Grammaroflatemod 02 Poutiala
Grammaroflatemod 02 Poutiala
Grammaroflatemod 02 Poutiala
H.
POUTSMA,
PART
II
SECTION
I,
P.
NOORDHOFF.
1914.
GRONINGEN.
UqP
PREFACE.
The second
detail,
falls
part
of
this
Grammar
the
into
two sections,
first
pronouns and
its
Owing to
inordinate
volume
two portions
I
the
same
have,
in the
main, proceeded on
preparation of
this
its
guided
me
in the
predecessor.
earlier part
between
and the
arrange
that
I
at greater pains to
my quotations chronologically. have not, indeed, concerned myself much about minor details of chronology, as, for example, the order in which the
novels of
whether
the
Dickens or Thackeray successively appeared; or the question Vanity Fair preceded or followed David Copperfield; but
landmarks
in
great
the
A few
to
additional remarks
may
support my statements, have, of course, been taken unaltered from the sources where I found them, but glaring inconsistencies in the use of capitals, hyphens, stops
niceties
Authorized Version
will,
editions
perhaps, be considered improper in a work like the present. The used are respectively the well-known Globe Edition edited by William G. Clark and William Aldis Wright and The Oxford
discussing
continued thought, must soon have become persuaded, that this is not in The least change of comparatively insignificant accordance with fact. words, the least tampering with the order of words in a sentence or phrase,
and the
and pitch, almost invariably produce observer could not fail to notice obtuse most changes of meaning which the never freedom at once. The prevailing degenerates into licence. Then
slightest modification of stress
o
1
:,.
,ki^O>"X.
p"
OO^
IV
PREFACE.
is
there
by many grammarians, to van Draat have especially drawn attention. To make one's conclusions reliable a large number of quotations is needed. have, indeed, collected a fair number to support my views: thousands
I
rhythm and metre, overlooked or slighted which the recent publications of Dr. P. FljN
not
upon thousands are scattered through the pages of my book, and yet in a few cases the evidence at my disposal was inadequate, and could not be procured in the scanty leisure accorded to me. There are few things
so wearisome and so disappointing as going in search of a particular idiom. a trick of not turning up when needed,
useful enough,
hand,
in
constantly
obtrude
themselves on
but not particularly required for the subject one's notice. The lack of
which
had
to
express
at
myself
It
is
often necessary to
some
of
which may,
first
sight,
to
appear
precise
puerile, but which, on closer view, will purpose. It is then that the great difficulty of
makes
itself felt.
Many
observations have required casting and recasting over and over again, before their final form could be established. Nor will it be wondered at
that, as the
to preceding
This, of course, entailed a repeated rehandling of the references and subsequent paragraphs and observations. Some of them,
fear, are, therefore, incorrect.
too
many
chiefly to the
verified
as
the
The
As
necessity of
chiefly responsible
the
left
great
the
bulk
press,,
into
had
accumulated,
that
have often
of,
advisability
of
cutting
apparently,
too luxuriant
I
my
Some important subjects, which in the have been touched upon only in the merest outline, or not at all, have found ample treatment. may here call attention to the paragraphs dealing
I
with
the
Adnominal
Use of Nouns
Nouns.
in
I
the
Common
Conversion
English
I
of Adjectives into
I
flatter
Grammar
have,
at
of course,
have done some useful spadework. diligently compared my results with those contained
in the
moment
of writing
were
my
disposal.
Throughout the
text
PREFACE.
about the
until
books and
the
book
is
completed.
of
the
present part in
.point of
conveniently, be given Also the preparation of the detailed Index which so many subjects have to be discussed from
until the
whole
is
nearing
my
this
brother,
Dr.
Alb s
weary pages bulky volume has brought all the penetration of his discriminating mind to bear upon a subject, comparatively alien from his own studies, and to whom many
the
of
improvements in the way of arrangement and wording are due. have great pleasure in saying that by his invaluable services he has cemented the feeling of brotherly affection by a sense of sincere gratitude.
important
I
It
is
also
me
to
acknowledge
in
my
indebtedness to the
publisher
generous co-operation
last
appearance, and,
attention he has
In
conclusion
must tender
my
omissions and other imperfections, which cannot fail to strike him, if he goes carefully through the book. He may rest assured that any communication he should like to
make
to
a willing ear.
In
I
submitting
of of
it,
will
meet
students of
English Grammar, firmly believe that a few years more of constant study would enable me to ameliorate it in many ways. If then it should be urged that I have been rash in going to press, I can only plead the scantiness of
my
leisure
in the
and the uncertainty of life and vigour. There is a painful truth I found quoted in Spencer, Education, Ch. I:
That
his
As
of old, for a
POUTSMA.
Amsterdam, Christmas
1913.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
ADNOMINAL USE OF NOUNS
NOUNS
IN
XXIII.
1
IN
113 ...
.
General Observations
14
57
511 Adnominal nouns expressing qualities Such as are names of substances Such as are names of persons, animals or things which are 8 considered as the embodiment of a quality Such as denote a particular state, status, function employment
what is expressed by the noun modified 910 Such as are proper names of persons or geographical bodies
or use of
.
5
5 13 16
17 17
11
relations
12
12
13
17
19
NOUNS
17 14 THE COMMON CASE USED PREDICATIVELY Predicative nouns which express qualities or relations
IN
...
14
.
23
23 23
Observations
15
16
....
24
28
CHAPTER
GENITIVE OF NOUNS
FORM OF THE GENITIVE
'
XXIV.
30
16
30
The genitive of simple nouns The genitive of compound nouns and word-groups The uninfected form taking the place of the genitive
Observations
12
30
34
5
33
37
38
756
7
. .
40
40
The
is
839
by the individualizing geni-
40
40
relations
810
expressed
Use
and
its
prepositional equi-
valent
considerations of syntax,
emphasis and
42
1124
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
11 The genitive of possession or origin 18 The genitive of agency or subjective genitive 20 21 The objective genitive 2223 The genitive of measure 24 The genitive of apposition or specializing
VII
19
42 59 60 63 69
of the individualizing genitive and its prepositional equivalent under the influence of considerations of syntax, em-
Use
2531
26
28
71
71
2930
31
74 76
Further observations
3239
equivalent with the preposition of differing
76
The
in
genitive and
its
3334
76 77
other
35-37
3839
4044
83 88
89 89
40 Preliminary Observations The classifying genitive denoting a quality 41 The classifying genitive denoting a relation 42 The classifying genitive of proper names 43 44 Observations
THE GENITIVE USED
IN
90
92
.......
. . . .
94 95
97
101
FOUR WAYS
4551
5256
CHAPTER XXV.
NUMBER OF NOUNS
FORM OF THE PLURAL
. .
.
u2
112
117
The The
114
and word-groups
112
1517.
141
1836
147
147
.
1821
.
.
148 19. Nouns whose singular is non-existent or unusual 185 Nouns that have special meanings in the plural 20 Nouns that are always used in the plural in certain combina.
. . .
tions
21
232
Nouns Nouns
.240 that are chiefly used in the singular that retain the singular form, although expressing a 243 plural idea Nouns that retain the singular form, when used adnominally
.
.
2224
2530.
3135
Use
of individualizing
267
words
36
273
VIII
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
CONCORD
Definition of concord
1
XXVI.
277
277
277
CONCORD OF NUMBER
224
exhibited
How
Concord with
23
420
. .
277
.278
Want of concord between the subject and the nominal part of 278 the predicate Collective nouns construed as singulars or plurals, according to
45
280 611 meaning 299 nouns construed as singulars 1218 Indefinite pronouns, nouns of common gender modified by an indefinite pronoun, or two or more nouns of different gender
their
Plural
19
of the sentence
2124
CONCORD OF GENDER
3338
325
325 Preliminary Observations Pronouns used in referring to names of persons that are of common gender 326 36
3335
in in
referring to referring to
names names
of animals
37
...
329
of inanimate things
38 332
CHAPTER
SEX DENOTED BY NOUNS
XXVII.
339
.
How
Sex Sex Sex expressed by the context 12 Sex indicated by adjectives, nouns or pronouns added nouns of common gender 13
339 2. 1 of living beings may be divided denoted by nouns that are not etymologically connected 3. 339 denoted by suffixes 4 11 340 the
347
to
names
349
CHAPTER
Adjectives
are
1
XXVIII.
354
or
continuative
adnominal
354
adjuncts
Adjectives denote either qualities or relations Adjectives are either independent or relative
23 45
...
. .
354
.359
359 Adjectives are used either attributively or predicatively Adjectives do not always logically belong to the nouns they 9 362 modify grammatically
68.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
IX
CHAPTER
XXIX.
365
converted into
365
212 ADJECTIVES TOTALLY CONVERTED INTO NOUNS Further comments on total conversion of adjectives 3 Such as end in certain suffixes
Such as denote a nationality Such as denote a language
4 5
368
2
.
.368
368
376
376
as denote a creed
sect or party
377 377
7 as are comparatives as denote the most characteristic quality of a substance as are names of periodicals 9
as denote a colour
8 379
379
379
....
.
.
10
as do not answer to a general description .380 11 as have conversion only occasionally and at variance 383
with the genius of the language 12 1328 ADJECTIVES PARTIALLY CONVERTED INTO NOUNS Further comments on partial conversion of adjectives Such as denote persons 1420
....
13
.
387
387 387
as denote a class of persons in a generalizing way as denote a nationality and end in a sibilant 15 as stand as objects to to commit, to do and to play
as denote attributes of particular beings or things as denote single individuals 18
14. 387
.
.
396
16 398
17
.
399 400
The
latter
20
405
2124
. .
406
Such as denote a quality in a generalizing way 21 22 406 23 419 Superlatives preceded by a possessive pronoun The superlatives first and last and the comparatives former and
....
latter
24
420
Partially converted adjectives denoting an indefinite number 421 of persons or things 2527 425 The adjective own 28
CHAPTER XXX.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON What words have degrees
427
of
1
427 427
427 427
231
228
2
527
28
. .
429 474
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Comparison
of
compound words
29
30
487
Terminational and periphrastic comparison combined 31 The positive used instead of the superlative
.490
491
3247 USE OF THE DEGREES OF COMPARISON 32 of two qualities Comparison The comparative varying with the superlative, 33 persons or things are compared
The use and suppression
pronoun or
of the,
491
491
when two
492
of (at
+)
possessive
3438.
493
The use of comparatives to express the gradual increase of 39 503 some quality The use of comparatives to express the proportional increase 40 504 of two qualities The two ways to express how many times a person, animal or
.
41 506 thing exceeds another as to the intensity of a certain quality The use of the preposition by before comparatives and superlatives
42
507
43
.507
510
511
44 45
Latin
the
construction
4
summus
... 511 512
mons
The
46
47
...... v
inclusive superlative
CHAPTER
THE ARTICLE
FORM OF THE ARTICLES MEANING OF THE ARTICLES 974 USE OF THE ARTICLES
XXXI.
513 513
h
13 48
517
530 530
1030
532
532
common nouns
10-22
Before common nouns that are modified by an adnominal clause, a prepositional word-group, an adnominal noun in the common 1014 532 case or an adjective Before the names of certain localities, the names of meals, the names of the main divisions of a day, the names of seasons and the names of months, days and festivals 15 538 Before common nouns that are used as significant proper names 16 549 Before the names of conceptions that are single in their kind 17 554 18 Before all and both 554 Before certain superlatives 1920 555 Before one when used as the correlative of the other, another or other 21 562 Before such words as be/ore-mentioned 22 564
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Before proper names
XI
2330
564
Before proper names that have assumed the character of common nouns 23 2427 Before significant proper names Before proper names that are modified by an adnominal adjunct 28 Before compound proper names both or all of whose parts are 29 insignificant Before compound proper names one or all of whose parts are
significant
564 565
571
577 577
30
3137
. .
.
587
Before adjectives partially converted into nouns and before 587 31 singular nouns that are not collective nouns 590 32 Before collective nouns Before plural nouns 33 Before material and abstract nouns
USE AND SUPPRESSION OF THE INDEFINITE ARTICLE
'
594
597
3437
38
42
608
nouns that are modified by an adnominal 608 38 39 Before the stems of verbs and before gerunds .608 610 40 Before other abstract nouns
Before
clause
abstract
. .
Before the names of certain disorders, before time or distance preceded by an adjective, before nouns in certain salutations
in titles of
books,
etc.
41
632
Before abstract nouns, when modified by the determinative 634 such or the exclamatory what 42 SUPPRESSION OF EITHER ARTICLE BEFORE NOUNS IN CERTAIN GRAMMATICAL FUNCTIONS
IN
IS
MODIFIED
4361
of proper
635
Before
that
as appositions 635
637
4452
before
predicative
Why
nouns
the
article
is
apt
to
be suppressed
44
637
637 45 47 predicative nouns not preceded by as predicative nouns preceded by as or its substitute for 48 644
....
647
by an adnominal
with the relative that, or an adverbial clause with the 647 50 conjunction as Before abstract nouns standing after to make and followed by 647 an adnominal gerund- or infinitive clause 51 Before predicative nouns that occur both as adjectives and as 648 nouns 52
Before
common nouns
way
of
apposition
5356
648
XII
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Before plural nouns that have assumed the character of inde57 657 pronouns Before nouns that have assumed the character of indefinite
finite
numerals
58
660
5960
6271
.
.
663
666
.
667 667
article
6366
word-group
many nouns,
6364
667
65 680 many nouns, when connected with another noun many nouns, when forming part of headings in books,
.
essays, etc.
66
article
684
6768
when
weak any
68
in
enumerations, epigrammatic
692
71
7274
694
CHAPTER
ADNOMINAL USE OF NOUNS
1.
XXIII.
IN
THE COMMON
CASE.
Times.
a soldier, He will remain a widower, He turned Christian, They parted enemies, They called him madman.
2.
Attributive
a)
in the
thing.
nouns occur:
:
The commercial
policy of Japan
is
no chance
b) in the genitive case: I ran to the vessel's edge. Marie Corelli, Sor. of Sat., II, Ch. XXXIX, 245. I'm not a lady's man. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake, I, Ch. XII, 203.
Attributive
a)
qualities
nouns
:
in the
common
Times.
(= young
b)
relations: Nowhere have these complaints been more China trade. Times. (= the trade to China.)
I.
4.
Obs.
The
attributive
is
highly interesting feature of the English language, to which there is hardly a parallel in either Dutch or German. Occasional instances are, indeed, met with in our language, but as the
numerous illustrative word-groups and quotations given below, show, different turns of expression .are in the majority of cases necessary to render its meaning. Even when a noun is
placed adnominally before another noun, it is mostly felt as a component part of a compound, not as an independent word like an ordinary adjective, which is the case in English. See especially H. Bradley, The Making of Eng., Ch. II,
63
II.
ff;
JESP.,
210.
The independent
attributive
of the
H.
2
a)
CHAPTER
that such a
standpoint
l
XXIII, 4.
noun
In
is
).
modified by an adverb. From a too exclusively London Lecky !). A distinctly Church of
father
England institution 2 ). She was brought up by a very heathen the Madding Crowd, Ch. X, 91.
A) that
and mother.
such a noun stands adnominally after a There was nothing political or partisan in the history Gaz. No. 5658, lc.
,
compound
-thing:
of the question.
Westm-
;)
that such a noun is placed in the degrees of comparison, i. e.: when expressing a quality, in the periphrastic comparative or superlative; when expressing a relation, in the terminational superlative. Compare 16. i. baby. The little king of Spain is also shown on stamps, but in a more
baby
state.
III. Is
it
Lond. News.
any wonder that the German can even afford to pay the 25 and get the business by his more business methods?
business.
per cent
preference
Times,
model. "And baby is the best traveller in the world," said Donati, "and Edna Lyall, Hardy Norse m., in every way the most model baby." Ch. XXVI, 239. pattern. Johnson clung to them as fondly as if they had been the most pattern hero and heroine of romantic fiction. Leslie Stephen, Life of
Johnson,
silver.
3.
|
An
Of
Isabel,
II.
ii.
centremost.
at
the
this
minute a
little
pang
II,
of
disappointment.
Hardy,
Madding Crowd,
headmost. Then as
the copse he cleared.
Ch.
the
420.
,
|
I, vi.
rearmost. The engine of the express reared up and literally leaped upon the roof of the rearmost carriages of the Tournai train. Graph. A long straggling troop bore spades and mattocks while the two rearmost of all staggered along under a huge basket of fish. Con. Doyle, White
Com p.,
Ch.
I,
2.
topmost. The wood Seems sunk and shorten'd to its topmost boughs. Cowper, Sofa, (226). They could descry nothing but one or two spectral black trees, their topmost branches coming up into the clearer air. William Black, The New Prince Fort., Ch. XIV.
Topmost
word
:
is sometimes used metaphorically as a quality-expressing He walked for a mile or two at his topmost speed. G. Gissing
,
Eve's Ransom,
Ch.
XIII.
Terminational comparison of quality-expressing attributive nouns is rare and has a burlesque effect 3 ): The wife is apt to remember that she is the bosomest of her husband's friends. Trol., Prime Min., Ill, 61.
i)
Jesp.,
19.
210. 685.
*)
Adj.,
Storm, Eng. P h
1.2,
IN
London
Gissing,
The House
256.
of
Cobwebs,
37.
The swellest European hotels. Muirhead, The Land of Contrasts, He has the darlingest expression. Punch, No. 3651, 4986.
It
must here be observed, however, that the frequent use of a noun word sometimes causes it to assume the character of a pure adjective, insomuch that there is nothing unusual in its being placed in either one or both of the degrees of comparison. Such, among, perhaps, other nouns are: chief. Mr. Gumbo proposed to ride by the window for the chief part of the Ch. XX, 202. journe>\ Thack., Virg.
as an attributive adnominal
,
For the first few weeks she spoke only to the goat, that was her chiefest friend on earth. Rudy. Kipling, The Light that failed, Ch. I, 5.
choice.
HI,
1,
No
163.
place will please me so, no mean of death, As here by Caesar, The choice and master spirits of this age. Jul. Caes., off,
|
He quickly rallied round him the choicest spirits in the Church. Buckle, Civil is., HI, IP). He had shown her all his choicest nursery of plants. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. X 108. would be the girdle About her dainty waist. Ten., The dainty. And
,
Miller's Daughter,
The hand
XXIII.
of little employment hath the daintier sense. Ham I., V, I, 78. There stood waiting for her the daintiest of little broughams. M. M. Grant,
Sun-Maid,
HI.
VII-').
For all that almost any noun can be freely used as an attributive adnominal adjunct, it is in this function to be regarded as a kind of makeshift, employed because there is not a fitting adjective expressing the meaning intended and the language does not admit of coining one from the noun. Thus we find: the Transvaal Government,
the Free State magistrates Ill, 61), Ch. Ill, 52), because there are no adjectives derived from either Transvaal or Free State. Conversely we never say England Government, magistrates etc. for English Government, magistrates, etc. Nor are, for example, Elizabeth poets or suburb traffic current collocations for Elizabethan poets (Shaw, Hist, of Eng. Lit., Ch. IV) or Suburban traffic (Times). Compare also the adjectives with the attributive nouns in: The com(Froude, Oceana, Ch.
(lb.,
,
is no chance thing. Daily Mail. Review is absolutely independent, and is free from any national, sex, class, sectarian and denominational bias. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 226.
of
tone of these lyrics is rather that of the Restoration poets than that of the earlier Caroline school. Ch. I, 25. Steph. Gwenn, Thorn.
Moore,
Note also that the language has recently formed pictorial postcard, which is used by the side of picture-postcard. IV. For reasons of euphony, metre, rhythm, etc. the attributive noun is sometimes used, although there is a corresponding adjective,
conveying practically the same meaning.
')
Murray,
s.
v.
choice;
-)
id., s. v. dainty.
CHAPTER
colony.
ancient
day.
In
XXIII
4.
the
old
colony days,
in
of
the
Pilgrims.
Longfellow,
is this
Courtship
hostelry
of
Miles Standish,
may
Inn, Prel.,
10.)
As any
a
in the
Id.,
Tales of
Wayside
in some coward. Those Sons of Freedom world have pistolled, stabbed that man by coward hands and murderous violence. Dick., way slain
Chuz.
Ch. XXI
185a.
(instead of cowardly.)
Flanders. The country squire's great coach and heavy Flanders mares. Ch. I, 8. (instead of Flemish.) Thack., Virg.
,
fool.
By
the fool
multitude.
M e r c h.
of
Ven.
II,
9, 26.
(instead of foolish.)
passion
HI, 133.
gulls
men
potently.
What if she be fasten'd to this fool lord. Ten., Maud, I, xvi, ii. The interchange of visits between the journalists of Germany and of Britain affords welcome evidence of the depth and sincerity of the common sentiment
of
the
either side.
two nations despite all the fool fury Rev. of Rev., CCX, 563a.
Iris
of the
demented phobists on
Ten.
Hght-foot.
brought
it
yester-eve.
CE n o n
VII.
money.
Money
profit
rather
than
first
The Periodical,
|
78.
(instead
neighbour.
seats.
And
Lilia
with
the
rest,
Ten.,
The Princess,
below under
the
taper.)
and lady friends From neighbour Prol., 98. (instead of neighbouring, see
newly arrived from
St.
the quotation
Portugal.
My
Swan
is
Sebastian
I,
laden
(44).
Farquhar,
1,
(instead of Portuguese.)
scoundrel. He had a scoundrel dog whom he taught to whine in the most ludicrous manner. Wash. Irvino Sketch-book., XXXII, 357. (instead of
,
scoundrelly.)
6. stranger. I saw the stranger lad lift up his head. John Hal. Ch. 1 (Compare: She remembered the strange officer's warning. Buchanan, That
, ,
Winter Night.)
taper. I saw the taper spire of a village church rising from the brow of a Wash. Irv. Sketch-book, The Voyage, 126. neighbouring hill.
,
(instead of tapering.)
victor.
And
return to thee,
mine own heart's home; As to his Queen some Shelley Revolt of Islam, Dedication, 3.
|
V.
In
some
'cursus'
cases, especially to meet the requirements of metre, rhythm, or rhyme, or when neither an attributive noun nor an ad-
jective is available, a word-group consisting of of to express the meaning intended. She that finds a winter sunset fairer than a morn of Spring.
noun
is
used
Locksl. Hall,
is
22.
The war of arms in the Far East has ended; the new war of commerce about to begin. D a a I. y
IN
The whole agitation would have collapsed Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 112a.
house of cards.
at
v.
To
to present a gun or pistol cover (with a gun, pistol, etc.) (something) so as to have it directly in the line of fire. Murray, s.
cover, 11.
VI.
noun logically represents the defining idea, the idea defined being indicated by the noun standing after of. This is especially the case in the colloquial turn of expression instanced in the following quotations with
such emotional words as:
I
devil.
certainly
am a
devil
of a mannerist.
Byron
in
Letter to
Mr. Murray.
There are prisoners here sometimes, who are not
hurry to be
tried.
such a devil of a
,
Dick.,
Little Dorrit,
I,
lb.
You
love.
What a
love
of a child!
107.
Jane Eyre,
Van. Fair,
slip.
Ch. XI
She
is
5736.
snip.
She was a
slip
of
woman
Ch.
Dor.
Gerard,
strip.
It was disgusting to Keck to see a strip of a fellow get up and speechify by the hour against institutions which had existed "when he was in his cradle". G. Eliot, Ch. XXVI, 342.
Middlemarch,
I,
termagant. How
the old
wife.
Mrs.
Ward,
This is really the relation also between the modifying word-group and the word modified in the turn of expression mentioned in Ch. V, 17, as is clearly seen by comparing the first with the second member of the following sentence: She's a smalt thing, not much of a figure. G. Eliot, Mill, V, Ch. V, 312.
VII.
It
is
interesting to note
how
times be expressed
a quality or a relation may someways described above. Thus birds Eyre, Ch. XXIII, 302)
birds (= migrants).
a head-word:
Have patience with me, brother Herluin, and I will die as soon as I can and go where there is neither French nor English Jew nor Gentile bond nor free, but all are alike in the eyes of Him who made them.
,
Ch. Kingsley,
Hereward,
c)
by names of substances: a cotton apron; by names of persons, animals or things that are considered as the embodiment of a quality: a giant tree; an infant colony. by names of persons, animals or things denoting a particular state, status, function, employment or use of what is expressed by the noun modified: a widow lady, a beggar-maid, his clergyman cousin, a fisher-lad, a sumpter-pony.
CHAPTER
d) by proper the origin
XXIII,
57.
towns, etc. denoting expressed by the head-word: tea, a Bengal tiger.
names
or
of persons,
countries,
is
habitat of
what
Gladstone
the
bag,-
Ceylon
When
adnominal noun denotes a matter which is felt to differ distinctly in nature from that expressed by the head-word, there is little difficulty in assigning its place among those mentioned under b), but when there is no such difference it often answers both to the description under b) and that under c).
She was not at that time an infant prodigy. William Mottram, The true Story of George Eliot, Ch. I, 6. The Queen left St. Pancras on Wednesday for Sandringham for the purpose of visiting the Princess of Wales and seeing the baby Prince. Daily Mail.
the substance that things consist of, or are made of, the unmodified name of the substance is now commonly used: an iron bedstead a cotton frock.
To denote
There she sat, staid and taciturn-looking, as usual in her brown stuff gown, her check apron, white handkerchief, and cap. Jane Eyre, Ch. XVI, 185.
And
Then
tripping
it
she opened
the
across the room daintily to a little mother-of-pearl inlaid desk, with a silver key. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. XXIV, 256.
,
three
men
strung
their
of Mr.
Miss Braddon,
My
First
Happy
Chris tm.
Obs.
I.
(Stof.,
Hand!.,
Sometimes an adjective
a)
The following
adjectives
higher literary style, language: birchen, earthen, hempen, leaden, leathern, oaken, oaten, wheaten, wooden, woollen. Besides the adjectives leathern and oaken we also find the nouns leather and oak, the latter being, perhaps, preferred in matter-
used for the same purpose. may be met with not only in the but in ordinary spoken and written
language; the adjective hempen, on the other hand, be more frequent than the corresponding noun earthen and oaten seem to be the ordinary forms, except oatmeal. Wheat in certain compounds, such as earthworks met with instead of wheaten. Of the other is occasionally material adjectives mentioned above, it may be said that they are used practically or wholly to the exclusion of the corresponding noun-forms. When these latter are used, they will mostly be found to convey a slightly different shade of meaning. Thus in wood pavement it is almost exclusively the road-metal used in the construction, hardly the construction itself, that is in our thoughts. Compare the Dutch h o u tbestrating. The use of wool instead of woollen, as in
of-fact
seems
to
below
is
very rare.
y\
J
beaded as
r
in
leaded panes
in their
e n).
birchen.
)
Canoe-men
Parkman
Murray,
s. v.
birchen.
IN
7
Halliwell
on a birchen trunk
that
had
23.
by the stream.
Sutcliffe,
earth(en).
A good
,
store
of
milk lay
in
Swift,
Gul. Trav. IV, Ch. II, 193a. The master sate down beside her on
Ch. XVIII
,
Bride of Lam.
183.
|
In this high field's dark corner, where he leaves His coat, his basket, and his earthen cruise. Matthew Arnold, The Scholar Gipsy, II. The door alone let in the day, Showing the trodden earthen floor. W. Morris, Earthly Par., The Man born to be King, 43a. swelled into the sky, engirdled Still higher ... the elevation called Bulbarrow by its earthen trenches. Hardy, Tess, I, Ch. IV, 34.
|
ii.
The Russians had thrown up strong earthworks on the banks of the Kinglake, Crimea, III, in, 340 1 )i.
I
river.
hemp(en).
threads of
covered
it
hempen
making. Swift, Gul. Trav. IV, Ch. X, 211a. The 'Bounty' lay motionless upon the placid waters of the quiet little bay, her hempen cable hanging straight up and down from hawse-pipe to anchor. Louis Becke and Walt. Jeffery The Mutineer, 10. The slow match consists of hempen cord steeped in a solution of saltpetre. Cassell's Cone. Cycl., s. v. match.
my own
ii.
The wires
in
hemp
core.
R. F.
Martin
l
).
leather(n). i. The armourer's heart swelled big with various and contending sensations, so that it seemed as if it would burst the leathern doublet under which it was shrouded. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. HI, 37. Mr. Dick never travelled without a leathern writing-desk. Dick., Cop., Ch. XVII, 124a. He more ribbed hose and leathern gaiters. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. I, 8. His only clothing was a ragged sheepskin bound with a leathern girdle. Ch.
,
Kingsley,
ii.
Hyp., Ch.
he
I,
la.
Here
saw
a
pretty
young
woman
in
leather gloves.
Dick.,
Domb.
Ch. XII,
I,
108.
Con. Doyle
h e
1.
Holm.,
oaken,
Beside him,
lips
With his
floor.
ii.
Id.,
upon the top of a thick oaken cudgel, was a Con. Doyle, Refugees, 226. compressed and clouded brow, he strode up and down the oaken
Ch.
I,
2. I,
She opened
Presentation of
oak doors. Mrs. Ward, Ma reel la, a carved oak chair to Dr. James. Williams.
rural
ditties
105.
Graph.
to the
oaten.
Meanwhile the
,
Temper'd
oaten
flute.
Milton
You
in
Ly
some months
Sweden.
sinks
better
III,
Butter
into
48.
into
Jerome
Idle
Thoughts,
wheaten.
of
i. The people live a good deal upon cakes made of oatmeal, instead wheaten bread. Scott, Tales of a Grand f. 1,5. John Halifax had probably not tasted wheaten bread like this for months. Mrs. Craik
,
John
i)
Hal., Ch.
I,
9.
Murray,
s.
v.
earthwork.
8
ii.
CHAPTER
It
XXIII, 7.
shall
suffice
be such as
is
usual to be eaten
may
conveniently be gotten.
Book
over.
of
Common
,
Prayer.
wood(en).
Ch. V, 386.
ii. They (sc. the motor omnibuses) outpace the 'buses and except when the wood pavement is slimy, they are well under control. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 3426. am sorry that my chairs all have wood seats. Th. Hardy Far from the
,
,
i.
The man
me
all
Dick.
Cop.,
Madding Crowd,
wool(len).
ii.
i.
Ch. LVI
465.
small
He always wears woollen stockings. wool hat rested on the top of his nose.
of
Wash.
style,
r v.
Sketch-
Sleepy Hollow,
359.
Some
are
enough
in the
i.
And Ronin's mountains dark have sent Their hunters to the shore, ashen, And each his ashen bow unbent, And gave his pastime o'er. Scott, Lord of the Isles, IV, ix. s. v. the ashen shaft of a spear. Murray Ash ash, 3. ii. The effects of the ashen shower were not instantaneous. Pall Mall Gaz.
|
brazen. And many other things there be, which they have received to hold, as the washing of cups and pots and brazen vessels. Mark, VII 4. Hear the loud alarum bells, Brazen bells. Poe, The Bells, III. The sun came dazzling thro' the leaves, And flamed upon the brazen greaves' Of bold Sir Lancelot. Ten., The Lady of Shal., Ill," i. Push the brazen door. W. Morris Earthly Par., P r o 1. 3b.
,
| |
flaxen.
She
A
patent
for
spinning
a flaxen
thread.
J.
Nicholson
Opera
t.
Mecha-
golden.
The congregation
21.
Id.,
Locksley
Hall,
100.
Reach me
my
golden cup
I,
that stands
and Iseult,
Ch.
24.
72.
Then taking from her bosom a small golden medallion attached to a slender golden chain, she placed it in his hands. Buchanan, That Winter Night,
II
,
They presented
little
Prince
evacuate
their
position
is
a golden replica of the King's cup Majesty's dinner. 111. L o n d. News. bridge for the retreat of those whom we wish to good strategy and sound common sense. Rev. of
at his
Edward with
most
Id.
,
of
must
at his
')
Murray,
s.
v.
ashen;
flaxen.
IN
9
104.
Mrs. Craik,
free
|
When
Ten,
of
,
breeze of a joyful
dawn blew
In
the silken
sail of infancy.
for the occasion by the holding rope across the street on either side of the Griffin, which commemorates the spot upon which the Temple Bar stood. Times.
Nights,
barrier
I.
was made
red silken
the two
376.
in his
hand. Motley,
In a poor chamber of the Vatican, upon a simple bed beside which burned two waxen torches in the cold morning light lay the body of the man whom none had loved and many had feared. Mar. Crawf. Don Orsino.
,
met with
harp
leans
in literary diction.
A gold
I
against
the
gold.
19.
Especially in the higher literary style material adjectives are often used to denote one or more special qualities suggested by the substance
173; and
la.
ashen. He was startled by the ashen hue Tale of a Lonely Parish, Ch. IX,
|
Marion Crawford,
A
i).
brazen. Bright clouds, Motionless pillars of the brazen heavens. A rare monument of brazen mendacity. Parkman x )flaxen.
Bryant
He was
(?)
tall
light
flaxen hair.
Madame Leroux,
have bought
all
sorts of people.
Macb.,
,
He
surf
I,
18).
This gave a golden opportunity to the seniors of which they were not slow to avail themselves. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch: VI, 92. S^weet lips whereon perpetually did reign The summer calm of golden charity. Ten., Isabel, I. The poet in a golden clime was born With golden stars above. Id. The
|
Poet,
of a
I.
Her hair
falls
Madonna.
of the
golden halo you see round the head II, Ch. Ill, 50.
with the Liberal Chief,
carried
One
him
the story.
Luck.
leaden. The leaden weight of the dead air pressed upon his brow and heart. Ruskin The King of the Golden River, Ch. HI. Leaden skies, chill mists, and raging gales were their portion for sixty long days. Lady Poore, Our Real Antipodes (Westm. Gaz., No. 5179 3b).
, ,
silken.
To
90
m pro v.
Mind,
')
Murray,
s.
v.
brazen;
-)
id., s. v. silken.
10
Their silken ease
|
CHAPTER
And
II,
,
XXIII, 7.
for
Epic
A
touch.
of
Hades,
changed
blood and
tears.
L.
Morris,
splendid charger
whose neck
swayed
hither
and
III,
thither
to her silken
a,
23').
1
waxen. Baby
mothers
breast.
Ten., Locksley Hall, 90. The gentleman in the ample white cravat and shirt-frill is Mr. Riley, a gentleman with a waxen complexion and fat hands. G. Eliot, Mill, Ch. Ill, 8. The gait was feeble, the bearing had lost all itserectness; the bronzed strength of the face had given place to a waxen and omnious pallor. Mrs. Ward,
Rob. Elsm.,
wooden.
II,
175.
Mr. F.
W. Dunn complained
in
of the
by well-taught pupils
III.
examination
-)
Also some
Note. 27
Fijn
material
See also 8,
c,
has been at great pains to ff.) material nouns and material adjectives
of metre and rhythm.
the
is
diamond. From
Ten.,
I
green
rivage
many
fall
Of diamond
V.
rillets
musical.
gold.
Henry Esmond
(Trol.
h a c
k.
Ch. V, 131).
The
her temples. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., I, 152. little gold curls on (Compare: Her hair had lost the original gold, which had dazzled the eyes of the poor defunct baroness. Dor. Gerard, Eternal Woman, Ch. XIX.)
iron.
Longfellow
in
Norm.
Bar.,
VII.
He The
felt
loss
as
much
as
it
was
his
anything but a province or a battle. Mac, Fred., 696a. iron hand is not less irresistible because it wears a velvet glove. O. W. Holmes, Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, Ch. VII, 65a. I have known him presume upon his iron strength until he has fainted from
pure inanition. N o r w. B u
i
1
Con. Doyle,
d. in
all
of the
old
pinchbeck.
silver.
Where
these pinchbeck
its
agricultural virtue in
purity?
find
II,
tlje
12.
He was
a cynic!
with
its
silver hair.
You might read it writ In that broad brow crowned Shirley Brooks (Trol., Thack., Ch. I, 59).
|
velvet.
Where dew
velvet grass.
lies long upon the flower, Though vanished from Scott, Bridal of Triermain, Intro d., I.
the
Here
we may
in
(= Dutch
bruine beuk).
was
greater than
IV. In
it
older
is
material adjectives
in the
now
azurn. Thick-set with agate and the azurn sheen Milton , C o m u s 893.
,
Of
turkis blue
and emerald
Murray,
s.
v.
silken.
*)
Wendt
15.
IN
11
W. Morris
the
carven
XI.
of
a cedarn cabinet.
Id.
Ge
the
r.
and
En.,
136.
These
sound
louder than
silvern
notes of the
tuneful
choir.
136a.
Aspen from asp, now almost forgotten, and linen, from Old English have practically lost their adjectival character. There's a dance of leaves in that aspen bower. W. C. Bryant, The Glad,
ness of Nature,
V. Adjectives
in
IV.
-en
found
are sometimes, especially in poetry and the higher in meanings differing materially from those referred
In some melodious plot beechen. Thou light-winged Dryad of the trees Of beechen green, and shadows numberless, Singest of summer in fullthroated ease. Keats Ode to a Nightingale, I. When beechen buds begin to swell. Bryant, The Yellow Violet, I. There's a titter of winds in that beechen tree. Id. The Gladness of
,
Nature.
birchen.
way.
,
He saw your steed, a dappled gray, Lie dead beneath the birchen Scott, Lady, I, XXIII. He pass'd where Newark's stately tower Looks out from Yarrow's birchen bower. Id. Lay, I n t r o d. 1. 28,
| |
Boyhood sheds its flood of birchen tears. Frazer's Mag. 1 ). But, alas! as his school increased in numbers, he had proportionately recanted these honourable and anti-birchen ideas. Lytton, Caxtons, II, Ch. I, 29.
brazen.
oaken.
On windy
wood
VI.
[etc.].
Some material adjectives and nouns may be used to modify colour adverbially, the two words being often hyphened.
ashen.
In
I
names
of
a
,
cloud
,
it
But an ashen-gray
delight.
Ten.,
Maud,
vi
iii.
XII, 336.)
Ah me, my dear, it seems gold(en). golden brown, and the cheeks as fresh as roses. Thack., Virg., Ch. XCII, 991. His beard and moustache were golden-yellow. Buchanan That Winter
,
Night,
Ch.
Ill
34.
Quince. A fruit and the tree that bears it, now widely cultivated, the fruit being golden yellow and much used in making preserves. Annandale, Cone. Diet. From the refulgent feathers of its head arises an upright crest of bare
.
.
shafted
plumes expanding
at
golden green, shot with blue. ii. A sudden splendour from behind Flushed all the leaves with rich goldgreen. Ten., Rec. of the Ar. Nights, VIII.
|
tops into webs, forming a crown of rich Westm. Gaz., No. 5329, 5a.
their
Murray
s. v.
birchen.
12
silver.
'
CHAPTER
XXIII, 7.
silver-green with gnarled bark.
Hard
All
Ten.,
VII. In
Mar
na
IV.
such collocations as chord glottis, cartilage glottis the adnominal noun is loosely thought of as a substance-indicating word.
VIII.
The
ashy.
suffix
-y
sometimes has approximately the same force as the 173. See also Sweet, N. E. Gr.,
that
By peaks
brine
in
|
flamed
or
all
in
shade
Gloom'd
and
quivering
With ashy
Obs.
I, ji.)
rains.
Ten.,
The Voyage,
(Compare:
,
ashen shower
Margaret tottering back towards him with palms extended piteously as it for help, and ashy cheek, and eyes fixed on vacancy. Ch. Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. XXIII, 88. (Compare: ashen hue in Obs. II.)
In In woodland cottages with barky walls, barky. In bright alcoves, noisome cells of the tumultuous towns Mothers haye clasped with joy the new-born babe. Bryant, An Evening Reverie, 17.
I |
feathery. Rather a childish beauty, though, with large clear blue eyes, and pale golden ringlets, that fall in a feathery shower over her throat and shoulders. Miss Brad., Lady Audley's Secret, I, Ch. Ill, 50.
leavy.
(leavy
silky.
Now
Thy
,
Macb.,
care.
V, 6, /
Mod. Engl,
silky
mane
braided once,
Must be another's
Mrs. Car.
Norton
The Arab
to his
Horse.
I ,
waxy. Pen's healthy red face, fresh from the gallop, compared oddly with the waxy debauched little features of Foker's chum. P e n d. Thack.
, ,
waxen complexion
in
Obs.
II.)
Also the Romance suffix -ous sometimes forms material adjectives. At the other end they (sc. the vocal chords) are fixed to two movable 17. cartilaginous bodies. Sweet, Phonetics,
IX.
It
is
hardly
is
of
the ,preposition
modified
of or are
i.
necessary to observe that also a word-group consisting noun placed after the noun of (sometimes in) frequently used to indicate the substance that things consist
made
of.
Chests in oak or walnut, looking with their strange carvings of palm branches and cherubs' heads, like types of the Hebrew ark. Jane Eyre, Ch. XI, 125.
lb.
Ch.
XXXI
440.
,
ii.
There was not one modern piece of furniture save a brace of workboxes and a lady's desk in rosewood. lb. Ch. XXIX 422. The summerhouse aloft That open'd on the pines with doors of glass.
,
Ten.,
I,
n,
1.40.
Such a word-group all but regularly replaces the material adjective or equivalent noun in the function of nominal part of the predicate or of predicative adnominal adjunct. Ch. XXVIII, la.
boat with two figures in it floated on the Thames, between Southwark Bridge which is of iron, and London Bridge which is of stone. Dick., Our Mut. Friend", I, Ch. I, 1.
In
also
these
word-groups with of
IN
13
of great heart, and nerves of iron, was kept in thraldom by the ancestors of the Orsini. Lytton, Ri e n z i, I, Ch, V, 41. In this small woman's frame was a will of iron. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 484, 1946.
8.
use of the second class of quality-expressing nouns is due to the ever active propensity of the human mind to trace resemblances among the varied objects of creation. Thus a tree that is as tall
as a giant will be described as a giant tree, one as stunted as a dwarf as a dwarf tree. Here follow some instances of:
a) attributive
The
booby.
boy.
booby brother
of
mine
I,
that
was sent
to sea
Congreve
2 (208).
The
affords a cheap
following them (sc. the military) about, and jesting with them, and innocent amusement for the boy population. Pickw., Ch. II.
for
darling.
She was
rescuing
the
Times.
despot. Last week came one to the county town, To preach our poor little army down, And play the game of the despot kings. Ten., Maud,
|
|
I,
x,
ii.
with
thicket,
Robin
Hood,
A
139
(Qruno Series).
Sketch -Bk.,
is
neighbouring brook
quite a
Wash. Irving,
gentleman. He
giant.
gentleman
,
G. Eliot, Mill,
,
|
I,
Ch.
VII.
And
|
whole
Of,
Talking
Huge
Kingsley
,
and round me play'd And sang to me the those three stanzas that you make About my "giant bole". Ten., Oak., XXXIV.
here
she came
thorni
cacti
t
like
Wes
I
w.
Ho!,
...
Ch.
grandfather.
have
a grandfather-clock.
sitting
Wes
m.
G a z.
45.
hang-dog.
idiot. the
Mr. Boxer,
opposite
in
a hang-dog fashion
eyed them
W. W.Jacobs,
Odd
,
Craft, B,
lowest and
This sweet and graceful courtship becomes a licentious intrigue of least sentinrental kind between an impudent London rake
Mac, Restoration,
I
579a.
|
weep
if
shriek
if
a Hungary fail?
Or
Ten.,
Maud,
,
iv,lviii.
maiden.
blight
and
free.
Wordsw.
Sonn.
Extinct.
Venet. Repub.
yet
He had not as
fleshed
his
maiden sword.
L.
Ritchie,
Wand, by
XI.
Id.
,
Seine,
15
1).
,
A maiden
There was no blood upon her maiden robes. Ten. The Poet, to me is given Such hope I know not fear. knight
|
Sir
Galahad,
J
1.
61.
Murray,
s.
v.
maiden.
14
CHAPTER
The congregation can never be
XXIII, 8.
Barch.
Tow.,
It
Ch. XXIII,
half
195.
is
nearly
Daily Tel.,
I
found the
maiden
soil.
Archaeol. Cantiana,
XII, 8>)-
The
on her maiden trip to the new steamship sailed from Plymouth Antipodes. Times (weekly ed.) 1884, 31 Oct. 19/41). Macaulay's maiden speech in the House of Commons was delivered in that No. 5625 4c. cause. e s t m. G a z. Macaulay himself preferred the speech we reprinted as more powerful and lb. effective than his maiden effort.
rival.
He
lives
at
some
,
near him.
Wash.
Irv.
Sketch-Bk.
distance from the main road without any rival gentry Christ m. Eve, 85a.
,
school-boy.
friends.
to
eight
school-boy
snob. There may be a snob king, a snob parson, a snob member of Parliament, a snob grocer, tailor, goldsmith, and the like. Trol., Thack. 83. Ch. II
, ,
spitfire.
little
which alternately mystified and enraged a Marcella Boyce. Mrs. Ward, Marcella, I, Ch. I, 8.
airs,
literary
circles
was whether
i t.
Wo
v.
d. at length
this
routed
Wash.
Rip.
Winkle.
Adelaide grew first into consequence through the Burra Burra coppermine a hill of virgin metal which was brought there by see and smelted. Froude Oceana, Ch. VI 82. Wicken Fen is about the only piece of virgin fenland left in England. Times.
, ,
b)
attributive
of animals.
fault.
bugbear.
halcyon.
Sedley.
Indiscretion
XII, 221.
friend
Amelia
T h a c k.
Ch.
98.
monster.
The mighty
mastiffs,
the
monster cats,
III
tower-like
men and
women
I
(sc. of
Brobdingnag).
Jane Eyre, Ch
19.
have attended the monster performances at Sydenham. Times. Monster meeting of Hindus and Mohammedans. lb. ( mass meeting: In the evening Mr. Chamberlain addressed a mass-meeting in the Free-trade Hall. lb.)
c)
attributive
of things.
Trol.
,
bubble.
The main
Thack.;
Many
Ch. so dote
66.
upon
IV,
bubble world,
Queen Mary,
buckram.
They
Ten.,
3 (6316).*
The English ladies with their confounded buckram airs, and the squires with their politics after dinner, send me to sleep. Thack., Pend. , I Ch. XXV, 269. ,
It
common-place.
I
history that
had forgotten
to
tell
Mrs. Craik,
John
')
Murray,
s.
v.
maiden.
IN
15
feel called upon as a parent to fulfil any expectations which Dick's youthful cupboard love had unintentially excited. F. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 381.
father to
fancy. This anxiety never degenerated into a monomania, pay fancy prices for giants. Mac, Fred., 664a.
like that
featherweight.
She
was
tall
woman
E.
W.
Hornung,
feint.
No Hero,
Ch
IV.
a feigned attack.
Times.)
himself in a
game. He conducted
game
Bleak House,
gift. Gift bread chokes in a man's throat. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XXXVI, 353. Do not look a gift horse in the mouth. P r o v.
Dick.
1 1 1
Dorr
t.
I ,
Ch.
2b.
bluff,
his
story
in
English Fiction,
mock. But
the
W.J. Dawson,
The Makers
135.
of
mock
mockery trial, mockery. Many, being subjected Southey, Wat Tyler (Brewer, Handbook.). old world. As if the folks at Fubsby's could not garnish dishes
leigh, with her stupid, old-world devices of laurel-leaves,
Gash-
Thack.
pattern.
lady.
A little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VI, A little formal but nothing that might not be
,
,
sent to a pattern
young
Dick.
Bleak House,
And
the
Ch. LXIII
|
523.
to side.
pendulum.
Rossetti
,
pendulum spider
I,
Christ. Georg.
Summer (Rainbow,
,
sham. This young lady was not able a sham enthusiasm a sham hatred
Trol.
,
to carry out
,
any emotion
,
had
sham
love
sham
sham
grief.
Thack.,
In
II.
Ch.
IV, 3.
|
sheet.
Ten.,
The Poet's
Mind,
surplus.
If
population.
they Ch
would
r
i
rather die,
I.
do
it,
m. Car.,
trumpery. His
active
10 and a trumpery was confined to giving him W. Gunnyon Biogr. Sketch of Burns, 46. my lady's maid of somewhat vinegar aspect and flaunting
friendship
G.Eliot,
Scenes,
II,
Ch.
II
,"
95.
Note.
place of adjectives in -y, which chestnut. Mr. Martyn shook the reins, and the sturdy chestnut cob the direction of Mount Stanning. Miss Brad., Lady Audley's
Ch.
Ill
,
of quality-expressing attributive nouns are a colour. (7, Obs. III.) They supply the these nouns are incapable of forming,
trotted off in
Secret,
(etc.).
II,
50.
ebony. Then
hazel.
All
this
my
the
sad
Poe,
1.
The Raven,
the
VIII.
spirit
Ten.,
Locks
Hall., 28.
16
CHAPTER
mahogany. of mahogany
Fancy Ch. XXI
,
XXIII,
810.
and a dozen
as that.
lb.
Better
she,
my
dear,
mahogany charmer
mulberry.
raven.
Let
berry indescribables.
her
,
Mr. Trotter gave four distinct slaps on the pockets of his mulPickw. Ch. XVI, 141.
,
air.
Matthew Arnold
95.
I
Compare
the
And on
snowy pillow
lb., I,
9.
The English language is singularly free in the attributive employment of nouns of the third group, especially of names of persons. Thus the noun orphan may stand attributively before boy, girl,
child, cousin, nephew, niece, son, daughter, etc., while the use of
wees in the same function in compounds is practically to weesjongen, weesmeisje and wees kind.
confined
Sometimes the two nouns merely denote two different functions, uses, etc. that are combined in one and the same person or thing. In this case the order in which the two nouns are placed need
is
not necessarily be a fixed one, although it is mostly but one that in practical use. Thus in warrior bard, bookseller importer, restaurant hotel, the order might be reversed. Also these attributive nouns
may be
distinguished into:
a) such as denote persons: the beggar maid (Ten.), his brother volunteers. his clergyman cousin, a young fisher lad, one of the hostage ladies (Mc Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. IV, 56), a Jew curiosity-dealer (Mrs. Ward. Rob. Elsm.), a Jew girl (Henry Esm. I, Ch. IX, 93), her kinsman
,
a maiden lady (lb., Ch. Ill, 100), the merchant princes of the City (Newc. I, Ch. IV, 140), the minstrel boy (Thom. Moore), the minstrel wench (Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXI, 322),
lover (Trol.,
Thack.,
Ch. V,
134),
his old-maid sisters, orphan pupils, his philosopher friend, a slave woman (Lecky), the stranger lad (Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. I), their tradesmen papas, the twin lads (Trol., Thack., Ch. IV, 137), the warrior-bard, a
I,
P.'s
Weekly,
two
b)
such as denote animals: the parent bird sumpter poneys, a Terrier puppy.
(111.
London News),
c)
such as denote things: gossip parlance (Ten., Isabel, II), his island home (Reade, Never too late, I, Ch. I, 24), the laurel shrub (Ten., Th|e Poet's Mind), a morality play (Rev. of Rev., CC, 206), prose
fiction, a specimen copy, a toy
watch (Trol.,
Thack.,
Ch. V,
134).
10.
Obs.
I.
above function.
In the old king's time we would have given a thousand for you, when he had his giant regiment that our present monarch disbanded.
Thack.
Barry Lyndon,
of the
class.
Ch. V, 79.
at
Cliff
Some
proportion
girls
the
tradesmen
Mrs. Ward,
Marcella,
IN
17
of
Trol.
T h a c k.
Ch. V,
135.
III.
by the nouns man (gentleman), woman cow etc. when placed before other nouns Ch. XXVII, 13, b and c.
IV.
Sometimes the adnominal noun in its ordinary application denotes a person, the noun modified a thing or animal.
Here
is
,
Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXVI
11.
335a.
names
to denote qualities (5, d) are names of of geographical bodies. They may be further
distinguished into:
fixed
ever
i.
epithets,
is
Gladstone bag,
boots,
Hansom
cab, Louis
XVI
chairs,
Pullman
cars,
Wellington
leather,
ii.
India
rubber,
Skye b)
terrier,
Turkey carpets.
accidental
Society
epithets:
owes some worthy qualities in many of her members to mothers of the Dodson class. G. Eliot, Mill, IV, Ch. I, 250. A conspicuous quality in the Dodson character was its genuineness. lb. In fact he (sc. Lord Dalmeny) was a Gladstone and not a Chamberlain
free-trader.
Speech. 1 )
that of Swift himself.
Fr. Harrison.
*)
of
course,
is
be understood to have
more prominent. This is, for example, the case in: China pigs have been esteemed a luxury all over the East from the remotest Ess. of Elia, Dissertation periods that we read of. Ch. Lamb
,
(255).
the
common-case
nouns are
They
may be
roughly divided into: a) such as may also be expressed by genitives, especially when classifying in nature. Ch. XXIV, 7; 5256. The relation may be:
1)
one
*
of possession, origin or agency: The Bishop ran off with more than youthful
agility to
States Minister.
In fact
Thack.
as the
monarch spoke,
Douglas
appointment
,
Court
Steph.
Gwenn
Thorn. Moore,
We
i)
Times.
H.
English.
II.
18
***
CHAPTER
XX1I1, 12.
Much admirable pioneer work has been accomplished. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII 2176. This involves Ihe abandonment of all contentious legislation and concentration on non-party measures of social and administrative reform. lb., CCXXX, 103a.
,
2)
of subjection to some action: taste for baby-worship. Trol., baby. He had not, perhaps, any natural B a r c h. Tow., Ch. XLIV, 398. There is a divinity student lately come among us. Oliver Wend.
one
divinity.
Breakfast Table,
Ch.
9a.
Government.
Truth,
rose.
tariff.
It
He shared
is
one more
Rev.
Note. In the following quotations the attributive noun equivalent to a pleonastic genitive (Ch. XXIV, 21):
In
is
almost
1862
is
she
married
Cross.
It
Trol.,
Th a c k.
a Thackeray cousin, a young officer with the Victoria Ch. I, 4. (= a cousin of Thackeray's.) ,
word.
not easy to read a Roosevelt Message to Congress without using a bad Saturday Review. (= a message of Roosevelt's, or a message
R.)
from
b)
in
apposition or a noun
Wash.
Irv.,
marriage. He naturally looks for happiness in the marriage state. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch XX, 113. The two bills introduced by women are for raising the marriage age from fifteen to eighteen years. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 1616. Of the same nature are the adnominal nouns in:
Mr. Wapshot laid bare to
Brough transaction.
If
me all the baseness of Mr. Smithers's Sam. Titmarsh, Ch. XIII, 182.
conduct
in the
Captain Sinclair had not had a three thousand majority at his back in 1906, he would have had to whistle for his peerage. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 1046.
c)
such as
may
a
also be expressed
by an
attributive
adnominal adjunct
preposition other than specializing of. Although as to their grammatical function these adjuncts are adnominal, yet they are adverbial in import. chance. The red-room was very seldom slept in, might say never, indeed,
containing
a chance influx or visitors at Gateshead Hall rendered it necessary to turn to account all the accommodation it contained. Jane Eyre, Ch. II, 9.
unless
I
when
found out by some chance expression that he was attending some meeting. Ch. Kinosley Alt. Locke, Ch. VI , 68. A chance acquaintance may develop faster than one brought about by formal
,
introduction.
Johnston's Son,Ch.
more
just
V.
China.
trade.
Nowhere have
complaints been
than
in
the
China
Times.
IN
19
pine because Her Majesty looks cold Ch. XV, 291. (= Dutch: dames aan for which the English has lady-in-waiting
II,
who
or maid-of-honour.)
cripple.
for
the
Rev.,
parlours the Ragged School Union pioneered the way now provided by the County Councils. Rev. of
Devonshire.
His forbears
have been
Devonshire
men
for centuries.
i t.
World.
emergency. All these things are admittedly emergency measures. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVII, 401a. farewell. He spent the 40 /. on a farewell supper to eight school-boy
friends.
I,
16.
|
kindred.
And
is
still
.
We
title
dear.
Scott,
life.
It
Marm.
VI,
In trod.
896.
iv.
Crown
Every one admits that the native question is the most dangerous of all the questions with which the new legislators
Id.,
difficult
and
will
have to
part. Trol.,
CXCV, He wrote
2296.
for
the
I,
Constitutional,
14.
of
Thack.,
Ch.
surprise.
bank on Tuesday afternoon. Daily Mail. university. He had had a university education.
Ch.
Ill
,
Henry Esmond,
HI,
334.
d) such
as
may
also
be expressed by a noun
in the function of
predicative adnominal adjunct of the first kind (Ch. VI, 1): maiden. Have you heard her maiden name? Miss Brad., Lady Audley's
Secret,
II,
Ch.
Ill,
50.
(=
Dutch:
meisjesnaam.)
to
schoolboy. It has never been my fortune boy days. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. I, 10.
my school-
student. No novel indeed is half so delightful as that picture ... of the student life enjoyed together for a few short months by the inseparable friends,
lb.
,
Ch.
II
22.
13.
Obs.
I.
Owing
to
to the absence of the preposition or any other indicate the particular kind of relation, the attributive is often unsettled in meaning. Thus a corner kick might a kick aimed at the corner, but also a kick discharged
word
noun
mean from
the
corner.
Similarly
the
at least three
meanings,
Huxley, Huxley.
as
by Huxley, the lecture about the lecture as one of a series of lectures instituted by
viz.: the lecture delivered
This indistinctness is not, however, such a serious drawback on the first blush would appear, ambiguity being mostly precluded by established usage, which has usually attached a fixed meaning to a given word-group, or by the connections, which make it quite clear what is meant. Thus to those
20
interested
in the
CHAPTER
game
XXIII, 13.
of football,
a corner
kicjc
exclusively
means a
kick discharged from the corner. On the other hand the fact that there
necessarily
attaches
rendering it occasion arises. Compare mud-guard with dress-guard; letter-carrier with frame-carrier (= carrier attached to the frame of a cycle) and carrier attached to the cycle). cycle-carrier (
II.
is not a fixed meaning which noun, has the advantage of capable of expressing almost any shade of meaning as
to
the
attributive
cases nouns, though primarily indicating some relation, mark by implication some quality. Thus an every-day occurrence means primarily an occurrence that happens every day, but may also denote an occurrence of a nature that it may be expected every day,
In
many
also
i.e.
/?)
air cold
a common occurrence. Similarly night air= a) air during the night, and bleak as the air during the night is apt to be. Further
hours.
lb.,
V, Ch.
II,
285.)
Sometimes such a noun passes almost entirely into a quality-expressing word. Compare home question, home truth, home thrust in which home has the meaning of searching, pointed with Home Office, home
trade.
Further instances
may be
struggle
III.
(Wolseley
in certain combinations expresses a relation, in others a quality as referred to in 5b and discussed in 8. Thus mountain is a relation-expressing word in mountain air, and mountain goats; it is a quality-expressing word in a man
of mountain stature.
Thus mountain
very
IV.
tall trees.
trees
Some collocations are, consequently, ambiguous. may mean trees growing in the mountain, and
also infant school with infant colony.
Compare
As some
above instances show, a relation-expressing attributive noun is often modified by a word or word-group. Frequently two or more nouns or other words, sometimes forming fragmentary sentences,
of the
are
The following
are in-
Preferential trade proposals (Times), long-distance trains (ib.), an everyday occurrence (Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIII, 169a), a secondhand piece of old stores (Dick. Bleak House, Ch. XXXIV, 293).
,
ii.
iii.
iv.
(Bradley), Church of England children House of Commons debate (Bradley). The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (Bradley), a life-and-death struggle (Wolseley, the Young Napoleon, Ch. II), Nursery Rhymes with original pen and ink drawings (Books for the Bairns, III). The Marriage with a Deceased Wife's Sister Bill. Times.
Church
of England
a
principles
(Times),
v.
Tom
I
Tom Brown,
II,
(was) equipped in his go-to-meeting roof, as his new friend called it. I Ch. 1 85. want her to have delicious do-nothing days. G. Ei.iot, Mill, VI, Ch.
,
,
352.
furniture.
Knock-down
Daily Mail.
IN
21
V.
am a lazy, good-for-nothing fellow. Miss Brad., Lady Audley's Secret, II Ch. HI 49. Sometimes a word-group with an adnominal noun is in its turn used adnominally with another noun, or, contrariwise, an adnominal noun serves to modify a word-group containing an adnominal noun. trade union leaders (Times), the London County Council (Bradley), the Marriage Law Amendment Act (id.), the Public Works Loans Bill (Times), the United Kingdom Tea Company (111. L o n d. News), the University of London school-leaving certificate (Mod. Lang. Quart.), the Times War Correspondent (Times), a livery stable
,
Labour
CXCIV,
1396.
is
The following
"Bishop's Barchester Young Men's Lecture-Room." Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. X, 73.
relation-expressing adnominal noun may be used as the base of a derivative. Thus trade unionist has been formed from
trade union, temperance reformer from temperance reform: a staunch teetotaler and temperance reformer. R e v. o f R e v., CXCV, 309a.
VII.
Very frequent is the use of gerunds as adnominal words, as in: Ch. XII, 224), dancingboarding schools calling-time (Mrs. Gask., Cranf. No. 5255, 4c), housing reform master, housing conditions (West. Gaz.
,
(Rev.
of Rev.,
CCXIII,
227),
the
living
conditions of British
workmen
(Westm. Gaz., No. 5255), marking ink, retiring room (James Payn, Glowworm Tales, I, A, 15), sinking fund, training college, trying-on room
(Walt. Bes. All Sorts and Cond. of Men, Ch. XXV, 178) visitingday (Goldsm., Vic, Ch. XII), waiting woman, withdrawing-room (James Payn,
,
,
Glow-Worm
Tales,
I,
A,
11).
ing may, apparently with equal justice, be regarded as a present participle used metonymically. Sweet (N. E. Gr., illness in which the patient falls), 2338) mentions falling sickness ( dying day, parting glass, sleeping draught as instances of word-groups (or compounds) in which the first element is a present participle,
in
basing his interpretation chiefly on the fact that they are pronounced with even stress. This looks like mistaking cause for effect, and, moreover, seems to apply indubitably only to the first. Dying-day may certainly be understood as the day on which a person dies, but parting glass and sleeping draught seem severally to stand for glass taken at parting and draught taken for sleeping or to induce sleep, i. e. they seem to be gerund formations. Further instances of doubtful formations are: leaving book (Symonds,
reforming days (Times), retiring pension (Mac, working man (Rev. of Re v.). In the following word-groups (or compounds), on the other hand, the verbal seems to be an indubitable participle: circulating library (Riv. Ch. IV, 52), flying literature 1,2), fighting men (Mc Carthy, S h o r t H s t. (Trol., Thack., Ch. VII, 165), flying visit (G. Eliot, Mid., 280), hanginglamps (Thack., A little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VII, 334), leading article repeating rifles (Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 254o), standing army.
15),
7226)
22
VIII. Attributive
CHAPTER
nouns
in the
XXIII, 13.
common
their
case
apt to form
a) the
individuality,
special
sense
the combination give up some of their often attended by their expressing a more they would convey when detached. Thus in
backbone the ideas conveyed by back and bone are not distinctly separated in the mind, and the word has a more special sense than the word-group back bone.
b)
the head-word loses some of its stress. when such a sentence as The backbone the human body is read out loud.
is the chief
Compare
also school-house
school house
Thus
also in the following quotation the adnominal noun does not form a compound with the noun standing after it: The house standing in the valley was somewhat better than the ordinary parsonage houses of the day. G. E. Mitton ,Jane Austen and her Times, Ch. I, 12.
For further information about the nature of compounds as compared with combinations in which the first element is merely an adnominal
noun, see also Bradley, The Making of Engl., Ch. and Murray, N. E. D., General Explanations, 23.
IX.
II,
66;
According to the degree in which the two nouns are considered to have lost their individuality, they are written without a break, w.ith a hyphen, or as separate words. As this loss must appear in different degrees to different persons, we do not find anything approaching to uniformity in the spelling of compounds. Here follow some compounds:
a) with
some
special
meaning:
light-house,
collar-bone,
day-star,
land-slip, turning-lathe.
b)
moon-light,
X.
It
is
of
hardly necessary to observe that the relations of the first noun compound to the second are in the main the same as those
expressed by the more independent attributive noun; i. e. they may be: a) such as are also expressed by a noun in the genitive: bedside, churchyard, day-star, sun-beam, man-slayer, peace-maker; b) such as are also expressed by a noun in apposition or a noun
c)
preceded by specializing of: oaktree; such as are also expressed by an attributive adnominal adjunct containing a preposition other than specializing of: inkstand, teaspoon, bushranger.
XI. Also
compounds are often vague in meaning. Thus fireman may a) one who attends to a furnace or the fire of a steam-engine and /?) one who is employed to extinguish fires. Similarly a waterplant might mean a plant growing in the water, or a plant growing
mean
near the water, or, on the analogy of water-melon , we might suppose it to mean a plant containing a great deal of moisture, and perhaps 1559. growing in a comparatively dry place. Sweet, N. E. Gr.
,
IN
23
features in English.
use of nouns presents some remarkable Not only are they found in all the functions which they may have in Dutch, but they are sometimes used to
Also the
predicative
denote a quality or a
i.
relation.
angel, imp. He
is
Trol.
Thack.
Ch.
IV, 109.
choice. She had been afraid he would die a bachelor, he was so very choice. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. VII, 130.
devil.
Your form
is
man's
and
I,
yet
1
You may be
devil.
Byron
The
Deformed transformed,
fool.
(490a).
He was
neither
stolid
nor fool.
John Oxenham
Great-heart
,
Gillian,
Ch. V, 41.
is
God
in
man.
H.
Ten., Bal.
and
Bal.
8.
left
glass. "Is that a fine time?" said the General, with a twinkle in his
eye
Miss
Jackanapes. his hair was gold. Ten. Victim, III. W. Besant By Celia's Arb. I, Ch.
J.
,
,
,
Ewing
I,
2.
,
knave.
31
,
In this business he
fool.
Mas.
Engl.
G r a m. 34
N. G. Farquhar,
*
manners. Whispering, sir, before company, is not manners. The Recruiting officer, III, 1 (289).
partisan. Though the views expressed
are
partisan , that is to say they fairly represent the other side of the question as well as the side to which the author has been led to adhere.
Times.
virgin.
What
,
pure
life
to
is
to be a
Is
it
to
,
have
lofty
aims,
to lead a
IV, 120.
ii.
Budget.
The
Westm. Gaz.,
however,
Budget.
chapel, church. Another place that would have suited her was lost through unconsciously answering that she was chapel. The lady would have nothing in her house but church. G. Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. XXI, 151.
county. The Barfields at least were county, and he wished Woodview remain cdunty as long as the walls held together. lb., Ch. XL VII 322.
,
to
Nonconformist. There are a large number of schools in which the dominant tone and temper are Nonconformist and a large number in which they are Church of England. Times. Nottinghamshire. I hear none (sc. genuine English) but from my valet and he is Nottinghamshire. Byron Letters (Marino Faliero, I, 2
, , ,
(359a)
15.
Obs.
I.
Sometimes the quality or the relation is expressed by a wordgroup, mostly a noun preceded by an adjective (or ordinal numeral) or followed by a prepositional word-group, the whole sometimes forming a kind of unit. i. (eighteenth) century. Mr. Austin Dobson a delightful authority
,
1
).
27.
24
(middle-)class.
excessively
CHAPTER
To
be a
XXIII,
1516.
than one's neighbour
bit better
was considered
Oscar Wilde
capital
An Ideal Hushere.
band,
I.
(capital, good) company. We are Ch. XX. never saw him such good company.
I
company
Pickw.,
Dick.,
a
III.
Cop., Ch.
to
XVIII, 1316.
(good) form.
E.
Is
it
good form
for
lady
drink a glass of
W. Hornuno, No Hero,
il
Ch.
(=zooals
good fun.
is
comme
,
faut.)
His
adventures
are
very
Trol.
Th
ac
k.
(common) knowledge. That Japan needs money Daily Mail. (=algemeen bekend.)
It
common
knowledge.
'
was considered bad manners to put food into the (bad) manners. mouth with the knife. Gunth., L e e r b. matter (-of -fact). I will be busy and cool and matter-of-fact. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake, II, Ch. IV, 77. It all seemed pretty matter-of-fact. Baroness von Hutten, Pam, III,
Ch. VI
,
145.
(Note
(common)place.
He was
of true love did not run smooth, which was also commonplace but which was less ordinary, the barrier to his hopes was not the want of money.
Mary M. Grose
The Lady
of the
Lime Walk
Jerome
,
plaster(-of-Paris). The trout was plaster-of-Paris. men in a Boat, Ch. XVII, 224.
Three
(sound common) sense, good strategy. The building of a golden bridge for the retreat of those whom we wish to evacuate their position is good strategy and sound common sense. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 335a.
ii.
Church.
Trol.,
Framl.
II.
used
to
denote a quality or a
That the
stuff is genuine Thackeray is best proved by sampling it. Acad., No. 1765, 2026. The old man took it for granted that the child could not spell, noYeoland could; and to him, whom she charmed, she was all Yeoland. Baroness von Hutten, Pam, Ch. X, 52. As for "Esmond", it is Addisonian in style certainly, but fortunately not Addison. Truth, No. 1802 826.
,
ii.
Kegan Paul was Eton and Exeter (= an Eton boy, and an Exeter college
undergraduate)
*).
lived
an individualizing adjunct or
16 and 35.
English as well as Dutch predicative nouns when not modified by when not proper names, approximate more or less to adjectives. Den Hertog, Ned. Spraakk., Ill,
i)
IN
25
by
not
their frequently discarding the definite or the indefinite article, only when they denote a quality as in many of the above
etc.),
quotations (i. a. with angel, imp, devil, knave, fool, partisan, but also when they express how a person is related to a person or thing (Ch. XXIV, 36), or when they indicate a state,
For a detailed discussion see or an office, function or station. Ch. XXXI, 45 ft Compare also Ch. XXIV, 36 and Franz, Shak.
Gram. 2
i.
277.
to
Gumbo
bragged ... of the immense wealth was heir. Thack., V r g., Ch. 1 7.
i ,
which he
(sc. his
young master)
ii.
hope you have no intent to turn husband. Much ado, Lord Arran was twice prisoner in the Tower. Henry
I
He was secretary to Mr. A. Mason, Engl. Qram.^, 15, IV. She was daughter to a city tradesman. W. Besant, St. Kath., Ch.
1,
II.
1, 196.III,
Esmond,
,
boy
go
with
us
lest
he prove
traitor.
