G.
G, its name and plur. —its sounds —when silent —Gh, sounds of, and silence
Gardiner, W., his new analysis of the Eng. alphab., noticed
Genders, term defined
—Genders, the diff., named and defined
—on what founded, and to what belong
—Gender, inconsistent views of, as given by many of the grammarians;
WELLS and MURR. criticised
—confounded with sex by some writers; others otherwise confuse the
matter
—Common gender, of the old grammarians, the term objectionable with
respect to Eng.
—Gender, how in many instances determined
—figuratively ascribed, how indicated
—denoted by he and she prefixed to nouns
—denied by MURR. et al. to pronouns of the first and second persons
—of pron., the preference of, when joint antecedents are of
different genders
General truths and customary actions, to be expressed by the indic. pres.
Generic names, sense and construc. of
"Genitives, double," discovered by our grammarians, the true explanation of all such
Gentile names, nature and construc. of
German language, form of its type —use of the comma less freq. in, than in Eng.
Gerund, Lat., explanation of
—what form of an Eng. participle corresponds to
—"Gerund in English," how becomes "a substantive," according to DR.
ADAM et al., Gerundives, what