WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
A short introduction to English grammar cover

A short introduction to English grammar

Chapter 6: EXAMPLE.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A concise manual presenting foundational principles of English grammar and arguing that the language's relative simplicity has encouraged careless practice and neglect of grammatical study. It sets out basic rules of construction and usage, accompanies them with critical notes that identify common errors even among accomplished writers, and illustrates points with paradigms and examples. Its stated aim is to enable readers to express themselves with propriety, judge the correctness of phrases, and encourage more careful composition.

WORDS.

Words are articulate sounds, used by common consent as signs of ideas, or notions.

There are in English nine Sorts of Words, or, as they are commonly called, Parts of Speech.

1. The Article, prefixed to substantives, when they are common names of things, to point them out, and to shew how far their signification extends.

2. The Substantive, or Noun, being the name of any thing conceived to subsist, or of which we have any notion.

3. The Pronoun, standing instead of the noun.

4. The Adjective, added to the noun to express the quality of it.

5. The Verb, or Word by way of eminence, signifying to be, to do, or to suffer.

6. The Adverb, added to verbs, and also to adjectives and other adverbs, to express some circumstance belonging to them.

7. The Preposition, put before nouns and pronouns chiefly, to connect them with other words, and to shew their relation to them.

8. The Conjunction, connecting sentences together.

9. The Interjection, thrown in to express the affection of the speaker, though unnecessary with respect to the construction of the sentence.

EXAMPLE.

    1. 1
    2. The
    1. 2
    2. power
    1. 7
    2. of
    1. 2
    2. speech
    1. 5
    2. is
    1. 1
    2. a
    1. 2
    2. faculty
    1. 4
    2. peculiar
    1. 7
    2. to
    1. 2
    2. man,
    1. 8
    2. and
    1. 5
    2. was
    1. 5
    2. bestowed
    1. 7
    2. on
    1. 3
    2. him
    1. 7
    2. by
    1. 3
    2. his
    1. 4
    2. beneficent
    1. 2
    2. Creator
    1. 7
    2. for
    1. 1
    2. the
    1. 4
    2. greatest
    1. 8
    2. and
    1. 6
    2. most
    1. 4
    2. excellent
    1. 2
    2. uses;
    1. 8
    2. but
    1. 9
    2. alas!
    1. 6
    2. how
    1. 6
    2. often
    1. 5
    2. do
    1. 3
    2. we
    1. 5
    2. pervert
    1. 3
    2. it
    1. 7
    2. to
    1. 1
    2. the
    1. 4
    2. worst
    1. 7
    2. of
    1. 2
    2. purposes?

In the foregoing sentence the Words the, a, are Articles; power, speech, faculty, man, creator, uses, purposes, are Substantives; him, his, we, it, are Pronouns; peculiar, beneficent, greatest, excellent, worst, are Adjectives; is, was, bestowed, do, pervert, are Verbs; most, how, often, are Adverbs; of, to, on, by, for, are Prepositions; and, but, are Conjunctions; and alas is an Interjection.

The Substantives power, speech, faculty, and the rest, are General, or Common, Names of things; whereof there are many sorts belonging to the same kind, or many individuals belonging to the same sort: as there are many sorts of power, many sorts of speech, many sorts of faculty, many individuals of that sort of animal called man; and so on. These general or common names are here applied in a more or less extensive signification, according as they are used without either, or with the one, or with the other, of the two Articles a and the. The words speech, man, being accompanied with no article, are taken in their largest extent, and signify all of the kind or sort, all sorts of speech, and all men. The word faculty, with the article a before it, is used in a more confined signification, for some one out of many of that kind; for it is here implied, that there are other faculties peculiar to man beside speech. The words power, creator, uses, purposes, with the article the before them, (for his Creator is the same as the Creator of him) are used in the most confined signification for the things here mentioned and ascertained: the power is not any one indeterminate power out of many sorts, but that particular sort of power here specified, namely, the power of speech; the creator is the One great Creator of man and of all things; the uses, and the purposes, are particular uses and purposes; the former are explained to be those in particular, that are the greatest and most excellent; such for instance, as the glory of God, and the common benefit of mankind; the latter, to be the worst, as lying, slandering, blaspheming, and the like.