Lytton
e n z
I ,
Ch.
13.
b)
by
their
being
often
referred
to
by
so.
XXXII, 28.
was altogether a desert to him then, and Bideford, as it turned e s t w. Ho!, Ch. XIV, 119a. out, hardly less so. Ch. Kingsley, We had been friends more so than I have had any occasion to mention in
Alas! Northam
Norris,
My Friend
Jim,
c)
by
their
occasionally
Emile
of degree.
Anglomane.
Ch. V, 77.
is
as Anglomane as ever.
Lord Ormont,
blockhead enough to give fifty per cent sooner than not have presume are rogue enough to take a hundred if you can get it. Sher., School for S c an d. III, 3 (395).
it;
am
churl.
fair features of
the
Viscountess of Castlewood.
fool.
Henry Esm.
27.
off,
r g.
,
I,
Ch. IX,
to
78.
was
marry him.
Sylvia Craven
The Harvest
game.
of Sin,
severely punished.
men were
to
very
game
or
Ch. XXXVII
383.
housekeeper.
things were
all
found
that
know whether
Bleak House,
,
|
iron.
Though aged
Byron,
Few
to
of
with him.
Siege of Corinth,
746.
man. Though
all
know whether
Bleak House,
361. master. He is fully master of the subject. Sweet, N. E. Gr., He soon made himself thoroughly master of its construction and method
of
working.
26
matter-of-fact.
of-fact,
CHAPTER
The
full
XXIII,
16.
story
of
and so
of Dan. Defoe,
partisan.
find
(v.
.
of the shipwrecked sailor was so good sense that to many it was not a d. Voort, Eng. R e ad.-Book, 42.)
natural,
story at
so matterall.
Hist,
Even in*. England it was well-nigh impossible for a statesman to place or a historian to find an audience, unless he were violently partisan.
.
Westm.
rogue.
Ch.
Ill,
I
9c.
;
am
Henry Esmond,
,
III,
344.
was
as starch
as
any
Quakeress.
Thack.
Barry Lyndon,
Note I. The conversion of some quality-expressing nouns into predicative quasi-adjectives is current only when they are connected with enough. Thus the absence of enough entails the use of the indefinite article before
fool,
I
i. e. causes this word to reassume its character as a noun. was a fool to marry you. Sher. School for Scand. III, I (393). If thou hast never been a fool, be sure thou wilt never be a wise man.
,
,
Thack.
(Trol.,
Thack.,
their
Ch.
I,
10.)
Also
being
in the
same grammatical
function may make such quality-expressing nouns capable of discarding the indefinite article. See the instances of fool and knave under 14. II. There is not, of course, anything unusual in the free use of adverbs
of
degree to
modify such words as choice and dainty, which sometimes (4, Obs. II.)
,
that
it
Dick.
Bleak House,
noun may be
III.
When
the
adverb of degree
is
more,
the predicative
As for the English settlers they are more Boer than the Boers. Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 1476. Still more fool shall appearBy the time linger here. Merch. of Ven., II, 9, 73. After all this man is more hero than scoundrel. Thack. Barry Lyndon. The mining and industrial vote in Charleroi and Liege will be even more Socialist than it was two years ago. e s t m. G a z. .
1
Being more
formed, better educated, and, though the youngest except Retty, either, she perceived that only the slightest ordinary care was necessary for holding her own in Angel Clare's heart against these her candid friends. Hardy, Tess, III, Ch. XXI, 176.
finely
IV. The terminational comparative of a predicative noun seems to be very rare, and to be used chiefly for humorous effect, except, of course, of such a word as dainty.
The sweet perfumed double yellow Wallflower is much dwarfer than the old wellknown yellow. Garden. ) The doctor's friend was in the positive degree of hoarseness, puffiness, red-faced1
ness, all-fours, tobacco, dirt, and brandy; the doctor puffier, more red-faced, more all-foury, tobaccoer Little Dorrit, Ch. VI, 31a.
,
in the
comparative
hoarser,
Dick.,
dirtier
and brandier.
Murray,
s. v.
dwarf, B,
1.
IN
27
occasionally
giving
up the distinctions
number and
must, however, be remembered that many masculine nouns have a tendency of being used as nouns of common gender. Ch. XXVII, 14, Obs. VI.
i.
rest
18.
assured
Jul.
They turned Christian. Rudy. Kipl., Plain Tales, 11. The casualties on our side are believed to amount to 350, among which must be reckoned some 220 officers and men taken prisoner. Morning Leader.
ii.
My
wife
was
The ordinary
i.
practice,
in
however, is to make such nouns exhibit number most connections is unusual in Dutch.
were fools enough to bring up another body's child. S t o r. B 73. They are not fools enough ... to believe that they cannot get the Budget without destroying the Lords. Sat. Rev. (Westm. Gaz. No. 5185, 18c.)
that
And we
,
Mrs. Craik
D o m.
gambler.
master.
Carnatic.
Mac
Pitt, 2886.
at
Let
World.
lb.,
Its
us be masters of the Channel for six hours, and IV, 821. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X,
we
Epil.,
Ch. X,
842.
Upper Canada.
lb.,
Both
make
in their
own
household.
Westm. Gaz.,
at
,
No. 5231,
16.
prisoner. imprisoned in Newgate. Scott, Wav. At least we would not have been taken prisoners. Ch. XIV, 271.
After
Henry Esmond,
II.
Morn-
we have
stranger.
They
are
equal
strangers to opulence
and poverty.
traitors.
Goldsm.
Vic,
IV
,
Ch. IV.
traitor.
When
In
Macb.,
4.
victim.
left
the
affair will, of
course, be
doubtless co-operate.
ii.
become
victims, will
Well, Julia, you are your own mistress. Sher. Riv., I, 2 (218). Mary, she was mistress enough of herself to whisper to Elizabeth [etc.]. Pride and Prej. Jane Austen As to tobacco she was perfect mistress of the subject. Dick., Crick., I, 34. England was sole mistress of the seas. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X,
mistress.
for
As
IV, 828.
28
In real life
CHAPTER
XXIII,
1617.
Marcella would probably before long have been found trying to a mode of warfare of which In her demon moods she was past mistress. Mrs. Ward, Marc, I, Ch. I, 11. It is next to impossible to be mistress in two antithetical genres. Times. She was mistress of Danish, German, English and French. lb.
kick his shins
e)
by
their sometimes requiring either that or which as relative pronouns, even when they are the names of persons, who being impossible in referring to qualities. For full details see Ch. XXXIX, 4.
i.
* Sir Anth. Though he wa'n't the indulgent father that I am, Jack. Abs. I dare say not, sir. Sher., Riv. III, 1 (241). I vain fool that I have been. Ch. have encouraged him too much
,
Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. IV, 18a. ** A minute ago, the boy had looked the quiet, mild, dejected creature that harsh treatment had made him. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. VI. 69.
ii.
John
I.
is
a soldier, which
should also
like to be.
Bain, H. E. Gr.
36.
17. Obs.
Some
quality-expressing predicative nouns assume so completely the character of adjectives that they may be followed by a pure
St.
prepositional object. Roman's Well is almost absolutely virgin of fact. Saintsb., Nineteenth Cent., Ch. Ill , 133. (= devoid of fact.)
IF.
When
a word is freely used both as an adjective and a pure noun, as is the case with many names of political or religious denominations (Ch. XXIX, 6), the English language mostly treats it as a noun, when it is used predicatively. Thus we mostly find: He is a Liberal, a Conservative, etc.; a Protestant a Roman Catholic , etc.; a captive,
,
a lunatic,
,
etc.
etc.;
Roman
,
Catholics,
Mrs.
etc.;
captives,
II
,
Ward
David Grieve,
,
92.
Roman
of the population are Protestants and about one Catholics. Cassell's Cone. Cycl., s. v. Russia.
is
ii.
The
1
principal
Christian.
half
Sher.,
heathen.
III,
(389).
,
Fair Maid,
Ch.
Catholic communities have, since that time become infidel and become Catholic again but none has become Protestant. Mac. , Popes, 563a. (In this quotation the context renders the form
chosen obligatory.)
The successor
lb.
,
of St. Peter
was
carried
away
562a.
Hist,
Ch.
74.
Thou
art
not Christian.
Ch. Kingsley,
in
With the documents contained in almost fruitless to discuss whether e s t m. G a z. No. 5448 Tory.
this
re ward, Ch. XIII, 59a. volume before us, it seems these days he was Radical or
He
9c.
HI.
To
English
uses
indifferently
IN
29
He was more than half a Frenchman. Mac. Fred., 6836. am a Frenchman, and incapable of fear. Buchanan, That Winter Night,
I
Ch. V, Angelo
I,
ii.
51.
'
Villani
...
is
Lytton
e n z
IV
Ch.
153.
I
Though
Rome,
My
father
was
Irish
Boulanger, as
Lit.
then must be known to me lb. IV, Ch. I, 155. on his mother's side. Ann. Bes. Autobiog. 13. well known, is English or rather Welsh on his mother's side.
name
World.
live in
English.
Jesp.
and Sarauw,
II,
CHAPTER XXIV.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
FORM.
1.
's
or
'
to the
common-case form.
in
'
all
than
,
s,
take
's.
All
any
only.
John's book, the miller's horse, Thomas's slate; the children's toys, geese's legs;
the boys'
books
Also
French
the apostrophe:
is
Farquhar.
Note.
is
The
syllabic, i.e.
in
a sibilant,
2.
i.e. either
As
sibilant,
the formation of the genitive of singular nouns ending in a usage is not always in conformity with the general rule. a4 Sweet, N. E. Gr., 175; 998; Mason, Engl. Gram. ,
to
Stof., Taalst., IV, 53; Horace Hart, itors and Readers, Appendix III.
a) Before the mostly take
word sake
's:
now
H.
E.
Bronte, Shirley, I, Ch. IV, 67), for acquainGr. 136), for appearance's sake (Barry Pain,
,
Culm. Point.)
omission of the s, whether or not with the apostrophe retained, is not uncommon:
But
i.
for appearance sake (Ten. Queen Mary, II, (5956) for conscience sake (Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XV, 125a), for convenience sake (Escott, Engl., Ch. II, 17), for old acquaintance sake (Sweet, N. E. Gr., 998).
,
, (
ii.
Pirate,
from
(Dick., Uncom. Trav. , Ch. Ill, 28; Scott, Ch. XXXIX, 432), for fairness' sake (W. Morris, Nowhere, Ch. XXVIII, 210), for goodness' sake (Jerome, Idle
News
Thoughts,
IV,
63.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
31
Note.
the
I.
In older
('s)
genitive
This practice
English it was quite usual to suppress the mark of in the case of nouns not ending in a sibilant. became obsolete about the middle of the 19th century.
also
Rosalynde,
,
,
in Pref. to
As you like
in Clar.
Press
20.
,
,
For sport sake. H e n r y IV A II 1 77. For fashion sake As you like it, III, 2, 236. For form sake. Sher. R v. II 1 (230).
, i
,
early 19th century sake and its modifier were often connected by a hyphen. Murray, s. v. sake, II. To flatter a man, from whom you can get nothing, ... is doing mischief for
II.
From
the
17th
to
the
mischief-sake.
I
Swift's Let.,
II,
. .
127
.
1).
shall call
Seat.
III.
...
J.H.Newman,
The apostrophe
if
ever,
found wanting
,
after plurals in 5
modifying sake.
The husbands,
Tow.,
sake.
Barch. for their wives' sake, are fain to admit him. Trol. Ch. IV 30. (This) does not endear him to those who do not value him for their souls'
,
lb.
. . .
maintain
certain
amount
of necessary zeal.
Thack.
Ch. 11,25.
As
to
recommended by
,
Murray
compositors
III)
:
Rules,
Appendix,
"Use 's for the genitive case in English names and surnames "whenever possible; i.e. in all monosyllables and dissyllables, and "in longer words accented on the penult; as Augustus's,
"Gustavus's, "Zacharias' s.
'
St.
James's
Square,
N icodemus' s
"In longer names, not accented on the penult, 's is also preis here admissible; e. g. Theophilus's. ferable, though "In ancient classical names, use 's with every monosyllable, e. g. Mars' s, Zeus' s. Also with dissyllables not
"in es;
as
in these cases sometimes use only; and Jesus' a well-known liturgical archaism. In quotations from Scripture follow the Oxford standard. "Ancient words in es are usually written es' in the genitive,
"But
poets
"is
"e.g.
Ceres'
used
in
rites,
Xerxes'
fleet.
"be
To pronounce
"another
x
Murray.
32
CHAPTER XXIV,
2.
"and
"the
Moses' law; "This applies only to ancient words. One writes As to / used to alight at Moses's for the British Museum.
latter
tailor,
using
his
In the above "Rules" English names and surnames means names and surnames of English persons, and by ancient classical names is meant names of persons belonging to the ancients. The "Rules" are silent as to the numerous nouns of more than two syllables in is, us and as. Except for poetry, the ordinary practice seems to be to form their genitive by suffixing 's. The following instances, which are arranged according to the
number
from
i.
will
show
as
being concerned,
ii.
uniformly
applied,
so
far
the
classical
names
are
Zeus's action.
*
Webb
Introd. to
,
Ten., D
m.
and P e r s.
,
Endym.
IV),
Dives' chariot
Ch. V, 51), Brutus' Portia (Merch. of Ven., I, 1, II, 1, 5), Phoebus' cart (Ha ml., Ill, 2, 167), Atlas' Daughter (W. Morris, Odyssey, I, 59), King Schceneus' city (id., Atalanta's Race, XXXII), Queen Venus' well-wrought image white (ib. L1V), Jesus' public ministry (H a r m s w. C y c 1. s. v. Jesus Christ, 278c). ** Moses's men (Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 266).
, ,
Hi.
Dido (Ha ml., II, 2, 676), Adorns' shoulders (Keats, Endym., Hippotas' son (W. Morris, Odyssey, X, 2), Adrastus' bonds (id., The Son of Croesus, LXIV), Adonis' bane (id., Atalanta's Race, XXX), Achilles' statue (Westm. Gaz. No. 5617, 8c), Cervantes' romance (Webst.,
II),
,
* ^Eneas' tale to
s.
v.
Dulcinea).
**
Laertes's
challenge
(Deighton,
Introd.
to
Haml.
14),
Ulysses's
arrival
(Rowe and Webb, Introd. to Ten., Lotos Eaters), Odysseus's own man (Thack., Virg. Ch. XX, 198), Erasmus's own letters (Froude
,
gentle,
Life
and
iv.
Let. of
VI, 139).
Erasmus),
Odyssey,
,
VI,
103),
Alcinous'
daughter
(ib.,
** Herodias's daughter
(id.,
II,
(Thack.,
II,
Newc.
I,
Ch.
XXV,
,
227),
Polonius's shop
Sam. Titm.,
2, 109),
Ch. Polonius's
letters
I,
22),
Haml.,
wit.
(Dowden, Note
Haml
1,
Guide
(Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Pref., 10), Ch. XVII, 173), Aristophanes' s Plato (Tom
11).
4951),
Hood, Pract.
to Eng. Vers.,
As regards the non-classical proper names in s, usage is much more uniform, at least in the spoken language, in which the suffix
of the genitive is, apparently, almost invariably pronounced. In the written and printed language, however, the bare apostrophe
is
seldom met with to denote the genitive. Many instances of irregularities and inconsistencies are cited by Stoffel, in Taalnot
t
u d
IV, 55.
I,
Figs'
left
(Van. Fair,
II,
house
(ib.,
Ch.
II,
23),
Ch. V, 46; in the same chapter: Figs's left), Raggles' Keats' view (Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Notes), Rubens'
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
33
Watering-place (Hazlitt, On the Ignorance of the Learned; Pardoe, S e 1. E n g. Ess., 234) John Waters' heart (G. Moore E s t h. Wat., Pears' soap (Advertisements). Ch. Ill 21) Stephens' inks
, , ,
Note.
tival
It
It
is
open
to
in the printed
to
may, however, be observed that certain people think they impart their language a mark of distinction by dropping sibilants, the
vulgar often
sibilants.
running into the opposite extreme of adding improper 799; Jesp., Growth and Struct.,
,
186 and
How can you talk like that, when you have books upon books already, and masterses and missesses a teaching of you continual. Dick., Domb.
Ch.
I
XII, 111.
do tell 'ee plainly, face to face, she be there in madam's drawingroom; herself and Gussy, and them two walloping gals, dressed up to their
very eyeses. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXIX, 344. The swellses likes to be looked at. Punch.
c) In the older writers, and in modern poetry, the s is sometimes suppressed in the case of ordinary class-nouns, chiefly for the sake of the metre. ABBOT, Shak. Gram., 22 and 471; Stof., Taalst., V. Compare also Ch. XXV, 2, Obs. III.
fairest
As you like
will
There
come
42.
at every sentence end, Will 2, 145. a Christian by, Will be worth a Jewess' eye.
boughs,
it,
Or
|
Rosalinda
r
III,
Me
c h.
of
Ven.,
II, 5,
Congreve The Mourning Bride 1 ). Gray l ). eye. Prayer is innocence' friend. Lonofellow !). The gifts of those who, longing for delight, Have hung them there the goddess' sight. W. Morris, Earthly Par., Atal ant a's Race,
The
Princess' favourite.
within
36a.
In the following quotation it is (the) Douglas must be understood as a genitive or as a quality-expressing noun
in the
common
case.
Can
I
not mountain- maiden spy, But she must bear the Douglas eye? Can not view a Highland brand, But it must match the Douglas hand? Scott,
I
|
Lady,
I ,
xxxv.
of
sibilants
seems
to
be
How
spirits.
Sher.,
ally
of whatever description, usuhave the mark of the genitive attached to the last word. Such a form is often called a group genitive.
Julius Caesar's death my father-in-law's house the Lord Lieutenants residence the old king's son; the principal offenders' names (Dick., Cop., Ch. VII, Alb).
; ;
Stof.,
H.
Taalst,
V.
II.
34
CHAPTER XXIV,
Colloquially this practice N. E. Gr., 1016;
89.
is
34.
to grotesque extremes.
sometimes carried
Sweet,
Bradley,
The Making
of English, 61;
Onions, Syntax,
Having purchased the beer and obtained, moreover, the day-but-onc-beforeCh. XLV, 411. yesterday's paper, he repaired to the skittle-ground. Pickw. Official Wife, 162. I hate this destroyer of my happiness' letter. Savage,
,
My
Advertisement.
sometimes gives rise to obscurity, as may be seen from the puzzle The son of Pharaoh's mentioned by Jespersen (Prog., 231): daughter was the daughter of Pharaoh's son.
4.
In
a)
the
group of nouns,
departed from. usually placed after each of a genitive when the head-word refers to each of them
is
is
Thus John's, Mary's and Jack's books are the books owned by John, Mary and Jack separately, as distinguished from John, Mary .and Jack's books, i.e. the books owned by John, Mary and Jack jointly. (27, ft, 2.) Some of the following quotations also illustrate the fact that
the
adnominal
often
left
is
are
ownership
modifiers belonging equally to each of the genitives out before the second, third, etc., when separate denoted:
Lord Fairfax was the only gentleman in the colony of Virginia to whom she would allow precedence over her. She insisted on the 'pas' before all Virg. Ch. IV, 36. lieutenant-governors' and judges' ladies. Thack. Buttons laid the table for the children's and Miss Prior's tea. Id. L o v e 1
, ,
,
the
Widower,
life
Ch.
Ill
49.
When
feat of
hath there been, since our Henrys' and Edwards' days, arms. Id., Henry II, Ch. XI, 247.
such a great
all
Esmond,
In
early
she had
art to
many
offers of marriage,
for the
sake of that
Ch. Reade,
IX, 45.
burgomaster in his house, after so many years of coolness, coupled with his wife's and daughter's distress, made him fear some heavy misfortune. lb., Ch. VII, 38. She had dreamed of an aged and dignified face, the sublimation of all the d'Urberville lineaments, furrowed with incarnate memories representing in hieroglyphic the centuries of her family's and England's history. Hardy,
T e s s.
of
Ch.
46.
Note.
the genitive.
Franz, S h
k.
Gram.
Prog.,
,
237.
to
Not
see.
of a
woman's tenderness
i
be
Cor
1.
V, 3
130.
A widow
Spec-
tator, No. XXXVI i). The difference he felt between a quarter of an hour and Darwin, Life and Let., I, 144 1).
i)
Jesp.,
Prog.,
237.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
35
When the persons or things denoted by the different nouns form a kind of unit, the latter practice is the rule: i. Mr. and Mrs. Fitzroy Tymmins request the pleasure of Sir Thomas and Lady Kicklebury's company at dinner on Wednesday, at 7 1 / 2 o'clock. Thack. A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. I (305). Of course people would say that she had tried to capture Aid. Raeburn for his money and position's sake. Mrs. Ward Marc, 1 122.
,
ii.
the grief
Virg., Ch. XXVIII, 291. (They) might be running off to Scotland to-morrow, and pleading papa's and mamma's example for their impertinence. lb., Ch. LXXXI, 852. They had married without previously asking papa's and mamma's leave.
.
lb.
854.
b) Practice is highly varied in the case of word-groups consisting of two nouns, the second of which stands in apposition to the first.
1)
When
the genitive is conjoint (45), the general rule (3) is mostly followed, unless the second noun is accompanied by lengthy adjuncts, which entails the attaching of the mark of
genitive to the first and the placing of the noun modified immediate succession to it. The result is a construction which is felt as at variance with the genius of the language, and which Sometimes both nouns is, therefore, mostly avoided. (27, b, 1.) receive the mark of the genitive, but this construction seems to be rare. Mason, Eng. Gram. 34 77; Jesp., Prog., 222;
the
in
64;
40.
kind of guardian to them both till their uncle Sir Oliver's liberality gave them an early independence. Sher., School for Scand., I, 2 (374). We ask not our cousin Louis's sword. Scott, Quent. Durw. Ch.
acted
as
XXVII
ii.
355.
is Othello's pleasure, our noble and valiant general. Othello, II, 2, /. For Herod had laid hold on John, and found him, and put him in prison for Herodias' sake, his brother Philip's wife. Matth. XIV, 3. He had now pitched his nets for Gripe's daughter, the rich scrivener. Wych., Love in a Wood, 1,2(24). Doubtless thou fearest to meet Balder's voice, Thy brother whom through folly thou didst slay. Matth. Arnold*). Another mind that was being wrought up to climax was Nanny's, the maid of all work who had a warm heart. G. Eliot 8). He joined his cousin's company, Mr. T. R. Benson. Lit. World, 15/2, 1906.
It
,
I
iii.
My Lord Castlewood feared very much that his present chaplain's, Mr. Sampson's careless life and heterodox conversations might lead him to give up his chaplaincy. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXIX, 723.
the genitive
is
2)
When
the
(45, 47), the first element of mark of the genitive, the receives the noun-group mostly alternative practice being, apparently, mostly followed when the
absolute
second
noun
is
a proper
name standing
i
after a
common
noun.
i)
Jesp.
Prog.,
222.
-')
The K
n g's
Engl.,
64.
36
i.
CHAPTER XXIV,
There was a carriage and pair standing
4.
at the gate, which she recognized as Dr. Madeley's, the physician from Rotherby. G. Eliot Scenes, I, Ch. VIII, 60. There was only one close carriage in the place and that was old Mr. Landor's, the banker. lb., III. Ch. II, 190. And I know for a fact that Fusby's bill is not yet paid; nor Binney and La, ,
Thack.,
to
A little Dinner
at
Timmins's,
Convoys
Prussia.
ii.
of treasure
Id.
,
were passed
Barry Lyndon,
our forces, and to our ally's, the King of Ch. IV, 68.
a
little
What
Fred's.
affair of
my young
(45,
49),
scapegrace
II,
Ch. XIII,
91.
3)
When
case
it
the genitive
used
substantively
in
which
into,
mostly
stands
after a preposition,
chiefly at,
in,
and denotes a residence or establishment, practice depends upon whether the noun expressing the narrower meaning, mostly a proper name, precedes or follows the other.
over and to,
)
When
nouns
it
precedes,
the
the
ordinary
practice
it
is
in
not
is
which
under the
He
invited
influence
of
grammar, we sometimes
Madame
Ill,
find the
Pen
liner's, in
Clavering.
38.
to
Men's Wives,
,
Ch.
(322).
was so shocked when I recognized him behind the counter at Mr. Grigg's, Id. V r g. Ch. LXXXI 856. Martin's pound of candles invariably found its way to Howlett's, the birdthe mercer's.
i
,
,
fanciers.
I
Tom Brown,
II
Ch.
Ill
240.
Sweet, N.
E. Gr.,
ii.
High Street he stopped at Clifford's, the gun-maker's, and bought heavy revolver. Conan Doyle, Round the Red Lamp, Lot no. 249, 105. I will send Nanny to London on purpose, and she may have a bed at her cousin the saddler's. Jane Austen Mansfield Park, Ch. 1 6. I called at Parker, the publisher's. Ch. Kingsley, Alton Locke,
In the
Pref.,
iii.
37.
As
they
Tom
Ch. V, 85. (Another edition has Nixon's, the hatter's.) But just then the other man in brown appeared wheeling his punctured machine. He was taking it to Flambeau's, the repairers. Wells, The
Brown,
Wheels
AH
this
the hosier.
Punch.
The
noun
third construction
is
would, of course, be used when the classconnected with (an)other(s) by and, or is accompanied by
a prepositional modifier, as in at Johnson's, the bookseller and See stationer, at Johnson's, the bookseller in Farringdon Street.
also JESP.,
Prog.,
224.
A)
When
mark
the
of the genitive
in the
case
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
m
of the
37
former being a proper name preceded by a title, when ordinary practice seems to be to attach the mark of the genitive to the first of the nouns,
the
i.
For my part I little expected when I last saw Keats at my friend Leigh Hunt's, that I should survive him. Shelley, Letter to Mr. Severn. At his aunt Pullet's there was a great many toads to pelt in the cellararea. G.Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. VII, 51.
,
ii.
My
am
I
master was all that time at his estate in Lincolnshire, and at his Davers. Richardson, Pamela, Letter X, 17. staying at my aunt's, Mrs. Mowbray. (Stof., Eng. Leesb. voor
Lady Agatha's.
Oscar Wilde
The
Pict. of
Do
c)
r.
Gray
Ch.
23.
ii.
Of the deviations from the general practice exhibited by the following quotations, no further instances have been found: A y IWhc n got to my sister's by marriage. Theod. Watts Dunton win, XII, Ch. Ill, 344. The first shop we entered was a hosier's and glover's. Daily Mail.
i. I
,
Note. Such a sentence as A few hours' a day steady application does wonders (Mrs. Alex. For his sake, I, Ch. XV, 256) does not afford a real exception to the general rule (3), the word-group a day being in fact a concealed adverbial modifier, which might be shifted after application : A few hours' steady application a day.
,
5.
is
noun modified
is
to
when sometimes found for the genitive be supplied from the preceding part of
,
the discourse.
42a.
Jesp.,
Prog.,
235;
Her dowry shall weigh equal with a queen. King John, II, 486 1 ). know the sound of Marcius' tongue from every meaner man." Cor iol., I, 6, 27. My mother for whose sake and the blessed Queen of heaven I reverence all women. Ten. j ) "Well, I never!" says Mrs. Quiggett, with a shrill, strident laugh, like a venerable old cockatoo. Thack. , V i r g. Ch. LI 526. It (sc. the pin) did not look near so well in the second day's shirt as on the Id. Sam. T i t m. Ch. V 48. (Note however the change of first day.
I ,
,
preposition.)
the good-tempered old fellow down the slide with a rapidity which came very close upon Mr. Welter and beat the fat boy all to nothing.
c k w.
is
,
Ch. XXX.
This
even the usual form, when the noun is used in the funcCh. V, 4. tion of predicative adnominal adjunct of the first kind.
He thought they were but acknowledging Henry Esm., II, Ch. XV, 288. At length Esmond saw his friend's name
Ch. IV, 348.
his merits as a
in the
commander.
Thack.,
lb., Ill,
Gazette as a bankrupt.
i)
Jesp.,
Prog.,
235.
38
Sometimes
not
the
CHAPTER XXIV,
56.
speaker
Bill
use of the uninflected form may be owing to the having arrived at clearness regarding the grammatical function of the word.
Tidd, a very pale young man, with a black riband round his neck instead Sam. Tita handkerchief, and his collars turned down like Lord Byron
Ch. VII
love
|
of
marsh,
Woman's
73
Ten.,
Lane, and
El.,
836.
The
uninflected
form
that
is
of genitive inflection.
"And whose
fault is
it
and such
you?
Scott,
Bride
"whose of Lam.,
Our terms
are lower than any office. Sam. be improved by placing those of after ihan.)
Titm.,
6.
Obs.
I.
tion es,
of the genitive has sprung from the Old English terminawhich formed the genitive of most masculine and of all neuter nouns of the strong declension: stan stanes; scip scipes. As this ending was the only one that never had any other
's
The
to
meaning than that of the genitive singular, it was better adapted become the universal mark of the genitive than any of the other endings used for this purpose, which were equivocal, inasmuch as they were also used in other grammatical functions. Ch. II, 36. Bradley, The Making of E n g. This termination formed a separate syllable, and in a later
,
period was often superseded by is, or ys. The change of pronunciation may have led to the notion of the 's of the genitive being an abbreviation of his, so that the king's crown was thought to stand for the king his crown.
II.
The use
pronouns his, her and their after a noun instead however, of early origin and used to be widely prevalent. Towards the 17th century her and their as substitutes for the genitive were disappearing; not so his, which at that period was still common, even in the literary language. Franz, Eng. Stud., XVII; id., Shak. Gram. 1 45; Matz.,
of the of a genitive suffix is,
,
Eng. Gram. Ill, 236. A continuation of Olympias her storie. Raleigh *). And now the feast of St. Martin was come, the Dutch
,
their Arch-Saint.
Fuller
!).
Bac.
Adv. of Lear
VI, A,
2).
Ill,
n.2)
Mars
Henry
B
k.
I,
2,
7 2).
2, 123
of
Com. Pray.
'5
is still
common
enough.
Stumps his mark. P c k w. Ch. XI 92 99. In George the First his time. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXII, 225. Seth Bede, the Methody his work. G. Eliot, Adam Bede, Ch.
,
,
I,
3.
i)
Franz, E.
S., XVII.
2)
217.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
III.
39
The use
not
confined
and, in Danish,
a possessive pronoun as a kind of genitival formative is to English. find it flourishing in colloquial Dutch, according to Jespersen (Prog., 248) it is extremely common
of
We
Norwegian and Swedish dialects, in Middle and Modern in some other European languages or dialects. According to the same authority, it seems in the majority of cases to be a form of anacoluthia, arising from the fact that the speaker mentions a word that is prominent in his thoughts without thinking of its syntactical possibilities, and afterwards feels the want of a This view does not, however, appear very acceptable. corrective.
Another possible source of this substitute for the genitive inflection the occasional sameness of meaning of a person object possessive pronoun and a genitival adnominal adjunct.
is
29.
I
II, Ch. XVI, 184. asked the woman's name.) (Compare: Edna Lyall, Knight Carlo would not refuse the little fellow's petition. Err., Ch. XXXIII, 329. (Compare: Carlo would not refuse the little fellow
I
forgave Miss Jessie her singing out of tune. Mrs. Gaskell, (Compare: I forgave Miss Jessie's singing out of tune.) asked the woman her name. Miss Brad., Lady Audi.,
Cranf., Ch.
II,
his petition.)
IV.
The apostrophe
in
the
termination
's
is
intended to
show
that the
vowel of a syllabic suffix has been lost. We still see the vowel in Wednesday (= Wodenesday) the proper name Swineshead (Nesfield, Hist. En g., 114, N. 3), and in the compounds calves-head and articles of food, as distinguished from calf's head and calves-foot
, ,
r. 999.) (Sweet, N. E. calf's foot, parts of body. es is still frequent in Spenser and instances are not 34 Shakespeare. (Mas., E n g. , 76, IV.)
The
syllabic
in
wanting
47.
Gram.
Ful worthy was he in his lordes werre. Chauc, Cant. Tales, A, By goddes bones! v/han I bete my knaves. lb., B, 3087. And eke through fear as white as whales bone. Spens., Faery Queene,
i d s. II Larger than the moon-es sphere. To show his teeth as white as whal-es bone.
,
III,
i,
xv.
7.
V, 2, 332.
apostrophe before the genitival -5 did not become until the middle of the 18th century, and as a mark of the general genitive plural it seems to be of more recent date still. In the original editions of Shakespeare such a spelling as kings or ladies was used for the genitive singular, for the nominative (or objective) plural, and for trffe genitive plural. The apostrophe was then used without regard
The use
of
the
to case-function:
a) to indicate that
/5)
Thomas's. a syllable was added in pronunciation. the ending es was still commonly used, bat not pronounced as a separate syllable. Thus Shakespeare has earth's as a genitive singular and prey's as a nominative plural. Compare
to
indicate
that
the
f) to
'
modern
is
practice of poets to write kill'd for killed, etc. figure, etc. or of a proper
.
name,
as
done
in
Present
English.
(Ch.
XXV,
,
3, 4.)
Prog.,
V.
129;
MAS., Eng.
Gram. 34
in
is
76.
40
CHAPTER XXIV,
68.
English practice, which often dropped the whole ending es in French words and proper names ending in a sibilant. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 992, 998, 1022.
Melibeus wyf.
VI.
It
century that the sibilant came to be used form the genitive of feminine nouns. In Chaucer we still find a few instances of the common case doing duty for the genitive case of nouns that in Old English were feminine. And born him well, as of so litel space In hope to standen in his lady
was not
to
grace.
Chauc
liste.
Cant. Tales, A
85.
|
And
in
as hir
sonne upriste
A trace of the old practice is found in Modern English with which compare Lord's day. Sweet, N. E. Gr.,
Lady-day,
993.
MEANING AND
7.
USE.
The
express
things. to the
genitive of a noun or pronoun is a form which is used to a certain relation between different persons, animals or
of brevity the
is
term genitive
is
often extended
placed
in the genitive.
The
thing(s) indicated
by the genitive
may be thought of as (an) individual(s) or as the representative(s) of a class. The genitive is. accordingly, meant either to individualize or to classify the person(s) animal(s) or thing(s)
indicated by the noun modified. i. John's book our neighbours' rights. ii. a giants task, old-wives' tales.
,
(Ch. IV,
I.)
A classifying genitive can often be told from an individualizing genitive by the markedly strong stress which it has as compared with the head-word. Compare: That was a father's duty
(G.
Eliot,
Si
1.
Mam.,
Ch.
XV,
117)
with
That was
your
father's duty.
8.
The
relations
between what is expressed by the individualizing and by the noun modified are of a highly varied nature, The noun in the chiefly of the following description.
denote:
genitive
may
a) the person, animal or thing to which that which is expressed by the noun modified, belongs, of which it is a part, or to
which
it
pertains.
My
b) the
person
is
expressed
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
c)
41
the
person,
animal
d) the
(Times);
their
Wildfire's
(a
horse)
loss
(Q.
Eliot,
Sil.
Mam.,
e)
Ch.
VIII, 56);
the
measure as
to distance,
time,
weight,
value or carrying
capacity of what is expressed by the noun modified. a hair's breath; an hour's interval; a pound's weight; a shilling's worth; seventy tons' burden.
/) the thing which is a specimen or a variety of the class things indicated by the noun modified. (Ch. IV, 16.)
name
Tweed's fair river (Scott, Marra., I, With treason's charge (ib., II, win).
|
of
i);
For he
attaints
that
rival's
different relations indicated by the genitive we therefore, distinguish: the genitive of possession, the genitive of origin, the genitive of agency or subjec-
According to the
may,
tive genitive, the genitive of undergoing or objective genitive, the genitive of measure and the genitive of
specializing
From
the
or
apposition.
fact that the genitive in the majority of cases expresses a relation of possession, it is often called the possessive.
Obs.
I.
The
description under a) is meant to include a great relations of a kindred nature, as illustrated by:
many
other
And when he reads Thy personal venture 1,3,9/. (= the fight against the rebels.)
|
Macb.
Freedom's
battle.
Byron,
Giaour,
Mrs.
123.
(=
the battle
fought
in the
cause of freedom.) Poor Mr. Holbrook's (= the dinner given by Mrs. Winter's dance. (= the dance given by
dinner.
I,
Ch. V, 70.
This country's history. Times. (= the history of the events connected with this country.) The week's weather. Ib. (= the weather prevailing in the week.) The world's fair. Ib. (= the fair bringing together persons and things
from
It
all
cannot always be marked off with precision. On the contrary, many genitives admit of being classed under different headings. Thus the man's mistakes is, perhaps, best described as a subjective genitive, but may also with, perhaps, equal justice be understood as a genitive of origin or even of Such doubtful cases are all discussed under the possession.
kilWs
genitive
heading of genitive of possession or origin, those cases in which the noun modified is a gerund or equivalent word being reserved for that of the genitive of agency or subjective genitive.
42
II.
the
Old-English
in
numerous than
the
2346.
Pisistratus
to
Lytton, Caxt.,
IV, Ch.
Ill,
in the
For further instances see also Ch. V, 5. Full details will be given Chapter about adverbs. The obsolete functions of the genitive
are
10. In
now
expressed by prepositions or by apposition. the relation expressed by the genitive may also be By far the most frequent prepositional
is
some cases
indicated
of.
Of more
restricted application
(3537.)
Note. The use of the preposition of to express the meaning of the genitive did not appear until the twelfth century. Save for some special cases as in se cyning of Norwegan, where it has the same meaning as the genitive, this preposition was used in Old English where Modern
English
of.
Bradley,
The Making!
of
Eng., Ch.
59.
individualizing genitive as compared with its prepositional equivalent depends in the main on a) the kind of
of
The use
the
relation that has to be expressed;. b) the meaning of the noun; c) the kind of diction; d) the syntactical connections of the noun; e) the comparative emphasis or stress of the modifying noun and the noun modified; /) the metre or rhythm.
In discussing the
it
mentioned
USE OF THE GENITIVE AND ITS PREPOSITIONAL EQUIVALENT APART FROM CONSIDERATIONS OF SYNTAX, EMPHASIS AND METRE OR RHYTHM.
The
is
names
12. a)
nouns denoting persons, there is a preference of the genitive over the prepositional construction. Indeed in perusing a few pages of ordinary English prose the observant reader cannot fail to be struck by the fact that, whenever the prepositional construction is used, there
to ordinary
As
common
distinct
is
for
mostly one of the reasons mentioned above (10) that accounts it. The reason of this preference may be that it is mostly a
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
43
matter closely connected with the person, which is to be expressed and for this the synthetic genitive is better adapted than the analytical prepositional construction. Thus the parsonage is
,
by the parson's house than by the house of the Here follow some quotations in which the synthetic parson. construction has possibly been preferred from this unity being more
better
indicated
Proudie
servants' hall.
lb.
37.
The
precentor clearly
,
saw from
his
his
companion's face
heart
to'
that a
tornado was to be
the bishop's invitation. lb., Ch. X, 74. The ceremony of washing the feet of
poor persons on the day before Good Friday was instituted in commemoration of Christ's washing the apostles' feet at the Last Supper, and of his injunction that his disciples should in like manner
feet.
Murray,
s.
v.
maundy.
above the following quotations, in which the use of the analytical construction may have been occasioned by the connection between modifier and head-word having been felt as a less
Compare
with
the
close one.
I the pen of a mighty poet, would I sing in epic verse the noble wrath of the archdeacon. Trol. B a r c h. T o w. Ch. V 37. She, and she alone, could in any degree control the absurdities of her sister.
,
lb.,
It
that you will accept from the hands of the not, I presume, probable bishop a piece of preferment with a fixed predetermination to disacknowledge the duties attached to it. lb., Ch. XII, 97. He merely observed that the duties of the situation had been done to the
is
. . .
satisfaction
of the late bishop. lb., 95. He would marry the lady as the enemy of her brother-in-law. lb., Ch. XV, 116. Another prince of the same house was raised to the throne by French influence and ratified all the promises of his predecessor. Mac, Clive, 505a.
,
b)
The
genitive
is
very
in
common when
it
the noun
is
used
in
a gene-
ralizing
sense,
which case
is
an adjective.
Of the soldier's great virtues -constancy in disaster, devotion to duty, hopefulness in defeat no man ever possessed a larger share. Motley, Rise, VI , Ch. VII, 900a. Any comprehensive scheme for extending education is beyond the range of the (Compare: The repeal of King's powers. Rev. of Rev., CCLVI, 3276. exceptional legislation is beyond the scope of Royal prerogative. lb.)
human kind (sc. in the singing of the telegraph wires) secrets, the sportsman's tips, the merchant's prices, the death-roll of Bagshot from the veld, the latest scores from the Oval. The
I
hear
all
the voices of
the
lover's
Comments
5607, 96.)
Collective
names
of
nouns indicating persons are often apprehended as the organized bodies and, consequently, have the genitive
44
construction
CHAPTER XXIV,
frequently
12.
seem
i.
to
be mostly preferred.
the assembly's
in
Swift,
Gu
1.
Trav.
IV,
Madras was
the
first
Mac,
e.
to be the talk ... at the gentry's houses and the rough roadThack., Virg., Ch. XII, 124. There were many schemes and proposals which had the meeting's objects in view. Westm. Gaz. No. 5448, 8c. This ... is the setting of Society's parade ground. lb., No. 5607, 8c.
Such continued
side taverns.
The
ii.
Times.
of
The business
the
judicial,
Company was
financial,
1
Clive,
He
lb.,
499a.
(sc.
Dupleix
hear
allies
509a.
So
we
futile
persisting in a policy which the country has approved, or the obstinacy of the Government in not yielding the victory to the beaten party. Westm. Gaz., No. 5631, lb.
little
of
genitive is hardly ever used. Thus it could hardly stand for the construction with of in the leaders of the multitude.
the
number
d)
The
is less freely used of plural nouns in s than of nouns. This is singular owing to the fact that the spoken language does not distinguish between the genitive singular and the genitive
genitive
sound precisely
the boy's parents and the boys' parents This leads the speaker to a frequent use of the prepositional construction when he wishes his hearers clearly to understand that he is thinking of more than one 2004. possessor. Sweet, N. E. Gr.,
alike.
Thus
Thus the
analytical
construction
preferred for
My
Ch.
Jane Eyre,
25.
Charlemagne was scarcely interred when the imbecility and the disputes of his descendants began to bring contempt on themselves and destruction on their
subjects.
Mac
Clive,
502a.
into a
thousand pieces.
lb.
is
here also be observed that the prepositional construction practically the only one with adjectives partially converted into nouns. (Ch. XXIV, 14 ff.)
may
We
justified our conquest to ourselves by taking away the character of the Oceana, Ch. III. conquered. Froude He has taken much interest in the housing of the poor. Rev. of Rev.. CXCVI, 3506.
,
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
13.
45
as
in
The
greater
frequency
is
of
the
genitive
compared with
the case of
its
still
more marked
proper
,
simple names. Sweet (N. E. Gr. goes so far as to say that "in such a sentence as Where is John's hat? we could no more substitute of John than we could substitute of me for my". Although there can be no doubt that as regards such nouns the genitive is by far it can hardly be said to be so the commoner construction as used Sweet's words exclusively imply, seeing that instances
2006)
even
of
its
analytical
equivalent
are not infrequently met with in See the second group of the fol-
lowing quotations:
i.
George's loyal younger brother shared too this repugnance. Thack. Virg., Ch. LXI, 634. He made up his mind that even as Mrs. Hope she must be dearer to him than any other creature on God's earth. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXVIII, 23. am the most fortunate woman living on God's earth. lb., Ch. XLIX, 437.
,
(Thus, apparently, regularly in this combination.) The supposed effect of these attacks on Keats's health was wildly exaggerated by some contemporaries. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent., Ch. II, 87. Little need be said of Shelley's character. lb. Hunt had to a certain extent started this (sc. the new note), but he had not succeeded in giving it anything like the distinct character which it
took in Keats's hands. lb., 89. Dr. Annandale not only sets forth the main
facts
of
Burns's career.
Westm. Gaz.,
ii.
If
they (sc. the Bells) said anything, they said this, until the brain of
Toby
reeled.
Dick
Chimes 3
I ,
36.
Despite all the admonitory looks and pinches of Bumble, [Oliver Twist] was regarding the repulsive countenance of his future master with a mingled expression of horror and fear. Id., 01. Twist, Ch, III, 42.
(sc. Harry Foker) would have longed to give his arm to the fair Blanche, and conduct her down the brown carpeted stair; but she fell to the lot of Pen upon this occasion. Thack, P e n d. Ch. I, 8. II, The chair of lone was next to the couch of Glaucus. Lytton, Last Days of Pomp., IV, Ch. III. Steele, an excellent judge of lively conversation, said, that the conversation of Addison was at once the most polite, and the most mirthful, that could be imagined. Mac, Addison, 751a.
He
With
this negotiation
commences
new
chapter in the
life
of
Clive.
Id.
Clive,
515a.
This was but the beginning of the greatness of Dupleix. lb., 5046. The health of Clive had never been good during his residence in India,
lb., 5096.
The young lady was not beautiful: but the Mac, Hist., II, Ch. IV, 31. But the fortitude of Monmouth was not
taste
nice.
that
sort of fortitude
II,
which is derived from reflection and from self-respect. lb., Even those wild islands which intercept the huge waves
Ch. V,
186.
of the Atlantic
46
CHAPTER XXIV,
13.
from the bay of Galway, had acknowledged the authority of William. lb., VI, Ch. XVII, 214. Here, they said, is an instrument of tyranny more formidable than the High Commission, than the Star Chamber, than even the fifty thousand soldiers
of
It
Oliver. lb., VII, Ch. XX, 311. contained a gold ring and a lock of the hair of Mary. lb., 10, Ch.XXV, 94. But the frame of William was not in a condition to bear even the slightest shock. lb., X, Ch. XXV, 89. England, dragged at the heels of Philip into a useless and ruinous war, was
left
Green,
Short
Hist., Ch.
VII,
3, 369.
b) Also as regards complex proper names and simple names preceded by a simple title, such as Lord, Lady, Sir, Mr., Mrs., Miss, the genitive is more in favour than the o/-construction, although in a less marked degree than in the case of simple proper names. The longer the complex name, the greater the prevalence of the
prepositional construction.
i.
The colloquy terminated by the writing of those two letters which were laid on Major Pendennis's breakfast-table in London, at the commencement of Prince Arthur's most veracious history. Thack. Pend. I, Ch. VI, 78. Two little boys had stolen some apples from Farmer Benson's orchard, and some eggs had been missed off Widow Hayward's stall. Mrs. Gask., Cranf.,
,
is
not
sufficiently
attract
who
Timothy's Bess, though retaining her maiden appellation among her familiars, had long been the wife of Sandy Jim. G. Eliot, Adam Bede, Ch. II, 14. The gratitude of Mr. Winkle was too powerful for utterance. P c k w.
i ,
Ch.
II,
19.
The The
materials
placed
at
the disposal
late
Lord
of great value.
Mac, Clive,
effect of the book ... is, on the whole, greatly to raise the character of Lord Clive. lb. 408a. The father of Herbert Spencer, it will be remembered was also a schoolmaster. Clodd Pioneers of Evolution, 86. In the words of Lord Rosebery, "the new King has led the life of a sailor and in Great Britain we all love sailors". Westm. Gaz No. 5311, \c.
,
c)
regular is the use of the genitive in denoting the residence, the activities, etc. of a firm as in. At Christie's rooms yesterday the old masters, which formed the collection of the late Sir William Abdy, were sold by auction. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 8c. The scheme is to be worked through the existing railway companies, Messrs. Thos. Cook and Son's agency and the well-established hotels and boarding-houses
Apparently
lb.,
d)
The
genitive
of
names which
streets,
much more common than the o/-construction of persons, whether proper names or common nouns,
is
are
used
as
etc.
parts
In
squares,
proper names of days, buildings, many cases such names of persons are
of
(at
II
,
preceded by Saint.
K*
King's College, Queen's College, Christ's College N n e t. Cent., Ch. Chris fs Hospital. Saintsb.
,
Cambridge).
98.
Pompey's
theatre.
Deiohton, Note
to
Ham
I.,
Ill,
2, 96.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
** St. John's College (at Cambridge). Valentine's day. Scott, F'air Maid,
47
St.
St.
Ch.
II,
92.
Bartholomew's fair. Wash. Irv., Sketch-bk., XXV, 249. Saint Bartholomew's Day. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. Saint Mary's Abbey. Robin Hood, 149. (Qruno Ser.)
ii.
II,
106.
in the
Campus
Martius.
Haml.,
Ill,
2, 96.
there has been a French church ever since Queen Bess's time and the dreadful day of Saint Bartholomew. Thack., Denis Duval, Ch. I, 180. The Church of St. Angelo. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. V, 109. The Castle of Saint Angelo. Mac, Hist., Ch. I, 136. The time was now come round again to the high-day of St. Valentine. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. XVI, 93.
Where
The Abbey of
St.
Mary.
s.
Robin Hood,
St. Giles,
144.
(Gruno
Ser.)
He was buried
in the
v.
church of
Frobisher.
Cripplegate, London.
Cass ell's
Cone. C y c
e)
I. ,
The
sons
genitive construction
of
abstract
is practically regular with titles of perdistinction, consisting of a possessive pronoun and an noun, the latter sometimes preceded by an adjective,
XXXVIII, 397.
The
I
faithful Fuchs bowed and promised to do her excellency's will. lb., 403. drink to your Highness' s health. Id., Henry II, Ch. XI, 245. He's his Royal Highness's right-hand man. Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIII, 131. One of his Royal Highness s performances was a refutation of Macchiavelli.
Esmond,
Mac
You
If
Fred.,
have
664a.
will
me
lb.
,
we
in
will
meet
you. Trol., Thack., Ch. II, 74. Similar fragmentary ejaculations were
my
lady's
presence. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. , Ch. XI, 208. Your Grace's policy hath a farther flight Than mine into the future. Ten., Mary, f, v (5406). You are to go to the bath three times every day. It is his Excellency's order. Max Pemb., Doct. Xav., Ch. VII, 33a.
|
Queen
Her Majesty's Government have ceased to rely on mere paper. Times. This matter has not been lost sight of by Her Majesty's Minister atTangiers. Her Majesty's gunboat Hazard is shelling the town of Candia. lb.
lb.
Thus
a) the
King's Majesty, the Queen's Grace, etc. when denoting the personages themselves. But, Sir Thomas, must we levy war against the Queen's Grace? Ten.,
Queen Mary,
/S)
II,
(596a).
( accomplice or sharer in a crime, witness for the prosecution against the other persons
himself
as
implicated).
48
14. a)
CHAPTER
The
1)
XXIV, 14.
genitive
is
certain proverbial sayings, such as: maids' husbands are al'ys (vulgar for: always) Ch. VI 47. G. Eliot .Scenes, I A coward's fear may make a coward valiant. P r o v. A fool's bolt is soon shot. Id. A man's best fortune, or his worst, is a wife. Id.
Old
well-managed.
A woman's
2)
strength
is in
her tongue.
Id.
certain
a)
as:
the time just be-
blind-man's-buff,
fore candles are lighted, when it is too dark to work and to rest or 'take a holiday', formerly used more widely.
In
one
is
obliged
Murray.)
I
the
winter afternoons
she
(sc.
.
knitting for
Miss Matty Jenkyns) would sit and when I asked if might not
,
ring
candles to finish stitching my wristbands, she told me to Ch. V, 87. "keep blind man's holiday". Mrs. Gask., Cranf.
for
/?)
(thy, his, etc.) father's (or mother's), as equivalents of /, thou, he, etc.
I
my
When we have taken thy father's work is well begun, Scott, Lay, III, xx. Where has he been? Where his mother's son should have been ashamed to go. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. VI, 77. are actually paying You mean that you your mother's son honourable attentions to this young person. Ch. Id., Virg.
think our
|
son.
LXXXIV,
895.
This also appears to be the case in such designations as brother's (or sister's) son (or daughter) for my nephew (or niece); my father's (or mother's) son (or daughter) for
my my
To
I
brother
tell
-(or sister).
lies
don't think
my
has not been a habit in our family, Mr. Costigan, and brother's son has learned it as yet. Thack., Pend.,
I,
Ch. XI,
120.
Now God
Blackmore,
y)
forgive
so of
my own
father's daughter.
XII, 70.
every mother's son everybody. i. That would hang us every mother's son. Mids. II, 1, 79. ii. Every mother's son of them wishes to be considered Samson and Solomon rolled into one. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. X, 190.
,
b)
The
genitive
is
almost
case:
regular
also
in
illustrated
has the
i.
common
New
Commonwealth's 10
Wes
revenue of m. G a z.
exports
14
millions
in
against the
1907
to
The
value
amounted
17
milliard marks, against England's 23.7 milliard marks. lb. The three shillings per week to be contributed by the employer,
as
lb.,
against the State's threepence, appears to us somewhat excessive. No. 5625, 6a.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
**
49
Green,
They
sailed
two
feet
Short
Hist.,
Ch. VII,
one. ***
VI, 419.
lean Clovelly
men
Ch. Kinqsiey,
Westw. Ho!,
Ch.
XXV,
. .
.
1846.
fired
handled
English vessels
four shots
VI, 419.
to
the
Spaniards' one.
In
the
third
,
set
Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, Miss Fanshaw was five games
95.
to
G. At
Moore
Modern Lover,
shall
in
have twelve
G a z.
Lond. News,
to
France's 3000.
II.
Summer
eight points to the United Kingdom's nine. Truth, No. 1800, 1685a. We shall have to go on quietly building ships two to Germany's every
one.
ii.
Eng. Rev.,
said
this,
1912,
March,
682.
Trotty
one stride of
Observe an analogous varied practice with possessive pronouns (Ch. XXXIII, 14, c), and compare also the following quotations: It having been arranged that Bob Sawyer and Ben Allen should be considered at liberty to fill twice to Mr. Winkle's once, they started fair, with great satisfaction and good-fellowship. Prckw., Ch. XXXVIII, 352. During the interview (she) had spoken probably three words for every one which her ladyship had been able to utter. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch.
thought of
me
Lorna Doone,
names
of
herself.
a)
As
to the
animals we
main, confined to those of the larger and more familiar animals, especially when they have personal qualities ascribed to them.
Murdstone with his horse's bridle drawn over his arm, walked slowly up and down. Dick., Cop., Ch. II, 116. The cake made no more impression on his big face than it would have done on an elephant's. Id., Ch. V, 32a,
Mr.
.
It
road.
The very
Ch.
Ill,
heard the old mare's hoofs clattering up the Ch. X, 106. manes were burnt off by the heat. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp.,
I
John H
I.,
14a.
How did you come to be taking my pheasants nest. Sweet, Old Chapel. His horse's feet were in the water. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. X, 57.
With proper names of animals the genitive is as usual as with proper names of persons. Pongo's collar, Oscar's coat. To hang about a stable, and collect a gang of the most disreputable dogs to be found in the town, and lead them out to march round the slums to fight other disreputable dogs, is Montmorency's idea of "life". Jerome,
Three Men
He
feebly got
in a
Boat,
Ch.
II
22.
upon Winnie's back. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch.XI, 63. b) When, however, an animal is regarded as a mere object of natural history, as is generally the case with the smaller and
A Grammar of
II.
50
lb.
16.
As
It
to the
is
names
of
things when
the o/-construction is the usual one. the genitive is used of the name of
there is a notion of personification. This may be true main, but can hardly be said to be applicable to all cases. Thus it seems difficult to find any notion of personification in such collocations as the morning's work, the day's event, his journey's end, an arm's length, to be at one's wit's (or wits') end, and many others mentioned below. See also Bradley, The Making of Eng. 60.
thing,
in the
In
ordinary prose
names
like
the genitive
,
is
quite
common:
a) of proper
provinces, towns, etc. or equivalent country, the town, and also of such church, university etc. when organized bodies
of states
this
G.Meredith,
Happily for the country, England's councils are not directed by boys. Lord Ormont, Ch. II, 24. France's religion must be that of France's king. Con. Doyle, Refu224.
gees,
America's foreign trade. Times. The Canadian people were devoted to British liberality and impressed by Britain's power. lb. All Frenchmen should be agreed in the necessity of seeking England's
friendship.
ii.
lb.
bad deeds that, under cover of the darkness, had been committed within wide London's bounds since night hung over it, that was the worst.
Of
all
Dick., 01.
best
spirit
Twist,
of a
.
That paragon
was
Ch. XLVIH, 439. that honoured representative of Oxford's clergyman Trol., Barch. Tow., misconducting himself.
.
. . .
The
refitting and refounding of the library by Sir magnificent example of Oxford's development.
s. v.
Thomas
Bodley,
is
the
most
Harmsworth En cycl.,
T.
His
Oxford. marvellous
facility
of
of
New
York's
most famous
painters.
P 's
Weekly,
(We) predicted (that) one day he would brightest honour, and her proudest boast. The object which actuates and animates
(is)
be ...
i
at
,
my
country's good.
lb.
In the last fiscal year the value of manufactured goods exported from America was for the first time in this country's history in excess of the manufactured goods imported. Time s. He offered to go out in any capacity to do what he could to help to
retrieve the
He worked
Empire's losses. Rev. of Rev., CCLVI for his country and his country's good.
in
3906.
Wes
m.
G a z.
the
Insurance
scheme must be
solvent.
lb.,
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
iv.
51
Ascott
R.
Hope,
Old
Pot.
authorities
The Municipal
opportunity.
v.
are taking full advantage of the city's great No. 3682, 726. The depreciation in the. value of the Bank's investments (admittedly the cause of its failure) is attributed to the Boer War. Westm. Gaz., No. 5642, lc. (Note the use of its.) Mr. Lloyd George then proceeded to give the House chapter and verse of the history of a number of the bank's principal investments. lb., 5b. The supply of these facilities was doubtless the reason of the Birkbeck Bank's popularity. Outlook (Westm. Gaz., No. 5642, 16c).
Punch,
vi.
vii.
the due administration of (this trust) much of the church's welfare might depend. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XIV, 107. The Archbishop implied this to be the Church's doctrine. Times. The theatre has been pointed at as the Church's great rival. Westm. Gaz., No. 5625, 4a. At the Hanley Town Hall the topic at the morning session was "The Church's Duty in Furthering International Peace." Times, No. 1814, 801a. The universities' boat race. II. Lond. News.
On
quotations illustrating the alternative practice, apparently the ordinary one, will suffice. While the Jacobite party was in the last ddtage und weakness of its paralytic old age, the political philosophy of England began to produce a mighty effect on France, and through France, on Europe. Mac, Hist. Rev., (346a).
During the last seven centuries the public mind of Europe has made constant progress in every department of secular knowledge. Id., Popes, (545a).
A few
Observe the regular use of the prepositional construction the Anglican Church, the Church of Rome of England
Catholic Church.
in the
Church
the
Roman
Trol.,
Those
are
the
sort
of
men who
,
will
ruin
the
Church of England.
Barch. Tow.,
Ch. VI
40.
Four times since the authority of the Church of Rome was established in Western Europe, has the human intellect risen up against the yoke. Mac,
countries, provinces, towns etc. are viewed as geographical areas, i. e. when there is no idea of any personification, the prepositional construction is practically regular.
Popes, When
(,545a
b).
The position of England, lying as it does N. W. Europe, has largely determined its
the world.
in full
command
of the sea-front of
politics of
part in the
v.
economy and
is
Harmsworth Encycl.
of
s.
England.
of earth
b) of
the
names
the
73), and also {globe), of such nouns as nature (in the sense of the creative power) and world. (44, Obs. IV.)
earth.
He has brought
together a
mass
Times.
is
Webst.,
division
s. v.
polar.
globe.
Asia
c
1
is
,
the
s.
largest
of land
Cass.,
Cone. C y
moon.
If
v.
Asia.
the
moon's orbit were in the same plane as the ecliptic or the path sun would be eclipsed at every full moon. lb., s. v. eclipse.
52
CHAPTER XXIV,
16.
There was but one there Who cared much about the moon's beauty. Trol., Barch.
Tow.,
sun.
Ch. XIX,
152.
C a s s. C o n
Cyc
p.
glancing rays.
Woollen materials of all sorts were but ungracious receptacles Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XII, 230.
Dolf gazed about him in mute delight and wonder at the scenes of nature's Dolf H e y I. (Stof. H a nd 1. 1 125). magnificence. Wash. Irv. He was as welcome as ever to the friendship of nature's and fortune's most favoured, yet most unspoilt minion. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. II, 116. Mar. Corelli S o r. of Sat., II, Ch. Ill, 44. All this is nature's work.
nature.
world.
It
must
to let men's tongues wag as they would. Trol., XXIV, 201. This world's wealth will make no one happy. lb., Ch. XXVII, 230. for He was condemned to undergo the world's harsh judgment: not for the fault its atonement. G.Meredith, Ord. of Rich. Fev. Ch. 1,6. She loved him, and the world's praise or blame were nothing to her. Edna Lyall,
honesty ot
for
Barch. Tow.,
Ch.
A Hardy Norseman,
He was never
Acad.
in the
The world's maize crop. Times. Never before have these aspirations found so responsive an echo one of the greatest and most powerful of the world's rulers. lb.
councils of
Note.
Nature
the
Of the names
is
common.
above quotations, hence the genitive is very common. When there is no notion of any personification as in the laws of nature the o/-construction
is,
perhaps, less
common
than the
is
It is to this s. v. earth the Ecliptic). Cassell's Cone. Cycl. inclination of the earth's axis that we owe the variations of the seasons. lb.) People come from the uttermost ends of the earth, though, of course, there are
(Compare:
4.
many Londoners
here.
Beatr. Har.
Ships,
I,
Ch.
I,
globe. During three hundred years the multiplying millions of the English-speaking races spreading ever more widely over the surface of the globe have turned in their
need
to
the
grand
simplicity
of
the
Authorised
Version.
George
V,
Speech.
moon.
s.
Eclipses of the
moon can
only occur
at
her
full.
v. eclipse.
sun. During a total eclipse, when the bright disc of the sun is obscured, red flames are seen to project from different portions of the sun's edge. lb., s. v. sun.
nature.
things in Nature.
The Laws of Nature are simply statements of the orderly condition H. Drummond, Nat. Law. in Spir. W.2, 5 ).
1
of
world.
Barch. Tow.,
i)
Mrs. Quiverful had not been slow to learn the ways of the world. Ch. XXV, 211.
s.
Trol.
Murray,
v.
nature.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
53
Her father was a soft, good-natured gentleman, not sufficiently knowing in the ways of the world. lb., Ch. XXIX, 250. (Compare the quotation above.) Oh, it's the way of the world, my dear. lb., Ch. XLHI, 384. (In this last combination with way in the" singular, the /-construction seems to be fixed.)
c) of
the
names
of epochs:
i ,
That morning's breakfast passed heavily off. P c k w. Ch. II. There was a good deal of noise in the course of the morning's work.
Dick.,
Cop.,
In
the next day's paper or quarter's review many of us very likely admired the work of his genius. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XXXIV, 362. He is now thinking of you as he attempts to write his sermon for next Sunday's
preaching. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XLV, 407. The boy's were preparing the morrow's lessons. G.Eliot, Mill, II, Ch. V, am going to write to my dear son by Friday's mail. Mrs. Alex., For Sake, I, Ch. II, 32.
I
160.
his
the 'Lorelei'
Mag.
Times.
the 16th day of the inquiry.
lb.
was
Our Cape Town Correspondent telegraphed under Sunday's date. lb. A certain balance there always must be on every year's transactions
to provide for interest
in order
on
securities.
lb.
The genitive construction seems to be the one that is mostly preferred, except, perhaps, when a genitive or possessive pronoun modifying the head-word precedes.
i.
Mr. Tupman was not in a condition to rise after the unwonted dissipation of the previous night. P i c k w. Ch. II. In the Times of Yesterday we published a report on trade in 1898. Times. It would be a fatal error in our judgment, were the Unionist Party to repeat the somewhat carping attitude which they adopted towards the Free Amusements
,
Bill
ii.
of
last year.
We
m.
G a z.
He begged me to express his opinion that your conduct of last evening was of a description which no gentleman could endure. Pickw. Ch. II, 16. "He gives devilish good dinners," said Foker, striking up for the honour
,
of his host
of yesterday. Thack. Pend., II Ch. II 27. of yesterday did indeed give me a cruel chill of disappointment. Mrs. Gaskell Life of Charl. Bronte, 242.
,
Your
letter
some
particulars of
Jane Austen North. A b. Ch. XV, 109. There was some connexion between his present situation and his last nights dream. Wash. Irv. D o 1 f H e y 1. There's her to-morrow's partridge in the larder. Dicic, Little Dorrit,
, ,
Ch.
Ill
196.
Having delivered this manifesto (which formed a portion of his last week's leader) ... the editor paused to take breath. Pickw., Ch. 41. Since their Sunday's conversation, his lordship was more free and confidential with his kinsman than he had previously been. Thack., Virg., Ch. XVI, 157. Small beer was the only drink with which unhappy will it be believed! gentlemen soothed the fever of their previous nights potation. Van. Fair,
I,
Periphrasis with of would seem to be the rule with to-day , yesterday and to-morrow, when respectively used in the sense of the present,
54
the past
CHAPTER XXIV,
16.
in
the
meaning
of
this
What young lady cares for the puddings of to-day, much more for those which were eaten a hundred years ago? Thack., Virg. Ch. IX, 89. Before the bishop of Barchester had left the table, the minister of the day was made aware of the fact at his country-seat in Hampshire. Trol. Barch.
, ,
Tow., XXXVIII,
The
ii.
333.
at the
problem as it exists to-day, is right to hold Bishops of yesterday. Rev. of Rev. Yesterdays preacher becomes the text for to-days sermon. Thack. E n g.
plain
man, looking
Hum., Swift.
As
to Bertie, one would have imagined from the sound of his voice and the gleam of his eye that he had not a sorrow nor a care in the world. Nor had he. He was incapable of anticipating to-morrow's griefs. Trol., Barch
Tow.,
Oh.
XIX,
is
147.
Periphrasis adverb.
unavoidable
when
room
,
the
epoch
is
denoted by a noun
in
the
Van. Fair,
I,
d) numerous nouns
in certain
combinations,
among
others:
arm's distance (end, length, reach), sometimes with Murray gives within arm reach as a variant of within arm's reach. At (the) arm's end is now obsolete, bed in bed's foot (head); boat in boat's head (crew, etc., almost any noun); cannon in cannon's mouth; death in at (from, to, etc.) death's door; finger in at one's fingers' ends; hair in hair's breadth; hand in hand's breadth and hand's span; harm in out of harm's way; heart in failure of the heart's action, my (your, etc.) heart's blood (content, care, delight,
in at (within)
arm
arm
journey in journey's end; life in life's business (end, prime, struggle); mind in mind's eye; nature in in nature's garb; needle in needle's eye; rope in rope's end; ship in ship's cabin (captain, company,
desire);
crew, doctor etc., almost any noun); spear in spear's length; sword in at the sword's point; tongue in at pne's tongue's end; town in town's end and town's people; vessel in vessel's edge (course, arrival, etc., almost any noun); water in water's edge; week in from week's end to week's end, from one week's end to another's; work in the work's end; year in from year's end to year's end, from one year's end to another's.
Hold him at arm's distance. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, 1,218'). Hold death awhile at the arm's end. As you like it, II, 6, 10. He is a man that one wishes to keep at arm's length. To work at arm's length to work awkwardly or disadvantageously. Webst., Diet., s. v. arm.
arm.
The
right
.
woman
.
Anon
Owen,
II,
2
2
265
).
Wood
vii,
79
).
bed. He stood at the bed's foot. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIX, 314. She went into the room where Clive was at (he beds foot. Thack.,
II,
Newc.
i)
Fluoel;
*)
Murray.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
An
old
. .
55
chair
stood
at the bed's
head.
Sterne, Tristr.
Ch.
I,
Shandy,
II.
XXIX,
boat.
Dick.,
01.
Twist,
la.
An exploit to which no little consequence was attached by the boat's crew. Scott, Pirate, Ch. XXII, 242. He kept the boat's head continually towards the monster. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp.,
Ch.
Ill,
126.
cannon.
death.
IV,
It's
I
I
the cannon's
She shook her head, and smiled as they smile who face cold steel or mouth and want to die game. Truth, No. 1800, 1677a. brought him from death's door. Farquhar, The Beaux' Stratagem,
time
to
(413).
not
spare
when people
are
at death's door.
t
G. Eliot
Sd.
Mid.,
Ch.
LXX,
527.
to death's door.
Wes
m.
G a z.
No. 5335
New
have the whole Peerage and Baronetage at your fingers' Prince Fortunatus, Ch. XV.
harm. People send Children to School to keep them out of Harm's way. Steele, Spectator, XXXVI. So he was in love, and wished to marry! It was but natural and would keep him out of harm's way. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXVI, 696. might have been kept out of a deal of harm's way. lb. Ch. LXIX 722. We were fain to take to our boats again and pull out of harm's way. lb., Ch. XC, 962. He wanted her out of harm's way. Ch. Kinosley, Hereward, Ch. XVI, 68a. In will wear him heart. Give me that man That is not passion's slave, and
I
my
Let
heart's core.
us
,
I.
III
2, 81.
Thack.,
Pend.
Little
Dinner atTimmins's,
yeomen no doubt cheered him to his hearts content. Froude, Ld. Beacon sfi el d, IV, 61. Ah me! these Plumstead walks were pleasant enough, if one could have but
,
hearts ease. Trol. Barch. Tow. Ch. XXX, 266. will yet have his heart's blood, if go round the world again. e s t w. Ho!, Ch. XIV, 1 18a. Death was due to failure of the hearts action. Times.
,
Ch. Kingsley,
journey. They find their journey's end too often chamber. Conan Doyle Refugees, 229.
,
in
a galley,
dungeon or
torture-
life.
My
whole
life
have lived
,
in
pleasant thought,
I
As
if
life's
business were a
summer mood. Wordsworth Res. and In d. Would Some One like to have the thing, wonder, and be reminded of a man whom she knew in life's prime. Thack., Lovel the Wid. Ch. II, 25. There are some few scenes in life's drama which even no poet should dare to
,
paint.
It
Trol.
