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Show #'u blot her honor, and her heinlj libt b N g6 H Dj, rader dj, en fo difloia B Be¥e - Djm of her hib dezert, or {jm fo likt Fair del it iz tu fun mawr rdm 5 Sen dj clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dj, raSer dj, Sen elter luly difloialj TYMOLOG Bu if tu lut diflsialt) it bj Qak - Mj broubt? ah! far bj fud reproo from mj Wat kan I les du Sen her lulr Serfor Sih I her du reward kanot reftwr Dj, rader dj, and djig du her ferh Djig her ferlt, and liYig her adwr teaches the deduttion of one word fro @ i B The Englifh -have two articles, axz or @, and the Dj, rader dj, en elter from her feriiis fwerlr AN troubled, it is better t truft to their gentlenefs moft mind unto, provid ftand upo your guard than t ¥or the f{afeguard of your face, which they hav a purfehood and knit about your collar, whic eminent parts with woollen cloth made.of coarfe boultering, to be draw for more fafety is to be lined againft th Firft cut a piece about an ‘inch and a hal broad, and half a yard long, to reach round by the temples and forchead one ear to the other; which being fowed in his place, join unto it tw pieces of the fame breadth under the eyes, for the balls of the cheeks, an {fet another piece about the breadth of a fhilling againft the top of th fro fhor the nofe At other times, when they are not angered, a little piéce half a quarter broad to cover the eyes and parts about them, may ferve, though it be in the heat o the day Be penfoéver you hav' occafion to trubble Beir patienc', or to coo waollen cloz Firft cut a peec' about an ind and a half broad, and half a yar Yong; to read round by Se temples and for'head, from one ear to e oder Pio becing fowed in his plac', join unto it ‘two. fort peeces of the fam bread under S eys not angered, a little piec® half a quarter broad, to cover Se eys and parts abou them, may ferve, Sowyg it be in the heat of Se day Batler on the Nature-an Properties of Bees; 1634 In the time of Charles I. there was a very prevalent inclination to chang .as. appears amon othe books, i fuch edition of th works of Milton as were publithed by himfelf Of thefe reformers, ever man had his own fcheme; but they agreed in one general defign of accommao €ating the letters to the pronunciation, by ejeting fuch as -they thought fuSome of them would have written thefe lines thus perfluous [ ---- . | § t}i ;t s pasedts, for ;:;pier T han thi his of of Eden, and d f: far happie ie dais dai propofed, without expeéting to be followed, a regular orthography by whic ' Yur Fidher huitthart in héven, halloed bi dhyi ndm, dhyi cingdym cym, dh &c #ill bi dyn in erth as it is in héven We have fince had no general reformers; but fome ingenious men hav endeavoured- to-deferve well of their country, by writing honor and /labor fo bonour and labour, red for read in the preter-tenfe, fais for fays, repete for repeat explane for explainy or declame for declaim. -~ Of thefe it may be faid, that as the have done no good, they have done little harm; both becaufe they have innovated little, and becaufe few have followed them u'fhéEnglifh language has 'properly no dialeéts; ithe ftyle of writers has n profefled diverfity in the ufe of words or of thei aor differs but by different degrees of fkill or care n no fpacious country, but haslef -mations of equal extent variatio i flexions an terminations The oral dition is unifor Englan than i words now out of ufe, but which are commonly of -the genuine Teutonic xace, and is uttered with a pronunciation which now feems harfh and rough but was probably ufed by our anceftors. The northern fpeech is therefore no barbarous but obfolete. The fpeech in the weftern provinces feems to diffe from the general diction rather by a depraved pronunciation; than by any xea g UG G Grammarians of the laft age dire@, that 4z fhould be ufe before 4 ; whence it appears that the Englith anciently afpirate lefs ~An is full ufed before the filent 4 man : but otherwife z ; as 4 horfe, a horfe m kingdo as, an berd for a horfe an honef Séaée/})mre An or a can only be joined with a fingular, the correfponden plural is th noun without an article as 7 wan pens I awan pens : or with the pronominal adje&tive fome, as I want fome pens TrE has a particular and definite fignification Of that forbidde The frui tree, whofe mortal taft Brought death into zbe world Milton That is, that particular fruit, and this aworld in ahickh awe live So, He giveth fodder for the cattle, and green berbs for the ufe o man 3 that 1s, for' thofe ‘beings that are cattle, and bis ufe tha is man TS 5 uled T Hoth numbers I am as free as Nature firlt made man Ere 7be bafe laws of fervitude began, ‘When wild in woods #be noble favage ran T Dryden 1. Proper names, as Fobn, Alexander, Longinus, Ariffarchus Ferufalem; Athens, Rome, London. Gop is ufed as a proper name z. Abftra& names,'as blacknefs, witcheraft, virtue, vice, beaury uglinefs, lowe, hatred, anger, good-nature, kindnefs 3. Word in which nothing but the mere being of any thin is implied: This is not deer but awarer; This is not érafi bu | freel Of Noun SUBSTANTIVES The relations of Englifh nouns to words going before or following, are not exprefled by cafs, or changes of termination ' but as in moft of the other European languages by prepofitions unlefs we may be faid to have a genitive cafe moft othe The language of the northern counties retains man difference which letters wopld exprefs a boy, that is, fo are boys. - An arm Many words are ufed without articles ; as Bithop Wilkins afterwards, in his great work of the philofophical language the Lord's prayer is to be written thus is, fom I have made a» the original article, becaufe it is only the Saxon an, or zmn one, applied to a new ufe, as the German ein, and the French uz; the 7 bein cut off before a confonant in the {peed of utterance tha In the fenfes in which we ufe @ or ax in the fingular, we fpea in the plural without an article ; as, thefe are good books At oSer tim's, pen Sey ar breadt of a rilling againft ‘the top o &e nofe. the orthography might enter without refiffance, that is any army fet an o8er peec' about the for the balls of Be cheeks; an Jword. This is a better book Sfor a man tha | one of thofe that are men than one of thofe tha amon Fem beeing trubled, it is better'to ftand upon your gard, San to truft to Bei gentlenes For ¥e faf' gard of your fac', pis> Sey hav' moft mind' unto provid' a purfehood, mad® of coorfe boultering, to bee drawn and knit abou your collar, pi>for mor' faf'ty is to bee lined againft & eminent parts wi killed by a fword o them bein to trouble their patience, or to com ava Nom Gen Magifter Magiftri amon occafio H Singu]ar a Matfter of @ Mafter #he Mafter of the Mafter or Mafters the Mafters : Dat 7 Acc Voc Abl Magiftro #0 a Mafter, 7o the Mafler ' Magiftrum 2 Mafter, zb¢ Mafter Magitter Mafter, O Matfter Magiftro, from a Mafter; from the Mafter But whenfoever you hav that ‘are good o e cording to his own fcheme; which the following fpecimen will make eafily underftood book for he printed his book ac A has an indefinite fignification, and means oze, with fom reference'to more ; ‘as This is'a good book, that is, one among th Dr. Gill was followed by Charles Butler, a 'man who did not want an underftanding which might have qualified him for better employment ~He feem a dub dezerlr to have been more fanguine than his predeceflors G i another, and the various modifications by which the fenf of the fame word is diverfified ; as Aor/z, horfes 5 1 love, 1 loved Sal T 8sn hat her Sat from deBez do D) Uif 1) gaty, 3) L 1 E Plural |