The Pronouns him, his, we, it, stand instead of some of the nouns, or substantives, going before them; as him supplies the place of man; his of man’s; we of men (implied in the general name man, including all men, of which number is the speaker;) it of the power, before mentioned. If instead of these pronouns the nouns for which they stand had been used, the sense would have been the same, but the frequent repetition of the same words would have been disagreeable and tedious: as, The power of speech peculiar to man, bestowed on man, by man’s Creator, &c.

The Adjectives peculiar, beneficent, greatest, excellent, worst, are added to their several substantives to denote the character and quality of each.

The Verbs is, was bestowed, do pervert, signify severally, being, suffering, and doing. By the first it is implied, that there is such a thing as the power of speech, and it is affirmed to be of such a kind; namely, a faculty peculiar to man: by the second it is said to have been acted upon, or to have suffered, or to have had something done to it; namely, to have been bestowed on man: by the last, we are said to act upon it, or to do something to it; namely, to pervert it.

The Adverbs most, often, are added to the adjective excellent, and to the verb pervert, to shew the circumstance belonging to them; namely, that of the highest degree to the former, and that of frequency to the latter: concerning the degree of which frequency also a question is made by the adverb how, added to the adverb often.

The Prepositions of, to, on, by, for, placed before the substantives and pronouns speech, man, him, &c. connect them with other words, substantives, adjectives, and verbs, as power, peculiar, bestowed, &c. and shew the relation which they have to those words; as the relation of subject, object, agent, end; for denoting the end, by the agent, on, the object; to and of denote possession, or the belonging of one thing to another.

The Conjunctions and, and but, connect the three parts of the sentence together; the first more closely both with regard to the sentence and the sense; the second connecting the parts of the sentence, tho’ less strictly, and at the same time expressing an opposition in the sense.

The Interjection alas! expresses the concern and regret of the speaker; and though thrown in with propriety, yet might have been omitted without injuring the construction of the sentence, or destroying the sense.

ARTICLE.

The Article is a word prefixed to substantives, to point them out, and to shew how far their signification extends.

In English there are but two articles, a, and the: a becomes an before a vowel or a silent h.

A is used in a vague sense to point out one single thing of the kind, in other respects indeterminate: the determines what particular thing is meant.

A substantive without any article to limit it is taken in its widest sense: thus man means all mankind; as,

“The proper study of mankind is man:”
Pope.

where mankind and man may change places without making any alteration in the sense. A man means some one or other of that kind, indefinitely; the man means, definitely, that particular man, who is spoken of: the former therefore is called the Indefinite, the latter the Definite, Article[1].

Example: “Man was made for society, and ought to extend his good-will to all men: but a man will naturally entertain a more particular kindness for the men with whom he has the most frequent intercourse; and enter into a still closer union with the man, whose temper and disposition suit best with his own.”

It is of the nature of both the Articles to determine or limit the thing spoken of: a determines it to be one single thing of the kind, leaving it still uncertain which; the determines which it is, or of many which they are. The first therefore can only be joined to Substantives in the singular number[2]; the last may also be joined to plurals.

There is a remarkable exception to this rule in the use of the Adjectives few and many, (the latter chiefly with the word great before it) which, though joined with plural Substantives, yet admit of the singular Article a: as, a few men, a great many men;

“Told of a many thousand warlike French:”—
“The care-craz’d mother of a many children.”
Shakespear.

The reason of it is manifest from the effect which the Article has in these phrases: it means a small or great number collectively taken, and therefore gives the idea of a Whole, that is, of Unity. Thus likewise a hundred, a thousand, is one whole number, an aggregate of many collectively taken; and therefore still retains the Article a, tho’ joined as an Adjective to a plural Substantive: as, a hundred years;[3]

“For harbour at a thousand doors they knock’d;
Not one of all the thousand, but was lock’d.”
Dryden.

The Definite Article the is sometimes applied to Adverbs in the comparative degree, and its effect is to mark the degree the more strongly, and to define it the more precisely: as, “The more I examine it, the better I like it. I like this the least of any.”

SUBSTANTIVE.

A Substantive, or Noun, is the Name of a thing; of whatever we conceive in any way to subsist, or of which we have any notion.

Substantives are of two sorts; Proper, and Common, Names. Proper Names are the names appropriated to individuals; as the names of persons and places: such are George, London. Common Names stand for kinds, containing many sorts; or sorts, containing many individuals under them; as, Animal, Man.