Barch. Tow.,
till
there dwell in joy and pleasure our lives' end. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. VII, 586. It is one of life's little ironies that men continually go unwhipped of justice for Rev. of their great crimes and get smartly trounced for the veriest peccadilloes.
was
better to
Ch. XXXII , 275. go and seek out some fair island and
life's
struggle.
Cent,
690).
Murray.
56
man-of-war.
,
CHAPTER XXIV,
16.
Cleveland, with his spy-glass, could see the man-of-war's men Scott, Pirate, boarding by the yards and bowsprit in irresistible numbers. Ch. XL 443.
mind.
Hor. Where, my lord? Haml. My father! methinks I see my father. Haml. In my mind's eye, Horatio. Haml., I, 2, 185 In his devouring mind's eye he pictured to himself every roasting-pig running about with a pudding in his belly. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Book, XXXII, 351.
;
nature.
side.
They spent
large
I,
portion
190.
of
the
day
in
nature's garb
by the
river
Tom Brown,
Ch. IX,
needle. The happy thought struck him of getting a piece of horse-hair, doubling Rev. of Rev. it, pushing it through the needle's eye.
rope.
risk
at
loss
how
his
cousin
rope's
precious existence (for which, perhaps, a termination). Thack., Vi rg., Ch. LXXXIII, 767.
his
In true English fashion they won their markets at the sword's point. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVIII, 135a. By the sword's edge his life shall be foredone. W. Morris, Earthly Par.,
sword.
II, in,
348i).
tongue.
G. Eliot, Sil.
Marn.
town. At
G. Farquhar,
The Recruiting
at
Officer,
I
with Lord Shelburne, who has the squire's house time Swift, Journ. to Stella, XXV, 9 June. The town's people repaired to the cliffs. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 142.
have been
vessel.
direct
It appeared certain that the crew, finding themselves unable either to the vessel's course, or to relieve her by pumping, had taken to their boats, and left her to her fate. Scott, Pirate, Ch. VII, 83. I fear the consequences of that vessel's arrival with her crew. lb., Ch. XXII, 246.
I
The
Mar. Corelli, S or. of Sat. Ch. XXXIX, 245. which great importance is attached owing to the vessel's enormous horse-power of 70.000 units, were to have taken place early this month. Times, No. 1819, 893c.
ran to the vessers edge.
official
trials,
to
water.
At a distance of
Mee
Ch.
the waters
edge.
Rid.
Hag., Mr.
II ,
s.
Will,
grew
Ch. VIII
thickly
83.
Lotus-lilies
Mar. Corelli
Son
of Sat,
XXXIX,
235.
not see a week's end to week's end. Thack., siijgle person from Ch. X, 120. (Compare: He brought down with him for the week-end a bundle of novels to review. Westm. Gaz. No. 5642, 9a.)
did
,
week.
We
Sam. Titm.
work. On
have ingeniously found some accommodating short cut , which has brought them without fatigue to their work's end in five minutes. Trol., B a r c h. T o w. Ch. XLVIII 426.
starting
they
instinct
of
self-respect
to another's.
keeps some men spruce and spotless Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. II, 17a.
Most of these combinations must be considered as survivals of the Old English idiom.
Murray.
i)
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
Not a few are more or
57
less felt as compounds with the genitive but dimly apprehended. In some of them, therefore, the common case occasionally takes the place of the genitive. The same applies more or less to those combinations in which the first element
relation
the name of one of the larger heavenly bodies. (44, Obs. IV; 536.) 1999. See also Sweet, N. E. Gr., When the things denoted by the component parts of the combination
is
are
is
replaced
G. Eliot
bed.
Mill,
Mr. Glegg advanced to the foot of the bed before speaking. III, Ch. IV, 202.
Suddenly appearing aware that some one was seated by his side of the bed, he turned sharply round and saw his sister. lb.
at the
head
harm. How proud he would be if he could show his young friend a if he could warn rogues off him, and keep him out of London life! of harm. Thack., Virg.; Ch. XVI, 168.
'
little
of
the
way
He knew that he was acting against Trol. B a r c h. Tow., Ch. XXVII 226.
life.
,
of
his life.
needle.
rich
It
is
man
Kingdom
of
for a
sword.
The
captives
(5136).
cell
Mac, Clive,
tongue.
I
saw
the
words on the
Mrs. Gask.,
tip
Cranf.. Ch.
17.
Sometimes
use
of
appears to be the noun modified which favours the This is shown by the frequency of the genitive. head-word being represented by edge and end or by the name of a measure, as may be observed in the above quotations, and especially by the fact that the genitive of all kinds of nouns may modify sake (2d).
it
the
For heaven's sake let me hear the worst of it. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXVIII, 242. "Then for God's sake", he answer'd, "both our sakes, So you will wed me, let it be at once. Ten., En. Ard., 505. There was no persecution for opinion's sake. T. W. Higginson, Hist. U. S.,
|
IX, 66 i\ He never loved combat for combat's sake. Rev. of Rev., CCXX I continue to take an interest in him for old soke's sake as Stevenson , Dr. J e k y 1 , 17 *).
1
345a.
they
say.
Ellen
and
in her boat,
me
in
his.
W. Morris,
sake
that the use of the genitive in connection with less archaic, being usual only in certain com-
binations, such as for God's sake, for Heaven's sake, for goodness' sake, for old soke's sake (= for the sake of old friendship). But
1
Murray.
58
would hardly construction in:
it
substitute
the
genitive
for
the prepositional
For the sake of her money was prostituting my honour. Thack., Pend. II, Ch. XXXIII, 360. It became necessary for him to exert himself for the sake of the family. 6 1). Lit. R e c. J. Payn .Some
1 ,
Note.
In
Thus
also
a distinct predilection for the genitive. almshouse, hospital and jail, in misery's every refuge, he C h r s t m. Car.
i
his blessing.
When
It
the
head-word
(39, Obs.
is
modified by own,
the genitive
is
practically
obligatory.
I.)
was
the
Oscar Wilde
The
Pict. of Dor.
Gray,
the
In the
ordinary prose
use
of
genitive
say,
at
is
more or
tale's
we
our
commencement
were
Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XX. 215. Failure in any of these arrangements endangers a newspaper's
stability.
Good Woids
He was ushered
for 1885.
into
a London house's
library.
Meredith,
Lord
Ormon
When Ho!,
Mr. Cunard was on board enjoying quietly his ship's success. Froude.
Oceana,
They saw
XX,
338.
mouth
[etc].
Ch. Kinosley,
off the
Westw.
lb.,
and there
bay's mouth.
in taxation
,
in
form and
in
Westm. Gaz.
No.
While the Lords have been engaged with the Budget, the Commons' Week has been one of considerable industry. lb., 2a. Well-meaning legislators would do well to think more of the present, and concentrate their forces on the hostile powers which are still
endeavouring to thwart the Act's chief end. lb., 5642, 4c. At the bottom of the kite's stem is another line terminating II. Lond. News, No. 3777, 393. of large spiders web.
II.
in
a tangle
the higher elevated style, especially in verse, the of the genitive is often found extended to any noun, to impart dignity to the discourse or to meet the requirements of metre and rhyme. What leave the lofty Latian strain Her stately prose her verse's
In
use
charms.
Calf-love
life
Scott,
is
Marm.,
VI,
In trod.,
|
vi.
outlived
Golden Calf. It is not the great bloodhounds and greyhounds heels. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to
|
common
by
the
Punch.
that bark at misfortune's
mend,
I,
Ch. 11,32.
i)
Murray.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
Genitive of
19. a)
59
Genitive.
Agency or Subjective
persons,
proper names, the genitive of agency is much more common than its prepositional equivalent, when the noun modified distinctly expresses an action or a state, i. e. when it is a gerund or an equivalent form. The verbal nature of the head-
distinctly
apparent by the
presence of
objects or adverbial adjuncts, and it is these latter which often practically preclude the use of the prepositional construction (26, c).
i.
* Will
of
Sher., Riv.,
I, 2.
He brought up
Thack.,
Pend.,
singing
Ch.
quite
Ch.
196.
XVI,
My
girl's
odious governess's
is
unbearable.
Dick.,
kind.
Van.
,
XIX,
alarmed
at
Mr.
Feeder's yawning.
of
Domb.
wooing
was
altogether
peculiar
Id.,
Cop.,
Ch. X, 72. That's Dr. Gwynne's doing. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XLVII. 421. ** Lady Catherine continued her remarks on Elizabeth's performance. Ch. XXXI, 176. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej. Mrs. Gardiner then rallied her niece on Wickham's desertion. lb., Ch. XXXVII, 154. A priest rose and renewed an oration which Hereward's entrance had Ch. IV, 336. interrupted. Ch. Kinosley, Herew. *** Mr. Slope had spoken of Mrs. Proudie's interference in diocesan matters. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXV, 209.
,
ii.
We
could never
listen
for
James, without feeling that there was a constant effort, a tug up hill. Mac, Rev., 3116. He was destroyed by Mercury at the bidding of Zeus. Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5329
,
5a.
17,
and especially
Note. Sometimes the prepositional construction may have been preferred on account of the modifier being a plural (12, d): After the withdrawal of the servants Pen said to the vicar of Tinckleton.
Thack., Pend.,
II,
a scolding from the bishop in the hearing Barch. Tow., Ch. XVL1I, 418.
He got
of the servants.
Trol.,
b)
With nouns
construction
that
is
do not
indicate
persons
the
)
the prepositional
The only sound heard in the stillness was and down the perches of its prison. Hardy
Gunth., Man.,
614.
i)
60
. .
the treaty.
Westm. Gaz.
Objective Genitive.
20.
The
objective genitive is unusual, apparently owing to the reluctance which is generally felt to express the notion of subjection
to an action
by genitive
inflection.
is
The
not,
however,
so
unusual
to
as
is
often
frequency
may be due
objective relation
is
relation of posses-
sion
understood
in
its
, Marley's funeral, the king's also be interpreted: the funeral which Marley had, the accommodation which the king had, the amusement which that lady had. These and similar combinations may favour the use of others, such as Rizzio's assassination Eleanor's banishment her daughter's loss etc. where the
, ,
mind that, according to a generally observed word-order (Ch. VIII, 2, a), post-position of the modifying element, as in the punishment of the boy, has the effect of throwing that element into relief, which may be foreign to the speaker's or writer's intention. It may, accordingly, be supposed that the desire of giving prominence to the element modified, will sometimes
It
in
lead to the use of the genitive construction. Objective genitives are almost strictly confined
to
the
names
of
persons, or of animals or things thought of as persons. They are found before gerunds, nouns of action, and agent-nouns. As to gerunds, the two factors mentioned above seem to operate with
their influence more powerfully felt a noun of action, but in the case of agent-nouns they almost entirely counteract the reluctance referred to above. Thus there is nothing strange in my father's defenders patrons, persecutors, supporters, but my father's defence, patronage, persecution, support
the
least
potency.
They make
is
when
the
head-word
more or less incongruous, if they are meant to denote the defence, patronage, persecution or support enjoyed or suffered by my father. It follows then that objective genitives are least common before gerunds, rather usual before nouns of action while before agent-nouns they are as common as ordinary genitives of possession. It stands to reason that the objective genitive is avoided when it might give rise to misunderstanding. Thus God's love being mostly apprehended as a subjective genitive, it would hardly do to use the same expression to denote an objective relation. It may here also be observed that the love of God, perhaps, owing to its frequent liturgical use is often understood as a substitute for a subjective genitive: The grace
are
,
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with us all evermore. Litany (Cor. B, XIII).
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
'
61
In
the
the following quotations those of the first group have a gerund as head-word of an objective genitive, those of the second a noun of
action.
i.
must present your friend with some little token, on the christening. D o m b. Ch. V, 34. occasion of Paul's christening. Dick. On the occasion of Dora's christening they had expressed their opinion in
I
, ,
writing.
Id.
Cop.,
Ch.
XXXVIII
2786.
is
drilling.
insisted on.
Spenc
Educ,
peculiarly
Ch. **
10a.
crowning.
auspicious circumstances.
ii.
abandonment.
avoid
the
friction
and odium
into power,
of
causing the
will repeal.it.
Bill's
abandonment now, and then when we come Rev. (Westm: Gaz., No. 5625, 16c).
we
Sat.
accommodation.
modation.
Some
Scott,
Quent. Durw.,
hasty preparations had been made for the King's accomCh. XXVIII, 360.
amusement. He little dreamt that had all his intentions with reference to Mrs. Bold been known to the signora, it would only have added zest to that lady's
amusement. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXVII, 228. appointment. She wouldn't have Mr. Quiverf urs promised appointment cozened away by the treachery of Mr. Slope. lb. Ch. XXVI 222. Sir John French's appointment to succeed Sir William Nicholson as Aide-de-Camp General to the King comes in the natural sequence of things. Truth, No. 1802, 756.
, ,
assassination.
this
Even the
story
no ideas
at
to
emissary of commerce.
Scott, Fair
it
Maid,
XXXIV,
Intr.
10.
banishment.
banishment.
To
the
one
Eleanor's
Trol.,
Barch. Tow.,
discomfiture. The idea of Mr. Slope's discomfiture formed no small part of the archdeacons pleasure. lb., Ch. XL VII, 421.
dread.
The Saxons
Ch.
II,
called
seal's dread.
Kingsley,
Herew.,
21a.
execution. A day or two after Amonius's execution. Id., Hyp., Ch. XX, 105a. Mr. Doughty's famous trial and execution. Id., Westw. Ho!, Ch. V, 416.
expulsion. She should not have expressed the idea that her order for Mr. Slope's expulsion could be treated otherwise than by immediate obedience. Trol., Barch.
Tow.,
loss.
It
Ch.
XXVI,
218.
was Jemina's opinion that if anything could console Mrs. Birch for her daughter's loss, it would be that pious and eloquent composition in which Miss Pinkerton announced the event. Van. Fair, I, Ch. I, 3. Nor should have mentioned the child's loss at all, but that even that loss was a means of great wordly blessing to us. Sam. Titm. Ch. XII, 165. The feeling of Emily's loss does not diminish as time wears on. Mrs. Gask. Life of Ch. Bronte, 286. No tears were shed for her mother's loss. Marie Corelli, Sor. of Sat., II,
I
,
,
Ch.
XXVI,
62.
His faculties were benumbed, and not even pain, the pain of Ewan'sloss, could yet penetrate the dead blank that lay between him and a full consciousness of the awful event. Hall Caine, Deemster, Ch. XXVII, 193.
murder.
tyrant
The army
is
giving
no thought
to
Times.
62
preferment.
rehabilitation.
his
life
Times.
robbery. In What Lady Glenmire had said about Mr. Hoggins's robbery, we had a specimen of what people came to, if they gave way to such a weakness.
Mrs. Gask.
**
,
Cra
f.
Ch.
208.
adoption.
The
result
was
,
his
marriage and
the
I
Mrs. Alex.
A Life Interest,
Ch.
II
33.
.
.
appointment. She sent Mrs. Quiverful home with an assurance that appointment of Mr. Quiverful should be insisted on. Trol., Barch.
Ch.
the
Tow.,
XXVI
223.
loss.
loss
of her
lover.
lb., Ch.
XXVIII,
228.
The
loss
ability,
the Malcontent nobles, the religious discord, the consummate both political and military of Parma, all combined with the lamentable
of
of William the Silent to separate for ever the southern and Catholic provinces from the northern confederacy. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 8976.
treatment. The high-handed treatment of the Prince was held by his (sc. Lord Ormont's) advocates to be justified by the provocation and the result.
G.Meredith,
21. Obs.
I.
Lord Ormont,
Ch.
II,
25.
Instances of the objective genitive, also of the are quite frequent in Shakespeare.
|
names
of things,
Every one did hear Thy praises in his kingdom's great defence. Macb. 1,5, 98. He laboured in his country's wreck. lb., I, 5, 114. Henry the Seventh succeeding, truly pitying My father's loss like a most royal prince Restor'd me to my honours. Henry VIII, II, 1, 113.
,
| |
I
II.
Such words as likeness, picture, portrait may be preceded by a genitive denoting the person (or thing) represented, the combination forming a kind of objective genitive.
effigy. Ch. II,
I
was
staring at
my father's effigy.
Rid. Hag.,
The Brethren,
18.
picture. On the receipt of my mother's picture. Cowper. The medallion with your mother's picture and yours, lies always on my heart. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. Ill, 26.
I
want you
to
explain
to
i
picture.
Osc. Wilde,
t.
exhibit
Dorian Gray's
12.
Ch.
I,
portrait.
"How many
"Four,
I
portraits
Crowdie?"
Lauderdale's".
think
have you painted since last summer, and two I'm doing now, besides Miss
statue.
Westm.
Compare
The
oil
with this: the picture of Dorian Gray. Oscar^Wilde. Miss Brad. painting of Bowster and Miss Bowster. y
,
First
Happy Christ m.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
In the centre of the
. . .
63
man.
III.
room stood the full-length portrait of a young Oscar Wilde, Pict. of Dor. Gray, Ch. 1,8.
i
a stone's throw, which has come to be used as the name of a measure, the objective genitive is fixed. See, however, 23, Obs. V.
In
IV.
Sometimes
it
genitive corresponds.
He had absolutely taken that same Mr. Arabin into his confidence with reference to his dread of Mr. Slope's alliance. Trol. , B a r c h. Tow., Ch. LII, 442 (=. alliance with Mr. Slope.)
Genitive of Measure.
22.
The
genitive of measure
is
used
in
expressing:
The lowest
distance
(165a).
gallery appeared in a parallel of less than a hundred yards' from the height where I stood. Swift, Gul. Trav. Ch. I III, (Compare: It lay nearly twenty miles distant from Yarlshof. Scott,
,
Pirate, Ch. Ill, 31.) The grisly priest, with murmuring prayer, A slender crosslet form'd with care. A cubit's length in measure due. Scott, Lady, HI, vm. Onward she came, the large black hulk seeming larger at every fathoms' length. Id., Pirate, Ch. VII, 83
|
|
little
Wash.
Irv.,
Sketch-Bk., XXVI,
We had good winds from the east, though soft and weak, for five months' Atlantis (269). space and more. Bacon In six weeks' time I finished a sort of Indian canoe. Swift, Gulliver's
,
New
Trav.,
In
IV, Ch.
(211a).
three
Twist,
was able
to
sit
in
an
easy chair.
Dick.
I.
They were
Edna Lyall, Hardy Norsem., Ch. XXIII, The acquaintance of the two was not of a few
weeks' standing.
II.
Lond.
News.
An
c)
interview of three hours' duration.
Times.
AH
as he lighted down.
King
Sol.
Mines,
68.
had not three farthings' worth of business in the world. Burns, Letter to Dr. Moore. He had chosen a shawl of about thirty shillings' value. Mrs. Gask., Cranf.,
Ch. XIII, 242.
Buy a
1,
shilling's
worth of stamps.
St.
Paul's
64
e) the
of a ship.
which
Reign
ofFerd. andlsab.
23. Obs.
I.
can only be measured by like, the names of measures speaking to be followed by the names of the abstractions that are measured, i. e. respectively by such words as distance, time, weight, worth, burden, or their synonyms. This is actually the case in all the quotations given above. As a matter of fact these words are, however, mostly understood: a moment's time (a) becomes a moment (0).
like
As
ought,
strictly
of the measure is put in the common of being placed before the name of the abstraction a moment's time becomes a moment of time (?') This construc-
case
tion
In
partitive
is
infrequent.
some cases the name of the abstraction is followed by descriptive of (Murray, s. v. of, 38) + the name of the matter
measured: a moment's pause of complete silence (8). In such a combination the name of the abstraction is mostly thrown out, with the result that the genitive is replaced by the common a moment's pause of complete silence becomes a moment case
:
of complete
silence
(e).
This latter construction admits of two modifications: it may be changed into one with a genitive: a moment's complete silence (Z); the word modified and the modifying word may change functions: a complete silence of a moment (>?), this last construction being also found with the name of the abstraction as the head-word: a space of five minutes. The different constructions here described do not occur with equal frequency, nor are they found with regard to all the different measures mentioned above. Construction (/?) is, of course, a usual one with all of them and does not, therefore,
require any illustration.
a) With the names of measures of length etc. constructions () and (}]) are the ordinary ones.
i.
To give Martin Lightfoot a yard of law was never to come up with him again. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. , Ch. I, 126. The sight of the miles and miles of houses all round made her miserable. Edna Lyall, Hardy Norseman, Ch. XX VI I, 250.
It
Rodney Stone,
I,
66.
ii.
The viceroy has sanctioned the construction of 550 miles of railway. Times, At a distance of some paces from the water's edge. Rid. Hag.,
Mr. Mees. Will,
Ch. VIII, 83.
is
When
tive
the
name
.of
the abstraction
name
Another said there was four foot water. Defoe, Rob. Crusoe.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
b)
65
the above constructions
of time
all
Construction (S) occurs denoted by such words as pause or interval. Constructions (s) and (C) are very frequent. Construction (>?), also quite common, is sometimes replaced by one with the preposition for, in which the prepositional word-group is, of course, an adverbial
(7) is
Construction
rather unusual.
is
when
the abstraction
adjunct. Some quotations illustrating the construction (#) instanced by a space of five minutes (see preceding page), are given below under vi. For illustration of construction (a) see 22, b. A moment of time will make us unhappy for ever. Gay, Beggar's Opera, II.
i.
There can be no harm in mentioning the matter now after twenty years' lapse of time. Thack., Sam. Titm. Ch. X, 130. He inquired for Rummer and the cold in his nose, told Mrs. Rummer a riddle, asked Miss Rummer when she would be ready to marry him, and paid his compliments to Miss Brett, the other young lady in the bar, all in a' minute
,
ii.
iii.
of time. Id., Pend., I, Ch. Ill, 42. There was a moment's pause of complete
silence. Mrs.
1,40-
for
reading.
To
She begged for an extra week of holiday. Mrs. Craik A Hero, 45. such a temper had eighteen years of misgovernment brought the most Mac, Hist., I, Ch. II, 232. loyal Parliament that had ever met. That would have spared me eight years of misery. Ch. Kingsley, Westw.
,
Ho!, Ch. VII, 626. After a night of tossing he started for Bideford. lb., Ch. XIV, 1126. Three hours of driving brought us back to Ballarat. Froude,
Ch. VIII, 116.
Still
it
Oceana,
iv.
to be out in the open air, to get a few minutes of Edna Lyall Hardy Norseman, Ch. XXIV 218. 11,261. To-night there was a moment of calm. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. Peggotty and Mr. Barkis were going to make a day's holiday together. Dick.,
leisure.
,
,
was something
Cop., Ch. X,
During
726.
month's holiday she was particularly pleased with me. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. I, 2. A couple of hours' brainwork. Mrs. Ward, Marc, 1,76. Dick Boyce got three months' imprisonment lb., I, 95. An hour's walking would have brought me back to Essendean. Stevenson,
my
Kidnapped,
Workers
Ch.
17.
toil.
He could
Mag.
to render
Times.
,
This is what we shall all feel when an account of our life's stewardship.
in
Yokohama
v. "I
vi.
is fifteen days' steaming from San Francisco. lb., CCXII, 1136. met with a man haven't seen for years," he said after a silence of some minutes. Mrs. Alexander, A Life Interest, I, Ch. I, 25. We sailed from Peru where we had continued for the space of one whole
I
year.
Bacon
New
IV,
My
master allowed
to finish
my
boat.
Swift,
Gul. Trav.,
Ch.
(2106).
This unique and momentous change, completed, so far as one dialect is concerned, in a space of two centuries, evidently requires to be accounted for. Bradley, The Making of English, Ch. II, 48.
H.
Poutsma
A Grammar of
II.
66
vii.
CHAPTER XXIV,
There was silence for a few minutes.
23.
Ch. Kinqsley,
Westw. Ho!,
Ch.
XXXI
In
2376.
There was a fight for four hours. Times. such a sentence as John had but two hours the start of them Ch. V, 46) the word-group two hours is I, (Thack., Henry Esm.
,
a weight are ordinarily found in construction (e): Compare, however, the construction used in: The floating masses are sometimes from sixty to two hundred and twenty-five
pounds of sugar.
in weight.
pounds
Webst.
Diet.,
s.
v.
ambergris.
varied practice may be observed with regard to nouns denoting d) a measure of worth or value. Very frequent are construction (a) and (d) with the noun worth as the
A more
head-word, in the latter with the name of a commodity in the descriptive word-group: a good shilling's worth, a shilling's worth of tobacco. When the noun in the descriptive word-group is not the name of a commodity, worth is suppressed; i. e. construction (e): a hundred pounds of debts, or construction (/): a debt of a hundred pounds is used, or the descriptive noun is placed by way of apposition after the name of In this last construction the money-unit: a hundred pounds expense. the apposition may be regarded as a substitute for the genitive (23, Obs. IV, d). Only the three last constructions are here illustrated, He had WOO I. of debts. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. X, 121.
i.
Brough alone
is
lb.,
million pounds.)
ii.
iii.
She brought me her 1.750 I. of savings. Id., Virg., Ch. LXXXIV, 893. A reward of 25 pounds is offered to whoever shall discover the offender, He had never been at one shilling expense to furnish him with food. Smollett,
Rod. Rand.,
Thirty
Ch.
Ill,
19.
pounds and twenty-five guineas a year make fifty-six pounds five shillings English money. Goldsm., Vic, Ch. XI. Three thousand two hundred loose cash. Sam. Titm., Ch. VI 58. (pounds
,
is
out
CCVII, 2286.
In the
(million
= million
hopes
of five
millions
reduction.
Rev. of Rev.,
pounds.)
following quotation for stands as a substitute for the conjunction function described in Ch. VI, 15. Whosoever will apprehend the traitor Thomas Wyatt shall have a hundred pounds for reward. Ten. Queen Mary, II, 3.
as
in the'
The names
to
worth
of the money-units penny, shilling and pound when joined are sometimes placed in the common case instead of the
The two nouns are sometimes made to form a kind of compound which may take the mark of the plural. For the exposition of the ordinary constructions with worth see Ch. IV, 10, Obs. II. Compare
genitive.
also Ch.
XXV,
29, a,
(a)
3.
and (#) are frequent enough with the noun value respectively as the head-word or as part of the modifying word-group:
Construction
i.
ii.
a shawl of thirty shillings' value. to value of sixpence. II. Loud. News. The money and jewels to the value of several hundred thousand pounds Mos. Rotsch. (Stof., H a n d I. I, 52).
Send stamps
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
67
More frequent
still is
the construction
(>?)
a shawl of thirty
shillings.
:
Compare also money's worth (= Dutch w a a r geld) with money value (= Dutch: geldswaarde). What need you care, if you have your money's worth.
i.
voor
Sher.,
(z
ij
n)
School
for Scand., HI, 3, (402). The public has a shrewd idea of Rev., CCXI, 126.
ii.
that
it
its
Old hoards were taken out and examined as to their money value. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XIV, 273. There is more depending upon this ring than its mere money value. Deighton, Note to Merch. of Ven., IV, 1, 426.
Ch.
e)
The noun burden is often understood after ton. A stout ship of three hundred ton. Swift, GuI. Trav.,
I,
I,
(163a).
II.
Word-groups containing the name of a measure of time are often used in describing the magnitude of other matters, varying as to the length of a period. Who knows what a year or two's Latin may do for him? Goldsm., She
Stoops
My
to
Conquer,
I.
faculties
have wrought a day's task and earned a day's wages. Mrs. Gask.,
,
Ch. II, 15. Thack., Sam. Titm. He has a right to claim six years' arrears. Lytton, Night and Morn., 470. The walk was a solitary walk, ... but a minute or two's distance from his Our Boys. lodgings. H. J. Byron He owed me fifteen months' rent. Miss Brad. Lady Audley's Secret.,
, ,
II,
Ch.
II,
35.
that in stating a distance in a measure of time it is the rule mention the mode oi locomotion: thus half-an-hour's walk (or ride, etc. not half-an-hour from the station , etc. etc.) from the station In the following quotation the ordinary practice is not observed: He (sc. Bismarck) had satisfied himself during his walk that our outposts were
to
,
,
Observe
T. P.'s
Weekly, No.
479, 336.
The
action or state
whose duration
is
to be described, is
sometimes but
dimly present to the speaker's mind, and, consequently, not indicated by a special word. We were all off at an hour's warning. Sher., Riv. I, 1. He was always ready to march at a few hours' notice. Thack., Pend., II,
,
Ch. XXXI, 339. beard of three weeks' date. Dick., Barn. Rudge, Ch. I, 4a. You cannot at a moment's notice put a stop to all those precautions. Times. Compare: I have already said that when you begin preparations, you cannot
stop them in a
moment.
lb.
IV.
is
is sometimes used instead of the genitive. most common when the name of the measure
is
feet included, Over against this temple, on the other side of the great highway, at twenty feet distance there was a turret at least five feet high. Swift, Gul. Trav., I, Ch. I, (118a). Noma took her seat on a stone about three feet distance. Scott, Pirate, Ch. X, 113. He built a house of three stories height. Id., Guy Man ne ring, Ch. I.
the
word
68
CHAPTER XXIV,
A much
ii.
23.
necessary to
hit
is
out this ideal would have involved another ten or Sweet, Hist, of Eng. Sounds, Pref., 11. He's four pounds weight. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXII, 1696. The vast tobacco warehouses with their millions of pounds weight of
Any attempt
to
carry
iv.
In
smoke-producing material. London and its Environs. J) found about thirty-six pounds value in money. Defoe, another locker
I
Rob. Crusoe
(v. d.
Voort, Eng.
Reading-book,
43).
when the name b) The common-case form is only exceptionally used of the measure is a singular, perhaps excepting inch, which owing
to the final sibilant
i.
I
ordinarily reject the mark of the genitive. saw body descending almost to a parallel with me, at less than an English mile distance. Swift, Gulliver's Travels, III, Ch. I, (1646). He passed them (sc. these remonstrances) on to the editor with ... a cheerful admonition not to swerve by an inch breadth from the course
may
this vast
ii.
No. 5335, 46. he was then pursuing. Westm. Gaz. She might as well have asked him to carry a ton weight on his back. G. Eliot, Mill, III, Ch. IX, 240.
,
c)
after the
name
of the
measure seems
it.
to
dropping of the mark of the genitive. The oldest clerk had not six months more standing in Titm., Ch. VI, 65.
d)
Thack.,
Sam.
The nouns denoting a measure of money have the mark of the genitive only when the noun modified is worth or value. When either of these nouns is absent, the common case seems to be regularly used. This appears to be the case also when the name of the money-unit
(pound)
i.
is suppressed. (23, Obs. 1, d.) She has fifteen hundred pounds a year jointure. Wych., Plain Dealer, 1,1. He had never been at one shilling expense to furnish him with food, raiment, books or other necessaries. Smol^ Rod. Rand., Ch. Ill, 19. Thirty pounds and twenty-five guineas a year make fifty-six pounds five Vic, Ch. XI (298). shillings English money. Golds. A hundred and fifty guineas reward. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. V, 52. became head-clerk with 400 I. a year salary. lb., Ch. X, 127. Under no circumstances shall we ever put a penny tax on wool. Westm. Gaz.
, , I
ii.
jointure. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. VI, 58. Three thousand two hundred loose cash. lb. Mr. Haldane held out hopes of five millions reduction. Rev. of Rev.,
CCVI1, 2286.
e)
of the singular common case instead of the plural genitive, as in the following quotation, is more or less vulgar. Each bar (of silver) between a thirty and forty pound weight. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. I, 2a.
The use
V.
The
Obs.
genitive
III.)
may be
Especially
variously related to its head-word. (16, d; 21, the following compounds are in frequent use:
t r.
i)
Ellinqer
Verm. B e
18.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
69
hair's-breadth, hand's-breadth, arm's-length, stone' s-throw , hand'stouch, day 's-journey , day's-sail. In some of these the common-case
form occasionally varies with the genitive. arm's-length. At last he was withim an arm's-length
II.
Mag.
at
arm's length.
Thack.,
Pend.,
I,
day's journey. Alexandria was still several days' journey below him. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. HI, 126. 12. It is a good two days' journey. Jerome, Diary of a Pilgr. There are districts in France now where a church is not to be seen in a
,
day's journey.
Con. Doyle
f.
222.
lb., 303.
The
greatest
man
sail.
Ch. Kingsley,'
Hy p.
\4b.
hair('s)-breadth. i. Not a hair's-breadth beyond. G.Eliot, MiddleCh. XXXVI, 260. She next dusted and arranged the room, which was dusted and arranged to a hair's breadth already. Dick., Cop., Ch. XIV, 1006. ii. Drawing herself up so as not to lose one hair-breadth of her uncommon
march,
height.
Scott
Guy Mannering. i)
,
hand('s)-breadth. i. The man's face was within a hand's-breadth of her own. Con. Doyle, Ref. 207. ii. Behold, thou hast made my days as an handbreadth. Psalm XXXIX, 5. I saw the library casement open a hand-breadth. Jane Eyre, Ch. XXIII, 302. The good sword stood a hand-breadth out Behind the Tuscan's head.
|
Macaulay
literature.
hand's-span.
is
but
hand's-span
in
the
history
of
Westm. Gaz.
No. 5071,4c.
hand('s)-touch. i. He had the woman he loved within hand's touch of him. Con. Doyle, Ref., 303. ii. ,1 could make out no sound when they are were within hand-touch of me. lb., 325.
stone('s)-throw(-cast). i. Rebecca and her husband were but a few stones' throw of the lodging which the invalid Miss Crawley occupied. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 265.
ii. About a stone-cast from the wall A sluice with blacken'd waters slept. Ten. Mariana, IV. Within a stone-throw of the hard white beach. Westm. Gaz. Compare also A bow-shot from her bower-eaves. Ten. Lady of
|
Shalott,
III,
i.
The genitive of apposition or specializing is uncommon and confined to the higher literary language, being almost exclusively found in poetry. In the majority of cases the noun is a proper
name.
In
of
apposition or specializing
is
Murray.
70
hardly used except
CHAPTER
XXIII, 24.
when the head-word is a plural, as in De der Republiek Vereenigde State n. See also Ch. IV, 16, and compare Onions, Advanced Eng. Synt., 9495.
i.
In
Britain's
,
Isle,
no matter where,
I.
An
ancient
In
pile
of
buildings
isle.
stands.
Gray
Long Story,
of timber then
1 ,
No want
was
felt
or fear'd
Albion's happy
Cowper,
Task,
On
58.
Barnard's towers and Tees's stream She (sc. the moon) changes as a guilty dream. Scott, Rokeby, I, 1. Where the Trosach's defile Opens on the Katrine's lake and isle. Id.
|
Lady,
Day
deep
set
|
VI, xix.
And
Id.,
fair river,
1.
broad and
Oh
And
this
Ullin's daughter.
hill.
leaves
on Cith&ron's
of Mceri's Lake.
Moore, Par.
and the
.
Peri.
Chief nourisher in
.
|
M a c b.
II
2, 39.
|
For he attaints that rival's fame For not Mimosa's tender tree
IV, Introd. vn.
With treason's charge. Scott, Marm., II, vm. Shrinks sooner from the touch than he. lb.,
|
power
|
Blushing
flower
Opening
to
d.
of
Triermain,
III
xxxix,
And indeed he seems to me Scarce other than my king's ideal knight. Ten., Id. of the King, Ded. 6. The horse was worth a kingdom's gift. W. Morris, Earthly Par., The Proud King, 876.
genitives in the following quotations may be considered as instances of the appositional or specializing genitive: 'T was after dread Pultowa's day. Byron Mazeppa, /. Within a window'd niche of that high hall Sate Brunswick's fated chieftain. C h II d e H a r. III xxm. Id.
Also the
in:
|
Far ran the naked moon across The houseless ocean's heaving field, Or flying shone, the silver boss Of her own halo's dusky shield. Ten., The Voyage, IV. which Almighty God bestowed Great and manifold were the blessings, upon us, the people of England when first he sent Your Majesty's Royal Person Author. Vers., Epistle Dedic. to rule and reign over us. To the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty this historical dictionary of the English language is by her gracious permission dutifully dedicated by the University of Oxford. Murray.
. .
Likewise
even
in
:
to
such
genitives as are
component parts
etc.
of proper
names, as
St.
b)
The
constructions mostly used instead of the genitive of apposition or specializing, are that of apposition or that with appositional of: the river Tweed (anciently the river of Tweed), the ideal knight
my
the feast
is
of
life,
the charge
of
Sometimes
its
:
ordinary
the
substitute
tree.
the
common
case of an
ff.
adnominal noun
mimosa
For
fuller details
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
71
USE OF THE GENITIVE AND ITS PREPOSITIONAL EQUIVALENT UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF CONSIDERATIONS OF SYNTAX, EMPHASIS AND METRE OR RHYTHM. 25.
As
as
to
the
names
persons, one
or
the
other
construction
is
sometimes made
obligatory or at least highly preferable by the syntactical connections of either of the two nouns concerned, by the exigencies
of
genitive:
is
followed by an apposition. Laura Bell became Mrs. Pendennis's daughter. Neither her husband, nor that gentleman's brother, the Major, viewed her with favourable eyes. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. VIII, 90. He purchased the Whittingehame estate, to which the Prime Minister's father, James Maitland Balfour succeeded in 1847. Rob. Machray (Pall Mall Mag.) There are some interesting illustrations, including a portrait of Pitts mother, Lady Hester Grenville. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 10a.
was
that
,
b)
Ill,
17.
c k
XXXIV.
2)
when
is followed by of (pro)noun, whether an or an apposition, or filling representing objective genitive It will be observed that other function. grammatical any Dutch idiom in this case hardly tolerates a genitive-construction, nor its prepositional equivalent either. He would grufhble about the master's treatment of him. Thack., Newc,
the
head-word
I,
Ch. XII,
are
144.
We
say a great deal about Pen's courtship of Miss Fotheringay. Id., Pend., II, Ch. VI, 69. He accepted very complacently the town's opinion of him. Id., Henry II, Ch. X, 238. All the town was indignant at my lord Duke's unjust treatment of General
not going to
Esmond,
Webb.
lb., II, Ch. XV, 287. Miles himself had agreed in George's view of pursuing quite other Ch. LXI, 633. than a military career. Id., Virg. Mrs. Gask. I was not surprised at Miss Pole's manner of bridling up. C r a n f. Ch. XI 208. Even Mrs. Jamieson's approval of her selling tea had been gained. lb.,
Sir
Ch. XV, 281. We can only find space for Napoleon's most interesting summary of Cromwell, in whom, perhaps, he saw a kindred spirit. Acad., No.
1765, 2036.
In the earlier plays,
is
to
such as the story of Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac, be found a preponderance of the pathetic. II Lond. News,
No. 3698, 344. Another distinction of the French visit was the King's opening of the King's way. Rev. of Rev., CXCI 460a.
,
72
c)
CHAPTER
XXIV, 26.
obligatory:
preposition.
His denials only served to confirm his relatives' opinion regarding his Ch. XVI, 167. splendid expectations. Thack., Virg. Within a few pages of the end we are made unhappy by the lady's victory over that poor young sinner Foker. Trol., Thack., Ch. IV, 111. (He) thus purposely (ignored) the archdeacon's hitherto unlimited dominion over the diocese at large. Id., Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 32. I was rather vexed and annoyed at Miss Matty's conduct in taking the note to herself so decidedly. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIII, 247.
2)
when the head-word is modified by a clause. There are so many of the bishop's relatives who always bring their own horses. Trol., Barch. Town., Ch. V, 35. The malignant Pope was forced to own, that there was a charm in Addison's Mac, Addison, (751a). talk, which could be found nowhere else.
when
the
3)
element
modified
is
made up
of
Barch.
Tow.,
Pitt's
'
4)
"
when a
construction
in
known. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 9c. which the owner is indicated by a
equivalent.
may be
Ch.
assistance),"
,
clasping
c k w.
II.
The tears rolled down the poor child's face. He squeezed Fokefs hand. Thack., Pend.
She put her card and half-a-crown
. . .
into the
man's hand.
Trol
to
Barch.
ruthlessly
be seated.
Ch. XII, 94. He took people's money, more by force than fraud. Doone, Ch. XI 65.
,
"Blackmore,
Lorn
Note.
genitive
Dr.
is
The above
1)
men-
tioned under
when an
objective
in question.
Grantly's proposed visit would have reference to the reappointment of Mr. Harding to the wardenship of Barchester Hospital. Trol. Barch.
,
Tow.,
Ch. XVII,
133.
He did not feel any peculiar personal interest in the appointment of Dr. Proudie to the bishopric. lb., Ch. V, 31. The assassination and burial of the king made a deep impression on the
people.
They
when
a relation of possession,
origin or agency is in question. The journey of my daughters to town was now resolved upon. Golds., Vic. From the time when as a hostage in France he first discovered the plan of Philip to plant the Inquisition in the Netherlands [etc.]. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 899fl. The last chapters in this volume deal with the relations of Pitt with Catherine of Russia. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 10a.
,
,
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
27.
73
The
a)
syntactical connections
make
unavoidable:
1)
when
the
noun
in the
modifying element
is
followed by an
adjective or participle that has the value of an undeveloped clause. Thus for the hats of the women present, the opinion
addressed we could not say *the women present's *the man addressed' s opinion; nor yet, of course, opinion, *the women's hats present, *the man's opinion addressed. But there is nothing unusual in the use of the genitive,
of the
man
if
is
not
felt
as an undeveloped
at
clause.
Fitzroy minor's nursery. Ch. VI 326.
,
Little
Dinner
Timmins's,
2)
when
head-word whether or no modified by an adjecpreceded by an indefinite article, by a demonstrative, interrogative or indefinite pronoun, or by a numeral; and also when it stands without any modifier beyond an adjective: a (this, which, some, one) friend (old friend) of
the
,
tive, is
practically obligatory or, at least, highly preferable: 1) when the noun in the modifying element is followed by an
i.
adnominal clause, a prepositional adjunct or an apposition, Is my young landlord then the nephew of a man whose virtues are so universally known? Golds., Vicar, Ch. III.
Harry played
the equal
so well
Will,
,
that
of
V
.
r g.
Ch. XVI
The
ii.
iii.
of Feversham, who commanded in chief, was Hist., II, Ch. V, 173, The Church of St. Mary of Egypt. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. V, 189. Chunda Sahib fell into the hands of the Mahrattas, and was put to death at the instigation probably of his competitor, Mahommed Ali.
Mac, Clive,
2)
(509a).
when
In
the
modifying
element
consists
of
two or more
co-ordinate members.
such a frame of mind he proceeded to pay his respects at the palace of the bishop and his chaplain. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 31. Shelley's body was washed ashore on the 19th, and burnt on a pyre Hunt and Trelawney. Saintsb. , N i n e t. in the presence of Byron
the second day after the arrival
,
Cent., Ch.
is
II,
83.
Note. It is hardly necessary to observe that also the genitive sometimes used in spite -of the above connections. A, a; 4,6,1. The Gentleman's Name that met him was Mr. Wordly Wiseman. Bunyan, Pilgr. Progr. (149). On Thursday Lord Selborne complained of Mr. Lloyd George's and No. 5625, lb. Mr. Churchill's combined invective. Westm. Gaz.
, ,
74
28. Obs. a)
Two
a
or
particular
more successive genitives are generally avoided, unless effect, mostly humorous or depreciatory, is in|
tended.
Haml. No, by the rood, not so: You Queen. Have you forgot me? your husband's brother's wife. Haml., Ill, 4, 75. What can do for Dr. Smith's daughter's husband. Swift J o u r n. to Stella, LX1. This is Madam Lucy, my master's mistress's maid. Sher., Riv., I, 1. Scrooge's niece's sisters, and all the other ladies, expressed the same
are the queen,
I
,
opinion.
Christm. Car.
Captain Boldwig's wife's sister had married a Marquis. Pickw., Ch. XIX. Wotever is. is right, as the young nobleman sweetly remarked wen they put him down in the pension list 'cos his mother's uncle's vife's grandfather vunce lit the king's pipe with a portable tinder-box. Pickw., Ch. LI, 468. Can you imagine Queen Guinevere s lady's maid's lady's maid being affable to Sir Lancelot. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. VII, 83. She snapped her fingers in the Judge's lady's face. Id., Van. Fair, Ch. VIII 82. was a very different But Sam Titmarsh, with a salary of 250 I. man from Sam the poor clerk, and the poor clergyman's widow's son. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. VIII, 88.
,
. . .
common
enough.
Passengers are requested to apply to the secretary in case of incivility of any of the servants of the company. The wife of a clergyman of the Church of England. Thack. i) "What a condition," said the doctor, "for the son of a clergyman of the Church of England." Trol. B a r c h. T o w. Ch. XIX, 149.
, ,
Note.
No
exception
is
genitives, one individualizing, the other classifying. Reeves' artists' colours can be obtained at Whiteley's. Advertisement.
29. a)
of the
in the
modifying element, which varies according to the prominence of the ideas they indicate have in the speaker's or writer's mind, may cause either the genitive or the prepositional construction to be the more preferable construction, i. "There are so many of the bishop's relatives who always bring their own
Dr. Grantly promised that due provision for the relatives' horses should be made. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 35. He at once saw that open battle against Dr. Grantly and all Dr. Grantly's adherents was a necessity of his position. .lb., Ch. VI, 43. Such is a very inadequate summary of Dr. Rose's treatment of Pitts Home Westm. Gaz. No. 5607, 10a. policy.
horses."
the {that or this) noun replaces a possessive pronoun, even when the reference is to (an) animal(s). The Major held out hands to Pen, shook the lad's passive fingers Ch. VIII, 91. Thack., Pend. gaily and said (etc.)
Thus
regularly
when
Jesp.,
Growth and
Struct.,
183.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
Thus
her
75
it was that Laura Bell became Mrs. Pendennis's daughter. Neither husband, nor that gentleman's brother, the Major, viewed her with
very favourable eyes. lb., Ch. VIII, 90. With another slight toss and a nod to the postilion, that individual's white leather breeches began to jump up and down in the saddle. Thack.,
Men's Wives,
You might
It's
Ch. II (325). just as well be angry with the turkey-cock for gobbling at you. the bird's nature. Trol., Barch. Ch. XLIII, 384.
Tow.,
started a hare. Sir Suddenly from a lumpy tussock of old grass Geoffrey put his gun to his shoulder, but there was something in the animal's grace of movement that strangely charmed Dorian Gray. Oscar Wilde, The Pict. of Dor. Gray, Ch. VIII, 259. But even if he were to admit to you that a snake may possibly be
. . . .
.
able to swim, he will still treat as the invention of Munchhausen the notion of a snake catching a fish in a fish's own element. Horace Hutchinson, Stranger than Fiction (Westm. Gaz. No. 5631 2c).
, ,
ii.
way, Mr. Tupman's new companion adjusted his dress, or rather the dress of Mr. Winkle. P c k w. Ch. II, 13. And now had the pen of a mighty poet, would I sing in epic verse the noble wrath of the archdeacon. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 37. Some lineaments of the character of the man were early discerned in the
Running on
in this
Mac, Clive, (498a). history of the successors of Theodosius bears that of the successors of Aurungzebe. lb. (502a).
child.
The
no small analogy to
,'
that of Grey, during the journey, observers with surprise. Id., Hist., II, Ch. V, 188. Those who do not think very highly of the poetry of the pupil do not. as a rule show much greater enthusiasm for that of the master. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent., Ch. II, 75. April was not worse, even in imports, than April of last year. Westm. Gaz., No. 5613, 2b.
b) But
to
the exigencies of emphasis are not always potent enough into the prepositional construction, and
looked very pale by the
light of the
i.
lamp
was flushed. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. VI, 77. You stand in your mother's presence and call
I,
that
woman
lb.,
The
preacher's immediate object was to preach Mr. Slope's doctrine, and not St. Paul's. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. VI, 45. The features of Mrs. Stanhope's character were even less plainly marked than those of her lord. lb., Ch. IX, 62.
Our
ii.
friends
32.
sitting
chair.
lb.
Ch. V,
Though he disliked the man, and hated the doctrines, pared to show respect to the station of the bishop, lb.,
he was pre-
31.
30. Obs.
ii.
giving the title of a writer's compositions or artist's works, The Poetical Works of S. T. Coleridge. The Complete Works of Alfred Lord Tennyson. Swiff s Works (but in the same volume: The Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Dean of St. Patrick's Dublin).
76
When such designations occur in other positions, the genitive is common enough, although its analytical equivalent appears to be
the usual one:
i.
This edition of Thackeray's works is complete in seventeen volumes, arranged, as far as possible, in chronological order. The Oxford
Thackeray,
ii.
A complete
at
6 d. net a volume.
The
works of Charles Dickens is now being published No. 5255, 3c. hitherto unpublished letters of Henry Fielding ... are of little
edition of the
. . .
Westm. Gaz.
10c.
interest.
lb.,
No. 5027,
In
the
in
used
spite
following quotation the prepositional construction is even of the syntactical connections making the genitive
in
s.
more
'Its'
preferable.
his life-time.
/?)
Murray,
in
matters,
events
etc.
connected with
sovereigns. Murray, s. v. of, XIV. i. The Scotch Parliament proposed the marriage of "the Maid of Norway" with the son of Edward the First. Green. *) In the reign of George the First this moderate but ancient inheritance was possessed by Mr. Richard Clive. Mac. C i v e (498a).
, 1
,
the state
was hastening
to
lb., (5016).
This chapel was fitted up as you see it, in James the Second's time. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. IX, 89. The term (sc. leveller) first arose as the designation of a political party of Charles l's reign. Murray, s. v. leveller.
of
31.
The laws
i.
season
brother's
dead
love,
remembrance.
Twelfth Night,
Scott,
I.
which she would keep fresh And 1,1, 31. (= love for
|
a dead brother.)
June saw his father's overthrow. Doge. Have you long served?
siege.
Marm.
to her.
IV, xv.
to
Ber.
So long as
Ten.,
remember Zara's
II.
Byron
Mar. F a
I.
2 (3566).
|
From
the dark fen the oxen's low But near by is my asses' stall
Came
Mariana,
42a.
birth,
Who
on
town.
W.
Morris
ii.
The son
in the
Earthly Par., The Man born to be king, of Duncan, From whom this tyrant holds the due of
|
Lives
English court.
M ac b.
III,
6, 25.
Note the varied construction in: And Gareth, a good knight, but therewithal
child of Lot.
Ten.
Lane, and
El., 556.
Further Observations.
32.
The
genitive
and
the
Thus:
307.
Foels.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
77
a) the King's English =s standard English, or the English spoken or written by the King; the English of the King the English spoken or written by the King. b) the Lord's Day c= Sunday (Dutch: de dag des Heeren);
the
Day of
the
the
Lord
18th
the
Day
of
Judgement.
Lord's day (without the article) was "somewhat widely used (not exclusively among Puritans) as an "ordinary name for Sunday. This use seems to be partially retained "by some Nonconformists, expressions like next Lord's day appearing
"In
17th
century
"occasionally in announcements of services." Murray. Compare with the above also the year of our Lord
(=
Anno
Domini),
c)
in
is fixed.
the owner of the horse; the master the officer but the Master of the Horse who has the management of the horses belonging to a sovereign or other exalted personage.
the
horse's
master
of the horse
id.,
d) Nelson's
a)
id., b)
life
the
life
led
by Nelson
life.
the life
of Nelson
The
first construction is occasionally used in the alternative meaning. This part of Newman's story in Mr. Ward's life is to an Irishman the most e e k y No. 491 4176. interesting. T. P.' s
e) the the
end the uttermost part end of the world == the last moment
world's
of the of this
fin
i.
I
du monde).
will
ii.
Ma
go to the world's end with you. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. Ill, 15a. would go with him to the world's end. Murray, s. v. end. What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world.
1 1
h.
XXIV,
3.
the farthest (uttermost) ends of the world, in which the prepositional construction seems to be fixed. We should see straggling huts built of wood and covered with thatch, where we now see manufacturing towns and seaports renowned to the
Compare with
this
farthest ends of the world. Mac., Hist, I, Ch. Ill, 277. The Catholic Church is still sending forth to the farthest ends of the world missionaries as zealous as those who landed in Kent with Augustin. Id.
,
Popes,
33.
(542a).
Sometimes the meaning of the preposition of is expressed over again by the genitive inflection of the following noun. This genitive may then be called pleonastic. (Sweet, N. E. Gr., 201.) The idiom is most common when a relation of possession is indicated, but is that of origin
this,
all
felt as modifications of that of possession. pleonastic genitive is natural to the genius of the language the noun modified by it is preceded by the indefinite article, a demonstrative, interrogative or indefinite pronoun, or by a numeral; and
The when
also
when
it
78
CHAPTER XXIV.
A
(this,
;
33.
which,
(fine,
large,
etc.
book)
of
my
brother's
etc. books) of my brother's, wine of my brother's. Compare Ch. XXXIII, 23, and see also Beekman, E. S., Fijn van Draat, De Drie Talen, XIV.
Books
(fine,
large,
(excellent,
VIII,
and
a)
relation of possession.
i.
He had a scoundrel dog, whom he taught to whine in the most ludicrous manner, and introduced as a rival of Ichabod's to instruct her in psalmS k e t c h - B k. XXXII 357. ody. Wash. Irv. He became a friend of Mr. Wilber force's. Van. Fair, I, Ch. IX, 88. Mrs. Lambert had been an early friend of his mothers. Thack. V r g. ,
,
in early
May, a letter reached her from a former friend Hardy, Tess., II, Ch. XV, 126.
Stubble and Spooney and the rest indulged in most romantic conjectures female correspondent of Osborne's. Van. Fair, I ,
last
night?
iv.
Van.
v.
Baker.
give
shall
vi.
up
their places.
Thack.,
Sam.
Almost
all of them, probably, [were] blood relations of Hereward's, or of King Harold's or of each other. Ch. Kingsley Hereward, Ch. XXIII, 976. (Note the absence of inflection in each other.) The shouting and yelling which had gained the camp its infelicitous title, were not permitted within hearing distance of Stumpy's. Bret Harte, The Luck of Roaring Camp, 13.
,
b)
a penny too a gift of Sowerberry's after some funeral in which he had acquitted himself more than ordinarily well. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. vhi, The insinuating Major had actually got a letter of Miss Rouncys in his own pocket-book. Thack., Pend. Ch. X, 111. This is a picture of Turners. Meiklejohn, The Eng. Lang., 67.
He had
A play of
ii.
Ibsen's.
Punch,
at
this
Mrs.
Cranf., Ch.
XI, 207.
Ward,
After
'
Ma reel la,
215.
Lytton
Caxtons,
These questions of Smithers's had a good deal to do with the subsequent events narrated in this little history. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. IX, 108.
iii.
is
your favourite?
iv.
execute any caprice or order of her patient's and reward. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XVI, 164.
To
was her
chiefest joy
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
It
79
was no fault of
I,
the doctors.
Wash.
Irv.
Handl.
v.
Dolf HeyHger.
(Stof.
109.)
two attempts of the lad's. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XIII, 137. promised 200 letters of Lamb's that have not been included in the most complete editions ever issued. Lit. World. Knowing it to be Carvers dwelling (or at least suspecting so from some words of Lorna's), I was led by curiosity to have a closer look at it.
After one or
We
are
Blackmore,
iv.
It's
Lorna Doone,
all
nonsense of Crowdie's.
Mrs.
II,
Ch. V,
6.
34. Obs.
I.
Occasionally we meet instances of the pleonastic genitive standing after a noun that is preceded by the definite article.
Since the youth of the counts was to-day with out of quiet. Twelfth Night, II, 3, 143.
In
my
lady,
she
is
much
the golden days of Christ's the young Hospitallers were wont to have smoking joints of roast meat upon their nightly boards. Ch.
Lamb Grace before Meat (Peacock S e 1. Ess., 192). The Sermon on Gunpowder Treason is the earliest composition of Taylor's which we possess. Edm. Gosse, Jeremy Taylor, Ch. I, 19.
,
The battered school-book of Tom's, which she held on her knees, could
give her no fortitude.
G. Eliot
Mill,
IV
Ch.
Ill
256.
The earliest letters of Gray's which have been preserved are addressed to him there. Life and Poems of Gray (Clarendon Press). A consideration which is in the spirit of Shelley's. Bradley Oxford
,
Lectures,
Lee
II.
171
(Macm.).
made to assign the embarrassements of Shakespeare's Shakespeare of Stratford deserve little attention. Sidney
is
The
And
construction as determinatives.
for
rare
and improper
,
used
of
).
his
government
,
civil
though he
did
not
attain
I,
to that
Trajan's.
III.
Bacon
Advancement
of
Learning,
7,6
The noun modified is sometimes divided from the modifying word-group by other elements of the sentence. am much obliged to you for having sent me a copy of the letter
I
you have of
IV.
my
grandmother's.
Truth,
An obvious
that a
explanation of the pleonastic genitive is to assume is understood after the genitive. But to this explanation there are two weighty objections: a) that such a noun is never used now, and has never been used; b) that the idiom is also used when it is impossible to think of one or more
noun
things out of a collection of like things as in the following quotations: 572. That Paradise Lost of Milton's. Earle Phil., That gun of Tupman's is not safe. Pickw. , Ch. XIX, 164.
,
,
When
is
is,
how-
ever, possible only after a demonstrative pronoun. Observe that the demonstrative is in this case more or less depreciative.
(Ch.
XXXVI,
2).
!)
Gunth.
Synonyms,
48.
2)
Note
to
1.
52
(Clar. Press).
80
It is
CHAPTER XXIV,
34.
probable that the idiom arose from the practice, long since obsolete, noun modified. In the expressions in which it survived of was gradually interpolated for clearness. So it would appear that the idiom is an instance of grammatical cumulation, so frequent in English. The term pleonastic genitive used by Sweet (N. E. Gr., 2010) seems, therefore, to be peculiarly appropriate. See also Jespersen,
of placing the genitive after the
Growth and
184 and Murray, s. v. of, 44. Struct., There can be no doubt, however, that of when followed by a genitive is mostly understood in a partitive sense. But this partitive sense is more or less vague. Thus such a phrase as two friends of my brother's does not necessarily imply that the number of friends is larger than two, a notion which would be expressed by two of my brother's friends. On the other hand it does not limit the number of friends to two, as is done by my brother's two friends. V.
The
partitive
often
causes the
common
case to be preferred
notion
is
foreign
a)
relation of possession.
i.
ii.
The note informed Mr. Esmond Warrington that his relatives at Castlewood, and among them a dear friend of his grandfather, were most anxious that he should come to 'Colonel Esmond's house in England'. Thack., Virg., Ch. II, 24. His wife's father was a great friend of good Bishop Ken. lb., Ch. XXII, 224. He was a c/ose friend of Ernest J ones. Annie Besant, Autobiography, 72. The Circumlocution Office, in course of time, took up the business, as if it were a bran-new thing of yesterday. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. X, 62a. As for Mrs. Kirk: that disciple of Dr. Ramshorn put one or two leading professional questions to Amelia. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVII, 289.
.
.
iii.
iv.
v.
of Mr. Slope, had not all the world conspired against her? Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XL VIII, 427. (Compare: Could not this affair of Mr. Slope's be turned to advantage? lb., Ch. XLI, 364.) By him also it was recognised as a binding law that every whim of his sister was to be respected. lb., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXV, 311. No less than three pupils of her father had trifled with those young affections. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. VIII, 87. Both of these Jewish gents, who were connexions of Mr. Abednego, were insured in our office. Thack., Sam. Titm. Ch. X, 127. She had no other relations than two aunts, maiden sisters of Mr. Spenlow.
In that affair
,
Dick., Cop., Ch. XXXVIII, 2786. His friends were old friends of Madame Svengali.
II,
Du
Maurier, Trilby,
Ch. VII,
176.
b)
A play of Shakespeare. Bain, H. E. Gr., 83. A symphony of Beethoven; a play of Shakespeare. Mas., Eng.
Gram.-**,
118.
reading to
161.
Thack.,
This letter of the Parisian great lady did not by any means advance Mrs. Becky's interest with her admirable, her respectable, relative. Van. Fair, I Ch. XXXIV, 380. The publication of such books as this of Mr. London is of far-reaching
,
import to the public. Academy. How could I tell Mary of this behaviour of Mrs. Hoggarty. Thack., Titm., Ch. X, 126.
Sam.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
iii.
81
World,
iv.
t.
The Lamberts were not squeamish and laughed over pages of Mr. Fielding, and cried over volumes of Mr. Richardson. Thack., Virg Ch. XXIII, 240.
In the following quotations of is ambiguous: Anecdotes of Byron formed his staple. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXIV, 361. I had hoped to gather some traditionary anecdotes of the bard from these
ancient chroniclers.
Wash.
is
Irv.
Sketch-Bk.
XXVI
261.
VI.
such a noun as portrait , effigy etc., denoting a representation of the person mentioned in the modifying element, the pleonastic construction is never used.
the
When
head-word
a bust of Shakespeare.
in this portrait
Wash.
Sketch-Bk., XXVI,
Dick.
,
263.
of Captain
Bleak House,
Ch. XIII
107.
"Then you mean to give up your profession," said she. "No, I dont," said he, going on with some absurd portrait of the bishop. Trol., Barch. Tow.,
Ch. XV,
VII.
117.
of the sentence
makes
:
This
is
the case
when
Here's
the head-word is accompanied by an apposition. a sad affair of our friend Lady Teazle. Sher., School for
the
Scand., V, 2, (425). He was a friend of his Royal Highness, Pend., I, Ch. VI, 78.
In
Duke of
Kent.
Thack.,
was an
Miss Jemima's eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, object of as deep veneration as would have been a letter from a
Id.,
I, Ch. I, 2. a grandson of Henry Esmond, the master of this house, has been here, and none of you have offered him hospitality. Id., Virg., Ch. II, 21. I believe you are a particular friend of Pickwick, the defendant, are not you? Pickw. Ch. XXXIV, 313. (Compare: Are you, or are you not, a particular friend of the defendant's? lb.) This neighbour was a secret kinsman of his dear friend, W. Ladislaw. Lockhardt S c o 1 1 1).
sovereign.
Van. Fair,
Do you mean
that
b)
When
head-word is modified by a genitive. He went off with Lord C. an intimate friend of my lady's husband. Fergus Hume, The Piccadilly Puzzle 1 ).
the
H.
c)
When
the element modified is compound. He was a contemporary of Coleridge and Lamb and Hazlitt. Selections from Leigh Hunt, Intro d.
J.
Lobban
The common case is decidedly the rule also when the noun standing after of is a collective noun. Mar. What are you, and what may your business in this house be? Miss Hard. A relation of the family. Goldsmith, She stoops to
conquer,
The
friend at
IV,
(212).
whose house we
shall sup to-night, hath a son, Thack., Virg., Ch. XXIV, 245.
who
is
an
H.
Fijn van Draat, De Drie Talen, XIV. Poutsma, A Grammar of Late Modern English.
82
VIII.
CHAPTER XXIV,
The
34.
partitive meaning that attaches to of, may also be responsible for the preference given to other constructions, when any such notion is foreign to the speaker's intentions:
a)
The most
favourite,
interesting of these is that with the preposition with instead of of, which is apparently the rule after certain nouns, such as:
i.
I
They
Ch.
w ex z
II,
was a favourite with all the servants. De Quincey, Conf., 90. Framl. Pars., great favourites with her ladyship. Trol.
,
11.
Mac, Pitt,
XVII, 476.
.
(292a).
Th.
Watts Dunton,
Aylwin,
ii.
iMiss Dorothy Drew was, as a child, a great favourite with her grandfather. II. Lond. News, No. 3704, 560. Virg., (He) was a prodigious favourite of the Chief himself. Thack. Ch. XCII, 982. Scorn and cynicism would be my only opium; unless I could fall into some kind of madness, and fancy myself a favourite of Heaven because I am not a favourite with men. G. Eliot Mill, VI Ch. VII 383.
.
vN o t
iii.
Trol.,
Barch.
Also the adjective favourite sometimes causes with to be used instead of of: With Donna Inez quite a favourite yet I never could see why Julia was
i
friend.
Byron
I,
Don Juan,
I, lxvi.
Hume's
Hooo, Life of
Shelley,
The
Gosse,
habit,
i.
Eighteenth Cent.
It
i
Lit.,
194.
was a habit with Scrooge ... pockets. C h r s t m. Car. It seems to have become a habit with
to put his
hands
in his breeches'
the
German Press
... to
vent feel-
Times,
Now if there's a habit of the populace which I cannot endure, barbarous practice of misplacing the aspirate. Grant Allen,
the
That
Friend
After the
to is occasionally found:
a habit
to her.
Max
Pemb.,
Doctor Xavier,
passion. It appeared to have become a perfect passion with Mrs. Flintwinch, that the only son should be pitted against him. Dick., Little D o r r t Ch. V, 28a. principle. It was a principle with Mr. Bulstrode to [etc]. G.Eliot, Mid.
i ,
sore point. The going to school to a clergyman was a sore point with Tom. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. IX. Note also: True sentiment is twin with melancholy, though not with
gloom.
After
Lytton, Rienzi,
the
III,
Ch.
Ill,
114.
definite
article precedes.
I always knew that Harry was the favourite son with Thack., Virg., Ch. LIV, 559.
Madam Esmond.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
b)
83
Other approximate equivalents of the pleonastic genitive may be seen in the constructions used in the following quotations: i. These locks of hair belonged to a baker's dozen of sisters that the old 2. gentleman had. Thack. Sam. T t m. Ch. ii. A look of surprise and displeasure on the nobleman's part recalled him
, i ,
1 ,
Ch. XV, 153. to better sentiments. Id., Virg. Very few people do like strangers to whom they are presented with an outrageous flourish of praises on the part of the introducer. lb., Ch. XXI, 221. Harry never could relish this condescension on his brother's part. lb.,
,
Ch. LXI, 634. This considerateness on old Mr. Clare's part led Angel onward to the other and dearer subject. Hardy, Tess, IV, Ch. XXVI, 211. Resolution. A formal decision etc. on the part of a deliberative assembly or other meeting. Murray.
iii.
Jane Eyre,
35. Besides
upon
of there are several other prepositions which them certain of the functions of the genitive.
may
take
a) At, for, to and towards appear to a certain extent as substitutes for an objective genitive after such nouns as dislike, hate, liking, love, which correspond to transitive verbs, but are
Ch. XIX, 49, Obs. III. b) By, as a genitive equivalent, is used only to express a relation It is especially frequent: of origin or agency. 1) when the head-word is also accompanied by an objective genitive or analogous possessive pronoun, or by a phrase with the preposition of representing an objective genitive.
of
synonymous words.
182.
bitter
His friend's assassination by the treacherous Arabs roused his His rejection by the widow
.
galled
him
terribly.
Trol.,
Barch.
Tow.,
of
All that the deputation could do was to register a protest in the hearing the civilized world against the treatment of their country by Japan. All the town was indiRev. of Rev., CCXII , 1 15a.
(Compare:
gnant
at
my
Thack.,
as a
Ch. XV, 287.) This leads to an able vindication by Dr. Rose of Pitts Minister. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 10a.
Henry Esmond,
the
fame
War
2)
when
head-word
in
all
is
mentioned
modifier at
beyond an
that,
We
have heard
about
this time,
Madame
d'Arblay
was performed without success. Mac, Mad. d'Arblay, (724a). From a speech by Mr. Gladstone. Lloyd, North. En g., 78. (Compare: The sensation of the week has undoubtedly been Mr. Roosevelt s
speech at the Guildhall on Tuesday.
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5323,
lb.)
Also
the definite article precedes, by is sometimes used. Another strange feature of Wednesday's debate was the speech by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Westm. Gaz., No. 5625, lb.
when
84
c)
in
In
27, a, 2 and 33, or has no modifier some cases it varies with by.
,
Nathaniel Pipkin could have sworn he heard the sound of a kiss, followed Ch. XVII, 153. by a faint remonstrance from Maria Lobbs. Pickw. Everything was made secure against an attack from the enemy. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. V, 46. The landlord had to listen to a long speech from the duke. Stof.,
Handl.,
I.
Despite bullying from big boys and masters, Tennyson would "shout his verses to the skies." Andrew Lang, Ten., Ch. I, 6. The French flagship "Massena" moored by men from Nelson's old flagship.
Rev. of Rev., CLXXXIX 227. II. Lond. News. visit from your Majesty. The debate on the second reading of that measure on Tuesday was initiated e s t m. G a z. by a motion for its rejection from Mr. Wyndham.
,
in:
was an
d) In
Miss Jemima's eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, object of as deep veneration as would have been a letter from a
sovereign.
Van. Fair,
I ,
Ch.
1 ,
2.
be understood as a substitute for a may in such adnominal genitive adjuncts as in the world, in the kingdom, in the town etc. He was pronounced by all the neighbourhood the wickedest dog in the street. Wash. Irv., Do If Heyl. (Stof., Handl., 1,104). When thus gentle, Bessie seemed to me to be the best, prettiest, kindest
to a certain extent
being in the world. Jane Eyre, Ch. IV 29. Her reply was, that, if he did not keep his promise, she would carry his letters into every court in the kingdom. Thack. Pend. I, Ch. VIII, 89. The aedile was celebrated through Pompeii for having the worst paintings in the world. Lytton , Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. Ill 156. Mr. Balfour went over the old ground of argument against the Veto Bill ... as it if was the most normal thing in the world that after the jury had pronounced for the one, judgment should be entered for the other. Westm. Gaz., No. 5613, lc.
,
with the above the following quotations with the less usual of: one of the established digniShe already saw Dolf, in her mind's eye Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 105). taries of the town. In my blood she venerates the eldest dynasties of earth. Lytton Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. IV, 22b. (In this quotation the alternative preposition would be on.) In size it (sc. St. Paul's) is fifth among Christian churches of the world. II. Lond. News, No. 3778, 441.
Compare
36.
To is also a kind of substitute for the genitive in other connections than that mentioned in 35, a. In literary language we frequently find it after nouns which express how one person (or a number of persons) is (are) related or disposed to another person (or number
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
of
85
persons), or to a thing (or a number of things); i.e. after such sister, etc.; apprentice, secretary, servant, etc.; prey slave , victim etc. ; enemy friend etc. In the majority of cases the head-word, when in the singular, is
nouns as brother,
,
not preceded by any modifier, or by either the indefinite article or Such nouns as would have the indefinite article in the singular, course throw it off in the plural, * The wish is father to the thought. Proverb.
i.
