Instead, what reckoned, and how best written
Intending, &c., verbs of, see Commanding.
Intensive nature of comparatives and superlatives, A. MURR.
Interrogative pronouns, defined
—what they severally demand
—their use and construc.
—in what differ from relatives
—are always of the third pers.
—declined
—their place in a sentence
—their construc. of cases, to what similar
Interrogative sentences, agreem. of verbs in
INTERJECTIONS, Etymol. of
—Interjection, defined
—derivation and signif. of the term; LOWTH'S error in describing the
interjections
—Interjections, numb. of, in common use
—List of
—Interjections, the frequent use of, an indication of
thoughtlessness; expressiveness of some interjections in earnest
utterance, &c.
—should be discriminatively used
—chief characteristics of; referred to the class of adverbs by the
Gr. grammarians
—significant words uttered as, ("Out! out!")
—appar. taken substantively
—Synt. of
—absolute construc. of
—have no construc. with cases, as in Lat. and Gr.
—appar., sometimes connected to other words by a prep., or by that
—place of
—punct. of
—ellips. of, shown
—derivation of
—frequency of, in poet. lang.
Inversion of terms, sometimes of advantage, in respect to strength and vivacity of expression.
Irony, figure explained
Is being, with a perf. part., or the subject of the UNCO-PASSIVE form of verbs, canvassed
Ise or ize, which of these terminations to be taken in forming derivatives under Deriv. of Verbs