Proper Names being the names of individuals, and therefore of things already as determinate as they can be made, admit not of Articles, or of Plurality of Number; unless by a Figure, or by Accident: as when great Conquerors are called Alexanders; and some great Conqueror An Alexander, or The Alexander of his age; when a Common Name is understood, as The Thames, that is, the River Thames; The George, that is, the Sign of St. George: or when it happens that there are many persons of the same name; as, The two Scipios.

Whatever is spoken of is represented as one, or more, in Number: these two manners of representation in respect of number are called the Singular, and the Plural, Number.

In English, the Substantive Singular is made Plural, for the most part, by adding to it s; or es, where it is necessary for the pronunciation: as, king, kings; fox, foxes; leaf, leaves; in which last, and many others, f is also changed into v, for the sake of an easier pronunciation, and more agreeable sound. Some few Plurals end in en: as, oxen, chicken, children, brethren; and men, women, by changing the a of the Singular into e[4]. This form we have retained from the Teutonic; as likewise the introduction of the e in the former syllable of two of the last instances; weomen, (for so we pronounce it) brethren, from woman, brother[5]: something like which may be noted in some other forms of Plurals; as, mouse, mice; louse, lice; tooth, teeth; foot, feet; goose, geese[6].

The English Language, to express different connexions and relations of one thing to another, uses, for the most part, Prepositions. The Greek and Latin among the antient, and some too among the modern languages, as the German, vary the termination or ending of the Substantive to answer the same purpose. These different endings are in those languages called Cases. And the English being derived from the same origin as the German, that is, from the Teutonic[7], is not wholly without them. For instance, the relation of Possession, or Belonging, is often expressed by a Case, or a different ending of the Substantive. This Case answers to the Genitive Case in Latin, and may still be so called; tho’ perhaps more properly the Possessive Case. Thus, “God’s grace:” which may also be expressed by the Preposition; as, “the grace of God.” It was formerly written Godis grace; we now very improperly always shorten it with an Apostrophe, even tho’ we are obliged to pronounce it fully; as, “Thomas’s book:” that is, “Thomasis book;” not “Thomas his book,” as it is commonly supposed[8].

When the thing, to which another is said to belong, is expressed by a circumlocution, or by many terms, the sign of the Possessive Case is added to the last term: as, “The King of Great Britain’s Soldiers.” When it is a Noun ending with s, or in the Plural Number in s, the sign of the Possessive Case is not added: as, “for righteousness sake; on eagles wings.” Both the Sign and the Preposition seem sometimes to be used: as, “a soldier of the king’s:” but here are really two Possessives; for it means, “one of the soldiers of the king.”

The English in its Substantives has but two different terminations for Cases; that of the Nominative, which simply expresses the Name of the thing, and that of the Possessive Case.

Things are frequently considered with relation to the distinction of Sex or Gender; as being Male, or Female, or Neither the one, nor the other. Hence Substantives are of the Masculine, or Feminine, or Neuter, that is, Neither, Gender: which latter is only the exclusion of all consideration of Gender.

The English Language, with singular propriety, following nature alone, applies the distinction of Masculine and Feminine only to the names of Animals; all the rest are Neuter: except when by a Poetical or Rhetorical fiction things inanimate and Qualities are exhibited as Persons, and consequently become either Male or Female. And this gives the English an advantage above most other languages in the Poetical and Rhetorical Style: for when Nouns naturally Neuter are converted into Masculine and Feminine[9], the Personification is more distinctly and forcibly marked.

Some few Substantives are distinguished as to their Gender by their termination: as, prince, princess; actor, actress; lion, lioness; hero, heroine; &c.

The chief use of Gender in English is in the Pronoun of the Third Person, which must agree in that respect with the Noun for which it stands.

PRONOUN.

A Pronoun is a word standing instead of a Noun, as its Substitute or Representative.

In the Pronoun are to be considered the Person, Number, Gender and Case.

There are Three Persons which may be the Subject of any discourse: first, the Person who speaks may speak of himself; secondly, he may speak of the Person to whom he addresses himself; thirdly, he may speak of some other Person.

These are called, respectively, the First, Second, and Third, Persons: and are expressed by the Pronouns I, Thou, He.