,
,
no.
of
He was son and heir to Sir Anth. Absolute. Sher. Rivals. The boy had been apprentice to a famous German doctor. Wash. Irv. D o f Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 105). make no doubt is heir to two thousand pounds a year. My young friend
1
, ,
Ch. XI, 108. He was Physician to Queen Charlotte. lb., I, Ch. X, 108. It occurred to him that Mrs. Bold was sister-in-law to the archdeacon. Trol. Barch. Tow., Ch. XV, 114. He had at length been placed in a post which partook of both characters (sc. military and commercial), that of commissary to the troops, with the rank of
,
Thack.
Pend.,
.
captain.
Mac.
v e
(5056).
,
,
cousin to the Loftus boys. Mrs. Wood Orville College, Ch. II 23. lb. is brother to the second senior of the school. She was sister to Mrs. Jones and the widow of a baronet. P r e f. Mem. of
He He
is
Walt. Bes. St. K a t h. Ch. He was declared heir presumptive to the Danish trone. Times. He was secretary to Mr. A.. Mason, Eng. Gram.^, 15, N. The German Emperor is brother-in-law to the Crown Prince of Greece.
, ,
II.
Spec-
tator (Westm. G a z., No. 5149, 20c). The wish was no doubt father to the thought.
**
Romeo, son
Romeo and
Lady Magdalen
ii.
Montague. Jul.
DacresJ
to
Paris, a
Westm. Gaz., No. 5561, 56. young nobleman, kinsman to the Prince.
/fl
^^ ^.^ m Quem
fa
^
1
,
Queen Mary
life.
Not
that
am an enemy
(Stof.,
to love.
Sher.
Duenna,
(310).
to Indians
and
to
an Indian mode of
Wash.
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.,
1,132). Her husband had fallen a victim to his zeal for the public safety. lb. , 102. She was a martyr to a curious disorder, called the "spazzums." Dick., Cop., Ch. XXVI.
too,
1,
Handl.,
Upon my word and honour, as a gentleman and an executor to my brother's will he left little more than five hundred a year behind him. Thack., Pend.,
Ch. XI, 118.
relative to both
He was a distant
I,
If
Kat
h.
Laud.,
They
abject slave to a woman, I was. Titbits, 1895, 389a. a prey to the angry waves. H. Fyfe, Triumphs of Invention, 13 ] ). Dr. Rose has not fallen a prey to the wiles of the Sinking Fund. West. Gaz., No. 3607, 10a. In one respect he may prove a worthy successor to Mr. Chamberlain. Times, No. 1820, 923a.
fell
Ch. I, ever a
8.
man was an
**
Most Scott,
)
of
the
Abbot,
10.
Ellinoer,
Verm. Beitr.
17.
86
***
no friend
to
the
ladies.
Goldsmith
She stoops
to
conquer,
For
(194).
my
I.
part
am no enemy
to
harmless ornaments.
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
37. Obs.
It
is
not often
when preceded by
that to is placed after any of the above nouns the definite article, unless the meaning of
the noun distinctly suggests this preposition, as in the case of such words as successor, heir, which are suggestive of to succeed to, or slave which suggests subject to. Purpose is but the slave to memory. Ham!., Ill, 2, 200. Matilda, though of the royal Saxon blood, was not the heir to the v a n h o e Ch. XLII 448. monarchy. Scott Miss Beaufort is now the heiress to an ancient name and fortune. Lytton, Night and Morn., 481. At fifteen he was the confidential counsellor, as at twenty-one he became the general-in-chief to the most politic, as well as the most warlike, potentate of his age. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 9026. We not only find that science is the handmaid to all forms of art and
,
poetry,
but that,
Spencer,
35b.
the
to his country.
Times,
is
81c.
As
a)
to the
(36),
the idiom
at all
common
when they
cate
are in the function of nominal part of the predior predicative adnominal adjunct. In this position it is freely used only when the relation is one of kinship: when the relation is one of a different description, it is of limited
application.
mill,
say:
He
is
owner
to the
squadron, overseer to the work. Conversely it appears to be regular in such designations as physician to the Queen, purveyor to the Prince of Wales, hatter to the Duke of Cornwall, etc The following quotations may show that of may be used after the above nouns, even although they stand without
the article:
i. I
commander
was
told
Thack.
,
S a m. to
Ygerne.
10.
G. C. Macaulay
Note
Tennyson's Guinevere,
li.
old school-fellow of his, and son of a merchant in Ch. Kinqsley, e s t w. Ho!, Ch. XVI, 131a. Robert, the first marquis of Westminster, was son of the first Earl Grosvenor. Harmsworth Encycl., s. v. Westminster. Little Buttons bounced up to his mistress, said he was butler of the family. Thack. A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VI, 327. When the boys' grandfather died, their mother proclaimed her eldest son George her successor, and heir of the estate. Id., Virg., Ch. Ill, 30.
b)
when
they stand as part of a nominal clause modifying a proper name. Here we meet to especially in descriptions of
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
87
the dramatis personae of a play, varying with of. Compare the last of the first group of quotations given in 36 with the following:
Oliver
sons of Sir Rowland de Boys. Jaques Orlando) Geoffrey, son of Rosamund and Henry.
As you like
Ten.,
it.
Becket.
Camma,
of
wife of Sinnatus.
Id.,
The Cup.
Except for descriptions of the dramatis personae of a play the use to in appositions or in nominal clauses (Ch. XXI) modifying proper names, would appear to be rare. Colonel F. W. Rhodes, brother of Mr. Cecil Rhodes, was wounded. Times. The elder was Mrs. Benjamin Slayback, wife of the well-known member of
n t r. to of the King. Further evidence of the variable practice regarding the use of to or of after relation-expressing words, also in connection with the use of
, ,
Congress. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. Mrs. Thackeray Ritchie daughter of Thackeray.
Id.
I,
7.
I
Ten.
the articles,
heir.
the
is
was present
to
do honour
to
memory of his friend. Times. Mr. Harry Esmond Warrington was the
Ch. XVI, 168.
heir of
left
immense
of an
illustrious
victim.
It
fell
paper Reader,
Shortly
He (sc Lord Rosebery) is a victim of insomnia. Daily News. after this he became the victim of a passionate attachment to a young The Personal Hist, of John Keats, 3. lady. Arthur C. Downer
,
III.
As to the nouns expressing a disposition (36), the use of to as compared with of depends on the particular shade of meaning expressed
by them. When it is rather the disposition than the individual that is meant, to is used, and vice versa. In the former case the noun is mostly preceded by a(n) or no, and is practically equivalent to an adjective. Thus He was a friend to Indians does not materially differ from He was friendly to Indians, any more than I am no enemy to harmless amusements from lam not inimical to harmless amusements. In the latter case the noun takes another modifier than either a(n) or no.
We
i.
subjoin some further quotations for comparison, So mak'st thou faith an enemy to faith. King John, HI 1 He was an enemy to himself in spending his estate. Howell
,
263.
t.
Tr
V, 359-0-
Some
The
to
ii.
Swift,
genius, enemy to mankind, must have been the first contriver. 1. II, vu 2). Minister who was no friend to the young nobleman. Shaft., Advice
evil
Gu
Author,
the
1/3
2).
Vice,
Enemy of
Ad
. .
is
,
at
the
same time
all
the
Enemy of Humane
to the pleasure
I,
vni/31*).
ought
,
to
be the enemy of
V, 229 2 ).
pandering
of the spectators.
!)
Jowett
Plato-,
17.
2
)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.
Murray,
s.
v.
enemy, B,
1.
88
IV.
is
am
the son of
A foe
to tyrants,
and
my country's
friend.
Jul.
C ae s.
5,4,5.
38. In
order to express emphatically that the relation of possession, origin or agency is assigned to a particular person, animal or thing (or number of persons, animals or things), the English
buff-coloured
39. Obs.
I.
Own
is
especially
used
after
a genitive,
as
in
the
above
quotations, or after a possessive pronoun (Ch. XXXIII, 18, 19), but before names of kinship it is occasionally met with also after the (in)definite article or without any modifier preceding.
is then usually followed by to, espemodifies a proper name, "The own maid" had not been able to divine the exact truth. Trol.,
when
it
B a r c h. Tow.,
The horses
ii.
Ch. XXXII
all
282.
are
right;
there's
the
own brother
to the
one
that
iii.
brought you here. Anth. Hope, Pris. of Zenda, 39. Decimus Brady, of Ballybrady, married an own cousin of aunt Ch. Ill, 33. Towzer's mother. Thack., Sam. Titm. Mrs. Waule's mind was entirely flooded with the sense of being an own sister and getting little. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 248. He married Scully, own cousin to Lord Poldoody. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVII. 288.
,
II.
III.
Own sometimes has a meaning which is usually expressed by the adverb even. For further information about secondary shades of meaning that may be expressed by own, see Ch. XXXIII, 19. The Tory women crowded round her with congratulations, and made her a train greater than the Duchess of Marlborough's own. Thack., Henry Esm., II, Ch. XV, 287. Her eyes were grey; her mouth rather large; her teeth as regular and bright as Lady Kew's own. Id., Newc, I, Ch. XXIV, 281. I would not have taken the Lord Mayor's own daughter in place of Mary with a plum to her fortune. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. VIII, 87. An occasional variant of own, now only used archaically, and often used together with it, is proper. For fuller illustration see Ch. XXXIII, 20. It is further agreed between them, that the duchies of Anjou and Maine
be released and delivered over to the king her father, and she sent over of the King of England's own proper cost and charges, without
shall
Henry
VI, B,
I,
1,
61.
Own
in the
is
sometimes
upon
the
used together with either of these adjectives. King Edward's own special gift was that he brought
task of the Sovereign e s endowed him.
all
t
to bear
J)
Sattler, E.
S., II, 7.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
CLASSIFYING GENITIVE.
40. a) Besides
89
representing a class of persons, animals or things as the owners, originators or performers of what is expressed by the noun modified, we find the classifying genitive indicating certain ideas which are suggested by the modifying noun.
These ideas are mostly qualities, sometimes adverbial relations. Thus in a fool's errand the genitive is connotati ve of a quality, in an evening's repast of an adverbial relation.
b)
Sometimes there
meaning.
is
Compare
i.
same
boy's
boy's-boyish.
ii.
have
and shown,
At
rtiy
Matthew Arnold, Sohrab and Rustum, 45. De Quincey, Conf. Ch. II, II. In my boyish days. In my infant and boyish days. Burns, Letter to Dr. Moore, 51. If the bright moment of promising is sincere in moment's-momentary. its moments extravagant goodness. Browning, A Soul's Tragedy,
,
i.
II,
ii.
(32).
Frithiof
it
in a
momentary
244.
aberration.
Edna Lyall, A
Hardy Norsem.,
XX VIII,
sheep's-sheepish. i. What a plague business had he making sheep's eyes at his daughter? Ch.-Kingsley, Wes t w. Ho!, Ch. II 206.
ii.
His boy's face gave him quite a sheepish look. Dick., Cop., Ch.
Ill,
15a.
Especial mention
may
here be
made
of adjectives in
y as equivalents
,
of classifying genitives. He was busied in doing this friendly office for me. Smol. Rod. Rand., Ch. XXIV, 175. He kissed her with a sisterly warmth. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIV, 257. He made me another of his soldierly bows. Dick., Bleak House, Ch.
XXIV,
c)
It
211.
deserves notice that the classifying genitive, like the uninnoun (Ch. XXIII, 4, Obs. I), is a peculiarly idiom. In Dutch, indeed, a noun in the classifying English genitive is frequent enough, but only as part of a compound, not as an independent word. Nor is the- mark of the genitive
flected attributive
distinctly felt as a case-suffix, but rather as a link-sound inserted for euphony: timme.rmansgereedschap,zusters-
The vagueness of the accounts for the inconsistency with which it is applied Dutch. Thus we find it only exceptionally in equivalents
is
shown by
the instances
given In not a few cases, however, is felt as part of a compound to be used conjunctively with to it by a hyphen. Instances
.
in
these
a noun in the classifying genitive also in English, which causes it the noun modified, or joined on
are given below 44, Obs.
I.
90
meaning intended,
is
not available.
James and Versailles wisely chose to consider the dispute as a European and not a Red-man's question. Thack.,
St.
Virg.
41.
Ch. VI,
63.
When
quality
is
modified
which are,
chiefly of the
following description:
a)
expressed by paw and we are the cats themselves. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. V, 546. (Observe also: cafs eye (a kind of precious stone), cat's meat (flesh of horses, etc. prepared and sold by street dealers
is
what
He
cat.
is
but a cat's
etc.)
Sat., Ch.
XXXIX
|
235.
|
"A stranger animal," cried one, Sure never lived beneath the sun: A lizard's body lean and long, Afish'shead, aserpenfs The Cameleon. tongue. Rev. John Merrick
|
136.
sheep.
Wolves
219a.
in sheep's clothing.
Thack.,
Newc.
I,
sow.
Ch.
virgin.
a silk purse
Dick.
Cop.,
XXX,
daughter of King Schoeneus, not willing to lose her law to all suitors that they should run a race with and if they failed to overcome her, should die
,
unrevenged.
W. Morris
was
like
Argument.
whale.
She
whiteness.
Ch.
Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!,
b)
Ch. VII
576.
The modifying noun denotes the person, animal (or thing) of which the quality assigned to what is expressed by the noun modified is characteristic. Thus slowness is characteristic of a snail, and a slow pace may, therefore, be aptly described as
,
a snail's pace.
In
we may,
or
may
not,
using such a collocation as a girl's voice think of the quality (of weakness) by
which the voices of girls are mostly characterized. In the former case the genitive would have to be classed among those mentioned here, in the latter case among those mentioned under a).
a
., but with boy. He was now a huge, strong fellow of six feet high simpering boy's face and curlish hair that gave him quite a sheepish
.
.
look.
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
Ill,
15a.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
child.
91
That
burning IOU's was child's play. Van. Fair, II, Ch. I, 5. Willie Winkie. Rudy. Kipl., How that woman can keep her child's heart and child's faith in a world like this, Mar. Corelli, S o r. of Sat., II, Ch. XXVII, 68. is more than I can understand.
To
talk of
is
child's talk.
Wee
conqueror.
enjoyed
my
conqueror's solitude.
stood awhile on the rug, where Mr. Brocklehurst had stood, Jane Eyre, Ch. VII 39.
,
and
courtier.
My
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!,
of
many
courtiers' words.
coward. On one
lord at Castlewood.
many coward's
Thack.,
Henry Esm.
come
Id.,
to
my
,
deuce.
II,
shall
him home.
what
Pend.
Ch.
XXIX,
323.
devil.
Oh
Robert Beaufort
feel
devil's trick
your
was playing with a son, who, if poor, would have been the pride of the Beauforts. Lytton Night and Morn., 90. Was this vessel another devil's craft set sailing round the world? Mar. Corelli, Sor. of Sat., II, Ch. XLII, 274. enemy. It might be an enemy's ship in disguise. Wash. Irv. Storm-Ship,
wealth
,
<Stof.,
country.
Handl.,
Dick.,
I,
86).
She would have taken her own way with as much coolness through an enemy's
109c.
That was a father's duty. G. Eliot, Sil. Mam., Ch. XV, 117. The Lords are living in a fool's paradise from which they will be rudely fool. awakened. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 566a. And so the patients and patients' friends go on living in a fool's paradise, often
father.
refusing to undergo an operation, until, when too late, it is discovered that the tumour is cancer. Titbits. In a sudden fool's paroxysm of despair exclaimed. Mar. Corelli, Sor. of Sat., II, Ch. XXVII, 91. was yet in my fool's dream. lb., II, Ch. XXV, 56. He sent us here on a fool's errand. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. Ill, 56a. gentleman. There now, that is a very pretty distance, a pretty gentleman's distance.
I I
Sher.,
Riv.,
V, 3.
giant.
A
It
giant's task.
is
Mrs.
II,
119.
knave.
I
a
II.
good knave's
John Ruskin
The King
of
the-Golden
mind, but a woman s might. Jul. Caes. II, 4, 8. son on condition that we should rear him until he came to man's estate. Con. Doyle, The White Com p., II. mother. It was a poor little chance of life for her mother's love. Mar. Crawf.,
a man's
,
to us his infant
Kath. Laud.,
slave.
II,
Ch. VII,
123.
Greek
is
a slave's tongue.
Ch. Kingsley,
his person
Hyp., Ch.
what
is
Ill,
13a.
his
choice to
Tom
Jones,
had
III,
(old) wives.
grown up
to
woman's
estate.
Mrs.
Gask.,
Life of Ch.
instinct
required
all
her
had read the truth. (?), Miss Pro v., Ch. XXI. woman's tact to avoid betraying what had happened. Ch. Kingsley,
VI, 506.
I,
92
c)
which what is expressed by the noun modified is adapted, for which it is destined, or by which it is used: lady's maid,
sportsman's tailor, bishop's mitre, judge's wig, widow's weeds, jewellers' cotton, the women's ward of an infirmary, carpenter's shop, smith's forge, boy's book, children's party (for which Thackeray has child's party, see below).
bishop,
child.
judge.
Mrs.
The son
in
of a peasant or
Sedley
had
forgiven
I,
his
at
the
child's party.
Van. Fair,
Ch. V, 48.
children. The end of a novel, like the end of a children's dinner-party, must be made up of sweetmeats and sugar plums. Trol., Barch. Tow.,
Ch. LIH, 459.
doctor.
He took
his
Forthcoming Books,
hunter.
March, 1908,
the
17.
Wes
bright
hunter's
Kingsley,
w.
Ho!,
Ch. V, 43a.
jeweller.
cotton.
Dick.,
Cop., much
Ch.
I,
56.
of a lady's man.
is
Mrs. Alex.,
I,
called a ladies'
Thack, Fitz-
essentially
man's man.
Mrs. Alex.,
For
town. A largely attended town's meeting was held on Monday night at the Hackney Town-Hall. Times. I beg to inform you that at a town's meeting, held here on Friday, May 26, it was unanimously resolved that [etc.]. Truth, No. 1801, 76.
woman. Lady Maxwell, as you once said yourself, is not, suppose, a woman's woman. Mrs. Ward, Sir George Tres. III, Ch. XV, 1236.
I
,
42.
When
an
adverbial relation
is
is
in the
mostly the
name
a division of a day (56, Obs. Ill, b, 4). afternoon. In the open bay window sat merchants and gentlemen ovei their afternoon's draught of sack. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!,
Ch.
I,
16.
evening. A part of the game was cooking for the evening's repast. Wash. Irv., Dolf H e y 1. (Stop. Handl., I, 130). had settled to my evening's reading. Ch. Kingsley, Alt. Locke,
'
Ch. VI, 69. took notes of the vicar's or curate's discourse to be reproduced in our own form as our evening's amusement. Miss Brad. First Happy Christm. (Stof., Handl., 1,66).
We
My
morning. After a hearty morning's meal the encampment broke Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 136).
?jp.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
2) a
93
day
of the
week
who
(56, Obs.
a generation
Ill,
b,
3).
Sunday.
People
steadily with the regular Sunday's rest, and perhaps are no longer satisfied with this. Times.
3) a season (56, Obs. Ill, b, 1). summer. Not so much life as on a summer's day Robs not one light seed from the feather'd grass. Keats, Hyp., I, 8. He sat down on its (sc. the brook's) margin as sad a gentleman as you shall meet in a summers day. Trou, Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXIV, 297.
|
(=
a long day.)
created ... to endure without protection the summer's sun and the winter's storm. lb., XLIX, 436. Passing the long summer's day Idle as a mossy stone. Matthew Arnold,
|
I,
793.
This* adventurous lady would be seen pushing her way through the summer's heat and the winter's snow. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, II, 21. This glycerine protects from summer's heat and winter's cold. II. L o n d.
News.
winter.
tired horse
What
One
tale
the
,
children
say,
Under
the hollies,
that bright
winter's
day?
Matth. Arn.
HI, 151.
of concrete.
b)
a period, represented:
1)
as a singular unit:
day.
I,
Van. Fair.,
Ch.
XXV,
283.
faculties have wrought a day's task and earned a day's wages. Mrs. Gask., Life of C h. Bronte, 311. Mr. Caudle's goes out to amuse himself when his day's work is done. Sarah
My
GRAND,Heav. Twins,
The Squire
is
I,
22.
good gentleman, he often gives a day's work. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. 1,24. life. Thackeray died, early indeed, but still having done a good life's
work.
Trol.
If
T h a c k.
(the
Ch.
8.
moment.
year.
bright
moment
,
of
promising
is)
sincere in
,
its
moments
extravagant goodness.
Browning
A Soul's Trag.
II,
(32).
have had a good year's trade. Westm. Gaz., No. 5501, \c. may be compared to such a combination as night's rest, but the word-group may also be analysed a year's good trade or a year of
(Year's trade
trade.)
:
We
good
Marce
hour.
day.
It
1
will
1
be a
II
,
ten
days'
at
any
rate.
Mrs.
Ward,
273.
Blackw. Mag.
but a twelve hours' passage. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 263. The village of Marlott for the most part untrodden as yet by (was) tourist or landscape-painter, though within a four hours' journey from
is
.
London.
Hardy,
Tess,
I,
Ch.
II,
10.
94
Note
in:
The
has long taken so strong a hold on public interest that no unusual incident in connexion with it is merely a nine days' wonder. Times, No. 1840, 271c. It will be a nine days' wonder, and then it will be heard of no more. Roorda, S u p p 1 e m. 43. (Compare: That would be a ten days' wonder at the That's a day longer than a wonder lasts. Henry VI, C, III, 2, 113.) least
,
II.
a genitive
is
action or state, as in
above instances.
blisses,
|
his
new-born
pigmy
Wordsworth, Ode, Intimations of Immortality, VII, 2. The Wedding-guest stood still, And listens like a three years' child. Coleridge, iv. Ancient Mar.,
|
She was
still
to
girl.
Ch. Kinosley,
Westw.
Ho!,
In
Compare with
I.
adjective as old seems to be understood. Compare Ch. XXV, 32, Obs. II, and also the following quotation: After a prolonged examination he discovers, in this century-old record, nothing more fitted for the exercise of his ingenuity. G. E. Mitton, Jane Austen and her Times. Ch. 1 5.
these collocations
some such
It
is
in this
case
is
apt
to
be suppressed.
names of persons are occasionally found in the classifying genitive, mostly denoting a quality.
When
I
Cook.
[etc.].
Max
Pemb., Giant's
Gate,
Dickens. It is fully illustrated from the "original wood engravings by Barnard, No. 5255, 3c. Phiz," and other great Dickens' artists. Westm. Gaz. Our vaunted levies of loyal recruits (were) so many Falstaff's Falstaff. V r g. Ch. XC 658 regiments for the most part. Thack.
,
Gessler. That Gessler's cap is still up in the market-place of Europe, and not a few folks are kneeling to it. Thack., The four Georges, I, 11. In thus facing imprisonment rather than bow to the Geszler's Cap which the Jingo majority of 1900 set up in our midst, the Nonconformists are on their
old ground.
Rev. of Rev.
detest
Jaeger.
all
people
who
are
always doing
it's
clothes.
Edna
Lyall, Hardy Norsem., Ch. XIII, 110. told you so!" is the croak of a true Job's comforter. Job. "I told you so, Trol. B a r c h. Tow., Ch. XLIV, 395. But the worst Job's messenger was Bishop Egelwin of Durham. Ch. Kingsley, H e r e w a r d Ch. XXV, 107a.
I
,
King William.
Tom
professed
himself,
albeit
high-churchman, a strong
in
King William's man. Thack., Henry Esmond, I, Ch. X, 101. Tennyson also knew Pope and wrote hundreds of lines Pope. measure. Andrew Lang Alfred Tennyson, Ch. 1,5. Tom Fool. It is a Tom Poors business. Rid. Hag., She, Ch. IV,
,
Pope's
48.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
Turner.
95
What could be expected from a man who goes to sleep with, every night, a Turner's picture on a chair opposite his bed that "he may have something beautiful to look at on first opening his eyes of a morning"? T. P.'s No. 478, 3b. (The reference is to Ruskin.)
44 Obs.
Weekly, A noun
I.
in the classifying genitive is more closely connected with the noun modified than one in the individualizing genitive. This is often symbolized by the hyphen, or by writing the two component parts of the word-group conjunctively, especially in formations that have been handed down from ancient times, when the genitive was more freely used than it is at the present
bird's-nest,
cat's-mint,
crow's-foot ,
craftsman, draftsman, draughtsman, headsman, helmsman, ratsbane, tradesman. Inconsistencies and irregularities are, of course, very numerous. Thus Murray has heartsease and heart's-ease, and in the quotations under this: hearts-ease and heart's ease. Also in such collocations as a ten days' break mentioned above, the numeral and the following noun form a kind of compound,
which
II.
sometimes symbolized by a hyphen. this closer union with the noun modified, the noun Owing in the classifying genitive is more rarely replaced by the prepois
to
construction than that in the individualizing genitive. Quite usual, however, is the construction with of, when the name of a period represented as the multiple of a certain unit, enters into the word-group. Compare Ch. XXV, 32, Obs. I, Note I. i. She set up a school of children. Thack., Henry Esm. Ch. VII, 381. ii. His friend of fifty years died. Prefatory Memoir to Lamb's
sitional
,
Henry Esm.,
great
III^
month of August 1756 that the Years commenced. Mac. Fred., (6876).
in
was
the
war of
During a halt of twelve days. Times. She broke the silence of many hours.
Bret Harte
Ou
c.
of
Pok. Flat, 31. It must, however, be remembered that also the classifying genitive is not freely used of nouns that otherwise admit of the genitive construction, and that of is frequently used in wordgroups denoting a quality. Thus not only a man of tact = a tactful man, a work of authority = an authoritative work, a flag
of three colours
a
=a
tricolor flag
etc.
the following quotations: nobler to receive sword and belt from a man of God than from a man of blood. Ch. Kingsley, Here ward, Ch. XX, 896. I swore that no word of man should make me doubt her innocence. Conway, Called Back, Ch. X, 115.
It
people,
v. of,
38),
but also, a
is
III.
A word-group
may
in its turn
96
I
CHAPTER XXIV,
44.
went to the window-seat to put in order some picture-books and doirs house furniture scattered there. Jane Eyre, Ch. IV, 30. He was very busy at a map or bird's eye view of an island. Ch. Kingsley, e s t w. Ho!, Ch. II 12a.
IV. In
some cases
the genitive
may be understood
as either individualizing
or classifying.
of his subjects to the task of his life, but also as equivalent to his lifelong task, the difference corresponding to the Dutch de taak zijns levens (or van zijn leven), and zijn levenstaak. The latter view seems to be the more plausible (53, b, Note II), but in // was her life's task and
was his life's task to promote the welfare we may apprehend the spaced word-group as equivalent
Thus
in //
duty to dedicate all her powers to the prosperity and interests of her Fatherland (Times), the fact that task is coupled with another; noun causes the genitive to be best understood as individualizing, although also task and duty may be apprehended as an instance of hendiadys.
Compare
also 16, d.
:
the figures of the polls for large crowds (II. Lond. News). In this quotation an evening's amusement may be understood to mean an amusement lasting an evening, but also an amusement enjoyed of an evening.
To
The appearance of
amusement
It is especially the following genitives discussed above, that are more or less ambiguous: a) those of the names of the principal heavenly bodies (16, b): the earth's axis, the sun's rays, etc.
b) those of certain nouns that have the genitive only in certain combinations (16, d): the bed' s foot , the boat's head, a hand's breadth, etc. c) those of the names of epochs (42, a) or periods (42, b): the evening's
repast, the winter's amusements , etc.; a day's work, a five days' absence, etc. In the majority of cases ambiguous genitives are rendered clear enough by the context or the circumstances of the case referred to. Thus the
following genitives, although admitting of two interpretations, will after a moment's thought be apprehended as classifying: Hot water was, indeed, a requisite in any decent gentleman's house. Trol.,
. .
V, 36. son. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. died like a true earl's son. Id. , H e
Ho!,
r
e w.
V. Modifiers
standing
before
it
it is classifying. 20023. Compare: Sweet, N. E. Gr., He refused to pay his extravagant son's bills. (= the bills of his extravagant son.) He was content to let his widowed mother pay 6/5 extravagant tailor's bills. Mar. Crawp., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. VII, 131.
when
the definite article stands before an individualizing genitive, it also best understood as belonging to the modifying element, although Thus in the expanded construction two definite articles are required. the archdeacon's daughters the daughters of the archdeacon.
is
When
But the
the
individualizing genitive of the names of epochs or periods, belong to the noun modified, or rather to the whole word-group.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
There's her to-morrow's partridge
in
97
Dick.,
the
larder.
Little Dorrit,
Ch.
Ill,
196.
I
saw, by the general's face, that the yesterday's transaction was known Thack., Virg., Ch. LXXVII, 815. During my month's holiday she was particularly pleased with me. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. I, 2.
At once to him.
Also when an individualizing genitive forms a kind of unit with its head-word (16, d), the preceding modifiers often belong to the whole word-group. Only one man of the whole ship's company could dance the hornpipe at all.
Truth,
All
No. 1801
9a.
to the
whole word-group.
(Ch. V, 16;
All (or both) brother's friends attended the meeting. All neighbour's property lies in this county.
my
my
great King's calamities, his passion for writing indifferent poetry grew stronger and stronger. Mac , Fred., (690a). This was one of the blackest nights in all Newnes's career. T. P.'s Weekly,
No. 482,
,130c.
But when the genitive is a plural, all and both may belong to the modifying element alone. Compare Ch. XXXIII, 8a. A peace was concluded ... to continue for both the kings' lives. Bacon, Hist. Henry VII (= the lives of both the kings). The young farmer drew himself up and looked fearlessly in all his companions' It is never too late to mend. eyes. Ch. Reade
,
Both these men's eyes followed George into the house, and each had a strong emotion they were bent on concealing. lb., I, Ch. II, 34.
Sometimes one of the modifiers, an adjective, belongs only to the with which it forms a kind of unit, while another modifier belongs to the whole word-group. Thus in the following quotation
genitive,
old belongs to wives' alone, while his modifies old wives' tales:
We'll stop his old wives' tales for him. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. Ill, 156. Another instance: Alas .'...my good and dear friend, from what sepulchre have
397.
we draw
attention
to
instanced by All other the Queen's Dominions (Periodical 1 ), which other belongs to the noun modified. (Ch. XXXIII, 116.)
IN
FOUR WAYS.
Nouns
substantively
and
Sweet (N. E. Gr., 2008) calls the substantive genitive elliptical, but there seems to be no call to assume an ellipsis in such a collocation as at the baker's, any more than there is in all the other cases in which an adnominal word(-group) is used substantively.
46. For
the conjoint use of the genitive, whether individualizing or classifying, see the above discussions.
i)
H. Poutsma,
Wendt, Synt. des heut. Eng., 88. A Grammar of Late Modern English.
II.
98
47. a)
CHAPTER XXIV,
47.
genitive is mostly individualizing. denoting a relation of possession, origin or agency, the absolute individualizing genitive appears to be used, in the main, of the same nouns as those which admit of the conjoint genitive.
The absolute
When
person with jaundice in his blood shall lie down and go to sleep at noon-day, when another of a different complexion shall find his eyes as a statue's. Leigh Hunt A Few Thoughts on Sleep. She cared for his verses no more than for Dan Chaucer's. Thack., Henry
,
Esmond,
He
neglects
,
II,
Ch. X, 240.
or imagined that they had, a list Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 45.
of grievances as long as
own
Sweet, N.
E.
G
II.
r.
2007.
His
Shakespeare's) tendencies had usually the same bent as the crowd's. No. 3678, 5386. Chambers's is the only Encyclopaedia that is always up-to-date. T. P.'s
(sc.
Lond. News,
Weekly,
b)
When
rare.
seems
to
be exceedingly
Such a construction as
all
is
illustrated
it:
by the following
ever got.
Thack.,
Barry Lyndon.
Note. The absolute individualizing genitive is sometimes replaced by a construction with the determinative that or those followed by of. This construction, however, is decidedly uncongenial to the language. It is rarely used in the case of a simple proper
name. Thus
we
is
more
expensive than
that of John.
connections or the demands of emphasis,
obligatory or desirable.
The
ever,
syntactical
how-
may make
it
The most triumphant death is that of the martyr; the most awful is that of the martyred patriot; the most splendid that of the hero in the hour of victory. Southey, Life of Nelson, Ch. IX, 268. He might perhaps make atonement for the distraction which his intrigues had occasioned in the Duke's dominions, and those of his allies. Scott,
.
Durw., Ch. XXX 384. command of the Duke, sanctioned by that of Louis, commenced an account of his journey. lb., Ch. XXXII, 418.
Quen
t.
At
the
Quentin
Mr. Blondel's house was next to thai of Sir Francis Clavering in Grosvenor. Thack., P e n d. I, Ch. XXXVI, 386. Mr. Arabin's church is two degrees higher than that of Mrs. Grantly. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. LIU, 461. We keep, if not our own birthday, those of our children. lb., Ch. LII, 456. Under whose direction are we to fight, if not under that of Mr. Balfour? Daily Telegraph (Westm. Gaz., No. 5642, 9).
,
Place.
Our
own
position
was
purely
of military conquerors.
Froude,
Oceana,
Ch.
III.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
But
this construction is in:
in
99
name, as
abounding
What noble
all
rivers
fish.
clumsy and unusual in the case of a proper were those of Potomac and Rappahannoc
167.
Thack., Virg., Ch. XVI, What noble rivers were the Potomac and the Rappahannoc.)
sorts
of
(Rewritten:
48.
is very being the ordinary practice to repeat the noun modified: a gentleman's umbrella and a lady's umbrella. Several instances are, however, found in the following quotation:
uncommon,
it
We
49.
found
all
red-linnets'
Only nouns
the
individualizing
In this application
used substantively.
they denote:
to Fullerton?
a) a residence, an establishment or a firm: Can you, when you return from this lord's, come
Jane Austen,
Northanger Abbey,
Here
Ch.
It
my
I,
136.
is.
my
29.
Id.,
Ill,
(sc.
the
diamond
to
pin) had
said on
Saturday night.
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
He was
XVIII,
invited
Logwood, Lady
Pend.
I,
Ch.
88.
183.
is
The doctor's
street.
For further
see
also
3.
Compare
with
the
above:
Thack.,
And
then
Sam.
Titmarsh's house.
b) a place of
worship (church, chapel or cathedral), a town or dedicated to a patron-saint, e. g. St. Paul's, St. Peter's, village St. Andrew's, St. Alban's, St. Ogg's, Bury St. Edmund's. i. If you will come to St. Cuthberfs some Sunday, I will preach you a sermon on that subject. Trol. Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 37. St. Stephen's has once more become the centre of the Empire. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 227a.
:
,
ii.
My ship the Swan is newly arrived from St. Sebastian's laden with The Constant Couple, I, 1, (44). Portugal wines. Farquhar
,
c)
a day dedicated to a patron-saint. It was nearly midnight on the eve of St. Thomas's, the shortest day Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. 11,8. year.
I.
in the
50. Obs.
Occasionally
the
substantive genitive
is
notions, as in:
Our
first
.
.
at a
.
were carried over to two thousand men Meanwhile Thack,, Stoney Point on the western shore, opposite Verplanck's. Virg., Ch. XCII, 975. (sc. point.) He is a little man in the Duke's whom every one loves. Dolf Wyllarde, The Story of Eden, I, Ch. I, 19. (sc. regiment) The Duke's are not all so popular. lb.
Point
.
100
II.
III.
When
and,
it is
consequently,
the subject.
the substantive genitive denotes a firm, it is felt as a plural governs the plural of the finite verb of which
Reeves' have been established 117 years. Pickford's have just delivered a heavy
tin kettles.
Advertisement.
case containing what
I
take to be
to
Punch
Barclay's assure
effect
absolute
results
secrecy:
satisfactorily
Daily Tel.,
1905,
5 Febr.,
IV. Instead
Adv.
of /
(Sweet), we also find / am Life Interest, I, Ch. VIII, is possible with word-groups The 123). like an uncle of my neighbours), an uncle of mine, etc.: I am staying with an uncle of my neighbour's), (or an uncle of mine). do dine to-day at the father's of a SHAKESPEARE, however, has: certain pupil of mine. Love's Labour Lost, IV, 2, 160. V. After foreign names of patron-saints the mark of the genitive is sometimes dropped: the cool shades of San Giovanni (Hugh
staying with
uncle (Mrs. Alex., A latter construction alone
am my
staying at
my
uncle's
111,34).
it.
MjssBurney,
,
Evelina, X,
Ch.
I,
better
balances
at their
bankers.
Spenc. Educ.
At
all
booksellers.
Advertisement.
of the
The suppression
is
mark
nouns
unusual except, perhaps, when the common noun is followed by a proper name in apposition, or when two (or more) nouns connected by and are used to denote the line of business, the
word-group being preceded by a preposition. Compare 4, b, 3, /?. They took all their spare clothes to a pawnbroker. W. W. Jacobs, Odd Craft, A, 19. ii. She desired me to take it on my arrival in London to the great jeweller
i.
Mr. Polonius.
iii.
Thack.
to
Sam. T
m.
at
Ch.
7.
They went
quarter.
Id.,
off
and confectioner
of the
Brobdingnag
little
is
Dinner
Tiramins's,
51. a)
used predicatively, it mostly denotes (are) thought of as the proprietor(s) or originator(s) of whatever is expressed by the subject: These houses are my uncle's. Those poems are my brother's. The grammatical function is mostly that of nominal part of the predicate, but may be that of predicative adnominal adjunct. Compare Ch. XXXIII, 28, a.
(a)
When
person(s)
is
i.
Render therefore unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's; and unto God a 1 1 h. XXII, 21.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
I
|
101
love snow and all the forms Of the radiant frost; love waves, and winds and storms, Everything almost Which is nature's, and may be Untainted by man's misery. Shelley, Invocation, VI. Your form is man's. Byron, The Deformed Transformed, I, 1 (490a). It is often said that his manners are a true, gentleman's. Dick., Little
I
| | |
|
Dorr it,
There
Ch. IX, 56. a foundation of Wordsworthian scheme in the blank verse; but the structure built on it is not Wordsworth's at all. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent., Ch. II, 84.
is just
ii.
Two men I honour, and no third. First the toil-worn Craftsman, that with earth-made implement laboriously conquers the Earth and makes her Man's. Carlyle , Sartor Resartus.
it is also used to represent a person as assigned obliged privileged entitled etc. to do the action indicated by the subject. Observe the same practice with possessive pronouns. See Ch. XXXIII, 28, b, where fuller illustration is given. What am truly, Is thine and my poor country's to command. Macb.,
,
and
Truth's.
John Morley
c)
The
genitive does not bear replacing by the conwith the preposition of. Thus such a sentence as *This horse is of our neighbour is impossible. Nor is its place often taken by a construction with the determinative that or
predicative
struction
those.
In
(47, Note.) the following quotations approximate equivalents of the predicative genitive are used:
i.
It It
is is
not for an old soldier to ask many questions. Wash. I r v. 2 ). for our merchants and manufacturers to consider whether they
will
Times,
;
The contest was long, and he (sc. William the Silent) fell in the struggle but the victory was to the dead hero, not to the living monarch. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 900a.
The
difference
common
case
between the individualizing genitive and the of attributive nouns is on the whole distinctly Thus there is no difficulty in distinguishing between
tongue,
the darling's champion, the idiofs wife, kinsman's friend, etc. and his mother-tongue, the idiot wife the boy friends his kins, ,
,
man
common
case into
the genitive
would involve
is
in:
to
One
of
directors
reported
George finance.
Lloyd George).
J
Westm.
have said that the trouble was due to Lloyd lc (= finance after the style of
88.
Foels.
382.
102
53.
CHAPTER XXIV,
53.
There are, however, not a few cases in which the relation expressed by the genitive is vague or dimmed by other associations, causing the common case to be substituted for the genitive, with numerous irregularities and inconsistencies. Compare also
Ch. XXIII, 12. a) A notable instance of divided usage proper names of buildings, streets,
rivers, etc.
1)
may be
parks,
seen
in
complex
bays,
countries,
When
the
first
part of such a
a person,
i.
highly arbitrary, some nouns the as regularly as others reject it. however, taking genitive, the
language
is
St.
Paul's
Cathedral,
Lincoln's
Inn,
Gray's Inn,
Queen's College,
Regents Park, Drake's Island, Behring's Straits (Cas. Cone. CycL), Hudson's Bay (ib.), Pompey's theatre (Deighton, Haml. Ill, 2, 96). ii. Buckingham Palace, Victoria Station, Marlborough House, Steinway Hall, Balliol College, Magdalen College. Hyde Park, Frobisher Strait (Cas. Cone. C y c 1.), Davis Strait (ib.) When such complex proper names are preceded by the definite article belonging to the noun modified (or the whole word-group), the common-case form is mostly used, except in those names in which the definite article is also found absent. (Ch. XXXI, 30, d, 1.)
the Albert Hall, the Alexandra Palace, the Swishtail Seminary, the Clarendon hotel, the Garrick Theatre. ii. (the) St. James's Hall, (the) Martin's Hall. Thus also the common case or the genitive is used in the following
i.
quotations, according as the definite article, or another modifier, is felt to belong to the noun modified or the modifying noun, i. The Government tariff scheme. Times. (Some) appear to be torn between an equal dislike both of the Lansdowne Bill and of the Government Bill. Westm. Gaz., No. 5619, \c. The Parisian reported ... that she had no Titanic passengers. Times, No. 1842, 301 d. ii. The Dutch Government's methods. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 2Mb. It seems to us extremely unlikely that the Peers will do other than Westm. Gaz., No. 5466 2a. reject the Government's scheme. Much nonsense has been talked in the heat of the moment about the Governments House of Lords policy. Ib., No. 5490, lb.
,
in the
Times,
Compare *
i.
The ghosts
also the following pairs of quotations: of the Prior children peeped out from the banisters.
ii.
Thack., Lovel the Widower, Ch. II, 25. ** Do you think, when I spoke anon of the ghosts of Prior's children I mean that any of them are dead? Ib. * On the Reaumur thermometer the distance is divided into 80 degrees. Cas. Con. C y c 1. s. v. thermometer. ** Reaumur's thermometer is used only in North-Western Europe. Ib.
,
not
wanting.
Thus
the genitive
seems
to be
task
have had the honour to be appointed by your committee to the trying De Quincey, On of reading the Williams' Lecture on Murder.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
103
Murder considered
Es.,
It
305).
that Mr.
was arranged
Stanhope's carriage
this
B a r c h. Tow., Ch. XLI 364. The Hudson's Bay Company has gradually extinguished
to Barchester.
Trol.
custom.
Times.
(Compare: From this point the Hudson Bay Company's steamers cover the whole distance to the Arctic Ocean. lb.) have been taken to task lately ... for writing about a Montagu's harrier
I
seen
in
Sussex.
Westm. Q a z.
No. 5631
2c.
2)
When
name
form.
i.
the
of
name is not the modifying part it almost the has common-case person, regularly
of a geographical
Portland
Bill, Calais
ii.
Trafalgar's
will
Bay
(II.
Trafalgar Bay.
3)
It
when
is
plural in s, and also when it is a singular in s, the mark of the genitive is apt to be neglected. Thus: All Souls College, a United States security, St. Pancras Church (Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. X, 120), by the side of All Souls' College a United States' security (Christm. Car., II, 26), St. Pancras' Church.
,
b)
It is but natural that when the modifying noun is one that hardly admits of the genitive in the present stage of the language, the common case is mostly preferred to the genitive.
Abbey.
Id.,
in the park.
I
|
Ten.,
Princ, Prol.,
14.
chestnut.
The
With
city.
And
gates he ran.
W. Morris,
lover
The Earthly
Par.,
Son
,
of Croeus., LXIV.
cottage.
left
gateway.
well,
|
A happy
lights
Who
It
Wordsworth Nutting, 4. who has come, To look on her that loves him and rings the gateway bell, And learns her gone and far
|
|
from home.
Ten., In
Mem.,
VIII,
i.
mast.
was
a fine sunny
morning when
Irv.,
was given
Wash.
Note
genitive,
I.
Such combinations of a similar nature as have the mark of the have come down to us from the older stages of the language,
made a much more extensive use of the genitive than the Also in these the common case not infrequently present. (16, d.) takes the place of the genitive, especially when the head-word is such
which
a
word
Ill,
bed.
Ch.
I
Bessie
16.
in her
hand.
IV, 22b.
Jane Eyre,
slipped to
my
his
Dick.
21.
Cop., Ch.
He
put on
[etc.].
hat,
added
boat.
Id.,
01.
Twist,
Ch.
I,
Often,
|
away
where clear-stemm'd platans guard The boat-head down a broad canal. Ten.
III.
Nights,
104
moon.
pin.
He
laid
it
out on
my bed
in the
moonlight.
Dick.,
Cop.,
VI, 43a.
majority ... it matters not a pin-head whether the Poems were the work of Ossian, the son of Fingal ... or of a James Mac Pherson.
the
To
Daily News,
alternative genitive:
pin-point, pin-prick.)
On
is
sometimes a Late-English
insertion.
the case with bridesman -and bridesmaid, which have taken the place of an earlier brideman and bridemaid. Compare bridegroom,
This
T. P.'s
c)
Weekly,
Quite
common
common
Ch-. XIX, 5. genitive before gerunds. 54. Also when the genitive is classifying,
it
is
mostly clearly
distinct
from
the
common-case form
tree,
of the noun.
Compare a
tailor with
sportsman's
sportman
tailor.
is
which causes a more frequent substitution of The genitive sometimes seems to be avoided because the context might cause it to be understood as individualizing.
Thus in such a sentence as Now health forsakes that angel face (Burns, On the Illness of a Favourite Child) the placing of angel in the genitive might misrepresent
the author's ideas.
is
a) occasionally with names of persons. angel. And hearken, my merry-men! What time
that
|
or where Did she pass, maid with her heavenly brow, With her look so sweet and her eyes so fair, And her graceful step and her angel air. Scott, Bridal of
|
Tri ermai
So sweet
n,
I,
iv.
|
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
And
to
105
offices, 'Like creatures native
and
fro
|
own clear element, they moved. Id., Princ, VII, //. Compare: She had an angel's face. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, I, 121. baby. Her baby face looked exquisite now in its perfect peace. Edna Lyall,
unto gracious act,
And
in their
Hardy Norseman,
He stooped
to kiss the
fault,
baby face that was temptingly offered to him. lb., Ch. XII, 97. common especially in bad southern English, and found almost. invariably in
is
6].
Rippmann,
The Sounds
English,
syllables,
44.)
(Compare:
stressed
lb.,
But he was little disposed contemptuously of the institution, and Pend., II, Ch. VII, 71. He often asked me to his bachelor home.
bachelor.
life.
James Payn
II,
A,
17.
am
,
month
boy. Ten.
longer.
Sam. Titm.
boyish
And
,
you
babble
mine.
dame.
picture
was
William Mottram, The True (Compare with this the legend of a preceding page: The Dame's School, Griff. George Eliot's First
Ch.
I,
6.
Mrs.
demon. A mode of warfare of which in her demon moods she was past mistress. Ward, Marc el la, I, Ch. I, 11. (Compare the quotations with deuce and
,
devil in 41
b.)
foot.
The
coach
was
going
at
footpace
up a steep
hill.
Dick.,
Cop.,
Ch. V, 386.
He went out
Compare:
Rob.
giant.
at a foot-pace. Willie Winkie, 200. Rudy. Kipling, Catherine was driving at a foots pace up a steep hill. Mrs. Ward, Elsm., I, 126. (foot pedestrian.) (The construction with the genitive is
Wee
not mentioned in
to be rare.)
And
thrust
His giant
self4.
Scott, Lady, II, xxxiv, 22. was, in his way a remarkable man. A stalwart, of giant strength, energetic and practical. William Mottram, George Eliot, Ch. I,
these things Sublime courage, unfailing skill, giant strength, paternal tenderness may win for some man the imperishable title of Father of United South Africa. Rev. of Rev. (Compare: a giant's task. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., II, 191.)
guardian. Being permitted in this way to revisit the scenes of his enterprise, and keep a guardian eye upon the river. Wash. Irv. Rip van Winkle. infant. How quickly the infant eye comprehends the look which precedes the verbal
,
expression of an idea. J. Habberton, Helen's Bab., 41. maiden. O Walter, I have shelter'd here Whatever maiden grace The good old Summers, year by year Made ripe in Summer-chace. Ten., Talking Oak, X. maniac. "His cousin what?" I shriek with a maniac laugh. Thack., Love the Widower, Ch. II, 27.
|
master. He has shown how much may be done for a place in hours of leisure by one master spirit. Wash. Irv. Sketch-book, Roscoe, (14a). In every line from Addison's pen Steele found a master-stroke. Thack. Henry
,
,
Esm.,
II,
106
CHAPTER XXIV,
55.
It is better to reproduce in another tongue the master-piece of a master-mind than to brew small beer of one's own. Not. and Quer. provided you do it well It is hardly necessary to remind either classical scholars or lovers of English literature of the influence which the master minds of antiquity have exercised upon the greatest English writers. Times. (Compare: It is a master's work. Acad.)
minstrel.
minstrel Harp,
I
still
Scott,
Lady,
I,
i.
missionary.
Jane
partisan. This reception will go far to wipe out from his memory the unfairness of the partisan attacks upon him. Times. To those who take a purely non-partisan view of the question, the outbreaks that occur from time to time on the Rand are rather alarming. Daily Mail.
peasant. And much it pleased him to peruse The songs of the Sicilian muse,j Bucolic songs by Meli sung In the familiar peasant tongue. Longfellow, Tales of a Wayside Inn, Prel. (Compare: Greek is a slave's tongue. Ch.
|
Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. Ill, 136.) Peasant German has lost much more of its original grammar than has the German spoken by the educated people. H. Bradley, The Making of English, Ch. II, 18. They had such a man ready to hand in M. Fallieres, of peasant origin. Rev. of
Rev., CXCIV,
sailor.
120.
Upon
no
the
body
in the well
S. Swift,"
collar of
any kind
is
1
[etc.].
were found a sailor hat with the name "H. M. Truth, No. 1801, 11a.
|
scoundrel.
keepeth he.
Thomson, Cast
to thy
Firm
to
this
scoundrel
maxim
l.
Campbell, Pleasures
183.
shepherd.
No. 1291
,
He has
Titbits,
400a.
spendthrift. The colonel was right when he rebuked him for his spendthrift follies. Thack., Virg., Ch. LIII, 554.
vagabond.
There
is
having nothing
in the
always, however, a kind of vagabond consolation in a man's world to lose. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Hand'l., I, 125).
woman. The
hoods, without
vows.
Times,
did
yeoman.
He
(sc.
Dickens)
yeoman
is
Times,
(Compare:
uninflected
41, 6.)
Note.
the
III,
The
ward
of
form
(Ch.
XXIX,
14a.)
hospital; the condemned hold (Gay, Beggar's No. 1843, 3336). 2); to be placed on the Retired List (Times
Opera,
In the
rise to obscurity:
That
life
(sc.
William the Silent) was a noble Christian (= the epic of a noble Christian.)
epic.
Motley, Rise,
case.
common
have the happiness to name her Ladyship among my acquaintances bear, sir, a Rosherville face. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. X, 106.
,
and you
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
b)
107
of animals.
would appear that this superstition as to names is later than the giving of animal names to groups. Andrew Lang, Acad., MDCCLXV, 2126.
a bird-of-prey eye.
life together.
Times.
sister lead a
cat-and-dog
Jane
Thou hast an eagle eye. Bulwer, Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 16. (Compare: The Duke of Omnium (saw) with his eagle's eye that the welfare
countrymen
at large
required that
some
Trol.,
ferret.
Framl. Pars.,
II,
Ch,
VIII, 78.)
He was endeavouring
31.
to pierce the
Where
gott'st
Macbeth,
V, 3, 12.
you stir, Mr. Cary, you have to do with Richard Grenville!" thunders the lion voice. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XII, 108. But never in the worst moments did that lion heart show signs of weakness.
2386.
it
of
room.
Wash.
The Legend
,
centre of the
(353).
I,
rabbit
serpent.
rabbit
mouth
in
Maud,
|
x,
ii.
And one
whom
all
together, laughingly)
Would
hint at
clung Like serpent eggs worse in either. Ten., En. Arden, 476.
evil
fancies
She contrived by means of an angel face, a serpent tongue and a heart as hard as a diamond, to make every weak man fall in love with her. Ch.
Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!
II,
The
serpent
Rienzi,
proper
distinction.
Lytton,
wild beast.
In the hunted air of the people there was yet some wild-beast Tale of Dick. thought of the possibility of turning at bay.
,
Two
Cities,
wild-cat.
is
I,
Ch. V, 45.
a political party has been kept too long in opposition, it all manner of wild-cat theories. Rev. of Rev.,
When
to
inclined
adopt
CCVIII, 341a.
Note. Sometimes the use of the common case seems to be favoured by the occurrence of a sibilant at the end of the modifier. Compare: horse-flesh (-meat) with dog's-flesh (-meat).
c)
almost regularly with the names of things in late formations, funeral. While through the meadows Like fearful shadows Slowly passes
1
funeral
train.
Longfellow,
Afternoon
in
February,
I.
State.
in the
He has recognized the justice of the demand State schools. Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 138a.
vegetable.
refreshment.
vegetable
[etc.].
life
may
not
be
the
highest
ideal
of
holiday
But
Times.
the brow of village. I saw the taper spire of a village church rising from a neighbouring hill. Wash. Irv., Sketch-bk., Voyage, 126.
The
The
in
red
sun flashes
I.
On
village
windows.
Longfellow,
Afternoon
February,
108
56. Obs.
I.
CHAPTER XXIV,
56.
When the modifying noun is a plural in s there is variable practice, the apostrophe being written by some and omitted by Thus we find ladies' waiting-room, savings' bank, others.
servants' hall by the side of ladies waiting room, savings bank,
servants hall.
Some compounds are always written without the apostrophe. Such, among others, are bees-wax, swansdown. Thus also in adnominal word-groups made up of a numeral and the name of a measure of time (42, b, 2; Ch. XXV, 32, Obs. I), the apostrophe is sometimes omitted.
John
was born, a seven months child, on the 29th of October W. M. Rossetti, Prefatory Notice to the Poetical Works of John Keats. What possible inroad upon the authority of the Boers could the fiveKeats
1795.
if
all correct.
Daily Chronicle.
A notable instance of divided practice is also afforded by trade union, the usual form, and its variants trades union and trades' union.
i.
The
workman
with a reserve
fund, that will enable him to stand out for his price. Encycl., s. v. trade unions.
If
Harmsworth
a trade union
comes
will
ii.
have
to
be arrived
Westm.
iii.
bound
,
to
man
,
Ch. Kinosley
102.
The
i.
plural also appears under three forms: trade unions, trades unions and trades' unions.
conspiracies.
Graph.
for
The
which trade unions have been formed, may be expressed briefly as overcoming or offsetting the disabilities of labour. Harmsworth Encycl., s. v. trade unions. The Friendly Societies and the trade unions all have criticisms to make and amendments to propose. Westm. Gaz., No. 5625, 2a.
object
ii.
iii.
The custom of congregation gave the guilds, of which our trades unions are the degenerate successors. Walt. Besant, Lond., I, 62. The misdoings of the Trades' Unions are no argument against the extension of the suffrage. Ch. Kinosley, Alton Locke, Pref., 103.
Another instance of variable practice may be seen in woman suffrage, the usual form, and its variants woman's suffrage, women suffrage and women's suffrage.
i.
It is a rather stubborn fact, which has its bearing on the Woman Suffrage question, that adult suffrage would give us a majority of female voters. Westm. Gaz., No. 5642, 2a. The movement for Woman-Suffrage and equality between the sexes. T. P.' s No. 467, 492a. e e k 1 y Mr. Lloyd George's speech was mainly devoted to woman suffrage. Times, No. 1822, 9596.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
ii.
,
109
iii.
Woman's suffrage. Ten Brug. Die t.3, s. v. woman. Portugal and women suffrage. Rev. of Rev., No. 256, 365a. She was hearty in her condemnation of recent militant Women Suffrage T. P.'s Weekly, No. 496, 5966. tactics.
Recent demands for women's suffrage have ended
in disaster.
iv.
Harms-
worth Encycl.,
To
II.
s.
v.
the
end of his
life
suffrage. he was a
Lond. News,
interesting
II.
to compare adnominal word-groups that are made up numeral and the name of a measure. The genitive plural is all but regularly used, when the measure is one of time (42, b, 2; 56, Obs. I), the uninflected form is the rule, when the measure is one of another description: a five-pound note, a two-foot rule, a four-mile journey; but a five hours' journey. See also Ch. XXV, 32, Obs. I. In the following quotation the common case is exceptionally used
It
is
of
made
chief
the
hour-and-a-half
trip
between
Ch.
I,
Hillcrest.
John
Habberton,
Helen's Babies,
10.
The
meaning than the genitive plural. Thus according to Kruisinqa (A Gram, of Pre s. -Day Eng., 343) "the difference "between (a) a three-mile journey and (/?) a three miles' journey seems "to be that (a) is more of a compound and used to denote a kind of "journey (compare a two-year-old horse); whereas (/?) applies to a
"special case."
III.
some words should be devoted to the use of the genitive, compared with the common case, of the names of seasons, months, days and parts of the day, when used adnomipally.
In
conclusion
as
a)
When
the
genitive
by the common
the
genitive
is,
as appears does not bear replacing case. (16, c.) Of the names of seasons and months however, used only in the higher literary style,
is
distinctly
individualizing,
it
(in)definite article,
especially
poetry,
the
analytical
construction
being the
rule
in
ordinary language.
i.
all
ii.
Darkly that day rose Autumn's mock sunshine of the faded woods Was the life of it. Ten., Aylmer's Field, 610. Alike to him was time or tide, December's snow, or July's tide. Scott,
:
!
Lay,
iii.
xxi.
iv.
was the 16th day of the inquiry. Times. Our Cape Town Correspondent telegraphed under Sunday's date. Id. Another strange feature of Wednesday's debate was the speech by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Westm. Gaz., No. 5625, 76. That morning's breakfast passed heavily off. P c k w. Ch. II.
Friday's meeting
i ,
b)
When, however, the individualizing and especially when the genitive is common case often takes its place.
function
distinctly
is
dimmed
classifying,
110
1)
CHAPTER XXIV,
56.
Of the names of seasons only summer and winter seem at all to admit of the classifying genitive, autumn and spring having, apparently, regularly the common case instead. This latter form appears to be more frequent than the genitive also in the case of winter and summer. Compare the quotations given in 42, a, 3 with the following: autumn. Even the indefatigable Mr. Towers had stolen an autumn holiday.
Trol.,
Barch Tow.,
Tres.,
still
September afternoon,
Ill,
Mrs.
Ward,
Sir
George
spring. The spring fashions were arrived. Mrs. Gask., Cran The poplar was bursting into spring beauty. lb., Ch. XIV, 260.
summer.
evenings
I
is
ended
/.
There was a
certain person in the village with whom on those golden summer should have liked to have taken a stroll in the hay-fields. Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
Ch.
I,
2.
There is a saying that the weather the cuckoo has eaten up the mud".
winter.
summer
fineness "until
2c.
Westm.
summer
heat.
Lytton
a x
on
II ,
Ch.
Ill
40.
The genitive is regular in in a summer's day (= in a long day), any summer's day (= practically every day in summer).
I'll assure, a' (vulgar for he) uttered as brave words at the bridge as you shall see in a summer's day. Henry V, III, 6, 67.
d s. proper man, as one shall see in a summer's day. I, 2, 77. spoke of the Montagu's harrier, and that was of a fact which I have seen v/ith my own eyes, and a fact which I have shown any summer's day, until some three years ago, on a certain stretch of Ashdown Forest. Westm. Gaz., No. 5631 2c.
i ,
,
Conversely midsummer appears to have the midsummer. Three o'clock upon a still, pure,
Ch. Kingsley,
2)
common
bright
case regularly.
midsummer morning.
Westw. Ho!,
of
Of the names
in a classifying
meaning.
i
,
A
It
fresh
I
wept,
May-dawn it was, When walked forth upon knew not why. Shelley, Revolt, D e d c.
a very fine
in
And
was
May
day.
Jane Eyre,
|
And
ramblings on the wold, When April nights began to blow, And I saw the village lights below. Ten. T h e April's crescent glimmer'd cold Miller's Daught. XIV. (April's crescent is an instance of an indivioft
,
|
dualizing
He was
the
in
on
April day.
Mrs.
Ward
Sir
George
Tres.,
The
who were hurried away that terrible January night Khan, had yet to be recovered. Justin McCarthy,
to replace the the quotation in 42, a, 2
Short
3)
Hist., Ch.
IV, 55.
Compare
The
Hall,
ministering.
Ten., En.
GENITIVE OF NOUNS.
He had heard something
of
,
Ill
Trol.
Mrs. Proudie
B
I
c h.
Tow.,
Ch. XLIII
386.
like me to drive over and inspect her Sabbath-day school. lb. The Saturday Westminster Gazette. Would you kindly permit me to inquire through your "Saturday Letter-Bag"
Westm. Gaz.
No. 5625,
Ac.
An
Little
is
Sunday's
best.
To
4)
family parties dressed in their Sunday best. JephsonI). go to fair I drest ... in my Sunday's best. Southey *).
is,
Of the names of parts of a day the classifying genitive frequent enough (42, a, 1), but the common case seems
indeed,
frequent, being apparently, regularly used in as morning (evening, night) air, morning (evening) dress (party), afternoon (morning) school (lessons), morning (evening) prayers.
evening.
(Stop.,
for the
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.
Morning parties, as a rule, are failures. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XLII, 367. lb. In a private house or in private grounds a morning party is a bore. She was dressed in her brightest of morning dresses. lb., Ch. XLVI, 409.
morning.
Eleanor was dressed a full hour before the time fixed hold for morning prayers. lb., Ch. XLIX, 434.
night.
in the Ullathorne
houseThack.,
to
attire.
Henry Esmond,
!)
Ch. V, 46.
Murray.
CHAPTER XXV.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
FORM.
1.
The
usual
way
of
is
by adding
s or es to the singular.
2. Obs.
I.
The
the
i.
e.
s is voiced, unless preceded by a voiceless consonant. In termination es the s is always voiced, and es is syllabic, sounded as a separate syllable, when preceded by a sibilant.
This equally applies to such nouns as in the singular have the sibilant followed by silent e: horse horses; age ages. In the following nouns the th, though voiceless in the singular, becomes voiced through the influence of the termination baths mouth mouths oath oath's , of the plural bath truths wreaths. In the plurals laths paths wreath path and youths the th is pronounced by some with voice, by some with breath in growths and heaths it seems to be breathed with most, if not all, speakers. In the above nouns the th is preceded by a long vowel, which may be considered as the cause of its becoming vocalized. When
: , , ,
preceded by a short vowel or a consonant, the th invariably months. remains breathed in the plural: death deaths; month This is also the case when the preceding vowel has become
lengthened through the r as
in birth births; fourth fourths. In hearths, however, the th is voiced. In unstressed positions the voiceless th is preserved: twent-
ieth
99; r e s.
twentieths. Compare Webst. Princ. of Pron. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 1001; Kruisinoa, A Gram, of E n g. 282.
:
pronunciation of cloths, Murray (N. E. D., s. v. cloth) observes that northerners generally pronounce the th with
As
to
the
breath, Londoners usually with voice, the preceding vowel being lengthened. Some Londoners make the th breathed in compounds
as
is
table-cloths,
neck-cloths,
many
to the
same when
the
word
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
II.
113
plural suffix s has come down from the Old English as, which terminated the nominative and accusative plural of the most numerous class of masculine nouns of the strong declension: stan stanas. On account of its never meaning anything else than the nominative or accusative plural, it was better adapted to become the universal termination for the plural than any of the other plural endings used in English, which might also have other grammatical functions. Bradley, The Making of English, Ch. II, 36. In course of time the ending as degenerated into es, sometimes into
The
ys or
Syllabic es is still the is, which continued to be syllabic. ordinary mark of the plural in Chaucer. In Spenser, however, the syllabic es has already disappeared, except, of course, after sibilants. 188. 123; Franz, Shak. Gram.-, Emerson, Mid. Eng. Read., And fyry Phebus ryseth up so brighte, That al the orient laugheth of the And with his stremes dryeth in the greves The silver dropes, hanging lighte, on the leves. Chauc, Cant. Tales, A, 1493 1497. A Gentle Knight was pricking on the plaine, Ycladd in mightie armes and Wherein old dints of deepe wounds did remaine, The cruel silver shielde, markes of many a bloudy fielde. Spenser, Faery Queene, I, i, 1. In the form clothes the ending es is never pronounced as a separate
|
The distinction between cloths and the plurale tantum syllable. clothes 'is chiefly of the 19th century'. Murray, s. v. clothes. Another common suffix for the plural in Old English was an,
which terminated all nouns of the weak declension: nama naman; sunne eagan. The ending an has survived in en, sunnan; eage which is found in the plural of a few English nouns to this day. Some of these plurals in en, however, must not be traced to Old English, but to Early Southern Middle English, which exhibited a movement towards making en the regular plural ending of nouns. Thus shoes was in this dialect shoon, but in Old English scos or sceos. For further details see Emerson, Mid. Eng. Read., 132; Bradley, The Making of English, Ch. II, 40; Jespersen,
185;
Kern, Vereenvoudiging,
14.
the termination of the plural, when preceded by a sibilant, written s, se, ss, ce and ge, is frequently left unpronounced, and sometimes even left unwritten. ABBOT, Shak. Gram. , 471;
In
Shakespeare
:!
189.
|
As
It
the
dead carcasses of
|
Thinking
ii.
upon
Are
1
,
|
is
so.
,
unburjied men. Coriol. , III, 3, 122. from you. lb., II, 3, 231.
|
;
to
weigh
The
flesh?
Merch. of
V
3.
e n.
IV,
\
256.
My sense are stopped. Son., CXII. The bulk of English nouns take s. The
a) to all
termination es is added: nouns ending in a sibilant: i.e. a blade, or a blade-point consonant: bus glasses; gases; glass bus(s)es; gas box boxes topaz quizzes fez(z)es quiz topazes fez
;
;
waltz
dishes; church
churches.
also: cargo, echo, flamingo, hero, negro, no, potato, tomato, volcano.
H.
Thus
English.
II.
114
In
CHAPTER XXV,
3.
the case of such nouns in o as have still more or less a foreign Thus we ring about them, usage is arbitrary and far from uniform. find s as well as es in the plural of bravo, calico, commando,
desperado, domino, embargo, fresco, grotto, indigo, innuendo, magnifico, memento, motto, mosquito, pallisado, peccadillo, photo, See especially portico, salvo, stiletto, tobacco, tornado, torpedo. Fowler, Concise Oxford Diet., Pref., 6. A simple s is invariably added to: 1) nouns ending in oo, and such as have the o preceded by a
cuckoo, Hindoo cameo, duo, folio, nuncio, ratio, seraglio, studio, tercio (= tertio), trio.
:
;
vowel
2) Italian
art
cento, crescendo,
zero.
the
albino, gaucho, guanaco, merino. Note. The e may have been retained in the termination of nouns ending in o, to denote length of vowel, this being one of the functions
of
this
letter
in
many German
dialects.
The
retention of the e
may
also be due to a desire of exhibiting the voiced pronunciation of the s, simple os, as in chaos suggesting the breath-sound. Mason, Eng.
Gram. 34
i.
49.
The following
illustrative quotations
must
suffice:
bilboes. You shan't go to the bilboes this bout. Ch. XXIII, 166.
buffalo.
Smollett
Rod. Rand.,
wild boars.
The
Pontifical
(559a).
State
is
abandoned
to
buffaloes and
Mac, Popes,
cargo.
1
There should be a more rigid examination of cargoes. Times. was never weary of playing at dominoes with Mrs. Primmins. dominoes. Lytton, C ax tons, I, Ch. IV, 19. fresco. Their open interiors all and each radiant with the gaudy, yet harmonious 10a. colours of frescoes. Id. Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. innuendo. Mr. Joshua Rigg, in fact, appeared to trouble himself little about any innuendoes. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 250. Jingo. When the Jingoes left office they had raised the expenditure on war to Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 333a. 76,367,000. memento. The soldier was offering for sale all sorts of mementoes of the
,
fight.
I,
Ch.
XXXV,
388.
Lapland is a country that abounds in mosquitoes and knorts. Daily Mail (Lloyd North. Eng., 86). 'If we motto. One of our mottoes is this haughty address to the Romans, fall R e n z i II, Ch. 1 80. ye fall also'. Lytton peccadillo. It is one of life's little ironies that men continually go unwhipped of justice for their great crimes and get smartly trounced for the veriest
mosquito.
peccadilloes. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI 3376. salvo. At three in the afternoon the batteries fired salvoes.
,
Daily Chron. What with vetoes and retaliation vetoes, the whole thing (sc. the Women's Parliament) would be absurd and impossible. T. P. s Weekly,
veto.
'
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
115
in
of
your father's house, without towers and fortresses, bravos? Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53.
to join the
Boer commandos.
Times.
this.
II.
am
Mag.
less inharmonious.
duo,
duos and
trios
more or
Gazebos or summer-houses hanging over peagreen canals. Thack a Week's Holiday (Pardoe, Sel. Eng. Es., 449). mustachio. The captain coming out, curling his mustachios, mounted the black charger pawing among the straw. Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIV, 136. photo. They (sc. those pictures) are some photos of the Khaibar and Tirah.
gazebo.
Notes on
Mrs.
Ward,
I,
Ch. V, 41a.
which was situated, as pianos usually are, in the back drawing-room. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IV, 32. punctilio. These treaties ought to have been officially notified with all due punctilios to the other signatories. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 348c. octavo. Other gentlemen carried under their arms goodly octavos. Dick.,
piano.
They went
to the piano,
Pickw., Ch. XXXIV, 305. Salvos of cannon were likewise fired, Motley, Rise, IV, Ch. II, 571. studio. She was known in all the studios of the quarter. Thack., Van.
salvo.
Ch. XIX, 200. England was armed to confront the awaited the Armada's sails. Acad.
