Some Questions of Good English, Examined in Controversies with Dr. Fitzedward HallH. Holt and Company, 1897 - 233 páginas |
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Página
... CARDINAL NEWMAN VERSUS SE.-F. H. " IS BEING BUILT . " - F . H. · 51 56 65 COMMENTS ON DR . HALL'S " CARDINAL NEWMAN VER- SUS SE . " - W . 66 A PARDONABLE FORGETTING.- " BORN IN BOSTON . " - W . 75 A CLASSICAL SOLECISM . - W . 83 ...
... CARDINAL NEWMAN VERSUS SE.-F. H. " IS BEING BUILT . " - F . H. · 51 56 65 COMMENTS ON DR . HALL'S " CARDINAL NEWMAN VER- SUS SE . " - W . 66 A PARDONABLE FORGETTING.- " BORN IN BOSTON . " - W . 75 A CLASSICAL SOLECISM . - W . 83 ...
Página 5
... Cardinal Newman , " Historical Sketches " ( Lon- don , 1885 ) , vol . ii . , p . 464 . The line is not distinct between such cases and the following : In other cases it is not the love of finery , but simple want of education , which ...
... Cardinal Newman , " Historical Sketches " ( Lon- don , 1885 ) , vol . ii . , p . 464 . The line is not distinct between such cases and the following : In other cases it is not the love of finery , but simple want of education , which ...
Página 35
... Cardinal Newman , " An Essay on the Develop- ment of Christian Doctrine " ( London , 1846 ) , pp . 126--7 . Under such circumstances , any men but they would have had a strong leaning towards what is called " Conversatism . " - Id ...
... Cardinal Newman , " An Essay on the Develop- ment of Christian Doctrine " ( London , 1846 ) , pp . 126--7 . Under such circumstances , any men but they would have had a strong leaning towards what is called " Conversatism . " - Id ...
Página 36
... Cardinal Newman given above are especially interesting here , because Dr. Hall has expressed very emphati- cally his opinion as to the correctness of New- man's writing . In his " Modern English " ( p . 292 , foot - note ) , he says ...
... Cardinal Newman given above are especially interesting here , because Dr. Hall has expressed very emphati- cally his opinion as to the correctness of New- man's writing . In his " Modern English " ( p . 292 , foot - note ) , he says ...
Página 37
... Newman . . . " Some instances where Cardinal Newman's English has arrested the “ unfavourable atten- tion " of Dr. Hall are mentioned in his note at page 292 , but the use of the nominative case after but is not among them . W. " NONE ...
... Newman . . . " Some instances where Cardinal Newman's English has arrested the “ unfavourable atten- tion " of Dr. Hall are mentioned in his note at page 292 , but the use of the nominative case after but is not among them . W. " NONE ...
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Some Questions of Good English, Examined in Controversies with Dr ... Ralph Olmsted Williams Sin vista previa disponible - 2019 |
Términos y frases comunes
Academy letter Adam Bede American Dialect American English Anthony Froude Armorel of Lyonesse authority bad English Book of Snobs Cæsar Cardinal Newman censured choicest of living citations cited by Dr colourable justification Dial Dictionary Eliot employ it freely English writers employ Exemplifications of False expression FITZEDWARD HALL foot-note genuine English grammar Hall says HALL'S REPLY Ibid idiom illustrating imperfect passive instances J. M. W. Turner James Anthony Froude known lish living English writers Lord Macaulay Lyonesse Lytton Marlesford Matthew Arnold meaning metonymical Miscellaneous Essays Modern English Modern Language Notes parish passage quoted Philip Gilbert Hamerton prepositions Princess of Thule Prof purist as Lord Quincey quotations Recent Exemplifications referred regarded remark Rider Haggard right English round seemed sense sentence Sketches and Essays solecisms substitutes Thackeray things Thomas tion unknown usage words and phrases writings York
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Página 183 - My father was a yeoman, and had no lands of his own, only he had a farm of three or four pound by year at the uttermost, and hereupon he tilled so much as kept half a dozen men. He had walk for a hundred sheep; and my mother milked thirty kine.
Página 197 - Unto that element; but long it could not be Till that her garments, heavy with their drink, Pull'd the poor wretch from her melodious lay To muddy death.
Página 189 - For my part, I have ever believed, and do now know, that there are Witches...
Página 15 - While Enoch was abroad on wrathful seas, Or often journeying landward; for in truth Enoch's white horse, and Enoch's ocean-spoil In ocean-smelling osier...
Página 184 - I propped her head up as before, Only, this time my shoulder bore Her head, which droops upon it still: The smiling rosy little head, So glad it has its utmost will, That all it scorned at once is fled, And I, its love, am gained instead!
Página 59 - Southey's style that, even when he writes nonsense, we generally read it with pleasure, except indeed when he tries to be droll. A more insufferable jester never existed. He Very often attempts to be humorous, and yet we do not remember a single occasion on which he has succeeded farther than to be quaintly and flippantly dull.
Página 176 - LORENZ, Schlosser, 80. Only according to his faith is each man judged. Committed as this deed has been by a pure-minded, pious youth, it is a beautiful sign of the time. — DE WETTE to SAND'S Mother ; CHEYNE, Founders of Criticism, 44, The men of each age must be judged by the ideal of their own age and country, and not by the ideal of ours.
Página 2 - The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that which has also involved the rest of Europe in a long and destructive warfare, of a nature long since unknown to the practice of civilized nations.
Página 202 - Mr. Partridge pretends to tell fortunes and recover stolen goods, which all the parish says he must do by conversing with the devil and other evil spirits; and no wise man will ever allow he could converse personally with either till after he was dead.