As the Speakers, the Persons spoken to, and the Persons spoken of, may be many, so each of these Persons hath the Plural Number; We, Ye, They.

The Persons speaking and spoken to are supposed to be present, from which and other circumstances their Sex is commonly known, and needs not to be marked by a distinction of Gender in their Pronouns: but the Person spoken of being absent and in many respects unknown, it is necessary that it should be marked by a distinction of Gender; at least when some particular Person is spoken of, who ought to be more distinctly marked: accordingly the Pronoun Singular of the Third Person hath the Three Genders, He, She, It.

Pronouns have Three Cases; the Nominative; the Genitive, or Possessive; like Nouns; and moreover a Case, which follows the Verb Active, or the Preposition, expressing the Object of an Action, or of a Relation. It answers to the Oblique Cases in Latin; and may be properly enough called the Objective Case.

PRONOUNS;
according to their Persons, Numbers, Cases, and Genders.

PERSONS.
1. 2. 3. 1. 2. 3.
Singular. Plural.
I, Thou, He; We, Ye or You, They.
CASES.
Nom. Poss. Obj. Nom. Poss. Obj.
First Person.
I, Mine, Me; We, Ours, Us.
Second Person.
Thou, Thine, Thee; Ye or You, Yours, You[10].
Third Person.
Masc. He, His, Him; } They, Theirs, Them.
Fem. She, Hers, Her; }
Neut. It, Its[11], It; }

The Personal Pronouns have the nature of Substantives, and as such stand by themselves: the rest have the nature of Adjectives, and as such are joined to Substantives; and may be called Pronominal Adjectives.

Thy, My, Her, Our, Your, Their, are Pronominal Adjectives: but His, (that is, Hee’s) Her’s, Our’s, Your’s, Their’s, have evidently the Form of the Possessive Case: and by Analogy, Mine, Thine[12], may be esteemed of the same rank. All these are used, when the Noun they belong to is understood: the two latter sometimes also instead of my, thy, when the Noun following them begins with a vowel.

Beside the foregoing there are several other Pronominal Adjectives; which tho’ they may sometimes seem to stand by themselves, yet have always some Substantive belonging to them, either referred to, or understood: as, This, that, other, any, some, one, none; these are called Definitive, because they define and limit the extent of the thing, to which they either refer, or are joined. The three first of these are varied to express Number; as, These, those, others; the last of which admits of the Plural form only when its Substantive is not joined to it, but referred to, or understood: none of them are varied to express the Gender or Case. One is sometimes used in an Indefinite sense (answering to the French on) as in the following phrases; “one is apt to think;” “one sees;” “one supposes.” Who, which, that, are called Relatives, because they more directly refer to some Substantive going before; which therefore is called the Antecedent. They also connect the following part of the Sentence with the foregoing. These belong to all the three Persons; whereas the rest belong only to the Third. One of them only is varied to express the three Cases; Who, whose[13], (that is, who’s[14]) whom: none of them have different endings for the Numbers. Who, which, what, are called Interrogatives, when they are used in asking questions. The two latter of them have no variation of Number or Case.

Own, and self, in the Plural selves, are joined to the Possessives my, our, thy, your, his, her, their; as, my own hand; myself, yourselves; both of them expressing emphasis, or opposition; as, “I did it my own self,” that is, and no one else: the latter also forming the Reciprocal Pronoun; as, “he hurt himself.” Himself, themselves, seem to be used in the Nominative Case by corruption instead of his self, their selves: as, “he came himself;” “they did it themselves;” where himself, themselves, cannot be in the Objective Case. If this be so, self must be in these instances, not a Pronoun, but a Noun. Thus Dryden uses it:

“What I show,
Thy self may freely on thy self bestow.”

Ourself, the Plural Pronominal Adjective with the Singular Substantive, is peculiar to the Regal Style.

Own is an Adjective; or perhaps the Participle (owen) of the obsolete verb owe; to possess; to be the right owner of a thing.

All Nouns whatever in Grammatical Construction are of the Third Person: except when an address is made to a Person; then the Noun, answering to the Vocative Case in Latin, is of the Second Person.

ADJECTIVE.

An Adjective is a word joined to a Substantive to express its Quality[15].