Fair,
I,
tercio.
tercios of Spain,
when Parma
c)
nouns ending in y preceded by a consonant, the y being ladies. changed to i: lady When the y is preceded by a vowel, the plural is formed by boys; key keys; quay quays. simply suffixing s: boy In the digraph qu the u is a consonant; hence the plural of colloquy and soliloquy, etc. is colloquies, soliloquies, etc.
to
From an historical point of view it would be more accurate to I. say that the ie has been changed in the singular to y: the Early Modern English way of spelling these words in the singular being ladie, glorie, etc. The ie was kept in the plural probably to show that the following s was voiced, simple is, as in crisis, suggesting the breath-sound. Mason, Eng. Gram. 34 49; Nesfield, Hist. Eng. and Deriv.,
,
Note
109; JESPERSEN,
II.
I,
3.134.
is
i.
a light one-horse covered carriage mostly written flys. Jespersen, Mod. Eng. Gram., 1,3.138. I remarked very few carriages, mostly cabs and flys. Thack., A Little Dinner at T m m n s s , Ch. VII (334). No flys so pleasant as Brighton flys. Id., Newc. I, Ch. IX, 102.
plural of fly
'
The
ii.
Flies
Mrs.
Ch.
I,
11.
III.
The
of
sometimes written
sty in the sense of 'pen or inclosure for swine', is There is, of course, nothing unusual in the styes.
spelling styes as the plural of stye (also spelled sty) in the sense of 'small inflammatory tumour on the edge of the eye'.
Sheep
Huxl.,
of
Darw.,
116
It
CHAPTER XXV,
3.
reminds them of the horrible acts of vandalism committed by people who have torn down beautiful ruins in order to build cottages and walls of pigstyes.
the
old
changed into ie before the plural s. Instances occasionally met with in the latest English. 8 37. N. E. Gr., 1021; Alford, Queen's Eng. Mildred was about fifteen, he made one of his rare journies to London.
till
lately
practice
are
Ch.
II.
The monies expended on you in your minority far exceed the sum to which you are entitled. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 257. ii. A purser is a commissioned officer who has the charge of the provisions, clothing, etc., and of the public moneys on shipboard. Webst., Diet. V. Nouns in i, of which there are but few, generally add s only; occasionally the plural of alkali is also written with es, and this seems to be the ordinary practice with macaroni. Murray; Sweet,
N. E. Gr.,
1021.
houri. The houris of the theatres especially were so ravishing and angelic that to see them was to set the heart in motion. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. I, 6. macaroni. Sure never were seen two such beautiful ponies; Other horses are clowns, but these macaronies. Sher., School for Scand., II, 2, (378). He wore his hair in the fashion which I remember to have seen in caricatures of what were termed, in my young days, Macaronies. Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia,
|
The
who
and
live
in this
on perfumes; and though banished for a time from Paradise, go about world doing good. Jeffrey, Thomas Moore.
On going into Fusby's a week afterwards he found the Peris drinking out of blue cups. Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. V. Ski. On these occasions practically every one is to be seen on skis. II. Lond.
News,
taxi.
No. 3850,
150.
They have
to catch trains
and
taxis.
53, 158.
v.
d) to
in
/,
the
being changed to
The
nouns which regularly change / into ves are loaf, self, sheaf, shelf, thief and wolf.
Note
I. Already in Old English /, like th and s, became voiced in voiced surroundings, although the symbol was retained. Thus wulf loaves. wolves, loaf wulfas, hlaf hlafas; Modern English: wolf
192, 2; Kaluza, Compare Cook-SieveRS, Old Eng. Gram. 3 Hist. Gram., 98; 81; Emerson, Mid. Eng. Reader, Sweet, N. E. Gr., 731; id., Sounds of Eng., 181; Jespersen,
,
2.541
and
life the
is
also
changed
into
v.
form, we also find beefs, the latter being apparently the ordinary form in America. The singular beef in the sense of ox occurs only occasionally since the 16th century; the plural is now found only in archaic and technical language. See Murray,
III.
Besides beeves,
the
common
s. v.
beef;
Sattler,
E. S., X.
IV.
it
The means
plural of staff is sometimes staves, but mostly staffs; when a corps of officers, either military or civil, the plural is always
distaff,
etc.,
staffs.
the plural
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
is
117
mostly formed by simply adding s: flagstaffs, etc. The plural staves has developed a new singular stave (= Dutch duig). Sweet, N. E. Gr., 1001; Jespersen, Progr. 133, footnote.
,
Dwarves and wharves are occasionally met with in English writers, instead of the more usual dwarfs and wharfs. (In America wharves is, apparently, the common form. Webst.) Scarves, however, seems to be rather more common than scarfs. Nesfield, Hist. Eng. and Der., 110. Hooves occurs occasionally beside the more usual hoofs. See the VI. quotation from Stevenson in Murray, s. v. hoof, 1; and below. For the rest nouns in / and fe form the plural according to the VII.
V.
general rule.
beef.
i.
A pound
|
of
man's
flesh taken
from a man
Is
|
ii.
muttons, beefs or goats. Merch. I, 3, 168. Has he land and beefs? Henry IV, B, III, 2, 353. All the villages, nine hundred yards round the city, (were obliged) to deliver in every morning six beeves, forty sheep, etc. Swift, Gul., I, Ch. II, (1196). Madam Esmond had beeves, and horses, and stores in plenty. Thack., Virg.,
neither,
As
flesh of
And men brought in whole hogs and quarter beeves. Ten., Ger. and En., 601. belief. The lecturer's beliefs exactly coincided with all his own ready-formed notions. Edna Lyall, Don., I, 84. gulfs which, as it seemed to him, could gulf. There were gulfs between them never be bridged again. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., II, 268.
Ten., Lady of S h al. III, iv. unusual hooved instead of hoofed in: Beautiful Paris, evilhearted Paris, Came up Leading a jet-black goat white-horn'd, white-hooved from reedy Simois all alone (Ten., CEnone, IV); and also leavy, which many modern editors altered into leafy, in: Now near enough: your leavy screens throw
hoof.
burnish'd hooves his war-horse trode.
this the
,
On
[Compare with
alike are
much
81.
Mr. Grummer pocketed his staff, and looked atMr. Dubbley; Mr. Dubbley pocketed his staff and looked at the division; the division pocketed their staves and looked at Messrs. Tupman and Pickwick. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXIV, 218. ** Here it is that the architects and surveyors with their several staffs are domiciled. Escott, Eng., Ch. Ill, 59. The railway companies mastered the difficulties of the situation and filled up
their depleted staffs. No. 1808, 682d. * sir, there's Trapland the scrivener, with two suspicious fellows like lawful pads, that would knock a man down with pocket-r/psraves. Congr.,
Times,
ii.
Love
for Love, I, 1, (205). The judges and the tipstaves parted the combatants. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 99. Over the altar are still seen the French flagstaves, taken by the garrison in a
desperate sally. Id., IV, Ch. XII, 239. ** Serving wenches ... sate plying their distaffs. It began with the erection of flagstaffs. Dick.,
III.
Domb.,
The mayor and corporation-men appeared in full Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIX, 2166. waif. This was the land which we have regarded
strays of our superfluous population.
to factories
Froude, Oceana, Ch. VIII, 115. and wharves. W.Besant, Bell of St. Paul's,
Ch,
II,
37.
118
4.
CHAPTER XXV,
45.
main, formed according to
The
in the
With regard to those in y and o, the most common practice is to add s: Henry Catos. Some writers insert an Henrys; Cato
apostrophe before s: Henry's, Cato's; others form the plural of these nouns as if they were class-nouns: Henries, Catoes. Singulars in y of one syllable, such as Paul Pry, would hardly be pluralized
in
's.
Jespersen
Mod. E
n g.
Gram.,
Proper
strophe,
or
the
3.135.
in
nouns ending
Chambers's.
in y.
occasionally es, or
a sibilant generally add the simple apo's: the Chambers' or the Chamberses
N.
E.
Sweet,
All
Gr.,
1021;
Ten Brug.,
Jane
let
the
Persuasion,
not
Ch.
of
2.
come
ye, she's of an ancient family. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. VIII, 83. "the inferior sex" is sighted and has to be taken Off the Scillys a member of .
tell
.
me
on board.
II.
3860, 464c.
that
proper names
party at all?
Id.,
Why, in fact, did the Timminses give A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VII, 334.
sibilant,
i.
The Carlovingian race had been exhausted by producing a race of Pepins and Charleses. Motley, Rise, Intro d., 126. The impious heretics the Drakes and Raleighs, Grenviles and Cavendishes,
Hawkinses and Frobishers had dared to violate that hidden Sanctuary. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIX, 218a. I have not been to the Rooms this age, nor to the Play, except going in last night with the Hodges's for a frolic. Northanger Jane Austen
,
ii.
Abbey,
5.
To
express the plural of a letter, figure or any character or sign, word or phrase mentioned without regard to its syntactical function, the letter s, generally preceded by the apostrophe, is
or of a
appended:
the
two I's
in
all;
the
two o's
in
400;
the
why's
and wherefore' s of
the question.
Some
writers, however, omit the apostrophe in such cases, joining the s immediately to the letter, character or word: the two Is in
all, etc.
Others
still
write
the
names
of
letters
endings,
i.
Several dozen of "How-are-you's?" hailed the old gentleman's arrival. Dick., Pickw., Ch. VII, 59 Mamma drops her H's. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIV, 251. a rYou don't need to be on your p's and q's with him. Mrs. Ward,
cella,
Esth.
I
I,
230.
You'll have to
mind your
I, 6.
p's
and
Wat
Ch.
Glyn, Refl.
of
Ambrosine,
II,
Ch.
Ill,
107.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
119
ii.
He discusses literature, as though he were a rather daring Victorian of the '90's. Eng. Rev., 1912 Aug., 153. The present authors are able to dot some of the i's. A then., No. 4463, 513a. The hes would quarrel and fight with the females, as fiercely as with each
other.
In L.
Swift, Oul.,
IV,
W.
S. these
us are
Sweet, A.
of the rs.
S.
Read.
149.
Gram.
Intr., 47.
of the action
lb.,
A
of
Germany. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 3476. But if 'ifs and ans were pots and pans', as no trade for tinkers'. Id.
it,
there'd be
The
plural of abbreviations is mostly indicated by 's, if only initials are used (M.P.'s); by s, if more letters are retained (Bros., Profs., Drs.). Another way of indicating the plural, especially applied to titles, is by
duplication: LL.D., MSS., i. To talk of burning lOU's is easy to understand It Eng. Rev., 1912, March,
pp.
was
the
685.
child's play.
quick
Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. I, 5. taming of the ordinary Labour M. P.'s.
to confine the B. D.
its
and D. D. degrees
to those
who
do
true
sense.
of
How many
trust
J.
Punch,
ii.
So
iii.
for by the Revs. Messrs. Grey and Green. Trol., Ch. XLII 368. MSS. should always be accompanied by remittance to cover the amount of charges and stamped addressed envelope for return. T. P. s Weekly,
was searched
,
Barc
Tow.,
'
No. 491
6.
447a.
their
feet; plural by vowel-mutation: foot - men. teeth louse tice; mouse mice; man
;
preservation of the mutation-plural in these nouns may be owing to the fact that their plural occurs more frequently than, or and at least as frequently as, their singular. Jespersen,
Note
The
Growth
14.
Structure,
II.
185;
lice
Kern,
Vereenvoudiging,
for
The forms
Middle English
lys
recording the fact that, when inflectional s in many words came to be pronounced with voice, the breath-sound was retained in these words. Compare 11, s. v. dice. The compounds dormouse and titmouse are
ce
English make also change man to men. Such are alderman, cabman, woman; Dutchman, Englishman, and a
great
many
others.
He captured two Dutch East Indiamen. Westm. Gaz., No. 6011, 9c. Compounds of woman form the plural by changing this part to women: horsewomen, gentlecountrywoman countrywomen, horsewoman
woman
In
gentlewomen.
of man no difference is heard in speech between women. singular and the plural, except in the case of woman Note also that gentleman in the vocative does not lose the e-sound in
these
compounds
the
Anglicized
foreign
as
in
Ottoman, Roman,
120
CHAPTER XXV,
67.
really compounds of man, such as cayman, talisman, form the plural, according to the general rule, by affixing 5: Germans, caymans, etc.
Mussulman, however, is pluralized either Mussulmen or Mussulmans. Proper nouns in man also form the plural in this way: Longman Longmans. Thus also proper names in foot simply take s in the plural: Longfoot
Longfoots. Foot has foots in the sense of 'bottoms, foot, 22); goose has gooses in the sense of
IV.
(id., s. v.
dregs'
'tailor's
(Murray,
s. v.
smoothing-iron'
goose,
5).
7.
Modern
but
being formed by affixing en is Note. In the forms brethren and children there is also vowel-change. The Old English brodor had in the plural brodor or brodru. The In singular brddor developed the Modern English brothers. Early Middle English another plural bredre or breder sprang up, formed on the analogy of the mutation plural fet, singular fdt, and suggested by the Old English dative singular breder. The shortening of the e in Middle English was due to its being followed by two consonants.
To
the
new
Modern English
plural the weak ending en was added, resulting in the brethren. The present differentiation between brothers
:i
and brethren (11, a) was not observed in Middle English. Compare Cook-Sievers, Old Eng. Gram. 285; Kaluza, Hist. Gram.,
,
121;
135.
had
in
the
plural
did and,
less
commonly,
,
developed into childre or childer with short i, the shortening being due to the three successive consonants (10001200). These forms have maintained themselves in the Northern In the Southern, and later in the Midland dialects to the present day. dialects, the weak ending en was added. Compare Cook-Sievers, Old
latter
The
Eng. Gram.
persen,
I
290;
132;
Jes-
thought more
Jane Eyre,
We
Ch. Kingsley,
hand
it
down
to
my
childer's childer.
Zanqwill,
I,
(63).
Compare
also called
Innocents' day [Matth. II, 16] (= 28 Dec). Another instance of a plural formed by vowel-mutation and suffixing en, although in a concealed form, is kine, a plural form of cow. Kine has
now
given
in poetry.
way to cows, but is still occasionally met with, especially Tennyson has* kine as a singular. The old plural ky in a
,
large variety of spellings, survives in dialects. Besides the above ^n-plurals, Early Modern
English
had eyne
(in
(in
these Late
Sackville), hosen (in the Authorised Version). For Modern English has eyes, shoes and hose, the last of which
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
nouns has one and the same form
Also Shakespeare has only hose.
for the plural
121
(8).
These old plurals in en are still now and again met with as archaisms, and survive in certain dialects. Burns has both een and ee. eyne. Shed thy faire beames into my feeble eyne. Spenser, Faery Queene,
Introd., IV. For ere Demetrius look'd on Hermia's eyne. And his half-open'd eyne he shut straightway.
s.
242.
lence,
LXXIV.
|
This said, poor Mailie turn'd her head, And closed her een amang the dead. Burns, The Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie. Their eldest hope, their Jenny, woman grown, In youthfu' bloom, love sparkling in her ee, Comes hame. Id., The Cotter's Sat. Night, IV. Hawks will not pick out hawk's een. Scott, Redgauntlet. ') hosen. Then these three men were bound in their coats, their hosen and their
|
hats.
Bible, Daniel,
,
III,
21.
|
twenty yeomen, two and two, In hosen black and jerkins blue. Scott, ar m. I, vm. I did lift her over the stream, she had having on her hosen and shoon, whilst but my wooden sandals. Con. Doyle, The White p., 7. was turned fourteen years old, and put into good small-clothes, But when buckled at the knee, and strong worsted hosen, knitted by my mother, it happened to me, without choice, I may say, to explore the Bagworthy water. Blackmore, Lorn a Doone, Ch. VII, 38.
Last,
Com
kine.
Bible, Gen., XLI, 18. and the troops departed driving away with them many sheep and goats, nine hundred kine, and two hundred of the small shaggy ponies of the Highlands. Mac Hist., VII, Ch. XVIII, 25. The fields between Are dewy-fresh browsed by deep-udder'd kine. Ten.
i.
And behold
there
came out of
The
Gard. Daught.
The dearness
ii.
46.
Sadly the
Ten.
Leonine Elegiacs,
petticoats
kilted
to
iii.
The
The
inn
lasses
went
afield
with
James
Purves,
Walking Tours.
cracks
of horses,
VIII.
(Stof.,
g.
e e s b.
I,
136.)
father
pleughs,
and kye.
Burns,
The Cotter's
Saturday Night,
shoon.
Spare none but such as go on clouted shoon. Henry VI, B, IV, 2, 195. should I your true love know From another one? By his cockle hat and And his sandal shoon. H a m 1. IV, 5, 26. staff The dull swain Treads on it daily with his clouted shoon. Milton, Com us, 635. Not in vain He wore his sandal-shoon and scallop-shell. Byron, Childe
How
Harold,
W. Morris,
IV, clxxxvi.
me
little
child
and did
off hastily
,
My shoon
and hosen.
Prol.
8b.
Gerard can paint, Gerard can write, but what can you do to keep a woman, ye lazy loon? Naught but wait for your father's shoon. Ch. Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. IX 45. treen. The wrathful Winter, 'proaching on apace, With blustering blasts had all ybar'd the treen. Thom. Sackville Induction to the "Mirror of
|
8.
in
i)
De Drie Talen,
XXIII, 148.
122
CHAPTER XXV,
8.
Note
seamen only
Craft, originally used collectively by watermen, fishermen and in the expression small craft (= small trading vessels, boats, lighters, etc.), afterwards without small in the same sense, subsequently in the general sense of vessels of all kinds, is now also used to denote a small vessel or boat, or any sailing or floating vessel. Murray.
I.
Deer, sheep and swine belonged to that class of Old English neuter in the nominative and accusative had the same form in the plural as in the singular. Deer is occasionally found with the mark of the
II.
nouns which
Murray,
s. v.
deer, 2,b;
Kern,
464. Kruisinga, Bonner Beitr., XVIII, In this sense we In Old English deer meant a wild animal in general. still find it once used in Shakespeare, and Sattler quotes an instance from Late Modern English. Swine is now chiefly used as a collective noun of the type of cattle. In Early Modern English it frequently denotes a single animal, where
Vereenvoudiging,
18;
English mostly has hog or pig. The use of swine to denote a animal is not, however, so unusual as is often thought. Thus Murray's definition of lard is: 1) the fat of a swine, 2) the internal fat of the abdomen of a swine. Present
single
Further traces of this want of inflection for the plural have been III. preserved to the present day with some other nouns. Thus head is still uninflected in such collocations as fifty head of cattle. Uneducated people still say year for years. For more details see 29.
plural of hose was formerly hosen (7). Its ordinary meaning is stockings, but the word was originally used to imply the breeches or chausses. Fairholt, in England, 512. (Note to A s
IV.
The
now
Costume
in
1
you like
of
the
fires,
it
i.
it,
II,
4,
legs in trunkhose
is
C ar. Press). It still denotes a covering [= trunks (19, a)], which sometimes has the
a flexible tube used in extinguishing
is
when denoting
sometimes placed
He
this
actually
made
it
II.
Mag.
.
Was
II,
ii.
devil's
great vessel with smoking funnels and grinding engines another craft set sailing round the world? Marie Corelli, Sor. of Sat Ch. XLII, 274.
Behind them lay two long, low, ugly-looking craft. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1416. Eighty odd craft made up their fleet. W. Besant, By Celia's Arbour, I, 2.
The
deer.
ii.
i.
strength of the future lies in these craft. Lit. World. They saw several deer grazing peacefully in the distance.
iii.
His reindeer are from Lapland. Times, No. 1826, 1049d. Are the princes of the Crusade turned hares or deers in the eyes of King Richard, that he should slip hounds on them? Black's Sir W. Scott's Read., Story of the Talisman, 46. But mice and rats and such small deer Have been Tom's food for seven
|
year.
King Lear,
The vendors R o u n d. i)
)
4, 144 (perhaps game. A. Schmidt.) of chickens and rabbits and such small deer. All the
III,
Year
Sattler,
E. S., X.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Next day we
curiosity deer.
123
were
to
to
shoot
as
how our
,
Westm. G a z.
,
pheasants, and there was lively would shape among these small
hither for stealing out of a French
in
hose.
i.
'Faith
come
hose.
Macb.,
3, 16.
He bought
I,
round hose
France.
Merch. of Ven.,
2, 80.
From
his
waist
hose fastened
Cloister
ii.
to his heels he was clad in a pair of tight-fitting buckskin by laces (called points) to his doublet. Ch. Reade, The and the Hearth, Ch. 1,8.
She was mending those eternal pairs of stockings, little and big grey and white socks and long hose. Mrs. Craik., A Hero, 82. followed him with my eyes his ribbed hose and leathern gaiters. Id., John Hal., Ch. I, 3. doffed my shoes and hose, and put them into a bag about my neck.
I
. . .
iii.
iv.
Blackmore Lorna Doone, Ch. VII 39. * The two fourgons carry about 4000 ft. of hose of different sizes. Times. ** Others were at the same time getting fire-hoses fitted and passed to the scene of the fire. (?) A Ship on Fi re (Stof., Le esb. I, 3). * The captains of the river-craft talk of a little square-built Dutch goblin in trunk-hose and sugarloaf-shaped hat. Wash. Irv., Storm-Ship (Stof.,
,
, ,
Hand
I.,
I, 88).
supply figures with beards and ruffs and rapiers and trunkthe picture complete. Thack, Newc. I, Ch. XXVII, 301. White satin his trunk-hose, Inwrought with silver. Ten., Mary,
to
,
|
Queen
(605a).
I
that every Spaniard carries a tail like a devil under Ay, but see what trunk-hoses! lb., Ill, 1, (6066). sheep. The sheep were patiently browsing Stevenson. swine, i. How like a swine he lies. Taming of the Shrew, In d. ,1, 34. And the swine, because it divideth the hoof, yet cheweth not the cud, it is
** Certain
had heard
his trunk-hose.
Bible, Deut.XV,
8.
The domestic swine fairly dotes on snakes. All the Year Round, i) ii. never threw away pearls to swine, as the saying is. Capt. Marryat, P e r c. K e e n e. b) the names of nationalities in ese, such as Chinese, Portuguese,
-')
and the noun Swiss. etc. Note. Instead of the singular Chinese, which sounds like a plural, we often find Chinaman, especially in familiar style. Switzer is used by Shakespeare and Scott instead of Swiss. For such singulars as Chinee
,
13.
we passed through
a location of Chinese.
Froude,
Hung Chang is one of the most intelligent and enlightened Chinese of the H a z e l's Annual. Many of the 130.000 Maltese who possess no political rights have interests
present age.
1
,
ii.
Mizzi and the enemies of British rule. Times. On the 7th, 8th, and 10th of May nine Chinese ..were examined on a charge of gambling ...Nineteenth Cent. No. CCCXCVII 535. Some 6000 men are employed on the works, most of them are Italians and
opposed
to those of Dr.
Swiss.
Graph.
consists
of
Swiss.
Note
to
Ham
I.,
IV,
5,
79
Sattler,
E. S.
X.
-)
Flugel,
s.
v.
swine.
124
iii.
CHAPTER XXV,
9.
Where are my Switzers. Ha ml., IV, 5, 96. They (sc. the Dutch) levy regiments of the stubborn Switzers and hardy Germans to protect the treasures they have amassed. Scott, Abbot,
Ch.
Ill
,
32.
c)
the Latin, and belonging in that declension in which the nominative of the singular and the plural are the same: series, species. (9.) series. If we lower the tongue, starting from [i] and respectively, we obtain the two parallel series: [etc.]. Sweet, Sounds of Eng.,64.
, [/']
In
it
lb.,
Of all the many cheap series of standard works to the production of which devoted themselves, 'Everyman's Library' so many publishers have maintains its triumphant lead. Daily Telegraph. species. Those beings which the world calls improperly suits of clothes, Swift Tale of a are in reality the most refined species of animals.
.
Tub,
With
Sect.
the
II.
Descent
Note.
is
size.
Darwin,
Abatis, ordinary spelling both in English and French, sometimes pronounced as in French. The spellings shammy and shamoy are still frequently used to denote a kind of leather, but the name of the animal is now always written chamois. In the plural the 5 may be pronounced, as is always done
with the plural corps. abatis. Mines are run under the man's credit, abatis are constructed around his markets. Miss Tarbell (Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 41a). chamois. Rabbits stamp loudly on the ground with their hind-feet as a
signal!
Descent
corps.
corps.
Sheep and chamois do the same with their fore-feet. Darwin, of Man, Ch. IV, 100. The sand-bank was dotted with English soldiery, of half-a-dozen
9.
The Light that failed, Ch. II, 17. nouns are used in English in the singular without Many foreign and of form are accordingly, pluralized more or less any change regularly in the same way as is done in the language from which they have been taken. For foreign pluralia tantum see 19, h. To those ignorant of Latin, Greek and Italian the following observations may
Rudy. Kipling,
,
be acceptable.
In
changed
Latin the termination a when belonging to nouns of the 1st declension is into ae (vertebra vertebrae), the suffix ma of nouns of the 3rd declension being changed into mata (dogma dogmata, stigma- stigmata, thema themata) the termination us of nouns of the 2nd declension is changed into i (bacillus bacilli, radius radii, tumulus tumuli), of nouns of the 4th declension remains unaltered (apparatus apparatus, hiatus hiatus), of nouns of the 3rd declen;
sion
the
is
changed
genera, tempus
apices, calyx
tempora);
calyces,
termination x is mostly changed into ces (apex radix radices, vortex vortices);
the termination
um
is
changed
into
a (datum
data desideratum
,
desiderata
erratum
errata, stratum
strata).
gegevens,
datum s.)
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
on is changed into a {phenomenon prolegomena); the termination sis is changed into ses (in which e represents u)
In
125
Greek
the
termination
phenomena
crisis
prolegomenon
crises)
Thus
In
also oasis
the
oases.
Italian
terminations e and
ciceroni, dilettante
dilettanti, libretto
solo
soli,
a)
Some
of these loan-words, especially such as are still distinctly felt as aliens, prefer the foreign plural. Thus we find it regularly, or practically
regularly:
1)
with nouns
in sis (crisis
crises)
amanuenses and axis axes. (Note that the ordinary meaning of amanuensis or writes from the dictation of another.)
2)
English
is
with the following, among many others: a) bacillus, calyx, formula, genus, hiatus, lamina, stratum, vertebra;
6)
phenomenon, prolegomenon;
bureau, chateau, madame, tableau.
especially
plural
y) dilettante;
o)
b)
Some,
their
formed
such as have passed into common use, mostly have in the ordinary English way: asylum asylums,
convolvulus
chorus
crucifix
choruses,
crucifixes,
convolvuluses
crocus
crocuses,
dogma
etc.
dogmas,
encomium
nostrums, rhododendron
less equally divided:
encomiums, rhododen-
appendix appenautomata, candelabrum candelabra criterion criterions candelabrums criteria focus *similes similia foci, fungus funguses fungi, simile focuses spectrums spectra stigma stigmas stigmata triumspectrum
dixes
is
more or
,
appendices, automaton
automatons
vir
triumvirs
triumviri, vortex
vortexes
vortices, etc.
,
adieu
adieus
all
adieux
beau
beaus
beaux
plateau
z).
plateaus
solos
soli,
soprano
these plurals the x is pronounced as conversazioni solo conversaziones virtuosos soprani, virtuoso sopranos
, ,
virtuosi.
Lit(t)erati, the plural of the Lalin lit(t)eratus has also to be the plural of the Italian literato (also litterato).
the
ordinary
singular,
instead of lit(t)eratus
sometimes used as a singular through ignorance. Rhinoceros sometimes remains unchanged, but the ordinary plural would seem to be rhinoceroses. (Compare, however, 29.)
Literati is
d)
plural belongs more or less strictly to (a) particular meaning(s) of the singular. Thus: genius has geniuses (= Dutch genieen) and genii (= Dutch genien), the latter being practically a plurale tantum, as the singular is replaced by genie or jinnee index, in the sense of the Dutch bladwijzer, mostly has indexes sometimes indices, the latter plural being almost regularly used for the
Sometimes each
meeldraad,
the form
126
stamina,
the
CHAPTER XXV,
9.
a plurale tantum, being used only figuratively in the sense of Dutch kern, pit. Here follow some illustrative quotations. When only one plural is given it must not be concluded that the alternative does not exist, or even is
,
less frequent. adieu, i. He departed, taking with him from many an anxious fellow besides myself, our adieux to friends in Old Ireland. Thack. Barry Lyndon, Ch. IV, 65. 1 shall pass over my adieux with my kind hostess. lb., Ch. V, 77. ii. I presume ... you are prepared to receive my adieus. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. XXI, 222. His adieus were not long. Jane Austen Northanger Abbey, Ch. XV. analysis. Sanatogen has probably been put to more severe and searching analyses and tests than any other specific of modern years. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIII, 1016. which involve special training apparatus, i. There are more elaborate methods, in physics and mathematics and in handling complicated apparatus. Sweet,
, ,
. .
Sounds
ii.
to
apply
electricity.
Napheys.
')
appendix, i. New and enlarged edition, with supplement of additional words; key to names in Mythology and Fiction, and other valuable appendices. Annandale, Cone. Diet, ii. The Appendixes include illustrative matter for which there was no natural place elsewhere. Cook First Book in Old English, Pref. 8. bacillus. Milk, however many tubercle bacilli it may contain, may be rendered an
,
absolute safe article of food by being raised to the temperature of boiling water. Times. "Have these automata, automaton, i. "Do you think so?" said the Princess
. .
.
indeed, souls?"
ii.
Disraeli,
Coningsby,
Three petty chieftains were sitting, stolid and silent, at a table and might have been taken for automatons. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. I, 74 beau. i. Poets will think nothing so checks their fury, As wits, cits, beaux, and women for their jury. Farquhar, The Constant Couple, Prologue, 2. ii. Young sparks of his Acquaintance ... the Beaus of those Days. Birch. 1 ) bureau. The establishment of information bureaux for all foreigners without distinction will be seen to be indispensable. Rev. of Rev., CCXXII, 538a.
|
cactus, candelabrum.
slopes.
Huge thorni cacti, like giant candelabra, clothed the glorious Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVIII, 1356. . (Candelabra is erroneously used as a singular in: A smartly dressed woman had taken from a travelling-bag some silver salt-cellars and a big candelabra of the same metal. Baroness von Hutten, What became of Pam, Ch. IV, 30.)
. .
chrysalis.
chrysalis)
The
are
chrysalides
(if
that
is
the
right
generally
found by digging
in the
way mossy
,
|
to
write of
earth of trees.
No. 5329, 4c). chinson, The Insect-Hunter (Westm. Gaz. convolvulus. The lustre of the long convolvuluses That coil'd around the stately stems. Ten., Enoch Arden, 571. It is the duty of the Government, when crises of this kind arise, to know crisis. what they want and to say what they mean. Times. But even these especial crises in her malady could scarcely have equalled in pain the constant watchfulness and anxiety of Lamb's early life. Prefatory Memoir
to
(Chandos).
crucifix.
The silver crucifixes were melted down. Mac, Popes, (5616). chateau. The chateaux of the Loire are famous in song and prose. Westm. Gaz., No. 4943, 156.
Murray.
>)
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
We
datum.
127
journey with her to the chateaux of the Loire. lb. As I have given the facts from which I have drawn my interpretation of the principal agent, the reader has sufficient data for his own judgment. Lytton,
Rienzi, Preface.
Look at Mr. Roosevelt's dicta about the Courts. Saturday Rev. There are many ways of seeing landscape quite as good (sc. as a walking tour); and none more vivid, in spite of canting dilettantes, than from a railway train, R. L. Stevenson, Walking Tours. dogma. Mr. Keats had advanced no dogmas which he was bound to support by
dictum.
dilettante.
examples.
He then began to read in a good round resonant voice with clear enunciation and careful attention to his pauses and emphases. Walt. Besant,
emphasis.
The
American Claimant.
Words that she would spell quite correctly in her letters to me, became enigmas when she wrote[to my father. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XIV, 259_ focus. The Clarendon Press was one of the foci of York Powell's life in Oxford. The Periodical, XXXVII 78. formula, i. The ordained agencies for teaching have been mumbling little else but dead formulas. Spenc, Educ. Ch. I, 23a. ii. have, therefore, laid down the most stringent rules and the clearest formulae in
enigma.
perfect
,
,
my
power.
Tom Hood,
11.
of grass differing in colour from the grass in popular belief to be produced by fairies
the
with moss and wall-flowers and funguses and creeping ivy. Ch. VI, 140. genius, i. There were hosts of these geniuses, and any reasonable person would have thought it honour enough to meet them Dick., Pickw., Ch. XV, 132. It was even said that one or two distinguished geniuses had condescended to borrow money of him. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXIII, 661. Saints and geniuses are always rare. William Mottram George Eliot, Ch. 1, 6. * I know too ii. where the Genii hid The jewell'd cup of their king Jamshid. Moore,
Trol.,
Thack.
Peri.
afflict
me
with keen
birth,
hail.
Shelley,
a
Prom. Unbound,
earth.
I,
** Her
Her
sire
Genie of the
all
Scott,
Bridal of Tr er m
hiatus,
ii.
i.
ai n,
II,
hi.
It
was
up
it
by conjecture.
Monthly Mag.
Those hiatuses at the bottom of the sea, whereby the abyss below opens and communicates with it. Franklin. >) hippopotamus, i. A considerable body of bitter water containing leeches
.
into
cro-
ii.
codiles and hippopotami. Livingstone, Zambesi, III, 81. J ) The tusks of hippopotamuses often appear on the surface. Lyell, Princ.
III,
GeoL
221.1)
hypothesis.
I have desired to put before you the principles upon which all hypotheses respecting the history of Nature must be judged. Huxley, Lect. and Es., 446. Phonology is, therefore, a speculative science, dealing largely with more or less-
probable hypotheses.
Sweet,
Sounds
of Eng.,
266.
!)
Murray.
128
CHAPTER XXV,
9.
of
incubus. Mary and I have had a dozen (sc. governesses) at least in our day; half them detestable and the rest ridiculous, and all incubi were they not? Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XVI, 214. index, i. A diligent search through the indices to 'Notes and Queries' fails to discover
One
of the first indices to the solution of the question lies in the situation of the
oil-bearing regions. Nature. 1 ) His son's empty guffaws struck him with pain as the indices of a
Stevenson.
The
ii.
number
i
of factors
And
is
in
To
their
come at large. Troilus 3, 343. Tastes are the indexes of the different qualities of plants. Arbuthnot. *) The indexes may be of use to students of a more advanced stage. Abbot, Shak.
seen
The baby
mass Of
j
things to
and Cressida,
Gram., Pref. to the 3rd Ed., 22. Such crystals may be easily cloven into the thinnest laminae. Tyndall, Glac. of the Alps, I, Ch. I, 15. larva. If you see a certain plant, you may look in your books and see what larvae
lamina.
there
I
is
t
a
-
n s ec
Hor. Hutchinson,
The
lazzarone.
ii.
Thack., Pend.,
he got a bit of sunshine, the old lazzarone basked in it. Ch. V, 59. Neither are picturesque lazzaroni or romantic criminals half so frequent as your common labourer. G. Eliot, Bede, II, Ch. XVII, 154.
i.
When
I,
Adam
lexicon.
Lexicons. Clar. Press Adv. * You do not lit(t)eratus. i. happen to have any place at your disposal which would suit a decayed Literatus? Ch. Lamb. 1 ) A folio edition of the Iliad, published at Venice, by a liter ato , who calls himself
literati.
Thack.,
Cox's Diary,
February,
ii.
literati as to the persons who should be appointed, that the plan was given up. Id., The four Georges, III, 74. magus. Whence the wise men of the East who came to see Christ, are called simply
Magi.
notes
to
1.
J)
memoranda
ask you if you could spare a few minutes to send me some as to the books which you found by experience most useful
,
you ? Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII 5686. nostrum. Among many nostrums which he possessed, there was one of the venereal disease, that brought him a good deal of money. Smol. Rod. Rand., Ch. XIX, 126.
,
parenthesis. The pronunciation given in parentheses is the nearest that can be expressed in English letters, as pronounced in Southern English. Sweet, A. S.
Primer,
3.
phenomena.
Science
reduces phenomena, as
most properly concerns itself with matter and motion, and far as it can, to mechanism. Oliver Lodge, In trod, to
Murray.
*)
Webster.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
plateau.
129
either
The
principal
s.
Cone. Cycl.
rhinoceros,
ii.
i. From their allies, the tapirs, the rhinoceroses differ in having w. Enc. only three toes on each foot. In his first day's shoot in Nepal, the King Emperor's bag included three Times, No. 1825, 1025cf. tigers and three rhinoceros.
Harms
soprano. Italian soprani piped their Latin rhymes in place of the hymns which William the Pious and Doctor Luther sang. Thack., The Four Georges, I, 5.
stamen,
ii.
i.
or pistils (or both), a corolla and a calyx. Murray. There are valetudinarians in reputation as well as constitution, who, being conscious of their weak part, avoid the least breath of air, and supply their want of stamina by care and circumspection. Sheridan, School for
Scand.,
I,
(370).
of animal bodies.
had endeavoured to palm upon posterity any Seneschal supposititious stigmata, I conceive the impostor would have chosen the Queen's cabinet and the bedroom for the scene of his trick. Scott , Fair Maid, In trod., 13. These men bore the stigmata of their punishment on their bodies. E. J. Dillon, The Breakdown of Turkey (Eng. Rev., Febr. 1912, 504).
. .
stimulus.
in
to artificial stimuli.
Westm. Gaz.
that fortunate day when stratum. It is written only in the geologic strata a wave of the German Ocean burst the old isthmus, which joined Kent and Cornwall to France. Emerson Eng. Traits, 846. syllabus. It has been embodied in the syllabuses drawn up by nearly all the School Boards. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII, 4516. symposium. Shelley's rooms were generally chosen as the scene of their
,
symposia. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. II 26. tableau. Pageant a stage or platform on which scenes were acted or tableaux
,
represented. Murray, s. v. pageant, 2. His theses got into print. Rev. thesis.
of Rev., CCVI,
128a.
10. a)
Of a few foreign nouns which in passing into English underwent a slight change in the singular, there is, besides the
,
,
regular English plural in s, a foreign plural also. cherub (icherubim, icherubin) cherubs or cherubim (icherubin fcherubims , f cherubins)
;
seraph
iseraphims
(t seraphim,
,
iseraphin)
;
bandit
Note I. "Cherubin and plur. cherubins are the original English "forms, as still in French. But, in the process of Biblical translation, "cherubin has been supplanted by cherub, and cherubins has been "'improved' successively to cherubims or cherubim; while concurrently "cherub has been popularly fitted with a new plural cherubs." Murray.
The form history of seraph is probably analogous to that of cherub. The forms marked with a f are now obsolete (archaic) or vulgar
(dialectal).
H.
Poutsma
English.
II.
130
In
CHAPTER XXV,
the sense
of
to
10.
picture
meant
represent
a beautiful and innocent child and that of an image or a celestial spirit, only the forms cherubs and
seraphs are used. It may be added here that also the Hebrew teraphim, a plurale tantum, is sometimes used as a singular, which may be pluralized regularly teraphims. Besides these the Anglicized forms teraph and teraphs are met with.
:
II. Banditti, an Anglicized plural of the Italian banditi, "is more common "than bandits, especially in reference to an organized band of robbers; in "which sense it has also been used as a collective singular. In the 17th "century this was taken as an individual singular, wtfh plural in is (ies)." Murray. Also bandit is sometimes used in a collective sense.
cherub (seraph),
i.
all
the rest.
fair.
Over
fabric half so
Palace.
like bed, face upward, he seemed to be nothing but a face Dick., Cop., Ch. XXI, 1536. Firing one day at some flying creature, he was very much dismayed, when it fell, to find that he had shot a cherubim. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XVI, 311. *** 0, cherubin, Thou wast that did preserve *me. Temp., II, 1, 152. Turn thy complexion there, Patience, thou young and rose-lipp'd c/ieru&//i, Ay, O thel lo, IV, 2, 63. there, look grim as hell! * And Mammon wins his way where seraphs might despair. Byron, Childe
**
As he
lay
in
a conventional cherubim.
ii.
painted on the scutcheon answered as well for her as for Sir Pitt's Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIV, 151. ... From my high nest of penance here proclaim That Pontius and Iscariot by my side Show'd like fair seraphs. Ten. St. Simeon Stylites, 166. ** Then methought, the air grew denser, perfumed from an unseen censer Swung
mother.
II
by seraphim, whose footfalls tinkled on the tufted floor. Poe, The Raven, XIV. Perhaps the daintiest children seem but an earthly order of cherubim. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. X, 93. The seraphim, according to the ancient Hebrew doctrine, were an order of angels who hovered round the throne of God on mighty wings, chanting His praises and bearing His messages to earth their chief attributes were power and wisdom. The cherubim were silent, mysterious spirits, and are generally pictured as not of human shape winged heads without bodies. Rowe and Webb, Selections from Tennyson, Note to The Palace of Art, 133. *** To thee Cherubin, and Seraphin: continually do cry. Book of Com. Pray.,
;
Te Deum.
**** Thou shalt make two cherubims of gold. Exodus, XXV, 18. There shall we be with Seraphims and Cherubims. Bunyan, Pilgr. Progr., 1,(147). Rabbins tell us that the Cherubims are a Set of Angels who know most. Spectator, DC. ***** There's not the smallest orb which thou behold'st But in his motion like an angel sings Still quiring to the young-ey'd cherubins. Merch. V, 1, 62.
| |
teraph.
bandit,
ii.
G. Eliot, Mill,
III,
Ch.
II.
Every baron in the land was a bandit. Hood, i) He was one of those wild German bandits whom the Colonna held
II,
in their
24.
some dozen
of the bandits
lb., II,
Ch.
I,
74.
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
** Banditti infest the beautiful shores of
131
Campania.
18.
Mac, Popes,
(5586).
i ,
Do you
blue-eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, an old moustache as I am Is not a match for you all. Longfellow,
think,
|
Such
The
Children's Hour,
VIII.'
*** Deer-stealers are ever a desperate banditti. **** But Enid in their going had two fears, the field, And one from Edyrn. Ten., Ger.
|
Scott.
*)
One from
and Enid,
b)
Cyclops
is
used
in the singular
The corresponding
plurals are cyclopes and cyclops. The singular cyclop is regularly used by Pope in his translation of the Odyssey. Webster. Some writers have cyclopses in the plural.
i.
Ulysses and his crew having reached the island of Sicily, strayed into the cave of Polyphemos, the giant Cyclops. Brewer, Read. Handb., 11566. I had felt early some stirrings of ambition, but they were the blind gropings of Homer's cyclops round the walls of his cave. Burns, Letter to Dr.
Moore,
A
**
little
(53a).
|
Wordsworth,
To
the Daisy,
ii.
In front of the helmet was a huge glass eye like that of a cyclop. Hist., Ch. XIX. i) * In works of art the Cyclopes are represented as giants with one eye forehead. Nettleship, Diet. CI as. Ant.
In
Mac,
in their
who
Wash.
Irv.,
the representations of the Cyclops make them the possessors of only one eye, situated in the centre of the forehead. Cas. Cone. Cycl. *** The one-eyed children of the Ocean God, The man-destroying Cyclopses.
|
Shelley.
c)
*)
portmanteau,
Eliot,
I,
i.
Feeling
in his
.
G.
Felix Holt. i)
portmanteaus. Thack.,
Dick.,
Newc,
Pickw.,
Violet's portmanteaux were packed. Miss Braddon, Vivien III. 1 ) Trunks and portmanteaux. Truth, No. 1802, 1156. purlieu. Brokers had been incessantly plying for custom in the purlieus of the the Court. Macaulay. 2 ) But his home was no longer in the ancient und picturesque purlieus which he loved so well. Prefatory Memoir to Lamb's Poems and Essays
Clas.).
(Chand.
d) Mr., short
for Mister,
of Messieurs.
*)
Murray.
2)
Webster.
132
Note.
Messrs.
firm.
Less
before the
i.
name of each of the gentleman referred to. (17, c.) Shakespeare has one instance of monsiears. The Messrs. Bell desire me to thank you for your suggestion respecting the advertisement. Mrs. Gaskell, Life of Ch. Bronte, 228.
Lady Agnes voted the two Messieurs Pendennis most agreeable men. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVI, 176. The Messrs. Foker and Pen strolled down the High Street together, lb.,
Ch. Ill, 42. Messrs. Tupman, Winkle and Snodgrass repaired to their several homes. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXVI, 234. A short time afterwards Mr. Chopper and Mr. Birch, the next clerk, were summoned. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 250.
ii.
iii.
iv.
Now
wise.
To
may be
And never
Henry
VIII, 1,3,21.
This form is also employed In this latter of Mrs. Mesdames Mrs. however, is, used, application rarely being mostly repeated before each of the following proper names. When there is only one proper name common to a number of ladies,- Mrs. is mostly placed before the plural of that proper name. (176.) A- dialogue between Mesdames Bridget and Deborah. Fielding, Tom
plural of
The
Madam(e)
Mesdames.
to
English
plural
Jones,
The two
I,
Ch.
VIII.
ugly
elderly
German
favourites,
Mesdames
of
Kielmansegge and
Schulenberg, whom he created respectively Countess of Darlington and Duchess of Kendal. Thack., The Four Georges, 1,20.
e)
Esquimo
Eskimo, Esquimau and Esquimaux, the Esquimos and Esquimau. According to Kruisinga, (A Gram, of Pre s. -Day Eng., 307, N.) the forms in o are
is
also
spelled
The Eskimo
rarely
to
feeds
his
dogs
in the
summer
time.
Harmsworth
live,
E
It
n cyc
is
I.
an error
suppose
that
a civilized
man can live also. Captain Mc Clintock. l ) Thumbs and hands are given to an Esquimaux,
surgeons.
Lytton,
Caxtons,
III,
Ch.
II,
58.
early history lesson can be safely hinged on to the child's play-interest, and there will be no reluctance in learning of the surroundings and implements of ancient Briton, or of Roman, of Esquimaux, or of Arab. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIV, 172a. ii. One of my Esquimos started to the Pole. Peary, Nearest the Pole. The Eskimos are the primitive people inhabiting the region of N. America extending from Greenland to Alaska. Harmsworth 's Encycl. The Esquimaux, pressed by hard necessity, have succeeded in many ingenious inventions. Darwin, Descent of Man, Ch. V, 133. iii. These Esquimo called themselves Ogluli Esquimo.*)
The
11.
Besides
the
nouns mentioned
in
9, d,
in
meaning or
use
Webst.
2)
Kruisinga,
307, N.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
brethren,
die
133
dies
dice,
pea
peas
brothers.
pease,
penny
pennies
a)
pence.
The ordinary plural of brother is now The older form brethren is still used:
1)
regularly to denote fellow-members of a Christian society or of the Christian religion as a whole: fellow-christians, co-religionists generally.
In this
meaning
brethren,
it
is
women.
Dearly beloved
the
[etc.].
Book
Si
I.
G. Eliot,
Marn.,
I,
Ch.
I, 6.
At this time the senior deacon was taken seriously ill, and being a childless widower, he was tended night and day by some of the younger brethren or sisters. lb., I, Ch. I, 7.
2)
almost regularly in certain proper names of Christian associations, most, if not all, of them used in conscious or unconscious allusion to The Brethren, as the members of the early Christian churches
were
i.
called.
Farewell to the Brethren of St. James's Lodge, Torbolton. Burns, Title of a Poem. (Compare with this the first lines of this poem: Adieu! a heart-warm, fond adieu! Dear brothers of the mystic tie!.) It was the custom of their Lantern Yard brethren to call them David and Jonathan. G.Eliot, S II. Marn., I, Ch. I, 6.
|
The Brethren,
Whitaker's Almanac.
She had been brought up
ii.
the
Ill,
strictness
21.
of the
Plymouth Brethren.
Wat.,
.
.
.
Ch.
a) regularly
to
denote
fellow-members of a guild
corporation or
by extension, persons of the same profession, trade when there is no defining word(-group). The general made certain of his young officers welcome at his table, a kind of hospitality which, I believe, is not now common among his brethren. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 251. The man of letters cannot but love the place which has been inhabited by so many of his brethren. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XXIX, 309. One of the pleas which Congreve set up for himself and his brethren
order, and, or society,
though they might be guilty of a little levity here and there, were careful to inculcate a moral, packed close into two or three lines, at the end of every play. Mac, Com. Dram., (5856). John Murray has moie knowledge of what concerns his business than
that,
was
they
h e n.
the nature of the profession, trade, etc. is indicated by some word(-group) brothers not seldom takes the place of brethren. See especially the second of the following quotations,
When, however,
i.
The brothers of the whip exchange a pinch of snuff. Carlyle, French Rev. Gradually the name of Thackeray as one of the band of brethren was buzzed about, and gradually became known as that of the chief of
the literary brothers.
Trol.,
Thack.,
Ch.
I,
22.
134
I
CHAPTER XXV,
and he,
|
11.
Brothers in Art.
Ten.,
of
We
ii.
Gardener's Daught.
Amos's
3.
are a cosmopolitSn
band
Daily Chron.
The persons
brethren I, Ch. 11,
,
were
his clerical
,
G. Eliot
Scenes,
and the strongest feelings concurred to mitigate the lately been brethren-in-arms. Mac, Mach., (36a). He acted what he thought and felt, with a directness rare among his brethren of the poet's craft. Symonds Shelley, Ch. VIII 182. Iffley Lock and Mill is a favourite subject with the river-loving brethren of the brush. Jerome, Three Men in a Boat, Ch. XVIII, 232. The impression made upon him by the warm welcome he received from his English brethren of the pen seems to have been a lasting one. Lit. World.
strongest
interests
hostility of those
The
who had
4)
same case or
position:
com-
O, my dear brethren and fellow-sojourners in Vanity Fair, which amongst you does not know and suffer under such benevolent despots? Thack. Van.
,
Fair, I, Ch. XXXIII, 363.Down, down with every foreigner, but let your brethren go. Mac, Lays, Ivry, 48. Thou shalt not find the ministers of God are less eager than their lay brethren
happiness of men. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. V, 43. She used to watch, Near that old home, a pool of golden carp; And one was patch'd and blurr'd and lustreless Among his burnish'd brethren of the pool. Ten., Mar. of Ger., 650. When the monasteries, the homes of the literary class, were filled with foreign
for the
|
monks
If
Bradley,
The Making
of Eng.
still
they are proud of having beaten them, they are them their political brethren. Graph.
Economically speaking, what I take from my brethren should go to my debit, only what service I do them, should go to the credit of my account. Stead's
Annual,
1906,
23b.
Mr. Balfour was the first great sacrifice to the injured manes of our slaughtered brethren in South Africa. Rev. of Rev., CXC1V, 1326.
ii.
the
pronouncing on the too much life Christm. Car., Ch. Ill, 62. the great jewellers' shops struck, saying they had no
Insect
on
the leaf
Dick.,
grievance of any kind, but they could not continue to work when their brothers all over Russia were striking for liberty. Rev. of Rev., CXCI, 5006. Pitt's noble heart was broken in striving that she (sc. Freedom) should not pass us for ever to take refuge with our brothers across the Atlantic. Con. Doyle,
Rodney Stone,
Far away
in the
I,
Ch.
I,
10.
background were the glorious snow-capped Alps, with Monte Rosa and Grand Paradis towering above their brothers. Conway, Called
Ch.
Ill,
Back,
5)
33.
often
sense of sons of the same parents, especially poetry, and occasionally in prose to produce a humorous effect.
in
the
literal
in
i.
And
live at
home
in
blameless ease;
For these
my
me
And, most
Wordsworth,
White Doe,
11,60.
1.
Call not thy brothers brethren. Byron, And Both my brethren are in Arthur's hall.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
135
It was not until he remitted considerable sums of money to England, that the bankers, his brethren, began to be reconciled to him. Thack., a, I, Ch. V, 57.
New
Thus frequently
i.
in
comparisons:
together
Sect.,
in
II.
You should
live
one house,
|
like
Swift,
IV,
Tale of
I
Tub,
all
pray you
to live together
Like brethren.
Ten.,
Queen Mary,
,
3, (6316). In the brave days of old. like brothers Mac. Lays, Horatius, XXXII. Note. The Authorised Version has only brethren, irrespective of meaning, According to Al. Schmidt brothers and brethren are used indiscriminately by Shakespeare. Swift also observes no difference in
ii.
|
The Tale
i.
but they
is
8.
knew him
not.
Genesis,
XLII,
all
8.
ye
Matthew,
XXIII
ii.
a better place in his affection Than all thy brothers: cherish it my boy, And noble offices thou mayst effect Of mediation, after I am dead, Between his greatness and thy other brethren. Henry IV, B, IV, 4, 22ff.
hast
| | |
|
Thou
b)
Dice
lice
is the modern spelling of Middle English dys, in like manner as and mice are the modern spellings of the Middle English lys and
ce came into use in the transition from Middle Modern English, and served the purpose of showing that
original
it
time
breath-sound of the sibilant had been retained. At that had become the general practice to pronounce breathed s, th
and / with voice in weak syllables. Especially was this the case with the sibilant in inflectional es, as in the genitive singular mannes (Modern The breath-sound was then English man's) and the plural stones.
for the 5 in strong monosyllables like ges and pens (Modern English geese and pence), also in such words as hennes, ones, twies (Modern English hence, once, twice), which at that time seem to have
retained
already
chiefly in a collective sense, the singular being rare before the time of Shakespeare; so that the 5 may not have been felt as a mark of the plural. Hence the use of dice as a singular (a dice) and of dices as a cumulative plural, down to the
17th century. Compare truce a concealed plural (14). Sweet, N. E. Gr., 861 and 997; Skeat, Etym. Diet., s.v.die, hence, etc. Murray,
,
s.
v. die;
109, N.
The form
i.
dobbelsteenen,
The immensity
Disraeli. *) *
now
used
in
the
meaning
of the
Dutch
muntstempels.
of the stake
ii.
Dice-player
= one
who
Murray.
i)
France and Austria were both playing with cogged dice. Morley. i) ** Protesting never to touch a card or throw a dice again. Mrs. E. Heywood. *** Ne at the dyces with him to play. B k. C u r t a s y e. *)
*)
Murray.
136
iii.
dies used for the 3 d. and 5 use for forty years. Times.
d.
New
c)
is chiefly used in a collective sense, but is also found preceded by a number-indicating word. Conversely peas, though mostly denoting separate seeds, is not infrequently met with in a collective sense. Many writers use the spelling peas throughout, i. *He is as like him as two peas. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIX, 302. ** How vulgar it is to eat peas with a knife. Id., Sam. Titm. Ch. Ill, 36. Wharton devoted himself to his green peas. Mrs. Ward, Ma reel la, II, 208.
,
and about
half
peck of peas.
Jerome
* In
each
bladder was a small quantity of dried pease. Ill, Ch. II, (1656).
Swift, Gul-
interested in the prospect of a few pease and cabbages former days she had been in the culture of expensive flowers. G. Moore, Esth. Waters,' Ch. XLIX, 327.
d) For the rise of the spelling pence see the observation under dice. The form pence is the only one used when the value is meant, but is not infrequently met with also when the coin is referred to.
The form pennies always indicates coins. The plural of halfpenny seems to be usually halfpence. Names of coins ending in pence form the plural regularly by adding 5. Thus also any multiple of
penny is pluralized when considered as a penny, B, 1, c. * The books cost him only eight pence each.
i.
unit.
Murray,
s.
v.
Bardolph
III,
stole a lute-case,
after
and sold
it
Henry
V,
2, 47.
**
We Two,
Edna Lyall,
How many pounds of copper are there in a million of pence, each weighing an ounce? Young, Arithmetic. *** William Wood of Wolverhampton obtained in 1723 a patent authorising him to coin halfpence and farthings to the value of 108000. D. Laino
Purves, Life of
,
Swift,
29.
(?),
He rattled his halfpence in his pockets as he walked home. L e r o u x Ch. XIII. He disinterred all the cheese and halfpence he had buried in
Dick.,
I
Mad.
the garden.
shall
Dick.,
"Here, you little beggars," Dobbin said, giving some sixpences amongst them. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXII, 229.
*****
ii.
How many eightpences go to a sovereign? These pieces obtained the appellation of gold pennies, gold halfpennies and gold farthings, Walter Merrey (Richard Bithell, Merchant's Diet., s. v. penny).
He
distributed
silver
Times.
13.
Alms
literary
is now mostly construed as a plural in ordinary language. language it is, however, sometimes treated as a singular,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
accordance with the Early Modern English practice.
137
See especially Jesp.
187:
|
my father's door Upon entreaty have a present alms. of the Shrew, IV, 3. Who seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple asked an alms. Acts, 111,3. He was engaged in conversation with a beggar man that had asked an alms of him. Spectator, CCLXIX. have enough to give and enough to keep; as large a daily alms as a deacon gives would never be missed by me. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. VI, 66. And Enoch set himself, Scorning an alms, to work whereby to live. Ten., En.
Taming
Arden,
A round
ii.
807.
before
99a.
is
some
city gate.
Cupid
a goodly alms.
1 1.
N e w s.
His wealth
An
fountain of perennial alms. Ten., outcast mother of the street stretched out of her rags a
Queen Mary,
me
as
if
II,
1,
(6006).
,
asking alms for the sake of the little children. He didn't see anything, but put out his hands towards
brown hand and arm G.Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. XX, 144.
asking alms.
Punch.
Eaves
a
is
now always
new
singular has
construed as a plural. From the supposed plural been formed, which is, however, as yet rarely met
with.
i.
The commonly on small arcades or corbel-tables. Freeman. j ) There was no counting now on Lord Ormont's presence in the British gathering seasons, when wheat-ears wing across our fields or swallows return to their eaves. George Mered. Lord Ormont, Ch. Ill, 43. The swallows sported about the eaves. Wash. Irv. D o f H e y 1.
, ,
ii.
The water
Tyndall.
*)
Forceps, from the Latin forceps, plural forcipes, although properly a singular, is sometimes construed as a plural, and, accordingly, used with the individualizer pair (36): on the table lay a forceps, these forceps are very easy to handle, a pair of forceps. Some writers also have forcepses for the plural. The form forcep, as the name of one of the branches of the prehensile organs in certain animals,
is
i.
now
One
obsolete.
of
is
Darwin
Descent. 1 )
ii.
iii.
These forceps can seize firmly hold of any object. Id., Origin of Species. 1 ) Dunstan caught his sable majesty by the nose with a pair of red-hot forceps. Cobh. Brew. Read. H a n d b. s. v. Dunstan.
,
iv.
Then must
T. Johnson,
the
i)
tooth
v.
Maga
vi.
The eggs
z. !)
at
the
Univ.
some
Darwin,
Origin of
Species.
Riches, an adaptation of the Old-French richeise, is always construed as a plural. "The conversion into the plural form may have been assisted
by Latin d v iti se." Murray. What signify riches, my dear friend? do they not take unto themselves wings, the wise man saith? Smol., Rod. Random, Ch. XVI, 101.
i
as
Murray.
138
(Middle
English
It
,
construed
to
apparently a as a singular.
plural,
somouns, from the Old French is a true singular and is has a regular plural: summonses.
has fallen into
According
disrepute,
i.
His Ch.
no kind
of
compulsion with
Escott,
England,
ii.
of hours David had but three summonses from below to Ward, Da v. Grieve, I, 229. There were three summonses just taken out by the sanitary inspector against Mr. Boyce. Id., Ma reel la, I, 135. The Prime Minister yesterday issued summonses to his colleagues to attend
During a couple
Mrs.
attend
a further Council for this week. Daily Chron. We are not disposed to regret the outcome of the cross-summonses which arose from the very disgraceful disturbances at the time of the Chelmsford
election.
e s
m.
G a z.
13. a) In
some cases a new singular has been coined from the supposed plural by divesting the latter of the plural termination. 116. Earle, Phil., 381; Nesfield, Hist. Eng., e from Mid. buriels. When the was urial, changed to English a in Mod. English, burials seemed to be a plural like victuals, vitals,
espousals, etc.
Cherry, from Mid. English cheris. Pea, from Mid. English pese, plur. pesen or peses. Pease may be apprehended as a singular in many compounds (31), such as
pease-meal, peas(e)-cod (=peapod), pease-pudding. In some the form pease varies with pea, as in pea(se)-bloom , pea(se)-blossom ,
pea(se)-soup.
English
redels.
b)
In
some words
jfssets
is
assetz (=
from the Anglo-French assetz, in the law-phrase aver to have sufficient, viz. to meet certain claims). Assets,
regularly treated as a plural, is still the ordinary form, but asset as a singular is by no means uncommon.
i.
His
his
mother, Donna Inez, finding, too That in the lieu of drawing on banker, Where his assets were waxing rather few, [etc.]. Byron,
|
Don Juan,
Lenders wish
X,
to
xxxi.
Rooers,
Sir R.
Pol it. Econ., Ch. XV, 213. A man's property and sums owing
ii.
him are
G. C. Hamilton and John Ball, Book-keeping, 5. One of the most valuable assets that Great Britain possesses,
of the South
is
the coal
Wales mining
fields.
Daily Mail.
To
that
prevent the sale to a foreign and not over-friendly Power of an asset would add enormously to the efficiency of its navy. lb. Hitherto the Queen Alexandra has been regarded more or less as an
583a.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
139
In the event of a dissolution of partnership the value of any existing insurance as an asset can be ascertained and dealt with as with any other asset. Weekly
Statement
Chicken
is
Com p.
in
some
We to be regarded as a kind of collective noun of the type of cattle. For the rest chick is generally understood as a diminutive of chicken, and, accordingly it often denotes the young bird still in the egg or only just hatched. Figuratively chick often stands for young child. When an article of food is meant,
causes chick
chicken is the only word; conversely the form chick is regular in the phrase Note also peachick as the only form. Alford, (n)either chick (n)or child.
dialects felt as a plural, of the type of oxen, which used as the singular. also find it occasionally
44;
Sattler,
after
E. S., XII;
Sweet,
N. E. Gr.,
him
like a
chick.
Tom Brown,
The female
the eggs
Hughes,
Ch.
II,
218.
Now G a z. ** Why
,
of the cassowary pays court to the male and leaves him to incubate and care for the young chicks. Rev. of Rev., CCXI 586. and again a kestrel will take to eating the chicks of pheasants. e s t m. No. 5231 Ac.
,
with
In
should any one exchange with me no chick or child to care whether she
I,
Mrs.
Ward,
Lady
to bless
Roses Daughter;
earlier
Ch.
I,
14a.
|
his
***
W.Morris, Earthly Par., The Story of R ho dope, XII. no one thwarted, much less punished; though he twisted the necks of John
house.
little
however, before the chicks proved to be the bringers of revenue instead of more cares and larger expenses to the modest household. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 474, 713c.
long,
ii.
pea-chicks.
Ch. Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
Ch.
II,
11.
Do you keep
iii.
Children and chicken must ever be picking. Hazlitt, E n g. Prov.i) The Queen's English, chicken ? Dean Alford
,
We
had a chicken
for dinner.
lb.
Kickshaws (= Dutch liflafjes) is a corruption of the French quel que chose. "The original French spelling was frequent in the 17th century, "but the commonest forms follow the pronunciation que'que chose, "formerly regarded as elegant and still current in colloquial French. The word "was sometimes correctly taken as singular, with plural -c hoses etc.; more "commonly it was treated as a plural, and a new singular kickshaw afterwards "formed from it." Murray. The word occurs only twice in Shakespeare,
once under the form of kickshaws in Henry IV, B, V, 1 29, where it may be understood as a singular; and once under the form of kickshawses in
,
Twelfth Night
1.
Florio.
2)
2
)
**
ii.
Making quelqae-choses
of
unsavoury Meat.
Thack., The I hate your kickshaws, though I keep a French cook way of thinking. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch, VII, 75.
four Georges,
who
iii.
The Chef
kickshaw.
is Id.
instructing a kitchen-maid G. C r u i k s h a n k. 2)
,
how
to
compound some
rascally French
Murray,
s. v.
chicken,
6.
2)
id., s. v.
kickshaws.
140
iv.
and any
Art thou
c)
pigeons, Davy, a couple of short-legged hens, a joint of mutton, Henry IV, B, pretty little tiny kickshaws, tell William cook.
1, 29.
good
at these
kickshawses, knight?
Twelfth Night,
I, 2.
122.
Some newly coined singulars have not as yet found their way into the literary language. Such are eave from eaves (13), shay from chaise, and Chinee, portuyuee, etc. from Chinese, Portuguese, etc. Storm, E n g.
Phil., 800. shay. "How
shall
we go?"
"It's
too*
warm
to
walk."
"A shay?"
suggested Mr. Joseph Tuggs. "Chaise", whispered Mr. Cymon. "I should think one would be enough", said Mr. Joseph Tuggs aloud, quite unconscious of the meaning of the correction, "However, two shays, if you like." Dick.,
Sketches,
Master sent
i)
me over with the shay-cart to carry your luggage up to the house. Id., Pickw., Ch. XXVIII, 248. Mr. Middlewick (a retired butterman). My boy'll be here soon; I sent the Sir Geoffrey Champni ys (a county magnate). Sent the what? shay. Mid. The shay the shay. Mid. No, only Sir G. Oh, the chaise? one of them. H.J.Byron, Our Boys, 1,1.
;
Chinee. For ways that are dark Chinee is peculiar. Bret Harte
And
The heathen
James,
panion.
I.
"You boys have no taste whatever; one might as well play to to ". She paused for a comparison. "To the heathen Chinee," suggested her com-
Edna Lyall,
I
Donovan,
1,55.
had an attack of fever and was in a bad way generally, when Portugee. one day a Portugee arrived with a single companion a half-breed. Now know a Delagoa Portugee well. Rider Haggard, Sol. Mines, 25.
I
14. In
some nouns plurality has got disguised through orthography, with the result that they are construed as singulars. Baize (= Dutch baai) stands for bayes, baies, etc., which are adaptations of the French baies, a plural of the feminine form of the adjective bai used as a noun. Bai chestnut-coloured; compare
^odice for stands bodies, the ce representing the earlier pronunciation of the final s(\\,b). "The original phrase (was) a pair of bodies. Even with "the spelling bodice the word was formerly (like pence, mice, dice, truce)
"treated as a plural."
new
plural
bodices.
Chess represents the Old French and Anglo-French eschecs, the plural of eschec, of which there are many secondary forms.
absurd spelling for pocks; compare the illiterate sox singular form still appears in pock-marks.' The plural pox occurs chiefly in the compounds chicken-pox (= Dutch waterpokken),
is
Pox
an an
for socks.
The
Dutch koepokken) and small-pox (= Dutch kinderpokcow-pox ( ken), which seem to be ordinarily construed as singulars. Hodgson, Errors 8 144. Cowpock etc. are, apparently, only in vulgar use for cowpox, etc.
,
,
Franz,
E. S. XII.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i.
I
141
in the village.
have
just
is
is
a shocking chicken-pox
to
Mar.
Edgewokth.
Cowpox
transferred to
duction of a virus.
ii.
Flint.
neighboorhood. G r a p h. 2) cowpock. Dick., Cop., Ch. V, 35a. thick pap, poultice represents the Latin pultes, plural of puis or pap-like substance.
in the
apparently, a re-spelling of sleds, plural of sled, the Canada for sledge. The spelling sledge may have into use through the influence of sledge in sledge-hammer.
Sledge
is,
still
used
in
word come
Jrace
trait
is
line.
probably a re-spelling of the French traits, the plural of The form traces would then be a double plural.
;
Truce might be
of
truth.
Modern English
representative
the
The
Middle English trives, and its variants, meaning pledges of spelling ce has to be accounted for as that of dice. (11,6.)
to fear
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!,
Welkin represents
variants.
"Well done, men of Devon!" shouted Amyas, as cheers rent the welkin. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XX, 152a.
15. In
forming the plural of compound nouns and substantival wordgroups, except such as contain a noun placed in apposition to another noun (17), only the last member receives, as a rule, the
mark
liner
of
plurality:
brother-officer
,
brother-officers , penny-a,
between old three-year-olds merry-go-round merry-go-rounds etc. The situation will be changed ... in such a way as to increase the work of the Lieutenant Governors. Westm. Gaz. No. 4949. lc.
,
In
the
next race
Le Nord and
Alloway.
Graph.
The custom
of the Temple obliging each novice to give a dinner to some brother Templars, embarrassed him at first. Steph. Gwenn, Thorn. Moore, Ch. I, 19. She had evidently held his displeasure as a rod in pickle over the heads of all the ne'er-do-wells. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. V, 94. A Governor General is a governor who has under him deputy- or lieutenant
governors.
Murray.
this rule,
Note. Also compounds of ful(l) mostly follow times we find the mark of the plural attached to
the
i.
but some-
the
first
member
of
ful(l) being kept in the singular, Two handfuls of marbles. Morris, Eng. Accidence, 78, A:. There were calves still young enough to want bucketfuls of fragrant milk.
compound,
the
word
G.Eliot, Silas
ii.
Marner, Conclusion,
morning,
Dick.,
in
156.
At seven
in
the
bed,
a tumbler of
table-
spoonsful of rum.
i)
Letters. 3)
S., XVI.
3)
Murray.
-')
Sattler, E.
Ten Brug.,
Taa
VI.
142
When
In
E n g. A c c
such a sentence as We had our hands full of work (Morris, i d. 78 k) hands and full are of course detached words. similar interpretation may also be put on:
, , ,
, ,
There was such a crowd you might have thought it was a Derby day. Several coaches full of ministers of all denominations. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. V, 55.
16.
To
a)
Word-groups
(or compounds) in which, after the French idiom, the adjective is placed after the noun (Ch. VIII, 87, a) mostly have the mark of the plural attached to the noun.
rule holds good chiefly in the literary language, i. e. when nature of the adjective as an adnominal modifier is distinctly understood. But in the popular language in which the individual meaning of the noun and the adjective is not distinctly felt, we observe a tendency
The
the
put the inflection at the end. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 1019. This to apply especially to knight-errant and court-martial. Accorto Murray attorney generals is 'better' than attorneys general. ding i. The children of brothers and sisters are usually denominated cousins, or cousins-german. Webst., Diet. Book-prices current is rapidly becoming the most extensive, as it has long been the best, of books of bibliographical reference. Not. and Quer. These battles royal between him and Lady Henry were not uncommon.
to
seems
Mrs.
It
I,
Ch. V, 42a.
a very singular accident, that a small society as that of Merton should have sent out two successive Governors-General of Canada.
is,
Sir G. C. Lewis, i)
Youth, we are damsels-errant and we ride, Arm'd as ye see, to tilt against the knights There at Caerleon. Ten., Pelleas and Ettarre, 61. The purpose of this little book is to provide for schools a simple outline of the rise, expansion, and present form of those National Institutions, of which all English children are already the heirs-apparent. Anna Buck,
|
|
land, Our National Institutions, Preface. Augusta was not prepared to find knights-errant thus prepared, at such cost to themselves, to break a lance in her cause. Rid. Haggard, Mees.
