ awkward_ or_ clumsy_? |
28900 | Is a_ catastrophe_ also necessarily a_ calamity_ or a_ disaster_? |
28900 | Is a_ contraction_ always an_ abbreviation_? |
28900 | Is a_ curse_ just or unjust? |
28900 | Is a_ difficulty_ within one or without? |
28900 | Is a_ foreigner_ by birth necessarily an_ alien_? |
28900 | Is a_ good- natured_ person necessarily_ agreeable_? |
28900 | Is a_ quarrel_ in word or act? |
28900 | Is a_ rare_ word necessarily_ obsolete_ or an_ obsolete_ word necessarily_ rare_? |
28900 | Is an innocent person ever pardoned? |
28900 | Is an object_ hidden_ by intention, or in what other way or ways, if any? |
28900 | Is an_ abbreviation_ always a_ contraction_? |
28900 | Is an_ army_ large or small? |
28900 | Is an_ envious_ spirit ever good? |
28900 | Is an_ extravaganza_ an_ exaggeration_? |
28900 | Is an_ ideal_ primal, or the result of development? |
28900 | Is an_ impediment_ what one finds or what he carries? |
28900 | Is an_ iniquitous_ act necessarily_ criminal_? |
28900 | Is an_ old_ or_ ancient_ word necessarily_ obsolete_? |
28900 | Is interest_ amassed_ or_ accumulated_? |
28900 | Is it a word of broader meaning than_ incident_? |
28900 | Is it attended with distinct thinking and willing? |
28900 | Is it attributed to men or brutes? |
28900 | Is it broader than_ business_? |
28900 | Is it commonly used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it conscious or unconscious? |
28900 | Is it correct to say"He_ gave_ it to me for nothing"? |
28900 | Is it correct to speak of a_ mutual_ friend? |
28900 | Is it correct to use_ hunt_ when_ search_ only is contemplated? |
28900 | Is it distinctively religious? |
28900 | Is it favorable or unfavorable in signification? |
28900 | Is it general or special? |
28900 | Is it good or bad, true or false? |
28900 | Is it in heav''n a crime to love too well? |
28900 | Is it mental or physical? |
28900 | Is it momentary or constant? |
28900 | Is it ordinarily good or evil? |
28900 | Is it physical or moral in its application? |
28900 | Is it possible to_ obliterate_ or_ efface_ that which has been previously_ canceled_ or_ erased_? |
28900 | Is it stronger or weaker than_ abolish_? |
28900 | Is it sudden or lingering? |
28900 | Is it true or false? |
28900 | Is it used in a favorable or an unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it used, in a favorable or an unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it well to speak of a_ supporter_ as a_ backer_? |
28900 | Is it worthy or unworthy? |
28900 | Is its reference to the past or to the future? |
28900 | Is man an_ animal_? |
28900 | Is the difference between them a matter of time? |
28900 | Is the general_ subject_ or_ theme_ properly known as the_ topic_? |
28900 | Is the substance of the_ absorbing_ body changed by that which it_ absorbs_? |
28900 | Is the sufferer considered blameworthy for it? |
28900 | Is the thing one_ obtains_ an object of_ desire_? |
28900 | Is the thing_ acquired_ sought or desired, or not? |
28900 | Is their association temporary or permanent? |
28900 | Is this latter use now common? |
28900 | Is this meaning retained in the figurative uses of the word? |
28900 | Is_ abandon_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ able_ or_ capable_ the higher word? |
28900 | Is_ abolish_ used of persons or material objects? |
28900 | Is_ action_ or_ motion_ the more comprehensive word? |
28900 | Is_ alleviate_ used of persons? |
28900 | Is_ alternative_ always so severely restricted by leading writers? |
28900 | Is_ arbitrary_ ever used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ assistant_ or_ attendant_ the higher word? |
28900 | Is_ avow_ used in a good or a bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ awful_ always interchangeable with_ alarming_ or_ terrible_? |
28900 | Is_ charge_( in this connection) used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ companion_ used in a good or bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ concern_ as strong a term as_ anxiety_? |
28900 | Is_ continue_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | Is_ deception_ ever innocent? |
28900 | Is_ detect_ often used in a favorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ dogma_ used favorably or unfavorably? |
28900 | Is_ embarrass_ or_ mortify_ the stronger word? |
28900 | Is_ esteem_ now used of concrete valuation? |
28900 | Is_ eternal_, in good speech or writing, ever brought down to such inferior use? |
28900 | Is_ extraordinary_ favorable or unfavorable in meaning? |
28900 | Is_ fabrication_ or_ falsehood_ the more odious term? |
28900 | Is_ facility_ active or passive? |
28900 | Is_ faithful_ commonly said of things as well as persons? |
28900 | Is_ freedom_ or_ liberty_ more freely used in a figurative sense? |
28900 | Is_ gift_ used in the good or the bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ harvest_ capable of figurative use, and in what sense? |
28900 | Is_ help_ or_ aid_ the stronger term? |
28900 | Is_ immediately_ losing anything of its force? |
28900 | Is_ innocent_ positive or negative? |
28900 | Is_ inquisitive_ ever used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ irony_ kindly or the reverse? |
28900 | Is_ irresponsible_ good or bad in its implication? |
28900 | Is_ jealous_ capable of being used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ law_ ever a synonym for these words, and in what way? |
28900 | Is_ mistrust_ used of persons or of things? |
28900 | Is_ nature_ a broader word than any of the preceding? |
28900 | Is_ power_ limited to intelligent agents, or how widely applied? |
28900 | Is_ protract_ ordinarily favorable or unfavorable in sense? |
28900 | Is_ remembrance_ voluntary or involuntary? |
28900 | Is_ reproach_ good or bad? |
28900 | Is_ retaliate_ used in the sense of_ avenge_ or of_ revenge_? |
28900 | Is_ ridicule_ or_ derision_ the stronger word? |
28900 | Is_ satisfactory_ a very high recommendation of any work? |
28900 | Is_ self- assertion_ ever a duty? |
28900 | Is_ surplus_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ transpire_ correctly used in the sense of_ happen_? |
28900 | Is_ wile_ used in a good or a bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ win_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Its derived meaning? |
28900 | Its meaning as an adverb of time? |
28900 | Its present meaning? |
28900 | O, to what purpose dost thou---- thy words, That thou return''st no greeting to thy friends? |
28900 | Of what is it ordinarily used? |
28900 | Of what is it used? |
28900 | Of what is it used? |
28900 | Of what is_ bevy_ used? |
28900 | Of what is_ former_ used? |
28900 | Of what is_ pack_ used? |
28900 | Of what kind of demands or impulses is_ appetite_ ordinarily used? |
28900 | Of what kind of value or property must an_ earnest_ consist? |
28900 | Of what material are all these restraining devices commonly composed? |
28900 | Of what matters are_ greedy_ and_ stingy_ used? |
28900 | Of what relations are_ honesty_ and_ probity_ used? |
28900 | Of what relations is_ treachery_ used? |
28900 | Of what things is one_ aware_? |
28900 | Of what words does_ abide_ combine the meanings? |
28900 | Of what words is_ oath_ a popular synonym? |
28900 | Of_ compute_,_ calculate_, and_ estimate_, which is used with especial reference to the future? |
28900 | On how many fields may one_ battle_ be fought? |
28900 | On what are_ prejudice_ and_ prepossession_ based? |
28900 | On what is it founded? |
28900 | On what plane are_ sports_? |
28900 | Prepositions: The business_ of_ a druggist; in business_ with_ his father; doing business_ for_ his father; have you business_ with_ me? |
28900 | Say, shall my little bark attendant sail,---- the triumph and partake the gale? |
28900 | Shall I not take mine---- in mine inn? |
28900 | Shall we, shall---- men, like---- trees, Strike deeper their vile root, and closer cling, Still more enamored of their wretched soil? |
28900 | Should it ever be used as the equivalent of_ language_ or_ diction_? |
28900 | Should we preferably use_ custom_ or_ habit_ of a society? |
28900 | Should we say one is_ stopping_ or_ staying_ at a hotel? |
28900 | Speaking of the honor paid to good men, is it not time to---- for a reform in the writing of biographies? |
28900 | Tell me where is---- bred; Or in the heart or in the head? |
28900 | The present meaning? |
28900 | Then how can any man be said To break an---- he never made? |
28900 | To bear too tender, or too---- a heart, To act a Lover''s or a Roman''s part? |
28900 | To how many dimensions does_ large_ apply? |
28900 | To persons or things, and in what way? |
28900 | To what additional matters does_ admission_ refer? |
28900 | To what are these words in such sense properly applied? |
28900 | To what are these words severally applied? |
28900 | To what are_ assassinate_,_ execute_, and_ murder_ restricted? |
28900 | To what are_ charge_ and_ expense_ ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what are_ explicit_ and_ express_ alike opposed? |
28900 | To what are_ rend_ and_ tear_ usually applied? |
28900 | To what are_ submission_ and_ resignation_ ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what are_ twinkle_ and_ twinkling_ applied? |
28900 | To what being, in that sense, may it be applied? |
28900 | To what beings only does_ sex_ apply? |
28900 | To what class are_ mercy_,_ forgiveness_, and_ pardon_ extended? |
28900 | To what class do most of the words in this group belong? |
28900 | To what class is_ grace_ shown? |
28900 | To what class of animals does_ brood_ apply? |
28900 | To what class of events does it apply? |
28900 | To what class of objects do we apply_ disbelief_? |
28900 | To what class of objects do_ transfer_,_ transmit_, and_ convey_ apply? |
28900 | To what class of objects does_ transport_ refer? |
28900 | To what class of persons is the latter word ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what class of things do we apply_ aboveboard_? |
28900 | To what classes of objects or states of mind do we apply_ calm_? |
28900 | To what classes of persons are_ orders_ especially given? |
28900 | To what classes of things do we apply_ accompaniment_? |
28900 | To what do they apply? |
28900 | To what do_ abundant_,_ ample_,_ liberal_, and_ plentiful_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ adapted_,_ fit_,_ suitable_, and_ qualified_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ alert_,_ wide- awake_, and_ ready_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ bodily_,_ corporal_, and_ corporeal_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ butcher_ and_ slaughter_ primarily apply? |
28900 | To what do_ congenital_,_ innate_, and_ inborn_ apply as distinguished from_ inherent_ and_ intrinsic_? |
28900 | To what do_ decrepit_,_ gray_, and_ hoary_ apply, as said of human beings? |
28900 | To what do_ encourage_ and_ uphold_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ integrity_,_ rectitude_,_ right_,_ righteousness_, and_ virtue_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ labor_ and_ pains_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what do_ redundance_ and_ redundancy_ chiefly refer? |
28900 | To what do_ sequence_ and_ succession_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ shine_ and_ sheen_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ young_ and_ youthful_ distinctively apply? |
28900 | To what does it apply? |
28900 | To what does it apply? |
28900 | To what does_ abuse_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ admittance_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ ally_ generally apply? |
28900 | To what does_ amiable_ always apply? |
28900 | To what does_ amplify_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ antique_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ appoint_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ aspiration_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ carnage_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ civilization_ apply, and what does it denote? |
28900 | To what does_ entrance_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ expediency_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ ferocious_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ financial_ especially apply? |
28900 | To what does_ forgive_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ inconsistent_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ justness_ refer, and in what sense is it used? |
28900 | To what does_ love_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ lovely_ often apply? |
28900 | To what does_ manly_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ manner_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ monetary_ directly refer? |
28900 | To what does_ nimble_ properly refer? |
28900 | To what does_ promote_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ racy_ in the first instance refer? |
28900 | To what does_ regularity_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ senile_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ swift_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ uprightness_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ vacant_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ veracity_ apply? |
28900 | To what faculty of the mind do both of these activities or powers belong? |
28900 | To what is that name more appropriately given? |
28900 | To what is the term_ infection_ applied? |
28900 | To what is the term_ uncertain_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ accomplice_ nearly equivalent? |
28900 | To what is_ actual_ opposed? |
28900 | To what is_ advertise_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ aged_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ caricature_ mostly confined? |
28900 | To what is_ contagion_ now limited by the best medical usage? |
28900 | To what is_ corporal_ now for the most part limited? |
28900 | To what is_ discordant_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ expertness_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ fiction_ now most commonly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ have_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ herd_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ luxuriant_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ male_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ massacre_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ obtrusive_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ train_ commonly applied where_ educate_ could not well be used? |
28900 | To what kind of person is a_ rebuke_ administered? |
28900 | To what kind of person is_ reproof_ administered? |
28900 | To what kind of power does_ actuate_ refer? |
28900 | To what kind of proceedings do_ indict_ and_ arraign_ apply? |
28900 | To what kind of reasoning does_ demonstration_ in the strict sense apply? |
28900 | To what kind of things are both these words applied? |
28900 | To what kind of_ reasoning_ were_ argument_ and_ argumentation_ formerly restricted? |
28900 | To what language do_ farewell_ and_ good- by_ belong etymologically? |
28900 | To what matters do we apply the word_ creed_? |
28900 | To what matters should_ awful_ properly be restricted? |
28900 | To what may a_ brawl_ or_ broil_ be confined? |
28900 | To what may it be applied? |
28900 | To what objects may these words be severally applied? |
28900 | To what objects or classes of objects does_ abandon_ apply? |
28900 | To what order of mind does it belong? |
28900 | To what realm does_ salutary_ belong? |
28900 | To what realm of thought does_ immanent_ belong? |
28900 | To what sort of activity does_ officious_ refer? |
28900 | To what sort of exertion does_ endeavor_ especially apply? |
28900 | To what sort of objects do we apply_ bear_? |
28900 | To what sort of objects do we apply_ behold_,_ discern_,_ distinguish_,_ observe_, and_ see_? |
28900 | To what use is_ congregation_ restricted? |
28900 | To what was_ abomination_ originally applied? |
28900 | To what, therefore, does_ awkward_ primarily refer? |
28900 | To what_ masculine_? |
28900 | To which does_ abuse_ apply? |
28900 | To whom does one_ complain_, in the formal sense of the word? |
28900 | Try what---- can: what can it not? |
28900 | Under what general term are all these included? |
28900 | What added sense is often blended with this primary meaning? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms for_ make_? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms of_ absurd_? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms of_ active_? |
28900 | What are some of the extended uses of_ roll_? |
28900 | What are the animals of a country or region collectively called? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ civil_ person? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ flame_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ group_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of an_ inquisitive_ person? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ affright_,_ fright_, and_ terror_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ command_ and_ commandment_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ wonder_? |
28900 | What are the chief antonyms of_ absolve_? |
28900 | What are the chief distinctions between_ deliberate_? |
28900 | What are the chief meanings of_ faint_? |
28900 | What are the chief synonyms of_ healthy_? |
28900 | What are the differences between_ overthrow_,_ suppress_, and_ subvert_? |
28900 | What are the dimensions of_ infinite_ space? |
28900 | What are the distinctions between_ allegory_,_ fable_, and_ parable_? |
28900 | What are the distinctions between_ irrational_,_ foolish_, and_ silly_? |
28900 | What are the distinctive senses of_ edge_ and_ brink_? |
28900 | What are the distinctive senses of_ employ_ and_ use_? |
28900 | What are the especial characteristics of_ anger_? |
28900 | What are the essentials of an_ army_? |
28900 | What are the prepositions chiefly used with_ make_, and how employed? |
28900 | What are the primary and derived meanings of_ remote_? |
28900 | What are the senses of_ plain_ and_ plane_? |
28900 | What are the shades of difference between_ choose_,_ cull_,_ elect_,_ pick_,_ prefer_, and_ select_? |
28900 | What are the special characteristics of_ insinuation_ and_ innuendo_? |
28900 | What are the special senses of_ dialogue_ and_ colloquy_? |
28900 | What are the special senses of_ differentiate_,_ discriminate_ and_ distinguish_? |
28900 | What are the special significations of_ abate_? |
28900 | What are the two common faults with reference to_ synonymous_ words or_ synonyms_? |
28900 | What are the two contrasted senses of_ anticipate_? |
28900 | What are the_ articles_ of a contract? |
28900 | What are the_ judges_ of the United States Supreme Court officially called? |
28900 | What are their respective rights in case of capture? |
28900 | What are_ bonds_ and of what material composed? |
28900 | What are_ breeding_ and_ nurture_, and how do they differ from each other? |
28900 | What are_ cargo_,_ freight_, and_ lading_? |
28900 | What are_ causality_ and_ causation_? |
28900 | What are_ confidence_ and_ reliance_? |
28900 | What are_ consternation_,_ dismay_, and_ terror_, and how are they related to the danger? |
28900 | What are_ dexterity_ and_ skill_? |
28900 | What are_ douse_ and_ duck_? |
28900 | What are_ fetters_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What are_ frenzy_ and_ mania_? |
28900 | What are_ grudge_,_ resentment_, and_ revenge_, and how do they compare with one another? |
28900 | What are_ manacles_ and_ handcuffs_ designed to fasten or hold? |
28900 | What are_ reputation_ and_ repute_, and in which sense commonly used? |
28900 | What are_ returns_ or_ receipts_? |
28900 | What are_ shackles_ and what are they intended to fasten or hold? |
28900 | What are_ use_ and_ usage_, and how do they differ from each other? |
28900 | What are_ valediction_ and_ valedictory_? |
28900 | What are_ wages_? |
28900 | What can be_ abbreviated_? |
28900 | What change has_ presently_ undergone? |
28900 | What change of meaning has_ apology_ undergone? |
28900 | What class of things do we_ perceive_? |
28900 | What common term includes the other words of the group? |
28900 | What contrasted senses are derived from this primary meaning? |
28900 | What contrasted senses has_ old_? |
28900 | What contrasted uses has_ high_ in the figurative sense? |
28900 | What demands or tendencies are included in_ passion_? |
28900 | What descriptive term would others prefer? |
28900 | What did it originally imply? |
28900 | What did it originally signify? |
28900 | What did the Latin_ impedimenta_ signify? |
28900 | What did_ atonement_ originally denote? |
28900 | What did_ by and by_ formerly signify? |
28900 | What did_ directly_ formerly signify, and what does it now commonly mean? |
28900 | What did_ extemporaneous_ originally mean? |
28900 | What did_ idea_ signify in early philosophical use? |
28900 | What did_ precarious_ originally signify? |
28900 | What did_ vengeance_ formerly mean, and what does it now imply? |
28900 | What difference is noted between_ self- conceit_ and_ conceit_? |
28900 | What difference is there in the use of these words? |
28900 | What difference may be noted between_ avenging_ and_ retribution_? |
28900 | What difference of usage is recognized between the two words? |
28900 | What different sense has it in business usage? |
28900 | What distance is implied in_ near_? |
28900 | What distinction is there between the two words as to the purpose implied? |
28900 | What distinctive name is given to a mass of sand across the mouth of a river or harbor? |
28900 | What do all these include? |
28900 | What do the two latter words suggest, and how do they compare with_ pomp_? |
28900 | What do these two words respectively signify? |
28900 | What do we mean by"a_ distinction_ without a_ difference_"? |
28900 | What do we mean when we say that a person is_ envious_? |
28900 | What do we mean when we say that a person is_ mortified_? |
28900 | What do we suggest when we speak of"_ seeming_ innocence"? |
28900 | What do_ adequate_,_ commensurate_, and_ sufficient_ alike signify? |
28900 | What do_ admittance_ and_ admission_ add to the meaning of_ entrance_? |
28900 | What do_ affright_ and_ fright_ express? |
28900 | What do_ amazement_ and_ astonishment_ agree in expressing? |
28900 | What do_ arbitrate_ and_ mediate_ involve? |
28900 | What do_ argumentation_ and_ debate_ ordinarily imply? |
28900 | What do_ attainment_,_ proficiency_, and_ development_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ behold_ and_ distinguish_ suggest in addition to_ seeing_? |
28900 | What do_ beseech_,_ entreat_, and_ implore_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ burst_ and_ rupture_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ choice_,_ pick_,_ election_, and_ preference_ imply regarding one''s wishes? |
28900 | What do_ close_,_ complete_,_ conclude_, and_ finish_ signify as to expectation or appropriateness? |
28900 | What do_ component_,_ constituent_,_ ingredient_, and_ element_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ division_ and_ fraction_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ drive_ and_ compel_ imply, and how do these two words compare with each other? |
28900 | What do_ emigrate_ and_ immigrate_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ entertainment_ and_ recreation_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ fanaticism_ and_ bigotry_ commonly include? |
28900 | What do_ glimmer_,_ glitter_, and_ shimmer_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ gratification_ and_ satisfaction_ express? |
28900 | What do_ incite_ and_ instigate_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ kin_ and_ kindred_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ lucid_ and_ pellucid_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ need_ and_ want_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ performance_ and_ execution_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ prime_ and_ primary_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ prompt_ and_ stir_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ rebuke_ and_ reproof_ imply on the part of him who administers them? |
28900 | What do_ rectitude_ and_ righteousness_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ scan_,_ inspect_, and_ survey_ respectively express, and how are they distinguished from one another? |
28900 | What do_ support_ and_ sustain_ alike signify? |
28900 | What do_ trusty_ and_ trustworthy_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ urge_ and_ impel_ imply? |
28900 | What does a_ proposition_ set forth? |
28900 | What does an_ affray_ always involve? |
28900 | What does an_ apology_ now always imply? |
28900 | What does an_ offer_ or_ proposal_ do? |
28900 | What does an_ overture_ accomplish? |
28900 | What does it distinctively denote? |
28900 | What does it imply as to the observer''s action? |
28900 | What does it imply of others''probable feeling or action? |
28900 | What does it include? |
28900 | What does it mean? |
28900 | What does it mean? |
28900 | What does it now express? |
28900 | What does it now signify? |
28900 | What does it signify in common use? |
28900 | What does it signify in common use? |
28900 | What does it signify in ordinary use? |
28900 | What does it signify? |
28900 | What does it signify? |
28900 | What does one_ earn_? |
28900 | What does the verb_ speed_ signify? |
28900 | What does the word signify in accepted usage? |
28900 | What does the word_ govern_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ abandon_ commonly denote of previous relationship? |
28900 | What does_ abhor_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ absolute_ in the strict sense denote? |
28900 | What does_ accost_ always signify? |
28900 | What does_ acquaintance_ between persons imply? |
28900 | What does_ advantage_ originally signify? |
28900 | What does_ affirm_ signify in legal use, and how does it differ from_ swear_? |
28900 | What does_ agriculture_ include? |
28900 | What does_ annihilate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ antecedent_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ approval_ add to the meaning of_ praise_? |
28900 | What does_ arrest_ signify in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ assiduity_ signify as indicated by its etymology? |
28900 | What does_ associate_ imply, as used officially? |
28900 | What does_ astute_ imply regarding the ulterior purpose or object of the person who is credited with it? |
28900 | What does_ atom_ etymologically signify? |
28900 | What does_ attain_ add to the meaning of_ arrive_? |
28900 | What does_ attend_ add to the meaning of_ listen_? |
28900 | What does_ augment_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ austere_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ business_ add to the meaning of_ barter_? |
28900 | What does_ clean_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ clear_ originally signify? |
28900 | What does_ coax_ express? |
28900 | What does_ complete_ express? |
28900 | What does_ conceive_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ consciousness_ include? |
28900 | What does_ consent_ involve? |
28900 | What does_ constrain_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ convince_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ courtly_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ culture_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ curious_ signify, and how does it differ from_ inquisitive_? |
28900 | What does_ defend_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ demeanor_ include? |
28900 | What does_ detest_ express? |
28900 | What does_ diligent_ add to the meaning of_ industrious_? |
28900 | What does_ distinct_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ ease_ denote, in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ ease_ imply, and to what may it be limited? |
28900 | What does_ either_ properly denote? |
28900 | What does_ endure_ add to the meaning of_ bear_? |
28900 | What does_ ephemeral_ suggest besides brevity of time? |
28900 | What does_ epithet_ signify in literary use? |
28900 | What does_ ethereal_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ execration_ express? |
28900 | What does_ expiation_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ facility_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ fair_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ fantastic_ add to the meaning of_ fanciful_? |
28900 | What does_ fierce_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ force_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ former_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ friendly_ signify as applied to persons, or as applied to acts? |
28900 | What does_ gain_ add? |
28900 | What does_ garrulous_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ general_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ generous_ tell? |
28900 | What does_ good- natured_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ graceful_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ guard_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ happen_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ hear_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ heed_ further imply? |
28900 | What does_ horizontal_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ hunt_ ordinarily include? |
28900 | What does_ hurry_ suggest in addition to the meaning of_ hasten_? |
28900 | What does_ idle_ in present use properly denote? |
28900 | What does_ ignorant_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ impediment_ primarily signify? |
28900 | What does_ impertinence_ primarily denote? |
28900 | What does_ inbred_ add to the sense of_ innate_ or_ inborn_? |
28900 | What does_ incompatible_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ inert_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ inherent_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ innocent_ in the full sense signify? |
28900 | What does_ instruction_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ keep_ imply when used as a synonym of_ guard_ or_ defend_? |
28900 | What does_ lacerate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ lazy_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ lift_ mean? |
28900 | What does_ listen_ add to the meaning of_ hear_? |
28900 | What does_ literature_, used absolutely, denote? |
28900 | What does_ loathe_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ material_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ matrimony_ specifically denote? |
28900 | What does_ method_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ munificent_ tell of the motive or spirit of the giver? |
28900 | What does_ music_ include? |
28900 | What does_ native_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ natural_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ necessity_ signify in the philosophical sense? |
28900 | What does_ next_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ noisome_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ nurture_ signify, and how does it compare with_ educate_? |
28900 | What does_ obtain_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ old_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ operation_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ ought_ properly signify? |
28900 | What does_ pauperism_ properly signify? |
28900 | What does_ penitence_ add to_ regret_? |
28900 | What does_ petulant_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pleasant_ add to the sense of_ pleasing_? |
28900 | What does_ population_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ possess_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ poverty_ strictly denote? |
28900 | What does_ price_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ primitive_ suggest, as in the expressions, the_ primitive_ church,_ primitive_ simplicity? |
28900 | What does_ privation_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ prompt_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pupil_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pure_ denote in moral and religious use? |
28900 | What does_ pure_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ rebuke_ literally signify? |
28900 | What does_ rip_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ rudeness_ suggest? |
28900 | What does_ savage_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ sensible_ indicate regarding the emotions, that would not be expressed by_ conscious_? |
28900 | What does_ sensitiveness_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ shield_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ skilful_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ speech_ always involve? |
28900 | What does_ stop_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ strive_ suggest? |
28900 | What does_ submerge_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ superciliousness_ imply according to its etymology? |
28900 | What does_ think_ signify in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ tidy_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ time_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ typical_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ use_ often imply as to materials_ used_? |
28900 | What does_ valiant_ tell of results? |
28900 | What does_ venerable_ express? |
28900 | What does_ vindicate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ waste_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ weight_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ win_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ yield_ imply? |
28900 | What element does_ habit_ add to_ custom_ and_ routine_? |
28900 | What element does_ lofty_ add to the meaning of_ high_ or_ tall_? |
28900 | What element is always found in an_ austere_ character? |
28900 | What element is common to the_ cheat_ and the_ impostor_? |
28900 | What element is prominent in this word? |
28900 | What element is prominent in_ intention_? |
28900 | What element or elements does_ watch_ add to the meaning of_ look_? |
28900 | What elements are combined in_ faith_? |
28900 | What elements are present and what lacking in_ awe_? |
28900 | What examples are given in the text of the correct use of these words? |
28900 | What feelings are combined in_ chagrin_? |
28900 | What forms of existence does the word_ creature_ include? |
28900 | What has it now come to signify in common use? |
28900 | What has the effect to make one_ abashed_? |
28900 | What idea does_ physical_ add to that contained in_ material_? |
28900 | What idea of time is implied in_ deliberate_? |
28900 | What ideas are combined in_ heroic_? |
28900 | What illustrations of the differences are given in the text? |
28900 | What illustrations of the uses of these words are given in the text? |
28900 | What implication does it frequently convey? |
28900 | What implication does_ surmise_ ordinarily convey? |
28900 | What implication is conveyed in_ seeming_? |
28900 | What important difference appears in this latter use? |
28900 | What in more strictly scientific use? |
28900 | What in the intellectual and moral sense? |
28900 | What instances can you give of the use of these words, also of_ tolerate_ and_ submit_? |
28900 | What is Paley''s definition of_ instinct_? |
28900 | What is a lawyer''s_ brief_? |
28900 | What is a person said to_ get_? |
28900 | What is a religious_ service_ in the extended sense? |
28900 | What is a verbal_ answer_? |
28900 | What is a_ bar_? |
28900 | What is a_ bargain_ in the strict sense? |
28900 | What is a_ barrier_? |
28900 | What is a_ battle_? |
28900 | What is a_ beach_? |
28900 | What is a_ benefaction_? |
28900 | What is a_ bid_? |
28900 | What is a_ blemish_? |
28900 | What is a_ catastrophe_ or_ cataclysm_? |
28900 | What is a_ code_? |
28900 | What is a_ cognomen_? |
28900 | What is a_ colloquialism_? |
28900 | What is a_ community_? |
28900 | What is a_ conclave_? |
28900 | What is a_ condition_? |
28900 | What is a_ conflagration_? |
28900 | What is a_ contingency_? |
28900 | What is a_ coterie_? |
28900 | What is a_ defect_? |
28900 | What is a_ design_? |
28900 | What is a_ dialect_? |
28900 | What is a_ dictum_? |
28900 | What is a_ doctrine_? |
28900 | What is a_ drove_? |
28900 | What is a_ fastness_ or_ stronghold_? |
28900 | What is a_ fee_, and for what given? |
28900 | What is a_ feud_? |
28900 | What is a_ fiction_ in the most common modern meaning of the word? |
28900 | What is a_ flare_? |
28900 | What is a_ fluid_? |
28900 | What is a_ fort_? |
28900 | What is a_ fragment_? |
28900 | What is a_ franchise_? |
28900 | What is a_ fraud_? |
28900 | What is a_ fraud_? |
28900 | What is a_ gift_? |
28900 | What is a_ grant_, and by whom made? |
28900 | What is a_ gratuity_, and to whom given? |
28900 | What is a_ group_, and of what class of objects may it be composed? |
28900 | What is a_ guess_? |
28900 | What is a_ heretic_? |
28900 | What is a_ hindrance_? |
28900 | What is a_ hunt_? |
28900 | What is a_ hypothesis_? |
28900 | What is a_ judge_ in the legal sense? |
28900 | What is a_ liquid_? |
28900 | What is a_ machine_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is a_ mandate_? |
28900 | What is a_ mechanism_? |
28900 | What is a_ model_? |
28900 | What is a_ molecule_, and of what is it regarded as composed? |
28900 | What is a_ name_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is a_ part_? |
28900 | What is a_ particle_? |
28900 | What is a_ patois_? |
28900 | What is a_ pause_? |
28900 | What is a_ people_? |
28900 | What is a_ permit_? |
28900 | What is a_ portion_? |
28900 | What is a_ precedent_? |
28900 | What is a_ precept_? |
28900 | What is a_ present_, and to whom given? |
28900 | What is a_ presumption_? |
28900 | What is a_ pretense_? |
28900 | What is a_ privilege_? |
28900 | What is a_ referee_, and how appointed? |
28900 | What is a_ reply_? |
28900 | What is a_ requital_? |
28900 | What is a_ retort_? |
28900 | What is a_ right_? |
28900 | What is a_ rite_? |
28900 | What is a_ ruse_? |
28900 | What is a_ sacrament_? |
28900 | What is a_ sample_? |
28900 | What is a_ sensation_? |
28900 | What is a_ sense_? |
28900 | What is a_ sententious_ style? |
28900 | What is a_ share_? |
28900 | What is a_ similitude_? |
28900 | What is a_ sketch_? |
28900 | What is a_ state_? |
28900 | What is a_ story_? |
28900 | What is a_ story_? |
28900 | What is a_ struggle_? |
28900 | What is a_ subdivision_? |
28900 | What is a_ system_? |
28900 | What is a_ tempest_? |
28900 | What is a_ term_ in the logical sense? |
28900 | What is a_ terminus_? |
28900 | What is a_ theory_? |
28900 | What is a_ token_? |
28900 | What is a_ tool_? |
28900 | What is a_ transaction_? |
28900 | What is a_ trip_? |
28900 | What is a_ utensil_? |
28900 | What is a_ vernacular_? |
28900 | What is a_ verse_ in the strict sense? |
28900 | What is a_ vocation_? |
28900 | What is a_ vow_? |
28900 | What is a_ vulgarism_? |
28900 | What is an emotional or personal_ fancy_? |
28900 | What is an intellectual_ fancy_? |
28900 | What is an_ ache_? |
28900 | What is an_ adherent_? |
28900 | What is an_ adjuration_? |
28900 | What is an_ aim_? |
28900 | What is an_ alliance_? |
28900 | What is an_ allowance_? |
28900 | What is an_ anathema_? |
28900 | What is an_ anecdote_? |
28900 | What is an_ animal_? |
28900 | What is an_ antagonist_? |
28900 | What is an_ apothegm_? |
28900 | What is an_ apparatus_? |
28900 | What is an_ appliance_? |
28900 | What is an_ approximation_ in the mathematical sense? |
28900 | What is an_ archetype_? |
28900 | What is an_ art_ in the industrial sense? |
28900 | What is an_ artifice_? |
28900 | What is an_ artificer_? |
28900 | What is an_ artist_? |
28900 | What is an_ attribute_? |
28900 | What is an_ economy_? |
28900 | What is an_ effort_? |
28900 | What is an_ element_ in chemistry? |
28900 | What is an_ emissary_? |
28900 | What is an_ encumbrance_? |
28900 | What is an_ endeavor_, and how is it distinguished from_ effort_? |
28900 | What is an_ enemy_? |
28900 | What is an_ episode_? |
28900 | What is an_ essay_, and for what purpose is it made? |
28900 | What is an_ essential_? |
28900 | What is an_ exemplification_? |
28900 | What is an_ ideal_? |
28900 | What is an_ implement_? |
28900 | What is an_ intimation_? |
28900 | What is an_ oath_? |
28900 | What is an_ obiter dictum_? |
28900 | What is an_ observance_? |
28900 | What is an_ opinion_? |
28900 | What is an_ origin_? |
28900 | What is an_ original_? |
28900 | What is an_ outline_ in written composition? |
28900 | What is an_ outline_ of a sermon technically called? |
28900 | What is commonly implied in the use of_ preternatural_? |