In English the Adjective is not varied on account of Gender, Number, or Case. The only variation it admits of is that of the Degrees of Comparison.

Qualities admit of more and less, or of different degrees: and the words that express Qualities have accordingly proper forms to express different degrees. When a Quality is simply expressed, without any relation to the same in a different degree, it is called the Positive; as, wise, great. When it is expressed with augmentation, or with reference to a less degree of the same, it is called the Comparative; as, wiser, greater. When it is expressed as being in the highest degree of all, it is called the Superlative; as, wisest, greatest.

So that the simple word, or Positive, becomes Comparative by adding r or er; and Superlative by adding st, or est, to the end of it. And the Adverbs more and most placed before the Adjective have the same effect; as, wise, more wise, most wise[16].

Monosyllables, for the most part, are compared by er and est; and Dissyllables by more and most: as, mild, milder, mildest; frugal, more frugal, most frugal. Dissyllables ending in y easily admit of er and est; as happy, lovely. Words of more than two syllables hardly ever admit of er and est.

In some few words the Superlative is formed by adding the Adverb most to the end of them: as, nethermost, uttermost, or utmost, undermost, uppermost, foremost.

In English, as in most languages, there are some words of very common use that are irregular in this respect: as, good, better, best; bad, worse, worst; little, less[17], least; much, or many, more, most; and a few others.

VERB.

A Verb is a word which signifies to be, to do, or to suffer.

There are three kinds of Verbs; Active, Passive, and Neuter Verbs.

A Verb Active expresses an Action, and necessarily implies an agent, and an object acted upon: as, to love; “I love Thomas.”

A Verb Passive expresses a Passion, or a Suffering, or the receiving of an Action; and necessarily implies an Object acted upon, and an Agent by which it is acted upon: as, to be loved; “Thomas is loved by me.”

So when the Agent takes the lead in the Sentence, the Verb is Active, and the Object follows: when the Object takes the lead, the Verb is Passive, and the Agent follows.

A Verb Neuter expresses Being, or a state or condition of being; when the Agent and the Object acted upon coincide, and the event is properly neither Action nor Passion, but rather something between both: as, I am; I walk; I sleep.

The Verb Active is called also Transitive, because the Action passeth over to the Object, or hath an effect upon some other thing: and the Verb Neuter is called Intransitive, because the effect is confined within the Agent, and doth not pass over to any object.

In English many Verbs are used both in an Active and a Neuter signification, the construction only determining of which kind they are.

In a Verb are to be considered the Person, the Number, the Time, and the Mode.

The Verb varies its endings to express, or agree with, the different Persons: as, “I love, Thou lovest, He loveth, or loves.”

So also to express the different Numbers of the same Person: as, “Thou lovest, ye love; He loveth, they love[18].”

So likewise to express different Times: as, “I love, I loved; I bear, I bore, I have born.”

The Mode is the Manner of representing the Action or Passion. When it is simply declared, or a question is asked concerning it, it is called the Indicative Mode; when it is bidden, it is called the Imperative; when it is subjoined as the end or design, or mentioned under a condition, a supposition, or the like, for the most part depending on some other Verb, and having a Conjunction before it, it is called the Subjunctive; when it is barely expressed without any limitation of person or number, it is called the Infinitive; and when it is expressed in a form in which it may be joined to a Noun as its quality or accident, partaking thereby of the nature of an Adjective, it is called the Participle.

But to express the Time of the Verb the English uses also the assistance of other Verbs, called therefore Auxiliaries, or Helpers; do, be, have, shall, will: as, “I do love, I did love; I am loved, I was loved; I have loved, I have been loved; I shall, or will, love, or be loved.”

The two principal auxiliaries, to have, and to be, are thus varied according to Person, Number, Time, and Mode.

Time is Present, Past, or Future.

To HAVE.

Indicative Mode.
Present Time.
Person. Sing. Plur.
1. I have, We } have.
2. Thou hast[19], Ye }
3. He hath, or has; They }
Past Time.
1. I had, We } had.
2. Thou hadst, Ye }
3. He had; They }
Future Time.
1. I shall, or will, } have; We } shall, or will, have.
2. Thou shalt, or wilt, } Ye }
3. He shall, or will, } They }
Imperative Mode.
1. Let us have,
2. Have thou, or,
Do thou have,
Have ye, or,
Do ye have,
3. Let him have; Let them have.
Subjunctive Mode.
Present Time.
1. I } have; We } have.
2. Thou } Ye }
3. He } They }
Infinitive Mode.
Present, To have: Past, To have had.
Participle.
Present, Having: Perfect[20], Had: Past, Having had.

