| Roswell Chamberlain Smith - 1859 - عدد الصفحات: 222
...as which it is founded : namely, that a word which principle as any on which it is founded : namely has the article before it, and the possessive preposition...noun, and not to have the regimen of a verb. It is the participial termination of this sort of words, that is apt to deceive us, and make us treat them as... | |
| William Rushton - 1869 - عدد الصفحات: 352
...confounding of two distinct forms.' He then states the principle on which this rule is founded : ' a word which has the article before it, and the possessive...ought to follow the construction of a noun, and not have the regimen of a verb.' But Dr. Lowth seems to confound a ' noun ' with a ' substantive ; ' the... | |
| F. Th Visser - 1966 - عدد الصفحات: 688
...which the Verb signifies . . . This Rule arises from the nature and idiom of our Language, and from as plain a principle, as any on which it is founded :...Noun, and not to have the regimen of a Verb. It is the Participial Termination of this sort of words that is apt to deceive us, and make us treat them, as... | |
| F. Th Visser - 1963 - عدد الصفحات: 688
...which the Verb signifies . . . This Rule arises from the nature and idiom of our Language, and from as plain a principle, as any on which it is founded :...Noun, and not to have the regimen of a Verb. It is the Participial Termination of this sort of words that is apt to deceive us, and make us treat them, as... | |
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