Foreign words or idioms, unnecessary use of, in opposition to purity

For, with all, as equivalent to although
For as much as, &c., having the nature of conjunctions
For that
For, with perf. part., ("FOR lost")
—with ever
—before TO and infin.
—as introducing its object before an infin.. For, conj., because,
from Sax.; anc. expressed for that

Forever, or for ever, its class

Former and latter, nature and applic. of Forms of letters, in type or
character
Forms OF VERBS, a knowledge of THE TRUE, nothing more important in
gram. than Forsooth, signif. and use of

Friends, the Society of; their employment, in familiar discourse, of the
sing. pron. of the second pers.
—generally neglect to compound their numeral names of the months and
days
—their misemployment of thee for thou
—their manner of speaking, different from the solemn style
—examples of their manner of forming the verb with the pron. thou;
their simplificat. of the verb

From, derivation of, from Sax. —From forth, from out, construc. of, explained —Off from, examp. of the use of

Full, in permanent compounds, how written; in temporary do., do. —compounds in, (spoonful, handful, &c.,) how pluralized

Future, contingency, how best expressed

Future tense, FIRST, how formed, and what expresses —SECOND, do., do., and how varied

Futurity, often denoted by the infin., ("The world TO COME")