28900 | What is especially denoted by_ fearless_ and_ intrepid_? |
28900 | What is especially implied in_ impart_? |
28900 | What is especially implied in_ secure_? |
28900 | What is imperatively required beyond_ verse_,_ rime_, or_ meter_ to constitute_ poetry_? |
28900 | What is implied by_ passions_ and_ appetites_ when used as contrasted terms? |
28900 | What is implied if we speak of any particular man as an_ animal_? |
28900 | What is implied in the use of the word_ severity_? |
28900 | What is implied in_ mourning_, in its most common acceptation? |
28900 | What is implied in_ profession_? |
28900 | What is implied in_ undertake_? |
28900 | What is implied when we speak of_ apparent_ kindness or_ apparent_ neglect? |
28900 | What is implied when we speak of_ granting_ a favor? |
28900 | What is it to_ accelerate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ affront_? |
28900 | What is it to_ allure_? |
28900 | What is it to_ amass_? |
28900 | What is it to_ amend_? |
28900 | What is it to_ announce_? |
28900 | What is it to_ apostrophize_? |
28900 | What is it to_ appropriate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ arrive_? |
28900 | What is it to_ asperse_? |
28900 | What is it to_ attempt_? |
28900 | What is it to_ avenge_? |
28900 | What is it to_ browbeat_ or_ cow_? |
28900 | What is it to_ cajole_? |
28900 | What is it to_ censure_? |
28900 | What is it to_ certify_? |
28900 | What is it to_ compel_? |
28900 | What is it to_ cover_? |
28900 | What is it to_ demonstrate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ despatch_? |
28900 | What is it to_ discard_? |
28900 | What is it to_ discipline_? |
28900 | What is it to_ encounter_? |
28900 | What is it to_ end_, and what reference does_ end_ have to intention or expectation? |
28900 | What is it to_ entertain_ mentally? |
28900 | What is it to_ excite_? |
28900 | What is it to_ extenuate_, and how does that word compare with_ palliate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ follow_? |
28900 | What is it to_ gaze_? |
28900 | What is it to_ hinder_? |
28900 | What is it to_ influence_? |
28900 | What is it to_ intermeddle_? |
28900 | What is it to_ interpose_? |
28900 | What is it to_ kill_? |
28900 | What is it to_ maintain_? |
28900 | What is it to_ manage_? |
28900 | What is it to_ obstruct_? |
28900 | What is it to_ paraphrase_? |
28900 | What is it to_ pardon_? |
28900 | What is it to_ persuade_? |
28900 | What is it to_ plead_ in the ordinary sense? |
28900 | What is it to_ pray_ in the religious sense? |
28900 | What is it to_ prohibit_? |
28900 | What is it to_ promote_? |
28900 | What is it to_ prop_? |
28900 | What is it to_ protract_? |
28900 | What is it to_ reach_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is it to_ reason_ about a matter? |
28900 | What is it to_ recreate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ remit_? |
28900 | What is it to_ reproach_? |
28900 | What is it to_ restrain_? |
28900 | What is it to_ scare_ or_ terrify_? |
28900 | What is it to_ slander_? |
28900 | What is it to_ slay_? |
28900 | What is it to_ suppose_? |
28900 | What is it to_ teach_? |
28900 | What is it to_ train_? |
28900 | What is its application? |
28900 | What is its chief present use? |
28900 | What is its common acceptation? |
28900 | What is its distinctive meaning? |
28900 | What is its distinctive sense? |
28900 | What is its meaning in popular use as said of persons? |
28900 | What is its meaning in present scientific use? |
28900 | What is its more appropriate sense? |
28900 | What is its original meaning? |
28900 | What is its present meaning? |
28900 | What is its present popular use, and with what words is it now synonymous? |
28900 | What is its present theological and popular sense? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its special sense when used with reference to sins? |
28900 | What is its use in scientific investigation and study? |
28900 | What is meant by saying that a word is_ rare_? |
28900 | What is meant by saying that an author has a_ subjective_ or an_ objective_ style? |
28900 | What is meant by_ hostilities_ between nations? |
28900 | What is meant by_ synonymous_ words? |
28900 | What is necessary to constitute an object or a person_ beautiful_? |
28900 | What is now its prevalent and controlling meaning? |
28900 | What is religion? |
28900 | What is that which the breeze on the---- steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses? |
28900 | What is the added significance of_ barbaric_? |
28900 | What is the central distinction between_ antecedent_ and_ cause_? |
28900 | What is the chief use? |
28900 | What is the conduct specially characteristic of a_ meddlesome_ person? |
28900 | What is the correct term in legal phrase? |
28900 | What is the definition of_ law_ in its ideal? |
28900 | What is the definition of_ prudence_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and distinctive meaning of_ alarm_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and distinctive sense of_ property_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ concise_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ fugitive_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ succinct_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and original meaning of_ awkward_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and primary meaning of_ expediency_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and primary meaning of_ symbol_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and signification of_ aboriginal_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the distinctive meaning of_ abjure_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the inherent meaning of_ quality_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the original signification of_ equivocal_? |
28900 | What is the derivation of_ language_? |
28900 | What is the derivation of_ transient_ and_ transitory_? |
28900 | What is the derivation, and what is the original meaning of_ exterminate_? |
28900 | What is the design of an_ imposture_? |
28900 | What is the difference between a_ female_ voice and a_ feminine_ voice? |
28900 | What is the difference between an_ empty_ house and a_ vacant_ house? |
28900 | What is the difference between the statement that a man_ has_ reason, and the statement that he_ is in possession_ of his reason? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ absorb_ and_ emit_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ abstract_ and_ separate_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ absurd_ and_ paradoxical_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ accident_ and_ chance_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ adjacent_ and_ adjoining_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ allow_ and_ permit_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ amateur_ and_ connoisseur_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ amend_ and_ emend_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ arms_ and_ armor_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ assemblage_ and_ assembly_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ choice_ and_ alternative_ in the strict use of language? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ envious_ and_ jealous_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ esteem_ and_ estimate_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ expression_ and_ look_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ listen for_ and_ listen to_? |
28900 | What is the difference in dignity between the two words? |
28900 | What is the difference in mental action between_ hesitate_ and_ waver_? |
28900 | What is the difference in method involved in the verbs_ cancel_,_ efface_,_ erase_,_ expunge_, and_ obliterate_? |
28900 | What is the difference in use between_ innate_ and_ inborn_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between the two? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ allay_ and_ alleviate_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ bring_ and_ carry_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ change_ and_ exchange_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ eager_ and_ earnest_ in the nature of the feeling implied? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ look_ and_ see_? |
28900 | What is the distinction often made between_ equal_ and_ equivalent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ barter_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ betide_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ call_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ caricature_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ citadel_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ criminal_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ danger_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ design_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ detect_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ edge_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ education_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ evanescent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ extremity_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ hallucination_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ magnanimous_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ migrate_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ superstition_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ temporary_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ wo nt_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ allude_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ attitude_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ aver_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ bind_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ convey_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ divert_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ emulation_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ irony_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ munificent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ noxious_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ pack_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ pose_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ strand_? |
28900 | What is the duration of_ infinite_ time? |
28900 | What is the especial element common to the_ ludicrous_, the_ ridiculous_, and the_ nonsensical_? |
28900 | What is the especial implication in_ unreasonable_? |
28900 | What is the especial significance of_ coerce_? |
28900 | What is the essential difference between_ decay_ and_ decompose_? |
28900 | What is the essential difference between_ illusion_ and_ delusion_? |
28900 | What is the essential fact underlying the visible phenomena which we call_ fire_? |
28900 | What is the essential idea of_ make_? |
28900 | What is the essential idea of_ revolution_? |
28900 | What is the essential meaning of_ conversation_? |
28900 | What is the essential meaning of_ storm_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ example_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ horror_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ perverse_? |
28900 | What is the figurative use of_ entrance_? |
28900 | What is the force and use of_ bear_ in this connection? |
28900 | What is the force of_ expostulate_ and_ remonstrate_? |
28900 | What is the force of_ summary_? |
28900 | What is the force of_ tho_ and_ altho_? |
28900 | What is the full meaning of_ educate_? |
28900 | What is the general meaning of_ conflict_? |
28900 | What is the general meaning of_ keep_? |
28900 | What is the general sense of_ abode_,_ dwelling_, and_ habitation_? |
28900 | What is the generic term of this group? |
28900 | What is the implication if we say one is_ industrious_ just now? |
28900 | What is the import of_ honor_? |
28900 | What is the legal distinction between_ abettor_ and_ accessory_? |
28900 | What is the legal phrase for a punishable_ omission_ of duty? |
28900 | What is the limit upon the meaning of this word? |
28900 | What is the literal meaning of_ obstruct_? |
28900 | What is the literal meaning of_ term_? |
28900 | What is the meaning and common use of_ passage_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ awe_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ barbarian_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ bear_ as applied to care, pain, grief, and the like? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ becoming_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ clever_ as used in England? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ comity_ and_ amity_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ common_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ eccentric_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ empty_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ enigmatical_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ essential_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ eternal_ in the fullest sense? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ execute_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ exercise_ apart from all qualifying words? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fanciful_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fit_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fluctuate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ formidable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ happy_ in its most frequent present use? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ hazard_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ healthy_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ honest_ in ordinary use? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ honorable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ illiterate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ incommensurable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ law_ in such an expression as"the_ laws_ of nature?" |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ minute_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ neat_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ new_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ novel_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ obdurate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ obviate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ odd_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ outlay_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ pastoral_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ proceeds_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ refractory_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ retard_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ sacred_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ short_ or_ brief_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ sojourn_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ subjective_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ superhuman_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ supervene_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ surly_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ termination_, and of what is it chiefly used? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ tip_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ unique_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ value_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ wedding_? |
28900 | What is the more exact term for the proper course regarding evil indulgences? |
28900 | What is the most comprehensive word of this group? |
28900 | What is the most general word of this group? |
28900 | What is the motive of_ economy_? |
28900 | What is the motive of_ parsimony_? |
28900 | What is the objection to the latter use? |
28900 | What is the one great distinction between them? |
28900 | What is the original distinction between_ benevolence_ and_ beneficence_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ happy_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ harvest_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ impromptu_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ pilgrimage_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ prevent_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ supernatural_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ absolve_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ boundary_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ piety_? |
28900 | What is the popular sense of_ umpire_? |
28900 | What is the present meaning of_ reign_? |
28900 | What is the present restriction upon the use of these words in England? |
28900 | What is the present use of_ arbiter_? |
28900 | What is the prevalent usage in the United States? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ cultivation_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ generous_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ give_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ immediately_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ iniquitous_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ occurrence_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ peculiar_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ queer_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ radical_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ rare_? |
28900 | What is the primary sense of_ scholar_? |
28900 | What is the prominent idea in_ virtue_? |
28900 | What is the proof of an_ induction_? |
28900 | What is the relative force of_ affirm_ and_ assert_? |
28900 | What is the secondary meaning of_ alert_? |
28900 | What is the sense and use of_ largess_? |
28900 | What is the sense of each when so used? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ analogous_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ bearing_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ brook_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ glare_ and_ glow_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ mannish_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ obvious_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ palpable_ and_ tangible_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ assert_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ defer_ and_ delay_, and how do these words differ in usage from_ protract_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ dispense_ in the transitive use? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ peer_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ quaint_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ quaint_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ spruce_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ void_ and_ devoid_? |
28900 | What is the signification of_ however_ as a conjunction? |
28900 | What is the special application of_ verbose_? |
28900 | What is the special characteristic of_ acumen_? |
28900 | What is the special characteristic of_ prudence_ and_ providence_? |
28900 | What is the special difference between_ care_ and_ anxiety_? |
28900 | What is the special difference between_ parody_ and_ travesty_? |
28900 | What is the special difference of meaning between the two words? |
28900 | What is the special force of_ limpid_? |
28900 | What is the special force of_ olden_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ accessible_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ harvest- home_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ tie_? |
28900 | What is the special quality of a_ response_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ adventurous_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ afford_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ boon_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ carriage_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ implore_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ manifest_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ motion_ in a deliberative assembly? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ apportion_ by which it is distinguished from_ allot_,_ assign_,_ distribute_, or_ divide_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ blab_ and_ blurt_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ caustic_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ congé_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ fortune_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ non- homogeneous_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ sway_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ tall_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ analogy_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ dementia_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ murder_? |
28900 | What is the true meaning of_ verbiage_? |
28900 | What is the use of_ boundless_,_ illimitable_,_ limitless_,_ measureless_, and_ unlimited_? |
28900 | What is the_ cost_ of an article? |
28900 | What is the_ end_? |
28900 | What is the_ soul_? |
28900 | What is the_ standard_? |
28900 | What is thy---- compared with an Alexander''s, a Mahomet''s, a Napoleon''s? |
28900 | What is to be said of the controversy regarding the formation and use of the word_ reliable_? |
28900 | What is to be said of the use of_ smart_ and_ sharp_? |
28900 | What is to_ confer_? |
28900 | What is to_ grant_? |
28900 | What is to_ hold_? |
28900 | What is----? |
28900 | What is_ aberration_? |
28900 | What is_ absolute_ in the fullest sense? |
28900 | What is_ acclamation_? |
28900 | What is_ acquittal_? |
28900 | What is_ address_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ advance_? |
28900 | What is_ affection_? |
28900 | What is_ affinity_? |
28900 | What is_ affinity_? |
28900 | What is_ agony_? |
28900 | What is_ air_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ample_? |
28900 | What is_ anarchy_? |
28900 | What is_ animadversion_? |
28900 | What is_ anxiety_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What is_ apathy_? |
28900 | What is_ applause_? |
28900 | What is_ assurance_ in the bad sense? |
28900 | What is_ assurance_ in the good sense? |
28900 | What is_ attachment_? |
28900 | What is_ audacity_? |
28900 | What is_ authority_? |
28900 | What is_ bail_? |
28900 | What is_ banter_? |
28900 | What is_ barter_? |
28900 | What is_ bashfulness_? |
28900 | What is_ belief_? |
28900 | What is_ bitterness_? |
28900 | What is_ boldness_? |
28900 | What is_ bullion_? |
28900 | What is_ ca nt_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ca nt_? |
28900 | What is_ calamity_? |
28900 | What is_ capacity_, and how related to_ power_ and to_ ability_? |
28900 | What is_ change_ or_ exchange_? |
28900 | What is_ chat_? |
28900 | What is_ circumspection_? |
28900 | What is_ clemency_? |
28900 | What is_ combustion_? |
28900 | What is_ communism_? |
28900 | What is_ competency_? |
28900 | What is_ compunction_? |
28900 | What is_ conformity_? |
28900 | What is_ consistency_? |
28900 | What is_ constancy_? |
28900 | What is_ conviction_? |
28900 | What is_ cost_? |
28900 | What is_ credulity_? |
28900 | What is_ crime_? |
28900 | What is_ custom_? |
28900 | What is_ deduction_? |
28900 | What is_ delight_? |
28900 | What is_ derangement_? |
28900 | What is_ design_? |
28900 | What is_ discipline_? |
28900 | What is_ dishonesty_? |
28900 | What is_ dismay_? |
28900 | What is_ dread_ and by what aroused? |
28900 | What is_ drill_? |
28900 | What is_ ease_? |
28900 | What is_ economy_? |
28900 | What is_ efficacy_? |
28900 | What is_ egoism_ and how does it differ from_ egotism_? |
28900 | What is_ endurance_? |
28900 | What is_ enmity_? |
28900 | What is_ euphony_? |
28900 | What is_ evidence_? |
28900 | What is_ evil_, and with what frequent suggestion? |
28900 | What is_ excess_? |
28900 | What is_ exorbitance_? |
28900 | What is_ experience_, and how does it differ from_ intuition_? |
28900 | What is_ extravagance_? |
28900 | What is_ fame_? |
28900 | What is_ fanaticism_? |
28900 | What is_ fancy_ as a faculty of the mind? |
28900 | What is_ fantasy_ in ordinary usage? |
28900 | What is_ fantasy_ or_ phantasy_? |
28900 | What is_ fashion_? |
28900 | What is_ fatuity_? |
28900 | What is_ fear_? |
28900 | What is_ felonious_? |
28900 | What is_ flattery_? |
28900 | What is_ forbearance_? |
28900 | What is_ foreknowledge_? |
28900 | What is_ fortitude_? |
28900 | What is_ freedom_? |
28900 | What is_ friendship_? |
28900 | What is_ frugality_? |
28900 | What is_ gain_? |
28900 | What is_ gardening_? |
28900 | What is_ gender_? |
28900 | What is_ genius_? |
28900 | What is_ gleam_? |
28900 | What is_ gratification_? |
28900 | What is_ grief_? |
28900 | What is_ happiness_? |
28900 | What is_ harm_? |
28900 | What is_ harmony_? |
28900 | What is_ harmony_? |
28900 | What is_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | What is_ hire_? |
28900 | What is_ history_? |
28900 | What is_ honest_ in the highest and fullest sense? |
28900 | What is_ honor_? |
28900 | What is_ hostility_? |
28900 | What is_ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | What is_ idiocy_? |
28900 | What is_ illumination_? |
28900 | What is_ imbecility_? |
28900 | What is_ impudence_? |
28900 | What is_ impudence_? |
28900 | What is_ indigence_? |
28900 | What is_ industry_? |
28900 | What is_ ingrained_? |
28900 | What is_ iniquity_ in the legal sense? |
28900 | What is_ injustice_? |
28900 | What is_ insanity_ in the widest sense? |
28900 | What is_ intolerance_? |
28900 | What is_ intuition_? |
28900 | What is_ justice_ in governmental relations? |
28900 | What is_ knowledge_? |
28900 | What is_ learning_? |
28900 | What is_ liberty_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What is_ license_? |
28900 | What is_ license_? |
28900 | What is_ light_? |
28900 | What is_ literature_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is_ madness_? |
28900 | What is_ malice_? |
28900 | What is_ manner_? |
28900 | What is_ massacre_? |
28900 | What is_ memory_ in the special and in the general sense? |
28900 | What is_ mercy_ in the strictest sense? |
28900 | What is_ mind_? |
28900 | What is_ mischief_? |
28900 | What is_ miserliness_? |
28900 | What is_ misfortune_? |
28900 | What is_ modesty_ in the general sense? |
28900 | What is_ money_? |
28900 | What is_ monomania_? |
28900 | What is_ morality_? |
28900 | What is_ motion_? |
28900 | What is_ necessity_? |
28900 | What is_ neglect_? |
28900 | What is_ notoriety_? |
28900 | What is_ oblivion_? |
28900 | What is_ obscure_? |
28900 | What is_ occupation_? |
28900 | What is_ officiousness_? |
28900 | What is_ order_, in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ostentation_? |
28900 | What is_ pain_? |
28900 | What is_ panic_? |
28900 | What is_ parity_ of_ reasoning_? |
28900 | What is_ parsimony_? |
28900 | What is_ patience_? |
28900 | What is_ pay_? |
28900 | What is_ perception_? |
28900 | What is_ perfect_ in the fullest and highest sense? |
28900 | What is_ perfect_ in the limited sense, and in popular language? |
28900 | What is_ permanent_, and in what connections used? |
28900 | What is_ permission_? |
28900 | What is_ perplexity_? |
28900 | What is_ persistence_? |
28900 | What is_ perspicacity_? |
28900 | What is_ pietism_? |
28900 | What is_ pity_? |
28900 | What is_ plain_? |
28900 | What is_ poetry_? |
28900 | What is_ pomp_? |
28900 | What is_ power_? |
28900 | What is_ practise_? |
28900 | What is_ practise_? |
28900 | What is_ praise_? |
28900 | What is_ predestination_? |
28900 | What is_ pride_? |
28900 | What is_ pristine_? |
28900 | What is_ produce_? |
28900 | What is_ profit_ in the commercial sense? |
28900 | What is_ progress_? |
28900 | What is_ purity_? |
28900 | What is_ recollection_, and what does it involve? |
28900 | What is_ recreation_, and how is it related to_ rest_? |
28900 | What is_ refinement_? |
28900 | What is_ regret_? |
28900 | What is_ religion_? |
28900 | What is_ remembrance_, and how distinguished from_ memory_? |
28900 | What is_ reminiscence_? |
28900 | What is_ remorse_, and how does it compare with_ repentance_? |
28900 | What is_ repose_ in the primary, and what in the derived, sense? |
28900 | What is_ repugnance_? |
28900 | What is_ revenge_? |
28900 | What is_ sagacity_? |
28900 | What is_ scintillation_? |
28900 | What is_ self- assertion_? |
28900 | What is_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | What is_ self- esteem_? |
28900 | What is_ sensibility_ in the philosophical sense? |
28900 | What is_ severe_? |
28900 | What is_ sex_? |
28900 | What is_ shrewdness_? |
28900 | What is_ sin_? |
28900 | What is_ slang_ in the primary and ordinary sense? |
28900 | What is_ socialism_? |
28900 | What is_ spite_? |
28900 | What is_ style_ considered as a synonym of_ name_? |
28900 | What is_ style_? |
28900 | What is_ susceptibility_? |
28900 | What is_ tact_? |
28900 | What is_ talent_? |
28900 | What is_ temperance_ regarding things lawful and worthy? |
28900 | What is_ testimony_? |
28900 | What is_ thought_? |
28900 | What is_ timidity_? |
28900 | What is_ towering_ in the literal, and in the figurative sense? |
28900 | What is_ trade_ in the broad and in the limited sense? |
28900 | What is_ travel_? |
28900 | What is_ triumph_? |
28900 | What is_ trust_? |
28900 | What is_ unanimity_? |
28900 | What is_ uncongeniality_? |
28900 | What is_ union_? |
28900 | What is_ unison_? |
28900 | What is_ unity_? |
28900 | What is_ utility_? |
28900 | What is_ vanity_? |
28900 | What is_ virtuousness_? |
28900 | What is_ work_? |
28900 | What is_ worry_? |
28900 | What is_ worship_? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ enough_, and what does it mean? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ high_? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ surveillance_, and what does it imply? |
28900 | What kind of a word is_ attain_, and to what does it point? |
28900 | What kind of a word is_ turn_, and what is its meaning? |
28900 | What kind of possibility does_ anxiety_ always suggest? |
28900 | What kind of_ asking_ is implied in_ demand_? |
28900 | What kind of_ excess_ do_ overplus_ and_ superabundance_ denote? |
28900 | What kinds of force or power do we indicate by_ convey_,_ lift_,_ transmit_, and_ transport_? |
28900 | What limit of time is expressed by_ abide_? |
28900 | What matters are purely_ objective_? |
28900 | What matters are purely_ subjective_? |
28900 | What may be given as a brief definition of_ love_? |
28900 | What meaning does_ event_ often have when applied to the future? |
28900 | What meaning has_ skepticism_ as applied to religious matters? |
28900 | What meaning may_ reliable_ convey that_ trusty_ and_ trustworthy_ would not? |
28900 | What more is found in one who is_ polite_? |
28900 | What must a_ definition_ include, and what must it exclude? |
28900 | What must a_ description_ include? |
28900 | What name is now preferably given to the so- called_ Reproductive Imagination_ by President Porter and others? |
28900 | What of the numbers affected by it? |
28900 | What of_ humanity_? |
28900 | What other senses has the word_ judge_ in common use? |
28900 | What other words of this class are especially referred to? |
28900 | What other words of this group are preferable to_ clever_ in many of its uses? |
28900 | What part of speech is an_ epithet_? |
28900 | What process is ordinarily followed in what is known as scientific_ induction_? |
28900 | What qualities are included in_ address_? |
28900 | What reference is implied in_ extremity_? |
28900 | What secondary meaning has_ administer_? |
28900 | What secondary sense has_ instruct_? |
28900 | What senses has_ negligence_ that_ neglect_ has not? |
28900 | What shades of difference may be pointed out between the four words_ actual_,_ real_,_ developed_, and_ positive_? |
28900 | What single definition would answer for either? |
28900 | What sort of a_ copy_ is a_ transcript_? |
28900 | What sort of things_ decay_? |
28900 | What special element does_ effrontery_ add to the meaning of_ audacity_ and_ hardihood_? |
28900 | What special element is commonly implied in_ savage_? |
28900 | What special element is involved in the meaning of_ attack_? |
28900 | What special element is involved in_ foretaste_? |
28900 | What special sense does this word always retain? |
28900 | What special sense has_ dip_ which the other words do not share? |
28900 | What special sense has_ primary_ as in reference to a school? |
28900 | What special_ tools_ are ordinarily called_ instruments_? |
28900 | What specially distinctive sense has_ finish_? |
28900 | What specific meaning has the word in modern travel? |
28900 | What substance is at once a_ liquid_ and a_ fluid_ at the ordinary temperature and pressure? |
28900 | What suggestion is often involved in_ attribute_? |
28900 | What synonymous word is always used in the evil sense? |
28900 | What term do many of its advocates prefer? |
28900 | What term is preferable to_ love_ as applying to articles of food and the like? |
28900 | What term would be applied to a_ multitude_ of armed men without order or organization? |
28900 | What terms are applied to an account extended to_ minute_ particulars? |
28900 | What terms do we use for doing away with_ laws_, and how do those terms differ among themselves? |
28900 | What then? |
28900 | What two chief senses has_ affliction_? |
28900 | What two contradictory meanings does_ example_ derive from this primary sense? |
28900 | What two contrasted senses arise from the root meaning of_ apparent_? |
28900 | What two contrasted senses has_ lawfulness_? |
28900 | What two senses has_ ambition_? |
28900 | What two senses has_ marriage_? |
28900 | What two senses of_ art_ must be discriminated from each other? |
28900 | What very different word is sometimes confounded with_ venial_? |
28900 | What was its original signification? |
28900 | What was the early New England usage? |
28900 | What was the early and general meaning of_ sick_ and_ sickness_ in English? |
28900 | What was the early and what is the present sense of_ piteous_? |
28900 | What was the former meaning of_ voyage_? |
28900 | What was the original meaning of_ pitiful_? |
28900 | What was the original sense of_ charity_? |
28900 | What when used in popular language? |
28900 | What word do we especially use of putting an end to a nuisance? |
28900 | What word is now commonly used in that sense? |
28900 | What words are commonly used for_ benevolence_ in the original sense? |
28900 | What words are preferred in such connection? |
28900 | What words are there commonly substituted? |
28900 | What words are used as synonyms of_ excess_ in the moral sense? |
28900 | What words do we apply to the_ unyielding_ character or conduct that we approve? |
28900 | What words may we use to express a condensed view of a subject, whether derived from a previous publication or not? |
28900 | What words now seem more emphatic? |
28900 | What words of this group are distinctly hostile? |
28900 | What words of this group are used in a bad sense? |
28900 | What( in the strict sense) is an_ avocation_? |
28900 | What, in that sense, is ordinarily preferred? |
28900 | What, in the full sense, is_ integrity_? |
28900 | When are substances_ heterogeneous_ as regards each other? |
28900 | When are things said to be_ incompatible_? |
28900 | When are things said to be_ incongruous_? |
28900 | When is a body said to_ roll_? |
28900 | When is a fluid said to be_ absorbed_? |
28900 | When is a mixture, as cement, said to be_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | When is a steam- boiler said to be_ ruptured_? |
28900 | When is a thing called_ strange_? |
28900 | When is a thing properly said to be_ necessary_? |
28900 | When is a thing said to be_ comminuted_? |
28900 | When is a word_ archaic_? |
28900 | When is a word_ obsolete_? |
28900 | When is anything properly said to be_ spontaneous_? |
28900 | When is anything said to be_ covered_? |
28900 | When is it equivalent to_ libel_? |
28900 | When is_ defame_ equivalent to_ slander_? |
28900 | When may an event be properly said to_ transpire_? |
28900 | When may_ unity_ be predicated of that which is made up of parts? |
28900 | When the Siberian Pacific Railway is finished, what is there to---- Russia from annexing nearly the whole of China? |
28900 | Where is that chastity of---- that felt a stain like a wound? |
28900 | Wherein does_ care_ differ from_ caution_? |
28900 | Which admits of freedom or idealization? |
28900 | Which are indifferently either good or bad? |
28900 | Which can and which can not be communicated? |
28900 | Which distinctly imply that what is added is like that to which it is added? |
28900 | Which finds outward expression, and which is limited to the mental act? |
28900 | Which implies the seconding of another''s exertions? |
28900 | Which includes the other? |
28900 | Which involves a sense of having done wrong? |
28900 | Which is applied to the Divine Being? |
28900 | Which is commonly applied to the inferior animals and to inanimate things? |
28900 | Which is commonly used in reference to the mind? |
28900 | Which is now the more common? |
28900 | Which is positive? |
28900 | Which is the greater and more important? |
28900 | Which is the higher quality? |
28900 | Which is the higher word? |
28900 | Which is the inferior word in such use? |
28900 | Which is the more comprehensive word,_ diction_,_ language_, or_ phraseology_? |
28900 | Which is the more comprehensive? |
28900 | Which is the more dependent upon training? |
28900 | Which is the more exact, a_ definition_ or a_ description_? |
28900 | Which is the more inclusive word? |
28900 | Which is the more mechanical? |
28900 | Which is the most emphatic word of the group and what does it signify? |
28900 | Which is the most general term of this group, and what does it signify? |
28900 | Which is the most general word of this group? |
28900 | Which is the predominant sense of the latter words? |
28900 | Which is the preferred legal term? |
28900 | Which is the primary and which the secondary word,_ allege_ or_ adduce_? |
28900 | Which is the stronger term? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word,_ abhor_ or_ despise_? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word? |
28900 | Which is used in excitement or emergency? |
28900 | Which is used mostly with regard to future probabilities? |
28900 | Which may be wholly mental? |
28900 | Which of the above three words is used in a figurative sense? |
28900 | Which of the above words expresses what necessarily belongs to the subject of which it is said to be an_ attribute_ or_ quality_? |
28900 | Which of the above- mentioned words apply to persons? |
28900 | Which of the three words apply to persons and which to actions? |
28900 | Which of the two words may be used in a passive sense? |
28900 | Which of the words in this group are necessarily and which ordinarily applied to articulate utterance? |
28900 | Which of the words in this group necessarily imply an external effect? |
28900 | Which of these words are used in the metaphorical sense? |
28900 | Which of these words can be used of the destruction of life in open and honorable warfare? |
28900 | Which of these words denote transient moods and which denote enduring states or disposition? |
28900 | Which of these words have figurative use? |
28900 | Which of these words is of widest import? |
28900 | Which of these words may refer to the future? |
28900 | Which of these words most commonly implies an unfavorable meaning? |
28900 | Which pertain mostly to realities, and which are matters of judgment--_difference_,_ disparity_,_ distinction_, or_ inconsistency_? |
28900 | Which power finds use in philosophy, science, and mechanical invention, and how? |
28900 | Which rarely, if ever, so used? |
28900 | Which suggest the most complete removal of all trace of a writing? |
28900 | Which term do we apply directly to God? |
28900 | Which term do we use with reference to the Divine Being? |
28900 | Which term is really the stronger? |
28900 | Which use is the more frequent? |
28900 | Which word carries a natural implication of superficialness? |
28900 | Which word has the broader meaning,_ disaster_ or_ calamity_? |
28900 | Which word implies a partial removal of the cause of suffering, or an actual_ lightening_ of the burden? |
28900 | Which word is applied to metals, and in what sense? |
28900 | Which word is ordinarily applied to objects of great extent? |
28900 | Which word is preferably used as to the rite of baptism? |
28900 | Which word is used especially of objects of sight? |
28900 | Which word would be used of an act of God? |
28900 | Which words of the group apply to open attack in one''s presence, and which to attack in his absence? |