Will,
It
numerous knights-errant spent their Graal. Cnut's courts martial really exercised this kind of jurisdiction. Freeman. *)
was an
lives.
Wcbst., A pp.,
waiting
the
v.
St.
ii.
Without
judgment
of
court-martials.
Steele,
Spect.
CCCCXCVII. i) From what giants and monsters would these knight-errants undertake
free the
to
world?
Berkeley,
i)
Note.
is
ib., II, 3,
(Rich. II, II, 1, 202; 250); but the modern practice to attach the mark of the plural only to the noun.
letters-patents
2,
Shakespeape has
130;
Henry
VIII,
III,
!)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
b)
143
consisting of a noun and a prepositional word-group or an adverb, have the noun placed in the plural: commanders-
Compounds
in-chief, fathers-in-law,
heirs- at-law
men-at-arms, quarters-of-
an-hour,
bills
of fare;
,
Prince Fortunatus,
H.
I
dare
and no traces
Ch. XXI. say thou hast often admired its magnificent portals ever gaping wide, disclosing to view a grave court, with cloisters and pillars, wltH few or
of goers-in or comers-out.
3.
Lamb,
Essays
of Elia,
South-
Sea House,
Breakings-up are capital things in our school days, but in after life they are Ch. XXX. painful enough. Dick., Pickw. At length after several droppings asleep and fallings forward towards the bars, and catchings backward soon enough to prevent being branded in the face, Mr. Dowler made up his mind that he would throw himself on the bed in the back-room and think not sleep of course. lb., Ch. XXXVI, 336. The punt-about is the practice-ball, which is just brought out and kicked about anyhow from one boy to another before callings-over and dinner. Hughes,
,
,
Tom Brown,
(I)
I,
Ch. V, 93.
|
Delight myself with gossip and old wives lyings-in. Ten., Holy Grail, 564.
And
ills
He sends
organs
Trol.
Framl. Pars.,
Ch.
Ill,
25.
c)
or word-groups in which one noun stands adnominally before another noun, have both members placed in the plural. This is the case: noun is in the genitive: bird's-nest 1) when the adnominal birds' -nests, lady's costume ladies' costumes, fox's tail foxes' tails, gentleman's umbrella gentlemen's umbrellas. Your hair reminds me of eagles' feathers; whether your nails are grown like birds' claws or not, have not yet noticed. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch.
I
Some compounds
XXXVII', 537.
fine
more
to
Hughes,
Tom
Ch. II, 89. Mr. Crawley returned a note with her compliments an an intimation that it was not her custom to transact bargains with ladies' maids. Thack., Van.
Brown,
Fair,
I,
Note.
Not infrequently do we
Cop., Ch. V, 38a. Though he had not reached his fortieth about his eyes. G Eliot, Broth. J a c.
395.
We
had been sowing dragon's teeth at the Diamond Fields, and the old harvest was springing from them. Froude, Oceana, Ch. HI, 52. A measure which it is asserted has practically dried up all Peters pence in France. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII 4546.
,
144
CHAPTER XXV,
florist's
16.
Convolvulus minor and major are 'Murray, s. v. convolvulus. King Midas has ass's ears. C a s.
2)
names
1.
of
Cone. C y c
v.
Midas.
Sometimes when the attributive noun denotes a particular condition, function, status, employment or use (Ch. XXIII,
5c; 9).
It
is
especially
the
plural
a)
number:
such as have
man
woman,
or a
compound
of a chandler's shop in a front-parlour, who took in gentlemenLittle Dorrit, boarders, lent his assistance in making the bed. Dick. Ch. VIII, 45a.
,
He lived in a little street near the Veterinary College in Camden Town, which was principally tenanted by gentlemen-students. Id., Copi, Ch. XXVII, 199a. The women-servants, who were about the place, came to look and giggle
at
It
me.
lb.,
Ch. V, 356.
was one of her practices to have the women-servants for half an hour every Sunday afternoon in the library and instruct them in the life of Christ. G. Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. Ill, 27. Their tradesmen papas were sometimes ready to deal on favourable terms
with Mrs. Frederick. Eight of the
Mrs.
Ward, Marcel
la,
I,
15.
women
657a.
Rev. of
Rev., CCIV,
find the adnominal noun kept in the singular. most eminent of our woman astronomers has passed away in Miss Elizabeth Brown. II. L o n d. News.
Note. Sometimes we
of
One
the
to
Woman suffragists in Wall-Street. Times, No. 1822, 9596. (According Wendt Synt. des heut. Eng., woman suffragists is more common
,
than
/?)
women
suffragists.)
Such as have knight, lord, and, perhaps, some other titles for their first member. 1019. Sweet, N. E. Gr., The priory of St. John of Jerusalem, the chief seat in England of the KnightsHospitallers, was founded in the year 1700. Walt. Besant, London, I, 16. On the first day of Michaelmas sittings the Lords Justices when they march
,
up Westminster Hall, wear black robes, liberally sprinkled with gold lace. Escott, England, Ch. XXIV, 415. The Lords-Lieutenants and their Deputies held the command under the
King.
Mrs.
Ward, Marcella,
1,287.
the border of Wales.
to die out.
They both were Lords Marchers, whose lands lay on Gosse Gray, Bard, Note to 14. After this the order of knights-bannerets was allowed
,
Murray,
s. v.
banneret.
Note.
i.
Occasionally
we
find the
mark
was
of counties in
Peers,
clergy
England and Wales. Daily Chron. Bishops, Lords-Lieutenant of counties, Members of Parliament, Mrs. Humphrey, of all demominations will be good enough.
16.
Etiquette,
He defended
No. 5060, 26.
the
Wes
m.
G a z.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
145
He prated about his own affairs and past splendour, and all the lords, generals, and Lord-Lieutenants he had ever known. Thack. Pend. I, Ch. V, 59. Two Knight Templars. Ten. Dram. Pers. to Becket. The Lord Chancellors are raised to the peerage. Anna Buckland, Our Nat.
, ,
Inst., 14. There are five ordinary judges in this court, who are called Lord Justices. lb., 60. That a Radical Ministry should employ the Crown to induce the Lord-Lieutenants to undertake a new and somewhat distasteful duty is entirely in accordance with the ideas of modern democracy. Rev. of Rev., CCXV 4426.
,
It
is
interesting
to
in the
it
meaning
is
of the adnominal
nouns
following quotation.
in the
In the first
They
I,
Lytton, Rienzi,
earls,
Ch.
20.
|
ii.
His princedom
and
caitiff
knights.
Compare with
The
election
is
the
of the
notable, too, from the fact that two Suffragists candidates stood, polled respectively 22 and 32 votes. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5484, 5b.
Note.
In this
connection mention
,
may
also be
made
of the
compounds
denoting the men or women belonging to a particular circle or establishment, as distinct from mankind, the human species or the male sex, according to the accent; and womankind, the female sex. Instead of womenkind the form womankind is very common. Murray gives no instances of mankind in the sense of menkind. For menkind and womenkind we also find menfolk and womenfolk.
\.
had breakfasted with the Family, and the Men-kind were gone abroad, in C. Mather, Magn., Ch. VI, 12. i) Where the family meals take place, and where the Basque menkind are served first. Month, i)
I
**
It
is
quite
live
ii.
more crowded and romantic lives than real women. Take for instance those who go with their menfolk to far corners of the Empire, where the latter are playing the parts of watchdogs of civilisation. Westm. Gaz., No. 5137, 156. * The womenkind were busy with their domestic avocations. Gordon Holmes,
Silvia Craven,
**
14.
Chafing under the persecution which his womankind had inflicted upon him. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XIX, 211. He hurried out of his house to his chambers, and to discharge the commissions with which the womankind had intrusted him. Id., A Little Dinner at i n s 's Ch. VI. T^i m She was at any rate their natural guardian in those matters, relating to womankind. Mrs. Ward Marcella, I, 159. *** The womenfolk don't understand these things. Jerome, Idle Thoughts,
VIII, 121.
the Anglo-Indian official, and especially his women-folk, could realise that, a of the trouble in India would disappear. Rev. of Rev., CCXXXI, 2056. What about the man in the street, the railway guard, the 'bus conductor, the
If
good deal
cabman,
one
*)
the
visit?
Westm. Gaz.,
.;
will
Murray.
H.
II.
10
146
Here,
at
any
rate,
was a
women-folk paying
flattering
3c.)
his
womenfolk.
17. a)
II.
Lond. News,
Word-groups consisting
of a class-noun and a proper name standing in apposition to it, mostly have the mark of the plural attached to the former, at least in the formal literary style. The Misses Osborne were excellent critics on a Cashmere shawl. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XII, 117. Yonder are the Misses Leery looking out for the young officers of the Heavies,
lb., I,
,
Ch. XXII, 229. Plaskwith. Lytton Night and Morn., 62. I would collect evidence and carry it home to lay before my father, as the family friend of the two Misses Jenkyns. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XII, 221. She had a countess coming, an honourable John and an Honourable George, and a whole bevy of Ladies Amelia, Rosina, Margaretha, etc. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXV, 307. The Messrs. Bell desire me to thank you for your suggestion respecting the Life of Char I. Bronte, 228. advertisement. Mrs. Gaskell The Ladies Devenish were not disposed to make her life any easier than it needed to be. Flor. Marryat, A Bankr. Heart, 1,230. This book is an attempt to revive the fairy-tale after the manner of the brothers Grimm. Manch. Guardian.
The Misses
The
sisters Findlater.
2166.
,
b) In the
mark
I
the
N. E. Gr.,
will
alter
plural 1020.
attached
the
have the
Sweet,
this: this shall be altered, were there ten Mrs. Yorkes to do Ch. Bronte, Shirley, II, Ch. XVI, 329. The Miss Crumptons or to quote the authority of the inscription on the Dick., Sketches, The garden-gate: 'The Misses Crumpton' [etc.].
battle with.
Misses Crumpton.
Nicklebies or to speak more correctly are there Mistresses France? Thack., Dickens in France. It was remarked that the young Master Gashleighs , when they came home for the holidays, always wore lacquered highlows. Id., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VI, 337. The Miss Notleys. Id., P e n d. I, Ch. XXIX, 316. 1020. The two doctor Thomsons. Sweet, N. E. Gr. Such things are never forgotten by the Mrs. Paches of this world. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Jane Oglander, Ch. VI, 88.
Are there
Nickleby
Airs.
in
This practice is, however, impossible when the different members one and the same family are referred to, and the proper name is mentioned only once. Mr. Mrs. and the Misses Johnson. The very blackest view is the one taken by the numerous Mrs. and Misses Grundy, to say nothing of the almost equally numerous Grundys, Esq. 1 ) Compare this with the varied practice in: Sir Thomas Clubber, Lady
of
,
Clubber, and the Miss Clubbers. Pickw., Ch. II, 13. Mrs. Smithie, Mrs. Smithie, and the Misses Smithie. lb.
!)
Kruisinoa,
315.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
147
N o t e I. In some combinations the popular language often transposes the two nouns, so that the mark of plurality may be conveniently placed at the end. (Ch. IV, 13.) 1020. The Smith brothers. Sweet, N. E. Gr.,
The Dodson
II.
sisters.
G. Eliot,
in
Mill,
III,
Ch.
Ill,
197.
King William,
end,
the
mark
may be
the
that the
common noun
extent
In fact
character
it
which causes
4 Obs.
I.
to
of head-word and becomes an adjunct-word, assume more or less the character of an adjective.
differs
but little from Royal William. Ch. IV, See also Sweet, N. E. Gr., 90. The placing of the mark of the plural at the end has, moreover, the effect of uniting the two nouns into a kind of compound.
King William
Ch.
XXXI,
53.
c)
When
it
is
the class-noun refers to persons bearing different names , placed in the plural, if it is not repeated before each
(10, d.)
smile in company.
,
proper name.
Messrs. Snodgrass, Winkle, and Tupman, all Pickw., Ch. XXVIII. Messrs. Pendennis and Bows. Thack., Pend.
Dick.,
II,
and Edward clapping and hurraying by Id., Newc. I. Ch. XVI, 183. The emperors William and Francis Joseph. Times. Lieutenants Walton and Sword. lb. Generals Buller and Warren. Morn. Lead. Drs. Johnson and Smith.
Young Masters
Alfred
Thus also when the proper names are preceded by two classnouns, as in: So the bishop was searched for by the Revs. Messrs. Grey and Green.
Trol.,
Barch. Tow.,
USE.
18.
From
their
chiefly
we meet
of
This plural meaning, however, is not always distinctly felt, so that with not a few instances in which, although the plural form
the
noun
orderly
this
The is retained, its constructions are that of a singular. discussion of this matter belongs of right to the Chapter on
Concord, but has, for practical purposes, been incidentally given in Chapter a propos of the several nouns concerned. For want of a convenient English word, nouns that are used only
in the plural are often called
singular
plurale tantum.
According partly to their meaning, partly to their origin, the pluralia tantum have been divided into certain groups. Especially owing to this twofold principle of division some have found a place in two or more
148
groups.
When
necessary,
these
illustrated
where
their
seemed most convenient to do so. The nouns that are usually placed in the
it
.
meanings, the singular being quite usual in others, are discussed in a separate This has also been done with such as have the plural for their ordinary form only in certain collocations.
19.
The nouns
a) the
of
which the
of
plural
is
the
names
certain
articles
tools
as in
Mod.
breeches), drawers (similarly swimming-drawers), ducks, (galli)gaskins , greaves, knee-smalls (= knee-shorts), knickerbockers (often shortened to knickers),
French),
cuisses,
drabs
(=
pantaloons, pumps, rationals (g) (= bloomers) , leathers, overalls, shorts (g), small-clothes, smalls (g), spatterdashes, stays, tights (g), trunk-hose (8a) Dutch pofbroek). trousers, trunks (20) (
,
2) bellows,
bilboes,
calipers
(=
caliper
compasses)
chains
(20),
compasses
(gyves),
handcuffs, irons (20), leading-strings, manacles, nutcrackers (20), pindiers) , pliers, reins, scales (20), scissors, shackles, pincers ( shears, snuffers, spectacles (20), tongs, trammels, tweezers.
After a numeral or the indefinite article these nouns be preceded by the individualizer pair. (36.) See, however below. Analogously a pair of corsets is sometimes used for a corset.
I.
Note
require
to
II. ellows is mostly construed as a singular: the bellows wants mending, a bellows is a kind of instrument. In some dialects it has received a second plural: bellowses. But we also find it construed as a plural and preceded by the individualizer pair (36) the bellows want mending, he has ordered another pair of bellows. After a numeral pair is, however, mostly dispensed with: two pair(s) of bellows more usually: two bellows. Also some of the other nouns mentioned above, are sometimes treated as singulars: a scissors, a trousers. Very rarely are the singulars of most of the above words met with. Eye-glass, however, seems to be in common use for eyeglasses. See also Storm, Eng. Phil.-, 686.
:
III. breeches is a cumulate plural, the Old English broc forming its plural by mutation: brec. This brec came afterwards to be considered as a singular, as in: But in our childhood our mothers maids haue so terrified vs with an
ouglie
diuell
fier in
his
mouth, and a
taile
in bis breech.
Reoinald Scot,
Discovery
of
Wi tchcraf t,
VII,
Ch. XV.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
149
Thou
Ch. Kinqsley has breeks archaically in: Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXX, 2296. art no old tarry-breeks of a sea-dog. Compare also: My coat and my rest, they are Scotch o' the best, O' pairs of quid cae twa man. Burns The Forbolton Lasses, X VIII. breeks barnacles, i. The barnacles are the handles of the pincers placed over and enclosing the muzzle. Youatt, Horse XXI, 457. *) ii. One on' em's got his legs on the table, and is a drinkin' brandy neat, vile the has got a barrel o' oysters atween his knees. him in the barnacles t'other one
|
Dick.
P
i.
c k w.
Ch.
XXX
266.
bellows,
bellows.
Suppose
Pericles, 1,2. Flattery is the bellows blows up sin. the enthusiasm gone to dust, or become a the reverse
George Mered.
,
wheezy old
Lord O r m o n
t ,
Ch.
Ill
61.
Bagpipe: a musical wind-instrument consisting of a leathern bag which receives mouth or from a bellows. Annandale, Cone. Diet. You want to be something better than a bellows. W. Besant All Sorts and Cond. of Men., Ch. XXXV, 239.
the air from the
,
ii.
When
the disease
full
bellows were
iii.
Swift,
Gu
1.
Trav.,
Ill,
Ch. V, (1746).
lb., Ill,
in stated
row,
more below.
iv.
Mason.
*)
The lungs are like two elastic bellows. Rippmann, Sounds of Spok. Engl., 4. The walls were hung with bright dish-covers, warming-pans, quaint old bellows and kitchen implements. Edna Lyall, Hardy Norseman, Ch. XVIII, 150.
Twenty bellowses
in all
v.
he had.
Hobbes.
)
, ,
bilboes.
You
sha'n't
go
A magician keeps me here in bilboes Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIX, 2196. chains. The gentleman is in chains
compasses.
cuisses.
Smol. R o d. R a n d. Ch. XXIII, 166. which you have no picklock. Ch. Kinqsley,
already.
III.
Fix one point of a pair of compasses at B, and with the distance sweep a circle. Tyndall, Glac. of the Alps, Ch. II, 16.
BO
And
d'
all
his greaves
Of onset.
Ten.,
Morte
derbies.
Arthur,
97.
215.
Just
I,
hands while
fix
the derbies.
Holm.,
drabs.
Ch.
I.
(sc.
board
white ducks,
to all
which hung on
his
emaciated form
clothes
on a prop, a man
appearance
consumption.
i.
Times.
"She has her notions, you know", said Mr. Brooke, sticking his eye-glasses, eye-glasses on nervously. G. Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XLIX, 357.
ii.
"My dear Chettam, it won't lead to anything, you know", said Mr. Brooke, seating himself and sticking on his eye-glass again. lb., V, Ch. XLIX, 358.
galligaskins. He was generally seen trooping like a colt at his mother's heels, equipped in a pair of his father's cast-off galligaskins. Wash. Irv., Rip van
Winkle.
*)
Murray.
150
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
galligaskins
He had somehow picked up a troop of droll children, little hatless boys much worn. G. Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XL VI, 342.
I
with their
Clown.
meaning
am
Mar. That
if
Twelfth Night,
of tags
used
greaves.
greaves
irons.
|
dazzling thro'
the leaves
the brazen
Sir Lancelot.
Ten.,
Lady
of Shalott,
The
him up
Mac, Clive.
Dick.,
knee-smalls.
Ch. XXIII.
Nich. Nick.,
and
silks,
knee-shorts. A very dusty skeleton fell forward in the arms of the porter.
Pickw.
Ch. XXI.
leggings. So by way of indemnification, Mr. Weller contorted his features from behind the wheelbarrow, for the exclusive amusement of the boys with the leggings.
Id,, Ch.
XIX, 165. He was dressed in a tarnished green travelling-jacket, with a broad belt round his waist, and a pair of overalls, with buttons from the hips to the ankle. Walh. Irv., Sketch-Bk., XVI, 150.
overalls.
pantaloons.
My
,
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.
pumps.
It
Ch.
was
quite
painful to see
208.
civil
Ch.
XX,
criminal law was invoked against poor Mrs. Spragne in order to whether innkeepers may or may not refuse to serve ladies in 'rationals'.
Times.
reins.
344.
scissors,
have
II,
paid
fifteen-and-six
for
scissors.
Thack.
S a m.
Titm.,
.
Ch.
21.
Here
is
the scissors.
Bain
Co
m p.
295.
ii.
Tom saw
scissors.
her go at once to a drawer, from which she took out a large pair of G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. VII, 54.
. .
shorts.
It was a . pleasant sight to behold Mr. Tupman in full Brigand's costume the upper portion of his legs encased in the velvet shorts. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XV, 131.
smalls.
it
who have
Id.,
tried
it,
know what
a difficult process
is, to
bow
in
Ch.
XV,
133.
shackles.
trunks.
The shackles
and
El., 870.
Equally humorous and agreeable was the appearance of Mr. Snodgrass in blue satin trunks. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XV, 131.
spectacles.
for the
On
|
the
whole
it
appears
VI.
.
|
Nose
And
the nose
was as
of an
stays.
tights.
Adjudged Case,
Margaret clasped
Ch.
II.
her stays
Moore, Esth.
Waters,
10.
Marley
in his pig-tail,
Dick.,
Christ
m.
in
tights?
Walt. Besant,
its
All Sorts
|
and Cond.
of
Men,
Ch.
XXX.
rosy deed,
trammels. Now when the wine has done human trammels freed. Keats Lamia.
,
And
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
At last,
151
off the whole trammels of French criticism and artificial Francis Jeffrey, Ess., Ford (Univ. Libr. 49). If a man can so write as to be easily understood, and to convey lucidly that which he has to convey, without accuracy of grammar, why should he subject himself to unnecessary trammels. Trol. Thack. Ch. IX, 199.
Cowper threw
refinement.
trouser(s). i. Besides the clothes in which you see decent trousers in my wardrobe. Stevenson. x )
ii.
me,
have scarcely a
My
first
first
glance
is
to take the
In a
b) the are
names of certain parts of the human or animal body, which made up of several more or less separate parts, such as:
bowels, entrails, (eye-)lashes , fauces, gums, guts, intestines, lights (g, 2), numbles (= entrails of a deer), posteriors (h), viscera (h), loins, whiskers, withers.
singulars bowel, (eye-)lash, gum, gut, intestine and occasionally met with, especially as medical or scientific terms, and when a defining adjective precedes, as in the little (small) gut, the great (large) gut, the small intestine, the large intestine. Also whisker is found in the singular, apparently in the same sense as the
viscus
Note.
The
are
plural whiskers.
bowel(s).
ii.
The seat of the disease, namely the bowel. Nature. 2) had often heard it said that Marley had no bowels, but he had Scrooge never believed it until now. Dick., Christm. Car., I, 18. A place where Miners live, who labour in the bowels of the earth. lb., Ill, 74.
i. i.
(eye-)lash(es).
M a g. a)
Harper's
ii.
Looking through
i.
Tyndall.
gum(s).
hiss of such a consonant as the blade-fan-open ... is formed not only between blade and gum, but also between the sides of the tongue and the back teeth. Sweet, of Eng. , 128.
The
Sounds
In
i.
some languages,
e.
the contact is
as in English, t, d, n are not strictly dental , but alveolar; with the gum close behind the teeth. Murray, s. v. dental, 2.
**
teeth
ii.
and a good deal of gum when she smiled. Queer No. 1800, 16766). from the teeth-rim to the arch-rim. Sweet, Princ.
faeces)
gut(s).
ii.
They
2
)
(sc.
the
may
lie
in
J.
M.
Duncan.
king
may go
i. I
Haml.,
IV, 3, 34.
intestine(s).
was about
to tell
him
intestine.
Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 110. The duodenum is that part of the small intestine which immediately succeeds the stomach. The rectum is that part of the large intestine which opens
Smol.,
externally.
ii.
Huxley.
>)
The
J
Med.
ou
lights. The lungs, or as they are vulgarly termed lights, are eaten as a part of the pluck or fry. E. Smith, Food. 2 )
i)
Gunth.,
Man.,
374.
Murray.
152
loins.
In
CHAPTER XXV,
Britain
19.
we
are girding
up our
loins for a
war with
the Lords.
Rev.
3a.
|
In
Haml.,
and sturdy giant, who, in all popular commotions, towered above thews of stone, and nerves of iron, stood now colouring and trembling. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. X, 59. Miss Thorne made up her mind ... to trust ... to the thews and sinews of
his
tribe,
with
Trol.,
Barch. Tow.,
Ch.
XXXV,
312.
viscus(-era).
vessel
of
says dishonour as to
i.
,
He
well
that
lie
probably no limb, no viscus is so far a wholly outside the renewal of the spirit.
Westm. Gaz.
ii.
Viscera
the
contents
thorax and
abdomen; but
i.
the great cavities of the body, as of the head, especially those of the abdomen, as the stomach,
intestines, etc.
whisker(s).
Sir
light hair,
to his cheek, a buff waistcoat, very neat boots I, Ch. VI, 68.
ii.
In face
portly in person.
Hobson Newcome, Esq., was like his elder brother, but he was more He allowed his red whiskers to grow wherever nature had
lb., I,
planted them.
withers.
2, 255.
Haml.,
Ill,
Mr. Lowther may well say, that his withers are unwrung, and there, so as he is concerned, the incident is at an end. Westm. Gaz., No. 5549,
.
far
\c.
c)
the
names
dismals (g), dumps, fidgets, glanders, gripes, horrors (20), hysterics (g), jerks, jumps, measles, mumps, pathetics (g), pouts, rickets, shakes (20), shivers, sullens (g), staggers, sulks, tantrums, thrills (20), vapours (20).
chills, creeps,
Note
I.
Probably these nouns are, at least partly, construed as is scanty. See the quotations with glanders
Hodgson, Errors 8
144.
III.
Of some of them the singular form is also in occasional use. Blues is a contraction from blue-devils in the meaning of depresVapours has almost disappeared from the language. above nouns, except glanders and measles, belong
the
indefinite
article
sion of spirits.
IV.
V.
All the
to the
After
or
fit
see you are awfully in the blues. Mrs. Alex., (Compare: I am very blue at times. lb.,
I
II,
Ch.
II,
38.)
blue-devils.
must get
to
II,
work or
250.
me.
Edna Lyall,
chills.
It
Donovan,
me
gave
i)
Con. Doyle,
The Sign
of Four.
i)
Drie Talen,
XXIII, 146.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
creeps.
It
153
She was constantly complaining of the cold, and of its occasioning a which she called the 'creeps'. Dick., Cop., Ch. Ill, 20a. gave one just the creeps to listen to her crying and moaning. G. Moore, Esth,
Ch. XVII, 106.
the dismals
Waters,
dismals.
day?
What business have you to indulge in a fit of Edna Lvall, To right the wrong.') {= low
it
on
this gala-
The
dismals
advisable to
Dick.,
Pickw.,
(=
dismal
dumps.
She
is in
the doleful
dumps because
in the
her father
,
was not
in sufficient
II,
Mrs. Alex.
A Life Interest,
glanders.
lenbosch.
at Stel-
Times.
The
cold
gripes.
G.
Moore,
horrors, jumps. "I've got 'em agin Bill, growled Bill. "What's the matter now?"
jumps, Bill", gasped the other, "the 'orrors they've got me and no mistake". Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XVI, 302. jerks. Tea-time and Miss Pross making tea, with another fit of the jerks upon her. Dick., Tale of two Cities, II, Ch. VI, 119.
"Ifs the
measles. Measles is a disease which when it occurs in healthy children is attended by only an insignificant mortality. Times. Fiscal malady may be a brief measles, which we shall get over, or a virulent disease, which will be incurable for years. Westm. Gaz.
,
young men at the quintain, you'll have all the young women Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXV, 308. shivers. You give me the shivers. Annie Besant, Autobiography, 4. Cold shivers went down Trilby's back as she listened. Du Maurier, Trilby, I, 99. 10 note, to sell it for 20; then to buy it back staggers. To buy a horse for a for 5 by pointing out that it had the staggers. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI 4186.
pouts.
If
you gets
the
in the pouts.
Trol.,
'
sulk(s). i. For a week or fifteen days her continued sulk excited Httle suspicion. G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. XI, 63.
ii.
The whole
revolts.
of
her
first
year was
of sulks, quarrels
and
Mrs.
Ward, Marcella,
Ch.
I,
6.
sullens.
it
We
in confidence
can speak a little to it, being ourself but lately recovered we whisper reader out of a long and desperate fit of the sullens. Ch. Lamb,
,
(397).
He might
Ch.
II,
strike
8.
Ch. BrontE,
Jane Eyre,
the cabals, the sulks and the tantrums of Ministers, even in an English cabinet, are remarkably like the carryings-on in the servants' kitchen. Rev. of Rev., CCIII, 477a.
To be signalled to in a marked manner by a strange young lady of great personal attractions might be a coveted distinction to other schoolboys, but it simply gave Mr. Bultitude cold thrills. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XI, 313. He had thrills of horror every ten' yards at the idea of the supernatural things he was about to witness. W.W.Jacobs, Craft, B, 39.
thrills.
Odd
vapours.
melancholy
!
got
believe:
must expel
this
Farquhar, Rec.
Off., 1,1(256).
Murray.
154
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
Wine can clear the vapours of despair. Gay, Beggar's Opera, III. He rose refreshed at an earlier hour than usual; and what he considered a fit of vapours of the previous night was passed away. Lytton Night and
,
Morn.,
455.
d) the names
all-fours,
letters,
of certain
billiards,
cards,
skittles.
Note
as singulars.
Probably also these nouns are, at least partly, construed See especially the quotations under billiards.
II. Ninepins has developed a new singular, which in its turn admits of being pluralized like an ordinary noun. all-fours. Ham had been giving me a lesson in all-fours. Dick., Cop.,
Ch. 6
Ill,
166.
billiards.
ft.
Billiards
is
played
in
England on an oblong
,
table, 13
ft.
long by
broad.
Harmsworth Encycl.
G a z.
,
s.
v. billiards.
Billiards is usually played by two persons. lb. Nor is billiards a game which puts much muscular
strain
on the
Wes
players.
m.
No. 5361
Ac.
Mrs. Mirvan was at cards. Miss Burney, Evelina, Ch. XI, 26. Cards are a temporary illusion. Ch. Lamb, Mrs. Battle's Opinions
cards.
on
playing at fives.
Thack.,
Pend.,
I,
Ch.
forfeits.
letters.
the
We
1
sat
handsome
)
i.
capitals as
round a large table and played at 'letters', sedulously 'shuffling' we gave each other long jaw-breaking words. Whyte
play at ninepins.
Melville.
ninepins,
ii.
To
you see an English nobleman knocked about like a ninepin? New Monthly M a g a z. **) He knocked his adversaries down one after the other like so many ninepins. Gordon Holmes, Silvia Craven, 19. The author sets up his four ninepins. Gosse. 3) Life is not all beer and skittles. Hughes, Tom Brown, I, Ch. II, 40. skittles.
Will
e)
the
names
curds, dregs, embers, groats, grounds, grouts, hards herds, hurds), hops, husks, lees, molasses, oats, sediments, slops, soapsuds.
ashes,
coals,
(=
Note
plural
I.
The
is
singular
pretty
ash, although
much
ashes,
common,
pipes. Especially in scientific language it is sometimes by the indefinite article. The singular is regular in the
varieties,
found preceded
names
of certain
and
in
compounds, such as
volcanic ash
copper-ash, pearlash, potash (but wood-ashes). on the other hand, it is only the plural form that
is
used.
Murray;
Sattler,
*)
E. S.,
s.
XVI.
\d.
2
)
Murray,
v. letter,
Fluoel,
s.
v.
ninepin.
189.
3)
Jespersen,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
155
Coal in the meaning of a piece of carbon glowing without flame is II. often used as an ordinary object-noun, with an indefinite article and with an ordinary plural. In the usual meaning of a kind of mineral the singular
than the plural, and almost the only form when a as in digged {earth, pit, sea, stone, etc.) coal, brown {black, cannel, cherry, parrot) coal. Thus also charcoal. The plural is, however, regular in certain expressions, such as to heap {cast, gather)
is
defining
word precedes,
XII,
90)(=to
flames
of
passion,
with good), to blow the coals {= to to blow hot coals (= to rage fiercely),
excite strife or ill-feeling), to carry {bear) coals {= to do dirty or degrading work, to submit to humiliation or insult), to haul {call, have) over the coals (= to call to task) , to carry coals to Newcastle. In the
to stir coals
(=to
second
black
as a coal,
and
in
is found with an indefinite article in the sayings as a cold coal to blow at {= a hopeless task to perform), dialects also to denote a piece of coal generally. Murray.
meaning coal
III.
indefinite article.
IV.
also
met with
is
V.
VI.
}(ards {hurds)
Murray.
}{op as a singular is used chiefly to denote the plant, the plural form being to all appearance regular when the ripened cones of the female hop-plant are meant. Sees is sometimes construed as a singular. VII.
VIII. Cat is found in the singular only in the sense of oat-plant, the more usual form, and when preceded by a defining adjective denoting a
variety, as the white oat, the false oat. sow one's wild oats, and its variations.
Murray.
to
ashes,
is not poverty that's the hardest to bear, or the least happy lot in Mr. Addison, shaking the ash out of his pipe. Thack., Henry Esmond, II, Ch. XI, 350.
i.
* "'T
life,"
said
**
Everything is covered with a white ash, which in the photographs looks like snow. C h a m b. a g. i) Gun-cotton leaves no ash or fouling matter. lb. ] ) The wood-fire makes no soot, and leaves only a white ash as clean as the flame
ii.
G r a p h. i) thousand villages to ashes turn. Addison, The The brands were dying, Amid their own white ashes
itself.
Campaign.
lying.
Coleridge, Chris-
tab el, 157. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe. Dick., Cop., Ch. LI, 3656. The woman who had left on a door-step the little pot of hot ashes [etc.]. Tale of Two Cities, I, Ch. V, 44. Pickwick, who has choked up the well, and thrown ashes on the sward. Pickw., Ch. XXXIV, 311.
**
Id.,
Id.,
Even before
,
Sixth
commenced.
|
Mac
The
Popes,
(562a).
And from
ashes XVII,
may be made
i.
Ten.
Memoriam,
i)
Sattler, E.
S.,
XVI.
156
***
CHAPTER XXV,
Alas, alas!
II,
19.
we poor mortals
Ch.
I,
are often
little
G.Eliot,
Scenes,
coal.
i.
79.
heard but an indistinct noise," said the youth, his face glowing like Scott Fair Maid, Ch. XI 60. One man can put the live coal in a right place. Ch. Kingsley, Herew., Ch. XVIIIHe threw a large coal at him. Murray, s. v. coal, 5, 6.
a heated coal.
,
,
* "I
** Coal was already the ordinary fuel in some districts. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 312. Both coal and coke are sent off as wanted. Escott, England, Ch. IX, 123. Within are vast stacks of coal, of coke and fire-bricks. lb. Summers-Howson would naturally be unwilling to tempt his assistant to burn
Barry Pain,
Culminating Point,
A The
piece of Flesh broiled on Coals. Addison. fire- wood was burnt into embers, or live coals.
the
,
On
Ten.
**
coals
lay,
all
hell
beneath
St.
Simeon Stylites,
He
said that
,
G. Eliot
(Comp. Bible, Revelation, IX.) they should have no more coals if they came to hear you preach.
1
dd
c h. 2)
roaring fire, composed of something short of a bushel of coals. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIV, 119. *** When you ask for Wallsend coals, see that you get them. All the Year
Round. 2)
I knew by that service the men would carry coals. Henry V, III, 2, 50. Publicola damned one poor man to a wretched immortality, and another was called pitilessly over the coals, because he had mixed a grain of flattery with a bushel of truth. Trol., Thack., Ch. II 82, What do you think of his having had me over the coals this evening? Dick.,
,
****
Little D o
i.
r r
t.
3)
into a curd.
J.
Baxter.
dregs.
cruelty
The dregs
Hughes, Tom Brown, I, Ch. II, 23. however brilliant, are ever a base residue of rapine,
,
and drunken plunder. Thack., Henry Esm. II, Ch. XII, Jingoism is the ultimate product of the drivelling brain of the dregs
255.
of
our people.
Mrs.
256a.
his
Wilfrid
returned
to
the
dregs of his
tea.
Ward,
Ch. V, 396.
And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor. ember(s). Poe, The Raven, II il. When the embers sank to a dull red, I undressed hastily. Ch. Bronte, Jane
Eyre, War in
embers.
Mac.
War
it
burns
fiercely
under the
grout(s). i. Wherefore should we turn the grout In a drained cup? Rossetti.*) ii. Old women might have told fortunes in them better than in grouts of tea.
Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. V, 286. hards. These Regalia were smuggled out by a clergyman's wife under a quantity of hards of lint. Scott.*) hop(s). i. The hop is remarkable among the Nettle family for its twining stem.
Oliver.
ii.
*)
*The planting
**
of
When
Bes.,
All Sorts
s. v.
and
2)
in England during this reign. Hume. *) seemed as if their throats were tightened. Walt. Conditions of Men., Ch. IV, 43.
i)
Murray,
coal.
Sattler.
3)
Drie Talen,
XXIII, 147.
*)
Murray
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
157
husk(s). i. It is certain that, as Christianity passes beyond its mediaeval phase, and casts aside the husk of out-worm dogmas, it will more and more approximate to Shelley's exposition. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. V, 101. "It's true enough in the main," he said, "master: I could sift grain from husk here and there, but let it be as it is." Dick., Chimes^, II, 52. ii. There were husks in his corn, that even Game Chickens couldn't peck up. Id., Domb., Ch. XII, 206. Often the husks of acorns are mixed with the meal to add to the volume of
lees.
Rev. of Rev., CCVI, 118a. He scrawled upon a wall with his finger dipped in muddy blood. Dick., Tale of Two Cities, I, Ch. V, 44.
this awful food.
i.
wine-lees
Ten.,
Ulysses,
,
7.
ii.
Stevenson of sleep are cleared from you. Peacock, Sel. Ess., 537). The wine of life is drawn and the mere lees
,
Walking Tours
|
(W.
of.
brag
Macb.,
II,
3, 100.
molasses. Don't think, young man, that we go to the expense of flower of brimstone and molasses just to purify them. Dick., Nich. Nickleby, Ch. VIII, 44a.
oat(s).
i.
was prepared
from
ii.
Ch. VII, 194. reaping. Grant Allen, Hilda ** Had the wild oat not been sown, The soil, left barren, scarce had grown The grain by which a man may live. Ten., In LIII, ii. * Oats in their Swift, Gul. Trav. , IV, tongue are called 'hlunnh'. Ch. II, (1926). In the United Kingdom oats are the chief crop. Graph. ** He will sow his wild oats. Van. 97.
its birth to its
Wade,
Memoriam,
Thack.,
I've pretty
my
wild oats.
/)
many words
a substance that
ing derived from gerunds especially when denoting is the product of an action, or anything thought of as the subject of an action, such as:
in
bearings, belongings, clippings, cuttings, diggings, drainings, earnings, hangings, incomings, leavings, lodgings, losings, outgoings, parings, savings, scrapings, soundings, surroundings, sweepings, trappings, trimmings, winnings, workings.
Note
under
action
I.
Most
It
e).
is
hardly
of these are virtually only a variety of those mentioned necessary to observe that the product of the
may also appear as a singular object so that some of the above nouns are also used as ordinary object-nouns with an ordinary singular and plural.
II. In this connection mention may also be made of innings, which, although not formed from a verb to in, is yet felt as a plural verbal noun of the type of surroundings. It is ordinarily construed as a singular, i. e. has the finite verb of which it is the subject in the singular, and is frequently found with the indefinite article. No evidence is available to show what is the form of the modifying demonstrative pronoun. See also Storm, E n g. Phil. 2 686.
,
used as a more or less strict plurale tantum in different shades of meaning: a) devices upon an escutcheon: armorial bearings; p) supports: the bearings of a floor; y) parts of a machine
III.
hearings
is
158
CHAPTER XXV,
friction:
19.
the' phrases
(=
Dutch
diggings is sometimes treated as a singular (Murray); i. e. it occasionally found with the indefinite article. Note also that diggings
IV.
lubricator.
iv.
Print.
Trades Journ. i)
Merc. Mar. Mag. 1 ) A Hardy Norseman,
Ch. VI, 53. by such landmarks as were still
v.
He had He was
visible.
utterly lost his bearings. EdnaLyall, in the act of taking his bearings
At
The Secret of the Court, 6. September 6, 4.20 a. m., the first bearings of the day were taken. and Calais east-south-east. Times, No. Grisnez bore south-west by south
Frankf. Moore,
of
dawn
1840, 713c.
belongings.
to love
Cranford and
its
belongings.
the
Mrs. Gaskell,
Cranford,
clippings.
The
i.
clippings
are
wastefully
thrown
into
river.
M a n c h.
Guardian. 1 )
cutting(s).
ii.
A
*
May
31.
The diggings, as they term the places where the lead diggings, about sixteen miles distant. Marryat. j )
**
is
found, were
the
hamper and
in
started
off
to
Jerome,
J
ii.
It
was
a goldfield
and a diggings
like
far-away Australia.
to
Boldewood.
drainings.
You would
In
have the best of everything, and the your baby handy. G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. XVIII, 117.
his
first
earnings.
all
It
him woke
With
babe's
first
To
save
Ten.,
Enoch Arden,
my
earnings.
86.
was my
G.
Moore, Esth.
Waters,
Ch. XXII,
154.
hangings.
She
set
fire
to the
Ch. Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
"Where am
Holy Virgin! do
these hangings "This room Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VI, 47. The incomings and outgoings of his private purse are faithfully set
dream
still!
Gaz .,
Saturday the Englishmen's first innings was completed for 312. innings, The Englishmen's innings was finished off for the addition of six runs.
ii.
On
Times.
Id.
The innings was declared closed. Daily Mail, The county were therefore victorious by an innings and 22 runs. Times. At the Oval on Wednesday Kent were beaten by an innings and 345 runs.
is
Id.
journeyings. In the course of his two months' journeyings the President to deliver no fewer than seventy-five set speeches. Times.
expected
*)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
leavings.
Their leavings
i.
159
all
made
the waiters.
,
Graph,
i)
lodging(s).
Dick.
Little Dorrit,
Mrs.
in his lodging.
1,310.
They
hired
quiet
I,
Van. Fair,
losings.
Thack.,
My
Id.,
Sam.
Titm., Ch. I, 2. One hears of the winnings, Esth. Waters, Ch. IV,
outgoings.
parings.
a
fleet of
The balance
1
of
Law Times.
The
prattle
of
potato parings.
Hal., Ch.
I, 6.
saving(s).
ii.
The i. 816.000 not yet "issued" by the Treasury, will, we may assume, be paid out before long, and cannot be regarded as a saving. Times, The savings of years of economy. Webst. Diet., s. v. savings. You will find nothing but three pound five of my own savings. G. Eliot,
,
Mam., Ch. I, 8. His illness made a big hole Ch. XXI, 146.
Sil.
in
her savings.
G. Moore,
Esth. Waters,
surroundings. It took the servants by surprise, and made them feel that they were out of place in such surroundings. lb., Ch. XXXIII, 237. Mr. Boyce was not very favourably struck with his daughter's surroundings.
Mrs. Ward, Marc. I, Ch. II, 13. Venice and its surroundings. Encycl. s. v. Venice. The patient should be removed from overwork, and from bad hygienic sur.
Harmsworth
roundings.
Id., s. v. phthisis.
sweepings.
They
sent
him
Mac,
1 i
e.
The sweepings
Diet.,
s. v.
sweepings.
the trappings and the suits of woe. Haml., I, 3, 86. trappings. The gold wrought into his armour, with the gorgeous trappings of his charger, betokened his rank. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 15.
These but
Maisie would not even allow him to put one ring on one finger, and she would laugh at golden trappings. Rudy. Kipling, The Light that failed, Ch. V, 71. The heavy cart-horses slipped and stamped upon the rough stones, shaking their bells and trappings. Oscar Wilde, Dorian Gray, Ch. VI, 118.
winnings. The pocket-book note which had been the last Fair, II, Ch. XIX, 204.
fell
it
the
workings.
workings.
g) a
Ch. XIX. that were originally adjectives. words are now seldom, if ever, used as adjectives; they are marked with an *. Others are as yet more or less uncommon in the function of nouns; they are marked with an f. Of some we also meet with occasional or frequent instances of
great
many nouns
Some
of these
Murray.
160
the
singular, sometimes the healing art
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
physic
(now
with a different meaning. Note especially medicine (now chiefly archaic) and
colloquial);
1)
and physics
natural science.
The majority may be known by certain suffixes, belonging to the foreign element of the language, such as:
a)
able: i(dis)agreeables
t insepa-
^undesirables , vegetables.
* 0) al: academicals , annals, bacchanals , bridals, canonicals, chemicals, Credentials, *espousals, "t externals nuptials , pontificals , rationals (a),
,
iextraordinaries
necessaries.
S) ent: tpertinents.
e)
)
statistics, tactics.
Note.
It
will
be observed that most of these nouns in ics are names These are singular in meaning, and are, accordingly,
The first nouns in ic of this kind that were adopted in English (before 1500), mostly had the singular form, and this form has been retained to the present day in some, such as arithmetic, logic, magic, music, rhetoric. The plural logics seems to be in occasional use.
In
recent
have preferred
polemic, etc.
times some writers, following German and French usage, to use the singular throughout: dynamic, economic,
Names of practical matters, such as gymnastics, politics, tactics usually remain plural in construction as well as in form. Such of these words in ics as have an uncertain construction have the verb to be in the singular, when the nominal part of the predicate
is a science. them are occasionally found in the singular number with the indefinite article, or preceded by a word denoting number. Murray; Webster; Storm, Eng. Phil. 2 686; Wendt, E. S., XV, 471; id., Syntax des Adjectivs, 48; id., Synt. des heut. Eng., 131.
is
a singular: mathematics
of
Some
II. Jjridal, really a compound (bride-ale), has assumed its present form and pronunciation through association with the adjectives of Latin
origin in
III.
al.
is
J/uptial
used
I,
in the singular
II,
by Shakespeare, except
in
two
instances.
(Othello,
Mids.,
instance in
IV.
For the 2, 8; Pericles, V, 3, 80). 1, 125, the second and later folios read nuptialls.
Victuals governs the singular number of the indefinite numerals: much (little) victuals. Poets often use the singular victual to avoid the common-place associations attaching to the word, but the singular is
also frequent in dialects.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
aesthetics.
the
161
Recognising thus the true position of aesthetics and holding that, while of them should form a part of education from its commencement, Ch. I, 316. such cultivation should be subsidiary. Spenc, Educ.
cultivation
,
bridal(s).
ii.
i.
The
bridal of Triermain.
Scott. Ten.
,
(1)
Mar. of G
r.
231.
wonder
Smol.,
Rod.
Most
of us, at
some moment
any sort
in
of canonicals or uncanonicals.
our young lives, would have welcomed a priest of G. Eliot, Mill, VI,
credential (s).
he
will
i.
If
carry
he goes, he will leave Trinity a sound classical scholar ... and credential which will always be of infinite value to his career.
7.
Philips,
Mrs. Bouverie,
ii.
Haldane has produced a new Army scheme, which has at least this great credential in its favour: it reduces the money spent on the Army by two millions instead of increasing the expenditure. Rev. of Rev., CCVII, 2286. He had no credentials and the whole mission was a joke, a mere farce. Mac,
Mr.
Fred.,
(6706).
liberality is well represented by his surviving partner" presenting his credentials. Dick., Christm. Car., 1,9.
"We
said
than
better disagreeables. A little credulity helps one on through life very smoothly always doubting and doubting and seeing difficulties and disagreeables in everything. Mrs. Gaskell, C ran ford, Ch. XI, 212.
essential(s).
in
ii.
i.
They
still
make
any negotations. Times, Mr. Timothy Shelley was a very ordinary country gentleman in essentials, and a rather eccentric one in some details. W. M. Rossetti, Shelley's Adonais,
,
Memoir of Shel. 3. The anecdote is in its essentials confirmed by two independent witnesses. W. Gunnyon Biographical Sketch of Burns, 34. Economics has come out into the open. Eng. Rev., 1912, July, 638. economics, ii. He really understood economics in fact, he had invented them. Chesterton
,
i.
(II.
Lond. News,
i.
ethics,
Ethics
Sir
is
the
of
the
agents.
ii.
W. Hamilton,
also ethics
,
To Spencer
Such
,
was
the
crown
the
human
the
thought. 2 )
it
Rom.
externals.
individual
are
ethics
play.
Dowden
d.
to
was at bottom the same have already described. Smol., Rod. Rand, Ch. XXI, 136. Externals have a great effect on the young.. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XI, 116. extraordinary(ies)\ i. She made it (sc. her behaviour) look like an extraordinary.
Howsoever
his externals might be altered, he
I
Gawky whom
Richardson.
ii.
The blank
lines are
left
for
any extraordinaries
that
O r d. A r m y. 3)
may
occur.
Regul. and
Not only the king's ordinary revenues, but the extraordinaries. Carlyle. 3) Extraordinaries comprehend the expenses for barracks, marches, encampments, Stocqueler. 3 ) staff, etc. fundamentals. The worshippers of this deity had also a system of their belief, which seemed to turn upon the following fundamentals. Swift, Tale of a Tub,
Sect.
!)
II.
Webster.
,
*)
Wendt
48.
3)
Murray.
1 1
H.
162
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
the
Given these two fundamentals, upon which the mandate of Ministers is unmistakable, Bill is remarkable for the tenderness with which it deals with denominational
schools.
4506.
It would be utterly contrary to the beautiful economy of Nature, gymnastic(s). if one kind of culture were needed for the gaining of information and another were needed as a mental gymnastic. Spencer E d u c. Ch. 1 36o.
,
miscellaneous activities of his life, he gains a better balance of physical powers than gymnastics ever give. lb., Ch. I, 36a. Esth. Waters, hysterics. The youngest was subject to hysterics. G. Moore
ii.
Through
the
Ch. XX,
135.
indescribables.
indescribables.
Dick.,
I
Mr. Trotter gave four distinct slaps on the pocket of his mulberry Pickw. Ch. XVI, 141.
,
inseparables.
intellectuals.
of their
hope we
shall
Id.,
Sketches by Boz.i)
Those instructions they give being too refined workmen. Swift, Gul. Trav. III, Ch. II, (1676).
,
invisibles.
You
i.
are
as
Swedenborg
Lamb.
mathematics,
maticians.
Mathematics
s.
is
its
Murray,
3
)
v. ic, 2.
stand
upon which
I
is
De
ii.
Quincey.
It
was those
infernal
mathematics,
one's
which
Thack.,
manners masculine?
they are not
But
still
womanly
in
Sarah Grand,
34.
irreconcilables. The prospect of two General Elections have abated the zeal of the irreconcilables. Rev. of
Rev., CXCVII,
metaphysics.
All parts of
knowledge have
their origin in
metaphysics, and
in its
perhaps, revolve into //. De Quincey. 3) The Scotch metaphysics he (sc. Carlyle) respects as being, protest against sensationalism. J. D. Morell. 9)
day,
a powerful
movable(s).
ii.
i. Every movable was packed off. Dick., Christm. Car.', 11,37. palace furnished with the most rich and princely movables. Evelyn. 3) i.
necessary
ii.
(ies). Maps are a necessary for children. Lit. World, The valley supplied its inhabitants with all the necessaries of life. Johnson, R ass el as, Ch. I, 5. was not only destitute of necessaries, but even of food. Smol., Rod. Rand.,
I
ii.
at
It
her house.
Golds.,
that
Vic,
the
Ch.
XXXI,
(465).
at
nuptials
should be celebrated
unfold
Cashmere.
Moore,
Lalla Rookh.
optics.
that
optics
teach,
To
Thy form
to please
me so? Campb.,
Hawthorne,
optics
Fijn
van Draat,
De Drie Talen,
XIV.
2)
Murray.
*)
Webst.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
pathetics.
with
the
163
friction
this,
he inflicted a
c
little
on
sleeve
after the
,
Dick.
of actors
when
they
pertinents. of Argyll
,
with
it
all
its
pertinents
is let to six
tenants.
The Duke
Scotland as
i.
was and
science
of
as
it
is.
phonetics,
Phonetics
is
the
speech-sounds.
Sweet,
Primer of
Phonetics.
Since then phonetics has made no progress in this country. lb. Phonetics is still regarded by the majority of educated persons as either a fad or a fraud, possibly a pious one. H. C. Wyld, Hist. Study of the Mothertongue, I n tro d., 16. Phonetics are in a much more advanced state. Sweet, Handb. of Phon., 100.
ii.
Note.
physic(s).
In
Sweet's
phonetics
latest publication
is
English,
i.
Sounds
of
To
admit
certificates
of ascertaining a regular education. J o u r n. , XIX, 468.-') As bad as the wrong physic, nasty to take and sure to disagree.
Med.
G. Eliot,
45a.
Mid., Ch.
ii.
X.
Physics
After
all
is
the
mother
of the sciences.
Spencer,
Education,
Ch.
II,
this
Daily N e w s. 3)
polemic(s).
Its
ii.
i. Plato's constant polemic against them. Lewes, Hist. Phil., 116. columns have been humming ever since with vehement polemic. Rev. of Rev., CCVI, 128a. Religious polemics have seldom formed a part of my studies. H. K. White. 2) i.
politics,
Politics, as a profession,
to him.
Trol.,
Framl. Pars.,
Politics is a
*
ii.
Ch.
II,
14.
game. Chesterton (1 1. Lond. News, No. 3690, 40c). were excluded. Ch. Lamb., Es. of Elia, South-Sea House. Cape politics had been so disagreeable a subject that persons in authority at the Colonial Office dismissed them from their minds. Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 48. English politics are free from that acerbity. Escott, England, Ch. XXII, 401. What is it? Nothing about politics, I hope? They don't interest me. Osc. Wilde, Dorian Gray, Ch. VI, 98. ** She had spared the time from her idleness to cultivate a language or two, a little music, a few politics. Beatr. Harraden, The Fowler, Ch. HI, 32.
Politics
in his regimentals.
regimentals. He now, therefore, entered, handsomely dressed Golds. Vic, Ch. XXXI (468). Perhaps their regimentals are alike, and she is something blind.
, ,
Sher.,
Rivals,
V, 2,
(.260).
reprisal(s). i. Such a proceeding would be barbarous if used towards any other nation, but would only be a just reprisal against the British. Times. They use every effort to scare the people of this country into some kind of
ii.
may be gathered from the following instance. No. CCCXCVII, 536. The neighbouring kings were but too ready to make reprisals on him for his, Ch. V, 366. champion's murders and robberies. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Japan is in a position to exercise reprisals against them. Times.
That
Nineteenth Cent.,
Fijn
van Draat,
E. S.,
De Drie Talen,
471.
XIV.
Murray.
3)
Wendt,
XV,
164
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
repectables. For 'respectables' to settle in such slums Where toil hums, And Is not nice. Punch. to dwell admidst much dirt and noise and vice Some of the 'respectables' objected to the enrolment of the bard. W. Gunnyon, Biographical Sketch of Burns, 38.
| |
|
* Accurate statistics may be difficult to obtain, but they are the only statistic(s). i. basis on which the work of dealing with the disease must rest. Rev. of Rev.,
CC,
185a.
show that moderate consumers of alcoholic drinks live considerably longer than drunkards and total abstainers. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., II, Ch.X, 180. Taking the experience from these official statistics, we are in a position to say
Statistics
[etc.].
Westm. Gaz.
W.
L.
No. 4949,
lc.
** Mr.
concerning
Wilson contributes
statistics to
He
ii.
cited
numerous
show
Times.
Now
tactics.
The Boer
tactics
were admirable.
Times.
Rev.
a certain extent these tactics have been successful. Id. President Roosevelt has shown himself fully aware of these insidious tactics.
To
of Rev., CCXIII.
theatricals.
*
It
2256.
(sc. \vh) is
commonly heard
at
recitals
taught by professors of elocution, and is, therefore, and also at amateur theatricals. W. Rippmann, The
26.
Sounds
**
I
of
Spoken English,
,
got the orders from my old friend Scrauncher, who does the theatricals for the Daily Scarifier. Miss braddon Captain Thomas.
China Town was honeycombed underground by% passages down undesirable. which criminals and other undesirables disappeared. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 608a.
valuables.
The
i.
Thack., Van.
Fair.
*
victual(s).
If
for
down your
wants.
Bacon
New
Atlantis,
(270).
|
** There came a fair-hair'd youth, that in his hand Bare victual for the mowers. Ten. ,Ger. and Enid, 202. Glad to be gone from a land of sand and sickness and sorrow, Short allowance of victual, and plenty of nothing but Gospel. Lonof., Courtship of Miles
|
St an dish, V.
*** In
this country, where there's some shelter and victual for man and beast. G.Eliot, Adam Bede, I, Ch. VI, 65. * Nor could all the world persuade him, as the common phrase is, to eat his victuals like a Christian. Swift, Tale of a Tub, XI, (906).
ii.
**
***
Herrings are a light victuals. Swift.-') My children can eat as much victuals as most, thank God.
I,
G. Eliot, Mill,
Ch.
4.
i.
vital(s).
Forced
to
burn
inwardly and
501.
keep the fire of my nature continually low, to compel it to never utter a cry, though the imprisoned flame consumed this would be unendurable. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch.
,
XXXIV,
ii.
Diet. Corruption of manners preys upon the vitals of the state. Webst. A man in an officer's uniform in Prussia is a little God the uniform makes the deity. Now when it is seen how easy it is for ex-convicts to obtain a uniform, the cult has been hit in its vitals. Rev. of Rev., CCIII, 4586.
i)
2)
48.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
2)
165
Many do
greens, hards
rapids, roughs, savages, shorts (a), smalls (a), sullens (c), tights (a), sweets, wilds, whites woollens. Here we may mention also the names of certain regiments, parties,
Note
in
more or
II.
Murray.
getter as a singular
is
or
station
in
singular
better, 7.
is not uncommon. When superiority in rank question, the plural betters is sometimes met with as a writers of the 16th to the 18th century. Murray, s. v.
in
bitter
fitter is occasionally found in the singular in the sense of a substance in general. In the sense of bitter, unpleasant experiences and in that of a liquor seasoned by a bitter substance, the plural seems to be regular.
III.
the sense of black clothing worn in mourning is said belong to an older stage of the language and to Lowland Scotch. Compare / found him in deep sables (Thack., Lovel, Ch. I, In the meaning of black or dress trousers it has only recently 23). come into use. To denote a man of black skin the singular is not infrequent, but the usual application of the word in this sense is the collocation the blacks, i. e. the black people as a class. It may here be observed that the corresponding use of white in the sense of a man of white skin seems to be confined to the plural. (XVI.) See also Wendt,
IV.
lacks
in
by
Murray
to
of certain companies and as the name of a certain disease, (c) VI. Commons is used as a plurale tantum to denote persons or provisions. Note especially short commons insufficient rations, scant In the sense of House of Commons, the word is sometimes fare. followed by the singular form of the finite verb, and referred to by
of troops
die Synt. des Adj. im heut. Eng., 43. V. glues is a strict plurale tantum as the name
singular pronouns.
VII.
style.
goods
is
VIII. greens as a plurale tantum is colloquially used in the meaning of green vegetables, such as are boiled for the table, and, especially in America, to denote freshly-cut branches or leaves for decoration.
IX. Jtfodern is regularly used in the plural in the moderns the nations which arose out of the ruins of the empires of Greece and Rome, the people of which are called 'the ancients'. Smart. The singular is
man of modern
times.
166
X.
CHAPTER XXV,
JYews
is
19.
now hardly felt as an adjective converted into a noun. but regularly construed as a singular in every respect, but is never found preceded by the indefinite article: for the Dutch een nieuwtje English has a piece (an item) of news (36). In Shakespeare news is often construed as a plural: the news, the news are good. In the latest English such constructions are felt as archaisms, except, perhaps,
It
is
now
all
in
describing
XI.
news
the
phrases Whafs the matter?) See however Ch. XXVI, 186. It is construed as a plural in the meaning of a) superiority in numbers or resources ( Dutch overwicht, overmacht); /S) chances, especially
in the
meaning almost entirely. It is meaning of difference, especially in the odds? or Where's the odds? (= What does
adjectival
In the
to
the
meaning of advantage conceded by one of the parties in proportion assumed chances in his favour (= Dutch voorgift), usage is
divided.
In many connections the number of odds is not shown. See the 4th group of quotations below, where some instances exhibiting different meanings are given. The combination odds and ends may be an alteration of odd ends.
Murray,
XII.
s.
v.
odds,
7.
is
much
less
common.
XIII. 7{ough (= rough fellow, Dutch woesteling) is mostly used in the plural, but the singular is not uncommon. The singular seems to be quite usual in the sense of a man who is averse to ceremony (= Dutch
r
we
k e
r e 1).
,
is mostly found in the plural both in the sense of a narrow pass(age) (either in a mountain or in the ocean), and in that of distressing necessity; but the singular is not infrequent.
XIV.
Strait
XV.
XVI.
current
Sweet
White
only
For sweet
in the
as a singular in the meaning of sweet thing is also met with. sense of a sweet person woman or girl see Ch. XXXIX, 18rf.
in
the
sense of a
man of a
the whites,
in
the
collocation
a class.
* The ancient, it may be, were too severe. Hooker. 1 ) ancient(s). i. Neither is there any likelihood that enuie and malignity died and were buried with the ancient. Bible Trans 1., Pref. !)
**
***
The
jv\y
only
method by which
i)
a poet
may reckon on
himself.
Lowell,
father,
,
sir,"
"How
are you,
my
ancient?"
Dick.,
P
ii.
c k w.
Ch. XX.
We
better(s).
always return to the writings of the ancients. Sir W. Jones. j ) i. It never entered his head that he was in any respect
their better.
Thack.,
Pend.
I,
Ch.
XXX,
317.
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
167
* The family endeavour to cope with their betters. Golds., Vic, Ch. X. The distinctions lately paid us by our betters awakened that pride which laid asleep, but not
had
removed.
lb.
**
I
A squire or a gentleman, or one that was her betters. Steele, Spect., CCLXVI. look upon myself as her betters. Fielding, Jos. Andrews, IV, Ch. I, 203.
i.
bitter(s).
little
bitter
II,
mingled
XXI.
i)
in
Hum. Underst.,
ii.
Camomile yields a useful bitter. Murray. Whether Mrs. Blifil had been surfeited with the sweets of marriage or disgusted will not determine. Fielding, Tom Jones, III, Ch. VI, 38a. by its bitters ...
I
Seek the sweets of life, the bitters come. 2) Some Americans drinking their morning's bitters.
J.
Flint, Let.
first
Amer.
54.2)
had
laid
time.
G. Eliot,
Mill,
,
his
master's
toilette.
Thack., Virg.
Ch.
XLVI,
The jailer was touched at the sight of the black's grief. lb., 486. The black will lose nothing that he now has. Westm. Gaz. No.
,
4925,
lc.
ii.
poor uncle.
Punch.
me
out with a
**
Aly
old
blacks
show
the
new
***
pair.
Thack.
It was more of the red men and the blacks that we were afraid. Thack., Virg., Ch. XC, 955. There have been no risings of blacks against whites in the Transvaal. Froude,
Oceana,
blues.
Ch.
Ill
47.
Vainly endeavouring to prevail on their soldiers to look the Dutch blues in the face. Mac, Hist., Ch. XVI.
Ten. The First Quarrel, XIII. bygones. Let bygones be Once set thinking of bygones by the stimulus of Mellor and its novelty, Marcella must needs think, too, of her London life. Mrs. Ward, Marc, I, Ch. II, 15.
!
* Let but the commons hear this testament. commons, Jul. Caes. III, 2, 735. ** The Commons resolved that made acquisitions by the arms of the State belong to the State alone Mac, Clive, (539a).
i.
,
The House
up
into
it
of Lords has the right to discuss and throw out any measure sent from the Commons, and the Commons has the same right in regard
lost
ii.
Anna Buckland, Our Nat. Inst., 15. much in his going, It welcomes him back as it welcomes back all able men who can minister to its fondness for the sharp clash of intellect against intellect. West. Gaz., No. 5255, Ac. *** The Commons were dealing with the largest Naval Estimates ever presented to the country. Westm. Gaz., No. 5261 4a. Sizar = one of a class of students in Cambridge University who get their commons
to bills
The Commons
The
a long grace
T wi s t, Ch. II, 33. Short commons, no work and intolerable dulness do pull a fellow down. Lyall Donovan, II 47.
, ,
Edna
Busi-
goods,
i.
He has
strongly
recommended me
I.
to
make
trial
of your goods.
Murray.
i)
Konrad Meier,
E. S.,
XXXI,
321.
168
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
G. Eliot,
Mid.
greens.
The
make
excellent 'greens'.
DuChaillu, Equat.
WASh.
in
Africa.
**
Two
great
wax
tapers,
Irv. 3)
The
staircase
greens',
use an
expression
current
the
States.
ob
i.
minute(s).
ii.
The minute of a letter to Elizabeth was submitted to the ambassador. Motley, N ether 1., VII, Ch. I, 409. i) The Minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. Folklore, Vol.
XI, 2, 184.
modern(s). But here the severe reader may justly tax me as a writer of short memory, a deficiency to which a true modern cannot but, of necessity, be a little Tale of a Tub, Sect. VI {75a). subject. Swift ii. In these abstracted tasks of poetry the moderns outvie the ancients. Leigh Hunt, A Few Thoughts on Sleep, (W. Peacock, S e 1. Es., 292). The ancients had not yet been permitted to condemn the moderns to the lot of humble imitators. Francis Jeffreys, Es. Ford, 41.
,
Came from
the north,
and thus
if
did import.
Henry
III,
Henry
so
How
dares
thy
harsh
rude tongue
Rich.
II,
As cold waters
far country.
Bible,
25.
news runs apace. Bain, H. E. Or., 130. These news are everywhere; every tongue speaks them. Henry VIII, II, 2, 39. I can tell you strange news that you yet dreamt not of As Are they good? the event stamps them; but they have a good cover, they show well outward.
HI *
Much
ado.,
I,
2,
in
47.
Perth?
Id.,
Farquhar, Const. Couple, I, 1, (49). Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXX, 312. Whose moody aspect soon declared, That evil were the news he heard.
These are no news What are the news
at all.
|
Lady,
But
tell
II, xxvii.
are your news of a sad or pleasant complexion ? Id. Ch. XXV, 322. (Thus, apparently, regularly in this novel.) Such were the news. Thack.. Henry Esm. II, Ch. I, 157.
me
u e n
t.
Durw.,
Id.,
Van. Fair,
lb., I,
II,
27.
He could
not
face
his
mistress
Ch.
Ten., Gar.
and Lyn.
534.
The News
to join the
Boer commandos.
little
it
Times.
Id.
No news
odds.
**
i.
So long as
helps
And
arter all
sooner or later, what's the odds? Thack., Pend., Ch.XVIII, 194 me; and don't hurt you, what's the odds? Punch. Ch. XIX, 167. though, where's the odds. Dick., Pickw.
,
no great odds betwixt us. Dick. 5) no great Honour in getting a Victory when odds
686.
,
is taken.
Bailey. 6 )
)
) )
VI.
*)
v.
muddle.
r
<)
s.
v.
s. v.
s.
v.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
169
lie.
Judging Locke. j )
**
In
is
We
spite
Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 14. courage, they are no match for our trained soldiers even
at
odds in favour of fame against failure so great? IV, Ch. Ill, 91. Even thus the odds were against him. Mac, Fred., (6886). The odds are in my favour. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake,
iii.
Times.
Lytton, Caxt.
,
II,
that
he would
kill
Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXIV, "I'll bet you twenty-five cents to a gold watch that you can't guess what's at Routh's." to a gold watch? Oh see. happened "Twenty-five cents Thank you the odds don't tempt me. What did happen?" Mar.' Crawf.,
I
Kath. Laud.,
iv.
II,
These companies are to-day by all odds the greatest power in the world. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 4196. (= far and away). ** do not know that Englishman alive With whom my soul is any jot at odds.
I
|
Rich. Ill, II, 1, 70. (= in disagreement.) The Council are all at odds. Ten., Queen Mary, II, 1, (5956). *** That makes no odds. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVI, 171. **** He gave the odds of 100 to 1 (in twenties) against Kangoroo, who won the Derby. Thack. Van. Fair. ***** It is not strange that even his heart should now and then have sunk when he reflected against what odds and for what a prize he was in a few hours to
,
contend. Mac, Clive, (518a). What warrior was there, however famous and skilful, that could fight at odds with him? Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXII, 350. ****** It is odds but I make a hairpin of it (sc. the straw). Ch. Reade, the Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. II, 12. (= It is not improbable, the
chances
v.
are.)
is filled
My
brain
with
all
He began
posteriors.
to
kinds of odds and ends. Wash. Irv. 1 ) of the greatest music. Ouida. 2 )
This leader had usually a favourite as like himself as he could get, to lick his master's feet and posteriors. Swift, Gul. Trav:, IV, Ch. VII, (2036).
i.
Mortal
XLI.
boat
In
float.
Shelley,
a,
Witch, When
brook
ii.
,
|
thought
my
thirst
Would
Ten.
slay
,
me
(I)
Holy Grail,
The Lachine rapids in the St. Laurence. Webst. rough(s). i. She is much too good for such a rough as I am. Thomas, W. Goring. 3) ii. There was a lot of Irish chaps, reg'lar roughs, a-breaking stones. Hughes, Tom Brown. You gave me time, to breathe; allowed me to play with the savage. savage(s).
i.
Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. I, 81. The savage only appears stupid, because
stand him.
ii.
Times,
interior is inhabited
by a race
Rev.
385a.
i)
2)
VI.
8)
Flugel.
170
strait(s). i. his fate.
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
* And since the day, when in the strait His only boy had met Byron Siege of Corinth, 760. ** You would be glad that she would have some one to protect her in such
\
a strait.
ii.
Mrs.
Ward
David Grieve,
III
98.
At this distance he hoped to decoy the enemy out, while he guarded against the danger of being caught with a westerly wind near Cadiz, and driven within the Straits. Southey, Life of Nelson, Ch. IX, 247.
**
I
have been shocked to think of the straits you have been reduced
to.
11,111. I forbid you to touch this, unless you are in the last straits. II. Mag. The merchants who traded with these parts were now driven to sore straits,
Edna Lyall,
Donovan,
to
them from
sweet(s).
*
i.
Bern. Shaw,
You
never can
ii.
tell,
II, (257).
of
prosperity.
arm
in
arm, again
,
Jane Austen, North. Ab., Ch. V, 23. ** Sweets to the V, 1, 266. sweet; farewell! Haml. I enter'd, from the clearer light Imbower'd vaults of pillar'd palm, Imprisoning sweets, which, as they clomb Heavenward, were stay'd beneath the dome Of hollow boughs. Ten., Rec. of the Arab. Nights, IV.
|
| |
whites,
i.
