Apophasis, or paralipsis, explained
Apostrophe, mark, what denotes; for what sometimes used
—at what period introduced into the poss. case Apostrophe, figure,
defined
Apposition, Synt.
—agreement between words in
—Apposition, what, and from whom received this name
—different from same cases put after verbs and participles not
trans.; false teachings of MURR. et al. hereon
—the rule for, to which apposed term applied; whether words in,
should be parsed separately
—common rule and definition of, wherein faulty
—which word of, the explanatory term; when explan. word placed
first
—in what case of, either word may be taken as the explan. term,
—why two possessive words cannot be in
—two or more nouns in, where sign of possession put
—whether compat. with, to supply relative and verb between the apposed
words
—Apposition, appar., of noun without poss. sign, with pron.
possess. ("YOUR success as an INSTRUCTER,")
—noun or pron. emphat. repeated ("Cisterns, broken CISTERNS," &c.,)
—appar., of a noun to a sentence
—of words differing in numb. ("Go YE every MAN,")
—of proper nouns with appellatives ("The river THAMES,")
—act. verb followed by two words in
—whether requires any other agreem. than that of cases
—words in, punct. of
—of a common with a prop. name, use of capital lett.
Archaism, what
Aristotle, division of the Greek letters
—what neoterics wiser than; how considers the compounding or
non-compounding of terms
Arithmetical numbers, relation of the terms in
ARRANGEMENT of words, term defined
—Arrang. of words, of what importance in synt.; whether it affects
the method of parsing words
ARTICLES, Etymol. of
—Article, defined
—Article, common noun without; Eng. nouns without, taken
indefinitely partitive
—words of mere being, used without
—Articles, how often inserted
—needless, to be omitted
—Classes of, named and defined
—Modificat. (an short, to a, the only,)
—Articles, the frequent use of; freq. misapplication of
—to be distinguished from adjectives, and from each other
—appar. used for adverbs
—Article, Eng., its demonstrative character
—do., compared with the Gr. def. art.; no rule for agreement of,
appropriate in Eng.
—use of, before names of rivers
—Articles, Synt. of
—to what RELATE
—Article, with the poss. and its governing noun, only one, used
—one noun admits of one, only; before an adj., relates to a noun
understood
—why not repeated, as in Fr., before every noun of a series; why the
omission of, cannot constitute a proper ellips.
—position of, with respect to its noun; ditto, with respect to an adj.
and noun
—relative position of, and adj., not a matter of indifference
—excluded by certain pronom. adjectives; what ones precede it; its
position in respect to an adj. of quality, limited by too, so, as,
or how
—position of, when an adj. is preceded by another adv. than too, so,
as, or how
—do., when an adj. follows its noun
—whether the insertion or the omission of, can greatly affect the
import of a sentence
—Article, repetition of, with nouns connected
—do. with adjectives connected, and, oppos.
—added to each of two or more nouns sing., or a plural put ("THE
nominative and THE objective CASE," or "THE nominative and
objective CASES,")
—use of, in special correspondence of phrases
—do., in correspondence peculiar
—do., in a series of terms
—erroneous use of, before the species, for THE; do., when the
species is said to be of the genus ("A JAY is a sort of A
BIRD,")
—not used before names of the virtues, vices, &c., before limited
terms, and before nouns of definite signif.
—do. before titles or names mentioned merely as such
—do. before a part. not taken as a noun
—insertion or omission of, with respect to a comparison or an
alternation made with two nouns
—required in the construc. which converts a part. into a verbal noun
—Articles, what the false synt. of, includes
—Ellips. of article, shown
—Articles, derivation of
—frequently omitted by the poets See also Definite Article, and An,
A
Articulate or elementary sound, nature of
Articulation, as defined by COMST.; do. by BOLLES
—Articulation, how differs from pronunciation
—the principles of, what they constitute
—a good one, what, in the view of COMST.; do., in what consists,
according to SHERID.; do. importance of; do., how delivers words