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An Advanced English Grammar with Exercises

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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The grammar offers an advanced, systematic treatment of English for students beyond the rudiments. It opens with a concise review of parts of speech, phrases, and clauses; proceeds to detailed coverage of inflection and syntax, including the roles and classification of subordinate clauses; and then develops sentence analysis, parsing, and the combination of clauses. An appendix supplies verb lists, conjugation tables, punctuation and capitalization rules, a summary of syntax, and a brief language history. Exercises drawn from notable writers and usage notes aimed at composition and historical differences accompany the main text.

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Title: An Advanced English Grammar with Exercises

Author: George Lyman Kittredge

Frank Edgar Farley

Release date: May 29, 2014 [eBook #45814]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jennifer Linklater and the
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR WITH EXERCISES ***

AN ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR
WITH EXERCISES

BY
GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE
GURNEY PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY
AND
FRANK EDGAR FARLEY
PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE IN WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY

GINN AND COMPANY
BOSTON · NEW YORK · CHICAGO · LONDON ATLANTA · DALLAS · COLUMBUS · SAN FRANCISCO

COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE AND FRANK EDGAR FARLEY
ENTERED AT STATIONERS’ HALL
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
424.2

The Athenæum Press
GINN AND COMPANY · PROPRIETORS · BOSTON · U.S.A.

PREFACE

This grammar is intended for students who have already received instruction in the rudiments. Still, every such textbook must begin at the beginning. Part One, therefore, which occupies pp. 1–24, gives a succinct treatment of the Parts of Speech in the Sentence and of their substitutes, the Phrase and the Clause, concluding with a Summary of Definitions. Thus it clears the way for what follows, and may be utilized as a review, if the student needs to refresh his memory.

Part Two deals specifically and fully with Inflections and Syntax (pp. 25–182). It includes also a chapter on the use of subordinate clauses as nouns, adjectives, and adverbs (pp. 157–162), as well as a chapter in which such clauses are logically classified in accordance with their particular offices in the expression of thought (pp. 163–182).

Part Three (pp. 183–226) develops the subject of Analysis in its natural order, first explaining how sentences are put together, and then illustrating the process by which they may be resolved into their constituent parts. Modifiers and Complements are classified, and the so-called Independent Elements are discussed. There is added a special chapter on Combinations of Clauses, in which the grammatical and logical relations of coördination and subordination are set forth, and their functions in the effective use of language are considered. This portion of the book, it is hoped, will be especially useful to students of English composition.

The Appendix furnishes lists of verbs, tables of conjugation, rules for capitals and marks of punctuation, a summary of important rules of syntax, and a brief history of the English language.

The Exercises (pp. 227–290) are collected at the end of the text, so as not to break continuity. References prefixed to each, as well as page-numbers in the Table of Contents, enable the teacher to attach them, at will, to the topics which they concern. The passages for parsing, analysis, etc., have been carefully selected from a wide range of eminent British and American writers. The name of the author is often appended to the quotation, when the passage is particularly noteworthy either for its contents or its form. In most cases, however, this has not been done; but the student may always feel confident that he is occupying himself with specimens of English as actually composed by distinguished authors. The constructive exercises call particular attention to those matters in which error is especially prevalent.

An advanced grammar must aim to be serviceable in two ways. It should afford the means for continuous and systematic study of the subject or of any part of it; and it should also be useful for reference in connection with the study of composition and of literature. With this latter end in view, many notes and observations have been included, in smaller type, to show the nature and development of the various forms and constructions, and to point out differences between the usage of to-day and that which the student observes in Shakspere and other English classics. The fulness of the index makes it easy to find anything that the volume contains.

In accordance with the desire of many teachers, certain topics of importance have been treated with unusual thoroughness. Among these may be mentioned the uses of shall and will, should and would, the infinitive and the infinitive clause, conditional sentences, indirect discourse, and the combination of clauses in sentences of different kinds.

The authors are indebted to several teachers for suggestions and criticism. Particular acknowledgment is due to Mr. Theodore C. Mitchill, of the Jamaica High School, New York, and Mr. C. L. Hooper, of the Chicago Normal School.

CONTENTS

[The numbers in the first column refer to the pages of the text; those in the second column to the pages of the Exercises.]