To BE.

Indicative Mode.
Present Time.
1. I am, We } are.
2. Thou art, Ye }
3. He is; They }

Or,

1. I be, We } be.
2. Thou beest, Ye }
3. He is; They }
Past Time.
1. I was, We } were.
2. Thou wast, Ye }
3. He was; They }
Future Time.
1. I shall, or will, } be; We } shall, or will, be.
2. Thou shalt, or wilt, } Ye }
3. He shall, or will, } They }
Imperative Mode.
1. Let us be,
2. Be thou, or,
Do thou be,
Be ye, or,
Do ye be,
3. Let him be; Let them be.
Subjunctive Mode.
Present Time.
1. I } be; We } be.
2. Thou } Ye }
3. He } They }
Past Time.
1. I were, We } were.
2. Thou wert[21], Ye }
3. He were; They }
Infinitive Mode.
Present, To be: Past, To have been.
Participle.
Present, Being: Perfect, Been: Past, Having been.

The Verb Active is thus varied according to Person, Number, Time and Mode.

Indicative Mode.
Present Time.
Person. Sing. Plur.
1. I love, We } love.
2. Thou lovest, Ye }
3. He loveth, or loves; They }
Past Time.
1. I loved, We } loved.
2. Thou lovedst, Ye }
3. He loved; They }
Future Time.
1. I shall, or will, } love; We } shall, or will, love.
2. Thou shalt, or wilt, } Ye }
3. He shall, or will, } They }
Imperative Mode.
1. Let us love,
2. Love thou, or,
Do thou love,
Love ye, or,
Do ye love,
3. Let him love; Let them love.
Subjunctive Mode.
Present Time.
1. I } love; We } love.
2. Thou } Ye }
3. He } They }

And,

1. I may } love; We } may love; and
have loved[22].
2. Thou mayst } Ye }
3. He may } They }
Past Time.
1. I might } love; We } might love; and
have loved[22].
2. Thou mightest } Ye }
3. He might } They }

And,

I could, should, would; Thou couldst, &c. love; and have loved.

Infinitive Mode.

Present, To love: Past, To have loved.

Participle.

Present, Loving: Perfect, Loved: Past, Having loved.

But in discourse we have often occasion to speak of Time not only as Present, Past, and Future, at large and indeterminately, but also as such with some particular distinction and limitation; that is, as passing, or finished; as imperfect, or perfect. This will best be seen in an example of a Verb laid out and distributed according to these distinctions of Time.

Indefinite, or Undetermined, Time:

Present, Past, Future,
I love; I loved; I shall love.

Definite, or Determined, Time:

Present Imperfect: I am (now) loving.
Present Perfect: I have (now) loved.
Past Imperfect: I was (then) loving.
Past Perfect: I had (then) loved.
Future Imperf. I shall (then) be loving.
Future Perf. I shall (then) have loved.

To express the Present and Past Imperfect of the Active and Neuter Verb the Auxiliary do is sometimes used: I do (now) love; I did (then) love.

Thus with very little variation of the Principal Verb the several circumstances of Mode and Time are clearly expressed by the help of the Auxiliaries, be, have, do, let, may, can, shall, will.

The peculiar force of the several Auxiliaries is to be observed. Do and did mark the Action itself, or the Time of it[23], with greater force and distinction. They are also of frequent and almost necessary use in Interrogative and Negative Sentences. Let does not only express permission; but praying, exhorting, commanding. May and might express the possibility or liberty of doing a thing; can and could, the power. Must is sometimes called in for a helper, and denotes necessity. Would expresses the intention of the doer; should simply the event. Will in the first Person singular and plural promises or threatens; in the second and third Persons only foretells: shall on the contrary, in the first Person simply foretells; in the second and third Persons commands or threatens[24].