Mr. Uppington
made an arrangement
Froude,
Oceana,
till
Ch.
Ill,
61.
iii.
The eyes of the dancing girls of Rev., CXCVIII, 618a. The interests of all white men in
i.
rolled
Rev.
Id.,
CCVI,
117a.
sometimes Who dwell' this wild, constrained by want, come wild(s). forth To town or viflage nigh. Milton, Par. Reg., I, 331. A wild where weeds and flow'rs promiscuous shoot. Pope, Essay on
|
We
Man,
I,
7.
III.
The King was hunting in the wild. Ten., Victim, And close beneath, a meadow gemlike chased In Ger. and Enid, 219.
|
the
brown
wild.
Id.,
ii.
But hosts
may
in these wilds
I
,
abound,
Such as are
Scott
Lady,
xvi.
The wilds of America. Webst. Then he cried again, 'To the wildsl'
|
Ten.,
Ger.
or
and Enid,
28.
h)
the
Latin
aborigines, agenda, anthropophagi , antipodes, arcana, data, effluvia, errata, facetiae, fasces, Flor alia, insignia, lares, larvae, lemur es, manes, minutiae, paraphernalia, penates, postulata, propaganda , regalia. In this connection we may also mention the Anglicized Latin words: calends {kalends), ides, nones.
I.
been formed.
we
ginal for the singular. Of most usual, its plural is sometimes used instead of aborigines.
(in 4 syllables) has also find aborigen (aborigin), and aborithese singulars aboriginal seems to be the
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
II. J7genda is memorandums in.
171
a book for writing
occasionally met
when denoting
-III.
is
with.
IV.
Murray.
jffntipodes
was formerly, quite regularly, pronounced in three This gave rise to the formation of a singular antipod(e), which is still used in the transferred sense of the exact opposite of a person or The plural form antipodes seems to be more usual in thing. Murray.
syllables.
this
meaning.
V.
jfircanum
In
is
mostly
used
in the plural, but the singular is not English arcana was sometimes treated as a
Murray.
Observe that
for the
has date, dates. VII. as a Effluvium singular does not seem to be very rare. The plural effluvia has often been carelessly, or ignorantly, treated as a singular with a new plural effluvias or effluviae.
rare as a singular.
Dutch
Erratum occurs mostly in the plural, but the singular is also met Modern English 's or es was sometimes added to mark the In the same period errata was sometimes construed plural more distinctly. as a singular in the sense of list of errata. Murray.
VIII.
with.
In Early
IX.
X.
XI.
paraphernalia
Jnsignia is sometimes erroneously used as a singular with a plural is sometimes construed as a singular.
in as.
to
has. passed into the language of the common people, has lost all character of a plural. We find it, therefore, regularly dealt with as an ordinary singular. Of the other loan-words mentioned above the singular is practically never used, and they are always construed as plurals.
Propaganda
it
whom
* The Cimex lectularius is apparently an aborigin of the country. aborigines etc. i. R. F. Burton, i) ** American an aborigine of the American continent; now called an 'American
,
Indian'.
Murray,
s.
v.
American.
The
Australian aborigine is not a great or serious foe to his neighbour. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 503, 808c. The aborigine is a true nomad. lb., 8086. *** The thoughtless aboriginal is delighted at the approach of the white man.
Darwin.
ii.
*)
It
will
be as well
by the name
officially
given to
it.
The Govern-
ment
'aboriginals', the word 'native' is almost universally applied to white colonists born in Australia. Trol. j ) ** The aborigines of Germany had their bards, their battle-songs and their sacrificial
styles
them
songs.
i.
B. Taylor,
i)
agenda, Notwithstanding all that has been done there still remain many agenda. Maury, i) ii. Agenda is also used for a book containing notes or memorandums of things necessary to be done. Chambers, Cycl. Sup. 1 ) anthropophagus (i). i. That same hair-mantled flint-hurling Aboriginal Anthropophagus.
l
Carlyle.
i)
Murray.
172
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
A poor New Zealander, whose forefathers had from time anthropophagi. J. Lang. *)
i.
immemorial been
antipode(s).
* Forbes he hated, for he was the very antipode to himself. Macdonald. G. !) ** He was a man in all respects the antipodes to Richard Seddon. Rev. of Rev., CXCIX, 11a. Alfred Beit was in almost every respect its exact antithesis and antipodes. lb., CC, 139a.
ii.
One of the reassuring signs of the times is the attention which is being paid to the curse of gambling both here and in the Antipodes. lb., CCIII, 4626.
(a),
arcanum
The
ii.
infallible
Under
the
arcana of
The pursuit of the great arcanum. Scott, Ke nil worth, Ch. XXII. i) arcanum for that purpose. Burke, i) impression that you might have some difficulty in penetrating the the Modern Babylon in the direction of the City Road [etc.]. Dick.,
i.
,
Cop.,
Ch. XI
786.
The Romans reckoned the days forward to the Kalends, Thus 'on the 27th of May' was ante diem sextum This was loosely rendered into English as 'the sixth of the
following.
Kalends
Kalends
of June.
Murray.
in the calculation,
datum
ii.
material
datum
namely, the
As
interpretation of the
principal
own
judgment.
Lytton,
the police.
Rienzi, Preface.
had given, the man would at once be identified by Hugh Conway, Called Back, Ch. X, 116. * The doctrine that magnetism is an effluvium issuing effluvia, etc.
i.
forth
from
ii.
the root of the tail of the Little Bear. Draper, i) ** A strong effluvia of the stable. Beckford. *) * The face of the sun will by degrees be encrusted with
its
own
effluvia. Swift,
Gul. Trav., Ill, Ch. II, (168). Its rooms and passages steamed with
striving vainly to
overcome
hospital smells, the drug and the pastille the effluvia of mortality. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre,
The putrid effluviae in prisons. Imison. *) The fam'd Perfumes of Summer Men to Rapture with effluvias move. T. Paine, i) * The errata, etc. company of stationers made a very remarkable Erratum or Blunder in one of their Editions of the Bible. Spectator, DLXXIX. i) ** Such Misnomers are so frequent in him, as might make a sufficient Errata
***
]
**
i.
ii.
at the * The
end
J.
of his History.
Heylin.
*)
errata
are
j
the
body
of the
work or
Swift,
at the
end
of
it.
Johnson.
** That a number of errata's be raised out of Pope's *** The errataes at the end of the books. Gerbier. *)
Homer.
i)
facetiae.
He read
All
tit-bits
from
its
columns
of facetiae
which made
me
the melanII,
now
behold.
James Payn,
Glow-Worm. Tales,
all
A,
18.
fasces.
of
the
same proud
patrician blood,
fasces and to
Floralia.
command
Floralia
the legions.
were popular festivals at which naked courtesans danced unpunished before the eyes of the citizens. Rev. of Rev., CCX, 575.
The
*)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
insignia(as).
ii.
i.
173
the dreaded insignia
In his
of his office.
*
Wash.
**
in
Freeman.
)
1 )
fool's
In
lares,
(the find
lemures.
Roman
belief the
Larvae,
in contrast to the
Lares
good spirits of the departed), were the souls of dead people who could no rest, either owing to their own guilt, or from having met with some were supposed to wander abroad in indignity, such as a violent death.. They the form of dreadful spectres, skeletons, etc., and especially to strike the living
with
madness. Similar spectres of the night are the Lemures. Nettleship and Sandys, Diet. Clas. Antiquities. manes. Peace to the manes of the Bubble. Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia, South-
Sea House,
minutiae.
4.
Impatient speed and indifference to Symonds, the cardinal qualities of his intellect.
i.
among
last
Shelley,
the
Ch.
II,
15.
paraphernalia,
Romanticism
is
certainly
in
Escott,
ii.
England,
A ponderous paraphernalia
a concomitant of respectability.
O'Donovan.
penates. John Walter broke up his household in Printing House Square, set l up his penates at Bearwood. Pebody. ) set apart for the reception of visitors who rooms were These two penetralia. neither by rank nor familiarity were entitled to admission in the penetralia of the mansion. Lytton, Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. II, 15a, For six years she lived in the innermost penetralia of the Imperial Household. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII, 534a.
postulata. These postulata being admitted, of a Tub, Sect. II.
it
Swift,
Tale
propaganda,
ii.
i.
The
Catholics
and
the
their schools as
engines of sectarian propaganda. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII, 4526. A propaganda of mutual hate was raging between their subjects.
Rev. of
1086.
to meet.
Rev., CXCVIII, 5576. He insisted that propaganda was active in the Army. lb., CCXXIV, It is this direct propaganda of promises that the Free Traders have
Westm. Qaz.
I
No. 4949,
16.
have gotten the warrant for searching for the regalia. Scottish Crown. J. W. Croker. i)
i)
constellations.
islands, etc.:
the Azores, the Brazils, the Grisons, the Hebrides, the East (West) Indies, the Low Countries, the Moluccas, the Netherlands, the Sporades, the United States (of America).
2)
names
of
the Alps, the Andes, the Apennines, the Balkans, the Cameroons, the Carpathians , the Pyrenees, the Urals (= the Ural Mountains).
3)
names
the
of constellations,
such as:
Hyades,
Murray.
174
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
I. The numerous names of towns in s, such as Athens, Brussels, Marseilles, Treves, etc., and the noun Flanders are only apparent plurals, and are regularly construed as singulars.
Note
Lyons,
II. jT/p is occasionally met with in the singular. Shakespeare has Alps followed by a singular verb and referred to by a singular pronoun. Dickens humorously speaks of an Alps of testimony.
in
alcans is also the name of the States covering the peninsula mountain range is found. Similarly Camaroons is mostly used to denote the district in which this range of mountains is situated.
III.
Jhe
which
this
IV.
Jhe
razils
seems
to
be
giving
way
to
Brazil,
at least in the
Beit, zur
Alp(s).
his
ii.
i.
Jhe United States (of America) is also construed as a singular. Schulze, Feststellung des mod. eng. Sprachgebrauches, 19.
I
marked him
As a
far
Dawn on
ample brow. De Vere, Mary Tudor, IV, 1. * The Banner of St. George was carried far beyond the Pyrenees and the Alps. Macaulay. i) ** The valleys, whose vassal seat The Alps doth spit and void his rheum upon.
|
Henry
If
it
V,
came
required,
testimony.
they
scope of reasonable probability that further proofs were might be heaped upon each other until they formed an Alps of Ch. I, 4a. Dick., Chuz.
,
Antilles.
The
Antilles
Antilles.
into c
1.
s.
Cone. C y
Balkans. * The simplest way of solving the whole problem would be to move the Balkans southward and sink them in the Dardanelles. Graph. The highlands of East Servia form the transition between the Transylvanian Alps and the Balkans. Harmsworth Encyclopaedia, s. v. Servia.
** Uneasiness in the Balkans.
Times.
,
Unrest
in
the Balkans.
229a.
lb.,
he was twenty-two, he went with his regiment to the Balkans. There is certain to be war in the Balkans. lb., CCIV, 564a.
Brazil(s). i. He liked the Brazils.
.
When
CCII, 3636.
how
George Gaunt
(4996).
II,
Ch. XIV,
at the Brazils.
Mac, Clive,
of Portuguese
which he had acquired when a lad in Brazil. Canaries. He got clapt into the Inquisition
at
the
Canaries.
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!,
Downs. We cast anchor in the Downs about nine in the morning. Swift, Gul. Trav., IV, Ch. XI, (2136). Camaroons. In the Camaroons the German Empire already possesses a colony of
The
nearly 200.000 square miles in area. Times, No. 1803, 515a. rivers would be of the first importance for the trade of the Camaroons.
lb., 575a".
Himalayas.
The
c
I.
Himalayas
are
the
loftiest
mountains
in
the
world.
s.
Cone. C y
i)
Foels.-Koch,
Wiss. Gram.,
261.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Hyades.
Ten.,
cruel
175
Hyades
Vext the dim sea.
And when
Thro' scudding
the
Ulysses,
Much
and
10.
Indies.
against
minds
of
many
of
the
in
the
the
Low
Countries.
She
(sc.
Elizabeth)
VII,
was
Low
Countries.
Green,
Short
is
Hist.,
3, 371.
Moluccas.
Philippines.
for the last.
Amboyna
one
of the Moluccas.
C a s. Cone. C y
I.
Times.
Alcyone, the brighest of the Pleiades,
is
Pleiades.
ii.
United States were not a party. Times. The United States are not, as many Americans and some foreigners seem to imagine, exempt from the laws of nature. lb. * The United States is as anxious as Germany for the punishment of such
offenders.
Daily Telegraph.
is
German
Times.
not
will not participate in any effort to bring about mediation. any note of interrogation regarding Great Britain's
The United States has considerably increased this balance in its favour. lb. The United States will increase its fleet in the Pacific. e s t m. G a z. *** The United States, of course, still produces more wheat than she requires.
lb.,
is the greatest coal country, the greatest lead country and the greatest cotton country in the world. need not, therefore, be surprised to find that her imports are smaller than our own. lb., No. 5271, 4a.
We
****
The unoccupied
lands,
mtion whole continents large as a second United States were hurriedly abandoned to the local colonial governments. Froude, Oceana, Ch. I, 16.
Urals.
/)
We
many nouns
acclamations, amends, annals, annates, archives, arms, arrears, assets (13), auspices, banns, barracks, bounds, cates, chattels, clothes, confines, duds, environs, exequies, fallals, fumes, gallows, gewgaws, hallows,
justs
(=
jousts),
kickshaws,
lauds,
(dis)likes,
lineaments,
matins,
obsequies, (outskirts, perquisites, plaudits, precincts, proceeds, raptures, remains, roads, slops, sweepstakes , thanks, throes, tidings, togs, traps, vails (= vales), vespers, vestments, viands, wages, wares, weeds.
Note
II.
I.
jfec/amation
in
the
singular
is
found
in the
phrase by
acclamation.
jfmends
as
the
far
occurs chiefly in the collocation to make amends. As evidence goes, it is construed as a singular and may even
article.
176
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
III. jftnnal in the singular is sometimes used to denote the record or entry of a single year, or a single item in a chronicle.
IV.
ytrchive
is
sometimes found
is
in the singular.
b)
found in two meanings: a) weapons; jfirms heraldic insignia or devices. Note especially: those the following compounds and word-groups: fire-arms, small-arms ( not requiring carriages, as opposed to artillery) stand of arms (= complete
V.
as a plurale tantum
,
set
one soldier), man-at-arms (= one practised in war, fully-armed armed man), companion in arms; knight), man-in-arms ( the following phrases: to arms, in arms (= armed, prepared to fight), up in arms (= in active readiness to fight, actively engaged in struggle or rebellion), to take up arms, to bear arms (=to serve as a soldier), to lay down arms to turn one's arms against (= to make war upon to attack) under arms (= standing or marching arms in hand), Stand to your arms! (= Stand in order of battle with arms presented), Present arms! Shoulder arms! Slope arms! Trail arms! Carry arms! etc. See especially Sattler, E. S., XVI. The singular arm is used to denote a) a kind of troops of which an army is composed, b) a particular species of weapon. (Compare a wine,
for
,
, ,
a sugar
VI.
etc.)
is
jfrrear
mostly used
in the
and occasionally when not preceded by in. VII. JJuspices is always used in the plural in the sense of patronage, as in the expression under the auspices of. The plural is also usual in the meaning of omen, as in under the fairest auspices, and in the unusual, although
original,
VIII.
meaning
of observation
is
$arrack
mostly used
when
it
is
used
in its
ordinary
meaning: a set of buildings erected or used as a place of lodgement or residence for troops, but the singular is not uncommon. This is even the ordinary form when there is occasion to use the indefinite article or a distributive numeral: a barrack, every barrack. Sometimes we find the plural form after the indefinite article.
IX.
Chattel
single
is
distinctly
occasionally used in the singular, especially when a object has to be denoted. Note also goods and chattels,
all kinds of personal property. occasionally met with in the singular.
firstling
is
fume
in
certain
shades of meaning
is
occasionally found
in the
singular.
fallows is said to have become a singular. The evidence for this Instances are, indeed, is, however, somewhat unsatisfactory. given of gallows preceded by the indefinite article, but, none with a demonNor do the illustrative quotations adduced strative pronoun or a numeral. in Murray clearly show whether we should say the gallows is or are. There is a plural gallowses, but, according to Murray, this form is now seldom
XII.
statement
felt to
the older language used a pair of gallows, the present language a set of 8 gallows (36) (Murray, s. v. pair, 6). See also Hodgson, Errors , 144.
XIII.
Qewgaw
is
sometimes used
in the singular.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
XIV.
177
JCoJust, occasionally spelled giust, is sometimes met with to denote encounter, in which case it may be preceded by a numeral: a j(o)ust, two j(o)usts. The plural j(o)usts is also found with the indefinite article a j(o)usts.
a
single
:
XV.
Xike
in
is
seldom
common
XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
the
met with in the singular, but dislike is quite singular as the opposite of liking. Likes and dislikes are
sympathieen en antipathieen).
singular.
Jflatins
is
sometimes construed as a
is
now and
Precinct also
"Rapture
is
XIX.
XX.
Remain
in
some shades
of
meaning
is
the singular.
XXI. Roads seems to be the regular form when a proper name precedes: Yarmouth roads. When no such noun precedes, the singular form seems
to
be the
XXII.
rule.
Sweepstake
is
occasionally
found
in
the
singular
to
denote a
person staked
article,
plural regularly used to denote the money a horse-race. It may then be preceded by the indefinite
all.
The
is
otherwise treated as a plural. is always used as a singular in Shakespeare, except for the combinations a thousand thanks (Taming of the Shrew, II, 85; Henry V, IV, 4, 64; Henry VIII, I, 4, 74) and many thousand thanks (Henry VI, C. Ill, 2, 56). Thus we meet with much thanks little thanks that thanks, thanks., is, a liberal thanks. Alex. Schmidt, s. v. thanks. In Present English thanks seems to be ordinarily construed as a plural. Thus regularly in such phrases as many thanks for, our (all, no) thanks are due to. On the other hand it is dealt with as a singular in to get little (much) thanks. For the rest no sufficient evidence is available at the time of writing to settle all points of concord. Here mention may also be made of the prepositional phrases thanks to ( owing to, Dutch dank zij) and no thanks to (= no credit to, Dutch niet te danken aan).
XXIII.
Thanks
XXIV.
throes seems
to
be a
strict plurale
is
sometimes used
is
in the singular.
regularly construed as a plural throughout, used indiscriminately as a singular and a plural in Shakespeare. See Al. Schmidt, s. v. tidings. Scott has little tidings instead of few tidings.
Toil was formerly also found in the singular. XXVII. Vespers is sometimes construed as a singular and may be preceded by the indefinite article.
XXVI.
officiating
Vestments is especially used in the plural when the dress of clergymen is referred to: the ecclesiastical or sacerdotal vestments. Annand., Cone. Diet. In Shakespeare only the plural is met with.
XXVIII.
XXIX. "Wages is much more common than wage, but there is a decided tendency to use the singular form when a defining adjective precedes: living wage, average wage, etc., but board wage is only vulgarly used for
H.
II.
12
178
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
board-wages. The plural requires the plural form of the demonstrative pronouns, but the indefinite numerals are the singular. Compare also Ch. XXVI, 16. Occasionally it has the finite verb of which it is the subject placed in the singular. XXX. Wares is almost the only form, but the singular is regular in compounds, such as tinware, hardware, earthenware, etc. Thus also woman's ware, which may be regarded as a kind of compound.
XXXI. Weeds as the name of clothing is the ordinary form, besides which the singular weed is in ordinary use in Early Modern English, especially to denote a single garment. Except for the collocation widow's weeds, the word is now only met with in the higher literary style. For weed(s) as the name of a plant see below (20).
To
translate the
go beyond
XXXIV.
ciative or
in certain combinations, such as bounds, to keep within (due) bounds. ])uds is used only in slang or colloquial language as a depreall
humorous term.
has been preserved only in All-Hallows.
XXXV. fallows
XXXVI.
Togs, from the Latin toga, only used in slang or colloquial language, corresponds to the Dutch plunje. XXXVII. Traps, used only in slang or colloquial language, may be an
abbreviation of trappings. XXXVIII. Vails (vales), shortened from avail, short perks, being the ordinary word now.
acclamation(s).
is
obsolescent, perquisites,
ii.
i. He was received throughout the fleet with a shout of answering acclamation. Southey, Life of Nelson, Ch. IX, 254. A general acclamation concluded the sitting of this species of privy council. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. VII, 74. The theatre resounded with acclamations. Mac. Fred., (6786).
,
amends.
Madam,
II,
Well, my dear, you shall come at night, and I'll make you amends. will have amends before I leave the place. Farquhar, Const. Couple,
5, (77).
Seeing here a possibility of making amends for the casting-vote he had given with an ill-satisfied conscience. G.Eliot, Middlemarch, V, Ch. L, 366.
Those who have most distinguished themselves by railing at the sex, very often make an honourable amends by chusing one of the most worthless persons of it for a companion and yoke-fellow. Spectator, DXXX, (69). ** There is great amends made in the representation. Farquhar, The Beaux'
**
Stratagem, Advertisement.
****
It
will
make us
IV,
but
II,
little
amends
be beauties.
Fieldino, Jos.
Andrews,
annal(s).
Ch.
205.
i. Here and there may be seen an annal, expressed in riper language, which must be marked as the interpolation of a later Editor. E a r e. J )
1
')
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
|
179
Let not Ambition mock their useful toil, ...Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile The short and simple annals of the poor. Gray, Elegy, 32.
|
Sir
literary
Walter Scott is undoubtedly the most remarkable writer that figures in the annals of the nineteenth century. G. H. T., Memoir of Sir Walter
12.
-
Scott,
annates.
At the Reformation the right to the annates was transferred to the Crown r in the reign of Queen Anne they were given up to form a fund for the augmentation Murray. of poor livings, known as Queen Anne's bounty.
Some
rotten archive,
rummaged out
of
some seldom-explored
press.
There remain in the various archives of the Netherlands and Germany many documents from his hand which will probably never see the light. Motley,
Rise,
Send the archives to Potsdam. Mac. Fred., (6976). God hath now Sponged and made blank of crimeful record
|
all
My
mortal
archives.
Ten.
*
arm(s).
i.
St.
Simeon
receive pay. Harper's Mag. 2 ) Since the adoption of long-range weapons of precision there has been an active controversy as to the value of cavalry and the method of using that arm. At hen. 3) ** The Enfield rifle is still b. a g. 2) superior to any arm. C h a
ii.
It
He
plain that an appeal to arms was at hand. had taken arms for the house of Stuart in 1715.
was
Mac, Pitt,
Id.
,
(301a).
Fred.,
(6756).
Saxony was
lb., (673a).
all
in in
Of the males
vigour of
life,
The scene in the interior of St. Paul's was, if possible, still more grand and touching, where were gathered almost all that survived of his companions in arms. Rowe and Webb , Intr. to Tennyson's Ode on the Death of the
Duke
of
Wellington.
soldiers.
Some of the peasants carried arms like the Night, Ch. V, 51. These men were openly carrying arms with
the avowed intention of using them. Rev. of Rev., CXCIX, 10a. ** The arms quartered on the shield along with his own were not, to be sure, poor Rose's. She had no arms. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIV, 151. Any person who without proper royal authority uses ... the royal arms ... is
liable to
be restrained by injunction or
i.
interdict.
Times.
is
arrear(s).
Gay,
Beggar's Opera,
Van. Fair,
Molly, kind and faithful in spite of a long arrear of unpaid wages. Thack., II, Ch. XVII, 182. The burdens of the war had been terrible, almost insupportable; but no arrear was left to embarrass the finances in time of peace. Mac. Fred., (7006). ** Our wages are sometimes a little in arrear. Sher., School for Scand.,
Ill,
2 (395).
cogitating in his
ii.
He was
mind
his
of rent.
Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. Ill, 86. He has a right to claim six years' arrears. Lytton, Night and Morning, 770. He received the arrears of two and three quarter years of sipping in one attack of delirium tremens. Rud. Kiplino, Plain Tales, XXIII, 177.
i)
Murray.
*)
Sattler, E.
S., XVI.
3)
XI.
180
He had
**
I
CHAPTER XXV,
large arrears of sleep to
19.
am
my
Donovan,
etc.
Ch. XLI1I.
Rev. of Rev.,
followed auspice(s). i. This auspice (sc. the publication of a pamphlet) was instantly by a speech from the throne, in the very spirit of the pamphlet. Burke. i) * All il. sortileges, auspices, divinations and other works of the devil were for-
Milman. J ) Under these unpromising auspices the parting took place and Ch. II, 7. began. Jane Austen, North. Ab. The company began under the fairest auspices. Lytton, Caxtons,
bidden.
*
,
the journey
II,
*** Published
banns.
the banns.
"He," said the parson, "with the consent of Fanny, before my face put Field., Jos. Andrews, IV, Ch. II, 205. To my thinking, she's just as much married as if the banns had been read in the churches in London. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch* XX, 211.
all
barrack(s). i. I wish any one in a barrack would say what you say. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 187. The high wall being that of a barrack. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XI, 98. I'll proclaim your share in the performance in every barrack in the kingdom. Em. Lawless A Colonel of the Empire, Ch. X. The conscription carries off village lads to the life of the barrack and the town from which half of them, apparently, never return. Times, * Three ii. days afterwards Dobbin found George in his room at the barracks.
,
,
Thack.,
**
Van. Fair,
college building
I,
The
a barracks.
to see
Harper's Mag. 1 )
them?
Dick.,
bounds.
Why
was he
rejoiced
beyond
all
bounds
Christ.
bounds.
would be
,
better consulted
by keeping
Thack.,
Religious
Newc.
I,
Ch.
I, 9.
bounds.
cates.
the
impulses like other impulses must be chastened and kept within due G. C. Macaulay, Pref. to Tennyson's Holy Grail, 16.
The Tempter, I warrant you, thought these cates would go down without recommendatory preface of a benediction. Ch. Lamb, Grace before Meat (Peacock, Sel. Es., 188). With the decay of my first innocence, I confess a less and less relish daily for those innocuous cates. lb., 190.
chattel(s). i. If at the age of eighteen she marries, she becomes little more than the chattel of her husband. Escott, England, Ch. X, 137. ii. Deliver up to me the chattels of the mad Charles Stewart. Scott, i) The bulk of his goods and chattels were with the regimental baggage.
.
Thack.,
confines.
Van. Fair,
If
I,
the
fame of
that treatise
,
were to extend
I, 3.
known
duds.
world.
Dick.,
Pickw.
Ch.
Her mother is getting on her duds. Rudy. Kipling, Gadsb. , 11. duds she 'as got on. G. Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. XIII,
88.
exequies.
exequies.
The
festival of
i)
of funeral
Thirlwall.
fume(s). i. His two chamberlains Will That memory, the warder of the brain,
|
with
Shall be a fume.
Macb.,
I,
7, 66.
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
The wind
Swinburne,
ii.
181
of
falls
*)
faint
as
it
the
The fumes
of choice tobacco scent the air. Dickens. *) Suddenly an idea mingled with the alcoholic fumes which disturbed
,
his brain.
Bret Harte
furies.
Outcasts,
he landed
24.
Before
at Southampton, the Jameson raid had taken place and were unloosed. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 28b.
|
gallows,
Temp.,
I prophesied, if a gallows were on land, This fellow could not drown. V, 1, 217. So was the black-horned thing seated aloof on a rock, surveying a distant crowd surrounding a gallows. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. I, 3. Gibbet a gallows with a cross-beam or an arm projecting from the top, on which notorious malefactors were hanged. Annandale, Cone. Diet. The sign-post of the White Hart Inn served for a gallows. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 201. ** I like thy wit well, in good faith: the gallows does well; but how does it well? it does well to those that do ill [etc.]. Haml., V, 1, 50. He continued to swing there at night long after the gallows was taken down.
i.
ii.
Wash. Irv., Do If Heyl (Stof., Handl., I, 114). *** He took the maior aside and required of him that a paire of gallowes should be framed and erected. Hayward. *) Previous to this epocha, gallowses had been erected at Naples. Helen M. Williams. *)
i.
gewgaw(s).
ii.
The
toy
and
the
divert.
R.
W. Hamilton,
such gewgaws.
P*>p. Educ, X, 318. Leave your diamond-pin up-stairs; our friends to-day don't Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 79.
i.
like
just (jousts),
The just was a separate trial of skill when only one man was Strutt. *) opposed Seldom hath pass'd a week but giust Or feat of arms befell. Scott, Marm., I, xiv. And no quest came, but all was joust and play. Ten., Merlin and Vivien, 143. Henceforward let there be, Once every year, a joust for one of these (sc. diamonds).
to another.
|
|
Id.,
Lane, and
El.,
61.
still
|
**
the
diamond
the jousts
of the year.
lb., 67.
ii.
Hand
,
in
r.
Down
meadow where
|
were held.
Id.
Ge
and Enid,
79.
537.
my Queen, you
|
cannot move
To
Lane.
|
and
**
EI.,
The
the
ways
From
Camelot,
lauds.
the
The
last
Breviary
It
=
is
I
Tournament,
book containing
Greek church.
composed
the daily service of the Roman Catholic or of matins, lauds, first, third, and ninth vespers and
v.
compline or post-communio.
i.
(dis)like(s).
breviary.
F.
M. Crawford,
;
Greif enstein,
xxii, 41.
,
ii.
She had a small flower-garden for which she had rather an affection but beyond this no other like or disliking. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IX, 86. Her odd likes and dislikes. Black P r. T h u e Ch. XII 180. i)
,
All
that
the
Chancellor said
... carefully
reported.
Manch. Exam. i)
J
Murray.
182
CHAPTER XXV,
and
19.
Compare:
liking
seen, and
The convenience of States has to be taken into account; the possible disliking of peoples whom perhaps the bride and bridegroom have never are destined never to see. Mc. Carthy, Short Hist, Ch. XVIII, 245.
lineaments. The general lineaments of the era that was passing away. Kirk, i) He examined his lineaments, in the hopes of detecting a likeness to the Chandos x portrait. J. Payn. )
matins. The warriors left their lowly bed, Looked out upon the dappled sky, Muttered their soldier matins by And then awaked their fire. Scott, Lady, V, n. Matins are preceded by the Pater Noster, the Ave Maria, and the Credo. J.M. Neale. *)
|
|
As we have warranty. obsequies. Her obsequies have been as far enlarged Haml., V, 1, 250. Call it not vain: they do not err, Who say, that when the poet dies, Mute Nature mourns her worshipper, And celebrates his obsequies. Scott, Lay, V, (out)skirts. i. We found a party of Uhlans reconnoitring in the outskirts of Grandpre and immediately attacked them. Buchanan That Winter Night, Ch. V, 52. There is much that is profoundly impressive in the appearance of their outskirts as the traveller enters them by night. Escott, England, Ch. VI, 74. ii. Now, Sir, young Fortinbras, ...Hath in the skirts of Norway, here and there
| |
| |
i.
Haml., I, 1, 97. In his way to the lodgings of a friend, who lived in the skirts of the town, was picked up by the watch. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XX, 133. He now entered the skirts of the village. Wash. Irv. Rip van Winkle.
Shark'd up a
list
of lawless resolutes.
he
perquisite(s).
the
ii.
i.
Of
all
the
arguments
in
the
way
most prevailing. Gay, Beggar's Your father's perquisites for the escape
Opera,
of prisoners
11,1.
must amount
to a considerable
sum
in the year.
lb.,
II.
plaudit. Mr. Morley introduced his first Indian Budget on July 20th, and won plaudits from the House for the manner as well as the matter of his speech. Rev.
of Rev., CC,
1236.
But what is that to the horror of seeing Marguerite return from heaven in order to join hands with the Devil and her seducer in acknowledging the plaudits of the
crowd?
lb.,
CC,
i.
I
157a.
precinct(s).
library at
I,
ii.
would as Soon have thought of walking into the Doctor's own Grey Friars, as of entering into that awful precinct. Thack., Newc,
. . .
Ch. V, 50.
The sound
of his voice was heard down staircases to the Court of Requests and precincts of Westminster Hall. Mac, Pitt, (2936). More than once it (sc. the Exhibition) held within its precincts at one moment nearly a hundred thousand persons. Mc. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. IX, 109.
The
public are not admitted within the turbulent precincts of "the House". Escott, Ch. VIII, 108. They do not even respect the holy precincts of the church. Buchanan, That
England,
Ch. V, 47. proceeds. It was a very vivid and very suggestive representation of the ways and manners ot those rough warriors, who, having garnered the loot of the world got drunk on its proceeds. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 356. a tall grey man, with a face rapture, i. Who was this, stealing in the chamber full of eager love and rapture? Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch.XV, 129. ii. held my daughter in my arms, whose silence only spoke her raptures. Golds., Vic, Ch. XXXI, (473). But my raptures were not lasting. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 156.
I
Winter Night,
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
remain(s).
ii.
i.
183
traditional
remain of his
office of server.
Times.
The supposition that Low Hill is a Druidical remain. J. H. Lupton.i) He made a scanty breakfast on the remains of the last night's provisions. Wash. Handl,, I, 123). Irv., Do If Heyl (Stof.
,
On
visiting
[etc.],
Lytton, Last
Days, Pref.
He must destroy
She
lies
remains
in
the
same
vault
containing
the
remains
statesman.
Lit.
World.
responsions. Congregation yesterday rejected the solution which would have rendered Greek unnecessary as a subject for Responsions. Times. V, I, 278. road(s). i. My ships Are safely come to road. Merch. of Ven. ii. The sixth day of our being at sea we came into Yarmouth roads. Defoe,
|
Rob. Crusoe, 8. great many ships from Newcastle came The Armada dropped anchor in Calais
into the
roads.
J.
lb.
Short
Hist.,
Cowes Roads.
of miles in
Daily Mail,
24 hours.
sweepstakes. Every noon there was a sweepstakes Froude, Oceana, Ch. XIX, 301.
few days
after
for the
number
he tried to persuade her to take a ticket in a shilling sweepstakes among the out- and in-door servants. G.Moore, Esth. Waters,
thanks, i. To his Subscribers the Author returns his most sincere thanks. Burns, Pref. to the First Edition.
letters consisted for the most part of compliments, thanks, offers of service, assurances of attachment. Mac. , Fred., (6906). The man was too awkward to put his thanks into words. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. Ch. XIII, 245. To those who wrote the play ... all thanks are due. Westm. Gaz., No. 5525, 8d. Many (a thousand) thanks for your kind letter, * For this relief much thanks. H a m 1. , 1,1,5. Your wife would give you little thanks for that. Merch. of Ven., IV, 1, 280. It's little thanks I get for what I do for folks i' this world. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. XII, 111. ** Yet your good will Must have that thanks from Rome, aftei the measure As you intended well. Coriolanus, V, 1, 46. *** Thanks to men of noble minds is honourable meed. Tit. A d r. 1 215. **** I have heard And am well studied for a liberal thanks Which it, Pompey;
| |
The
ii.
iii.
do owe you. Ant. and C Thanks to the political crisis, A Life's Less., II, 136.2)
I
1
Mrs. Gore,
That the incident terminated without an appeal to arms was no thanks to Lord Randolph. Rev. of Rev., CXCIII, 89a. (Compare: That increasing acquaintance with the laws of phenomena, which has through successive ages enabled us to subjugate Nature to our needs, is scarcely owed to the appointed means of instructing our youth. Spenc. Educ. , Ch. I, 23a.)
,
throe(s).
ii.
And was the Old World coming Kingley, Hyp., Ch. X, 54.
i.
speedily
to
its
death-r/iroe?
Ch.
the
heifer
moves,
Fruit
of
her
throes.
Pope,
Murray.
Flugel.
184
CHAPTER XXV,
19.
Nine years elapsed before it saw the light. His throes in bringing been severe and remittent. Boswell, Life of Johnson, 856.
It
it
forth
had
is
at
least
might perish.
tidings,
I i.
5626.
And when
XXXIII
,
they mourned.
Bible
Exodus,
am
to
shew thee
Id.,
Luke,
I,
19.
ii.
The next tidings were that he was married. Jane Austen, Persuasion, Ch. I, 6. * The tidings comes that they are all arrived. King John, IV, 2, 115. Now, Travers, what good tidings comes with you? Henry IV, B, I, 1, 33. ** He welcomed his nephew to France, and, in the same breath, asked what
news from Scotland. "Little good Scott, Quent. Durw. Ch. V,
,
young Durward.
you would drive
toil.
i.
Why
do you go about
to recover the
wind
of
me, as
if
me
ii.
into a toil?
Haml.,
in
Ill,
2, 365.
|
Where
game,
In
To share their monarch's silvan bloody toils were snared. Sqott, Lady, II, xxvm, 15. order to drive a deer into the toils it was needful to get to the windward of
chiefs, with
|
Themselves
him. Madden, The Diary of Master (Dowden, Hamlet, 111,2,365). Do you know whom she has got into her
William Silence,
toils.
33,
Note
Mrs.
Ward,
Lady Rose's
I.
Daughter,
traps.
vails.
toils.
Oscar Wilde,
An Ideal Husband,
Have
got
all
my
traps?
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
13.
XXII, 1666.
The
lackeys rose up from their cards to open the door to him, in order to
et their "vails".
II,
These ignominious
vespers,
Ch.
**
I,
i.
Mac, Pitt,
,
(298a).
,
Vespers was
off.
Conan Doyle
far
1.
We should see a new and vaster and Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 511a.
King Robert
,
more
Leigh
ii.
Hunt
The Story
of
of Sicily.
vestment(s). i. They frown at the sight of even the most modest sacerdotal vestment. Rider Haggard Lysbeth, Author 's Note,
ii.
Some
away their sacred vestments. Mac, Popes, (560a). quaint old carved oak chest half filled with priests' vestments. MjssBraddon, Lady Audley's Seer., I, Ch. I, 4.
(priests) flung
i.
viand(s).
ii.
Still
Soon
after
New
wage(s).
cupboarding the viand. Coriolanus, I, 1, 103. our dinner was served in, which was right good viands.
Bacon,
Atlantis,
and shared
5726.
of
six
By
the
end
of fourteen
shillings as salesman.
Mrs.
Ward
David Grieve,
I,
250.
Three half-pence an hour was the average wage of a working man in England. Hall Caine, The Christian, 11,69. Thousands of them are just earning a living wage. Rev. of Rev., CCVII, 385a. ** What's to make me sure as the house won't be put o' 6oard" wage afore we're many months older. G.Eliot, Adam Bede, Ch. XXXII, 300.
i.
pretty good.
Thack.,
Van. Fair,
I,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
The wages
of
185
powder and arms.
Froude,
these
52.
in
Oceana,
If
Ch. HI,
the wages satisfy you, think you will suit me very well. G. Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. XXII, 143. ** The wages of sin is death. Bible, Romans, VI, 23. Last week my wages was 7s. 6 d. Ch. Kingsley, Cheap Clothes and
Nasty,
I
66.
think
shall
be able
to
manage
till
my
first
quarter's
wages comes
to
me.
Ch.
Ill,
25.
utterly insufficient.
****
them
any servants have too little wages, or any husband too much wife: let repair to the noble Serjeant Kite. Farquhar, The Recruiting
little
wages
to receive.
Field., Jos.
Andrews,
IV,
203.
is
in a place where they don't give her as much wages as she Mrs. Gaskell, Wives and Daught. , Ch. XV, 157. The manufacturers there enjoy the advantage of paying much less wages for much longer hours of work. Westm. Gaz. No. 4943, "9. He quite compelled us to hold our tongues, by threatening to lay information
Mary
living
deserves.
Lorna Doone,
Love
for
If
you please
I,
i.
had rather be
Board-Wages,
Congreve,
Love,
ware(s).
1, 72.
The
ii.
and the
capital of
Escott,
England,
One
of the youngsters espied the cart of Dobbin and Rudge, at the Doctor's door, discharging a cargo of the wares in which the firm dealt. Thack.,
pay nothing.
G. Eliot,
Romola,
,
on and
weed(s). i. They left me then when the grey-hooded Ev'n Like a sad votarist in palmers weed Rose from the hindmost wheel of Phcebus' wain. Milton, Com us, 190. Oh, for his arms! Of martial weed.\ Had never mortal Knight such need! Scott, Br id. of Trierm. III, xx. At least put off to please me this poor gown, This silken rag, this beggar|
ii.
Ten., Ger. and Enid, 679. To such my errand is, and but for such I would not soil these pure ambrosial weeds. Milton C o m u s , 15. Who would rob a palmer of his weeds? lb., 390. You must even do like other widows buy yourself weeds. Gay, Beg-
woman's weed.
gar's
Opera,
how
37a.
II,
1.
No
matter
her weeds of
widowhood might have become her, she would wed another lover. Rev. of Rev.,
CCV,
20.
more or less strictly pluralia tantum only meanings, the majority are found in the plural also in a meaning or in meanings corresponding exactly to that or those of the singular, so that they mostly have more meanings in
Among
in certain of their
VI.
186
the
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
fetters
Thus chains as a plurale tantum plural than in the singular. but the word is also the plural of chain in its ordinary meaning. , Similarly accents not only has the meaning corresponding to the
These relative
speech, language. ages hence Shall this our lofty scene be acted over and accents yet unknown! Jul. Caes. III, 1, 113. O Minstrel Harp, 'still must thine accents sleep? Scott, Lady,
accents
How many
In states
unborn
I,
1.
ornamental attainments or acquirements. accomplishments used in the singular in, apparently, the same meaning.
i.
Sometimes
Jane Austen,
,
ii.
reading, no small ability, considerable accomplishment good sense and humour. Thack., Newc. I, Ch. VIII, 97. Such a dashing young fellow as he is, with his good looks, rank and accomplishments would be the very husband for her. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXI, 216. But it was not solely or principally to outward accomplishments that Pitt owed the vast influence which, during nearly thirty years, he exercised over the House of Commons. Mac, Pitt, (294a).
excellent
,
II,
8.
accounts a) registers of facts relating to money; b) the art of drawing up commercial calculations (= Dutch handelsrekenen). Also regularly used in the plural in the phrases to cast accounts, to keep accounts, to balance (or square) accounts with any one, to settle (the) accounts. i. In very ancient times accounts were kept by means of tallies and chalk-marks. Sir R. G. C. Hamilton and John Ball, Book-keeping. Here he checked the housekeeper's accounts. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 246.
times,
ii.
Some days we can get through our accounts in 'alf G.Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. XXX, 214.
the time
we can
at other
A knowledge
education
I
of the theory
and practice
Sir
of
accounts
is
of
every
man.
R.
G. C.
Book-
keeping, Pref.
iii.
versed in book-keeping and accounts. Business-letter writer, XX. cast accounts. Lytton, Night and Morning, 81. I went over from Drumble once a quarter at least to settle the accounts. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XV, 286.
am
Can you
acquirements
i.
personal attainments of body or mind. Occasionally in the same meaning. A man of greater ability and acquirement than Stein. Seelen. *) They found it advisable to employ these unoccupied intervals with rubbing up Dor. Gerard, Etern. Woman, their historical or geographical acquirements.
Ch. XII.
!)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
187
addresses dutiful or courteous approach to any one especially to a lady Dutch aanzoek). Occasionally in the singular in, appain courtship ( rently, the same meaning.
i.
She
I
is
Sher.,
Riv.,
II,
2, (238).
have your respected mother's permission for this address. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch. XIX, 108. Make your addresses to the fair. Farquhar, Const. Couple, I, 1, (46). It is usual with young ladies to reject the addresses of the man whom they secretly mean to accept, when he first applies for their favour. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch. XIX, She felt much honoured by Mr. Pipkin's addresses. Dick.. Pickw., Ch. XVII, 132.
advances
tures.
movements towards closer acquaintance or understanding, overbe used in the singular preceded by every, and in the plural modified by some understood as an indefinite numeral, i. She doggedly refused and rejected every advance. Mrs.GASK., Cranf., Ch.XV,291. ii. Notwithstanding some advances she made, I could not be prevailed upon to
May
iii.
yield her the least attention. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XIX, 124. The girls had made the most cordial advances to her. Thack., Van.
I,
Fair,
Frederic
Mac,
Fred.,
his
Mrs. Alex.,
A Life Interest,
occasionally in the
Also
same meaning. singular I i. have sure advice that she is gone to meet her father. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXX, 313. ii. Though advices came down to him that many thousands of the citizens had been enrolled as volunteers for the good cause, nothing was done. Mac, Hist., II,
in the
inst.
say that
many
Times.
a) transactions of a general kind; b) commercial or professional business; c) public business transactions or matters concerning men or nations collectively; d) matters, things in an indefinite or vague way (Ch.
affairs
XXXI,
i.
57).
is
There
fortune.
tide
in
the affairs of
men
Which, taken
at the flood,
leads on to
ii.
His
own
A knowledge
state. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIV, 274. and practice of accounts is an important part of the enables him to exercise a due control over his own others which may be intrusted to him. Sir R. G. C.
Book-keeping, Preface,
own
minister for trade and justice, for
Gradually he acquired such an aptitude for affairs as his most intimate associates were not aware he possessed. Mac, Fred., (6616).
He was
iv.
his
own
treasurer, his
home affairs
had
and foreign
lb., (6716). affairs. The inhabitants of the village, suddenly been startled by the
while
45.
discussing the
position
of affairs,
Buchanan,
Ch. V,
artificial or affected manner, show of pride, haughtiness. They give themselves such airs. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. VI,
30.
188-
CHAPTER XXV,
,
20.
He puts on airs. Webs r. Diet. You will find your companions easy enough yourself airs. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch.
antlers
II,
to get 37.
on with,
if
and
Robin
(Gruno
Series).
appearances
things.
Also
regularly
the general aspect of circumstances or events, the 'look' of in the plural in the phrases to keep up {to save)
at least
appearances.
i.
Appearances are
Westw. Ho!,
ii.
How deceptive are appearances. Punch. My only chance of success depends on my suspicion. Mrs. Alex., A Life Interest,
lulling
appointments
= equipment,
outfit,
singular, especially in earlier writers, to denote a single article of outfit, I i. have not one appointment belonging to me which I set so much store by, as I do by these jack-boots. Sterne, Trist. Shandy, III, Ch. XXII. ii. "Oh, oh! my old friend!" said the Prince recognising the figure as well as the appointments of the French glee-woman Louise. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXX, 318.
articles
in articles.
formal agreement drawn up in articles; b) indictment drawn up a plurale tantum also met with in the collocation the articles of war (= the regulations made for the government of the military and naval forces of Great Britain and the United States [= Dutch krijgswet]).
= a)
As
Note especially: a) articles of apprenticeship, articles of association (= rules, conditions, etc., upon which a commercial agreement is founded), P) marriage articles (= Dutch h u we lijksvoorwaarden), y) to enter into articles with a man (= Dutch een overeenkomst met iemand aangaan, het met iemand op een accoordje gooien).
i.
Parting with
articles.
is
I.
the
of all
marriage
Gay
Beg. Op.,
He had been
smith,
instrumental in drawing up the marriage articles himself. GoldCh. XXXI, (469). I was obliged to retrench and enter into articles with the porters of certain taverns. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XXIII, 161. I'll teach the scoundrel to give intelligence to others, while he is under articles with me. lb., Ch. HI, 46. She was forbidden by the articles of her engagement to have 'followers'. Mrs. Ch. Ill, 54. Gask., Cranf. have a great mind to chuck the whole thing up. I would, if my articles hadn't
Vic,
been signed.
ii. iii.
Osc. Wilde,
Dorian Gray,
Ch. V,
93.
Certain articles presented against this Archbishop. Burton. *) The Articles of War are to be read once in every three months to the Officers
and Men.
It
was
Motley, Rise,
IV, Ch.
I,
562.
held periodically in each county of England for the purpose of administering civil and criminal justice. Sometimes found preceded by the indefinite article or a singular demonstrative pronoun; in this
assizes
sessions
position the singular form is, however,
more
usual.
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i.
189
In
addition to the ordinary half-yearly assizes, at which both civil and criminal causes are heard, there is now in some of the counties a special assize for criminal cases only. C a s. Cone. Cyclop., s. v. assize.
What
now wanted is some sort of international assize which will do for libelled what the Liverpool Assize did for the libelled soap firms. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 122a. It sometimes happens in thinly populated districts that there are no criminals to be tried; this is called a "Maiden Assize," and the sheriff presents the judge
is
nations
Anna Buckland,
Ch.
Our
to
Two
Gask.
lawyers'
,
clerks
Mrs.
Mary Barton,
XXVI
267.
A plague upon you, sir, and a black assizes for you, for you will come to the gallows yet. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. IV, 296.
attainments
i.
= personal
it
. .
.
acquirements.
Men
that
count
ii.
examining him as to his literary attainments. Hughes, Ch. V, 87. was French tutor of the three daughters A French poet of modest attainments Sidney Lee French Renaissance in England, of Protector Somerset. I, Ch. X, 45.
. . .
Tom
auxiliaries
= foreign
a
met with
i.
in the singular to
troops in the service of a nation at war. Occasionally denote a soldier belonging to an auxiliary force,
to challenge
A Gaul and
fell
,
Roman happened
mocked him.
one another
the auxiliary
Merivale.
i)
ii.
When
balusters
Stooping
=
till
her head
structure of uprights and handrail. looked over the balusters. G. Moore, Esth.
Waters,
The main
staircase ...
was
and moulded
Madding Crowd,
in
bands
i.
a) bonds,
bondage;
b) strips
hanging down
front as part of
bands
of
a conventional dress, clerical, legal or academical. He left me on pretence of finding a proper person wedlock. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 150.
He
ii.
to unite us in the
struggled
this
fiercely
was
man
that
Whispered, and wept, and smiled; Yet Bryant, The African Chief, VIII. Jonathan Swift advised to take orders, to mount in a cassock
with
his chain,
|
fatal
bands.
and bands.
ban(n)isters
Trol.,
Thack.,
Ch. VII, 161. the singular in the same usual one. The word is a meaning of upright post, the form
balusters.
Occasionally
used
is
in
meaning.
spelling with single n corruption of balusters. In the singular baluster is the ordinary one.
i.
The
the
[etc.].
Ch. Bronte,
Jane
is
it
for
the
child?"
cried
Lady Ann,
reeling
ii.
Thack., Newc, I, Ch. IX, 114. She kept looking over the banisters to see if she could get a glimpse of Mr. Rochester, Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XIII. 141.
]
Murray.
190
As
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
the ghosts of the Prior children
I went up and down that darkling peeped out from the banisters. Thack.,
stair,
Ch.
II,
25.
leaves or sprigs of the bay-tree or bay-laurel woven into a wreath bays or garland to reward a conqueror or a poet. Also occasionally in the singular in the same meaning. The gain of Civil wars will not allow Bay to the Conqueror's Brow. Cowley. ')
i.
ii.
Your bays may hide the baldness of your brows. Byron, Don Juan, Dedic, VIL Murray, we are told, might have been an Ovid, but he preferred to be lord chief Ch. LXIII, 659. justice, and to wear ermine instead of bays. Thack., Virg.
,
beads
in
its
a) rosary; b) string of beads for the neck. Bead (archaically hede) original sense of prayer occurs as a singular in to bid a (his, etc.)
bead;
to
the
*
to tell
i.
mostly as a plural in to say one's beads. With distinct reference use of the rosary we find bead as a plural also in the expressions or count one's beads,
a rocky cell,
III, iv.
|
He seeks
Scott,
Bridal
of Tri
**
erman,
1, 152i).
To
To
W. Morris, Earthly
Par.,
ii.
Do
He
they
wear beads?
She cannot
Murray.
iii.
All the
people said their beads in a perfect silence. Burnet, Hist. Ref., II, 55.') counts his beads and spends his holy zeal. J. Barlow, Conspir. Kings, 78. *)
,
beginnings
the
i.
initial
The
Out
now housed
in
Lond. News,
They have fought their way up from humble beginnings of Rev., CXCVIII, 568a.
Rev.
The
tale may have been invented to sharpen the contrast between his high achievements and his humble beginnings. Intro d. to 'The Merch. of
n.' 4
(Clar. Press).
boards
the
stage.
officer
This general
still
acted
on
London boards.
VIII, 170.
Cranf., Ch.
VII, 129.
Moliere and his contemporaries had lived their lives on the boards.
Andrew Lang,
Ten., Ch.
bonds
I
bondage.
before
I
G. Eliot,
Scenes,
Ch.
II,
95.
of the
bonds
of love.
366.
Compare:
T.
P.'s
There
is
Christm. Numb, of
all
nations.
boots a) instrument of torture, b) servant in hotels who cleans the boots. Also in certain compounds, such as clumsy-boots, lazy-boots, sly-boots, smooth-boots , in which it stands for fellow , person. i. He (Monmouth) tried to throw the blame on others, particularly on Argyle, who would rather have put his legs into the boots than have saved his own life by such baseness. Mac. Hist, II, Ch. V, 189.
J)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
191
No
iii.
I'm the boots as b'longs to the house. Dick. boots admires and envies me. Id.,
Sketches.
,
Uncom. Trav.
Ch. I,
11.
Dick.,
Our
Mut. Friend.
brains a) the nervous system contained in the skull when not considered as part of the organic system: a dish of brains ; b) intellectual power. Brain as a singular is chiefly used in two ways: a) as an ordinary object noun to denote the nervous substance in the skull as part of the animal organism. In this case it may be preceded by the indef. art. and be pluralized like any other object-noun: a brain, ten brains (Comp. mane); /?) as a material noun: brain is heavier than water. Also in denoting intellectual power, some writers prefer the singular.
i)
When by
etc.
the
the word is meant the centre of sensation, the organ of thought, popular language prefers the plural, the dignified language the
singular.
plural is regular in many phrases, such as to dash (knock) out a Derson's brains, to blow out (any) one's brains. The singular is regular in the phrases to have anything (music, gambling, any object of admiration or antipathy) on the brain (= to be crazy on the subject of), to turn one's brain (== to render giddy, to bewilder, to render
The
vain or imprudent). Usage is divided as to the phrases to beat (busy , cudgel, drag, melt out, nuzzle, rack) one's brain(s) (=to exert oneself in thought or contrivance); also in the phrase to crack one's brain(s) (= to render oneself insane) but
;
the plural
is
the singular.
Brains
in
the
intellectual
now
power is construed now as a plural, of the singular form of the indefinite numerals the rule: much (little) brains. Compare also
He fired, over the boy's head, exactly in the very spot where the tall man's brain would have been, had he been there instead. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIX, 165. The brain of a porpoise is quite wonderful for its mass. Huxley, Darwi-
nian
It
a,
may be
brain
twice
Nature,
that an average European child of four years old has a as large as that of an adult Gorilla. Huxley, Man's Place in Ch. II, 107.
is the
in the world.
Rev. of Rev..
She has fascination, resource, brain. Mrs. Ward, Marc, I, Ch. Ill, 29. He's hot an unusual brain and a wonderful memory. Id., David Grieve, I, 70. In the coming day Brain is to stand above Dollars. Andrew Carnegie (Rev. of Rev., CCV, 28). **** I hasten to fulfil an that of giving the productions of a important duty sublime genius to the world ... as they sprang, living and warm from his heart and brain. Mrs. Shelley, Pref. to First Col. Edition, 1839. Men who are not perplexed overmuch by fatigue of the brain. Thack., Van.
Fair,
II,
Suddenly an idea mingled with the alcoholic fumes Bret Harte, Outcasts, 24.
l
Murray.
192
(If)
CHAPTER XXV,
|
20.
he should sorrow o'er my state And marvel what possess'd my brain. Ten., In Memoriam, XIV, iv. He paced restlessly up and down the room with his brain on fire. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. II, 30.
***** Zounds!
IV, 1, (261).
If
the
girl's
mad!
said
1
Sher.,
Riv.
they
(sc.
the
,
Bells)
is
anything,
,
brain of
Toby
reeled.
Dick.
Chimes^,
36.
When
'borrow'
cudgelling his brain to find any rhyme for 'sorrow' besides his woes are nearer at an end than he thinks for. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XV, 147. He cudgels his brain into framing illustrations which he takes for proofs. Leslie Stephen, G. Eliot, Ch. VIII, 117. The lithe, thin-lipped Countess is racking her small brain for caressing words and charming exaggerations. G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. II, 28. He was racking his brain for some excuse by which to draw Stephen away.
a gentleman
and 'to-morrow',
II,
150.
some way
of
making money.
Id.
A Hardy
Norseman,
Mr. Balfour has the Irish on the brain, and we need not attach serious importance to what he says when he sees green. Westm. Gaz. No. 5283, lb. He may sometimes have been derided ... as a man afflicted with postal reform on the brain. Times, No. 1831 896.
,
.
. .
ii.
the result of the careful weighing of more than 900 human brains, Professor Wagner states that one-half weighed between 1200 and 1400 grammes. Huxley,
As
Man
Place
was
in
Nature,
Ch.
II,
166.
** His skull
of
it
became
Hero Worship,
18.
out,
Let your brains be knocked Goldsmith, She Stoops, II. Dead as the stones on which her brains and blood were scattered. Ch. Bronte,
my good
we
sir,
Jane Eyre,
**** Are
become sudden? Thack., Van. Fair, 1, Ch. XVI, 164. You have got more brains in your little finger than any baronet's wife in the county. lb., I, Ch. XV, 158. She's as stuck-up as if her brains had made the money, and not his. Lloyd, North. Eng., 118.
Brains without practical experience without brains. John Stuart Mill.
i
to
will
go
farther
than
practical
experience
***** She
did
Van. Fair,
I,
not pester their young brains with too Ch. XVI, 164.
much
learning.
Thack.,
Ch.
When
XVI,
stand.
she spoke, he
165.
brought
all
the
lb., I,
Ward
Da v. Grieve,
273.
,
******
I
shall
It
Cudgel thy brains no more about it. H ami. V, 1, 62. knock your brains out, if you have any. Gay, Beggar's Opera, was a mercy of God you did not knock your brains out against some post
121.
I.
in
your career. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XVIII, They are melting their brains out, this hot day,
to guess at the riddle. Lytton, Ch. IX, 55. Give your brains a racking. Brownino, Pied. Piper, 29. (with which compare: It's easy to bid one rack one's brain. lb., 38.)
Rienzi,
I,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Often
193
Lyall
The
he rack his brains for some means of cheering the 'debutant'. Ch. XVI 132. old man was racking his brains for some argument. Ch. Kinosley,
did
,
Edna
Hyp.,
Knight Errant,
Ch. IV, 186. ******* g ra [ns were no t everything though of course brains counted. And at any time he would back the man with greater force of character and fewer brains against the man with more brains and less force of character. Bonar Law (Time s). Madam has far too much brains to be taken in by that vapouring vain little villain. (?) Mad. Leroux, Ch. XIII. We have never regarded him as having much brains. II. Lond. News, No.
,
3816, 894a.
heavy ocean waves which break violently into foam against a rocky coast or in passing over reefs or shallows. Sometimes the singular is used collectively,
breakers
i.
sweep
we drove, Where those long swells of breaker The nutmeg rocks and isles of clove. Ten. The Voyage, V. Following up And flying the white breaker, daily left The little footprint daily
|
ii.
wash'd away. lb. Enoch A r d e n 21. Suddenly we heard a shout of 'Breakers ahead!' and every one turned Beerbohm. 1 )
, ,
pale.
brows
a)
head; b)
countenance.
In
poetical
eyebrows. The singular brow, the literary word for forehead, seems to be likewise used loosely for the head in general.
i.
ii.
And many a wizard brow bleach'd on the walls. Ten., Merl. and Viv., 595. * And round the champion's brows were bound The crown that Druidess had wound Of the green laurel-bay. Scott Brid. of Triermain, III, xxxix. And he laid His brows upon the drifted leaf and dreamed. Ten. Last
|
To urn.,
Ard
e
,
405.
|
with her brows against the wall Answered [etc.]. Id., Enoch n 313. Then, those two brethren slowly with bent brows Accompanying, the sad Lane, and El., 1131. chariot-bier Past like a shadow thro' the field. Id. I sat up in the bed and pressed my hands to my throbbing brows. Conway, Called Back, Ch. II, 23. ** Though all things foul would wear the brows of grace, Yet grace must still look so. Macb., IV, 3, 23. A heavy thunder-cloud gathering on his brows. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XI, 217. *** But under her black brows a Last swarthy one Laugh'd shrilly. Ten.
Then Annie
Tourn.
cards
216.
figurative
Also used as a plurale tantum in certain cardplaying (\Qd). expressions, such as to play one's cards well (badly, etc.), to throw (fling) up one's cards, to show one's cards, it is on the cards (= within the range of probability),
i.
tear
woman from
I,
1.
a pension out of the hands of a courtier, a fee from a a looking-glass, or any woman from cards. Gay,
that he
Beggar's Opera,
ii.
It
was
quite
on the cards
of
was
to
An
It
invasion
quite
England was
that
at least
be raised to the Upper House. Murray. on the cards. McCarthy, Short. Hist.,
together. Norris,
on the cards
My Friend
1
Jim,
H.
II.
13
194
chains
fetters (19a).
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
charges = expenses. According to Murray in this application archaic. Note especially the collocation at (rarely upon, or on) any one's charges (= Dutch op kosten van),
i.
Charges
*
to
be deducted.
*)
ii.
day at Pen's charges. Ch. XXXI, 339. They are welcome to make merry at my charges. Id. , Lovel the Widower. ** One that serves as a volunteer in the wars upon his own charges. Bailey. 2)
Thack.
Pend.,
checkers
cheers
draughts (\9d).
writers.
shouts of encouragement , welcome, approbation or congratulation. He drew down storms of cheers. Dick. C h u z. Ch. XXI 184a. (= Dutch
,
oogstte stormachtigen
chops (also,
bijval.)
Times.
=
,
Open your chaps again. Temp., II 2 thou hadst as much brains in thy skull
,
89.
Swift.
2)
circumstances a) external conditions prevailing at the time; b) condition or state as to material welfare, means. In the first application occasionally singular in the same meaning, even where the Dutch idiom would lead
one
to
preceded
under.
to the frequent
the plural often discards the article. (Ch. XXXI, 57.) In the second meaning usually preceded by some defining adjective: in easy (good, reduced, straitened, etc.) circumstances.
i.
If
that
me
in
this circumstance.
Gay
Beggar's Opera,
He has
stance.
He
lb.,
ii.
is
strayed or has been forced into political life by irresistible circumT. P. s Weekly, No. 417, 617c. heirimed in by circumstance, by interests, and above all, bv friends.
'
618c.
Have you no tenderness, my dear Lucy, to see your husband in these circumstances. Gay, Beggar's Opera, 11,1. Under these circumstances dare not press your visit here. Mrs. Gask Life of Ch. Bronte, 121. That was an act that seemed pardonable under the circumstances. Du Maurier,
I
,
Trilby,
I,
6.
was
in
John
Wash. Irving,
Sketches, XXX,
323.
Are you aware how small his means are, and of the straitened circumstances of his widow? Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXV, 390. He had become fairly easy in his circumstances. Trol Thack., Ch. 1 39.
, ,
Fluoel.
2)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
195
colours a) coloured symbols of colleges, clubs, jockeys, etc., rosettes and ribbons worn as party badges; b) flag. In the second meaning preceded by stand or pair when the indefinite article or a numeral precedes (36). Instead of a stand {pair) of colours modern military use has a colour; a
colours
In
to
is
serve
with
the
Furthermore
we
flying colours,
army in such expressions as colours, to join the colours, to desert one's colours. find colours in a great many phrases, a) to come off with to stick to one's colours, to nail one's colours to the mast
adopt an unyielding attitude), to hang out false colours, etc., b) to {put) false {lively, etc) colours upon, to paint in bright {dark, etc.) colours, to see a thing in its true colours, to be in excellent colours. i. To lose a colour in battle was considered a great dishonour. Graph. Her Majesty presenting a state colour to the Scots Guards at Windsor Castle. Times,
(=
to
cast
ii.
It
still
bears on
its
When
colours the proud motto 'Primus in Indis'. Mac, Clive, (5186). the stout old marshal snatched the colours
,
to the charge.
Mac, Fred.,
Presentation of
**
new
colours at the
Duke
of York's school.
Graph.
What! a soldier stay here! to look like an old pair of colours in Westminster Hall, ragged and rusty! Farquhar, The Constant Couple, I, 1. He began life rather brilliantly with a pair of colours. Thack. P e n d. ,
, ,
Ch. V, 58.
Fifty
stand of colours
fell
into the
hands
of the Prussians.
Mac, Fred.,
Addison.
*)
(693a).
An author compares a ragged coin to a **** The Russian demand is for 36000 men
colours.
***
tattered colours.
Times.
Special inducements have been offered to Reservists to rejoin the colours. They joined for 12 years with the colours. lb.
They
***** Mrs. Chick had nailed her colours to the mast. Dick., Domb., Ch.V, 35. gallantly determined to nail their colours to the mast, and to go through Darkness Lane rather than fail in loyalty to their friend. Mrs. Gask. C r a n f. , Ch. X, 192. He stood for a vacant fellowship and got it with flying colours. Mrs. Ward ,
,
Rob. Elsm.,
I,
93.
****** The armourer, indeed, while he heard the lips that were dearest to him paint his character in such unfavourable colours, had laid his head down on the table. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. II, 34. He would have liked to protest and declare himself there and then in his true colours. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. Ill, 59. showed himDr. James the new President of the College who took the chair self in excellent colours. Truth, No. 1802 74a.
, , , ,
circumstances {a). Like circumstances frequently found preceded by the prepositions in and under, especially the latter. The total eclipse of the moon was observed in Dublin on Tuesday night under
conditions
exceptionally favourable conditions. Times. Hereford once more had its musical festival, than heretofore. Graph.
this
What might not be the development of the suburban population The conditions have changed in the interval. Graph.
')
Murray,
s.
v.
colour,
7.
196
contents
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
thing contained, things treated of in a writing or document. singular form is now the rule in the sense of containing capacity , space, area, extent, especially in the collocation solid content. Note also (table of) contents. The pronouns referring to contents are sometimes singular,
The
i.
Gaugers glancing
at a
cask to
1
tell its
'content, as
its
holding capacity
is officially
styled.
Chamb. Journ.
by side with, and
the
)
,
in close relation to, the study of the content in the William Macpherson study of structure may proceed. Princ. and Meth. in the Study of Eng. Lit., Ch. II 24. In these classes we cannot hope to gain for the pupils all that is to be derived from the study of literature: their attention is to be directed mainly to the content
** Side
senior
classes,
ii.
of what is read. lb., 26. (Thus throughout the book) * (He) can tell you the cubic contents of anything in no time.
III,
G. Eliot, Mill,
Ch.
IV, 212.
** The contents were less Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, striking than the title. Ch. V, 54. The most precious contents of the purse were two half-crowns folded together Dick. in a bit of paper. Cop., Ch. V, 32a. The contents of the Company's warehouses were seized. Mac C v e. *** There are some shrewd contents in yon same paper, That steals the colour 2 III from Bassanio's cheek. e r c h. 246. **** An earnest ... That, on the view and knowing conjuration from the king, ... He should the bearers put to sudden death. Haml. of these contents,
, ,
V, 2, 44.
She had formed no expectation of its (sc. the letter's) contents. But such as they were, it may well be supposed how eagerly she went through them. Jane Austen,
Pride and P
The
epistle
j.
Ch.
XXXVI
202.
its
was
in his friend's
contents.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
Walt. Besant
completed,
the
contents
sometimes
costs
expenses of litigation or other legal transaction. The singular is almost regularly used except in the legal meaning above and in the phrase at all costs (= at any cost French coute que coute). Note especially at any one's cost (= Dutch op iemands kosten), as distinguished from at any one's expense (= Dutch tot iemands nadeel); at one's own cost
at one's own expense Dutch op zijn eigen kosten); at the cost at little of something (= Dutch ten koste van iets); at little cost expense (= Dutch met geringe kosten); to any one's cost (= Dutch to f iemands schade). Compare also: at any one's charges (see above). For further details see Sattler, E. S. X. * The cost of his victories increased the pleasure with which he contemplated
i.
them.
Mac, Pitt,
(309a).
Germany would have much to gain by a successful war, but the cost, both in the lives of men and in treasure, would be enormous. Graph. The new water-works have been built at a cost of 20.000. II. Lond. News. 2 ) ** The dinner so hospitably offered by the Colonel was gladly accepted and followed by many entertainments at the cost of that good-natured friend. Thack.,
,
Newc,
i)
Ch. V, 49.
Murray.
-')
Sattler, E.
S., X.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
197
The crofters want the right of every man to live idle at the cost of the estate. W. Black, The New Prince Fortunatus, Ch. VIII. *** She had been living a month at her own cost. Jane Austen, Mansf. Park,
Ch. XIII
****
*****
ii.
,
135.
To
It
I
increase
the
numbers
P.
,
of
a
to
nation
comfort.
*
Munera
fast, as
I
at the cost of
common
health or
41
J
2. i)
can
tell
III,
Do
,
in costs?
Dick.
Bleak House, Ch. LXV, 533. His friends in Leadenhall Street proposed to reimburse him the costs of his
(655a). severally fined' 20
s.
trial.
and
costs.
Graph.
His rustic patrons are apt to consider the costs of schooling a grievous burden. Wash. Irv. S k e t c h - B k. XXXII (346). *** The Government will carry through, without wavering and at all costs, the policy in South Africa they have laid down. Times. Water at all costs must be had. Con. Doyle, Siege of Sunda Gunge.
, ,
courses a) points of the compass; b) ways of action, proceedings , personal conduct or behaviour. i. Lay her two courses to the wind. Cornhill Mag.
ii.
Since the departure of Becky Sharp, that old wretch Mad given himself up entirely to his bad courses. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIII, 358. Mr. A was getting into bad courses. Id., N e w c. , I, Ch. VII, 85.
in the
crackers
compound nutcrackers
(19,
c).
cups == potations, drunken revelry, especially in the phrases in one's cups, over one's cups.
There is the jolly Prince, shrewd, selfish, scheming, loving his cups and his Thack. The Four Georges, I, 17. They were merry, but no riot came out of their cups. lb., Ill, 68.
ease.
,
**
When
in
his
Id.,
Van. Fair,
I,
Ch.
XXXIV,
I'll
376.
when you
are in
your cups.
Id.,
Henry Esmond,
I,
***
Many of the wags derided the poor fellow in his cups. lb., II, Ch. XI, 242. They affect, dull souls, the knowledge of the past, play the patron, and mis-
quote Latin over their cups. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 11. What is the grandest entertainment at Windsor, compared to a night at the club over its modest cups ? Thack. The Four Georges, III, 67.