28900 | Which words of this group are naturally applied to reputation, and which to character? |
28900 | Which words of this group are used in a good, and which in a bad sense? |
28900 | Which words of this group refer exclusively to one''s own knowledge or action? |
28900 | Which words simply add a fact or thought? |
28900 | Who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open----? |
28900 | Why are they so called? |
28900 | Why could not the words be interchanged? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | With reference to what is a thing said to be_ requisite_? |
28900 | With what implication is it always used in the metaphorical sense? |
28900 | With what implication is it now commonly used? |
28900 | With what limited sense is_ innocent_ used of moral beings? |
28900 | With what meaning is_ clear_ used of an object apprehended by the senses, as an object of sight or hearing? |
28900 | With what special meaning is it used? |
28900 | With what special reference does_ congenital_ occur in medical and legal use? |
28900 | With what special reference is_ control_ used? |
28900 | With what two sets of words is_ active_ allied? |
28900 | With what words is it allied in this sense? |
28900 | With what words is_ alleviate_ especially to be grouped? |
28900 | With what words of the group does it agree? |
28900 | With which of the above words are we to class_ appease_,_ pacify_,_ soothe_, and the like? |
28900 | With whom does one_ remonstrate_? |
28900 | Would a mountain range be termed a_ bar_ or a_ barrier_? |
28900 | _ Abet_,_ incite_,_ instigate_: which of these words are used in a good and which in a bad sense? |
28900 | _ Simile_ with_ metaphor_? |
28900 | _ abdicate_? |
28900 | _ absolution_? |
28900 | _ absorb_ and_ radiate_? |
28900 | _ accomplish_ and_ complete_? |
28900 | _ accuse_? |
28900 | _ acquaintance_ from_ friendship_? |
28900 | _ acrimony_? |
28900 | _ action_? |
28900 | _ address_? |
28900 | _ admonition_? |
28900 | _ adore_? |
28900 | _ affluent_? |
28900 | _ alternative_? |
28900 | _ amnesty_? |
28900 | _ anarchism_? |
28900 | _ anguish_? |
28900 | _ annoy_? |
28900 | _ antiquated_? |
28900 | _ any_,_ each_, and_ every_? |
28900 | _ apprehension_? |
28900 | _ arbitrary_? |
28900 | _ arrogance_? |
28900 | _ asperity_ from_ acrimony_? |
28900 | _ assassinate_? |
28900 | _ asseverate_? |
28900 | _ assign_? |
28900 | _ assuage_? |
28900 | _ assurance_? |
28900 | _ assure_? |
28900 | _ authoritative_? |
28900 | _ autochthonic_? |
28900 | _ aver_? |
28900 | _ aversion_? |
28900 | _ badinage_? |
28900 | _ banter_? |
28900 | _ benefit_? |
28900 | _ bigotry_? |
28900 | _ blessedness_? |
28900 | _ bliss_? |
28900 | _ butchery_? |
28900 | _ candid_? |
28900 | _ capital_? |
28900 | _ carriage_? |
28900 | _ carry_? |
28900 | _ cash_? |
28900 | _ caustic_? |
28900 | _ cede_? |
28900 | _ censure_? |
28900 | _ chattering_? |
28900 | _ circumstance_? |
28900 | _ cognizance_? |
28900 | _ coincidence_? |
28900 | _ colleague_? |
28900 | _ collected_? |
28900 | _ comely_? |
28900 | _ commencement_? |
28900 | _ common_? |
28900 | _ compensation_? |
28900 | _ complaisant_? |
28900 | _ compute_,_ reckon_ and_ estimate_? |
28900 | _ comrade_? |
28900 | _ concomitant_? |
28900 | _ confusion_? |
28900 | _ conglomerate_? |
28900 | _ congruity_? |
28900 | _ consider_? |
28900 | _ consort_? |
28900 | _ conspicuous_? |
28900 | _ constitution_ and_ disposition_? |
28900 | _ consult_? |
28900 | _ contention_? |
28900 | _ conterminous_? |
28900 | _ contest_? |
28900 | _ contiguous_? |
28900 | _ contrition_? |
28900 | _ contumacious_? |
28900 | _ coyness_? |
28900 | _ dapper_? |
28900 | _ degrade_ from_ disgrace_? |
28900 | _ delirium_? |
28900 | _ demeanor_? |
28900 | _ depravity_? |
28900 | _ desert_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | _ despotic_ from_ tyrannical_? |
28900 | _ destitution_? |
28900 | _ detriment_? |
28900 | _ devotion_? |
28900 | _ diffidence_? |
28900 | _ diligence_? |
28900 | _ direction_? |
28900 | _ disaster_? |
28900 | _ discover_? |
28900 | _ disdain_? |
28900 | _ display_? |
28900 | _ doctrine_? |
28900 | _ dogma_? |
28900 | _ doubt_? |
28900 | _ duty_? |
28900 | _ earnings_? |
28900 | _ ecstasy_? |
28900 | _ effect_? |
28900 | _ efficiency_? |
28900 | _ emolument_? |
28900 | _ eradicate_? |
28900 | _ erudition_? |
28900 | _ event_? |
28900 | _ exasperation_? |
28900 | _ execute_? |
28900 | _ expense_? |
28900 | _ expiration_? |
28900 | _ extirpate_? |
28900 | _ fact_? |
28900 | _ faculty_? |
28900 | _ fair_? |
28900 | _ fancy_? |
28900 | _ fight_? |
28900 | _ finesse_? |
28900 | _ flagitious_? |
28900 | _ flock_? |
28900 | _ floriculture_? |
28900 | _ forgive_? |
28900 | _ formalism_? |
28900 | _ forsake_? |
28900 | _ forsake_? |
28900 | _ frank_? |
28900 | _ fraud_? |
28900 | _ fretfulness_? |
28900 | _ fulfil_? |
28900 | _ gage_? |
28900 | _ generosity_? |
28900 | _ genteel_? |
28900 | _ glistening_? |
28900 | _ godliness_? |
28900 | _ greet_? |
28900 | _ grotesque_? |
28900 | _ guilt_? |
28900 | _ gyves_? |
28900 | _ hail_? |
28900 | _ handsome_? |
28900 | _ hardihood_? |
28900 | _ harvest- tide_? |
28900 | _ harvest- time_? |
28900 | _ hasten_? |
28900 | _ haughtiness_? |
28900 | _ havoc_? |
28900 | _ heed_? |
28900 | _ hesitation_? |
28900 | _ hireling_? |
28900 | _ holiness_? |
28900 | _ honest_? |
28900 | _ horticulture_? |
28900 | _ humble_ from_ humiliate_? |
28900 | _ hurry_? |
28900 | _ hurt_? |
28900 | _ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | _ impending_? |
28900 | _ imperative_? |
28900 | _ imperious_? |
28900 | _ imprecation_? |
28900 | _ incandescence_? |
28900 | _ incessant_ from_ ceaseless_? |
28900 | _ incident_? |
28900 | _ induction_? |
28900 | _ inharmonious_? |
28900 | _ injunction_? |
28900 | _ insolence_? |
28900 | _ instruction_? |
28900 | _ insubordination_? |
28900 | _ intrusive_? |
28900 | _ invent_? |
28900 | _ involuntary_? |
28900 | _ ire_? |
28900 | _ jurisprudence_? |
28900 | _ justify_? |
28900 | _ lavishness_ and_ profusion_? |
28900 | _ legion_? |
28900 | _ legislation_? |
28900 | _ leniency_ or_ lenity_? |
28900 | _ liberality_? |
28900 | _ limit_? |
28900 | _ load_? |
28900 | _ lying_? |
28900 | _ maintain_? |
28900 | _ malignity_ from_ virulence_? |
28900 | _ malignity_? |
28900 | _ manful_? |
28900 | _ manners_? |
28900 | _ maritime_? |
28900 | _ meddlesome_? |
28900 | _ meditate_? |
28900 | _ melody_? |
28900 | _ mercenary_? |
28900 | _ misgiving_? |
28900 | _ mitigate_? |
28900 | _ moderate_? |
28900 | _ move_? |
28900 | _ murmuring_? |
28900 | _ mutiny_? |
28900 | _ mutual_? |
28900 | _ natal_? |
28900 | _ natural_? |
28900 | _ nautical_? |
28900 | _ negligence_? |
28900 | _ neighboring_? |
28900 | _ normal_? |
28900 | _ nuptials_? |
28900 | _ obstacle_? |
28900 | _ obstruction_? |
28900 | _ occurrence_? |
28900 | _ officious_? |
28900 | _ officious_? |
28900 | _ order_? |
28900 | _ order_? |
28900 | _ ordinance_? |
28900 | _ outgrowth_? |
28900 | _ pageant_ or_ pageantry_? |
28900 | _ pardon_? |
28900 | _ partner_? |
28900 | _ patience_? |
28900 | _ penury_? |
28900 | _ peremptory_? |
28900 | _ perform_ and_ accomplish_? |
28900 | _ perseverance_? |
28900 | _ pertinacious_? |
28900 | _ philanthropy_? |
28900 | _ picturesque_? |
28900 | _ placid_? |
28900 | _ plan_? |
28900 | _ plentiful_? |
28900 | _ point_? |
28900 | _ positive_? |
28900 | _ pray_ and_ petition_? |
28900 | _ precaution_? |
28900 | _ preclude_? |
28900 | _ primeval_? |
28900 | _ principle_? |
28900 | _ prior_? |
28900 | _ promulgate_? |
28900 | _ proof_? |
28900 | _ propitiation_? |
28900 | _ propound_? |
28900 | _ publish_? |
28900 | _ pungent_? |
28900 | _ pungent_? |
28900 | _ purpose_? |
28900 | _ pursuit_? |
28900 | _ putrefy_? |
28900 | _ quiet_? |
28900 | _ quiet_? |
28900 | _ quit_? |
28900 | _ rage_? |
28900 | _ raillery_ from both? |
28900 | _ rapture_? |
28900 | _ readiness_? |
28900 | _ readiness_? |
28900 | _ rebellion_? |
28900 | _ recant_? |
28900 | _ reciprocal_? |
28900 | _ recompense_? |
28900 | _ reflect_? |
28900 | _ regular_? |
28900 | _ remuneration_? |
28900 | _ repining_? |
28900 | _ reserve_? |
28900 | _ resign_? |
28900 | _ resources_? |
28900 | _ rest_? |
28900 | _ result_? |
28900 | _ result_? |
28900 | _ retract_? |
28900 | _ retrospection_? |
28900 | _ return_? |
28900 | _ revolt_? |
28900 | _ rigid_? |
28900 | _ rot_? |
28900 | _ routine_? |
28900 | _ rule_? |
28900 | _ sale_? |
28900 | _ sanctimoniousness_? |
28900 | _ satisfaction_? |
28900 | _ satisfaction_? |
28900 | _ sedition_? |
28900 | _ self- conceit_? |
28900 | _ self- conceit_? |
28900 | _ serene_? |
28900 | _ sham_? |
28900 | _ shamelessness_? |
28900 | _ show_? |
28900 | _ sincere_? |
28900 | _ singular_? |
28900 | _ situation_? |
28900 | _ skirmish_? |
28900 | _ slaughter_? |
28900 | _ sluggish_? |
28900 | _ solicitude_ from_ anxiety_? |
28900 | _ specie_? |
28900 | _ sprightly_? |
28900 | _ still_? |
28900 | _ strict_? |
28900 | _ strife_? |
28900 | _ stupidity_? |
28900 | _ succor_ and_ support_? |
28900 | _ suffering_? |
28900 | _ suppress_? |
28900 | _ supreme_? |
28900 | _ surrender_? |
28900 | _ suspicious_? |
28900 | _ sympathy_? |
28900 | _ system_? |
28900 | _ take_? |
28900 | _ talent_? |
28900 | _ teaching_? |
28900 | _ terrible_? |
28900 | _ tranquil_? |
28900 | _ transparent_? |
28900 | _ treason_? |
28900 | _ tremendous_? |
28900 | _ tribe_? |
28900 | _ trim_? |
28900 | _ truthfulness_? |
28900 | _ tuition_? |
28900 | _ urbane_? |
28900 | _ venerate_? |
28900 | _ virile_? |
28900 | _ voluntary_? |
28900 | _ watchfulness_ from_ wariness_? |
28900 | _ wayward_? |
28900 | _ wrath_? |
28900 | _ yield_? |
28900 | a_ barbarism_? |
28900 | a_ beast_? |
28900 | a_ beast_? |
28900 | a_ blaze_? |
28900 | a_ brute_? |
28900 | a_ brute_? |
28900 | a_ cheat_? |
28900 | a_ coast_? |
28900 | a_ commonwealth_? |
28900 | a_ competitor_? |
28900 | a_ conception_ from both? |
28900 | a_ conjecture_? |
28900 | a_ convention_? |
28900 | a_ convocation_? |
28900 | a_ craft_? |
28900 | a_ creed_? |
28900 | a_ device_? |
28900 | a_ donation_? |
28900 | a_ facsimile_, and an_ imitation_? |
28900 | a_ fault_? |
28900 | a_ figure_? |
28900 | a_ flash_? |
28900 | a_ gas_? |
28900 | a_ glitter_? |
28900 | a_ hint_? |
28900 | a_ narrative_ or_ narration_? |
28900 | a_ nation_? |
28900 | a_ paroxysm_? |
28900 | a_ particle_? |
28900 | a_ pattern_? |
28900 | a_ perception_? |
28900 | a_ piece_? |
28900 | a_ pithy_ utterance? |
28900 | a_ prerogative_? |
28900 | a_ prototype_? |
28900 | a_ race_? |
28900 | a_ rejoinder_? |
28900 | a_ rise_? |
28900 | a_ rival_? |
28900 | a_ saying_? |
28900 | a_ scheme_? |
28900 | a_ schismatic_? |
28900 | a_ schismatic_? |
28900 | a_ search_? |
28900 | a_ sign_ and a_ symbol_? |
28900 | a_ source_? |
28900 | a_ sparkle_? |
28900 | a_ specimen_? |
28900 | a_ speculation_? |
28900 | a_ statute_? |
28900 | a_ supposition_? |
28900 | a_ surmise_? |
28900 | a_ swindle_? |
28900 | a_ throe_? |
28900 | a_ title_? |
28900 | a_ tour_? |
28900 | a_ type_? |
28900 | an_ adversary_? |
28900 | an_ affidavit_? |
28900 | an_ amiable_ person? |
28900 | an_ aphorism_? |
28900 | an_ arbitrator_? |
28900 | an_ artisan_? |
28900 | an_ enactment_? |
28900 | an_ ensample_? |
28900 | an_ exemption_? |
28900 | an_ exertion_? |
28900 | an_ idiom_? |
28900 | an_ image_? |
28900 | an_ immunity_? |
28900 | an_ instalment_? |
28900 | an_ opponent_? |
28900 | an_ ordinance_? |
28900 | and by what kind of agent is it effected? |
28900 | and by what kind of agents are they effected? |
28900 | and how expressed? |
28900 | and in what sense to_ rotate_? |
28900 | and to what_ clumsy_? |
28900 | and what is its purpose? |
28900 | and what_ abridged_? |
28900 | and which negative? |
28900 | and why? |
28900 | as applied to things? |
28900 | between a_ permit_ and_ permission_? |
28900 | between both and_ burlesque_? |
28900 | between these words and_ behold_? |
28900 | between_ carry_ and_ bear_? |
28900 | between_ chaff_,_ jeering_, and_ mockery_? |
28900 | between_ connoisseur_ and_ critic_? |
28900 | between_ discriminate_ and_ distinguish_? |
28900 | between_ satire_ and_ sarcasm_? |
28900 | between_ vacillate_ and_ waver_? |
28900 | both from_ result_? |
28900 | both these words from_ despotic_? |
28900 | both with_ spontaneous_? |
28900 | by how many given? |
28900 | by what_ intimidated_? |
28900 | by whom_ expatriated_ or_ exiled_? |
28900 | by_ live_,_ dwell_,_ reside_? |
28900 | by_ lodge_? |
28900 | especially between the last two of those words? |
28900 | for_ keen_,_ sharp_? |
28900 | from a_ disciple_? |
28900 | from a_ fable_? |
28900 | from a_ myth_? |
28900 | from an_ abstract_ or_ digest_? |
28900 | from crime in general? |
28900 | from each other? |
28900 | from what_ immerse_? |
28900 | from_ achieve_? |
28900 | from_ affection_? |
28900 | from_ antagonism_? |
28900 | from_ apprehend_? |
28900 | from_ apprehension_? |
28900 | from_ approach_? |
28900 | from_ attempt_? |
28900 | from_ aversion_? |
28900 | from_ coalition_? |
28900 | from_ composite_? |
28900 | from_ deck_ or_ bedeck_? |
28900 | from_ decorate_? |
28900 | from_ deed_? |
28900 | from_ distract_? |
28900 | from_ foreboding_? |
28900 | from_ friendship_? |
28900 | from_ garnish_? |
28900 | from_ goal_? |
28900 | from_ guile_? |
28900 | from_ hope_? |
28900 | from_ inclination_? |
28900 | from_ indifference_? |
28900 | from_ industrious_? |
28900 | from_ insensibility_? |
28900 | from_ interfere_? |
28900 | from_ intimacy_? |
28900 | from_ involved_? |
28900 | from_ league_? |
28900 | from_ lure_? |
28900 | from_ prepared_? |
28900 | from_ pride_? |
28900 | from_ regard_? |
28900 | from_ remove_? |
28900 | from_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | from_ self- denial_? |
28900 | from_ unconcern_? |
28900 | g._)? |
28900 | how does it differ from_ partnership_? |
28900 | how does this word compare with_ attack_? |
28900 | how many for_ melody_? |
28900 | in its restricted use? |
28900 | in matters of reasoning or literary treatment? |
28900 | in more limited sense? |
28900 | in popular use? |
28900 | in social and personal relations? |
28900 | in special senses? |
28900 | in the common sense? |
28900 | in the figurative? |
28900 | in the legal sense? |
28900 | in the objects toward which it is directed? |
28900 | in the technical and common use? |
28900 | in the widest sense? |
28900 | in what two senses used? |
28900 | in_ bestow_? |
28900 | in_ deliberate_,_ consider_,_ ponder_,_ reflect_? |
28900 | in_ meditate_? |
28900 | in_ require_? |
28900 | is one_ influenced_ by external or internal force? |
28900 | is_ trusty_? |
28900 | its common meaning? |
28900 | its later meaning? |
28900 | its most common present sense? |
28900 | its present meaning? |
28900 | mark you His----''shall''? |
28900 | of an individual? |
28900 | of an_ edict_? |
28900 | of an_ intrusive_ person? |
28900 | of one who is_ obtrusive_? |
28900 | of their_ language_? |
28900 | of what is he_ conscious_? |
28900 | of_ administer_? |
28900 | of_ admiration_? |
28900 | of_ advert_? |
28900 | of_ ambiguous_? |
28900 | of_ avouch_? |
28900 | of_ avow_? |
28900 | of_ bearing_? |
28900 | of_ bold_? |
28900 | of_ bucolic_? |
28900 | of_ chivalrous_? |
28900 | of_ clumsy_? |
28900 | of_ companionable_ and_ sociable_? |
28900 | of_ compendious_? |
28900 | of_ condensed_? |
28900 | of_ cordial_ and_ genial_? |
28900 | of_ decent_? |
28900 | of_ dim_,_ faded_, or_ indistinct_? |
28900 | of_ enforce_? |
28900 | of_ fresh_? |
28900 | of_ glory_? |
28900 | of_ healthful_? |
28900 | of_ healthful_? |
28900 | of_ irresolute_ or_ timid_? |
28900 | of_ modern_? |
28900 | of_ mold_? |
28900 | of_ nevertheless_? |
28900 | of_ objective_? |
28900 | of_ outgo_? |
28900 | of_ preternatural_? |
28900 | of_ recent_? |
28900 | of_ refer_? |
28900 | of_ suitable_? |
28900 | of_ supplicate_? |
28900 | of_ terse_? |
28900 | of_ thrift_? |
28900 | of_ transit_? |
28900 | of_ vacant_? |
28900 | once more who would not be a boy? |
28900 | one who is_ absent- minded_? |
28900 | or, in which_ direction_? |
28900 | or_ business_ and_ obligation_ of moral things? |
28900 | regarding things vicious and injurious? |
28900 | the common meaning? |
28900 | the derived meaning? |
28900 | the derived sense? |
28900 | the derived sense? |
28900 | the legal sense? |
28900 | the present popular sense? |
28900 | the secondary meaning? |
28900 | the_ price_? |
28900 | the_ proposal_? |
28900 | the_ sullen_ and_ sulky_? |
28900 | the_ terms_ of a contract? |
28900 | to an examination similarly extended? |
28900 | to what class does_ litter_ apply? |
28900 | to what class of substances is it applied? |
28900 | to_ amuse_? |
28900 | to_ beguile_? |
28900 | to_ condone_? |
28900 | to_ decoy_? |
28900 | to_ defame_? |
28900 | to_ despatch_? |
28900 | to_ disparage_? |
28900 | to_ endeavor_? |
28900 | to_ excuse_? |
28900 | to_ glance_? |
28900 | to_ inveigle_? |
28900 | to_ libel_? |
28900 | to_ malign_? |
28900 | to_ occupy_? |
28900 | to_ plagiarize_? |
28900 | to_ prove_? |
28900 | to_ reprove_? |
28900 | to_ resist_? |
28900 | to_ revolve_? |
28900 | to_ rotate_? |
28900 | to_ screen_? |
28900 | to_ stare_? |
28900 | to_ traduce_? |
28900 | what does it imply? |
28900 | what is its distinctive use? |
28900 | what mighty magician can---- A woman''s envy? |
28900 | what rests? |
28900 | when_ homogeneous_? |
28900 | which to feelings? |
28900 | with_ abstruse_? |
28900 | with_ big_? |
28900 | with_ both_? |
28900 | with_ but_? |
28900 | with_ common_? |
28900 | with_ complex_? |
28900 | with_ conceive_? |
28900 | with_ delight_ and_ joy_? |
28900 | with_ disagreeable_ or_ annoying_? |
28900 | with_ effrontery_? |
28900 | with_ happiness_? |
28900 | with_ identical_? |
28900 | with_ melancholy_? |
28900 | with_ pattern_? |
28900 | with_ permanent_? |
28900 | with_ permission_? |
28900 | with_ profound_? |
28900 | with_ sadness_? |
28900 | with_ tease_? |
28900 | with_ virtuous_? |
11615 | ''T is true, the ancients we may rob with ease; But who with that mean shift himself can please? |
11615 | ''_ Blue- eyed, strange- voiced, sharp- beaked, ill- omened_ fowl, What art thou?'' 11615 ''_ Wanderer_,| whither| wouldst thou| roam? |
11615 | A merchant at sea asked the skipper what death his father died? 11615 A_ mother''s accusing her son_,& c.,_ were circumstances_,"& c.? |
11615 | After what is said, will it be thought refining too much to suggest, that the different orders are qualified for different purposes? |
11615 | Against heaven''s endless mercies pour''d, how_ dar''st_ thou_ to_ rebel? |
11615 | Am I being instructed? |
11615 | Am I one chaste, one last embrace deny''d? 11615 Am I to set my life upon a throw, Because a bear is rude and surly? |
11615 | Am_ I_ not an_ apostle_? 11615 Among all Things in the Universe, direct your Worship to the Greatest; And which is that? |
11615 | An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ who_ is he, and_ what_ does he want?'' |
11615 | An adverb may be generally known, by its answering to the question, How? 11615 An interrogation(? |
11615 | And are not the countries so overflown still situate between the tropics? |
11615 | And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glory of the Creator? 11615 And dost thou open thine eyes upon such an one, and bringest me into judgement with thee?" |
11615 | And every beast of their''s, be our''s? |
11615 | And i heard, but i understood not: then said i, o my Lord, what shall be the end of these things? |
11615 | And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles than the testimony of them old Pharisees? |
11615 | And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles, than the testimony of_ those_ old Pharisees? |
11615 | And is the ignorance of these peasants a reason for others to remain ignorant; or to render the subject a less becoming inquiry? |
11615 | And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within them? |
11615 | And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? |
11615 | And there is something in your very strange story, that resembles-- Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly? |
11615 | And they said,''What is_ that_[194][ matter] to us? 11615 And what can be better than him that made it?" |
11615 | And what is reason? 11615 And when I say, Two men_ walk_, is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural, because it expresses_ two_ actions?" |
11615 | And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? |
11615 | And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the Prophets? |
11615 | And_ I_ heard, but_ I_ understood not; then said_ I, O_ my Lord, what shall be the end of these things? |
11615 | And_ what have become_ of my resolutions to return to God? |
11615 | Another man now would have given plump into this foolish story; but I? 11615 Are either the subject or the predicate in the second sentence modified?" |
11615 | Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own sakes? |
11615 | Are not these schools of the highest importance? 11615 Are some verbs used, both transitively and intransitively?" |
11615 | Are there any adjectives which form the degrees of comparison peculiar to themselves? |
11615 | Are there any nouns you can not see, hear, or feel, but only think of? 11615 Are these the houses you were speaking of? |
11615 | Are they men worthy of confidence and support? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the kings of Israel? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the_ Kings_ of Israel? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the acts of Solomon? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the_ Acts_ of Solomon? |
11615 | Are we not lazy in our duties, or make a Christ of them? |
11615 | Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce it to our children? |
11615 | Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than that of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities? |
11615 | Art not thou and you ashamed to affirm, that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags? |
11615 | Art thou a penitent? 11615 Art thou proud yet? |
11615 | Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness, And fears to die? 11615 Art thou that art_ to comynge_, ether abiden we another?" |
11615 | Art thou the man of God that camest from Judah? |
11615 | Art_ not thou_ a seer? |
11615 | Art_ thou Elias_? |
11615 | Art_ thou_ a_ king_ then? |
11615 | Art_ thou_ that traitor_ angel_? 11615 As for Modesty and Good Faith, Truth and Justice, they have left this wicked World and retired to Heaven: And now what is it that can keep you here?" |
11615 | Asking questions with a principal verb-- as,_ Teach I? 11615 Be thou, or do thou be writing? |
11615 | But I say, again, What signifies words? |
11615 | But I would inquire at him, what an office is? |
11615 | But how can_ you_ a_ soul_, still either hunger or thirst? |
11615 | But if I say''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?'' 11615 But if a solemn and familiar pronunciation really exists in our language, is it not the business of a grammarian to mark both?" |
11615 | But if you ca n''t help it, who do you complain of? |
11615 | But may it not be retorted, that its being a gratification is that which excites our resentment? |
11615 | But what has disease, deformity, and filth, upon which the thoughts can be allured to dwell? |
11615 | But what is to be said when presumption pushes itself into the front ranks of elocution, and thoughtless friends undertake to support it? 11615 But what saith the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?" |
11615 | But what think ye? 11615 But where shall wisdom be found? |
11615 | But whom say ye that I am? |
11615 | But wil our sage writers on law forever think by tradition? |
11615 | But,_ admitting_ that two or three of these offend less in their morals than in their writings, must poverty make nonsense sacred? |
11615 | But_ some_ man will say, How are the dead raised up? 11615 But_ what!_ is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing?" |
11615 | Called_ Crotchets_by whom? |
11615 | Can I make men live, whether they will or no? |
11615 | Can a mere buckling on a military weapon infuse courage? |
11615 | Can any thing show your holiness how unworthy you treat mankind? |
11615 | Can honour set to a leg? 11615 Can our Solicitude alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?" |
11615 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? 11615 Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? |
11615 | Canst thou by searching find out_ God_? |
11615 | Canst thou grow sad, thou sayest, as earth grows bright? |
11615 | Canst thou, by searching, find out God; Canst thou find out the Almighty to perfection; It is high as heaven, what canst thou do? 11615 Canst thou, by searching, find out the Lord?" |
11615 | Cry, By your Priesthood tell me what you are? |
11615 | Dare he assume the name of a popular magistrate? |
11615 | Dare he deny but there are some of his fraternity guilty? |
11615 | Dare you speak lightly of the law, or move that, in a criminal trial, judges should advance one step beyond_ what_ it permits them_ to go_? |
11615 | Dear gentle youth, is''t none but thee? |
11615 | Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause where both his honour and life are concerned? |
11615 | Did ever_ Proteus, Merlin_, any_ witch_, Transform_ themselves_ so strangely as the rich? |
11615 | Did he not fear the Lord, and besought the Lord, and the Lord repented him of the evil which he had pronounced? |
11615 | Did n''t ye hear it? 11615 Did not great Julius bleed for justice sake?" |
11615 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''s sake? |
11615 | Did not great Julius bleed for_ justice''_ sake? |
11615 | Did they ever bear a testimony against writing books? |
11615 | Did they not_ take hold of_ your fathers? |
11615 | Did you conceive( of) him to be me? |
11615 | Did you never bear false witness against thy neighbour? |
11615 | Did_ not Israel_ know? |
11615 | Do not the eyes discover humility, pride; cruelty, compassion; reflection, dissipation; kindness, resentment? |
11615 | Do not those same poor peasants use the Lever and the Wedge, and many other instruments? |
11615 | Do not those same poor peasants use the_ lever_, and the_ wedge_, and many other instruments? |
11615 | Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and make the rest a slave? |
11615 | Do you remember speaking on this subject in school? |
11615 | Do_ not they_ blaspheme that worthy name? |
11615 | Does Bridget paint still, Pompey? 11615 Does continuity and connexion create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?" |
11615 | Does he mean that theism is capable of nothing else except being opposed to polytheism or atheism? |
11615 | Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates the whole departments of the state? |
11615 | Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates_ all the_ departments of the state? |
11615 | Does the Conjunction join Words together? 11615 Does the present accident hinder your being honest and brave?" |
11615 | Does_ not-- or,_ Do n''t_ your cousin intend to visit you? |
11615 | Dost_ thou_ mourn Philander''s fate? 11615 Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray?" |
11615 | Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and_ go_ into the mountains, and_ seek_ that which is gone astray? |
11615 | Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give none of the saints this testimony? |
11615 | Doth_ the hawk_ fly by thy wisdom, and stretch_ her_ wings toward the south? 11615 Established use?" |
11615 | For between which two links could speech makers draw the division line? |
11615 | For instance, when we say''_ the house is building_,''the advocates of the new theory ask,''building_ what_?'' 11615 For is not this to set nature a work?" |
11615 | For what else is a_ red- hot_ iron than fire? 11615 For what had he_ to do to chide_ at me?" |
11615 | For where does beauty and high wit But in your constellation meet? |
11615 | Gentle and| lovely form, What didst| thou here, When the fierce| battle storm Bore down| the spear? 11615 Gentlemen: will you always speak as you mean?" |
11615 | God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? 11615 Grammatica quid est? |
11615 | Ha ha ha; some wine eh? |
11615 | Has he not taught,_ beseeched_, and shed abroad the Spirit unconfined? |
11615 | Has this word which represents an action an object after it, and on which it terminates? |
11615 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods? |
11615 | Hath the Lord said it, and shall he not do it? 11615 Have the greater men always been the most popular? |
11615 | Have they ascertained the person who gave the information? |
11615 | Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife, as well as other apostles? |
11615 | Have you no more manners than to rail at Hocus, that has saved that clod- pated, numskull''d ninnyhammer of yours from ruin, and all his family? |
11615 | Have_ they not_ heard? |
11615 | He says he was glad that he had Baptized so few; And asks them, Were ye Baptised in the Name of Paul? |
11615 | He that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? 11615 He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
11615 | Here,_ John_ is the actor; and is known to be the nominative, by its answering to the question,''Who struck Richard?'' |
11615 | How do you account for IN, OUT, ON, OFF, and AT? |
11615 | How do you know that_ love_ is the first person? 11615 How do you parse''letter''in the sentence,''James writes a_ letter''? |
11615 | How does this man''s definitions stand affected? |
11615 | How far do you call_ it_ to such a place? |
11615 | How his eyes languish? 11615 How is the agent of a passive, and the object of an active verb often left?" |
11615 | How is the gender and number of the relative known? |
11615 | How little reason to wonder, that a perfect and accomplished orator, should be one of the characters that is most rarely found? |
11615 | How long was you going? 11615 How many cases? |
11615 | How many numbers do nouns appear to have? 11615 How many numbers have pronouns? |
11615 | How many of your own church members were never heard pray? |
11615 | How many persons? 11615 How many right angles has an acute angled triangle?" |
11615 | How many_ Sorts_ of Participles are there? 11615 How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with? |
11615 | How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with? 11615 How much is seven times nine?" |
11615 | How shall I curse[_ him_ or_ them_] whom God hath not cursed? |
11615 | How shall the people know who to entrust with their property and their liberties? |
11615 | How shall we distinguish between the friends and enemies of the government? |
11615 | How therefore is it that they approach nearly to Non- Entity''s? |
11615 | How_ could_ he_ see to do_ them? |
11615 | I am their mother, who shall bar me from them? |
11615 | I hope, you have, upon no account, promoted sternutation by hellebore? |
11615 | I pr''ythee,_ whom_ doth he trot_ withal_? |
11615 | If David then call him Lord, how is he his son? |
11615 | If I_ will_ that he_ tarry_ till I_ come_, what is that to thee? 11615 If a Yearly Meeting should undertake to alter its fundamental doctrines, is there any power in the society to prevent their doing so?" |
11615 | If he dare not say they are, as I know he dare not, how must I then distinguish? |
11615 | If he_ cut_ off, and_ shut_ up, or_ gather_ together, then who can hinder him? |
11615 | If it be asked, why a pause should any more be necessary to emphasis than to an accent? 11615 If love| make me| forsworn,| how shall| I swear| to love? |
11615 | If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what is become of decency and virtue? |
11615 | If the crew rail at the master of the vessel, who will they mind? |
11615 | If the prophet had commanded thee to do some great thing, would you have refused? |
11615 | If the whole body_ were_ an eye, where_ were_ the hearing? |
11615 | If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth-- if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows? 11615 In life, can love be bought with gold? |
11615 | In the sentence,''this is the pen which John made,''what_ word_ do I say John made? |
11615 | In what other[ language,] consistent with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him? |
11615 | Interrogation(? 11615 Is endless life and happiness despis''d? |
11615 | Is genius yours? 11615 Is it I or he whom you requested to go?" |
11615 | Is it lawful for_ us to give_ tribute to CÃ ¦ sar? |
11615 | Is it meant that theism is capable of nothing else besides being opposed to polytheism, or atheism? |
11615 | Is it not charging God foolishly, when we give these dark colourings to human nature? |
11615 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and to bow down his head like a bulrush? |
11615 | Is it_ her_ or_ his_ honour that is tarnished? 11615 Is not Mr. Murray''s octavo grammar more worthy the dignified title of a''Philosophical Grammar?''" |
11615 | Is not life a_ greater_ gift_ than_ food? |
11615 | Is not the bare fact of God being the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon? |
11615 | Is not this using one measure for our neighbours, and another for ourselves? |
11615 | Is that ornament in a good taste? |
11615 | Is there any Scripture speaks of the light''s being inward? |
11615 | Is there any Scripture_ which_ speaks of the_ light_ as being inward? |
11615 | Is there any other doctrine_ whose_ followers are punished? |
11615 | Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? 11615 Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
11615 | Is this he that I am seeking of, or no? |
11615 | Is this your son,_ who_ ye say_ was born_ blind? |
11615 | Is''t not drown''d i''the last rain? 11615 Is_ William''s_ a proper or common noun?" |
11615 | Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of a pronoun? |
11615 | It has been often asked, what is Latin and Greek? |
11615 | It is choosing such letters to compose words,& c.--_Ibid._"What is Parsing? |
11615 | It should seem then the grand question was, What is good? |
11615 | King Agrippa,_ believest thou_ the prophets? |
11615 | Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel? |
11615 | Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates? |
11615 | Know ye not your_ own selves_, how that Jesus Christ is in you? |
11615 | Know ye not, that_ so many_ of us_ as_ were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
11615 | Learned they their pieces perfectly? |
11615 | Learnest thou thy lesson? |
11615 | Look next on Greatness; say where Greatness lies: Where, but among the Heroes and the Wise? |
11615 | Love sounds| the alarm, And fear| is a- fly~ ing; When beau|-ty''s the prize, What mor|-tal fears dy|-~ing? 11615 Mark, and perform it: seest thou? |
11615 | Master,_ what_ shall we do? |
11615 | May I, unblam''d, express thee? 11615 May not four feet be as poetick as five; or fifteen feet, as poetick as fifty?" |
11615 | Meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?'' |
11615 | N''avez vous pas des maisons pour manger et pour boire? |
11615 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? 11615 Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
11615 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
11615 | Nay, what evidence can be brought to show, that the Inflection of the Classic tongues were not originally formed out of obsolete auxiliary words? |
11615 | Never adventure on too near an approach to what is evil? |
11615 | Never| wedding,| ever| wooing, Still| lovelorn| heart pur|-suing, Read you| not the| wrong you''re| doing, In my| cheek''s pale| hue? 11615 Nor foes nor fortune_ take_ this power away; And is my Abelard less kind than_ they_?" |
11615 | Now who would dote upon things hurryed down the stream thus fast? |
11615 | Now, Who is not Discouraged, and Fears Want, when he has no money? |
11615 | Now, if it be an evil to do any thing out of strife; then such things that are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken? |
11615 | O gentle sleep, Nature''s soft nurse, how have I frighted thee? |
11615 | O,_ says I_, Jacky, are you at that work? |
11615 | O_ Death!_ where is thy sting? 11615 O_ thou sword_ of the Lord, how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet?" |
11615 | Of Godlike pow''r? 11615 Of whom hast thou been afraid or feared?" |
11615 | Of_ what number are_ the expressions_,''these boys,''''these pictures,''& c.? |
11615 | Oh let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) 11615 Oh, let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) |
11615 | Oh? 11615 Or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?" |
11615 | Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? |
11615 | Or if he was, was there no spiritual men then? |
11615 | Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? |
11615 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
11615 | Or, if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? |
11615 | Or_ I_ only and_ Barnabas_, have not we power to forbear working? |
11615 | Or_ hear''st_ thou rather pure ethereal stream? |
11615 | Our fathers, where are they, and the prophets, do they live forever? |
11615 | Parthenia,_ rise_.--What voice alarms my ear? 11615 Permit that I share in thy woe, The privilege can you refuse?" |
11615 | Prepositions, you recollect, connect words as well as conjunctions: how, then, can you tell the one from the other? |
11615 | Que veut dire ce bruit de la ville qui est ainsi à © mue? |
11615 | Quomodo differunt grammaticus et grammatista? 11615 Rather than thus be overtopt, Would you not wish their laurels cropt?" |
11615 | Remember Handel? 11615 Richard of York, how_ fares_ our dearest_ brother_?" |
11615 | Say, dost thou know Tectidius?--Who, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch? |
11615 | Shall I hide from Abraham that thing_ which_ I do? |
11615 | Shall I hide from Abraham_ what_ I am going to do? |
11615 | Shall any_ teach God knowledge_? |
11615 | Shall he alone, whom rational we call, Be pleased with nothing if not blessed with all? |
11615 | Shall not myself be_ kindlier_ mov''d than thou art? |
11615 | Shall not their cattle, and their substance, and every beast of their''s be ours? |
11615 | Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow them to the grossest energies of appetite and sense? |
11615 | Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of Spirits, and live? |
11615 | Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the father of spirits, and live? |
11615 | Shalt thou build me an house for me to dwell in? |
11615 | Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? |
11615 | So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you? |
11615 | So saucy with the hand of she here-- What''s her name? |
11615 | Spake_ I not_ also to thy messengers? |
11615 | St. Paul asked king Agrippa if he believed the prophets? 11615 Stay, my| charmer,| can you| leave me? |
11615 | Tell me, Alciphron, is not_ distance_ a_ line_ turned endwise to the eye? |
11615 | Tell me, if in any of these such an union can be found? |
11615 | The Indicative Mood simply indicates or declares a thing: as,''He_ loves_, he is_ loved_:''or it asks a question: as,''Does he love?'' 11615 The Indicative mood simply declares a thing; as, He_ loves_; He is_ loved_; Or, it asks a question; as,_ Lovest_ thou me?" |
11615 | The Interrogation Point(? 11615 The Panther smil''d at this; and when, said she, Were those first councils disallow''d by me?" |
11615 | The following is a note of Interrogation, or asking a question(?). |
11615 | The indicative mood sheweth or declareth; as,_ Ego amo_, I love: or else asketh a question; as,_ Amas tu_? 11615 The interrogator?" |
11615 | The point of Interrogation,? |
11615 | The question may then be put, What does he more than mean? |
11615 | The question might be put, what more does he than only mean? |
11615 | The whole must centre in the query, whether Tragedy or Comedy are hurtful and dangerous representations? |
11615 | The_ Productive System_teaches thus:"What does the word_ singular_ mean? |
11615 | They put their huge inarticulate question,''What do you mean to do with us?'' 11615 Thinkst thou that duty shall have dread to speak?" |
11615 | This An|-na so fair, So talk''d| of by fame, Why do nt| she appear? 11615 Thy nature, immortality, who knowest?" |
11615 | To be, or not to be? |
11615 | To reason how can we be said to rise? 11615 To what purpose_ cometh_ there to me incense from Sheba,_ and_ the sweet cane from a far country?" |
11615 | To who? 11615 Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land? |
11615 | Was any person besides the mercer present? 11615 Was it Mirabeau, Mr. President, or what other master of the human passions, who has told us that words are things? |
11615 | Was it thou that buildedst that house? |
11615 | Was it thou, or the wind, who shut the door? |
11615 | Wast_ thou born only for pleasure? 11615 Were Cain''s and Abel''s occupations the same?" |