Do and have make the Present Time; did, had, the Past; shall, will, the Future: let the Imperative Mode; may, might, could, would, should, the Subjunctive. The Preposition to placed before the Verb makes the Infinitive Mode. Have, through its several Modes and Times, is placed only before the Perfect Participle; and be, in like manner, before the Present and Passive Participles: the rest only before the Verb itself in its Primary Form[25].

The Passive Verb is only the Participle Passive, (which for the most part is the same with the Indefinite Past Time Active, and always the same with the Perfect Participle) joined to the Auxiliary Verb to be through all its Variations: as, I am loved; I was loved; I have been loved; I shall be loved: and so on through all the Persons, Numbers, Times, and Modes.

The Neuter Verb is varied like the Active; but, having somewhat of the Nature of the Passive, admits in many instances of the Passive form, retaining still the Neuter signification; chiefly in such Verbs as signify some sort of motion, or change of place or condition: as, I am come; I was gone; I am grown; I was fallen[26]. The Verb am in this case precisely defines the Time of the action or event, but does not change the nature of it; the Passive form still expressing, not properly a Passion, but only a state or condition of Being.

IRREGULAR VERBS.

In English both the Past Time Active and the Participle Perfect, or Passive, are formed by adding to the Verb ed; or d only when the Verb ends in e: as, turn, turned; love, loved. The Verbs that vary from this rule, in either or in both cases, are esteemed Irregular.

The nature of our language, the Accent and Pronunciation of it, inclines us to contract even all our Regular Verbs: thus loved, turned, are commonly pronounced in one syllable, lov’d, turn’d; and the second Person which was originally in three syllables, lovedest, turnedest, is become a dissyllable, lovedst, turnedst: for as we generally throw the accent as far back as possible towards the first part of the word, (in some even to the fourth syllable from the end,) the stress being laid on the first syllables, the rest are pronounced in a lower tone, more rapidly and indistinctly; and so are often either wholly dropt, or blended into one another.

It sometimes happens also, that the word which arises from a regular change does not sound easily or agreeably; sometimes by the rapidity of our pronunciation the vowels are shortened or lost; and the consonants which are thrown together do not easily coalesce with one another, and are therefore changed into others of the same organ, or of a kindred species: this occasions a further deviation from the regular form: thus, loveth, turneth, are contracted into lov’th, turn’th, and these for easier pronunciation immediately become loves, turns.

Verbs ending in ch, ck, p, x, ll, ss, in the Past Time Active and the Participle Perfect or Passive admit the change of ed into t; as, snatcht, checkt, snapt, mixt, dropping also one of the double letters, dwelt, past; for snatched, checked, snapped, mixed, dwelled, passed: those that end in l, m, n, p, after a diphthong, moreover shorten the diphthong, or change it into a single short vowel; as, dealt, dreamt, meant, felt, slept, &c: all for the same reason; from the quickness of the pronunciation, and because the d after a short vowel will not easily coalesce with the preceding consonant. Those that end in ve change also v into f; as, bereave, bereft; leave, left; because likewise v after a short vowel will not easily coalesce with t.

All these, of which we have hitherto given examples, are considered not as Irregular, but as Contracted only; and in all of them the Intire as well as the Contracted form is used.

The formation of Verbs in English, both Regular and Irregular, is derived from the Saxon.

The Irregular Verbs in English are all Monosyllables, unless Compounded; and they are for the most part the same words which are Irregular Verbs in the Saxon.

As all our Regular Verbs are subject to some kind of Contraction, so the first Class of Irregulars is of those that become so from the same cause.

I.
Irregulars by Contraction.

Some Verbs ending in d or t have the Present, the Past Time, and the Participle Perfect and Passive, all alike, without any variation: as, Beat, burst[27], cast, cost, cut, hit, hurt, knit, let, lift[28], put, read[29], rent, rid, set, shed, shred, shut, slit, spread, thrust, wet[28].

These are Contractions from beated, bursted, casted, &c; because of the disagreeable sound of the syllable ed after d or t[30].

Others in the Past Time, and Participle Perfect and Passive, vary a little from the Present by shortening the diphthong, or changing the d into t: as, Lead, led; sweat, swet; meet, met; bleed, bled; breed, bred; feed, fed; speed, sped; bend, bent[28]; lend, lent; rend, rent; send, sent; spend, spent; build, built[28]; geld, gelt[28]; gild, gilt[28]; gird, girt[28].

