A Grammar of the English Tongue Quotes
A Grammar of the English Tongue
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A Grammar of the English Tongue Quotes
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“Grammar, which is the art of using words properly, comprises four parts: Orthography, Etymology, Syntax, and Prosody.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“For pronunciation the best general rule is, to consider those as the most elegant speakers who deviate least from the written words.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“C might be omitted in the language without loss, since one of its sounds might be supplied by, s, and the other by k, but that it preserves to the eye the etymology of words, as face from facies, captive from captivus.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“Experience has long shown this method to be so distinct as to obviate confusion, and so comprehensive as to prevent any inconvenient omissions.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“of English, as of all living tongues, there is a double pronunciation, one cursory and colloquial, the other regular and solemn.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“C, according to English orthography, never ends a word; therefore we write stick, block, which were originally, sticke, blocke. In such words c is now mute.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“Ou is frequently used in the last syllable of words which in Latin end in or and are made English, as honour, labour, favour, from honor, labor, favor. Some late innovators have ejected the u, without considering that the last syllable gives the sound neither of or nor ur, but a sound between them, if not compounded of both; besides that they are probably derived to us from the French nouns in eur, as honeur, faveur.”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“I consider the English alphabet only as it is English;”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
“glass. A broad resembles the a of the German; as all, wall, call. Many words pronounced with a broad were anciently written with au; as sault, mault; and we still say, fault, vault. This was probably the Saxon sound, for it is yet retained in the northern dialects, and in the rustick pronunciation; as maun for man, haund for hand. The short a approaches to the a open, as grass. The long a, if prolonged by e at the end of the word, is always slender, as graze, fame. A forms a diphthong only with i or y, and u or w. Ai or ay, as in plain, wain, gay, clay, has only the sound of the long and slender a, and differs not in the pronunciation from plane, wane. Au or aw has the sound of the German a, as raw, naughty. Ae is sometimes found in Latin words not completely”
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
― A Grammar of the English Tongue