11615 | Were either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized? |
11615 | Were you not affrighted, and mistook a spirit for a body? |
11615 | Were_ Cain_ and Abel''s occupations the same? |
11615 | Wert thou born only for pleasure? 11615 What Sort of a Noun is Man? |
11615 | What am I and from whence? 11615 What am I, and whence? |
11615 | What are become of so many productions? |
11615 | What are become of those ages of abundance and of life? |
11615 | What are thy rents? 11615 What are verbs? |
11615 | What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus range the camp alone? |
11615 | What avails the taking so much medicine, when you are so careless about taking cold? |
11615 | What better reason_ needs_ be given? |
11615 | What can be the cause of the_ parliament''s neglecting_ so important a business? |
11615 | What can be the reason of the_ committee''s having delayed_ this business? |
11615 | What can prevent this republick from soon raising a literary standard? |
11615 | What can we expect, who come_ a gleaning_, not after the first reapers, but after the_ very_ beggars? |
11615 | What cases are there in English? 11615 What do you call it? |
11615 | What do_ ye_ more than_ others_? |
11615 | What further need was there of an other priest rising? |
11615 | What gender is_ woman_, and why? |
11615 | What gender, then, is_ man_, and why? |
11615 | What is Language? 11615 What is Number? |
11615 | What is Rule III.? |
11615 | What is Spelling? 11615 What is a Noun Substantive? |
11615 | What is a noun? 11615 What is an Asserter? |
11615 | What is emphasis? 11615 What is meant by_ Gender?_ The different sexes." |
11615 | What is number? 11615 What is number? |
11615 | What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words? 11615 What is said respecting sentences being inverted?" |
11615 | What is spelling? 11615 What is the cause that nonsense so often escapes being detected, both by the writer and by the reader?" |
11615 | What is the cause that the former days were better than these? |
11615 | What is the gender, number, and person of those in the first? |
11615 | What is the import of that command to love such an one as ourselves? |
11615 | What is the meaning of the word_ to?_ Ans. 11615 What is the name of the river on which London stands? |
11615 | What is the putting vowels and consonants together called? |
11615 | What is the reason of our being often so frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse? |
11615 | What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of France? |
11615 | What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of Italy, Spain, or France? |
11615 | What is vice and wickedness? 11615 What is vocal language? |
11615 | What is vocal language? 11615 What is your opinion of truth, good- nature, and sobriety? |
11615 | What is''t to thee, if he neglect thy urn, Or without spices lets thy body burn? |
11615 | What is_ a verb_? 11615 What kind of Jesamine? |
11615 | What kind of a book is this? |
11615 | What kind of a noun is_ river_, and why? |
11615 | What kind of an article, then, shall we call_ the_? |
11615 | What may_ it_ be, the heavy_ sound_ That moans old Branksome''s turrets round? |
11615 | What method_ had he best take_? |
11615 | What need you be anxious about this event? |
11615 | What noun do they describe or tell the kind? |
11615 | What nouns are masculine gender? 11615 What nouns frequently succeed each other?" |
11615 | What nouns frequently_ stand together_? |
11615 | What number are these boys? 11615 What number is_ boy_? |
11615 | What other means are there to attract love and esteem so effectual as a virtuous course of life? 11615 What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third person?" |
11615 | What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third_ persons_? |
11615 | What say you to such as these? 11615 What shall we say of noctambulos?" |
11615 | What should we say of such an one? 11615 What sort of a charm do they possess?" |
11615 | What sort of a thing is it? |
11615 | What sounds have each of the vowels? |
11615 | What striking lesson are we taught by the tenor of this history? |
11615 | What tenses are formed on the perfect participle? |
11615 | What tenses are formed_ from_ the perfect participle? |
11615 | What thank have ye? 11615 What then can be more obviously true than that it should be made as just as we can?" |
11615 | What think ye of Christ? 11615 What think ye of Christ? |
11615 | What use can these words be, till their meaning is known? |
11615 | What went ye out_ for to_ see? |
11615 | What wilt thou_ have_ me_ to_ do? |
11615 | What word, then, may_ and_ be called? 11615 What_ art thou doing_?" |
11615 | What_ be_ these two olive branches? |
11615 | What_ means_ this restless stir and commotion of mind? |
11615 | What_ virtue_ or what mental_ grace_, But men unqualified and base Will boast_ it_ their possession? |
11615 | What_ would_ this man? 11615 When is a dipthong called a proper dipthong?" |
11615 | When the judge dare not act, where is the loser''s remedy? |
11615 | When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_? 11615 When was it that Rome attracted most strongly the admiration of mankind?" |
11615 | When will his ear delight in the sound of arms? 11615 When-- under what administration-- under what exigencies of war or peace-- did the Senate ever before deal with such a measure in such a manner? |
11615 | Whence comes all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings? |
11615 | Where is thy true treasure? 11615 Where now the rill melodious,[--] pure, and cool, And meads, with life, and mirth, and beauty crown''d?" |
11615 | Where should he have this gold? 11615 Where thy true treasure? |
11615 | Where thy true treasure? 11615 Where was you born? |
11615 | Where_ thinkst thou_ he is now? 11615 Where_ were_ you born? |
11615 | Whereto serves mercy, but_ to confront_ the visage of offence? |
11615 | Which of the two brothers are graduates? |
11615 | Which of these two kinds of vice are more criminal? |
11615 | Which of you convinceth me of sin? |
11615 | Which road takest thou here? |
11615 | Which tense is formed on the present? |
11615 | Whither art going, pretty Annette? 11615 Whither,_ O!_ whither shall_ I_ fly? |
11615 | Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel To spurn the rags of Lazarus? 11615 Who calls the council, states the certain day? |
11615 | Who can ever be easy, who is reproached with his own ill conduct? |
11615 | Who can unpitying see the flowery race, Shed by the morn, their new- flush''d bloom resign, Before th''unbating beam? 11615 Who can, either in opposition, or in the ministry, act alone?" |
11615 | Who dare, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task? |
11615 | Who do you dine with? |
11615 | Who do you think me to be? |
11615 | Who else can he be? |
11615 | Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was dead? |
11615 | Who gave you that book which you prize so much? |
11615 | Who goeth_ a_ warfare any time at his own charges? |
11615 | Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? |
11615 | Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman? |
11615 | Who is my mother, or my brethren? |
11615 | Who is she who comes clothed in a robe of green? |
11615 | Who is there? 11615 Who knows not, how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with arm''d legions fill''d?" |
11615 | Who knows what resources are in store, and what the power of God may do for thee? |
11615 | Who knows what resources are in store? 11615 Who was it from? |
11615 | Who was the agent, and whom the object struck or kissed? |
11615 | Who who has either sense or civility, does not perceive the vileness of profanity? |
11615 | Who would not guess there might be hopes, The fear of_ gallowses_ and ropes, Before their eyes, might reconcile Their animosities a while? |
11615 | Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_? |
11615 | Who would not say,''If it be_ me_,''rather than, If it be_ I_? |
11615 | Who would not sing for Lycidas? 11615 Who, in the fullness of unequalled power, would not believe himself the favourite of heaven?" |
11615 | Who_ art thou_? |
11615 | Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am? |
11615 | Whom do they say it is? |
11615 | Whom hast thou then or_ what t''accuse_? |
11615 | Whose prerogative is it? 11615 Why are nouns divided into genders? |
11615 | Why are you vext, Lady? 11615 Why call ye me lord, lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
11615 | Why call ye me,_ Lord, Lord_, and do not the things which I say? |
11615 | Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we? |
11615 | Why do lexicographers spell_ thinnish_ and_ mannish_ with two Ens, and_ dimish_ and_ ramish_ with one Em, each? |
11615 | Why do you keep_ teasing_ me? |
11615 | Why do you plead so much for it? 11615 Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou beganest?" |
11615 | Why dost thou then suggest to me distrust, Knowing who I am, as I know who thou art? |
11615 | Why is_ our language less refined than_ the French_? |
11615 | Why should we doubt of that, whereof our sense Finds demonstration from experience? 11615 Why so sagacious in your guesses? |
11615 | Why so sagacious in your guesses? 11615 Why then cite thou a Scripture which is so plain and clear for it?" |
11615 | Why_ satst_ thou like an enemy in wait? |
11615 | Will Henry call on me, while he shall be journeying south? |
11615 | Will John return to- morrow? |
11615 | Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? 11615 Will any able writer authorise other men to revise his works?" |
11615 | Will he esteem thy riches? 11615 Will he thence dare to say the apostle held another Christ than he that died?" |
11615 | Will it be urged, that the four gospels are as old_ as tradition, and even_ older? |
11615 | Will it not be receiv''d that they have done''t? 11615 Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And never, never be to Heaven resign''d?" |
11615 | Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And_ wilt thou_ never be to Heaven resign''d? |
11615 | Will not a look of disdain cast upon you, throw you into a foment? |
11615 | Will you let me alone, or no? |
11615 | Wilt thou condemn him that is_ most just_? |
11615 | Without you, what were man? 11615 Would it not be making the students judges of the professors?" |
11615 | Would you_ have_ them_ let go_ then? 11615 You inquire,''What is number?'' |
11615 | Young stranger, whither wand''rest thou? |
11615 | _ Are they_ Israelites? 11615 _ Can not I_ do with you as this potter?" |
11615 | _ Can_ there_ need to_ be argument to prove so plain a point? |
11615 | _ Canst thou thunder_ with a voice like him? |
11615 | _ Dare_ I_ to_ leave of humble prose the shore? |
11615 | _ Did_ he_ love_? |
11615 | _ Do_ I not yet_ grieve_? |
11615 | _ Do_ you_ dare to prosecute_ such a creature as Vaughan? |
11615 | _ Hath the Lord said it? 11615 _ Is_ the gospel or glad tidings of this salvation brought nigh unto all?" |
11615 | _ Know ye not_ that a little leaven_ leaveneth_ the whole lump? |
11615 | _ Needst_ thou--_need_ any one on earth-- despair? |
11615 | _ Oh me!_ all the horse have got over the river, what shall we do? |
11615 | _ Q._ What do you mean by_ Accent_? 11615 _ Q._ What is a tripthong? |
11615 | _ Q._ What is the_ Proportion_ between a long and a short Syllable? 11615 _ Return? |
11615 | _ Think ye_ that we excuse ourselves? |
11615 | _ Was_ not Demosthenes''s style, and his master Plato''s, perfectly Attic; and yet none more lofty? |
11615 | _ What!_ are you so ambitious of a man''s good word, who perhaps in an hour''s time shall curse himself to the pit of hell? |
11615 | _ What!_ know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God? |
11615 | _ What_ advantageth it me? |
11615 | _ What_ is_ truth_? |
11615 | _ What_ were we? |
11615 | _ Which_ of the prophets have not your fathers persecuted? |
11615 | _ Who_ art_ thou_? |
11615 | _ Who_ do men say that I, the Son of man, am? |
11615 | _ Who_ taught that heav''n- directed spire to rise? 11615 _ Who_ touched me? |
11615 | _ William_ is a noun.--why? 11615 _ Would_ its compiler_ dare to affront_ the Deity?" |
11615 | _Is this| a Fast,| to keep The lard|-er lean And clean From fat| of neats| and sheep? |
11615 | _--Your_ fathers_, where are they? |
11615 | and why not also of understanding and explaining? |
11615 | & c._? |
11615 | ''Burns he? |
11615 | ''Do you ride to town to- day?'' |
11615 | ''Do you think, sir, I may venture to alter it? |
11615 | ''Hast thou, spirit, perform''d_ to point_ the tempest?'' |
11615 | ''He hath not told his thought to the king?'' |
11615 | ''He hath not told his thought to the king?'' |
11615 | ''Is it possible he should know what he is, and be_ that_ he is?'' |
11615 | ''Oh? |
11615 | ''Sir,''asks the boy,''does not_ to run_ imply action, for it always makes me perspire?''" |
11615 | ''Tis the land| of the East-|''t is the clime| of the Sun-- Can he smile| on such deeds| as his chil|-dren have done? |
11615 | ''Well,''replies the merchant, and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''" |
11615 | ''Well,''replies the merchant,''and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''" |
11615 | ''What kind of stone?'' |
11615 | ''What kind of way?'' |
11615 | ''What_ has become_ of national liberty?'' |
11615 | ''Wheat sells well,''sells_ what_? |
11615 | ( could sleep do more?) |
11615 | );_ Interrogation_(? |
11615 | --"''Pat, how did you carry that quarter of beef?'' |
11615 | --"Am I not an apostle?" |
11615 | --"As 2_ is_ to 4, so_ is_ 6 to 12;"or,"As two_ are_ to four, so_ are_ six to twelve?" |
11615 | --"Do you say so,_ and_ can you prove it?" |
11615 | --"How many[_ kinds of_] substantives are there? |
11615 | --"Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?" |
11615 | --"Seven times three_ make_, or_ makes_, twenty- one?" |
11615 | --"Three quarters of the men were discharged; and three quarters of the money_ was_, or_ were_, sent back?" |
11615 | --"Three times four_ is_, or_ are_, twelve?" |
11615 | --"Three times his age_ do_ not, or_ does_ not, equal mine?" |
11615 | --"Three times naught_ is_, or_ are_, naught?" |
11615 | --"Three times one_ is_, or_ are_, three?" |
11615 | --"Three times the quantity_ is_ not, or_ are_ not, sufficient?" |
11615 | --"Thrice one_ is_ or_ are_, three?" |
11615 | --"Thrice three_ is_, or_ are_, nine?" |
11615 | --"Twice two_ is_ four,"or,"Twice two_ are_ four?" |
11615 | --"Two times one_ is_ two,"or,"Two times one_ are_ two?" |
11615 | --"What has she done,_ except rock_ herself?" |
11615 | --"What_ is_ become of decency and virtue?" |
11615 | --"Where is he_ at? |
11615 | --"_Did_ she not_ die_?" |
11615 | --"_Do you not know_ that a little leaven_ leavens_ the whole lump?" |
11615 | --"_Do you think_ that we excuse ourselves?" |
11615 | --"_So justly as was never_,"is a positive degree that is not imaginable; and what is this but an absurdity? |
11615 | --"_Which_ man of you all?" |
11615 | --"_Who_ did you say_ it_ was?" |
11615 | --"_Whom_ did you suppose me to be?" |
11615 | --''Shall I come to you with a rod,_ or_ in love?'' |
11615 | --''What need was_ there_ of it?''" |
11615 | -----------------------------"Wilt thou fly With laughing Autumn to_ the Atlantic isles_, And range with him th''_ Hesperian field_?" |
11615 | --I know_ whom_? |
11615 | --SHAK:_ ib._"For what else is a redhot iron than fire? |
11615 | --_ Coar cor._"We say,''_ If it rain,''''Suppose it rain?'' |
11615 | --_ Lempriere''s Dict._"For who could be so hard- hearted to be severe?" |
11615 | --_Abbott cor._"But if you ca n''t help it,_ whom_ do you complain of?" |
11615 | --_Addison cor._"How_ do_ this man''s definitions stand affected?" |
11615 | --_Allen cor._"Shall not the_ Judge_ of all the earth do right?" |
11615 | --_Bacon cor._"Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause_ in which_ both his honour and_ his_ life_ were_ concerned?" |
11615 | --_Balbi cor._"Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the_ Father_ of spirits, and live?" |
11615 | --_Barclay cor._"How many of your own church members were never heard_ to_ pray?" |
11615 | --_Barclay cor._"Will he thence dare to say, the apostle held_ an other_ Christ than_ him_ that died?" |
11615 | --_Barnes cor._"And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glow of the Creator? |
11615 | --_Barrett cor._"Where else can he go?" |
11615 | --_Barrett cor._"Will not John return to- morrow?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own_ sake_?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Art thou the man of God, that_ came_ from Judah?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"But_ who_ say ye that I am?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Did he not fear the Lord, and_ beseech_ the Lord, and_ did not_ the Lord_ repent_ of the evil which he had pronounced?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"If David then_ calleth_( or_ calls_) him Lord, how is he his son?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"What is vice,_ or_ wickedness? |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Who is my mother? |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Why do you plead so much for it? |
11615 | --_Blair and L. Murray cor._"_ Jul._ Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"What is''t to thee, if he_ neglect_ thy urn, Or without spices_ let_ thy body burn?" |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"What_ has_ become of so many productions?" |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"_ Dares_ he assume the name of a popular magistrate?" |
11615 | --_Brevard''s Digest._"Now what is become of thy former wit and humour?" |
11615 | --_Brownlee cor._"And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within_ him_?" |
11615 | --_Buchanan cor._"Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of_ pronoun_? |
11615 | --_Bucke cor._"Prepositions, you recollect, connect words,_ and so do_ conjunctions: how, then, can you tell_ a conjunction_ from_ a preposition_?" |
11615 | --_Bucke cor._"What sort of_ noun_ is_ man_? |
11615 | --_Bullions cor._"How do you know that love is_ of_ the first person? |
11615 | --_Bullions cor._"Why labours reason? |
11615 | --_Bullions, E. Gram._"Why labours reason? |
11615 | --_Burgh cor._"And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the_ prophets''_?" |
11615 | --_Bush cor._"What further need was there_ that_ an other priest_ should rise_?" |
11615 | --_Byron cor._"Or saith he it altogether for our_ sake_?" |
11615 | --_Campbell cor._"Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And_ fearst_ to die? |
11615 | --_Campbell cor._"Where lies the fault, that boys of eight or ten years_ of age_ are with great difficulty made to understand any of its principles?" |
11615 | --_Churchill cor._"But may it not be retorted, that_ this gratification itself_, is that which excites our resentment?" |
11615 | --_Clark cor._"Without you, what were man? |
11615 | --_Cobbeti cor._"What_ thanks_ have ye? |
11615 | --_Collier cor._"Whence_ come_ all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings?" |
11615 | --_Collier cor._"_ Whom_ was it from? |
11615 | --_Day cor._"Or, if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?" |
11615 | --_Day cor._"What kind of_ jessamine_? |
11615 | --_Dickens cor._"Dear gentle youth, is''t none but_ thou_?" |
11615 | --_Dorset cor._"Who do they say it is?" |
11615 | --_Drummond cor._"Who_ dares_, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task?" |
11615 | --_Editor of Waller cor._"Did they ever bear a testimony against_ the_ writing_ of_ books?" |
11615 | --_Farnum cor._"Can you tell me_ why_ his father_ made_ that remark?" |
11615 | --_Felton cor._"O who of man the story will unfold?" |
11615 | --_Felton cor._"Which of the two brothers_ is a graduate_?" |
11615 | --_Foster cor._"_ Has_ the legislature power to prohibit assemblies?" |
11615 | --_Gardiner cor._"_ Dares_ he deny_ that_ there are some of his fraternity guilty?" |
11615 | --_Gay cor._"Permit that I share in thy wo, The privilege_ canst thou_ refuse?" |
11615 | --_Goldsmith cor._"Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than_ those_ of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities?" |
11615 | --_Gould cor._"Was any person_ present besides_ the mercer? |
11615 | --_Gratton cor._"And what can be better than_ he_ that made it?" |
11615 | --_Greenleaf cor._"What is language? |
11615 | --_Hall and Baker cor._"The following is a note of Interrogation, or_ of a_ question:(?)."--_Inf. |
11615 | --_Hallock cor._"How_ are_ the agent of a passive and the object of an active verb often left?" |
11615 | --_Hallock cor._"Those adverbs which answer to the question_ where_? |
11615 | --_Hart cor._"How is Rule III violated?" |
11615 | --_Hart''s E. Gram._, p. 40, Why say,"_ distinction_;"the numbers, or_ distinctions_, being two? |
11615 | --_Hiley cor._"What sort of charm do they possess?" |
11615 | --_Holmes''s Rhetoric?_, Part II, p. 14. |
11615 | --_Ib._ Better:"Who can act alone, either in opposition, or in the ministry?" |
11615 | --_Ib._ But how can any idiom be violated by a mode of parsing, which merely expounds its_ true meaning_? |
11615 | --_Ib._"Couldest not thou write without blotting thy book?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Do we sound_ gases_ and_ gaseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous?_ No: they are more like_ glasses_ and_ osseous_."--_G. |
11615 | --_Ib._"Doth not your cousin intend to visit you?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Of whom_ speaketh_ the prophet this?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"The child is lost; and me, whither shall I go?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"The child is lost; and_ I_, whither shall I go?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Thinkest thou not it will rain to- day?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that didst let him in?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that_ let_ him in?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it thou that spreadest the hay?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it thou that_ spread_ the hay?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Were Cain and Abel''s occupation the same?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"What are the_ Jupiters_ and_ Junos_ of the heathens to such a God?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"What was Simon''s and Andrew''s employment?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"_ Understandest thou_ what thou readest?" |
11615 | --_Ib._, xvi, 15.--"Whom think ye that I am? |
11615 | --_Id., ib._"This priest has no pride in him?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And dost thou open thine eyes upon such_ a_ one, and_ bring_ me into judgement with thee?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And must I ravel out my_ weaved- up_ follies?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the_ king_ of the Jews?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And when I say,''_ Two men walk_,''is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural because it_ agrees with men_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Are not these schools of the highest importance? |
11615 | --_Id._"Are some verbs used both transitively and intransitively?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Are these the houses you were speaking of? |
11615 | --_Id._"But if I say,''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?'' |
11615 | --_Id._"But what_ say_ the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?" |
11615 | --_Id._"But_ will_ our sage writers on law forever think by tradition?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Canst thou by searching find out God? |
11615 | --_Id._"Do we sound gasses and_ gasseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous_? |
11615 | --_Id._"Do you remember_ to have spoken_ on this subject in school?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Does the present accident hinder_ you from_ being honest and brave?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give_ some_ of the saints this testimony?" |
11615 | --_Id._"For is not this, to set nature_ at_ work?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Have the_ greatest_ men always been the most popular? |
11615 | --_Id._"How can it choose but wither in a long and sharp winter?" |
11615 | --_Id._"How do you parse_ letter_ in the sentence,''James writes a letter?'' |
11615 | --_Id._"How long_ were_ you going? |
11615 | --_Id._"How many cases? |
11615 | --_Id._"How_ many_ are seven times nine?" |
11615 | --_Id._"I will say unto God my Rock, Why hast thou forgotten me?" |
11615 | --_Id._"I will say unto God my_ rock_, Why hast thou forgotten me?" |
11615 | --_Id._"If he_ dares_ not say they are, as I know he_ dares_ not, how must I then distinguish?" |
11615 | --_Id._"If_ mea_, which means_ my_, is an adjective in Latin, why may not_ my_ be so called in English? |
11615 | --_Id._"Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and bow down his head like a bulrush?" |
11615 | --_Id._"May not four feet be as_ poetic_ as five; or fifteen feet as_ poetic_ as fifty?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Now who would dote upon things_ hurried_ down the stream thus fast?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Now, if it be an evil, to do any thing out of strife; then such things_ as_ are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow_ pleasures_ to the grossest energies of appetite and sense?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Should we render service equally to a friend,_ a_ neighbour, and an enemy?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Suits my complexion--_hey_, gal? |
11615 | --_Id._"Thus the declarative mood[ i.e., the indicative mood] may be used in asking a question: as,''_ What_ man_ is_ frail?''" |
11615 | --_Id._"To reason how can we be said to rise? |
11615 | --_Id._"What can prevent this_ republic_ from soon raising a literary standard?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What connection has motive, wish, or supposition, with the the term_ subjunctive_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is Brown''s Rule in relation to this matter?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is Rule III?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is emphasis? |
11615 | --_Id._"What kind of article, then, shall we call_ the_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What nouns are_ of the_ masculine gender? |
11615 | --_Id._"What say you to such as these? |
11615 | --_Id._"What shall we say of_ noctambuloes?_ It is the regular English plural."--_G. |
11615 | --_Id._"What then may AND be called? |
11615 | --_Id._"What was_ Simon_ and Andrew''s employment?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Who can tell us who they are?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Who gave you that book, which you prize so much?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Whose prerogative is it? |
11615 | --_Id._"Why are you_ vexed_, Lady? |
11615 | --_Id._"Why then_ citest_ thou a scripture which is so plain and clear for it?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Did_ they_ learn_ their pieces perfectly?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ I_ meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?''" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Mr._ Smith,_ you_ say, on page 11th,''_ The_ objective case denotes the object''"--_Id._"Gentlemen, will you always speak as you mean?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Of_ what number is_ pens_? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Seems?_ madam; nay, it is: I know not_ seems_-- For I have that within which passes show."--_Hamlet_. |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Who_ think ye that I am? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why are we so often_ frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why does_ our teacher_ detain_ us so long?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why were_ the former days better than these?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why_ need you be anxious about this event?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Yet here, Laertes? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Your_ fathers, where are they? |
11615 | --_Infant School Gram._, p. v."Do not they say, every true believer has the Spirit of God in them?" |
11615 | --_Ingersoll cor._"Which tense is formed_ from_ the_ present_, or root of the verb?" |
11615 | --_Ingersoll cor._"_ Dost_ thou_ learn_ thy lesson?" |
11615 | --_Jamieson cor._"What is the name of the river on which London stands? |
11615 | --_Jaudon cor._"Does the conjunction_ ever_ join words together? |
11615 | --_Job._"_ What_ have I offended thee?" |
11615 | --_John Flint cor._"_ Of_ what number is_ boy_? |
11615 | --_Josephus cor._"What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words? |
11615 | --_Kames cor._"Or, if he was,_ were_ there no spiritual men then?" |
11615 | --_Kirkham cor._"How_ are_ vocal and written language understood?" |
11615 | --_Kirkham cor._"What are verbs? |
11615 | --_L''Estrange cor._"How comes this to be never heard of, nor in the least questioned, whether the Law was undoubtedly of Moses''s writing or_ not_?" |
11615 | --_Lempriere cor._"Good_ Master_, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" |
11615 | --_Lempriere''s Dict., n. Chilo._"Good master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" |
11615 | --_Lennie and Bullions cor._"Who calls the council, states the certain day, Who forms the phalanx, and who points the way?" |
11615 | --_Lennie cor._"When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_, what does the combination form?" |
11615 | --_Lieber cor._"Would it not be_ to make_ the students judges of the professors?" |
11615 | --_Locke cor._"What do you call it? |
11615 | --_Locke cor._"Will not a look of disdain cast upon you throw you into a_ ferment_?" |
11615 | --_Lowth cor._"Which road_ dost_ thou take here?" |
11615 | --_Mack cor._"What sort of thing is it?" |
11615 | --_Mathews cor._"Why should not we their ancient rites restore, And be what Rome or Athens_ was_ before?" |
11615 | --_Merchant cor._"Or what man is there of you,_ who_, if his son ask bread, will give him a stone?" |
11615 | --_Merchant cor._"Shalt thou build me_ a_ house to dwell in?" |
11615 | --_Milton cor._"What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus_ roamst_ the camp alone?" |
11615 | --_Milton cor._"Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was_ killed?_"--_Shak. |
11615 | --_Milton._"_ Wherein_ have you been galled by the king?" |
11615 | --_New Gram._, p. 337, Why not? |
11615 | --_Nutting cor._"Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we_ do_?" |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"Am I_ to be_ instructed?" |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ Who_ is he? |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"Why do you tolerate your own inconsistency, by calling it the present tense?" |
11615 | --_Pierpont cor._"_ Is then_ one chaste, one last embrace_ denied_? |
11615 | --_Priestley cor._"Who is there? |
11615 | --_Rev._, xii, 5.--"Why have ye done this, and saved the_ men- children_ alive?" |
11615 | --_Rowe cor._"Who knows not how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with_ arm~ ed_ legions fill''d?" |
11615 | --_Rush cor._"Is not the bare fact,_ that_ God_ is_ the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?" |
11615 | --_Russell cor._"Is that ornament in good taste?" |
11615 | --_Shak._"Can hearts, not free, be try''d whether they serve Willing or no, who will but what they must?" |
11615 | --_Sheridan cor._"_ Are you not ashamed_ to affirm that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags?" |
11615 | --_Sir W. Scott, L. L._"_ Seems he not_, Malise, like a ghost?" |
11615 | --_Sketch cor._"_ Was_ it I or he,_ that_ you requested to go?" |
11615 | --_Smart cor._"_ Do_ WILL and GO express but_ one_ action?" |
11615 | --_Smith cor._"Have they ascertained who gave the information?" |
11615 | --_Stuart cor._"If the crew rail at the master of the vessel,_ whom_ will they mind?" |
11615 | --_Swift cor._"Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel_ Bedash_ the rags of Lazarus? |
11615 | --_Tooke''s Annotator cor._"I, nor your plan, nor book condemn; But why your name? |
11615 | --_Volney cor._"What_ has_ become of those ages of abundance and of life?" |
11615 | --_Walker cor._"Wilt thou kill me, as thou_ didst_ the Egyptian yesterday?" |
11615 | --_Webster cor._"Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce_ her_ to our children?" |
11615 | --_Webster cor._"_ Of_ what use can these words be, till their meaning is known?" |
11615 | --_Webster''s Dict._"What, then, was the moral worth of these renouned leaders?" |
11615 | --_Webster''s Dict._,"I only mean to suggest a doubt, whether nature has enlisted herself as a Cis or Trans- Atlantic partisan?" |
11615 | --_Who_ runs? |
11615 | --_Wilson cor._"What should we say of such_ a_ one? |
11615 | --he asked,''Did I say_ penetrate_, sir, when I preached, it?'' |
11615 | --or even the possessive; as,"Whose sobs do I hear? |
11615 | --or,"Proper_ seasons for_ retirement should be allotted?" |
11615 | --or,"Seasons_ proper for_ retirement should be alloted?" |
11615 | 10 When an infinitive phrase is made the subject of a verb, do the words remain adjuncts, or are they abstract? |
11615 | 10.--to Rule 10th? |
11615 | 11.--to Rule 11th? |
11615 | 12.--to Rule 12th? |
11615 | 12th of the first chapter? |
11615 | 13.--to Rule 13th? |
11615 | 14.--to Rule 14th? |
11615 | 15.--to Rule 15th? |
11615 | 16.--to Rule 16th? |
11615 | 16th, of the plan of mixing syntax with etymology? |
11615 | 17.--to Rule 17th? |
11615 | 2.--to Rule 2d? |
11615 | 22, at p. 555;) as,"For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise?" |
11615 | 25? |
11615 | 3.--In interrogative sentences, the terms are usually transposed,[359] or both are placed after the verb; as,"Am_ I_ a_ Jew_?" |
11615 | 3.--to Rule 3d? |
11615 | 31st on Rule 4th? |
11615 | 39. Who invented the doctrine, that a participle and its adjuncts may be used as"_ one name_"and in that capacity govern the possessive? |
11615 | 4.--In negative questions, the adverb_ not_ is sometimes placed before the nominative, and sometimes after it: as,"Told_ not I_ thee?" |
11615 | 4.--to Rule 4th? |
11615 | 5.--Generic names, even when construed as masculine or feminine, often virtually include both sexes; as,"Hast thou given_ the horse_ strength? |
11615 | 5.--to Rule 5th? |
11615 | 57. Who says,"the verb agrees with_ the last nominative_?" |
11615 | 6,) that,''Language is established by reason, antiquity, authority, and custom?'' |
11615 | 6.--to Rule 6th? |
11615 | 7.--to Rule 7th? |
11615 | 7th of the first chapter? |
11615 | 8.--to Rule 8th? |
11615 | 9.--to Rule 9th? |
11615 | : Can you tell me the reason of his father''s making that remark?" |
11615 | : What is the reason of our_ teacher''s_ detaining us so long?" |
11615 | A Noun or a Pronoun is put absolute in the nominative, when its case depends on no other word: as,_"He failing, who shall meet success? |
11615 | A cardinal number answers to the question,"_ How many_?" |
11615 | A compiler of grammar first observes these habits, and then makes his rules: but if a person is himself familiar with the habits, why study the rules? |
11615 | A worse_ what_? |
11615 | ANALYSIS.--What is the general sense of this passage? |
11615 | According to Allen''s rule, this question is ambiguous; but the learned author explains it in Latin thus:"Placet igitur eos_ dimitti_? |
11615 | According to Churchill,"To use_ ought_ or_ cause_ in this manner, is a Scotticism:[ as,]''Wo n''t you_ cause_ them_ remove_ the hares?'' |
11615 | According to Johnson and Tooke, what is_ worth_, in such phrases as,"Wo_ worth_ the day?" |
11615 | According to this, must we not suppose verbs to be often transitive, when_ not made so_ by the author''s_ definition_? |
11615 | Adverbs of decree are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of degree are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of_ degree_ are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of_ manner_ are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of_ place_ are those which answer to the question,_ Where? |
11615 | After making this application of the name_ modes_, was it not improper for the learned author to call the moods also"_ modes_?" |
11615 | After the antecedent_ who_; as,"Who that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?" |
11615 | After verbs of_ giving, paying_, and the like, what ellipsis is apt to occur? |
11615 | After what manner should pauses be made? |
11615 | Again, Barnard approves of the question,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running to- day_?" |
11615 | Again, what sense is there in making the"liberty"of publishing one''s"private observations"to depend on the presumed absence of rivals? |
11615 | Again, with what truth can it be said, that nouns have_ no cases_ in English? |
11615 | Again:"_ Who_ betrayed_ her_ companion? |
11615 | All this is regular, with the exception of one foot; but who can make any thing but_ prose_ of the following? |
11615 | Am I not related, in this view, to the very earth itself?--_to_ the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?" |
11615 | An ordinal number answers to the question,"_ Which one_?" |
11615 | An''twas yesterday? |
11615 | An_ interrogative pronoun_ is a pronoun with which a question is asked; as,"_ Who_ touched my clothes?" |
11615 | And again, Are they all wrong? |
11615 | And again, is not a simplification of the verb as necessary and proper in the familiar use of the second person singular, as in that of the third? |
11615 | And also this:"Why are we brought into the world_ less perfect_ in respect to our nature?" |
11615 | And even here an auxiliary is usually preferred in questions and negations; as,"_ Do_ you love?" |
11615 | And even if they were so, and the difference were nothing, would it not be better to adhere, where we can, to the analogy of General Grammar? |
11615 | And how can the_ first person_ be"the_ person_ WHO_ speaks_,"when every word of this phrase is of the_ third_ person? |
11615 | And how can"_ largest_"be wrong, if"_ first_"is right? |
11615 | And how do feelings differ from thoughts? |
11615 | And how does_ the_ commonly limit the sense? |
11615 | And how is it in the Latin phrases,"_ Dulcior melle_, sweeter than honey,"--"_Prà ¦ stantior auro_, better than gold?" |
11615 | And if infinitives and other mere_ adjuncts_ may be the objects which make verbs transitive, how shall a transitive verb be known? |
11615 | And if so, have we not reason to conclude that the adoption of participles in such instances is erroneous and ungrammatical? |
11615 | And if so, what is that rule? |
11615 | And if some would be found less so than others, may there not be an insufficiency in the very nature of them all? |
11615 | And if such they had, what Scripture taught them? |
11615 | And if we depart from the common scheme, where shall we stop? |
11615 | And if we follow not ours, when or how shall the English scholar ever know why we spell as we do? |
11615 | And if_ to_, without government, is not an_ adverb_, what is? |
11615 | And if_"see"_ is here transitive, would not other forms, such as_ are told, have been told_, or_ are aware_, be just as much so, if put in its place? |
11615 | And is it arrogant to say there is much? |
11615 | And is it not plain, that the old verb"THE,"as used by More, is from Theon,_ to thrive_, rather than from Thicgan,_ to take_? |
11615 | And is not this the situation of every transitive participle that is made either the_ subject_ or the_ object_ of a verb? |
11615 | And must| it shine| to light| a world| of war|-fare and| of tears? |
11615 | And since Murray''s phrases are both entirely too long for common use, what better name can be given them than this very simple one,_ the Curves_? |
11615 | And the expression in English should rather have been,"Lovest thou me more than_ do_ these?" |
11615 | And the swift| charger sweep, In full| career, Trampling thy| place of sleep-- Why cam''st| thou here? |
11615 | And what advantage has it, even where it is least objectionable? |
11615 | And what becomes of syllables that end with vowels or liquids and are not accented? |
11615 | And what can be made of rules and examples like the following? |
11615 | And what do his twenty pages amount to? |
11615 | And what else can be meant by"_ the division of thought_,"than our notion of objects, as existing severally, or as being distinguishable into parts? |