Others not ending in d or t are formed by Contraction; have, had, for haved; make, made, for maked; flee, fled, for flee-ed.

The following beside the Contraction change also the Vowel; Sell, sold; tell, told; clothe, clad[28].

Stand, stood; and dare, durst, (which in the Participle hath regularly dared;) are directly from the Saxon, standan, stod; dyrran, dorste.

II.
Irregulars in ght.

The Irregulars of the Second Class end in ght, both in the Past Time and Participle; and change the vowel or diphthong into au or ou: they are taken from the Saxon, in which the termination is hte.

Saxon.
Bring, brought: Bringan, brohte.
Buy, bought: Bycgean, bohte.
Catch, caught:
Fight, fought: Feotan, fuht.
Teach, taught: Tæchan, tæhte.
Think, thought: Thencan, thohte.
Seek, sought: Secan, sohte.
Work, wrought: Weorcan, worhte.

Fraught seems rather to be an Adjective than the Participle of the Verb to freight, which has regularly freighted. Raught from reach is obsolete.

III.
Irregulars in en.

The Irregulars of the Third Class form the Past Time by changing the vowel or diphthong of the Present; and the Participle Perfect and Passive by adding the termination en, beside, for the most part, the change of the vowel or diphthong. These also derive their formation in both parts from the Saxon.

Present. Past. Participle.
a changed into e.
Fall, fell, fallen.
a into o.
Awake, awoke, [awaked.]
a into oo.
Forsake, forsook, forsaken.
Shake, shook, shaken.
Take, took, taken.
aw into ew.
Draw, drew, drawn[31].
ay into ew.
Slay, slew, slayn[31].
e into a or o, o.
Get, gat, or got, gotten.
Help, [helped,] holpen.
Melt, [melted,] molten[28].
Swell, [swelled,] swollen[28].
ea into a or o.
Eat, ate, eaten.
Bear, bare, or bore, born.
Break, brake, or broke, broken.
Cleave, clave, or clove[28], cloven[28].
Speak, spake, or spoke, spoken.
Swear, sware, or swore, sworn.
Tear, tare, or tore, torn.
Wear, ware, or wore, worn.
Heave, hove[28], hoven.
Shear, shore, shorn.
Steal, stole, stolen, or stoln.
Tread, trode, trodden.
Weave, wove, woven.
ee into o, o.
Creep, crope, [creeped, or crept.]
Freeze, froze, frozen.
Seethe, sod, sodden.
ee into aw.
See, saw, seen.
i long into i short, i short.
Bite, bit, bitten.
Chide, chid, chidden.
Hide, hid, hidden.
Slide, slid, slidden.
i long into o, i short.
Abide, abode.
Drive, drove, driven.
Ride, rode, ridden.
Rise, rose, risen.
Shine, shone, [shined.]
Shrive, shrove, shriven.
Smite, smote, smitten.
Stride, strode, stridden.
Strive, strove[28], striven[28].
Thrive, throve, thriven.
Write[32], wrote, written.
i long into u, i short.
Strike, struck, stricken, or strucken.
i short into a.
Bid, bade, bidden.
Give, gave, given.
Sit[33], sat, sitten.
Spit, spat, spitten.
i short into u.
Dig, dug[28], [digged.]
ie into ay.
Lie[34], lay, lien, or lain.
o into e.
Hold, held, holden.
o into i.
Do, did, done, i. e. doen.
oo into o, o.
Choose, chose, chosen[35].
ow into ew.
Blow, blew, blown.
Crow, crew, [crowed.]
Grow, grew, grown.
Know, knew, known.
Throw, threw, thrown.
y into ew, ow.
Fly[36], flew, flown.

The following are Irregular only in the Participle; and that without changing the vowel.

Bake, [baked,] baken[28].
Grave, [graved,] graven[28].
Hew, [hewed,] hewen, or hewn[28].
Lade, [laded,] laden.
Load, [loaded,] loaden[28].
Mow, [mowed,] mown[28].
Rive, [rived,] riven.
Saw, [sawed,] sawn[28].
Shave, [shaved,] shaven[28].
Shew, [shewed,] shewn[28].
Sow, [sowed,] sown[28].
Straw, -ew, or -ow, [strawed, &c.] strown[28].
Wax, [waxed,] waxen[28].