SECTION VIII.—THE CURVES.
CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE I.—OF PARENTHESES.
"Another [, better written as a phrase, An other,] is composed of the indefinite article an, (which etymologically means one,) and other; and denotes one other."—Hallock cor.
"Each mood has its peculiar Tense, Tenses, or Times."—Bucke cor.
"In some very ancient languages, (as the Hebrew,) which have been employed chiefly for expressing plain sentiments in the plainest manner, without aiming at any elaborate length or harmony of periods, this pronoun [the relative] occurs not so often."—L. Murray cor.
"Before I shall say those things, O Conscript Fathers! about the public affairs, which are to be spoken at this time; I shall lay before you, in few words, the motives of the journey and the return."—Brightland cor.
"Of well-chose words some take not care enough,
And think they should be, like the subject, rough."—Id.
"Then, having showed his wounds, he'd sit him down."—Bullions cor.