INTRODUCTION
  TEXT EXERCISES
Language and Grammar xi  
Grammar and Usage xv  
Summary of General Principles xvii  
ENGLISH GRAMMAR
PART ONE—THE PARTS OF SPEECH IN THE SENTENCE
The Sentence—Subject and Predicate 1 227
Kinds of Sentences 2 227
The Eight Parts of Speech Defined 3 228
The Same Word as Different Parts of Speech 9 229
Infinitives and Participles 11 229
Comparative Importance of the Parts of Speech 13
Simple and Complete Subject and Predicate 14 230
Compound Subject and Predicate 15 230
Substitutes for the Parts of Speech 16 231
Phrases—Noun, Verb, Adjective, Adverbial 16 231
Clauses—Independent and Subordinate 16 232
Compound and Complex Sentences 17 232
Compound Complex Sentences 18 232
Clauses as Parts of Speech 19 232
Summary of Definitions 21  
PART TWO—INFLECTION AND SYNTAX
CHAPTER I—INFLECTION
Inflection in General 25  
Summary of Inflections 26  
CHAPTER II—NOUNS
Classification—Common Nouns and Proper Nouns 27 233
Special Classes—Abstract, Collective, Compound 29 234
Inflection of Nouns 30 235
Gender 31 235
Number 34 235
Person 39 236
Case 40 237
Nominative Case 41 237
Possessive Case 43 238
Objective Case 47 239
Parsing of Nouns 54 240
CHAPTER III—PRONOUNS
Personal Pronouns 55 241
Gender and Number of Personal Pronouns 56 241
Case of Personal Pronouns 57 241
The Self-Pronouns (Compound Personal Pronouns) 60 241
Adjective Pronouns—Demonstratives 62 243
Adjective Pronouns—Indefinites 64 243
Relative Pronouns 66 244
The Relative Pronoun What 71 246
Compound Relative Pronouns 72 246
Interrogative Pronouns 73 246
Parsing of Pronouns 74 247
CHAPTER IV—ADJECTIVES
Classification of Adjectives 75 248
Adjectives—the Articles 77 248
Comparison of Adjectives 79 249
Irregular Comparison 81 249
CHAPTER V—ADVERBS
Classification of Adverbs 83 250
Relative and Interrogative Adverbs 86 251
Comparison of Adverbs 87 252
Use of the Comparative and Superlative 88 252
Numerals—Adjectives, Nouns, Adverbs 89 252
CHAPTER VI—VERBS
Classification of Verbs 91 253
Auxiliary Verbs—Verb-Phrases 91 253
Transitive and Intransitive Verbs 92 253
Copulative Verbs 93 253
Inflection of Verbs 94 254
Tense of Verbs 94 254
Present and Past Tenses 94 254
Weak (Regular) and Strong (Irregular) Verbs 95 254
Person and Number 97 254
The Personal Endings 97 254
Conjugation of the Present and the Past 98 254
Special Rules of Number and Person 100 254
The Future Tense—Shall and Will 102 256
Complete or Compound Tenses 106 258
Voice—Active and Passive 107 258
Conjugation of the Six Tenses 108 258
Use of the Passive Voice 110 258
Progressive Verb-Phrases 113 260
Emphatic Verb-Phrases 114 260
Mood of Verbs 115 261
Indicative Mood 115 261
Imperative Mood 116 261
Subjunctive Mood—Forms 118 261
Uses of the Subjunctive 119 261
Potential Verb-Phrases (Modal Auxiliaries) 124 262
Special Rules for Should and Would 127 264
The Infinitive 132 266
The Infinitive as a Noun 134 266
The Infinitive as a Modifier 136 266
The Infinitive Clause 137 267
Participles—Forms and Constructions 140 268
Nominative Absolute 144 269
Verbal Nouns in -ing (Participial Nouns) 145 269
CHAPTER VII—PREPOSITIONS
List of Prepositions 148 270
Special Uses of Prepositions 149 270
CHAPTER VIII—CONJUNCTIONS
Coördinate (or Coördinating) Conjunctions 151 270
Subordinate (or Subordinating) Conjunctions 153 270
Correlative Conjunctions 153 270
CHAPTER IX—INTERJECTIONS
Interjections 155 272
Exclamatory Expressions 155 272
CHAPTER X—CLAUSES AS PARTS OF SPEECH
Clauses as Parts of Speech 157 272
Adjective Clauses 157 272
Adverbial Clauses 158 272
Noun (or Substantive) Clauses 159 272
CHAPTER XI—THE MEANINGS OF SUBORDINATE CLAUSES
Clauses of Place and Time 163 272
Causal Clauses 164 272
Concessive Clauses 164 272
Clauses of Purpose and Result 166 274
Conditional Sentences 167 274
Forms of Conditions 169 274
Present and Past Conditions 170 274
Future Conditions 171 274
Clauses of Comparison 173 275
Indirect Discourse 173 277
Shall and Will, Should and Would in Indirect Discourse 177 278
Indirect Questions 179 280
Shall and Will, Should and Would in Indirect Questions 182 281
PART THREE—ANALYSIS
CHAPTER I—THE STRUCTURE OF SENTENCES
Analysis—the Elements 183 282
Simple Sentences 184 282
Compound Sentences 185 282
Complex Sentences 186 282
Compound and Complex Clauses 186 287
Compound Complex Sentences 187 283
CHAPTER II—ANALYSIS OF SENTENCES
Simple Sentences 188 283
Compound Sentences 188 283
Complex Sentences 189 283
Compound Complex Sentences 190 283
CHAPTER III—MODIFIERS
Modifiers in General 191 283
Modifiers of the Subject 192 283
Modifiers of the Predicate 196 284
CHAPTER IV—COMPLEMENTS
Use of Complements 200 285
The Direct Object 201 285
The Predicate Objective 202 285
The Predicate Nominative 202 285
The Predicate Adjective 203 285
CHAPTER V—MODIFIERS OF COMPLEMENTS AND OF MODIFIERS
Modifiers of Complements 205 286
Modifiers of Other Modifiers 207 286
CHAPTER VI—INDEPENDENT ELEMENTS
Four Kinds of Independent Elements 209 286
Parenthetical Expressions 209 286
CHAPTER VII—COMBINATIONS OF CLAUSES
General Principles 210 287
Coördination and Subordination 210 287
Clauses—Simple, Compound, Complex 211 287
Complex Sentences 186 282
Simple Sentences with Compound Subject or Predicate 212 287
Compound and Complex Sentences 213 287
Compound Complex Sentences 215 287
Varieties of the Complex Sentence 216 287
Special Complications in Complex Sentences 220 288
Special Complications in Compound Complex Sentences 222 288
CHAPTER VIII—ELLIPTICAL SENTENCES
Ellipsis in Clauses and Sentences 224 288
Varieties of Ellipsis 225 288
Examples of Elliptical Constructions 226 288
EXERCISES
Exercises on Part One   227
Exercises on Part Two   233
Exercises on Part Three   282
APPENDIX
Lists of Verbs   291
Conjugation of the Verb to be   300
Conjugation of the Verb to strike   301
Use of Capital Letters   305
Rules of Punctuation   306
Rules of Syntax   311
The English Language   316
Index   321