11615 | And what is one singular irregular preterit, compared with all the verbs in the language? |
11615 | And what then? |
11615 | And what would this mean? |
11615 | And where shall we find a more blamable one than this? |
11615 | And which is that? |
11615 | And who does not know, that to call the adjuncts of any thing"an_ essential part_ of it,"is a flat absurdity? |
11615 | And who will deny that every degree of improvement in literary taste tends to brighten and embellish the whole intellectual nature? |
11615 | And who will undertake such a task but he that is personally interested? |
11615 | And who, but some sciolist in grammar, would, in all such instances, prefer the passive voice? |
11615 | And why not? |
11615 | And yet are there some prepositions which govern nothing, precede nothing? |
11615 | And yet what truth is there in the passage? |
11615 | And, again,"a worse"_ than_ what? |
11615 | And, if so, what is a"silent letter?" |
11615 | And, indeed, why should we write,"I_ can not_ go, Thou_ canst not_ go, He_ can not_ go?" |
11615 | And, of the quackery which is now so prevalent, what can be a more natural effect, than a very general contempt for the study of grammar? |
11615 | And, why should we_ wish_ to write bad grammar, if we can express our meaning in good grammar?" |
11615 | And, with such an interpretation, what must be the meaning of_ more bookish_ or_ most foolish_? |
11615 | Are Letters Sounds? |
11615 | Are all interjections to be parsed as being put absolute? |
11615 | Are all literary works divided exactly in this way? |
11615 | Are all long syllables equally long, and all short ones equally short? |
11615 | Are all the conjunctive adverbs included in the first four classes? |
11615 | Are authors apt to undervalue their own performances? |
11615 | Are not these expressions much better English than the foregoing quotations? |
11615 | Are not"_ three or more persons_"here compared by"the comparative"_ wiser_? |
11615 | Are proper triphthongs numerous in our language? |
11615 | Are rules of government to be applied to the governing words, or to the governed? |
11615 | Are sentences often elliptical? |
11615 | Are such expressions as,"the_ then_ ministry,""the_ above_ discourse,"good English, or bad-- well authorized, or not? |
11615 | Are such pauses essential to verse? |
11615 | Are the countless examples of this exception truly elliptical? |
11615 | Are the different forms of false construction as numerous as these notes? |
11615 | Are the distinctions of voice and of time as much regarded in participial nouns as in participles? |
11615 | Are the interrogative pronouns declined like the simple relatives? |
11615 | Are the just powers of the letters in any degree variable? |
11615 | Are the kinds of composite verse numerous? |
11615 | Are the methods of science to be accounted mere hinderances to instruction? |
11615 | Are the person, number, and gender of a pronoun always determined by an antecedent? |
11615 | Are the prepositions divided into classes? |
11615 | Are the principles or doctrines which are applied in these different exercises usually the same, or are they different? |
11615 | Are the sounds of a language fewer than its words? |
11615 | Are the words to be divided thus,_ ri- ver, fe- ver_? |
11615 | Are there any exceptions or objections to the old rule,"Active verbs govern the objective case?" |
11615 | Are there any exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | Are there any of our passive verbs that can properly govern the objective case? |
11615 | Are there any verbs that sometimes connect like cases, and sometimes govern the objective? |
11615 | Are there different methods of analysis, which may be useful? |
11615 | Are there exceptions in reference to all the parts of speech, or to how many of the ten? |
11615 | Are there exceptions to all the rules, or to how many? |
11615 | Are these kinds to be kept separate? |
11615 | Are these the Gods they worship? |
11615 | Are they Hebrews? |
11615 | Are they Israelites? |
11615 | Are they friends to learning? |
11615 | Are they ministers of Christ? |
11615 | Are they not loved? |
11615 | Are they the seed of Abraham? |
11615 | Are verbs often connected without agreeing in mood, tense, and form? |
11615 | Are words in apposition always supposed to be in the same case? |
11615 | Are words in apposition always to be parsed separately? |
11615 | Are_ an_ and_ a_ different articles, or the same? |
11615 | Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
11615 | As?_ 21. |
11615 | Author make new words when he pleases? |
11615 | Author make new words when he pleases? |
11615 | Ay, truly; but must we not also, in the latter case, use_ and_, and not_ with_? |
11615 | B. Peirce about the name and place of the interjection? |
11615 | B. Peirce cor._"It is_ the_ choosing_ of_ such letters to compose words,"& c.--_Id._"What is parsing? |
11615 | B. Peirce''s Grammar, with reference to his manner of parsing words after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | B. cor._"Thy nature, Immortality, who_ knows_?" |
11615 | B.--is not the infinitive in Latin_ the same_ as in_ the English?_ Thus, I desire_ to teach Latin_--Ego Cupio_ docere_. |
11615 | Bat what says the Bible? |
11615 | Besides the rules and their examples, what sorts of matters are introduced into these chapters? |
11615 | Better English:"What means this noise_ with which the city rings_?" |
11615 | Better:"What means this restless stir,_ this_ commotion of mind?" |
11615 | Between what other related terms can_ as_ be employed? |
11615 | Between what parts of speech, as terms of the relation, can a preposition be used? |
11615 | Blair cor._"Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and_ all_ the rest_ enslave_?" |
11615 | Blair cor._"The question might be put, What more does he than mean?" |
11615 | Bullions cor._"What striking lesson_ is taught_ by the tenor of this history?" |
11615 | But after all, what does it mean? |
11615 | But are not many teachers too careless here? |
11615 | But are not"TRUTH, NATURE, and REALITY,"worthy to be preferred to any instructions that contradict them? |
11615 | But are there not_ other_ faults in the version? |
11615 | But can a boy learn by such means what it is,_ to speak and write grammatically_? |
11615 | But can they give a_ reason_ for their preference? |
11615 | But can we change this well known name? |
11615 | But did not the wit consist in adroitly excusing himself, by an illusory comparison? |
11615 | But do not its"simplicity and facility"appear greatest to those who know least about it?--i.e., least of its grammar, and least of its history? |
11615 | But does the text specify a_ particular_"deeper well"or"clearer water?" |
11615 | But how can one indivisible word be consistently made two different parts of speech at once? |
11615 | But how can the metre which predominates by two to one, be called, in such a case, an occasional diversification of that which is less frequent? |
11615 | But how does_ an_ or_ a_ commonly limit the sense? |
11615 | But how far is analogy alone a justification? |
11615 | But how shall, or can, this readiness be acquired? |
11615 | But in what a posture does the grammarian place himself, who condemns, as_ bad English_, that phraseology which he constantly and purposely uses? |
11615 | But is it not a_ fact_, that such words as_ cuttest, stopping, rapid, rugged_, are_ trochees_, in verse? |
11615 | But is it not plain that_ heiress''s, abbess''s, peeress''s, countess''s_, and many other words of the same form, are as good English as_ witness''s_? |
11615 | But is it not preferable to the hyphened form, with three Ells, which has authority? |
11615 | But is it true, that,"We all know_ what light is_?" |
11615 | But is the fourth case of these authors_ the same_ as his? |
11615 | But is this all that Webster meant? |
11615 | But it is more dignified, and in general more graceful, to place the preposition before the pronoun; as,"_ To whom_ did he speak?" |
11615 | But let a scornful expression be addressed to a passionate man, will not the words"call internal feelings"into action? |
11615 | But of_ what_ ideas are the words of our language significant? |
11615 | But shall it be allowed, in the present state of things, to confound our conjugations and overturn our grammar? |
11615 | But still the definition would not be true, nor would it answer the question, What is a letter? |
11615 | But the reader may ask,"What have all these things to do with English Grammar?" |
11615 | But the true question is, would it be right to say,"He expressed the pleasure he had in the_ philosopher''s_ hearing_ him_?" |
11615 | But varied how? |
11615 | But what ambiguity of construction, or what diversity of interpretation, proceeding from the same hand, can these admissions be supposed to warrant? |
11615 | But what apology is this, for that authorship which has produced so many grammars without originality? |
11615 | But what do they mean by"_ their substantives_,"or"_ their nouns_?" |
11615 | But what does such a thinker know about correctness? |
11615 | But what etymology? |
11615 | But what has the doubling of_ c_ by_ k_, in our native monosyllables and their derivatives, to do with all these words of foreign origin? |
11615 | But what have these to do with the monstrous absurdity of supposing objective adjuncts to be"parts of the actual nominative?" |
11615 | But what if all these authors do prefer,"_ but him_,"and"_ save him_,"where ten times as many would say,"_ but he_,""_ save he_?" |
11615 | But what is any opinion worth, if further knowledge of facts can confute it? |
11615 | But what is it? |
11615 | But what is the familiar form of expression for the texts cited before? |
11615 | But what property has_ unity_ in common with_ plurality_, on which a definition of_ number_ may be founded? |
11615 | But when or where, since the building of Babel, has this ever happened? |
11615 | But when, or where? |
11615 | But when? |
11615 | But who can hope to prevail on nations to change their practice, and make all their old books useless? |
11615 | But who can not perceive, that without the colon, the semicolon becomes an absurdity? |
11615 | But who shall determine whether the doctrines contained in any given treatise are, or are not, based upon such authority? |
11615 | But who will suppose that_ foolish_ denotes but a slight degree of folly, or_ bookish_ but a slight fondness for books? |
11615 | But why is it, that so much of what is spoken or written, is spoken or written in vain? |
11615 | But why make the classes so numerous as four? |
11615 | But why should any principle of grammar be the less intelligible on account of the extent of its application? |
11615 | But why was this text admired? |
11615 | But"_ Shall_ I go?" |
11615 | But, if_ four_ be taken as only one thing, how can_ three_ multiply this one thing into_ twelve_? |
11615 | But, when this command was uttered to the dark waves of primeval chaos, it must have meant,"_ Do ye let light be there._"What else could it mean? |
11615 | But, without other exceptions, what shall be done with the following texts from Murray himself? |
11615 | But_ n_ too is a letter; and is_ n_ the first principle? |
11615 | By a repetition of the article before two or more adjectives, what other repetition is implied? |
11615 | By observing that it answers to the question,_ When? |
11615 | By what is the possessive case governed? |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"How many persons? |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"Is WILLIAM''S a proper or_ a_ common noun?" |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"Of whom hast thou been afraid, or_ whom hast thou_ feared?" |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"_ Of_ what gender, then, is_ man_, and why?" |
11615 | Can a collective noun, as such, take a plural adjective before it? |
11615 | Can a participle which is governed by a preposition, have a case after it which is governed by neither? |
11615 | Can a preposition ever govern any thing else than a noun or a pronoun? |
11615 | Can a preposition, in English, govern any other case than the objective? |
11615 | Can a pronoun agree with its antecedent in one sense and not in an other? |
11615 | Can a single foot be a line? |
11615 | Can a theory which turns topsyturvy the whole plan of syllabication, fail to affect"the_ natural quantities_ of syllables?" |
11615 | Can a uniform series of good grammars, Latin, Greek, English,& c., be produced by a mere revising of one defective book for each language? |
11615 | Can a verb or participle not transitive take any other case after it than that which precedes it? |
11615 | Can a zeugma of the verb be proved to be right, in spite of these authorities? |
11615 | Can all sentences be divided into clauses? |
11615 | Can an active- transitive verb govern any other case than the objective? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever be substituted for its kindred abstract noun? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever be used without relation to any noun, pronoun, or other subject? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever relate to any thing else than a noun or pronoun? |
11615 | Can an objective before the infinitive become"the subject of the affirmation?" |
11615 | Can any grammarian forget that, in speaking of brute animals, male or female, we commonly use_ which_, and never_ who_? |
11615 | Can any of the definitives which preclude_ an_ or_ a_, be used with the adjective_ one_? |
11615 | Can any thing but the governing of an objective noun or pronoun make an active verb transitive? |
11615 | Can any word have the secondary accent, and not the primary? |
11615 | Can any words agree, or disagree, except in something that belongs to each of them? |
11615 | Can articles ever be used when we mean to speak of a whole species? |
11615 | Can different antecedents connected by_ or_ be accurately represented by differing pronouns connected in the same way? |
11615 | Can he be a competent grammarian, who does not know the meaning of_ between_; or who, knowing it, misapplies so very plain a word? |
11615 | Can he conceive how the number_ five_ can be a_ unit_? |
11615 | Can infinitives, participles, phrases, sentences, and parts of sentences, be really"in the objective case?" |
11615 | Can it be anything else than their_ similarity_ in some common property or modification? |
11615 | Can it be right, to regard as hypermeter the long rhyming syllables of a line? |
11615 | Can it be shown, on good authority, that_ O_ in Latin may be followed by the nominative of the first person or the accusative of the second? |
11615 | Can it be, though, that you are not dead?" |
11615 | Can monosyllables have either? |
11615 | Can not my opponents see in these examples an argument against the distinction which they attempt to draw between_ to_ and_ to_? |
11615 | Can nouns without_ and_ be taken jointly, as if they had it? |
11615 | Can one article relate to more than one noun? |
11615 | Can one noun have more than one article? |
11615 | Can one read with too many emphases? |
11615 | Can our| eyes Reach thy| size? |
11615 | Can praise and success entitle to critical notice works in themselves unworthy of it? |
11615 | Can singular antecedents be so suggested as to require a plural pronoun, when only one of them is uttered? |
11615 | Can such pronouns as stand for things not named, be said to agree with the nouns for which they are substituted? |
11615 | Can the article in English, ever be placed after its noun? |
11615 | Can the explanatory word ever be placed first? |
11615 | Can the insertion or omission of an article greatly affect the import of a sentence? |
11615 | Can the parsing of words be affected by the parser''s notion of what constitutes a simple sentence? |
11615 | Can the parsing of words be varied by any transposition which does not change their import? |
11615 | Can the possessive sign be ever rightly added to a separate adjective? |
11615 | Can the preposition_ to_ govern or precede any other mood than the infinitive? |
11615 | Can the relative position of the article and adjective be a matter of indifference? |
11615 | Can the subject of a finite verb be in any other case than the nominative? |
11615 | Can the syllables of a word be perceived by the ear? |
11615 | Can there be a syntactical relation of words without either agreement or government? |
11615 | Can there be an inelegant use of prepositions which is not positively ungrammatical? |
11615 | Can there ever be an implied repetition of the noun when no article is used? |
11615 | Can this, in general, be literally imitated in English? |
11615 | Can we consistently take for our present standard, a style which does not allow us to use_ you_ in the nominative case, or_ its_ for the possessive? |
11615 | Can we help| loving him-- Loving ex|-ceedingly? |
11615 | Can words connected by_ with_ be properly used as joint nominatives? |
11615 | Can words differing in number be in apposition with each other? |
11615 | Can words having the form of the first participle be nouns, and clearly known to be such, when they have no adjuncts? |
11615 | Can words that agree with the same collective noun, be of different numbers? |
11615 | Can you form a word upon each by means of an_ f_? |
11615 | Can you give examples? |
11615 | Can you mention the principal exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | Can you repeat the alphabet, with_ an_ or_ a_ before the name of each letter? |
11615 | Can you specify some that appear to be faulty? |
11615 | Can"the case absolute,"in English, be any other than the nominative? |
11615 | Canst thou make_ him_ afraid as a grasshopper? |
11615 | Common Version:"Art thou he that_ should come_, or do we look for another?" |
11615 | Could we| soar to| your proud| eyries| fleeing, In our| hearts, would| haunting|_ m= em~ or~ ies_| die?" |
11615 | Cruel| charmer,| can you| go? |
11615 | Dict., w. Human._"How much more grievous would our lives appear, To reach th''eighth hundred, than the eightieth year?" |
11615 | Dict._ Now is it not plain, that the action expressed by"_ read_"is"that_ towards_ which"the affection signified by"_ loves_"is directed? |
11615 | Dict._"Tell me, in sadness, whom is she you love?" |
11615 | Did Adam give names to all the creatures about him, and then allow those names to be immediately forgotten? |
11615 | Did I lose heaven for this?" |
11615 | Did his praisers think so too? |
11615 | Did n''t they do it? |
11615 | Did not Jane West write justly,"She made an attempt to look in at the dear_ dutchess''s_?" |
11615 | Did not both he and his family continually use his original nouns in their social intercourse? |
11615 | Did the writer mean,"Proper seasons should be_ allotted to_ retirement?" |
11615 | Did these authors_ know_ the words, or did they not? |
11615 | Do I not write? |
11615 | Do I write? |
11615 | Do any English authors adopt the Latin doctrine of the accusative( or objective) before the infinitive? |
11615 | Do any imagine these fashionable substitutions to be morally objectionable? |
11615 | Do any of these virtues stand in need of a good word; or are they the worse for a bad one? |
11615 | Do any other verbs, besides these eight, take the infinitive after them without_ to_? |
11615 | Do any reputable writers allow passive verbs to govern the objective case? |
11615 | Do articles always relate to nouns? |
11615 | Do collective nouns generally admit of being made literally plural? |
11615 | Do compounds embracing the possessive case appear to be written with sufficient uniformity? |
11615 | Do figures of rhetoric often occur? |
11615 | Do n''t they do it? |
11615 | Do not adverbs sometimes relate to participial nouns? |
11615 | Do not the principles of etymology affect those of syntax? |
11615 | Do other adverbs come between the article and the adjective? |
11615 | Do the Latin grammarians agree in their enumeration of the concords in Latin? |
11615 | Do the Latin grammars teach the same doctrine as the English, concerning nominatives or antecedents connected disjunctively? |
11615 | Do the simple orders admit any diversity? |
11615 | Do the teachers of this doctrine agree among themselves? |
11615 | Do these ten heads embrace all the uses of the infinitive? |
11615 | Do those who speak of syntax as being divided into two parts, Concord and Government, commonly adhere to such division? |
11615 | Do we ever compare by adverbs those adjectives which can be compared by_ er_ and_ est_? |
11615 | Do we ever find the subjunctive mood put after a relative pronoun? |
11615 | Do we ever lay two equal accents on one word? |
11615 | Do we learn to articulate in learning to speak or read? |
11615 | Do we often put proper nouns in apposition with appellatives? |
11615 | Do we put the sign of possession always and only where the two terms of the possessive relation meet? |
11615 | Do what? |
11615 | Do_ we, our_, and_ us_, become actually singular, as often as a king or a critic applies them to himself? |
11615 | Do_ who, which_, and_ what_, all ask the same question? |
11615 | Does Lowth agree with Murray in the anomaly of supposing_ to_ a preposition that governs nothing? |
11615 | Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly?" |
11615 | Does Murray acknowledge or furnish any exceptions to this doctrine? |
11615 | Does Murray''s notion, that collective nouns are of different sorts, appear to be consistent or warrantable? |
11615 | Does a collective noun with a singular definitive before it ever admit of a plural verb or pronoun? |
11615 | Does a singular antecedent ever admit of a plural pronoun? |
11615 | Does an ellipsis of the verb or participle change this construction into apposition? |
11615 | Does any verb in English ever govern two objectives that are not coupled? |
11615 | Does apposition require any other agreement than that of case? |
11615 | Does emphasis ever affect accent? |
11615 | Does every adjective"belong to a substantive, expressed or understood,"as Murray avers? |
11615 | Does every possessive sign imply a separate governing noun? |
11615 | Does he mean"_ a worse vocabulary_?" |
11615 | Does he positively determine, that the participle should_ never_ be allowed to govern the possessive case? |
11615 | Does it appear that nouns before participles are less frequently subjected to their government than pronouns? |
11615 | Does not every body know it was current four hundred years ago, or more? |
11615 | Does not the verb_ make_ agree with_ constitution_ and_ laws_, taken conjointly? |
11615 | Does our rule for the verb and disjunct nominatives derive confirmation from the Latin and Greek syntax? |
11615 | Does syllabic quantity always follow the quality of the vowels? |
11615 | Does the adjective frequently relate to what is not uttered with it? |
11615 | Does the adverb"_ frequently_"qualify the verb"_ will depend_"expressed in the sentence? |
11615 | Does the analogy of other languages with ours prove any thing on this point? |
11615 | Does the composite order demand any uniformity? |
11615 | Does the compounding of words necessarily preclude their separate use? |
11615 | Does the mere being of a thing demand the use of articles? |
11615 | Does the possessive case admit of any abstract sense or construction? |
11615 | Does the possessive case before a real participle denote the possessor of something? |
11615 | Does the preposition_ to_ before the infinitive always govern the verb? |
11615 | Does this author appear to have gained"a_ clear idea_ of the nature of a collective noun?" |
11615 | Does this construction admit of any variety in the position of the words? |
11615 | Does this list contain all the words that are ever used in English as prepositions? |
11615 | Does this work contain specimens of different kinds of composite verse? |
11615 | Does_ than_ as well as_ as_ usually take the same case after it that occurs before it? |
11615 | Dost thou love?" |
11615 | Dost thou love?" |
11615 | Doth_ the eagle_ mount up at thy command, and make_ her_ nest on high?" |
11615 | E. Day cor._"_ Who_ is generally used when we would inquire_ about_ some unknown person or persons; as,''_ Who_ is that man?''" |
11615 | Else what_ is_ agreement? |
11615 | Example of error:"What is_ Person_? |
11615 | Example:"For dost thou sit as judging me_ according to_ the law, and_ contrary_ to law command me to be smitten?" |
11615 | Examples:"In the grave,_ who_ shall give thee thanks?" |
11615 | Examples:"Whence hath_ this_ man_ this_ wisdom, and_ these_ mighty works?" |
11615 | Expression? |
11615 | Fall whither? |
11615 | Fisk has it in the following form:"What is the reason of this_ person''s dismissing his servant_ so hastily?" |
11615 | Flint cor._"In the sentence,''This is the pen which John made,''what word_ expresses the object of_ MADE?" |
11615 | For example: Is it not a disgrace to a man of letters, to be unable to tell accurately what a letter is? |
11615 | For example: is it better to say,"Twice one_ is_ two,"or,"Twice one_ are_ two?" |
11615 | For how can they be right, while reason, usage, and the prevailing opinion, are still against them? |
11615 | For instance,_ does_ the_ v_ in_ river_ and the_ v_ in_ fever_ belong to the first or to the second syllable? |
11615 | For instance:"What is the meaning of the word_ number_? |
11615 | For seeing_ time_ and_ person_ be, as it were, the right and left hand of a verb, what can the maiming bring else, but a lameness to the whole body?" |
11615 | For the correcting of false syntax, we have a hundred and fifty- two_ notes_; can these be used also in parsing? |
11615 | For what purpose are_ Italics_ chiefly used? |
11615 | For what sense could be made of parsing, without supposing an objective case to nouns? |
11615 | For why stop at a limited number, when in all subjects, susceptible of intension, the intermediate excesses are in a manner infinite? |
11615 | For, what is requisite to the performance? |
11615 | For,"_ As he attends_,& c.,"means,"As_ he_ attends_ to your studies!_"And what good sense is there in this? |
11615 | Forms adapted to the Common or Familiar Style._"Was it thou[538] that_ built_ that house?" |
11615 | From such an instructor, who can find out what is good English, and what is not? |
11615 | Gildon ah!_ what ill- starr''d rage Divides a friendship long confirm''d by age?" |
11615 | Ha?" |
11615 | Had Adam, Abel, Enoch, Noah, and Abraham, then, no such knowledge? |
11615 | Had I loved? |
11615 | Had he loved? |
11615 | Had he meant,"Would you have them_ to_ let go then?" |
11615 | Had n''t they done it? |
11615 | Had she a| brother? |
11615 | Had she a| sister? |
11615 | Had they not been loved? |
11615 | Had thou loved? |
11615 | Had we not loved? |
11615 | Had you not seen? |
11615 | Hadst thou loved? |
11615 | Has Murray written any thing which goes to show whether_ as follows_ can be right or not, when the preceding noun is plural? |
11615 | Has grammar really been made easy by this confounding of its parts? |
11615 | Has he loved? |
11615 | Has the regular method of comparison any degrees of this kind? |
11615 | Hast thou loved? |
11615 | Hast thou loved? |
11615 | Hast thou so crack''d and_ splitted_ my poor tongue?" |
11615 | Hath he said it? |
11615 | Hath he spoken it? |
11615 | Hath he spoken it? |
11615 | Have I loved? |
11615 | Have any popular authors adopted this doctrine? |
11615 | Have n''t they done it? |
11615 | Have plagiarism and quackery become the only means of success in philology? |
11615 | Have prepositions any grammatical modifications? |
11615 | Have the compound relative pronouns any declension? |
11615 | Have they not been loved? |
11615 | Have we any connective words besides the conjunctions? |
11615 | Have we more than one sort of accent? |
11615 | Have we not loved? |
11615 | Have ye| chosen,| O my| people,| on whose| party| ye shall| stand, Ere the| Doom from|_ its_ worn| sandals| shakes the| dust a|-gainst our| land? |
11615 | Have you not seen? |
11615 | He saith unto him, Which? |
11615 | He saith unto them, How then doth David in Spirit call him Lord?" |
11615 | He saith unto them, How then doth David in_ spirit_ call him Lord?" |
11615 | He that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?" |
11615 | He? |
11615 | Hear no| sound of| sabbath| bell?''" |
11615 | Hear ye| not his|_ chariot_| wheels, As the| mighty| thunder| rolls? |
11615 | Here the idea is,"_ What person_ hath first given_ any thing_ to_ the Lord_, so that it ought to be repaid_ him_?" |
11615 | Here_ it_ represents_ the word"Jane"_ and not_ the person Jane._"What mark or sign is put after_ master_ to show that_ he_ is in the possessive case? |
11615 | Here_ what_, means_ in what degree? |
11615 | Herself? |
11615 | Himself? |
11615 | Honour hath no skill in surgery then? |
11615 | How able is that writer who is chargeable with the_ greatest want_ of taste and discernment? |
11615 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
11615 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
11615 | How are adverbs to be parsed in such expressions as,"_ Away with him?_"9. |
11615 | How are different vowel sounds produced? |
11615 | How are participles placed? |
11615 | How are passive verbs formed? |
11615 | How are poetic quantities denominated? |
11615 | How are pronouns divided? |
11615 | How are relative and interrogative pronouns placed? |
11615 | How are such questions asked in the familiar style? |
11615 | How are the conjunctions divided? |
11615 | How are the consonants divided? |
11615 | How are the degrees of diminution, or inferiority, expressed? |
11615 | How are the following sentences analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How are the harmonic pauses divided? |
11615 | How are the interjections arranged in the list? |
11615 | How are the leading principles of syntax presented? |
11615 | How are the person and number of a verb ascertained, where no peculiar ending is employed to mark them? |
11615 | How are the prepositions arranged in the list? |
11615 | How are the second and third persons singular distinctively formed? |
11615 | How are the two articles distinguished in grammar? |
11615 | How are these inflections exemplified? |
11615 | How are these learned? |
11615 | How are they proportioned? |
11615 | How are they used in asking questions? |
11615 | How are verbs divided, with respect to their form? |
11615 | How are verbs divided, with respect to their signification? |
11615 | How are words distinguished in regard to_ species_ and_ figure_? |
11615 | How can a noun be, or seem to be, in apposition with a possessive pronoun? |
11615 | How can he be a man of refined literary taste, who can not speak and write his native language grammatically? |
11615 | How can it be proved that_ to_ before the infinitive is a preposition? |
11615 | How can it be said, that_ good_ and_ bad_ are here substantives, since they have a plural meaning and refuse the plural form? |
11615 | How can one avoid the ambiguity which Dr. Priestley notices in the use of the adjective_ no_? |
11615 | How can one determine whether an adjective or an adverb is required? |
11615 | How can one''s notion of_ ellipsis_ affect his mode of parsing, and his distinction of sentences as simple or compound? |
11615 | How can references be otherwise made? |
11615 | How can that be"_ a part_ of the verb,"which is_ a word_ used_ before_ it? |
11615 | How can the terms of relation which pertain to the preposition be ascertained? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a CONJUNCTION? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a NOUN? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PARTICIPLE? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PREPOSITION? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PRONOUN? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a VERB? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an ADJECTIVE? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an ADVERB? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an INTERJECTION? |
11615 | How can we introduce a noun or pronoun before the infinitive, and still make the whole phrase the subject of a finite verb? |
11615 | How can we know to what class, or part of speech, any word belongs? |
11615 | How can_ it_ be quiet, seeing the Lord hath given_ it_ a charge against Askelon, and against the sea- shore? |
11615 | How can_ to_ be a"_ preposition_"in the phrase,"_ He was listened to_,"and not so at all in"_ to be listened to_?" |
11615 | How could the man who saw all this, insist on adding_ st_ for the second person, where not even the_ d_ of the past tense could he articulated? |
11615 | How could"good writers"indite"much"bad English by_ dropping_ from the subjunctive an indicative ending which never belonged to it? |
11615 | How do Dr. Adam and others suppose"the gerund in English"to become a"substantive,"or noun? |
11615 | How do Ingersoll, Kirkham, and Smith, agree with their master Murray, concerning such examples as,"_ Let me go_?" |
11615 | How do Nutting, Kirkham, Nixon, Cooper, and Sanborn, agree with Murray, or with one an other, in pointing out what governs the infinitive? |
11615 | How do Priestley and others pretend to distinguish between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_? |
11615 | How do compounds take the sign of possession? |
11615 | How do conjunctions differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do conjunctive adverbs differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do our grammarians now dispose of what remains to us of the old Saxon dative case? |
11615 | How do permanent compounds differ from others? |
11615 | How do prepositions differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do relative pronouns differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do we compare_ well, badly_ or_ ill, little, much, far_, and_ forth_? |
11615 | How do we mark a quotation within a quotation? |
11615 | How do we sometimes avoid such repetition? |
11615 | How do you compare_ far? |
11615 | How do you compare_ good? |
11615 | How do you decline the nouns,_ friend, man, fox_, and_ fly?_ LESSON VII-- PARSING. |
11615 | How do you decline the pronoun_ I? |
11615 | How do you decline the pronoun_ Myself? |
11615 | How do you decline_ Who? |
11615 | How do you decline_ Whoever? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE LOVED, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE READING, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ be_, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ see_, with the pronoun_ I? |
11615 | How do you_ know_ long and short Syllables? |
11615 | How does Bolles define articulation? |
11615 | How does Brown review these criticisms, and attempt to settle the question? |
11615 | How does Churchill differ from Lowth respecting the phrase,"_ ever so wisely_,"or"_ never so wisely?_"23. |
11615 | How does Churchill treat the matter? |
11615 | How does Comstock define it? |
11615 | How does Dr. Ash parse_ to_ before the infinitive? |
11615 | How does Hiley treat the English participle? |
11615 | How does John Burn propose to settle this dispute? |
11615 | How does L. Murray connect emphasis with quantity? |
11615 | How does a finite verb agree with its subject, or nominative? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with a collective noun? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with disjunct antecedents? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with its antecedent? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with joint antecedents? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with a collective noun? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with disjunctive nominatives? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with joint nominatives? |
11615 | How does articulation differ from pronunciation? |
11615 | How does the English fashion of putting_ you_ for_ thou_, compare with the usage of the French, and of other nations? |
11615 | How does the English participle compare with the Latin gerund? |
11615 | How does the French construction of participles and infinitives compare with the English? |
11615 | How does the author of this work dispose of the example? |
11615 | How does the author of this work generally dispose of such government? |
11615 | How does the infinitive"express an action or state_ indefinitely_,"if it"_ usually relates to some noun or pronoun_?" |
11615 | How does the passage here cited comport with this hint of Pope? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metaphor? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metonymy? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of personification? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of synecdoche? |
11615 | How does this accord with the views of Murray, Lowth, Adam, and Brown?. |
11615 | How is Grammar divided? |
11615 | How is a verb conjugated interrogatively and negatively? |
11615 | How is a verb conjugated negatively? |
11615 | How is an adverb to be parsed, when it seems to be put for a verb? |
11615 | How is grammar to be taught, and by what means are its principles to be made known? |
11615 | How is the distinguishing of the participle from the verbal noun inculcated by Allen, and their difference of meaning by Murray? |
11615 | How is the first or imperfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example to be parsed? |
11615 | How is the following long example parsed in Praxis XII? |
11615 | How is the form of negation exemplified by the verb_ love_ in the first person singular? |
11615 | How is the infinitive used after_ bid_? |
11615 | How is the infinitive used after_ have, help_, and_ find_? |
11615 | How is the like synopsis formed in the third person plural? |
11615 | How is the negative question exemplified in the first person plural? |
11615 | How is the negative question exemplified in the second person plural? |
11615 | How is the passive verb BE LOVED conjugated throughout? |
11615 | How is the plural number of nouns regularly formed? |
11615 | How is the possessive case of nouns formed? |
11615 | How is the regular plural formed when the word gains a syllable? |
11615 | How is the regular plural formed without increase of syllables? |
11615 | How is the second or perfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the sense of nouns commonly made indefinitely partitive? |
11615 | How is the third or preperfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the verb BE conjugated? |
11615 | How is the verb READ conjugated in the compound form? |
11615 | How is the verb SEE conjugated throughout? |
11615 | How is the verb conjugated interrogatively? |
11615 | How is the word_ man_ to be parsed in the following example? |
11615 | How is this art to be acquired? |
11615 | How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How little?_ or, to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How many agreements, or concords, are there in English syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the compound personal pronouns? |
11615 | How many and what are the consonant sounds in English? |
11615 | How many and what are the degrees of comparison? |
11615 | How many and what are the diphthongs in English? |
11615 | How many and what are the figures of etymology? |
11615 | How many and what are the figures of syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the governments in English syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the improper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the improper triphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the parts of speech? |
11615 | How many and what are the principal figures of rhetoric? |
11615 | How many and what are the principles of syntax which belong to the head of simple relation? |
11615 | How many and what are the proper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the simple personal pronouns? |
11615 | How many and what are the_ principal parts_ of a sentence? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to rule 20th, concerning participles? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for adverbs? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for conjunctions? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for prepositions? |
11615 | How many and what kinds of pauses are there? |
11615 | How many and what parts of speech are concerned in government? |
11615 | How many and what parts of speech are usually parsed by such rules only? |
11615 | How many and what secondary feet are explained in this code? |
11615 | How many and what tenses has the_ infinitive_ mood?--the_ indicative_?--the_ potential_?--the_ subjunctive_?--the_ imperative_? |
11615 | How many and which of the ten have but one rule apiece? |
11615 | How many and which of these are so variable in sound that they may be either proper or improper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many are there for infinitives, and which are they? |
11615 | How many are there of the general or critical notes? |
