Thence, &c., with from prefixed, whether allowable

There, introductory and idiomatic, notions of grammarians concerning; its posit. and use; is a regular adv. of place, and not "without signification," —derivation of, from Anglo-Sax. —poet. omission of

They, put indefinitely for men or people

This and that, as explained by CHURCH. —placed before conjoint singulars, ("THIS POWER AND WILL do," &c.,) —in contrasted terms

Three stars, or asterism, use of

Time, the order and fitness of, to be observed in constructions
expressing it
—nouns of, with adv. WHEN, as a special relative, following Time,
measure
, or weight, part made possessive of the whole, ("An
HOUR'S time")
—noun of, not poss., immediately before an other, ("A POUND
WEIGHT,") Time, place, &c., the obj. case in expressions of, taken
after the fashion of an adv. Time, measure, distance, or value,
nouns of, their peculiarity of construc.; the parsing of Time, obj.
noun of, qualifying a subsequent adj., ("A child OF ten years
OLD,") Four times, five times, &c., how to be reckoned. TIMES,
before an other noun, by way of MULTIPLICATION, the nature and
construc. of, discussed; decision. Times, in what construc. may be
called the objective of repetition, or of time repeated. Time
in pronunciation, or quantity

Titles, of books, are printed in capitals
—of office, &c., begin with do.
—merely mentioned as such, are without art.
Name and TITLE, (see Proper Names.) Side-titles, use of dash
in application to

Tmesis, explained

To, as governing infin. mood
—do., variously explained by grammarians
—is a sign of inf., but not a part of it
—what BROWN claims for his RULE respecting the infin. as gov. by the
prep.
TO, &c.; he shows that the doctrine originated not with
himself
—TO and the verb, what FISHER (anno 1800) taught respecting; what,
LOWTH, and what, absurdly, MURR., his copyist
To, as governing infin., traced from the Sax. to the Eng. of
WICKL.,
To, before infin., evasive teachings of the later grammarians
concerning its class and construc.
—do., how considered by most Eng. grammarians
—do., how proved to be a prep.
—do., preceded by for, anc.
—after what verbs, omitted,
—whether to be repeated before infinitives in the same construe.
—sometimes required, and sometimes excluded, after than or as
—whether it may be separated from its verb by an adv.; is placed
more elegantly AFTER an adv., ("PROPERLY TO respect,")
—in what cases has no prop, antec. term of relat.
To suppressed and be inserted after MAKE, whether correctly
To, prep, or adv., from Anglo-Sax.
To, as prefix to noun, (to-day, to-night, to-morrow,).

Tones of the voice, what; why deserving of j particular attention —what denominated by SHERID.; what should be their character —BLAIR'S remark on; HIL. do. —Tones of the passions, WALK, observation on.