_Concrete _terms for abstract qualities, poet. use of
Confusion of senses, in use of pron., to be avoided
Conjugation of a verb, defined —what some teachers choose to understand by —Conjugating a verb, four ways of, named —Conjugation of an Eng. verb, what the simplest form of —Conjug. of verbs, shown in five Examples —(See also Compound or Progressive, &c.) —Conjugat. negative, how made, interrogative, do. —interrog. and negative, do.
CONJUNCTIONS, Etymol. of
—Conjunction, defined
—Conjunctions, how differ from other connectives
—nature and office of; R. F. MOTT quot.
—nature of the connexions made by
—how many in common use
—how parsed
—as "connecting the same moods, &c.," strictures on the doctrine of
MURR. et al., concerning
—Conjunctions, classes of, named and defined
—(See Copulative Conjunction, Disjunc. Conj., and Corresp.
Conjunc.)
—Conjunctions, List of
—appar. used as adverbs
—peculiar phrases having the force of
—importance of, as copulative or as disjunctive, to be carefully
observed
—Conjunctions, Synt. of
—do., in what consists, (MURR. et al. teaching erron.)
—what connect
—declinable words connected by, why in the same case
—power and position of those that connect sentences or clauses
—absurd and contradictory notions concerning the office of, by LENN.,
BULL., et al.
—two or three coming together, how parsed
—Conjunction, followed by a phrase, and not a whole member
—connecting two terms to one
—do. two terms the same in kind or quality
—Conjunctions, to be used with due regard to import and idiom
—punct. of
—ellips. of, shown
—derivation of
—are mostly of Anglo-Sax. origin
—H. TOOKE'S derivations of, given
—poet. usage of or
—or, and nor
—nor
Conjunctive adverbs, what office perform; what classes of words embrace
—often relate equally to two verbs in different clauses
—list of
—whence, whither, &c., sometimes partake of the nature of pronouns
Connected terms, two, limited by a third, what both must be
—should be the same in kind or quality. Connected adjectives, how
should be placed. Connective words, or connectives, kinds of, named
—do., how may be distinguished
Consonants, divisions and subdivisions of —properties of, as sharp, flat, labial, &c.
Construing, whether differs from parsing
Continuance of action, see Compound or Progressive
Contractions, in the orthog. and the pronunciation of words —ocular, in printing poetry, not important
Correlatives, combinations of, ("Father's son,") how to be regarded