11615 | How many cases are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many definitions are here given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many exceptions, or forms of exception, are there to Rule 1st for the comma? |
11615 | How many feet do prosodists recognize? |
11615 | How many genders are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many kinds of figures are there? |
11615 | How many kinds of participles are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many kinds of sentences are there? |
11615 | How many letters are in the alphabet? |
11615 | How many letters are there in English? |
11615 | How many moods are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many numbers are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many of the rules have no such notes under them? |
11615 | How many of the ten parts of speech in English are in general incapable of any agreement? |
11615 | How many of the twenty- four rules of syntax are used both in parsing and in correcting? |
11615 | How many of them are under the rule for_ articles_? |
11615 | How many of them belong to the syntax of_ adjectives_? |
11615 | How many of them expose errors in the use of_ prepositions_? |
11615 | How many of them pertain to the syntax of_ participles_? |
11615 | How many of them refer to the construction of_ nouns_? |
11615 | How many of them regard the use of_ verbs_? |
11615 | How many of them relate to the construction of_ adverbs_? |
11615 | How many of them show the application of_ conjunctions_? |
11615 | How many of them speak of_ interjections_? |
11615 | How many of them treat of_ pronouns_? |
11615 | How many of these seventeen speak of_ cases_, and therefore apply equally to nouns and pronouns? |
11615 | How many persons and numbers belong to verbs? |
11615 | How many persons are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many pronouns are there? |
11615 | How many redundant verbs are there? |
11615 | How many rules are there for finite verbs, and which are they? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Colon? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Curves? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Dash? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Period? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Semicolon? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents, and which are they? |
11615 | How many rules are there for this mark? |
11615 | How many rules are there for this mark? |
11615 | How many rules for capitals are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules for spelling are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules for the Comma are there, and what are their heads? |
11615 | How many rules for the figure of words are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules of government are there in the best Latin grammars? |
11615 | How many simple irregular verbs are there? |
11615 | How many special rules of syllabication are given in this book? |
11615 | How many such rules are there among the twenty- four? |
11615 | How many syllables are found in the longest? |
11615 | How many tenses are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How may an interjection generally be known? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of degree be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of manner be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of place be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of time be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the vowel sounds be written? |
11615 | How may these sounds be modified in the formation of syllables? |
11615 | How much? |
11615 | How much?_ or_ How_?--or serves to ask it; as,"He spoke fluently." |
11615 | How shall we parse the word_ that_ in the foregoing sentences? |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How then can the mere addition of this mood make_ any_ verb transitive? |
11615 | How was the infinitive expressed in the Anglo- Saxon of the eleventh century? |
11615 | How, after_ dare_? |
11615 | How, after_ feel_? |
11615 | How, after_ hear_? |
11615 | How, after_ let_? |
11615 | How, after_ make_? |
11615 | How, after_ need_? |
11615 | Hundreds? |
11615 | I allude to those who would prefer the possessive case in a text like the following:"Wherefore is this noise of the_ city being_ in an uproar?"'' |
11615 | I do not see that the copulative_ and_ is here ungrammatical; but if we prefer a disjunctive, ought it not to be_ or_ rather than_ nor_? |
11615 | I fear for life,''_ which words_ here appear to be thrown in_ between the sentences_, to express passion or feeling? |
11615 | I pray thee,_ with whom_ doth he trot withal?" |
11615 | I suppose the author to speak of_ good persons_ and_ bad persons_; and, if he does, is there not an ellipsis in his language? |
11615 | I. Adverbs of_ time_ are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | If an adverbial word relates directly to a noun or pronoun, does not that fact constitute it an adjective? |
11615 | If any body can boast of being"_ the first person in grammar_,"I pray,_ Who_ is it? |
11615 | If difficult, wherein does the difficulty lie? |
11615 | If easy, why do so few pretend to know their number? |
11615 | If ever one of Father Hall''s nouns shall speak for itself, or answer when"spoken to,"will it not reprove him? |
11615 | If it is said,''What think you of my_ horse running_ to- day?'' |
11615 | If it were_ true_, a few quotations might easily prove it; but when, and by whom, have any such words as_ lovedest, turnedest_, ever been used? |
11615 | If not, what else is it? |
11615 | If participial nouns retain the power of participles, why is it wrong to say,"A superficial reading books is useless?" |
11615 | If reputation has been raised upon the mist of ignorance, who but the builder shall lament its overthrow? |
11615 | If so, what sense has"_ vocabulary_?" |
11615 | If so, whose? |
11615 | If the Doctor designed to ask,"Do you think my horse ran well to- day?" |
11615 | If the antecedent is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the pronoun always be plural? |
11615 | If the errors of some have long been tolerated, what right of the critic has been lost by nonuser? |
11615 | If the interests of Science have been sacrificed to Mammon, what rebuke can do injustice to the craft? |
11615 | If the nominative is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the verb always be plural? |
11615 | If the second person singular of this verb be used familiarly, how should it be formed? |
11615 | If the works of grammarians are often ungrammatical, whose fault is this but their own? |
11615 | If there are antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the pronoun always to take them separately? |
11615 | If there are nominatives connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the verb always to refer to them separately? |
11615 | If there are two or more antecedents connected by_ and_, must the pronoun always be plural? |
11615 | If there are two or more nominatives connected by_ and_, must the verb always be plural? |
11615 | If this is to be taken for a grammatical definition, what definition shall grammar itself bear? |
11615 | If we take neither of these assumptions, must we not say, they are of different genders? |
11615 | If when a participle becomes an adjective it drops its regimen, should it not also drop it on becoming a noun? |
11615 | If"_ a_ participle refers to_ nouns_ or_ pronouns_,"_ how many_ of these are required by the relation? |
11615 | If"a_ participle_ is called an_ adjective_,"which is it, an adjective, or a participle? |
11615 | If, in the following example,_ gold_ and_ diamond_ are neuter, so is the pronoun_ me_; and, if not neuter, of what gender are they? |
11615 | If_ all_ grammatical fame is little in itself, how can the abatement of what is undeserved of it be much? |
11615 | In Flint''s Murray it stands thus:"An adverb may generally be known by its answering the question, How? |
11615 | In either form of it,_ two_ nominatives are idly imagined between_ as_ and its verb; and, I ask, of what is the first one the subject? |
11615 | In etymological parsing, we use about seventy_ definitions_; can these be used also in the correcting of errors? |
11615 | In extended compositions, what is the order of the parts, upwards from a sentence? |
11615 | In how many and what ways does the relation of prepositions admit of complexity? |
11615 | In how many different ways can the letters of the alphabet be combined? |
11615 | In how many different ways can the nominative case be used? |
11615 | In how many ways are the sexes distinguished in grammar? |
11615 | In how many ways can nouns of the second person be employed? |
11615 | In how many ways is the nominative case put absolute? |
11615 | In law,| what plea| so taint|-ed and| corrupt, But, be|-ing sea|-son''d with| a gra|-cious voice, Obscures| the show| of e|-vil? |
11615 | In making a phrase the subject of a verb, do we produce an exception to Rule 14th? |
11615 | In preparing a manuscript, how do we mark these things for the printer? |
11615 | In respect to collective nouns, how is it generally determined, whether they convey the idea of plurality or not? |
11615 | In scansion, why are the principal feet to be preferred to the secondary? |
11615 | In such expressions as,"I give it up_ for lost_,"--"I take it_ for granted_,"how is the participle to be parsed? |
11615 | In such phrases as,_ at once, from thence, till now_, how is the latter word to be parsed? |
11615 | In such phrases as_ in vain, at first, in particular_, how is the adjective to be parsed? |
11615 | In such sentences as,"I paid_ him_ the_ money_,"--"He asked_ them_ the_ question_,"how are the two objectives to be parsed? |
11615 | In the expression,"_ I, thou, or he, may affirm_,"of what person and number is the verb? |
11615 | In the phrase,"For_ David_ my servant''s sake,"which word is governed by_ sake_, and which is to be parsed by the rule of apposition? |
11615 | In the sentence,"And_ Simon_ he surnamed_ Peter_", how are_ Simon_ and_ Peter_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"I_ know that_ Messias cometh,"how are_ know_ and_ that_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"I_ know why_ she blushed,"how is_ know_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"It is certainly as easy to be a_ scholar_, as a_ gamester_,"what is the case of_ scholar_ and_ gamester_, and why? |
11615 | In the sentence,"It is_ man''s_ to err,"what is supposed to govern_ man''s_? |
11615 | In the sentence,"What_ have_ I to_ do_ with thee?" |
11615 | In the sentence,"_ It_ is useless to complain,"what does_ it_ represent? |
11615 | In the sentence,''William hastens away,''the active intransitive verb_ hastens_ has indeed an_ agent_,''William,''but where is the_ object_? |
11615 | In this perplexity, is not the pronunciation of the words the best guide? |
11615 | In what chapter are the rules of syntax first presented? |
11615 | In what does a knowledge of the letters consist? |
11615 | In what exercise can there be occasion to cite and apply the_ Exceptions_ to the rules of syntax? |
11615 | In what instances is the adjective placed after its noun? |
11615 | In what instances is the first participle equivalent to the infinitive? |
11615 | In what instances may the adjective either precede or follow the noun? |
11615 | In what kinds of examples do we meet with a doubtful case after a participle? |
11615 | In what manner, or in what respect, does an article point out substantives? |
11615 | In what order are the rules of syntax arranged in this work? |
11615 | In what other form can the meaning of the possessive case be expressed? |
11615 | In what place are the rules, exceptions, notes, and observations, in the foregoing system of syntax, enumerated and described? |
11615 | In what praxis are these rules first applied in parsing? |
11615 | In what series of words may all these sounds be heard? |
11615 | In what series of words may each of them be heard two or three times? |
11615 | Interrogatively and negatively; as, Write I not? |
11615 | Interrogatively; as, Write I? |
11615 | Into what classes may adjectives be divided? |
11615 | Into what general classes are nouns divided? |
11615 | Into what general classes are the letters divided? |
11615 | Is a good articulation important? |
11615 | Is dactylic verse very common? |
11615 | Is either of them right in his argument? |
11615 | Is every thing that a preposition governs, necessarily supposed to have cases, and to be in the objective? |
11615 | Is every word accented? |
11615 | Is he the only man who has ever had a right notion of its_ meaning_? |
11615 | Is it agreed among grammarians, that the Latin gerund may govern the genitive of the agent? |
11615 | Is it clear, that they ought to be called adverbs? |
11615 | Is it common to find in grammars, the rules of syntax well adapted to their purpose? |
11615 | Is it compatible with apposition to supply between the words a relative and a verb; as,"At Mr. Smith''s[_ who is_] the bookseller?" |
11615 | Is it demonstrable that verbs often agree with relatives? |
11615 | Is it easy to distinguish an ARTICLE? |
11615 | Is it ever convenient to have one and the same rule applicable to different parts of speech? |
11615 | Is it ever convenient to have rules divided into parts, so as to be double or triple in their form? |
11615 | Is it ever indifferent, which word be called the principal, and which the explanatory term? |
11615 | Is it ever right to put both terms before the verb? |
11615 | Is it ever uniform? |
11615 | Is it not a pity, that"more than one hundred thousand children and youth"should be daily poring over language and logic like this? |
11615 | Is it not plain, that twice two things, of any sort, are four things of that same sort, and only so? |
11615 | Is it not rather true, that we know nothing at all about it, but what it is just as easy to tell as to think? |
11615 | Is it not strange, is it not incredible, that the same hand should have written the two following lines, in the same sentence? |
11615 | Is it not this;--that, like_ English, French_,& c., they are always_ adjectives_; except, perhaps, when they denote_ languages_? |
11615 | Is it not_ I_, even_ I_? |
11615 | Is it often expedient to join in the same rule such principles as must always be applied separately? |
11615 | Is it proper to teach, in general terms, that the noun or pronoun which limits the meaning of a participle should be put in the possessive case? |
11615 | Is it right to introduce it into our paradigms, as the only form of the second person singular, that modern usage acknowledges? |
11615 | Is it right to say with Smith,"Every hundred_ years constitutes_ a century?" |
11615 | Is it right without the_ of_, though contrary to the author''s rule for elegance? |
11615 | Is it some"_ vocabulary_"both"English and parliamentary?" |
11615 | Is it that of one and one, the_ positive_ and the_ comparative_ added numerically? |
11615 | Is it the_ authors_, or their_ figure_, that becomes tedious and intricate? |
11615 | Is it then any disgrace to spell words erroneously? |
11615 | Is it therefore difficult to determine which party is right? |
11615 | Is it they_?" |
11615 | Is it thou? |
11615 | Is it| to fast| an hour, Or ragg''d| to go, Or show A down|-cast look| and sour? |
11615 | Is it| to quit| the dish Of flesh,| yet still To fill The plat|-ter high| with fish? |
11615 | Is language impotent? |
11615 | Is not our language like the Latin, in respect to verbs governing two cases, and passives retaining the latter? |
11615 | Is not the former as good English as the latter? |
11615 | Is not this because there is an_ ellipsis_ in the sentence, and such a one as may be variously conceived and supplied? |
11615 | Is not this better English than to say,"of_ his_ being the only person?" |
11615 | Is that a correct rule which says,"Two negatives, in English, destroy each other, or are equivalent to an affirmative?" |
11615 | Is the Greek or Latin construction of the latter term in a comparison usually such as ours? |
11615 | Is the anapest adapted to single rhyme? |
11615 | Is the article_ an_ or_ a_ always supposed to imply unity? |
11615 | Is the author himself to be disbelieved, that the extravagant praises bestowed upon him may be justified? |
11615 | Is the case after the verb reckoned doubtful, when the subject going before is a sentence, or something not declinable by cases? |
11615 | Is the common rule for interjections, as requiring certain cases after them, sustained by any analogy from the Latin syntax? |
11615 | Is the connecting of verbs elliptically, or by parts, anything peculiar to our language? |
11615 | Is the devil in you? |
11615 | Is the distinction between the participial noun and the participle well preserved by Murray and his amenders? |
11615 | Is the doctrine well sustained by its adopters, or is it consistent with the analogy of general grammar? |
11615 | Is the infinitive ever governed by a preposition in French, Spanish, or Italian? |
11615 | Is the infinitive ever liable to be misplaced? |
11615 | Is the mere relation of words according to the sense an element of much importance in English syntax? |
11615 | Is the number of feet in a line to be generally counted by that of the long syllables? |
11615 | Is the objective, when it occurs before the infinitive in English, usually governed by some verb, participle, or preposition? |
11615 | Is the possessive case always governed by the name of the thing possessed? |
11615 | Is the possessive often governed by what is not expressed? |
11615 | Is the preposition_ to_"understood"after_ bid, dare, feel_, and so forth, where it is"superfluous and improper?" |
11615 | Is the pronoun_ we_ singular when it is used in lieu of_ I_? |
11615 | Is the pronoun_ you_ singular when used in lieu of_ thou_ or_ thee_? |
11615 | Is the syntactical parsing of a noun to be precisely the same as the etymological? |
11615 | Is the voice to be varied for variety''s sake? |
11615 | Is there a construction of like cases, that is not apposition? |
11615 | Is there any argument from analogy for taking_ each other_ and_ one an other_ for compounds? |
11615 | Is there any exception to the 24th rule, concerning interjections? |
11615 | Is there any other method of expressing the degrees of comparison? |
11615 | Is there any question about the true mode of parsing"_ only_"and"_ also_"here? |
11615 | Is there anywhere, in print, viler pedantry than this? |
11615 | Is there ever any needful agreement between unrelated words? |
11615 | Is there not an amplification that is at once novel, disagreeable, unauthorized, and unnecessary? |
11615 | Is there not contradiction in these instructions? |
11615 | Is there not truth, is there not power, in the appeal? |
11615 | Is there| peace where| ye are| borne, on| high? |
11615 | Is this doctrine consistent either with itself or with Wilson''s? |
11615 | Is this frequent? |
11615 | Is this the conduct of the duellist? |
11615 | Is this the true ratio of the merit of these authors, or of the wisdom of the different ages in which they lived? |
11615 | Is this the woman you saw?" |
11615 | Is this their"common mode of expression?" |
11615 | Is"_ O thee_"good English, because"_ O te_"is good Latin? |
11615 | Is_ a_ the first principle? |
11615 | Is_ an_ Unit of one, a Number? |
11615 | Is_ m_ the first principle of this word? |
11615 | Is_ need_ ever an auxiliary? |
11615 | Is_ than_ supposed by Murray to be capable of governing any other objective than_ whom_? |
11615 | Is_ to"in every other case a preposition_,"and not such before a verb or a participle? |
11615 | Is_ to_ a preposition when it is placed_ after_ a verb, and_ not_ a preposition when it is placed_ before_ it? |
11615 | Is_ to_ before the infinitive to be parsed just as any other preposition? |
11615 | It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? |
11615 | It is indeed so much more common, as to seem the only proper mode of expression: as,"_ Do I say_ these things as a man?" |
11615 | It is true, we occasionally meet with such fulsome phraseology as this; but the question is, how is it to be explained? |
11615 | It might be set down under Critical Note 9th, among examples of_ Words Needless_; for the author''s question is,"Why is the verb so called?" |
11615 | It ought to be,"Is it_ her_ honour or_ his_, that is tarnished?" |
11615 | It?_ 17. |
11615 | Itself?_ 19. |
11615 | Johnson cor._"How_ are_ the gender and number of the relative known?" |
11615 | Keith cor._"Who is so mad, that, on inspecting the heavens,_ he_ is insensible of a God?" |
11615 | Lewis sighs| for the sake Of her charms,| as they say; What excuse| can she make For not com|-ing away? |
11615 | Literally:"What means this noise of the_ city which is so moved_?" |
11615 | Literally:"What[_ means_] the clamour of the_ city resounding_?" |
11615 | Loop up her| tresses, Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; Whilst wonderment guesses, Where was her| home? |
11615 | Lov''st thou? |
11615 | Love I? |
11615 | Love we not? |
11615 | Loved I? |
11615 | Loved he? |
11615 | Loved thou? |
11615 | Loved we not? |
11615 | Lovedst thou? |
11615 | Loves he? |
11615 | Lovest thou? |
11615 | Low lies the| stately head, Earth- bound| the free: How gave those| haughty dead A place| to thee? |
11615 | M''Cartee._"Shall I tell you_ why?_ Ay, sir, and_ wherefore_; for, they say, every_ why_ hath a_ wherefore._"--_Shak._( 2.) |
11615 | M.?" |
11615 | MIXED EXAMPLES OF ERROR"If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth; if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows? |
11615 | Many such examples may be cited, but are they not examples of false syntax? |
11615 | May I not_ call_ them what they_ are_?" |
11615 | May a surplus ever make up for a deficiency? |
11615 | May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they do it? |
11615 | May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they have done it? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must I have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must I love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must he have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must he love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must they not be loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must they not have been loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must thou have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must thou love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must we not have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must we not love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must you not have seen? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must you not see? |
11615 | May_ we not_ say? |
11615 | Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou have loved? |
11615 | Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou love? |
11615 | Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they do it? |
11615 | Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they have done it? |
11615 | Might not Quintilian or Varro have obliged many, by recording these? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should I have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should I love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should he have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should he love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not be loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not have been loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not have seen? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not see? |
11615 | Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou have loved? |
11615 | Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou love? |
11615 | Murray cor._"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has_ become of decency and virtue? |
11615 | Murray cor._"Know ye not that there is[542] a prince, a great man, fallen this day in Israel?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Know ye not your own selves,_ that_ Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Was it thou, or the wind,_ that_ shut the door?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou_ begannest_ or_ beganst_?" |
11615 | Must a finite verb always agree with its nominative in number and person? |
11615 | Must composites have rhythm? |
11615 | Must every preposition govern some"_ noun or pronoun_?" |
11615 | Nay, docs he not make man the contriver of that"natural language"which he possesses"in common with the brutes?" |
11615 | Neither does_ oh_ or_ ah_: for, if a governing word be suggested, the objective may be proper; as,"Whom did he injure? |
11615 | Now are not,"_ I only spoke three words_,"and,"_ He only bared his arm_,"analogous expressions? |
11615 | Now can any one suppose that words are not here, in some true sense, the instruments of thought, or of the intellectual process thus carried on? |
11615 | Now do not_ my, thy, his, her, our, your, their_, and_ mine, thine, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs_, all equally denote possession? |
11615 | Now the question to find the subject of the verb_ are_, is,"My_ what_ are to come?" |
11615 | Now then to| find a name;-- Where shall we| search for it? |
11615 | Now who can show that this is not the case in general with the numerals of multiplication? |
11615 | Now would not this"useful improvement"give us such a word as_ allejjable_? |
11615 | Now, has the boy been instructed, or only puzzled? |
11615 | Now, if this is not_ government_, what is? |
11615 | Now, if"participles are adjectives,"to which of these five classes do they belong? |
11615 | Now, if_ many_ is here a singular nominative, and the only subject of the verb, what shall we do with_ are_? |
11615 | Now, in parsing an_ article_, why should the learner have to tell all this story about_ adjectives_? |
11615 | Now, is this good English, or is it not? |
11615 | Now, to what extent do these questions apply to the verbs in our language? |
11615 | Now, what was it that_ freezed_ so hard?" |
11615 | O where is now your bloom?" |
11615 | Of how many different constructions is the objective case susceptible? |
11615 | Of interrogating;_ eh? |
11615 | Of the seven rules for cases, how many are applicable to relatives and interrogatives? |
11615 | Of the twenty- four rules in this work, how many are applicable to pronouns? |
11615 | Of what degree is the adverb_ rather_? |
11615 | Of what does Etymology treat? |
11615 | Of what does Etymology treat? |
11615 | Of what does Orthography treat? |
11615 | Of what does Orthography treat? |
11615 | Of what does Prosody treat? |
11615 | Of what does Prosody treat? |
11615 | Of what does Syntax treat? |
11615 | Of what does Syntax treat? |
11615 | Of what does a poetic foot consist? |
11615 | Of what does a verse consist? |
11615 | Of what parts is syntax commonly said to consist? |
11615 | Of what two kinds does the composition of language consist? |
11615 | Of what use are those which can not be violated in practice? |
11615 | On what are the different genders founded, and to what parts of speech do they belong? |
11615 | On what are they founded? |
11615 | On what but the vowel sound does quantity depend? |
11615 | On what is the construction of_ same cases_ founded? |
11615 | On what principle can one justify such an example as this:"_ All work and no play, makes_ Jack a dull boy?" |
11615 | Or an arm? |
11615 | Or because proprietors and publishers may profit by the credit of a book, shall it be thought illiberal to criticise it? |
11615 | Or better:"What then shall we call the article_ the_?" |
11615 | Or both wish''d here, where neither can be found?" |
11615 | Or did Scott write inaccurately, whose guide"Led slowly through the_ pass''s_ jaws?" |
11615 | Or does this adverb qualify the action of"_ reading_?" |
11615 | Or even to adults, when they are spoken of without regard to a distinct personality or identity; as,"_ Which_ of you will go?" |
11615 | Or is it certain that human languages used by perfect wisdom, would all be perfectly competent to their common purpose? |
11615 | Or is it expedient to augment by it that multiplicity of other forms, which must either take this same place or be utterly rejected? |
11615 | Or is it proper for a grammarian to name sundry authorities on both sides, excite doubt in the mind of his reader, and leave the matter_ unsettled_? |
11615 | Or take away the grief of a wound? |
11615 | Or this again? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_? |
11615 | Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_? |
11615 | Or, as our common grammarians prompt me here to say,"May not the comparative degree increase or lessen_ the comparative_, in signification?" |
11615 | Or, if it be supposed to mean,"above the amount of all other_ degrees_,"what is this amount? |
11615 | Or, if none of them,_ what else_ is meant? |
11615 | Or:"If such maxims and practices prevail, what_ will_ become of decency and virtue?" |
11615 | Or:"Shalt thou build_ a_ house for me to dwell in?" |
11615 | Or:"What need_ have_ you to be anxious about this event?" |
11615 | Or:"What nouns_ are_ frequently_ used one after an other_?" |
11615 | Or:"Why do_ ye_ plead so much for it? |
11615 | Or:"_ Does_''_ will go_''express but_ one_ action?" |
11615 | PRECEPT I.--Avoid a useless tautology, either of expression or of sentiment; as,"When will you return_ again_?" |
11615 | PRONOUNS:"_ What_ am I eased?" |
11615 | Respecting an English verb, what things are to be sought in the first place? |
11615 | Respecting_ an_ or_ a_, how does present usage differ from the usage of ancient writers? |
11615 | S. Journal cor._"Art thou a penitent? |
11615 | Saw ye not? |
11615 | Say rather:"Was this_ because there were_ twelve primary deities among the Gothic nations?" |
11615 | Say, where greatness lies? |
11615 | Say,"_ Why does the parliament neglect_ so important a business?" |
11615 | Say,"_ Why have the committee_ delayed this business?" |
11615 | See ye not? |
11615 | See, in the original, these texts:"There was_ a man_ sent from God,"(_ John_, i, 6,) and,"What is_ man_, that thou art mindful of him?" |
11615 | Sha n''t,_ or_ wo n''t they do it? |
11615 | Shall I have loved? |
11615 | Shall I love? |
11615 | Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?" |
11615 | Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?" |
11615 | Shall all| the les|-sons time| has taught,| be so| long taught| in vain; And earth| be steeped| in hu|-man tears,| and groan| with hu|-man pain?" |
11615 | Shall he who can not paint, retouch the canvass of Guido? |
11615 | Shall he who can not write for himself, improve upon him who can? |
11615 | Shall hu|-man pas|-sion ev|-er sway| this glo|_-rious world_| of God, And beau|-ty, wis|-dom, hap|-piness,| sleep with| the tram|-pled sod? |
11615 | Shall man, endowed with reason, do, say, or contrive any thing, without design, and without understanding? |
11615 | Shall modest ingenuity be allowed only to imitators and to thieves? |
11615 | Shall now| that ho|-ly fire, In us,| that strong|-ly glow''d, In this| cold air,| expire? |
11615 | Shall peace| ne''er lift| her ban|-ner up,| shall truth| and rea|-son cry, And men| oppress| them down| with worse| than an|-cient tyr|-anny? |
11615 | Shall the better usage give place to the worse? |
11615 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?" |
11615 | Shall we en|-dow him with Title he|-roic, After some| warrior, Poet, or| stoic? |
11615 | Shall we not have loved? |
11615 | Shall we not love? |
11615 | Shall we say that"_ place_,"in this sense, is not a noun of place? |
11615 | Shall we then say, as he does, in the_ present tense_ conjugation of his passive verb,--''The criminal is bound?'' |
11615 | Shall we| not sing| an ode? |
11615 | Shall_ or_ will he love? |
11615 | Shall_ or_ will they not be loved? |
11615 | She? |
11615 | Should not every individual feel the deepest interest in their character and condition?" |
11615 | Should not every individual feel_ a deep_ interest in their character and condition?" |
11615 | Smith and Priestley cor._"Art thou proud yet? |
11615 | So one might say,"Can a man arrive at excellence, who has no desire_ to_?" |
11615 | So the interrogative_ who_ may be the antecedent to the relative_ that_; as,"_ Who that_ has any moral sense, dares tell lies?" |
11615 | Sometimes we see it divided only by a comma, from the preceding question; as,"What dost thou think of this doctrine, Friend Gurth, ha?" |
11615 | Sometimes, however, the sense forbids it to be put in the possessive case; thus, What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day? |
11615 | Son Louis soupire, Après ses appas; Que veut elle dire, Qu''elle ne vient pas? |
11615 | Strephon, how can you despise Her who without thy pity dies?" |
11615 | Strephon, how_ canst thou_ despise Her who, without thy pity,_ dies_?" |
11615 | T. Smith''s_, 13. Who, but a child taught by language like this, would ever think of_ speaking to a noun_? |
11615 | Ten''s? |
11615 | That he is regenerate? |
11615 | That is, What am I, and whence_ am I_?" |
11615 | That is,"Ode is,_ literally_, the same_ thing that_ song or hymn_ is_?" |
11615 | That is,"Would you have them_ dismissed_ then? |
11615 | That is,"_ What act_, or_ thing_?" |
11615 | That is,"_ Which man_ of you?" |
11615 | That there must be some such relation, is obvious; but what is it? |
11615 | That? |
11615 | The Bible has many examples; as,"Who is_ like to_ thee in Israel?" |
11615 | The Doctor absurdly says,"Not only things, but persons, may be the_ antecedent_ to this pronoun; as,_ Who is it_? |
11615 | The French Bible has it:"Simon, fils de Jona, m''aimes- tu plus que_ ne font_ ceux- ci?" |
11615 | The answer to the question,''How does he read?'' |
11615 | The double question is, Which of these forms ought to be approved and taught for that person and number? |
11615 | The errors here committed might have been avoided thus:"What is_ a verb_? |
11615 | The falling,"_ When_ will you_ gò_?" |
11615 | The following are a few examples:--_ Example I.--Two ancient Stanzas, out of Many_,"This while| we are| abroad, Shall we| not touch| our lyre? |
11615 | The meaning is,"Whose house is that house?" |
11615 | The potential mood, like the indicative, may be used in asking a question; as,"_ Must_ I_ budge_? |
11615 | The preposition_ till_, or_ until_, is sometimes found in use before an expression of_ times numbered_; as,"How oft shall I forgive? |
11615 | The question which he asks, ought to have been,"_ Why did this person dismiss_ his servant so hastily?" |
11615 | The rising,"Do you mean to_ gó_?" |
11615 | The second person is that which denotes the hearer, or the person addressed; as,"_ Robert_, who did this?" |
11615 | The word_ heathen_, too, makes the regular plural_ heathens_, and yet is often used in a plural sense without the_ s_; as,"Why do the_ heathen_ rage?" |
11615 | The_ noun_ that is spoken to, is the second person; as,_ James_, were you present? |
11615 | Then, of the twenty- four rules, how many remain for the other three parts,--nouns, pronouns, and verbs? |
11615 | Therefore,"Dispenser"should here begin with a capital D.]"Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?" |
11615 | Therefore,_ me_ should be_ I_; thus,"Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_?''"] |
11615 | These verbs are here transitive, but are they so above? |
11615 | This also is plausible; but is the imperfection less, for being sometimes traceable to an ulterior source? |
11615 | This author prefers"_ heardest_;"the other,"_ heardst_,"which I think better warranted:"And_ heardst_ thou why he drew his blade? |
11615 | This is a very peculiar idiom of our language; and if we say,"Have ye not houses_ in which_ to eat and to drink?" |
11615 | This may be supposed to mean,"_ I_, granting this to be true,_ ask_ what is to be inferred from it?" |
11615 | This sentence, before it is parsed,_ should be transposed_; thus,''Whose is that house?'' |
11615 | This usage is now obsolete; and, in stead of it, we say,"_ Which_ is greater?" |
11615 | This would, of course, double the_ l_ in nearly all the derivatives from_ metal, medal_,& c. But what says Custom? |
11615 | Thou? |
11615 | Through_ what?_ Ans. |
11615 | Thus Milton:--"Thou following_ cry''dst_ aloud, Return, fair Eve; Whom_ fly''st_ thou? |
11615 | Thus Webster:"We have some verbs which govern two words in the objective case; as,''Did I request thee, maker, from my clay To mold_ me man_?'' |
11615 | Thus a monosyllable, considered singly, rises from a lower to a higher tone in the question_ Nó? |
11615 | Thus all his personal pronouns of the possessive case, he then made to be inflections of pronouns of_ a different class!_ What are they now? |
11615 | Thus much, in this place, to those who so frequently ask,"Wherein does your book differ from Murray''s?" |
11615 | Thus, Ã � sop''s viper and file are both personified, where it is recorded,"''What ails thee, fool?'' |
11615 | Thus:"How many times or tenses have verbs? |
11615 | Thus_ who_ means_ what person_? |
11615 | Thyself? |
11615 | To explain the syntax of"_ Twice two are four_,"what can be more rational than to say,"The sense is,''Twice two_ units_, or_ things_, are four?''" |
11615 | To the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?" |
11615 | To what adjectives is the regular method of comparison, by_ er_ and_ est_, applicable? |
11615 | To what do adjectives relate? |
11615 | To what do adverbs relate? |
11615 | To what do articles relate? |
11615 | To what does the adjective usually relate, when it stands alone after a finite verb? |
11615 | To what general classes may adverbs be reduced? |
11615 | To what other terms can the infinitive be connected? |
11615 | To what part of speech is the greatest number of rules applied in parsing? |
11615 | To what purpose can he_ transpose_ the words of a sentence, who does not first see what they mean, and how to explain or parse them as they stand? |
11615 | To what style is the inflecting of_ shall, will, may, can, should, would, might_, and_ could_, now restricted? |
11615 | To what then are the_ mortar_, the_ wheat_, and the_ pestle_, to be mentally subjoined? |
11615 | To what then does_ the_ refer, but to the proportionate degree of_ deeper_ and_ clearer_? |
11615 | To what| region| far a|-way, Bend thy| steps to| find a| home, In the| twilight| of thy| day?'' |
11615 | To which of the apposite terms is the rule for apposition to be applied? |
11615 | Turn to his| ancestry, Or to the| church for it? |
11615 | Twice two duads are how many? |
11615 | Under what circumstances can a pronoun agree with either of two antecedents? |
11615 | Under what circumstances is it common to disregard the distinction of sex? |
11615 | Under what four heads are the apparent exceptions to this Rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what names are words classed according to the number of their syllables? |
11615 | Under what seven heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the apparent exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions, real or apparent, here noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the limits and exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what_ figure_ of syntax did the old grammarians rank the plural construction of a noun of multitude? |
11615 | Unit figure? |
11615 | Upon what does distinctness depend? |
11615 | Vainly,| vainly,| would my| steps pur|-sue: Chains of| care to| lower| earth en|-thrall me, Wherefore| thus my| weary| spirit| woo? |
11615 | Was Murray less praiseworthy, less amiable, or less modest? |
11615 | Was there a| dearer one Yet, than all| other? |
11615 | Was this from a notion, that_ you_ and_ ye_, thus employed, were more analogous to_ thou_ and_ thee_ in the singular number?" |
11615 | Was this, or something else, the desideratum of Beattie? |
11615 | Was this_ owing to there being_ twelve primary_ deities_ among the Gothic nations?" |
11615 | We may say,_ tenderer_ and_ tenderest, pleasanter_ and_ pleasantest, prettier_ and_ prettiest_; but who could endure_ delicater_ and_ delicatest_?" |
11615 | We might ask in turn, when you say''the field ploughs well,''ploughs_ what_? |
11615 | We might here, perhaps, say,"of_ Christ''s speaking_ in me,"but is not the other form better? |
11615 | We often speak of"_ the same words_,"and of"_ different words_;"but wherein does the sameness or the difference of words consist? |
11615 | We ought,_ therefore_, to introduce something explanatory; as,''What do you think_ of the propriety_ of my going to Niagara?" |
11615 | Well you| know how| much you| grieve me: Cruel| charmer,| can you| go? |
11615 | Were they not loved? |
11615 | What actual ellipsis usually occurs with the imperative mood? |
