These followers make a great boast of learning a series of
suggestive words in pairs and without interfering with the mind’s action
in doing so, when they are clearly indebted to Thomas Hallworth for this
inadequate method, yet they never have the grace to acknowledge their
indebtedness.
Pupils who have a poor ear for sounds sometimes fail to
note when “n” sounds like “ng” and so means 7 instead of 2. Let them
study the words “ringer” (474), “linger” (5774), and “ginger” (6264).
The first syllable of “linger” rhymes with the first of “ringer” and not
with the first of “ginger;” it rhymes with “ring” and not with “gin;”
and if the first syllable of “ringer” is 47, the first of “linger” must
be 57; but the second syllable of “linger” is “ger,” while the second
syllable of “ringer” is only “er.” So “linger” is pronounced as if
spelled “ling-ger,” the “n” sounds like “ng.” “Ringer” is pronounced
“ring-er,” and “ginger” as if spelled “gin-ger.”
Those who were in office more than four years were
re-elected for a second term. The second term always began four years
after the beginning of the first term.
Those who were Presidents for less than four years died in
office and were succeeded by Vice-Presidents. President Lincoln was
murdered forty days after the commencement of his second term of office,
when Vice-President Johnson became the 17th President.
Lord Elgin, the present Viceroy, gave Prof. Loisette
H. E.’s patronage when the Professor lectured in Calcutta. As his system
is the foe of all artificial methods, it is par excellence the
“Natural” System.
The “New Memory-Aiding French Vocabulary” by Albert Tondu,
published by Hachett et Cie, London, in 1881, is a somewhat similar work
to Charles Turrell’s.
In some English schools the first syllable in “panis”
sounds “pan,” in others “pain.” If an English word derived from a
foreign word (or from the same root) occurs to you, use it; but do not
spend time hunting for derivations. Unfamiliar words are no help; do not
think the word “panification” will help you to “panis,” because it is an
English word meaning “bread-making,” and you are an Englishman. You
would be much wiser to try to remember the English “panification” by the
aid of the Latin “panis,” than vice-versa, that is, if any mortal ever
does want to remember that pedantic dictionary word.
One of the meanings of “Salient” is “to force itself on the
attention.” Recall his threat when coughed down on the occasion of his
maiden speech in the House of Commons. “You will hear me” (18)05.
It is sufficient to indicate the figure 9, as we know that
it could not have been the year 9 of the Christian Era, and as it was
somewhere about the beginning of this century, the figure 9 makes an
indefinite impression definite and exact.