| Lindley Murray - 1808 - 526 pągines
...most easily comprehended." " They are not the men in the nation the most difficult to be replaced." The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...things which are, in truth, one and the same, but arc characterized by several qualities. If we say, " The ecclesiastical and secular powers concurred... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1819 - 718 pągines
...most difficult to be replaced." The definite article is likewise used to distinguish between thing?, which are individually different, but have one generic...same, but are characterized by several qualities. If we say, " The ecclesiastical and secular powers concurred in this measure,'' the expression is ambiguous,... | |
| Allen Fisk - 1822 - 192 pągines
...the nation, the roost difficult to be replaced.* The definite article is liki wixe used to distinguai b'etween things, which are individually different, but have one generic name, and things, which a ГР, in truth, one and the same, hut are characterized by several qualities. It we eiy,* The ecclesiastical... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1823 - 716 pągines
...most easily comprehended." " They are not the men in the nation the most difficult to be replaced." The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...same, but are characterized by several qualities. If we say, " The ecclesiastical and secular powers concurred in this measure," the expression is ambiguous,... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1824 - 554 pągines
...most easily comprehended." " They are not the men in the nation the most difficult to be replaced." " The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...name, and things which are, in truth, one / and the sanlE^ but are characterized by several qualities. If we say, "The ecclesiastical and secular powers... | |
| Charles M. Ingersoll - 1825 - 298 pągines
...most easily comprehended." " They are not the men in the nation the most difficult to be replaced.'' The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...individually different, but have one generic name, and thingyvhich are, in truth, one and the same, but are characterizedDy several qualities. If we say,... | |
| Alexander Crombie - 1830 - 490 pągines
...article. In all examples, therefore, like these, where the explanatory meaning admits the article, it is necessary, for the sake of perspicuity, to mark the...I mean that the union of red and blue in the same vestments was most admired, or that the red and the blue vestments were both more admired than the... | |
| Lindley Murray, Allen Fisk - 1846 - 180 pągines
...most easily comprehended.' ' They are not the men in the nation, the most difficult to be replaced.' The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...same, but are characterized by several qualities. If we say, ' The ecclesiastical and secular powers concurred in this measure,' the expression is ambiguous,... | |
| William Chauncey Fowler - 1851 - 1502 pągines
...soldier than a scholar would make." Note 5. The Indefinite article, like the definite, is employed ز j 1"- G 6m Y rE e/ [ÓY9 / m 7`J 8 = { ] W Nl ނ$ , ; Zg | |$= > |# ߔ in reality are one and the same, but are characterized by different qualities : " A black and a white... | |
| William Chauncey Fowler - 1857 - 516 pągines
...article ; &f, " All the words which are signs of complex ideas furnish matter of mistake." Note II. — The definite article is likewise used to distinguish...things which are, in truth, one and the same, but are characterised by several qualities : " The red and white roses were most admired." It may be doubtful... | |
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