11615 | What adjectives are compared by means of adverbs? |
11615 | What adjectives can not be compared? |
11615 | What adjectives exclude, or supersede, the article? |
11615 | What adjectives precede the article? |
11615 | What agreement is required between words in apposition? |
11615 | What am I? |
11615 | What analogy is there between the things which he compares? |
11615 | What are adverbs of degree? |
11615 | What are adverbs of manner? |
11615 | What are adverbs of place? |
11615 | What are adverbs of time? |
11615 | What are cases, in grammar? |
11615 | What are conjunctive adverbs? |
11615 | What are corresponsive conjunctions? |
11615 | What are genders, in grammar? |
11615 | What are gerundives? |
11615 | What are inflections? |
11615 | What are its participles? |
11615 | What are pauses? |
11615 | What are persons, in grammar? |
11615 | What are the PRINCIPAL PARTS in the conjugation of a verb? |
11615 | What are the chief constructional peculiarities of the relative pronouns? |
11615 | What are the component parts of a sentence? |
11615 | What are the construction and import of the phrases,_ in particular, in general_, and the like? |
11615 | What are the faults opposite to it? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ can_? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ may_? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ shall_ and_ will_? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ be_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ do_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ have_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the just powers of the letters? |
11615 | What are the least parts of language? |
11615 | What are the names of the letters in English? |
11615 | What are the other parts called? |
11615 | What are the principal feet in English? |
11615 | What are the principal figures of orthography? |
11615 | What are the principal kinds, or orders, of verse? |
11615 | What are the principal parts of the simple verb READ? |
11615 | What are the principal parts of the verb LOVE? |
11615 | What are the principal parts? |
11615 | What are the principal parts? |
11615 | What are the principal points, or marks? |
11615 | What are the several combinations that form dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octometer? |
11615 | What are the several measures of anapestic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of dactylic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of iambic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of trochaic verse? |
11615 | What are the several titles, or subjects, of the twenty- four rules of syntax? |
11615 | What are the six Marks of Reference in their usual order? |
11615 | What are the uses of_ must_, which is uninflected? |
11615 | What are the vowel sounds in English? |
11615 | What are the_ Person_ and_ Number_ of a verb? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their names in both numbers, singular and plural? |
11615 | What are their names? |
11615 | What are their titles, or heads? |
11615 | What are these_?" |
11615 | What are thy_ comings- in_? |
11615 | What are tones? |
11615 | What are you a- seeking? |
11615 | What are_ Cases_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Classes_, under the parts of speech? |
11615 | What are_ Genders_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Modifications?_ 5. |
11615 | What are_ Moods_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Numbers_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Persons_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Tenses_, in grammar? |
11615 | What art thou?" |
11615 | What art thou?" |
11615 | What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we? |
11615 | What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we? |
11615 | What article may sometimes be used in lieu of a possessive pronoun? |
11615 | What author declares it improper ever to connect by_ or_ or_ nor_ any nominatives that require different forms of the verb? |
11615 | What authors deny the existence of"the case absolute?" |
11615 | What authors prefer"_ the nearest person_,"and"_ the plural number_?" |
11615 | What authors prefer"the_ nearest nominative_, whether singular or plural?" |
11615 | What authors teach that interjections are put absolute, and have no government? |
11615 | What becomes of the elongating power of e, without accent or emphasis, as in_ jun´cate, pal´ate, prel´ate_? |
11615 | What benefit may be expected from the rules for spelling? |
11615 | What besides a noun or a pronoun may be made the subject of a verb? |
11615 | What can be hoped from an author who is ignorant enough to think"_ Thou walketh_"is good English? |
11615 | What can be hoped from the grammarian who can not discern it? |
11615 | What can be more fantastical than the following etymology, or more absurd than the following directions for parsing? |
11615 | What can be more uncouth than to say,''What do you think of_ me_ going to Niagara?'' |
11615 | What can be transgressed, but a law, a limit, or_ something_ equivalent? |
11615 | What can she more_ than_ tell us we are fools?" |
11615 | What case do prepositions govern? |
11615 | What case does an active- transitive verb or participle govern? |
11615 | What case in Latin and Greek is reckoned_ the subject_ of the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What case is employed as the subject of a finite verb? |
11615 | What case is put after a verb or participle not transitive? |
11615 | What causes the sign_ to_ to be expressed before_ study?_ Its being used in the passive voice after_ be made_." |
11615 | What characters are employed in English? |
11615 | What common property have the_ three cases_, by which we can clearly define_ case_? |
11615 | What comparative view is taken of accent and emphasis? |
11615 | What conjunction is frequently understood? |
11615 | What constitutes a circumflex? |
11615 | What constitutes a monotone, in elocution? |
11615 | What constitutes the rising, and what the falling, circumflex? |
11615 | What construction is produced by the_ repetition_ of a noun or pronoun? |
11615 | What critic will not judge the following phraseology to be faulty? |
11615 | What critical remark is made on the misuse of_ ever_ and_ never_? |
11615 | What defect is observable in the common rules for"the case absolute,"or"the nominative independent?" |
11615 | What did he say, when his fit partner, the fairest and loveliest work of God, was presented to him? |
11615 | What difference does it make, whether we use the possessive case before words in_ ing_, or not? |
11615 | What different sorts of types, or styles of letters, are used in English? |
11615 | What distinction between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_ do Crombie and others propose to make? |
11615 | What distinction of form belongs to each of the letters? |
11615 | What distinction, in respect to government, is to be observed between a participle and a participial noun? |
11615 | What do Nixon and Kirkham erroneously teach about cases governed by interjections? |
11615 | What do conjunctions connect? |
11615 | What do our grammarians teach concerning the omission of_ to_ before the infinitive, after_ bid, dare, feel_,& c.? |
11615 | What do we derive from these combinations of sounds and characters? |
11615 | What do we mean by_ matter_? |
11615 | What do you see now? |
11615 | What do you see now? |
11615 | What do you see? |
11615 | What do you see? |
11615 | What does Brown say of this doctrine? |
11615 | What does Cobbett say about_ with_ put for_ and_? |
11615 | What does Dr. Wilson say of the character and_ import_ of the infinitive? |
11615 | What does Richard Johnson infer from the fact that the Latin infinitive is sometimes governed by a preposition? |
11615 | What does elocution require? |
11615 | What does he know of grammar, who can not directly and properly answer such questions as these?--"What are numbers, in grammar? |
11615 | What does he say of the manner in which"the use of_ nor_ after_ not_ has been introduced?" |
11615 | What does it include? |
11615 | What does the combination form?" |
11615 | What does the pronoun"_ they_"represent? |
11615 | What does_ interjection_ mean? |
11615 | What does_ preposition_ mean? |
11615 | What else can the author have meant? |
11615 | What erroneous remark have Priestley, Murray, and others, about two prepositions"in the same construction?" |
11615 | What errors are taught by Greenleaf concerning_ dare_ and_ need_ or_ needs_? |
11615 | What errors do Kirkham, Smith, and others, teach concerning the possessive singular? |
11615 | What errors in the construction and punctuation of interjectional phrases are quoted from Fisk, Smith, and Kirkham? |
11615 | What false doctrine have Lowth, Murray, and others, about the separating of the preposition from its noun? |
11615 | What fault is found with the opinion of Priestley, Murray, Ingersoll, and Smith, that"either of them may be used with nearly equal propriety?" |
11615 | What fault is there in the usual distribution of these rules? |
11615 | What faults appear in the teaching of our grammarians concerning_ do_ used as a"substitute for other verbs?" |
11615 | What faults are there in the rules given by_ Lowth, Murray, Smith_, and others, for the construction of_ like cases_? |
11615 | What figures of rhetoric are liable to affect the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents? |
11615 | What form of the article do the sounds of_ w_ and_ y_ require? |
11615 | What four adverbs affect the position of the article and adjective? |
11615 | What four things distinguish the elegant speaker? |
11615 | What further is added concerning the terms which conjunctions connect? |
11615 | What further is remarked concerning false teaching in relation to participles? |
11615 | What governs the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What grammarian approves of such expressions as,"Two and two_ is_ four?" |
11615 | What grammarian supposes_ whom_ after_ than_ to be"in the objective case_ absolute_?" |
11615 | What grammarians have taught that the preposition_ to_ governs the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What great difficulty does Murray acknowledge concerning"nouns of multitude?" |
11615 | What guide have we for dividing words into syllables? |
11615 | What has discourse to do with sentences? |
11615 | What has stress of voice to do with quantity? |
11615 | What have the_ three persons_ in common, which, in a definition of_ person_, could be made evident to a child? |
11615 | What inconsistency is found in Murray, with reference to his"_ nominative sentences_?" |
11615 | What inferences have our grammarians made from the phrase_ than whom_? |
11615 | What inflection of English nouns regularly changes their gender? |
11615 | What is Antithesis? |
11615 | What is Aphà ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Apocope? |
11615 | What is Apophasis, or Paralipsis? |
11615 | What is Apostrophe? |
11615 | What is Climax? |
11615 | What is Cobbett''s"_ clear principle_"on this head? |
11615 | What is Dià ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Dr. Webster''s ninth rule of syntax? |
11615 | What is Ecphonesis? |
11615 | What is Ellipsis, in grammar? |
11615 | What is Enallage? |
11615 | What is English Grammar, in itself? |
11615 | What is Erotesis? |
11615 | What is Grammar? |
11615 | What is Hyperbaton? |
11615 | What is Hyperbole? |
11615 | What is Irony? |
11615 | What is Mimesis? |
11615 | What is Nixon''s notion of the construction of the verb and collective noun? |
11615 | What is Onomatopoeia? |
11615 | What is Paragoge? |
11615 | What is Personification? |
11615 | What is Pleonasm? |
11615 | What is Prosthesis? |
11615 | What is Syllepsis? |
11615 | What is Syncope? |
11615 | What is Synecdoche? |
11615 | What is Synà ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Tmesis? |
11615 | What is Vision? |
11615 | What is a Bacchy? |
11615 | What is a CONJUNCTION, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a CÃ ¦ sura? |
11615 | What is a Dactyl? |
11615 | What is a Metaphor? |
11615 | What is a Metonymy? |
11615 | What is a Moloss? |
11615 | What is a NOUN, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is a PARTICIPLE, and how is it generally formed? |
11615 | What is a PREPOSITION, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a PRONOUN, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a Pyrrhic? |
11615 | What is a Simile? |
11615 | What is a Spondee? |
11615 | What is a Tribrach? |
11615 | What is a Trochee? |
11615 | What is a VERB, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is a collective noun? |
11615 | What is a common adjective? |
11615 | What is a common noun? |
11615 | What is a compound adjective? |
11615 | What is a compound word? |
11615 | What is a conjunction? |
11615 | What is a consonant? |
11615 | What is a copulative conjunction? |
11615 | What is a defective verb? |
11615 | What is a defective verb? |
11615 | What is a derivative word? |
11615 | What is a diphthong? |
11615 | What is a disjunctive conjunction? |
11615 | What is a figure of etymology? |
11615 | What is a figure of orthography? |
11615 | What is a figure of rhetoric? |
11615 | What is a figure of syntax? |
11615 | What is a letter? |
11615 | What is a mute? |
11615 | What is a neuter verb? |
11615 | What is a noun? |
11615 | What is a numeral adjective? |
11615 | What is a participial adjective? |
11615 | What is a participle? |
11615 | What is a passive verb? |
11615 | What is a perfect definition? |
11615 | What is a personal pronoun? |
11615 | What is a preposition? |
11615 | What is a primitive word? |
11615 | What is a pronominal adjective? |
11615 | What is a pronoun? |
11615 | What is a proper adjective? |
11615 | What is a proper diphthong? |
11615 | What is a proper noun? |
11615 | What is a proper triphthong? |
11615 | What is a redundant verb? |
11615 | What is a redundant verb? |
11615 | What is a regular verb? |
11615 | What is a relative pronoun? |
11615 | What is a rule of grammar? |
11615 | What is a semivowel? |
11615 | What is a simple word? |
11615 | What is a stanza? |
11615 | What is a syllable? |
11615 | What is a triphthong? |
11615 | What is a verb called which wants some of these parts? |
11615 | What is a verb? |
11615 | What is a verbal or participial noun? |
11615 | What is a vowel? |
11615 | What is a word? |
11615 | What is a_ Figure_ in grammar? |
11615 | What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word? |
11615 | What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word? |
11615 | What is a_ clause_, or_ member_? |
11615 | What is a_ compound sentence_? |
11615 | What is a_ phrase_? |
11615 | What is a_ sentence_? |
11615 | What is a_ simple_ sentence? |
11615 | What is a_ triphthong_? |
11615 | What is accent? |
11615 | What is affirmed of the difficulties of parsing the infinitive according to the code of Murray? |
11615 | What is an ADJECTIVE, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is an ADVERB, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is an ARTICLE? |
11615 | What is an Allegory? |
11615 | What is an Amphibrach? |
11615 | What is an Amphimac? |
11615 | What is an Anapest? |
11615 | What is an Antibachy? |
11615 | What is an Archaism? |
11615 | What is an English Grammar? |
11615 | What is an INTERJECTION, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is an Iambus? |
11615 | What is an abstract noun? |
11615 | What is an active- intransitive verb? |
11615 | What is an active- transitive verb? |
11615 | What is an adjective? |
11615 | What is an adverb? |
11615 | What is an article? |
11615 | What is an auxiliary, in grammar? |
11615 | What is an elementary sound of human voice, or speech? |
11615 | What is an example, as used in teaching? |
11615 | What is an exercise? |
11615 | What is an improper diphthong? |
11615 | What is an improper triphthong? |
11615 | What is an interjection? |
11615 | What is an interrogative pronoun? |
11615 | What is an irregular verb? |
11615 | What is an irregular verb? |
11615 | What is articulation? |
11615 | What is blank verse? |
11615 | What is cadence? |
11615 | What is called the falling or downward inflection? |
11615 | What is called the rising or upward inflection? |
11615 | What is comparison, in grammar? |
11615 | What is composite verse? |
11615 | What is elocution? |
11615 | What is emphasis? |
11615 | What is it but an idle conjecture? |
11615 | What is it that is called_ Orthoëpy?_ 3. |
11615 | What is it,"to analyze a sentence?" |
11615 | What is it,_ to read_? |
11615 | What is it,_ to speak_? |
11615 | What is it,_ to write_? |
11615 | What is meant by the term,"_ Parts of Speech?_"3. |
11615 | What is meant by_ scanning_ or_ scansion_? |
11615 | What is meant, when we speak of the powers of the letters? |
11615 | What is necessary to every finite verb? |
11615 | What is noted in relation to the unamendable imperfections sometimes found in ancient writings? |
11615 | What is noted of the ambiguous use of_ but_ or_ only_? |
11615 | What is noted of the word_ which_, as applied to persons? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the distinction of_ voice_ in the simple infinitive and the first participle? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the further extension of this rule to nouns and pronouns of the third person? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the place of the verb? |
11615 | What is observed in relation to the exceptions to Rule 23d? |
11615 | What is observed of Murray''s"_ infinitive made absolute_?" |
11615 | What is observed of adjectives preceded by_ the_ and used elliptically? |
11615 | What is observed of collective nouns used partitively? |
11615 | What is observed of nouns of weight, measure, or time, coming immediately together? |
11615 | What is observed of sentences like the following, in which there seems to be no nominative:"There_ are_ from eight to twelve professors?" |
11615 | What is observed of such phrases as,"_ hand to hand_,"--"_face to face_?" |
11615 | What is observed of the agreement of verbs in interrogative sentences? |
11615 | What is observed of the expressions,_ these people, these gentry, these folk_? |
11615 | What is observed of the frequent ellipses of the verb_ to be_, supposed by Allen and others? |
11615 | What is observed of the multiplicity of uses to which the participle in_ ing_ may be turned? |
11615 | What is observed of the nouns used in dates? |
11615 | What is observed of the relation of conjunctive adverbs, and of the misuse of_ when_? |
11615 | What is observed of the term_ not but_, and of the adverbial use of_ but_? |
11615 | What is observed of the word_ worth_? |
11615 | What is observed of the words_ like, near_, and_ nigh_? |
11615 | What is observed of those rules which suppose every adjective to relate to some noun? |
11615 | What is observed of verbs that agree with the nearest nominative, and are understood to the rest? |
11615 | What is observed of_ never_ and_ ever_ as seeming to be adjectives, and being liable to contraction? |
11615 | What is observed of_ this_ and_ that_ as referring to two nouns connected? |
11615 | What is offered in refutation of Peirce''s doctrine? |
11615 | What is our nearest approach to the Latin construction of the accusative before the infinitive? |
11615 | What is pronunciation? |
11615 | What is quantity? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the place of the pronoun of the first person singular? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the rhyming syllables? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the use of_ of, to, on_, and_ upon_? |
11615 | What is remarked of different cases used indiscriminately before the participle or verbal noun? |
11615 | What is remarked of instances like the following:"Prior''s_ Henry and Emma contains_ an other beautiful example?" |
11615 | What is remarked of such examples as this:"The_ Pleasures_ of Memory_ was_ published in 1702?" |
11615 | What is remarked of the difference between the indicative and the subjunctive mood, and of the limits of the latter? |
11615 | What is remarked of the ellipsis or omission of the relative? |
11615 | What is remarked of the faulty omission of the pronoun_ it_ before the verb? |
11615 | What is remarked of the placing of two or more adjectives before one noun? |
11615 | What is remarked of the possessive relation between time and action? |
11615 | What is remarked of the use of adjectives for adverbs? |
11615 | What is remarked of two or more conjunctions coming together? |
11615 | What is remarked of two or more negatives in the same sentence? |
11615 | What is remarked on the place and character of the critical notes and the general rule? |
11615 | What is replied to Dr. Adam''s suggestion,"Adverbs sometimes qualify substantives?" |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in syntactical parsing? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the EIGHTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the ELEVENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FIFTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FIRST PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FOURTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the NINTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SECOND PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SEVENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SIXTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the TENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the THIRD PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is rhyme? |
11615 | What is said in regard to the placing of adverbs? |
11615 | What is said of Dr. Adam''s"_ To_ taken_ absolutely_?" |
11615 | What is said of Murray''s mode of treating this subject? |
11615 | What is said of adjectives as agreeing or disagreeing with their nouns in number? |
11615 | What is said of certain infinitives supposed to be erroneously put for participles? |
11615 | What is said of ellipsis after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | What is said of needless articles? |
11615 | What is said of nouns used in exclamations, or in mottoes and abbreviated sayings? |
11615 | What is said of rhetorical pauses? |
11615 | What is said of small letters? |
11615 | What is said of the comparison of adverbs by_ more_ and_ most, less_ and_ least_? |
11615 | What is said of the compound personal pronouns? |
11615 | What is said of the correction of those examples in which a needless article or possessive is put before the participle? |
11615 | What is said of the different parts of speech contained in the list of correspondents? |
11615 | What is said of the distinguishing or confounding of different parts of speech, such as verbs, participles, and nouns? |
11615 | What is said of the duration of pauses, and the taking of breath? |
11615 | What is said of the ellipsis of one or the other of the terms? |
11615 | What is said of the fifth method of analysis? |
11615 | What is said of the gender of nouns of multitude? |
11615 | What is said of the notation of them? |
11615 | What is said of the omission of_ s_ from the possessive singular on account of its hissing sound? |
11615 | What is said of the parsing of a preposition? |
11615 | What is said of the participles which some suppose to be put absolute? |
11615 | What is said of the place of the interjection? |
11615 | What is said of the placing of prepositions? |
11615 | What is said of the position of the adjective? |
11615 | What is said of the position of the infinitive? |
11615 | What is said of the prepositions which follow_ averse_ and_ aversion, except_ and_ exception_? |
11615 | What is said of the secondary feet? |
11615 | What is said of the sign_ to_ after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | What is said of the slanting strokes in Roman letters? |
11615 | What is said of the sounds of_ c_ and_ g_? |
11615 | What is said of the sounds of_ j_ and_ x_? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of the antecedent? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of the conjunction_ and_? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of_ to_ and the insertion of_ be_; as,"To make himself_ be_ heard?" |
11615 | What is said of the teaching of Murray and others, that,"The participle with its adjuncts may be considered as a_ substantive phrase_?" |
11615 | What is said of the transitive use of such words as_ unbecoming_? |
11615 | What is said of the transposition of the two terms? |
11615 | What is said of this figure? |
11615 | What is said of those examples in which participles seem to be made the objects of verbs? |
11615 | What is said of those sentences in which an interjection is followed by a preposition or the conjunction_ that_? |
11615 | What is said of_ O_ and the vocative case? |
11615 | What is said of_ an_ or_ a_ before an adjective of number? |
11615 | What is said of_ and_ as supposed to be used to call attention? |
11615 | What is said of_ sc_, or_ s_ before_ c_? |
11615 | What is said of_ see_, as governing the infinitive? |
11615 | What is shown of the later teaching to which Murray''s erroneous and unoriginal remark about"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"has given rise? |
11615 | What is spelling? |
11615 | What is stated of the retaining of adverbs with participial nouns? |
11615 | What is stated of the rules of Adam, Lowth, Murray, and Kirkham, concerning collective nouns? |
11615 | What is suggested concerning the character and import of_ than_ and_ as_? |
11615 | What is the Rule for the pointing of_ Participles?_ 10. |
11615 | What is the comparative degree? |
11615 | What is the comparative degree? |
11615 | What is the compound form of conjugating active or neuter verbs? |
11615 | What is the conjugation of a verb? |
11615 | What is the construction of a noun, when it emphatically repeats the idea suggested by a preceding sentence? |
11615 | What is the construction of such expressions as this:"A torch,_ snuff_ and_ all, goes_ out in a moment?" |
11615 | What is the construction of the pronoun in"_ Ah me!_""_ Ah him!_"or any similar exclamation? |
11615 | What is the construction when two nominatives are connected by_ as well as, but_, or_ save_? |
11615 | What is the declension of a noun? |
11615 | What is the declension of a pronoun? |
11615 | What is the difference between_ in_ and_ into_? |
11615 | What is the dispute among grammarians concerning the adoption of_ or_ or_ nor_ after_ not_ or_ no_? |
11615 | What is the effect of putting one article for the other, and how shall we know which to choose? |
11615 | What is the effect of the word_ the_ before comparatives and superlatives? |
11615 | What is the essential character of the_ Notes_ which are placed under the rules of syntax? |
11615 | What is the feminine gender? |
11615 | What is the feminine gender? |
11615 | What is the fifth example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the first example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the first method of analysis, according to this code of syntax? |
11615 | What is the first person? |
11615 | What is the first person? |
11615 | What is the first- future tense? |
11615 | What is the form for the familiar style? |
11615 | What is the form of negation for the solemn style, second person singular? |
11615 | What is the form of question in the solemn style, with this verb in the second person singular? |
11615 | What is the fourth example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the fourth method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the general rule? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Colon? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Comma? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Dash? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Period? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Semicolon? |
11615 | What is the guide to a right emphasis? |
11615 | What is the imperative mood? |
11615 | What is the imperfect participle? |
11615 | What is the imperfect tense? |
11615 | What is the indicative mood? |
11615 | What is the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What is the infinitive, and for what things may it stand? |
11615 | What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ I_? |
11615 | What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_? |
11615 | What is the kind, and what the degree, of originality, which are to be commended in works of this sort? |
11615 | What is the masculine gender? |
11615 | What is the masculine gender? |
11615 | What is the name, or title, of this book? |
11615 | What is the negative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_? |
11615 | What is the neuter gender? |
11615 | What is the neuter gender? |
11615 | What is the nominative case? |
11615 | What is the nominative case? |
11615 | What is the object of a verb, participle, or preposition? |
11615 | What is the objective case? |
11615 | What is the objective case?" |
11615 | What is the opinion of Nixon, and of Crombie? |
11615 | What is the perfect participle? |
11615 | What is the perfect tense? |
11615 | What is the pluperfect tense? |
11615 | What is the plural number? |
11615 | What is the plural number? |
11615 | What is the position of the article with respect to its noun? |
11615 | What is the positive degree? |
11615 | What is the possessive case? |
11615 | What is the possessive case? |
11615 | What is the potential mood? |
11615 | What is the power, and what the position, of a conjunction that connects sentences or clauses? |
11615 | What is the preperfect participle? |
11615 | What is the present tense? |
11615 | What is the quantity of a syllable? |
11615 | What is the regular construction of participles, as such? |
11615 | What is the result of a uniform mixture? |
11615 | What is the rhythm of verse? |
11615 | What is the rule which speaks of a finite_ Verb Understood?_ 8. |
11615 | What is the second example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the second method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the second person? |
11615 | What is the second person? |
11615 | What is the second- future tense? |
11615 | What is the simplest form of an English conjugation? |
11615 | What is the singular number? |
11615 | What is the singular number? |
11615 | What is the subject of a verb? |
11615 | What is the subjunctive mood? |
11615 | What is the superlative degree? |
11615 | What is the superlative degree? |
11615 | What is the syntax of interjections? |
11615 | What is the syntax of the verb, when one of its nominatives is expressed, and an other or others implied? |
11615 | What is the syntax of the verb, when there are nominatives connected by_ as_? |
11615 | What is the third example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the third method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the third person? |
11615 | What is the third person? |
11615 | What is the use of doing so? |
11615 | What is the use of prepositions? |
11615 | What is the use of the Acute Accent? |
11615 | What is the use of the Apostrophe? |
11615 | What is the use of the Asterism, or the Three Stars? |
11615 | What is the use of the Brace? |
11615 | What is the use of the Breve, or Stenotone? |
11615 | What is the use of the Caret? |
11615 | What is the use of the Cedilla? |
11615 | What is the use of the Circumflex? |
11615 | What is the use of the Crotchets, or Brackets? |
11615 | What is the use of the Curves, or Marks of Parenthesis? |
11615 | What is the use of the Dià ¦ resis, or Dialysis? |
11615 | What is the use of the Ecphoneme, or Note of Exclamation? |
11615 | What is the use of the Ellipsis, or Suppression? |
11615 | What is the use of the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation? |
11615 | What is the use of the Grave Accent? |
11615 | What is the use of the Guillemets, or Quotation Points? |
11615 | What is the use of the Hyphen? |
11615 | What is the use of the Index, or Hand? |
11615 | What is the use of the Macron, or Macrotone? |
11615 | What is the use of the Paragraph? |
11615 | What is the use of the Section? |
11615 | What is the usual construction of_ each other_ and_ one an other_? |
11615 | What is the usual position of pronouns, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the article with respect to an adjective and a noun? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the nominative and verb, and when is it varied? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the objective case, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the possessive case, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the_ Perfect Participle_? |
11615 | What is the_ agreement_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ arrangement_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ government_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ relation_ of words? |
11615 | What is there remarkable in the construction of_ ourself_ and_ yourself_? |
11615 | What is there that_ can not be named or mentioned?_ Others again are restricted to one noun, or to a few; as,_ to transgress a law, or rule_. |
11615 | What is this"vague sense?" |
11615 | What is to be done with"_ Thinks I_ to myself,"and the like? |
11615 | What is told of two prepositions coming together? |
11615 | What is verse, as distinguished from prose? |
11615 | What is"_ being builded_"or"_ being printed_,"but"an_ imperfect passive participle_?" |
11615 | What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar? |
11615 | What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar? |
11615 | What is_ Punctuation?_ 3. |
11615 | What is_ Utterance?_ 2. |
11615 | What is_ Versification_? |
11615 | What is_ apposition_, and from whom did it receive this name? |
11615 | What is_ as_ when it is made the subject or the object of a verb? |
11615 | What is_ the Imperfect Participle_? |
11615 | What is_ the Present_? |
11615 | What is_ the Preterit_? |
11615 | What is_ to_ here? |
11615 | What kind of a stone? |
11615 | What kind of a way? |
11615 | What kinds of words can take different cases after them? |
11615 | What knowledge does pronunciation require? |
11615 | What large exception to this rule has been recently discovered by Dr. Bullions? |
11615 | What less pardonable misnomer, than for a great critic to call the sign of long quantity a"_ hyphen_"? |
11615 | What letters are called liquids? |
11615 | What letters are reckoned mutes? |
11615 | What letters are reckoned semivowels? |
11615 | What letters are vowels? |
11615 | What made this vast difference, but this: That_ one was_ accustomed to have what_ they_ called or cried for;_ the other_ to go without it?" |
11615 | What marvel then, that all his multifarious grammars of the English language are despised? |
11615 | What marvel, then, that he falls into errors, both of doctrine and of practice? |
11615 | What mean the technical words,_ catalectic, acatalectic_, and_ hypermeter_? |
11615 | What modifications have adjectives? |
11615 | What modifications have adverbs? |
11615 | What modifications have nouns? |
11615 | What modifications have pronouns? |
11615 | What modifications have the articles? |
11615 | What modifications have verbs? |
11615 | What monosyllables, contrary to this rule, end with_ c_ only? |
11615 | What name is given to the sound of a letter? |
11615 | What needless ellipses both of nominatives and of verbs are commonly supposed by our grammarians? |
11615 | What notice is taken of the application of the rule for"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"to nouns of the second person? |
11615 | What notice is taken of the application of_ between, betwixt, among, amongst, amid, amidst_? |
11615 | What notion had Dr. Adam of simple and compound sentences? |
11615 | What notions are inculcated by different grammarians about the introductory word_ there_? |
11615 | What notions have been entertained concerning the word_ to_ as used before the infinitive verb? |
11615 | What nouns, then, are masculine? |
11615 | What number is_ pens_? |
11615 | What objections are there to the rule, with its exceptions,"One verb governs an other in the infinitive mood?" |
11615 | What observation is made respecting exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | What odd use is sometimes made of the pronoun_ your_? |
11615 | What order is observed in the placing of these notes, if some rules have many, and others few or none? |
11615 | What orders of verse arise from these? |
11615 | What other common modes of expression are censured by this author under the same head? |
11615 | What other orders are there? |
11615 | What participle is often understood after nouns put absolute? |
11615 | What particular classes are included among common nouns? |
11615 | What particular convenience do we find in having most of our tenses composed of separable words? |
11615 | What parts of speech can be omitted, by ellipsis? |
11615 | What parts of speech have no other syntactical property than that of simple relation? |
11615 | What pauses are denoted by the first four points? |
11615 | What pauses are particularly ungraceful? |
11615 | What pauses are required by the other four? |
11615 | What peculiar meaning does this form convey? |
11615 | What peculiar name have some of these? |
11615 | What peculiarities are noticed in regard to the noun_ side_? |
11615 | What peculiarities has the possessive case in regard to correlatives? |
11615 | What peculiarity has the relative_ what_? |
11615 | What peculiarity is there in the construction of nouns of time, measure, distance, or value? |
11615 | What preposition is often put between nouns that signify the same thing? |
11615 | What principle of universal grammar determines the gender when both sexes are taken together? |
11615 | What principles of spelling must be observed in the comparing of adjectives? |
11615 | What pronoun is sometimes an expletive, and sometimes used with reference to an infinitive following it? |
11615 | What pronoun is sometimes applied to animals so as not to distinguish their sex? |
11615 | What quantity coincides with accent or emphasis? |
11615 | What questionable uses of participles are commonly admitted by grammarians? |
11615 | What questions are raised among grammarians, about the construction of_ as follow_ or_ as follows_, and other similar phrases? |
11615 | What reasons can be adduced to show that the infinitive is not a noun? |
11615 | What regulates accent? |
11615 | What relation of case occurs between nouns connected by_ as_? |
11615 | What relative is applied to a proper noun taken merely as a name? |
11615 | What rule does Dr. Webster give for such examples as the following:"There_ was_ more than a hundred and fifty thousand pounds?" |
11615 | What rule speaks of the separation of_ Words in Apposition?_ 2. |
11615 | What rules of relation are commonly found in grammars? |
11615 | What say Crombie and others about this disputable phraseology? |
11615 | What say Murray, Ingersoll, and Lennie, about interjections and cases? |
11615 | What says Blair about tones? |
11615 | What says Brown of this their teaching? |
11615 | What says Churchill about the notion that certain conjunctions govern the subjunctive mood? |
11615 | What says Comstock of rules for inflections? |
11615 | What says Critical Note 1st of_ the parts of speech_? |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 2d of_ Restrictive Relatives?_ 20. |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 4th of_ Two Words with Adjuncts?_ 23. |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 7th of_ Complex Names?_ 3. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 2d of_ Short Terms closely Connected?_ 21. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 4th of_ Two Terms Contrasted?_ 24. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 7th of_ Close Apposition?_ 4. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 2d of_ Elliptical Members United?_ 22. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 4th of a mere_ Alternative of Words?_ 25. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 7th of_ a Pronoun without a Pause?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Exception 4th to Rule 4th of_ Conjunctions Understood?_ LESSON III.--OF THE COMMA. |
11615 | What says Exception 4th to Rule 7th of_ Names Acquired?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Hiley? |
11615 | What says Lindley Murray about this passive government? |
11615 | What says Murray? |
11615 | What says Note 10th of_ improper omissions_? |
11615 | What says Note 11th of_ literary blunders_? |
11615 | What says Note 12th of_ literary perversions_? |
11615 | What says Note 13th of_ literary awkwardness_? |
11615 | What says Note 14th of_ literary ignorance_? |
11615 | What says Note 15th of_ literary silliness_? |
11615 | What says Note 16th of_ errors incorrigible_? |
11615 | What says Note 2d of_ the doubtful reference_ of words? |
11615 | What says Note 3d of_ definitions_? |
11615 | What says Note 4th of_ comparisons_? |
11615 | What says Note 5th of_ falsities_? |
11615 | What says Note 6th of_ absurdities_? |
11615 | What says Note 7th of_ self- contradiction_? |
11615 | What says Note 8th of_ senseless jumbling_? |
11615 | What says Note 9th of_ words needless_? |
11615 | What says Rippingham about it? |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ Infinitives?_ 18. |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ final e retained?_ 26. |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ personifications_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ Participles?_ 19. |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ derivatives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ final y changed?_ 28. |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ Adverbs?_ 20. |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ I and O_? |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ final y unchanged?_ 30. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of the terminations_ ize_ and_ ise?_ 32. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ Conjunctions?_ 21. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ poetry_? |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ Prepositions?_ 22. |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ compounds?_ 34. |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ examples_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ Interjections?_ 23. |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ chief words_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ usage_, as a law of spelling? |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ Words Repeated?_ 24. |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ needless capitals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 17th of_ Dependent Quotations?_ LESSON II.--OF THE COMMA. |
11615 | What says Rule 17th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 18th of_ Infinitives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 19th of_ Infinitives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Abrupt Pauses?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Additional Remarks?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Articles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Complex Members?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Distinct Sentences?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Interjections?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Questions Direct?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Simple Sentences?_ 9. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ books_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ consonants_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ final f, l_, or_ s_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ the Parenthesis?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 20th of_ Participles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 21st of_ Adverbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 22d of_ Conjunctions_? |
11615 | What says Rule 23d of_ Prepositions_? |
11615 | What says Rule 24th of_ Interjections_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Allied Sentences?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Emphatic Pauses?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Greater Pauses?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Invocations?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Nominatives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Questions United?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 10. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ first words_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ other finals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ simples_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ vowels_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of the_ doubling_ of consonants? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ Apposition_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ More than Two Words?_ 11. |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ names of Deity_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ terminations_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ the sense_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ Only Two Words?_ 12. |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ Possessives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ ellipses_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ prefixes_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ proper names_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th_ against the doubling_ of consonants? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ Objectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ Words in Pairs?_ 13. |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ final ck_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ the hyphen_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ titles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of the_ retaining_ of double letters before affixes? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ Same Cases_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ Words put Absolute?_ 14. |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ lines full_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ no hyphen_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ one capital_? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of the_ retaining_ of double letters after prefixes? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ Objectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ Words in Apposition?_ 15. |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ two capitals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of the_ Nominative Absolute_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ Adjectives?_ 16. |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ final ll_, and of_ final l single_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ Adjectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ Finite Verbs?_ 17. |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ apposition_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ final e omitted_? |
11615 | What says Sheridan, of a good articulation? |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 1st of a_ Long Simple Sentence?_ 19. |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 8th of_ Adjectives Restrictive?_ 7. |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 9th of a_ Very Slight Pause?_ 9. |
11615 | What sense would there be in expounding this to mean,"And_ neither_ a true one?" |
11615 | What shall I say to you? |
11615 | What shall be said of the following? |
11615 | What shall we do when_ of_ after the participial noun is objectionable? |
11615 | What should regulate the inflections? |
11615 | What signifies it, to object to his language as"_ unintelligible_"if it conveys his idea better than any other could? |
11615 | What sort of scholarship is that in which_ fictitious examples_ mislead even their inventors? |
11615 | What sounds has the consonant_ g_? |
11615 | What strange error is taught by Cobbett, and by Wright, in regard to the relative and its verb? |
11615 | What strictures are made on Murray, Lennie, and Bullions, with reference to examples in which an infinitive follows the participial noun? |
11615 | What strictures are made on the classification and placing of the word_ only_? |
11615 | What suggestions are made concerning the word_ no_? |
11615 | What suggestions are made in relation to the number of rules or notes, and the completeness of the system? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure anapestic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure dactylic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure iambic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure trochaic line? |
11615 | What ten chapters of the foregoing code of syntax treat of the ten parts of speech in their order? |
11615 | What then becomes of the thousands of"adjectives"embraced in the"& c."quoted above? |
11615 | What then is the middle ground for the true grammarian? |
11615 | What then is the remedy? |
11615 | What then is the_ agreement_ of words? |
11615 | What then is"being built,"but"_ continuing to be built_,"the same, or nearly the same, as"_ building_"taken passively? |
11615 | What then of the following example:"Which of_ those two persons_ has_ most_ distinguished himself?" |
11615 | What then shall be thought of the explanations which our grammarians have given of this degree of comparison? |
11615 | What then? |
11615 | What then? |
11615 | What things are commonly exhibited wholly in capitals? |
11615 | What three modes of construction appear like exceptions to Rule 4th? |
11615 | What two cases of nouns are alike in form, and how are they distinguished? |
11615 | What two great authors differ in regard to the correctness of the phrases,"_ upon the rule''s being observed_,"and"_ of its being neglected_?" |
11615 | What uniformity have stanzas? |
11615 | What variation may occur in the first foot? |
11615 | What variety have they? |
11615 | What variety is there in the letters? |
11615 | What verbs are defective? |
11615 | What verbs are used as auxiliaries? |
11615 | What verbs take the infinitive after them without the preposition_ to_? |
11615 | What verbs take the participle after them, and not the infinitive? |
11615 | What was language at first, and what is it now? |
11615 | What whimsical account of the English infinitive is given by Nixon? |
11615 | What words does this rule claim, which might seem to come under Rule 7th? |
11615 | What words must be supplied in parsing? |
11615 | What words want the comparative? |
11615 | What words want the positive? |
11615 | What would be the natural effect of the following sentence, which I quote from a late well- written religious homily? |
11615 | What, for instance, would they substitute for the following very inaccurate expression from the critical belles- lettres of Dr. Blair? |
11615 | What, in his view, is a good articulation? |
11615 | What, of_ ce, ci_, and_ ch_? |
11615 | What, then, are interjections? |
11615 | What, then, is the common order of literary division, downwards, throughout? |
11615 | What, then, is"THE PRODUCTIVE SYSTEM?" |
11615 | What? |
11615 | What? |
11615 | What_ excess_ of skill, or what_ very high degree_ of acuteness, have the_ brightest_ and_ best_ of these grammarians exhibited? |
11615 | Whatever? |
11615 | Whatsoever?_ LESSON XI.--PARSING. |
11615 | When Dr. Johnson was asked,"What is_ poetry_?" |
11615 | When a noun is implied in an adjective of a different number, which word is regarded in the formation of the verb? |
11615 | When a pronoun represents a phrase or sentence, of what person, number, and gender is it? |
11615 | When a verb has nominatives of different persons or numbers, connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, with which of them does it_ commonly_ agree? |
11615 | When are_ w_ and_ y_ consonants? |
11615 | When do we employ the same relative in successive clauses? |
11615 | When does a common noun not admit an article? |
11615 | When does a_ participle_"admit the degrees of comparison?" |
11615 | When does it agree with the remoter nominative? |
11615 | When is an active verb followed by two words in apposition? |
11615 | When is this figure allowable? |
11615 | When is_ the_ required before adjectives? |
11615 | When joint antecedents are of different persons, with which person does the pronoun agree? |
11615 | When joint antecedents differ in gender, of what gender is the pronoun? |
11615 | When one can condense several different principles into one rule, is it not expedient to do so? |
11615 | When ought_ an_ to be used, and what are the examples? |
11615 | When shall I, like Oscar, travel in the light of my steel?" |
11615 | When should_ a_ be used, and what are the examples? |
11615 | When the Bible was translated, either form appears to have been used before the letter_ h_; as,"Hath not_ my hand_ made all these things?" |
11615 | When the adjective follows its noun, where stands the article? |
11615 | When the confounding of such distinctions is begun, who knows where it will end? |
11615 | When the gender is figurative, how is it indicated? |
11615 | When the nominatives connected are of different persons, of what person is the verb? |
11615 | When the noun is such as may be applied to either sex, how is the gender usually determined? |
11615 | When the speaker changes his nominative, to take a stronger one, what concord has the verb? |
11615 | When the verbs,_ say, answer, reply_, and the like, introduce the parts of a dialogue; as,"''Son of affliction,''_ said Omar_,''who art thou?'' |
11615 | When two declinable words are connected by a conjunction, why are they of the same case? |
11615 | When two or more infinitives occur in the same construction, must_ to_ be used with each? |
11615 | When two or more nominatives connected by_ and_ explain a preceding one, what agreement has the verb? |
11615 | When verbs are connected by_ and, or_, or_ nor_, do they necessarily agree with the same nominative? |
11615 | When will the cause of learning cease to have assailants and underminers among those who profess to serve it? |
11615 | When words commonly used as adverbs assume the construction of nouns, how are they to be parsed? |
11615 | When, and in what case, is a noun or pronoun put absolute in English? |
11615 | When, or how often, should articles be inserted? |
11615 | When? |
11615 | Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | Where and what is this"_ thing_"which is so bad that the leading Senator has"never heard a worse?" |
11615 | Where are the positives which are here supposed to be"_ increased to the highest degree_?" |
11615 | Where is quantity variable, and where fixed, in English? |
11615 | Where is the noun or pronoun, when an adjective follows an infinitive or a participle? |
11615 | Where is the| thatch- roofà © d| village, the| home of A|-cadian| farmers?" |
11615 | Where must the sign of possession be put, when two or more possessives are in apposition? |
11615 | Where the cit|-ron and ol|-ive are fair|-est of fruit, And the voice| of the night|-ingale nev|-er is mute? |
11615 | Where the sense admits of a choice of construction in respect to the participle, is not attention due to the analogy of general grammar? |
11615 | Where the vir|-gins are soft as the ros|-es they twine, And all,| save the spir|-it of man,| is divine? |
11615 | Where then holds the anchor of his praise? |
11615 | Where then is the propriety of their notion of infinitive government? |
11615 | Where usage is utterly unsettled, what guidance should be sought? |
11615 | Where, but among the heroes and the wise?" |
11615 | Where? |
11615 | Where? |
11615 | Wherefore Beza expressed it differently:"Simon_ fili Jonà ¦_, diligis me plus_ quâm hi_?" |
11615 | Wherein are the common rule and definition of apposition faulty? |
11615 | Wherein consists_ the truth_ of grammatical doctrine, and how can one judge of what others teach? |
11615 | Whether of them twain did the will of his father? |
11615 | Which are the copulative conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the corresponsive conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the disjunctive conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the interrogative pronouns? |
11615 | Which are the most apt to be taken plurally, collections of persons, or collections of things? |
11615 | Which are the relative pronouns? |
11615 | Which are these seven? |
11615 | Which exercise brings into use the greater number of grammatical principles, parsing or correcting? |
11615 | Which is the best adapted to strong emphasis? |
11615 | Which is the definite article, and what does it denote? |
11615 | Which is the indefinite article, and what does it denote? |
11615 | Which kind of inflection is said to be most common? |
11615 | Which number does_ the_ limit, the singular or the plural? |
11615 | Which of the letters can form syllables of themselves? |
11615 | Which of the ten parts of speech is left without any rule of syntax? |
11615 | Which of the visors was it, that you wore? |
11615 | Which of the vowel sounds form words? |
11615 | Which of_ these_ are called_ Vowels_?" |
11615 | Which, now, is"more judicious,"such confusion as this, or the arrangement which has been common from time immemorial? |
11615 | Which, now, of all these did Charles the Second mean, when he gave the colony this name, with his charter, in 1663? |
11615 | Which, then, of the two or three modifications or forms, do they mean, when they say,"Number is_ the distinction_"& c.? |
11615 | Which? |
11615 | Whichever? |
11615 | Whichsoever? |
11615 | Whither? |
11615 | Who are they? |
11615 | Who are you? |
11615 | Who art thou? |
11615 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?" |
11615 | Who breaks a butterfly upon_ the_ wheel?" |
11615 | Who does not know that such syllables as"_ at, bat_, and_ cur_"are often long in poetry? |
11615 | Who is he that will pretend that the solemn style of the Bible may be used in familiar discourse, without a mouthing affectation? |
11615 | Who shall decide whether the contributions which any individual may make to our grammatical code, are, or are not, consonant with the best usage? |
11615 | Who shall say that_ Daleth, Delta_, and_ Dee_, are not three_ real words_, each equally important in the language to which it properly belongs? |
11615 | Who that knows what it is, to name a letter, can think of naming_ w_ by double_ o_? |
11615 | Who was her| father? |
11615 | Who was her| mother? |
11615 | Who, in common parlance, has ever said,"He_ was loving me_,"or any thing like it? |
11615 | Who, then, are here the neologists, the innovators, the impairers of the language? |
11615 | Whom did he copy when he said,"The phrases,_ more perfect_, and_ most perfect_, are improper?" |
11615 | Whose are"The Principles of English Grammar"which Dr. Bullions has republished with alterations,"on the plan of Murray''s Grammar?" |
11615 | Whose fault is that? |
11615 | Whosoever? |
11615 | Why are both parties wrong in this instance? |
11615 | Why are interjections so called? |
11615 | Why are not these things defined under the head of pronouns? |
11615 | Why are not these things defined under the head of verbs? |
11615 | Why are the anapestic measures few? |
11615 | Why are these feet principal? |
11615 | Why are verbs called by that name? |
11615 | Why are we apt to use a plural pronoun after antecedents of different genders? |
11615 | Why can not an omission of the possessive sign be accounted a true_ ellipsis_? |
11615 | Why can not the omission of an article constitute a proper ellipsis? |
11615 | Why can not two nouns, each having the possessive sign, be put in apposition with each other? |
11615 | Why delayest thou thy coming? |
11615 | Why delayest thou thy coming? |
11615 | Why did Murray think all Webster''s examples under this rule bad English? |
11615 | Why do collective nouns singular, when connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, admit of a plural verb? |
11615 | Why do singular antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_ appear to require a singular pronoun? |
11615 | Why do they deserve particular attention? |
11615 | Why do those teach just as inconsistently, who forbear to call the_ to_ a preposition? |
11615 | Why does it vary? |
11615 | Why does the author discard the two special rules commonly given for the construction of relatives? |
11615 | Why does the author incline to condemn these peculiarities? |
11615 | Why have we no exact enumeration of the measures of this order? |
11615 | Why is Murray''s rule for the possessive case objectionable? |
11615 | Why is it difficult to learn to spell accurately? |
11615 | Why is it more objectionable to change_ pupillaris_ to_ pupilary_, than_ pupillus_ to_ pupil_? |
11615 | Why is it necessary to observe_ the sense_, or_ meaning_, of what we parse? |
11615 | Why is it necessary to use the sign_ to_ before an abstract infinitive, where it shows no relation? |
11615 | Why is it not as proper, to write an order for"a bushel of_ peas_,"as for"a bushel of_ beans_?" |
11615 | Why is it reasonable to limit the government of the possessive to nouns only, or to words taken substantive? |
11615 | Why is it thought improper to put a noun in two cases at once? |
11615 | Why is it wrong to say, with Dr. Ash,"The king and queen appearing in public_ was_ the cause of my going?" |
11615 | Why is it wrong to say,"The first has a lenis,_ and_ the other an asper over_ them_?" |
11615 | Why is just articulation better than mere loudness? |
11615 | Why is the position,"Active verbs govern the objective case,"of no use to the composer? |
11615 | Why is the thirteenth rule of the author''s Institutes and First Lines not retained as a rule in this work? |
11615 | Why is_ an_ or_ a_ not applicable to plurals? |
11615 | Why must a grammarian discriminate between idioms, or peculiarities, and the common mode of expression? |
11615 | Why not suppose them all to be elliptical? |
11615 | Why not? |
11615 | Why or wherein is the common rule,"Prepositions govern the objective case,"defective or insufficient? |
11615 | Why should the different sorts of letters be kept distinct? |
11615 | Why then attempt instruction by a method which both ignorance and knowledge on the part of the pupil, must alike render useless? |
11615 | Why then is the simplest solution imaginable still so frequently rejected for so much complexity and inconsistency? |
11615 | Why were the general rule and the general or critical notes added to the foregoing code of syntax? |
11615 | Why? |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why_ must_ its_ agent_"be in the_ objective_ case,"if"_ to improve_ relates to the pronoun_ he_?" |
11615 | Will a boy pretend that he can not understand a rule of English grammar, because he is told that it holds good in all languages? |
11615 | Will any grammarian say,"I know well enough what the thing is, but I can not tell?" |
11615 | Will any one say, that every such construction is_ bad English_? |
11615 | Will any person pretend that the connective here joins different cases?" |
11615 | Will he have loved? |
11615 | Will it be pretended that the French names and the English do not differ? |
11615 | Will it be said that the latter phrases are elliptical, for''ask_ of_ him his opinion?'' |
11615 | Will they not have been loved? |
11615 | Will thou have loved? |
11615 | Will thou love? |
11615 | Will you name the ten parts of speech, with_ an_ or_ a_ before each name? |
11615 | Will you not have seen? |
11615 | Will you not see? |
11615 | Will you try the series again with a_ p_? |
11615 | Wilt thou have loved? |
11615 | Wilt thou love? |
11615 | With how many other parts of speech does W. Allen confound the participle? |
11615 | With what does single- rhymed dactylic end? |
11615 | With what does the relative agree when an other word is introduced by the pronoun_ it_? |
11615 | With what nominatives of the second person, does the imperative verb agree? |
11615 | Without you, what were man? |
11615 | Wo n''t they have done it? |
11615 | Would it not be better to say,"Ode is the same_ as_ song or hymn?" |
11615 | Yet he does not fail to repeat, with some additional inaccuracy, the notion, that,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running_? |
11615 | Your_ Effs_, and_ Tees_, and_ Ars_, and_ Esses_?" |
11615 | [ 269]"Suppose a criminal to be_ enduring_ the operation of binding:--Shall we say, with Mr. Murray,--''The criminal is binding?'' |
11615 | [ 28]"Except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
11615 | [ 331] ANALYSIS.--What is the general structure of this passage? |
11615 | [ 354] To these examples, Webster adds_ two others_, of a_ different sort_, with a comment, thus:"''Ask_ him_ his_ opinion_?'' |
11615 | [ 359]"''Whose house is that?'' |
11615 | [ 430] Should not the Doctor have said,"_ are_ there_ more_,"since"_ more than one_"must needs be plural? |
11615 | [ 550]"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has become_ of national liberty?" |
11615 | [ 89] What, but the greater care of earlier writers, has made the Greek names better known or more important than the Latin? |
11615 | [ EXAMPLES:]''May_ not we_ here say with Lucretius?'' |
11615 | [?] |
11615 | [?]" |
11615 | ], the Dash[--], the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation[? |
11615 | ], the Note of Interrogation[? |
11615 | ],_ the Note of_ Interrogation[? |
11615 | _ Ail, irk_, and_ behoove_, are regular verbs and transitive; but they are used only in the third person singular: as,"What_ ails_ you?" |
11615 | _ Being built_ signifies action_ finished_; and how can,_ Is being built_, signify an_ action unfinished?" |
11615 | _ But_ what are goose- eyes in grammar?" |
11615 | _ Example VI.--"A Good Name?" |
11615 | _ Heardst_ thou that shameful word and blow Brought Roderick''s vengeance on his foe?" |
11615 | _ How_ did he speak? |
11615 | _ Hundreds_''? |
11615 | _ I_ know_ thou_ sayst it: says thy_ life_ the same?" |
11615 | _ Is it not Thomas_? |
11615 | _ Prodest_ is a Latin verb, which signifies"_ is profitable to_;"but who will thence infer, that_ profitable to_ is a verb? |
11615 | _ Siccine ais Parmenó?_ Voss. |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Tens_''? |
11615 | _ Units_''figure? |
11615 | _ What_ through? |
11615 | _ What_ unto day? |
11615 | _ What_ unto night? |
11615 | _ Whereto_ serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence?" |
11615 | _ Who are_ in the house? |
11615 | _ Who strike_ the iron? |
11615 | _ Who strikes_ the iron? |
11615 | _ Who was_ in the street? |
11615 | _ Who were_ in the street?" |
11615 | _ Who_ fathers the foundlings? |
11615 | _ Whom_, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch?" |
11615 | _ Why is_ the sign_ to_ expressed before_ study_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_?" |
11615 | _ Ye mountains_, that ye skipped like rams; and_ ye little hills_, like lambs? |
11615 | _ a_ is an article.--why? |
11615 | _ dead- eyes_ are in a ship, they are blocks, with holes in them, but what are goose- eyes in grammar?" |
11615 | _ elles_] Other; one or something_ beside_; as, Who_ else_ is coming?" |
11615 | _ heard ye not_ of lowland war?" |
11615 | _ must_ I_ observe_ you? |
11615 | _ or_ Did I love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did he love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did we not love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did you not see? |
11615 | _ or_ Didst thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do I love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do we not love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do you not see? |
11615 | _ or_ Does he love? |
11615 | _ or_ Dost thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Dost thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ a vine, figs?" |
11615 | _ that is_,''What is the reason of this person,_ in_ dismissing his servant so hastily?'' |
11615 | _ thee_, my boy?" |
11615 | _ thine_, my child?" |
11615 | _ thou Jordan_, that thou wast driven back? |
11615 | _ till_ seven times? |
11615 | _ to leave_[ town] to- day:''''They tried( What?) |
11615 | _ very_ is an adverb.--why?" |
11615 | _ was_ is a verb.--why? |
11615 | _ wast thou_ never to do any thing?" |
11615 | _ whither_? |
11615 | a language"_ The meaning of which_,"he says,"_ all the different animals perfectly understand_?" |
11615 | ah, whither dost thou run? |
11615 | am_ I_ not_ free_? |
11615 | and Priestley cor._"Say, dost thou know Vectidius? |
11615 | and adds,"Between this form of expression and the following,''What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day?'' |
11615 | and have they not in the other sentence, a relation similar to what is seen here? |
11615 | and how are they always the same? |
11615 | and how could they use them, without other parts of speech to form them into sentences? |
11615 | and how do they differ? |
11615 | and how is it to be known? |
11615 | and how many of these are aspirates? |
11615 | and how many sounds do they represent? |
11615 | and how shall he who knows not what and how many they are, think himself capable of reforming our system of their alphabetic signs? |
11615 | and how uttered when they are not words? |
11615 | and if it is a plural adjective, what shall we do with_ a_ and_ great?_ Taken in either of these ways, the construction is anomalous. |
11615 | and if it is, do they not make"common"what is no better English than the Doctor''s? |
11615 | and if my is an adjective, why not_ Barrett''s_?" |
11615 | and in depriving the poor of a benefactor? |
11615 | and is it not a_ perversion_ of the sentence to interpret it otherwise? |
11615 | and is not_ unlock_ an_ iambus_? |
11615 | and of those who do pretend to this knowledge, why are there so few that agree? |
11615 | and shall he not do it? |
11615 | and shall he not do it? |
11615 | and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | and shall he not make it good_?" |
11615 | and the prophets, do they live forever?" |
11615 | and the_ prophets_, do they live forever?" |
11615 | and to whom must our appeal be made? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles? |
11615 | and what by_ mind_? |
11615 | and what else is a burning coal than redhot wood?" |
11615 | and what else is a burning coal than_ red- hot_ wood?" |
11615 | and what epithet, to a letter not sounded? |
11615 | and what is it, that is"indeterminate?" |
11615 | and what knowledge does it imply? |
11615 | and what of the rest? |
11615 | and what the power of God may do for thee?" |
11615 | and what was it about?" |
11615 | and what, consonants? |
11615 | and what, neuter? |
11615 | and what, the chain of connexion between the words_ Swift_ and_ putrefaction_? |
11615 | and what, the chain of connexion"between the words_ away_ and_ is? |
11615 | and when, vowels? |
11615 | and where is the place of understanding? |
11615 | and which can not? |
11615 | and which of them are imperfect mutes? |
11615 | and which of them ought to be censured and rejected as bad English? |
11615 | and who does it belong to?" |
11615 | and who is thy companion?" |
11615 | and who is thy companion?" |
11615 | and why are capitals used? |
11615 | and why have_ Greene, Bullions, Hiley, Hart_, and others, also copied it? |
11615 | and why so? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and with whom did it originate? |
11615 | and with_ what_ body do they come?" |
11615 | and would not one such monster be more offensive than all our present exceptions to Rule 9th? |
11615 | and, if this be done, with respect to the infinitive, why not also with respect to the objective case? |
11615 | and_ to whom_ does it belong?" |
11615 | are not_ ye_ my_ work_ in the Lord? |
11615 | are there not two kinds of sentences? |
11615 | as, in the phrase,''He reads_ correctly_,''the answer to the question, How does he read? |
11615 | bad, evil_, or_ ill? |
11615 | but, What do you think of my_ horse''s running_? |
11615 | but,''Does the sentence ask a question?''" |
11615 | can Sporus feel? |
11615 | can Sporus feel? |
11615 | canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection? |
11615 | canst thou not forbear me_ half an hour_? |
11615 | cor._"And will you_ rend_ our ancient love asunder?" |
11615 | cor._"Are we not lazy in our duties, or_ do we not_ make a Christ of them?" |
11615 | cor._"By what code of morals_ is the right or privilege denied me_?" |
11615 | cor._"Can hearts not free, be_ tried_ whether they serve Willing or_ not_, who will but what they must?" |
11615 | cor._"Can our_ solicitude_ alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?" |
11615 | cor._"Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? |
11615 | cor._"Do not they say,_ that_ every true believer has the Spirit of God in_ him_?" |
11615 | cor._"Does continuity,_ or_ connexion, create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?" |
11615 | cor._"Has this word, which represents an action, an object after it, on which_ the action_ terminates?" |
11615 | cor._"How many numbers do nouns appear to have? |
11615 | cor._"How many numbers have pronouns? |
11615 | cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ goodness''_ then end with? |
11615 | cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ the word_ then end with? |
11615 | cor._"In what other,_ consistently_ with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him?" |
11615 | cor._"May I_ express thee''unblam''d? |
11615 | cor._"To_ whom_? |
11615 | cor._"What is the_ putting- together of_ vowels and consonants called?" |
11615 | cor._"When the judge_ dares_ not act, where is the loser''s remedy?" |
11615 | cor._"Who is here so rude,_ he_ would not be a_ Roman_?" |
11615 | cor._"Young stranger, whither_ wanderst_ thou?" |
11615 | cor._"_ Questions asked by_ a principal verb_ only_--as,_''Teach I?'' |
11615 | cor._"_ Was_ either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized?" |
11615 | deeper than hell, what canst thou know?" |
11615 | deeper than hell; what canst thou know?" |
11615 | does every body take their morning draught of this liquor?" |
11615 | either a vine, figs?" |
11615 | for_ whether_ is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the gold?" |
11615 | fore? |
11615 | ha? |
11615 | hast thou clothed_ his_ neck with thunder? |
11615 | hath he spoken it, and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord? |
11615 | have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? |
11615 | have ye not houses to eat and to drink_ in_?" |
11615 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see?" |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | hind? |
11615 | how are_ have_ and_ do_ to be parsed? |
11615 | how his thoughts adore That painted coat which Joseph never wore?" |
11615 | how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet? |
11615 | how much? |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | i. e._ Who is the person_? |
11615 | if the latter, how are they governed? |
11615 | in filling the orphan''s eyes with tears?" |
11615 | in ill thoughts again? |
11615 | in relation to this matter?" |
11615 | in? |
11615 | instead of--_wilt thou_ walk? |
11615 | is Moscow in flames?" |
11615 | is different_ to_[ say_ from_,] What do you think of my_ horse running_?" |
11615 | is this the consequence of thy generosity?" |
11615 | is thy_ servant_ a_ dog_?" |
11615 | is_ different_ from, What are you seeking? |
11615 | its chief use--declined--to what creatures may be applied--put for the distance,("_ How far do you call_ IT?" |
11615 | late?_ 26. |
11615 | little? |
11615 | low? |
11615 | many?_ 25. |
11615 | me_, how fared it with me then?" |
11615 | means, Do you think I should let him run? |
11615 | means, he_ has_ run, do you think he ran well?" |
11615 | mild and_ gall- less_ dove, Which dost the pure and candid dwellings love, Canst thou in Albion still delight?" |
11615 | much? |
11615 | near? |
11615 | nor in preferring the lessons of conscience to the impulses of passion? |
11615 | of whom do the kings of the earth take taxes and tribute?''" |
11615 | or Where? |
11615 | or both? |
11615 | or both? |
11615 | or came it unto you only?" |
11615 | or canst thou thunder with a voice like him?" |
11615 | or despise ye the church of God, and shame them that have not? |
11615 | or from one who does not know that_ you_ is never a_ nominative_ in the style of the Bible? |
11615 | or from one who tells us, that"_ It walks_"is of the solemn style? |
11615 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | or how is_ to_"joined to the verb,"or made a part of it, in the phrase,"_ to_ ride?" |
11615 | or how knowest_ thou_, O_ man_, whether_ thou_ shalt save_ thy wife_?" |
11615 | or how the word_ five_, the figure 5, or the numeral letter V, is"the designation of a_ unit_?" |
11615 | or is he not rather at fault in his interpretations? |
11615 | or is it the sum of all the quantities which these may indicate? |
11615 | or neither? |
11615 | or neither? |
11615 | or sentences, with points? |
11615 | or that"a_ more reddish_ tinge,"--"a_ more saltish_ taste,"are not correct phrases? |
11615 | or the action of"_ composing_?" |
11615 | or thus,_ riv- er_,_ fev- er_?" |
11615 | or what advantage would a new orthography procure equivalent to the confusion and perplexity of such an alteration?" |
11615 | or what propriety could there be in making the words,_ of_, and_ to_, and_ from_, govern or compose three different cases? |
11615 | or what reason can be assigned for making more than three? |
11615 | or where, on such a principle, can the line of distinction for transitive verbs be drawn? |
11615 | or where? |
11615 | or where? |
11615 | or why an emphasis alone, will not sufficiently distinguish the members of sentences from each other, without pauses, as accent does words? |
11615 | or"_ will depend_"understood after_ more_? |
11615 | or, Am I not writing? |
11615 | or, Am I writing? |
11615 | or, in the order of a declarative sentence,"That house is whose house?" |
11615 | or, that a noun can not be put in the_ first person_, so as to agree with_ I_ or_ we_? |
11615 | or, that a noun of the second person_ could not be spoken of_? |
11615 | or, to change_ tranquillitas_ to_ tranquility_, than_ tranquillus_ to_ tranquil_? |
11615 | or,"Do you think it proper for my horse to run to- day?" |
11615 | or,"_ What one_?" |
11615 | or_ whence_? |
11615 | or_ who are_ my brethren?" |
11615 | our own, or that which is foreign? |
11615 | out? |
11615 | says a bright boy;"pray, what are they? |
11615 | says a bright boy;"pray, what are they? |
11615 | shall I praise you in this? |
11615 | tell, Tell, if ye saw, how came I thus, how here? |
11615 | that a doctrine so pure as the Gospel should be the work of an uncommissioned pretender? |
11615 | that he is regenerate? |
11615 | that is,"so that_ the gift_ ought to be recompensed from Heaven to_ the giver_?" |
11615 | that so perfect a system of morals should be established on blasphemy?" |
11615 | that the proudest and the most ambitious of mankind should be the great master and accomplished pattern of humility? |
11615 | that the verb should be made plural? |
11615 | the boy? |
11615 | the boys?_ LESSON XIX.--VERBS. |
11615 | the child? |
11615 | the children?_ LESSON XX.--VERBS. |
11615 | the man? |
11615 | the men?_ LESSON XVIII.--VERBS. |
11615 | the note of interrogation(?) |
11615 | these pictures? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they?_ LESSON XVII.--VERBS. |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | to thee? |
11615 | to thee? |
11615 | up? |
11615 | violated?" |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | were you never to do any thing?" |
11615 | what am I, and from whence_ am_ I?" |
11615 | what an one was he?" |
11615 | what answer will he get? |
11615 | what visor? |
11615 | what, feminine? |
11615 | when? |
11615 | when? |
11615 | where art thou? |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy sting? |
11615 | where is thy sting? |
11615 | where is thy victory?" |
11615 | where is thy victory?" |
11615 | where? |
11615 | where| are the charms That sa|-ges have seen| in thy face? |
11615 | which way shall I fly Infinite wrath, and infinite despair? |
11615 | whith-- erstraysth''--immort-- almind?" |
11615 | whither hast thou fled?" |
11615 | whither hast thou fled?" |
11615 | whither shall I fly?" |
11615 | whither shall i fly? |
11615 | whither strays the immortal mind?'' |
11615 | who fathers the foundlings? |
11615 | who hath warned you to flee from the wrath_ to come_?" |
11615 | whose Son is he? |
11615 | whose_ son_ is he? |
11615 | who| would inhab|-_it_ This bleak| world alone?" |
11615 | why demand you this?" |
11615 | why do frown?" |
11615 | why do frown?" |
11615 | why do ye preach it up?" |
11615 | why do_ ye_ preach it up?" |
11615 | why do_ you_ preach it up?" |
11615 | why was this concealed?" |
11615 | why was this concealed?" |
11615 | will it support him in preparing affliction for the widow''s heart? |
11615 | will justice support him in robbing the community of an able and useful member? |
11615 | would not such a sight annihilate_ thee_?" |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | | But why| complain? |
11615 | | Who knows| not Cir_c~ e_, The daugh|-ter of| the sun? |
11615 | | m= y s= oul''s| f~ ar b= et|-t~ er p= art,_ Wh= y w~ ith_| untime|-ly| sor|-rows heaves| thy heart? |
11615 | | whither| are you| going? |
11615 | | whither| do ye| call me? |
11615 | Ã Kempis cor._"Who is she_ that_ comes clothed in a robe of green?" |