,
(the) upon imports, b) (the) Department a) of the Civil Service employed in levying these duties. The singular is used to denote the money to be paid by way of duty, The handkerchiefs will be put in some friend's pocket, not to pay custom. Swift. 1 )
i.
Customs
ii.
Arnold.
*)
value estimated in money of something lost or witheld; the damages sum of money claimed or adjudged to be paid in compensation for loss or
injury sustained.
Damages, gentleman
can
visit
heavy damages
is
the only
him.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
Ch.
XXXIV,
31.
Murray.
198
CHAPTER XXV,
for those
20.
a high-minded a right-
And
to
an enlightened
lb. feeling jury. The jury find for the plaintiff with
20 damages. Escott,
England,
The defendants capitulated and consented to pay damages plus costs. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 123a.
deserts such as
to the extent of
that
which
(get,
is
deserved.
meet with\ one's deserts, to come by one's deserts, to reward a man according to his deserts. In other combinations and shades of meaning the singular is frequent enough, i. Use every man after his desert, and who should 'scape whipping? Haml.
to find
have,
II,
2,
554.
loves only himself,
A man who
Hume
Essays,
23.
,
always mistake the degree of their own desert. Johnson Rambler. Pitt having come to his kingdom, and having by good luck, or desert rather, as he considered, assumed almost all the fortune [etc.]. Thack. Van. Fair, II Ch. V, 55. Surely a few pin-pricks were her desert. Mrs. Ward, Lady Rose's Daught. I, Ch. VII, 536.
Some
will
ii.
In the spring of 1713, Swift began to realise that there was no prospect of overcoming the resistance which his deserts and his hopes encountered at Court. D. Laing Purves Life of Swift, 22. ** The wicked are wicked no doubt, and they go astray and they fall, and they come by their deserts; but who can tell the mischief which the very virtuous
,
Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XX, 218. Ah, good neighbour, There should be something fierier than fire To yield them their diserts. Ten., Queen Mary, V, 4, (6476). knew that the last and guiltiest of Antony March's murderers had found his deserts. Conway, Called Back, Ch. XV, 193. AH was being done to bring the guilty to their deserts. lb., Ch. X, 114.
do?
worship, 'prayers' (= Dutch geestelijke oefeningen). Occasionally met with in the singular in, apparently, the same meaning, i. Conachar lived with him in his cell, sharing his devotion and privations, till death removed them in succession. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXVI, 379. ii. She invited them to join in her devotions. lb., 376. She was scrupulous in her devotions, good to the poor, never knowingly did
devotions
anybody a wrong. Thack., Virg. Ch. IV, 34. That half-hour in which you perform your devotions.
,
Punch,
Diet.
Life's Little
Fowler, Cone.
Oxford
dwelling-house. In this meaning especially common in the collocations (with)in-doors , out of doors (= without doors), to pack out of doors,
to enter into
a man's doors.
Good-nat. Man,
Turning her out of doors. Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey, Ch. Sir Pitt swore that no governess should ever enter into his doors again.
II, 8.
Thack.
Van. Fair,
In the
I,
course of the day Miss Osborne heard her father give orders that that meddling scoundrel, Captain Dobbin, should never be admitted within his doors again. lb., I, Ch. XXIV, 254. His fame out of doors depended entirely on the report of those who were within the doors. Mac Pitt, (2936).
,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
199
Let your poor wife's only brother go from your doors without a penny in the world. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 375. You may swear at it and kick it out of doors, but next time you will remember that cats have claws. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII, 4866.
drains == dregs from which the liquid has been drained. My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains My sense, as though had drunk, Or emptied some dull opiate to the drains. Keats,
|
of
Ode
hemlock to a
Nightingale,
draughts (19,
I.
d).
drawers
drawers.
I
a)
the
skin
(19,
a);
b)
chest of
set
out
,
Thack.
duties
regular actions required by one's position, profession, religion, etc. Having thus discharged his devotional duties, he annexed, in the same diary, the following remarkable writing. Southey, Life of Nelson, Ch. IX, 251. He had undertaken public duties for which he was ill qualified. Trol. Thack.,
,
the
to
wait
in
darkness
I, 7.
until
Conway,
Called Back,
effects
Ch.
goods and chattels, movable property. Also used in a wider meaning, as in the phrases no effects, written by bankers on dishonoured cheques when the drawer has no funds in the bank; to leave no effects (= to leave nothing for one's heirs). Note also the common personal effects (= personal luggage as distinguished from merchandise). With these he lived successively a week at a time; thus going the rounds of the neighbourhood, with all his effects tied up in a cotton handkerchief. Wash. Irv.,
Sketch-Bk.,
The bankers
effects'
XXXII.
to
declined
Wo
Thack. i) The people escaped from the town with their effects. He died leaving no effects. Murray. Sale of household effects. lb. The contents of the trunks were insured as 'personal
the paper.
on
Webst., Diet.
effects'.
lb.
elements
rudiments of learning, first principles of an art or science. Calculation and geometry and all the other elements of instruction. Jowett. i)
Euclid's elements were
first
used
in the
school of Alexandria.
Lardner.
in
i)
environments
Occasionally
and a
of
little
the
singular
in
To
action
to the interest.
Punch.
the
defects
his
environment.
Rev. of
life
and
Hughes,
Tom
Brown,
In the
I,
Ch.
II,
21.
become
respectable citizens.
Times.
of
the
Estates
assembly
governing
classes
or their representatives
(=
J
Dutch St at en).
Murray.
200
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
The new law had been ratified by the Estates of all the kingdoms and principalities which made up the great Austrian monarchy. Mac, Fred., (665a). The whole nation is represented in the Government by what is called the "three Estates of the Realm". Anna Buckl. Our Nat. Institutions, 9.
,
(The) Estimates (the) accounts presented annually to Parliament, showing the probable amount of expenditure on the several administrative departments for the current year (= Dutch Begrooting). Sometimes in the singular in the same meaning, especially after the indefinite article, i. Every rixdollar of extraordinary charge was scrutinized by Frederic with a vigilance and suspicion such as Mr. Joseph Hume never brought to the examination of an army estimate. Mac. Fred., (673a). ii. Warm debates took place on the Estimates. Id., Pitt, (302a). Mr. Balfour denied that anything which fell from him last year estopped the Government from presenting the Estimates in the form which they had selected.
,
n.)
We
Army Estimates
for
18891890.
Id.
expenses a) items of outlay incurred by a person in the execution of any commission or duty money paid to a person in reimbursement of these (= Dutch onkosten); b) expenditure (= Dutch uitgaven). The singular is ordinarily used in the meaning of amount of money to be
;
expended in carrying out a plan (Dutch kosten); also in certain phrases, such are instanced by at the (an) expense of 40 pounds; at a heavy (considerable, trifling, etc.) expense, or at some (little , much) expense I procured this article; He has been at (put to, brought to) a heavy (considerable trifling, etc.) expense or He has been at (put to, brought to) little (some, much) expense to get everything right; at my father's (my own, etc.) expense or at the expense of my father, etc.; They laughed at his (your brother's, etc.) expense, or at the expense of your brother ; to spare no expense. Usage is divided as to to be at the expense(s) of (= to defray the costs of) (Murray), to go to the expense(s) of (= to spend money (on, or in). Except for certain collocations there is much vacillation in the choice of the number. See especially Sattler, E. S. XII.
,
i.
My
weak
to support the
Smol.
Ch. VIII, 43. the war never entered into Pitt's consideration. Mac, Pitt, (309a). Of the expense of civil government only a small portion was defrayed by the Crown. Id., Hist, Ch. Ill, 302.
**
Mrs. Norris had not the least intention of being at any expense whatever in Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. 1,7. The whole arrangement was to bring very little expense to anybody. lb. Ch. XIII, 135. Instead of contriving to gratify him at little expense, she gave her cook as high wages as they did at Mansfield Park. lb., Ch. Ill, 30. They have also at their own expense made tours of Germany. Escott Engher maintenance.
, ,
land,
Ch. V, 58.
I
,
At a heavy expense procured the rods. Marryat After having up the whole basement, at the expense
Olla Podrida.
of 40
pounds,
that
nuisance
was abated.
lb.
I don't like to speak to your papa about it, my dear; he has already been put to such expense. lb. You defend his veracity at the expense of his understanding. We had a laugh
Oxford
Diet.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
201
to contribute only twenty thousand pounds for architectural Hist., Ch. Ill *302. The expenses of his board and schooling were defrayed by his father in goods, Van. Fair, Ch. V, 40. not money. Thack. In this case the expenses of brokerage are saved. Esc, England, Ch. VIII, 112. To form a correct estimate of the true amount of the management expenses.
expenses.
Lit.
World.
expenses.
He paid my
He
offered
me
10
and expenses.
Fowler, Cone.
some loose
silver for
between the lining and waistbands of our breeches, our immediate expenses on the road. Smol. Rod.
,
years,
we
Burns, Letter to
Moore,
52a.
She went to great expenses in new gowns, and bracelets and bonnets. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXI, 219. He had written to ask the signor to come, and was to be at all the expenses of the affair. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XVI, 309.
exported articles. Not infrequently found in the singular to exports denote a single article. i. The trade and commerce of Rio de Janeiro are very great, its principal export
ii.
being coffee. Cassell's Cone. Cycl. Our exports have been 'cabined, cribbed and confined' by
quarter of the globe.
Times.
|
the Destinies or Parcae. (the) Fates And thou, fair cause of mischief, hear
The doom
method
,
Scott,
Brid. of Triermain, II, xxvi. They cast lots for the farms as the Rev. of Rev., CCV, 296.
fairest
We
in silence to
can but say that the Fates deal mercifully with him if he (sc. the Sultan) passes some place of safety. Westm. Gaz. No. 4983, \b.
,
features form or mould of the various parts of the face combined, cast of countenance. Also in the singular to denote the same meaning, especially in the older language. i. Doth my simple feature content you? As you like it, HI, 3, 3. (Compare the answer: Your features! Lord warrant us! what features?) He equalled him in refinement of feature. Trol. 2 ). ii. As Dolf caught a distinct view of his person and features, he was struck with something that reminded him of the old man of the Haunted House. Wash. Irv.
,
Dolf Heyl.
finances
pecuniary resources (= Dutch geldmiddelen). The singular form is the rule to denote the management of (public) money, the science which concerns itself with the levying and application of revenue in a state, corporation, etc. (= Dutch geldelijk beheer, finantiewezen). But also the plural form often seems to convey the same meaning, The report which is first taken, is that of the committee of finance. Escott,Eng., Ch. IV, 51. His book is most useful in the account it gives of the steps which have been
i.
(Stof.,
Han
1. ,
I,
130).
taken to reduce Egyptian finance to order. Lit. World. This is fanaticism; it is certainly not finance. Westm. Gaz., No. 5036, lb. We are to give the House of Lords control of finance as well as of legislation.
Id.,
5207, lb.
')
Murray.
202
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
much
has
,
20.
* So
Lalouette's
luck
drained
my
finances that
[etc.].
Thack.,
Fitzb. Pap. Pref. He increased his finances by taking pupils. As to finances they were not making their
Trol.,
fortune,
way
and something more. Mrs. Ward, David Grieve, His finances were low. Edna Lyall, Donovan, II,
**
286.
156.
most intricate matters, especially in the finances, that, whilst he was speaking, the most ignorant thought that they understood what they really did not. Chesterfield (1001 Gems in prose, 210a). While Danby was at the head of the finances, the creditors had received their
(He was) so clear
in stating the
dividends.
Mac, Hist,
I,
Ch.
Ill,
284.
That load which pressed most heavily on the finances of the great continental
states was here scarcely felt. lb. 285. Any departure from the simple rules of
, ,
arithmetic
and
fact is
Westm. Gaz.
floodgates,
in a figurative
meaning.
The
"Life of Wallace" poured a Scottish prejudice into my veins, which will boil along there till the floodgates of life shut in eternal rest. Burns, Letter to Dr. Moore. The. floodgates were opened, and mother and daughter wept. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVI.
that which is given to a person by fate or divine providence, Occasionally also in the singular in, apparently, the same sense. The plural is also the rule in the phrases to seek (try, repair, stake) one's Dutch w a a rfortune(s). The plural is regular in to tell fortunes ( zeggen), the singular in the phrase to tell a man his fortune. * The contract was made when we were both i. poor and content to be so, until,
fortunes
lot.
in
patient
industry.
there to seek his fortune. Walter Raleigh Ch. II 42. Send him out to seek his fortune. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Ch. I, 16a. *** The Visier then demanded, if he could tell his own Fortune. Lond. Gaz. 1 )
,
Shakespeare,
ii.
* The sad fortunes of the Rev. Amos Barton. G. Eliot Scenes. Pulteney had resigned a valuable place, and had followed the fortunes of Walpole.
,
Mac, Pitt,
In
fame and fortunes he accepted the offer. lb., (301a). This, when taken with the decline of his fortunes seems to indicate some evil Con. Doyle, Sherl. Holm., Blue evidence, probably drink, upon him.
evil
an
hour
Carb.
The fortunes of France were at ** He must repair his fortunes.
the last extremity.
583.
Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XI, 110. out into the world to seek my fortunes. Ch. Kingsley,
Bulgaria may decide to stake her fortunes in a gallant effort to liberate the enslaved province. Rev. of Rev., CCIV, 564a. *** Ham was trying to recollect a scheme of telling fortunes with the dirty cards. Dick., Cop., Ch. Ill, 166.
fruits
a) vegetable products in general that are fit to be used as food by also: fruits of the earth (ground); b) products, revenues.
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i
203
In the Authorised Version the word is, apparently, mostly singular when used in the first meaning. Thus in Numb. XIII, 26; Deut. XXVI, Not in Deut. XXXIII, 14; Psalm CVII, 37. 2; Isaiah XXVII, 6. The singular is used, both as a collective noun and as a unit-noun with
in the more limited sense of the edible succulent products Compare the Dutch fruit (= o o f t) and vruchten. The plural is the rule in certain combinations, such as fruits and flowers fruits and vegetables, etc., also when a defining adjective precedes: candied fruits, preserved fruits, syruped fruits, etc. The trade distinguishes green
an ordinary plural,
of certain plants.
fruits (= oranges, lemons, etc., gathered green and ripening on the way to destination) from green fruit (= apples, pears, etc. consumed in an
fruit
unripe state); dried fruits (= dried figs, raisins, currants, etc.) horn dried (= evaporated apples, pears, etc.). The plural is regular in the phrase first-fruits which in its metaphorical meaning is, however, often construed as a singular, i. e. preceded by the
,
indefinite article or a singular demonstrative pronoun. The singular is the rarer form in the metaphorical meaning of products, in the collocation to bear (yield) fruit. See especially Sattler, E. S., XII.
i.
Every tree
,
good
fruit
is
fire.
Bible, Matth.,
VII, 19.
Or garden
I
He
tempting with forbidden fruit. Pope, Essay on Man, 1,9. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXIII, 303. on, now lifting the gooseberry-tree branches to look at the fruit, large
as plums.
The
**
silly
people take
Ten.,
St.
Simeon
bring
me
offerings of fruit
and flowers.
The rich man enjoyed Trav., IV, Ch. VI, (1996). The toil which stole from
at thy feet.
the fruit of
the
Swift, Gul.
is
thee so
many an hour,
,
Is
ended
Shelley,
,
Revolt, Ded.
16.
|
For manners are not idle, but the fruit Of loyal nature, and of noble mind. 333. Ten., Guin. Mr. Cremer has good reason to be proud of the fruit of his labours. Rev. of
***
Ch. BrontE,
Jane
same
will
fruit according to
rapacious licence and oppression over again, and it will its kind. Dick., Tale of Cities,
Two
These principles
ii.
bear
fruit.
Rev. of Rev.
all
turn
the fruits
of the earth
to account.
Jephson,
Brittany,
**
i)
The birds eat the fruits of the surrounding trees. Bates. *) The fruits of some species of jungle-trees furnish a variety of poison. Ball. l ) The very gold and silver fish, set forth among these choice fruits. Christm. Car. Which at this season, with their unripe fruits, Are clad These orchard-tufts in one green hue. Wordsw., Lines com p. a few miles above Tint. Ab., 12. *** There Frederic amused himself by collecting rare fruits and flowers. Mac, Fred., (6616). Negroes in these climates live principally upon fruits and vegetables. A the Year Round. 2)
|
i)
Murray.
*)
Sattler, E.
S.
XII.
204
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
The candied fruits were so caked and spotted with molten sugar. Chrtstm. Car. delicate jellies and syruped They fared sumptuously every day upon dainties
fruits.
Howells, (2). Green fruits are entirely duty free. All the Officially, according to the customs lists, all dried fruits green fruits and nuts. lb. l )
,
Year Round.
fruit is
value of the produce of the soil far exceeded the value of all the other fruits of human industry. Mac, Hist., Ch. Ill, 306. I could wish that the fruits of my manhood were worthier of the tender and
****
The
anxious pains bestowed upon my education in youth. Lytton, Rienzi, Ded. Every day witnessed the fruits of their lawless warfare. lb., I, Ch. II, 19. The fruits of the victory were lost by a sudden appearance of Soult on the English line of advance. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X, Sect. IV, 825. ***** Ye shall bring a sheaf of the first-fruits of your harvest unto the priest.
Bible, Lev.,
As a
XXIII,
10.
we have,
W.T.Arnold, Intro
first-fruits
of
d.
to
Keat's Hyperion.
[etc.].
this dedication
Preface
to Par.
Lost (Clar.
in full robes, with maces and tipstaffs, do honour to that first-fruits of the Gospel in the West. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXXIX, 2166. (Compare: The scientist sat mutely enjoying the first No. 5167, 2c). fruit of his stupendous discovery. Saki, (Westm. Gaz.
functions
official duties.
the functions of a lecturer.
Trol.
Thack.
Ch.
I, 43.
a person's disposal; b) stock of the national debt a) money considered as a mode of investment. When he had no funds, he went on tick. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 25. The knight who happens to be in funds at the time, prefers to kill the little
at
girl.
ii.
Trol.,
Thack.,
The funds
We
Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 185. shall have our town and country mansion, and a hundred and
fell.
,
thirty
pounds
Cox's Diary, Feb. funds. Id. I succeeded to an income, which, being drawn from the funds, I was abie to enjoy without responsibilities or anxiety. Conway, Called Back, Ch. I, 2.
in the
furies
= =
He
(sc.
Surajah
in his tent,
haunted',
have said, by the furies of those who had cursed him with their Black Hole. Mac, Clive, (518a).
in other
without pains. P r o v. gains be sordid and lucre filthy, where is the priest, the lawyer, the doctor, or the man of literature, who does not wish for dirty hands? Trol", Thack., Ch.I, 44.
ornamental grounds used as a place of public resort, usually gardens with some defining word. Sometimes constructed as a singular, i. e. as the subject of a singular finite verb, and preceded by the indefinite article. The singular form is sometimes used in the same sense,
,
i.
to
go with him on
Spectator,
i)
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
205
* And after we have been in the Park we can walk in Kensington Gardens. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. 111,28. I have just returned from my stroll in the Botanical Gardens. Scotsman.
** A natural Zoological Gardens. Lit. World. The Zoological Gardens was patronised by 21000 persons on Bank
Holiday.
Daily Telegraph.
glasses in the sense of eye-glasses (19,
a).
,
goddesses of charm and beauty; b) attainments accomplishments. Also in the phrase to be in a man's good graces ( Dutch b ij iemand in de gratie staan). "This cup to the Gracesl" said Panda, and he thrice emptied his calyx., Lytton, Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. Ill, 18a. Your daughter and her cousin much commend The ii. She secretly o'erheard parts and graces of the wrestler. As you like it, II, 2, 73. To some kind of men Their graces serve them but as enemies. lb., II, 3, //.
graces
a)
i.
iii.
He
Ch.
was
Ill,
pretty
well
in
Thack.,
Pend.
II,
33.
Mrs. Hoggins was really desirous to be restored to Mrs. Jamieson's good graces. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. Ch. XV, 291. He was without much difficulty received again into the good graces of Stella. D. Laing Purves, Life of Swift, 29.
,
grounds
a) enclosed portion of a land of considerable extent surrounding or attached to a dwelling-house or other building, serving chiefly for ornament or recreation; b) particles deposited by a liquid in the bottom of the
,
vessel containing
it
(19,
e).
Extensive grounds were also laid out around the place. Prescott. i) One afternoon he chanced to meet me and Adele in the grounds.
Ch. Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
Guards household troops of the English army consisting of the Footguards, the Horse-guards and the Life-guards. A single soldier belonging to the Guards is called a Guardsman.
i.
The brigade
of
Guards
will
be destroyed; ought
it
not to
fall
back?
Kinglake,
Crimea,
ii.
II,
351.1)
Jack the Guardsman and La Tulipe of the Thack., Virg., Ch. LXIV, 685.
Royal Bretagne
heaps large quantity (= Dutch een hoop, hoopen). Old Lobbs was well known to have heaps of money. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XVII, You will have had heaps of opportunity. Osc. Wilde, An Ideal Husb., I.
I
151.
lb., IV.
heavens
of space
in
bodies move.
the
Heaven is also met with in the plural a) occasionally when denoting abode of the Supreme Being and the blessed after death, /?) rather
frequently when denoting the Supreme Being, y) in apostrophe, when its precise meaning is indistinct. It deserves notice that, except for the vocaThe tive, the plural is almost always preceded by the definite article.
singular, mostly with the definite article, the sense of sky. (Ch. XXXI, 24a.)
J
is
Murray.
206
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
will
20.
the
send
(?),
to
thee
at
the
hour of eve,
When
curtains
are
drawn
o'er
heaven.
II,
the
52).
ii.
The full power of the clear heaven was not equal to that of a cloudy sky at noon. Hardy Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XIV, 1 14. * The moon was already bright in the heavens. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. IV, 31. The thunder may roar till it splits the heavens. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!,
,
As
in the
Besant, Autob. 126. Oh, I suppose the heavens must W. Black, The New Prince
because you've
lost
Fortunatus,
Ch. XX.
Maps of the heavens, planisphere of the heavens, globe of the heavens- Murray. A popular Guide to the study of the Starry Heavens. Advertisement. ** The Planets and Comets move in the Heavens very freely. Gregory, Astron.i) The great circle of the Heavens, or the path which the earth traverses in its revolution around the sun,
***
I
is called
the ecliptic.
Cycl.
II,
1.
Thus
the heavens
and
|
the sweet heavens To save her dear lord from any wound. Ten. G e r. and Enid, 44. The Heavens themselves had called upon Spain to fulfil her heavenly mission. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIX, 218a. ***** Heavens make our presence and our practices Pleasant and helpful to
|
down sin And be God. Ten., Guin., 633. **** And she was ever praying
can
live
,
mate hereafter
heavens
Before high
him.
******
Haml.,
Heavens!
II, 2,
it.
38.
,
Heavens avert
Farquhar
it
11,2, (269).
Lord Adrian di Castello! Bulwer, Rienzi, I, Ch. VI, 47. But, good-heavens! such a figure, in such a place; a pious, self-respecting, miserably infirm and pleased old man telling such a tale! Wordsworth,
is
the
Letters.
vacation. holidays (Ch. XXXI, 39.)
i.
Often
used
in
the singular in
the
same meaning.
The
day of my holiday. Thack. Sam. T i t m. Ch. 1 3. have holiday. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, III, 275. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake, II, Ch. IV, 78. In November he took a holiday. She's entitled to a week's holiday. Hall Caine, The Christian, I, 276.
last
,
Lucy
shall
ii.
Blair spent orte summer holidays with his mother, Lady Mary, at Spa. Southey. 1 ) You have devoted your month's holidays to your aunt. Thack. Sam. T t m. ,
, i
Ch.
I, 5.
my
month's holiday.
;
lb.,
Ch.
I, 2.)
honours a) marks or manifestations of high regard b) special distinction gained, in a University or other examination, for proficiency in scholarship beyond that required to pass the examination; c) decorations ornaments; d) the highest trumps in certain games of cards. In the first meaning honours is very common in the expressions to do the honours, the last In the meaning (funeral) honours, military honours, honours of war. given under c) it is chiefly found in poetical language,
,
i.
* At
He never
Cawnpore;
with
the
received
him. Mac, Clive, (525a). reason being, it is believed, that he would McCarthy, Short Hist., princely honours.
')
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
** George did XXVI, 275.
207
Thack.,
the
air.
Van. Fair,
I,
Ch.
He
assisted the captain in doing the honours of the princely meal. I, Ch. II, 19.
Miss Brad.,
As soon as the prince Facilidas had paid the last honours to his father. Bruce. 1 ) Their funeral honours claimed, and asked their quiet graves. Dryden. 2 ) His remains were buried on the following day with military honours by his brother volunteers. W. Gunnyon, Biographical Sketch of Burns, 49. She capitulated, or rather marched out with the honours of war. Trol. i)
ii.
matical Tripos.
sity.
iii.
Anstey,
honours
at
in the
Mathe-
Miss Pankhurst has taken her degree with honours Rev. of Rev., CXCIX 8a.
,
law
Manchester, Univer-
iv.
The sire then shook the honors of his head. Dryden. -) The woods, in scarlet honors bright. Cowper, Task, I, 321. J ) The honours were divided, but the state, as by this time its habit was, took
odd
trick.
the
Maitland.
i)
horrors
b) habitual time of getting seven stated times of the day appointed for prayer (also the prayers or offices appointed to be said at In the two -first meanings these times, and a book containing these).
hours
or duty
c)
up and going
to
preceded
hours.
i.
by a defining word.
plural
is
In
the
third
meaning hours
canonical
The
(=
Murray.
,
ii.
iii.
Their regular hours stupefy me. Sher. Rivals, I, 1. I keep early hours. Mrs. S. Edwards. *) In the Church of Rome the canonical hours begin with vespers.
Hook,
i)
A nun
iv.
1 saying her hours. Baring Gould. ) Illuminated hours, and golden missals. Dixon. 1 ) Both these gifts inevitably (attached), as they believed, to
either
all unlucky infants' of gender, born towards the small hours on a Friday night. Dick., Cop.,
Ch.
I,
lb.
hulks
Rather than trade upon this secret of Amory's I would go and join at the hulks. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXIII, 359.
my
father-in-law
temporary platform from which, previous to the Ballot Act of hustings 1872, the nomination of candidates for Parliament was made, and on which these stood while addressing the electors. Sometimes preceded by the indefinite
article.
*
S. C. .**
One
Carlyle.
,
i)
Church never stood on a hustings. Lytton My Novel. 3 ) The members were nominated on an open hustings, exposed to the disturbances of two contending mobs. Anna Buckl., Our Nat. Institutions, 24.
better friend of
imports
the singular
in
Murray.
2
)
Webster.
686.
208
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
is
20.
Your import
your
ii.
We
your own food; as much your own, as that you raise ... out of Burke, i) are not going to ruin because our imports exceed our exports. Times.
own
soil.
indentures contract by which an apprentice is bound to the master who undertakes to teach him a trade; also contract by which a person binds himself to service in the colonies etc. Note to take up one's indentures to receive them back on completion of service. Not infrequently used in
,
the singular in the same sense, i. Mr. W. C. D. Whetman supplies proof in an indenture of the 3rd of January, 1648 49, of the sale of Bishop's lands during the Commonwealth to a Parliamentary soldier.
ii.
2106.
Recollecting
Smol. irons
Rod.
fetters.
Especially
in
the
compound
The
fire-irons
implements used
in
were
exactly
same
position.
Mrs. Gask.,
Cranf.
jaws
mouth. Frequent in certain transferred meanings, as in the jaws of a valley {gulf, sea, etc.), the jaws (fauces) of a flower, the jaws of the tongs, the jaws of a boom (gaff), the jaws of death. The singular is sometimes used in, apparently, the same sense, But such officers do the king best service in the end; he keeps them, like an ape. in a corner of his jaw; first mouthed to be last swallowed. Haml. IV, 2. 21, ii. We that were awhile since in the jaws of death, were now brought into a place where we found nothing but consolations. Bacon, New Atlantis, (276). Your benevolence rescued me from the jaws of death. Smol. Rod. Rand.,
i.
, ,
Ch. XXJIJ, 169. When a man goes near them Dick., Domb., Ch. XII, 103.
out of compassion
jinks lively or boisterous sport; mostly in the combination high jinks. In Wraxall we find the Prime Minister himself, the redoubted William Pitt, engaged in high jinks with personages of no less importance than [etc.]. Thack., The
Four Georges,
In
IV, 100.
the club takes to tents, migrates to the forest, and holds high jinks in Dionysic fashion. Froude, Oceana, Ch. XX, 320. It's my lady's It is easy to guess who is at the bottom of it (sc. raising the rents). A Bankrupt Heart, II, 22. high jinks and no mistake. Flor. Marryat You ought to be in bed, my Nell, instead of cutting such jinks. lb., I, 134.
the
summer weather
Chiefly, with partial allusion to its original meaning as to reap (or win) one's laurels, to repose (or Also the singular is rest, retire) on one's laurels, to look to one's laurels. occasionally met with in the same figurative meaning, i. Still he is a poet poet of a prouder laurel than any contemporary. Emerson,
laurels
in
distinction.
certain
phrases,
such
sweet to win, no matter how, one's laurels. Byron, Don Juan, I, cxxvi. He did not exactly cover himself with laurels. Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. IV, 68. He caught eagerly at the golden opportunity of winning fresh laurels. Motley Rise, I, Ch. II, 89a. is Mr. Dernburg who wears all the laurels of the victory. It Rev. of Rev.,
'Tis
,
CCVI, 116a.
It
showed
Murray.
Graph.
J)
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
leads
209
Having reached the leads, I looked out afar over sequestered field and BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XV, 130. The tempest crackles on the leads. Ten., Sir Galahad, 53.
leathers
Ch.
articles
ii.
glanced down at the new patent leathers which I was wearing. Sherl. Holmes, Out of the vay, young leathers. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XIX, 167.
I
,
letters
it
In the meaning of epistle also a) a certain game; b) literature. regularly placed in the plural in certain combinations of a formal or legal sense, such as letters dimissory, letters patent, letters rogatory, etc.; In Early Modern English letters of administration, caption, ejection, etc. the plural is also met with without any such defining word.
is
In
the
meaning
,
man of
i.
letters
the
commonwealth
(or republic)
of
letters.
We
*
round a large table and played at 'letters', sedulously 'shuffling' the handsome capitals as we gave each other long jaw-breaking words. Whyte
sat
Melville.
ii.
*)
not to receive a member of any other known monastery without dimissory letters from his superior. Southey. j ) Letters dimissory for a young man who has distinguished himself. C. Simeon. *) Richard II was the first to confer the peerage by letters patent. H. Cox. *)
**
I,
Thy
5. 57.
letters
have transported
in
me beyond This
|
ignorant present.
M a c b.
iii.
Letters
In
those
quaint times,
actually
authorities.
France,
man
distinguished in letters
all
was found
Mac,
Popes,
(5606).
him from
among men of
field of exertion
Fred.,
(6626).
...
in the republic
The teaching
munities.
of
arts
and
letters is not
Escott,
England,
liabilities = debts
(= Dutch
Sir R. G. C.
sums owing to him are called his assets; the sums owing Hamilton and John Ball, Book-keeping, 5.
lights knowledge, information. Frequent in the phrases according (or after) one's lights (the singular is unusual in these combinations). Also a plurale
tantum i. The
in the legal
editors
of
the
phrase ancient lights, and in northern (or polar) lights. Posthumous Poems, moreover, though diligent according to
ii.
their light, were neither endowed with remarkable acumen nor possessed of the wide knowledge requisite for the full intelligence of so erudite a poet as Shelley. Thomas Hutchinson , Poet. Works of Shelley, Preface, 7. He was, according to his light, a just man. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5613, 9a. * In truth nothing more is wanted, - except those inner lights as to which so many men live and die without having learned whether they possess them or
not.
Trol.,
Thack.,
Ch.
I,
11:
Murray.
H.
II.
14
210
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
Two
to Pen's mother he is beneficent after his lights. lb., Ch. IV, 112. however, marred the effect of his sagacity: a supreme insolence of disposition, and a profound belief in the lights of his experience. Lytton,
To Pen and
faults,
of
lights
of
men.
G. Eliot,
Romolo. 1 )
They were doing
** Ancient lights
molestation,
according to their lights. Mrs. Ward, Marc, II, 42. window lights, which have been opened and enjoyed without and have become established by the legal time of prescription.
their best
Webst.
Diet.
i.
e.
The northern
darkness.
lights,
which are
northern daybreak; popularly called northern lights. lb. to be seen almost every evening, relieve the
to the
Times.
answer has yet been furnished as
I.
No
lines
satisfactory
lights.
s.
Cone. C y c
(your, etc.) footing. Also regularly plural in the Scriptural lines fall (fell, etc.). (Compare XVI, 6.) Furthermore in (marriage) lines marriage certificate), and in the colloquial phrase to be hard lines
My
Psalm
(=
(on a man), i. In Lord Rosebery's opinion acquiescence in these opinions is wholly incompatible with the maintenance of the Liberal party on existing lines. Times. The division was not taken on party lines. lb. Languages which have been separate for thousands of years have altered so much from their original form, and have developed on such different lines, that they are often absolutely unrecognisable as relatives. H. C. Wyld, Hist. Study
ii.
of the Mother Tongue, Ch. 1,9. Milby was a low place where they would have found
lines fall for
it
G. Eliot,
Scenes,
III,
Ch.
II,
194.
iii.
"How should
I
you know
that the
"Because
cries Caroline quickly. had no lines Thack. 2 ) She could not produce her marriage lines. Marryat.
iv.
said
to
that
was hard
lines
on me.
To
links
break
,
an old connection so suddenly, and, as it chanced, at such a trying lines. Edna Lyall, Hardy Norseman, Ch. X 84.
,
the
(=
golf-links).
"Golfing?" "Oh, yes," said the young Mrs. Ward, Lady Rose's Daught.,
man
I,
indifferently.
"There's a
fair links."
Ch. V, 386.
This would be a
jolly
good place
for
a golf-links.
Shaw,
Island,
lists
102.
= ground
The
or tournament.
inclosed for a combat or competition , especially a tilting-match palisades or barriers.) The word may be an (Properly
English adaptation of the Old French lisse (Mod. French lice). For the insertion of the / compare whilst, amongst. Note especially to enter the
lists.
i.
singular form
is
same meaning,
list.
Macb.
|
III,
1,
71.
martial
II,
sort,
Have thronged
into the
Scott,.
xvm.
VI.
2)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
211
The lists are oped, the spacious area clear'd. Byron, Childe Harold, I, lxxii. They reel, they roll in clanging lists. Ten., Sir Galahad, I. ** The young king himself entered the lists against Luther. Green, Short
5, 321. Hist., Ch. VI, He entered the lists against the most celebrated advocates of the day. ship Diet, of Clas. Antiquities, s. v. Julius Caesar.
,
Nettle-
looks
= appearance
in the
jour' hebben). Without any defining word looks often means good looks. (Compare parts and spirits).
i.
1
of the countenance, mien, cast of the features. Frequent Note to be in good looks (= Dutch zijn 'beau The singular form is sometimes used in the same meaning.
abilities
make amends
for
any
fault of look.
Ch. Bronte,
ii.
I
Jane Eyre,
* asked a man of sorrow and of tears Whose looks told anguish press'd him more than years. (?), What is Life? (Rainb., 1,20). Tozer replied that he thought not also, judging from Paul's looks. Dick.,
Domb.,
**
to
Ch. XII,
105.
suffer
of
the fate
under the misfortune of good looks, ought which awaits them. Thack., Van.
Fair, I, Ch. XII, 113. He was possessed of a certain brilliancy which generally passes for good looks. Edna Lyall, Don., 1,60. *** Her person was pleasing, and, when in good looks, pleasing. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. II, 6. Catherine was in very good looks. lb., Ch. II, 12. **** I never saw anybody to equal him in looks. Rid. Haggard, She, Ch. II, 21.
lots
plenty.
Only
another
in colloquial
with
a lot,
colloquialism,
Dick.
number
Let's
(quantity).
Lots of tin,
suppose, eh?
37.
I,
manners external behaviour in social intercourse (= Dutch manieren). The singular form is sometimes used in the same meaning, but mostly corresponds to the Dutch (wijze van) optreden.
i.
Jane Austen,
North. Abbey,
We
for
ii.
.
much
Id.,
Mansfield Park,
His manners were dignified. G. Eliot, Mid., I, Ch. II, 8. For manners are not idle, but the fruit Of loyal nature, and of loyal mind. 333. Ten., Guin.
|
Evil
Rev. of Rev.
marbles a) sculptures in marble; b) game played with marble balls. In the second meaning constructed as a singular. Of late years he has decidedly gone in more for sculpture, or as Plush disdainfully terms it "taken to marbles." James PAYn, Glow-Worm Tales, II, C, 42. What have I myself not suffered from Jebb's lectures upon the Carrara marbles. lb. ii. Marbles is not the popular game it once was. New B k. Sports.*)
i.
*")
Murray.
212
matters
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
things, affairs, in an indefinite and vague sense (Ch. XXXI, 57). Matters being thus composed, everybody went to rest. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XIX, 127. Those who either attack or defend a minister in such a government as ours, where the utmost liberty is allowed, always carry matters to an extreme. Hume, Essays,
III, 24.
We
are,
Thack.,
Newc.
I,
Ch.
II,
16.
(= Dutch
attained;
loopenopdezaakvooruit.)
means
= a)
is
find
meaning construed as a singular or as a plural. Thus we It is but this (that) means, but also these (those) means. natural that the plural demonstratives are used when more agencies than one are referred to. In Early Modern English the singular form mean is sometimes met with, in Present English this form is rare. In the second meaning means is a strict plurale tantum, and construed as
a means,
such
throughout, except with regard to the indefinite numerals: much means. The plural is also regularly used in certain collocations, such as to have means, to find means, (by) fair (or foul) means, means of
(little)
Grace, by all (manner of) means, by any (manner) of means , by no (manner of) means, by means of, ways and means (see below). a) i. You may deny that you were not the mean Of my lord Hastings' late imprison|
ment.
Rich.
|
Ill,
I,
3, 90.
|
No place will serve me so, no mean of death, As here by Caesar, and by you cut off, The choice and master spirits of this age. Jul. Caas. , III, 1, 161. I will not practise any violent mean to stay the unbridled course of youth in him.
Jonson, Ev. Man in his Hum., I, 2, 124. (Some editions have means). You may be able by this mean to review your own scientific acquirements. Coleridge, i) As a mean of passenger transportation. Mark Twain Tramp Abroad. 2 )
,
ii.
He was thankful to have been the means Van. Fair, I, Ch. XX, 214. ** Rebecca easily found a means to get rid of
Ch. XVI, 165. Each regarded
her
as a
of
Thack.
lb., I,
means
of
Mrs.
Ward,
Marc,
***
I,
135.
Being by that means reminded of his charge, he fell mechanically into his Dick., Chimes^, I, 36. trot,, and trotted off. By this means she ensured the personal chastisement of all other youths who dared to lift their eyes to her. Ch. Kingsley, Hereward, Ch. VIII, 48a. **** Good God, betimes remove The means that makes us strangers. Macb.,
usual
|
IV, 3, 164. ***** e s t m. a z. . No. 5231 4c. They have few means of information. ****** With great dexterity these means were now employed. Motley. 3) ******* Bv fair or foul means we must now enter in. Henry VI, C, IV, 7, 14. She found means to deceive the servants. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. I, 9.
What was
Ch.
I,
income
33.
The
the St.
discipline
discourse of the preacher was on the fearful condition of those who disobey of the Church and refuse the means of Grace. Walt. Besant, Katherine, Ch. X.
2
i)
Webst., Diet.
VI.
3)
GUnth., Man.,
369.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
These
213
(sc. the Rosebery and Lansdowne Resolutions) adumbrate a Second Chamber which by no manner of means satisfies the Liberal Party or the Country. Westm. Gaz. No. 5496, lc.
,
/?)
it a great favour if you would acquaint me, so far as lies your power, with information respecting the character and means of Messrs.
I
should esteem
in
Business Letter-Writer,
The daughter
of
XVI.
means, who squandered them and became a Saintsbury, Ninet. Cent., Ch. 'I, 37. ** She was parting with one who had little means of serving her. De Quincey,
an Irishman
[etc.].
of
Confessions,
Ch.
II,
28.
He broke away from surgery, and, having some little means, travelled to the Isle of Wight, Devonshire, and other parts of England. Saintsbury, Nine-
teenth Century,
He would very with less means
and so
forth.
Ch,
II,
86.
Norris,
My Friend
in the steps of his father and grandfather consequently greater temptations than theirs Jim, Ch. XII, 80.
a) desultory record of events; b) autobiographical record; c) record of the proceedings or transactions of a learned society. i. Their whole structure serves to prove .that they (sc. the Synoptic Gospels) are memoirs and not histories. Westcott. *)
ii.
memoirs
We
do not
find,
in
vivid painting.
Mac, Fred.,
read with
so
much
profit
as the
Memoirs
of
Burns, of
iii.
The sensation of the month has been Memoirs. Rev. of Rev., CCIII 477a. Memoirs read before the Anthropological
,
publication
Prince Hohenlohe's
Society of London.
*)
memoranda
so
that
the
booklet or paper containing memoranda. Felt as a singular, use of a preceding indefinite article is not regarded as an
at this
paper."
Lytton,
Caxtons,
merits
to
a) intrinsic excellences or defects ; b) good works viewed as entitling reward from God. In the first meaning especially frequent in the phrase (up)on one's {own) merits. The opposite demerits, often found in conjunction
with merits,
i.
is
* In pleading, they studiously avoid entering into the merits of the cause. Gul. Trav., IV, Ch. V, 199a.
Swift,
Nobody could be
It
insensible to Mr. Pipkin's merits. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XVH, 152. impossible to enter here into the merits of the controversy. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 565a. ** He has always been content to let his novels advance on their own merits.
is
Standard.
He wishes
that
Rev. of Rev.,
of the law must be judged on its own merits. Westm. Gaz., No. 6005, lc. His superabundant merits, which are laid up as a rich treasure for his Church. Mortimer, i)
*)
Murray.
214
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
Perhaps his exalted appreciation of the merits of the old girl causes him usually to make the noun-substantive, Goodness, of the feminine gender. Dick., Bleak
,
House,
iii.
I
Ch. XLIX
409.
their special merits
and demerits.
fifty
Trol.,
Thack.
Ch.
It
38.
seemed
to
me by no means
and
sous
in the
purchase
stable for carriages and carriage-horses. Originally the name Royal stables in London, so called because built where the king's hawks were once mewed or confined. Mews is often found with the indefinite article, but seems otherwise to be treated as a plural. Compare Storm, 2 Eng. Phil. 686 and 799. of
mews
= large
the
i.
There was some disturbance last night round the King's mews. Greville. *)
in
consequence
of the
mob
assembling
ii.
Street.
Anstey,
Mews.
Vice Versa,
Dick.,
Ch.
44.
at
back)
commanded
own.
a
l
vista of
Domb.,
of
Ch. VII,
59.
The mews
iii.
London
I
,
Mayhew.
one
of the
in
60.
Mr. Turveydrop's great room was built out into a mews at the back. Id., Bleak House, Ch. XIV, 117. I found that there was a mews in a lane which runs down by one wall of the garden. Con. Doyle, Sherl. Holm., 1,31. She saw the black spot pass down a mews and disappear under the eaves. G.Moore, Esth. Wat., Ch. XV, 96. Nero, the younger (dog) had dived to the very heart of a peculiarly unsavoury dust-box, standing near the entrance of a mews. Mrs. Ward, Lady Rose's D aught., I, Ch. IV, 29a.
moral principles, moral life. morals He would not take one without a certificate from
of his native place, strongly
the schoolmaster and clergyman vouching for his morals and doctrine. Thack., Sam.
of the worst kind.
Titm., Ch.
II,
11.
Mac, Pitt,
(291a).
in
The Duke of Newcastle, however contemptible ding, was a dangerous enemy. lb., (305a).
nervousness. nerves He must be a man of nerve, but without
95) (Note the contrast.) Europe during the last ten years has
I,
nerves.
Good Words
(Stof.,
Leesb.
been in that peculiar stage of nerves in which does but increase the irritation, and accentuate the fears of the timid. Westm. Gaz., No. 5376, \c. In order to bring us into his state of nerves he made a series of assertions which are either half-true or totally inaccurate. lb., No. 5442, lc.
mere
talk
about war
a) a large number; b) numerical strength ; c) superior numbers ; d) poetical rhythm or measure (now uncommon). Also the singular form
numbers
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
215
is used to denote a numerous multitude. Note also the collocation in round numbers, sometimes used figuratively in the sense of the Dutch in ronde
wo o rde
i.
n.
friends, frequented this very
merry meeting.
Thack.,
Pend.
ii.
iii.
To do the villains justice, they fought bravely; but we far excelled them in numbers. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. V, 52. The Ghebers are at last borne down by numbers. Jeffrey, Thomas Moore,
numbers. Haml. II, 2, 120. numbers, for the numbers came. Pope. Tell me not in mournful numbers. "Life is but an empty dream!" Longfellow. Such may be stated, in round numbers, to be the result of the information which Major Pendennis got. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. VII, 75. Well, ma'am, in round numbers, she's run away with the soldiers. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. X, 92.
I
iv.
am
ill
at these
lisp'd in
v.
offices
c)
a)
ceremonial
duties
or
services;
b)
rites
due
to
the
dead;
and rooms connected with it, often including stables and other outhouses. In the second meaning mostly preceded by the adjective last. To denote a single servant's room the singular may be used,
kitchen
i.
She usually leaves her cloak in the passage as she goes with the milk. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXII, 334.
* In offices as strict as Lent,
|
ii.
is
ever spent.
Scott,
Mark,
IV, xv. Hitherto he had said his offices regularly, but now he Hall Caine, Christian, 1,298. a book containing the daily offices which Breviary
would say
all
special prayers.
The
who
bound
**
I
to read.
did
not
Lytton,
Caxtons,
Macb.
The
***
He hath been
,
in
II,
to
your
offices.
She gave her cook as high wages as they did at Mansfield Park and was scarcely ever seen in her offices. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. Ill, 30. The spacious offices were little used. Dick., Christm. Car., II, 31. The sleeping-rooms and domestic offices were on its right. Mrs. Wood, Or-
I, 7.
a) oil-colour; b) oil-paintings. Branwell seems to have progressed so far as to paint, very badly, Miss Flora Masson The Brontes, Ch. VII 38.
.
.
in oils.
ii.
Payn,
Glow-Worm
Tales,
I,
B,
40.
oilskins
clothes
made of
oilskin.
e s t m. G a z. and plunged in to save him. No. 5371, M. Mr. Tom Wing ... is going to don oilskins in a week's time and go on a fortlb., No. 5376, 8d.night's voyage to the Faroe Islands.
a) rank, status, or position of a clergyman or ordained minister of the Church ; b) conferment of holy orders. Orders is short for holy orders. It is frequently found in certain phrases: to take orders, to enter (into) holy orders, in orders , in deacon's orders, in pries fs orders (= in full orders).
orders
216
Also
in
CHAPTER XXV,
the
20.
seemingly regularly
often find order in the plural; combinations, such as to have orders, to receive orders, at (by) any one's orders, under (strict) orders, with (strict) orders. Shakespeare has to have order, Dryden by my order. The plural is likewise regular in the phrase standing orders (= Dutch reglement van orde).
meaning
in
of
command we
certain
i.
* Last
year
resigned my orders because I could no longer accept the view of Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. II, 154.
,
** About this period he was offered a living of considerable value in Lincolnshire, if he were inclined to enter into holy orders. Boswell, Life of Johnson, 856. A master of arts, in full orders, is desirous of a curacy. Martineau. x ) It is better for a boy's character that his headmaster should be in orders. Times.
He
told
his
father
that
I,
Lyall,
We Two,
he must give up
25.
all
Edna
It was a settled thing that he should take Holy Orders. lb., I, 25. Nor was any undertaking given by the candidate of their choice that he should
hereafter enter holy orders. Times. After some delay Swift was admitted to deacon's orders, in October 1694, to to priest's orders, in January 1694-5. Life of Swift,
and
Prefaced
The
Works
ii.
the sacrament of Orders there is given a grace, whereby a priest will always have a perpetual assistance for the discharge of his office. Manning. x ) #
In
iii.
of
* Villeneuve received orders to put to sea the first opportunity. Southey L Nelson, Ch. IX, 246. He twice gave orders to cease firing upon the Redoutable. lb., Ch. IX, 259.
,
to shoot all
dogs found
in this enclosure.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
18.
At Truncheon's orders she flung the whole shrubbery into the dust-house. Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VI, 326. Boaler has orders to pay your cab. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. I, 15. She jerked and pushed him into his place without a word, being apparently under strict orders from the governess not on any account to speak to the boys.
lb.,
M c Carthy,
Short
1. ,
Hist.,
, ,
iv.
** 20. III 1 They have already order This night to play before him. H a m He did it by my order. Dryden, All for love, IV, 1 (79). The standing orders allow the Speaker to arrest irrelevance. Daily Mail.
pains
c)
a) punishment , penalty, fine; b) suffering or throes of childbirth; exertions. In the first meaning pains Js said (by Murray) to be now
obsolete , except in the collocation pains and penalties. The singular form with the same meaning is regular in the phrases on (upon, under) pain of death (bondage etc.). In the third meaning pains has the finite verb of which it is the subject As for its either in the singular or in the plural, generally the latter.
adnominal modifiers
(those)
we say much (little) pains, not many (few) pains ; these pains rather than this (that) pains. But great (small) pains seems preferable to many (few) pains, and instances with the demonstratives are infrequent. Compare also Ch. XXVI, 16.
I)
Muri^y.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
217
We
also
find pains
is impossible to tell whether pains is regarded Note especially to be at some {the, great , etc.) pains, to spare no pains, to cost {give) no {great, etc.) pains, to be a fool for one's pains (= lit. to be a dupe notwithstanding, or in reward of, one's pains; fig. to lose one's labour). For illustration of this last phrase see especially Flugel, s. v. pains, and Stof., Stud., I, 17. Instead of the plural the older language also had the singular form pain, which is still occasionally met with in poetry as an archaism.
a)
* That's
necessary on pain of a
either
in
fine.
I,
Ch.
VII, 126.
**
Compulsion,
the
direct
form
and
penalties.
Mill,
Liberty,
I, 23. i)
/?)
Each bottle being marked with the initials of the inventor, to counterfeit which would be to incur the pains of forgery. Scott, Fair Maid, Intro d., 11. She bore unhusbanded a mother's pains. Southey, Eng. Eclogues,
Hannah,
y)
i.
19. i)
The labour we
Pray thee
spirit.
,
delight in physics pain. Macb., II, 3, 55. take pain To allay with some cold drops of modesty
|
Thy
skipping
Merch. of Ven.,
his
II,
|
2, 171.
He
rolled
,
kindling
eye,
With pain
Scott,
Mar m.
pain
|
I, xvi.
Woods
|
|Whom
Ten., Their
His
own
against him.
He
quickly
snatched away
Doom
ii.
Such men as there in of King Acrisius, 78b. * All my pains is sorted to no proof.
(sorted
last To urn. 178. maid and with small pain did slay arms before him stood. W. Morris, Earthly Par.,
fairest
]
The
43.
contrived.) It is obvious that such a racial difficulty as this can only be overcome by taking special pains, and yet in most of our schools no pains at all seems to be taken.
Taming
of the
Shrew,
IV, 3,
Graph.
** Your pains
|
turn
The
leaf to
read them.
Macb.,
The
to
I,
3, 151.
greatest pains have been taken by the author of the following vocabularies render them as complete and correct as possible. Webst. Appendix,
,
Pref. to
Biogr. Names.
Hardly any pains are taken to make it (se. the play) credible. Rev. of Rev., CCII, 358a. *** The answers I have with much pains wringed and extorted from you. Swift, L i 1 1 p u t. Much pains have been taken to give the most approved spelling. Webst.,
i
Appendix,
By merely
out of
it.
Pref. to
a
little
Biogr. Names.
taking
may make
Pu
nc
h.
Donovan,
have deserved her; and now begin to like her. Dryden, ***** Yet much he praised the pains he took, Scott, Marm. , I, xm.
her,
I
1,21. methinks too, with taking all this pains for Marriage a la Mode, V, 1 (319).
|
And
Murray.
218
******
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
<5)
He took every pains to arrive at a proper conclusion. Sir J. C. Mathew. i) His Majesty, in another audience, was at the pains to recapitulate the sum of all I had spoken. I. Swift, Gul. Trav. She (sc. Lady Godolphin) refused some time ago to be acquainted with me. You know she is Lord Marlborough's eldest daughter. She is a fool for her pains, and I'll pull her down. Id., Journ. to Stella, LXI. The parts which have given the author the greatest pains in composing. Fielding, Jones, V, Ch. I, 63. It cost this great man no pains to pardon him. Thack., Henry Esm. II, Ch. X, 234. Many people give themselves extreme pains to frequent company where all round them are their superiors. Id., Newc. , Ch. IX, 103. The impression at present is that he (sc. Dobbin) is a fool for his pains. Id., Let. to Rob. Bell (Times, No. 1803, 581c).
,
Tom
a born scoundrel,
you are a fool for your pains. He is Lynton off his debt, and has never seen his way to being anything else, why should you compassionate him? Marie Corelli, Sor. of Sat., I, Ch. X, 136. He spared no pains to please her during her week's stay. Edna Lyall, Don.,
You want
to
let
II,
160.
were at some pains to acquaint ourselves accurately with the facts. Times. at great pains to supplement what has been published already with particulars which scarcely merit reproduction. A t h e n.
We
He
is
Parts a) portion of an animal body; b) talents; c) region. When denoting a portion of an animal body, parts is mostly preceded by a defining adjective: hinder parts, inward parts. In the meaning of talents also it is often accompanied by a defining adjective; when such an adjective is absent, parts =s good parts. (Compare looks and spirits.) According to Murray
the
i.
word
in the
second meaning
to
is
now
had occasion
*)
French verses of Frederic we can find nothing beyond the reach of any man of good parts and industry. Mac, Fred., (663a). He was allowed to be a man of parts. lb., (6716). His parents expected nothing from such slender parts and such a headstrong
In
the
temper.
lb.,
Clive,
(498o).
talent
Though
He was
Hi.
his parts
were not brilliant, he made up for his lack of Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IX, 87.
by meri-
not a young
man
of brilliant parts.
II.
Mag.
are.
H.
J.
Byron,
Our
Boys.
They spends the summer at Woodview and goes G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. XXVI, 181.
prayers She went
prayers.
= devotional
to
exercises on a small scale, especially in the home-circle: church thrice every Sunday, and as often on week-days as there were Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXI, 288.
He has come down late for prayers. So you have had prayers without me.
premises have no
I
Punch.
lb.
building with
to
its
adjuncts.
desire
249.
put
my
foot
G. Eliot,
Mid.,
IV
Ch.
x
XXXV,
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Meadows was wandering about
late to
the
219
,
premises.
Ch. Reade
It
is
never too
switch of a railway-track. points Passing over the points at Manningtree, the train gave a lurch. Jerome, Sketches (Grondh. and Roorda, Eng. Leesb. 111,51). present letters or instrument. A legal term used in a deed of presents conveyance, a lease, a letter of attorney, a bill of sale, etc., especially in the formula (Know all men) by these presents (= Dutch b ij d e z e n). Witness all men by these presents, that I, Anthony Lumbkin, esquire of Blank place, refuse you, Constantia Neville, spinster, of no place at all, for my true and lawful wife. Goldsmith She Stoops to Conquer, V, (232). To the hundred thousand ladies and gentlemen who have written me from all parts of the world greeting. Know all of you by these presents that [etc.]. Adver,
mend,
I.
tisement.
a) happenings, b) course^ of steps, especially in the prosecution proceedings of actions at law ; c) record of the proceedings or transactions of a society. i. He even remembered an impious opinion of his that the proceedings were 'slow'. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. I, 13. There seems to be a widespread misconception concerning this month's Parliamentary proceedings. Rev. of Rev., CCIII, 451a. * He therefore commenced ii. proceedings by putting his arm over the half-door of
the bar.
**
Dick. P i c k w. Ch. XXVII 240. Proceedings were threatened but were withdrawn. G.Moore, Esth.
,
,
Waters,
Ch.
II,
12.
He
iii.
is
now
taking proceedings
in
order to
financial affairs.
3636.
prospects
expectations.
Dolf frankly told him his course of life, his severe medical studies, his little proficiency, and his very dubious prospects. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl
,
I,
138).
provisions
stock of food (= Dutch proviand, leeftocht). He made a scanty breakfast on the remains of the last night's provisions. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., 1,123). quarters a) four parts, each containing a limb of a human body divided
in the
case of execution for high treason, by extension also any part of the human body ; b) place of stay or residence, lodgings, especially of soldiers. Quarters is a strict plurale tantum in the compounds head-quarters and
hind-quarters. The plural is likewise usual in the phrases in certain (some) quarters (= circles), at close quarters. The singular quarter is occasionally met with in the meaning hind-quarters. The compound head-quarters is
with either a singular or a plural finite verb, and may be preceded by the indefinite article, * Their heads and a) quarters were still rotting on poles. Mac, Hist., Ch. XII. ** The tickling pleasure which he experienced in his lower regions had rendered him quite callous to any inconveniences he might feel in those remote quarters. Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia, Dis. on Roast Pig, (255). *** The mare's... a bit too weak in the hindquarters. G. Eliot, Sil. Marn.
construed
,
'
They jawed
aft
good
spell,
till
turned
and, laying hold of a rattan, came athwart Mr. Bowling's quarter. Rod. Rand., Ch. XXIV, 175. (= hind-quarters.)
Smol.,
220
)
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
He was
I'm in
fain to
20.
take
up his quarters for the night under the lowly roof of Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., H a n d 1. I. 150).
,
good quarters for the present at least. lb., 143. Lieutenant Lindsay answered that the soldiers came as VII, Ch. XVIU, 21. nothing but quarters. Mac, Hist.
,
friends,
and wanted
ii.
allowed his troops to take some repose in winter quarters. Id., Fred., (693a). * He had no quarrel with Mr. Cadogan, but only with those at head-quarters, who had belied him. Thack., Henry E s m. II, Ch. XV, 284. ** The head-quarters of her (sc. Aphrodite's) worship were Paphos, Amathus
Frederic
,
[etc.].
Nettleship
original
t.
a
s.
s.
Ant., 396.
in the
***
The
head-quarters was
v.
palace of Baldwin
of
II
in
Jerusalem.
templar.
The head-quarters
Tower
London.
Graph.
**** In Toulon the French have a fortified head-quarters. Times, 3 11, 1893. The line ,to Dartmoor passes through Exeter, an excellent head-quarters for the exploration of the rugged Phillpotts country. Westm. Gaz., No. 6017, lie.
y) *
The nonsense
that
is
talked
in
been
lost
women
Rev.
of Rev., CXCVII,
**
I
in Russia at close quarters, and I struggle in vain against the despairing conviction that it is too late. lb., CXCVIII, 564a. We both desired to come to close quarters. Mrs. Ward, Lady Rose's D aught., I, Ch. II, 22a.
ranks
and file. Mostly used in the plural drawn up in line abreast (= Dutch
gelid). Note especially ranks of death , ranks of war. When used figuratively of other matters than the army, the plural is practically the only form,
i.
He was reduced
to the ranks.
Ten Bruo.
Diet.
ii.
To rise from the ranks. Flugel. * When the ranks are broken and you have to fight singly. Jowett. *) ** To paint the Hero's Toil, the Ranks of War. Gray, Propertius,
The Minstrel Boy Thomas Moore.
to
III,
33.
the
war
is
gone,
like
In the
**
the
Short Hist,*)
com-
recitals
It
=
=
is
monly heard
recitals,
taught by professors of elocution, and is, therefore, and also at amateur theatricals. Walt. Rwpmann,
26.
The
Sounds
records
of
Spoken English,
of
collection
official accounts,
documents.
Here they find an inspector of police, who enters the charge in the station-records. Escott, England, Ch. IV, 416. Here were usually kept the records of the family. Lytton, Last Days of Pomp.,
I,
Ch.
II,
146.
expressions of regard or deference. merely told her that my father was well and sent his kind regards to her. Mrs. Gask., Cranford, Ch. XIII, 238. Pa's kind regards and hopes his leg's better, and will he lend him his spirit-level. Jerome, Three men in a boat, Ch. HI, 25.
regards
I
*)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
relics
i.
221
=
is
remains (19,
/).
Occasionally used
in the singular.
,
Such
it
a magnificent relic.
At least such it was forty years ago when I Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia, South-Sea House,
relics of
knew
4.
ii.
All
around
The mouldering
my
kindred
lay.
Shelley,
Queen Mab,
VII, 188.
The
of
whose
relics
we
yet trace.
Lytton, Last
Days
Pompeii,
Pref.
resources
i.
= a)
(309a).
at
(= Dutch kunnen).
Mac,
The
national
Pitt,
I
husband
Hal.,
(776).
article,
bought the Nineteenth Century for an important thereby strained my resources. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 570&.
ii.
and
She had a
finer
Short
Falstaff
Hist., Ch.
was never
50.
end
Ch.
II,
IV.
respects
I'll
=
I,
take
another
paying
to
my
respects to
Mrs. Malaprop.
Sher.,
friend.
Rivals,
2, (219).
The young lady came forward Thack., Van. Fair, Ch. XII,
115.
To
to another.
Webst.
Diet.
returns
set
(=
Dutch staat).
Long then may England's
to her
England,
rights
a)
way
in
dracht);
In
b) dues;
which anything really happened (= Dutch ware toec) justice or correctness of opinion or action.
in
other
The
Bill
We
of Rights, by
side with within one's (legal) rights, the latter being, apparently the more common form. In one's right(s) is an uncommon variant. The plural seems
to
be the rule also in to insist (up)on one's rights. which does not appreciably differ from by rights.
i.
Note also of
right(s),
We
will let matters stand over till we can look into this complaint of yours and discover the rights of it. S. Baring Gould, The Red- Haired Girl (Swaen,
III,
Selection,
ii. I
141).
I
love
Scott
Fair Maid,
iii.
We
*
No. 5060,
iv.
(= Wij moeten M.
D.
Some people would be ashamed to fill G. Eliot, Mid., Ill, Ch. XXXII, 227. A great rock, I have said; but by rights
top.
Wes
m.
G a z.
rights to others.
at the
it
Graph.
222
**
I
CHAPTER XXV,
have a thought shall soon set
I.
20.
all
Gay, Beggar's
himself to me, or a call at Putney when next in town, might set all North. Abbey, Ch. XXVII 208. Jane Austen I turned crusty and put her to rights. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. IX, 103. I'll go put my room to rights. Dick. C h u z. He tried to set the village to rights. L i t. o r d.
, ,
,
*** General Komaroff was entirely within his rights. They were acting within their rights. lb., 896.
Colonials were acting within their rights. Times. She was quite within her rights. Mrs. Ward, Lady Rose's D aught. I, Ch. V, 386. You're within your legal right Id., Sir George Tres., HI, Ch. XXIV, 204. The Tsar was within his rights in dissolving the Duma. Rev. of Rev., CCI, 2286. We were in our right in creating our Navy, and they were not in their right in ordering us to scrap it. Thos. Hodgkin (Nineteenth Cent., No. 399, 865). The publishers ... are no doubt within their right. Athen., No. 4422, 92a.
The
****
It
is
not to
a
19.
be wondered
at
if
W. Gunnyan,
Biographical Sketch
*****
It
of
Burns,
was
thing appertaining
of rights
to
them.
Lytton,
Night and
Morning,
Martin's
should be taken.
grandfather was of right the person to decide upon the course that Dick., Chuz. , Ch. XLVIII, 376a.
rudiments
good nature adds the general rudiments of good breeding, will never be ridiculous in the best society. Scott (in Lockh., Life of Sir Walt. Scott, Ch. I, 4, N.)
remains of destroyed or desolate house, fortress, city and the like. Also figuratively of other matters. Sometimes dealt with as a singular. Thou art the ruins of the noblest man That ever lived in the tide of times. Jul.
ruins
|
A man who
Caes.,
Ill,
1,
256.
On
Her
the platform of the middle terrace stands the ruins of the chapel.
Westm. Gaz.
sables
little
Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXII, 242. "I can't go out of mourning, ma'am," said the young man looking down at his sa6/es. Id., Virg., Ch. XXV, 256. He rose, drawing his sables about him. Marie Corelli, Sor. of Sat., I, Ch. Ill, 35.
sands =s a) grains of sand, b) areas covered with sand. In the first meaning especially used in referring to the contents of the hour-glas. Here the singular is occasionally met with also.
i.
Herrings are
I,
as
Suggestive
les-
sons,
119.
** The sands are numbered that make up my life. Henry VI, C, I, 4, 25. Our sands run low. Lytton, RIenzi, V, Ch. IV, 212. The sands of the holidays have run out to their last golden grain. Anstey,
Vice Versa,
No. 5436,
Ch.
I, 7.
The sands are running fast out of The Nation warns statesmen that
16c.
CXCI,
4546.
Westm. Gaz.,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
***
ii.
223
My sand
The sea
is nearly run. Lytton, Rienzi, IV, Ch. I, 149. beating loud the mutable sands of the sea-shore. Lonqf.,
Courtship
III.
of Miles Standish. 1 ) Three corpses lay out on the shining sands. Ch. Kingsley,
scales
the
Three Fishers,
is
d).
The
The
plural is
by the
i.
But here, again* Intellectually the balance was nearly even between the rivals. the moral qualities of Pitt turned the scale. Pitt, (299a). , A hair would turn the scale either way. G.Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. XX, 138.
Mac
ii.
hook in the ceiling that supported the scales on wich the hemp is weighed. Rod. Rand., Ch. XXIII, 164. that of thy house that of thousands that of Britain herself Thine own fate are at this moment in the scales. Scott, Redgauntlet, Ch. XXII, 5196. ** He weighed it in a scales. Hichens, Garden of Allah, I, i, Ch. V, 78.
large
Smol.,
seeds
Here
I
= prime
causes
(= Dutch kiemen).
,
could plainly discover the true seeds of spleen, which only seizes on the IV, Ch. VII, (204a). lazy, the luxurious and the rich. Swift, Gul. Trav. He cherished the seeds of enmity so strongly in his breast, that he imparted his indignation to his wife. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XXI, 139. Many of those who reached their country carried with them the seeds of death.
Mac, Fred.,
sessions
fully
(6696).
of justices of the peace, also the magistracy itself. More mostly preceded by defining words: Petty Sessions, Quarter Sessions. Sometimes the word is preceded by the indefinite article. The singular is also met with in the same meaning.
sitting
i.
But
I'll
it
is
now
Gay,
try
ii.
Beggar's Opera,
him only
is
two longer upon his good behaviour. lb. one of the class called stipendiary magistrates, who in places where the magisterial work is arduous, are commonly substituted for the Petty Sessions. Escott, England, Ch. XXIV, 416. In districts where the business is lighter the Petty Sessions consist of two or
for a session or
*
The Magistrate
lb.
Assizes when the judge comes round Quarter Sessions, which have power to try most criminal cases except burglary and murder. lb., 417. ** There is not one in the town where he lives that he has not sued at a quartersessions. Spectator, CXXII (36). He never missed a sessions. Mrs. Ward, Mar. of Wil. Ashe, I, 13.
tried either at the
,
shakes
c).
shambles by the
the
i.
slaughter-house.
article.
indefinite
Sometines treated as a singular and preceded Also the singular form is used occasionally in
same
sense.
A
*
ghastly shamble.
ii.
Starving wretches
slaughtered.
Arch. Forbes, Life of Nap. Ill, 290. swarmed daily around the shambles where Motley, Rise, IV, Ch. II, 575.
in
We
no longer slaughter
the
I,
shambles and
cellars
of our
crowded
capital.
Suggestive Lessons,
!)
86.
Ten Bruo.
Taa
t.
VI.
224
** Far
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
be the thought of this from Henry's heart, To make a shambles of the parliament-house. Henry VI, C, I, 1, 71. That hand was found cast out on the street, like the disgusting refuse of a shambles. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XV, 163. A shambles reeking with blood. Stanl. Weym. Count Hannibal, 37. The awful stench from this shambles turns your gorge. Times, 25/8, 1899.
|
shores
country (with
collocation
on our shores.
some vague reference to coast). Frequent The singular form is not infrequent
in the
in the
same
i.
sense.
This delusion becomes almost a madness when many exiles who suffer in the same cause herd together on a foreign shore. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 94.
ii.
shores.
Thack.
The
Hist, of the
next French
I.
Mr. Binnie was just on the point of visiting his relatives, who reside at Musselburgh, near Edinburgh, when he met with the fatal accident which prevented his visit to his native shores. Id., I, Ch. XXII, 245. Our home markets have been free to all the world to pour its products on our
Newc
shores.
Times.
yourself efficient to undertake the responsibility of defending our shores against an invasion, if necessity arose? Westm. Gaz., No. 5382, 16. is announced that King Manael is to find an asylum on our shores. It lb., No.
5436, 2a.
shrouds
In
set
to the sides
of vessel
same meaning.
Coleridge,
Anc. Mar.,
ii.
xix.
all
Her
rattling
shrouds,
sheathed
in
ice,
[^
Lonof.,
silks
i.
Wreck
dusty
of the
Hesperus,
XVIII.
very
in the
arms
Very few
is,
skeleton in a blue coat black knee-shorts, and silks, fell forward Dick., Pickw. , Ch, XXI. people but those who have tried it, know what a difficult process it
of the porter.
in great velvet
to
bow
smalls and a tight jacket, a high-crowned hat: or in silks. lb., Ch. XV, 133.
in her silks.
Thack., Virg.
spectacles
spirits
= pair
a)
first
of lenses
strong
drinks.
spirits,
meaning mostly accompanied by a defining adjective: good his spirits were excellent, etc. Without any such good spirits. (Compare looks and parts.) defining word spirits natural buoyancy, The plural is also regular in the phrase animal spirits
In
the
excellent spirits,
'healthy animalism'.
The
as
plural is frequent
in spirits)
geest).
singular
is
liquid produced by distillation is meant, Dutch of hartshorn spirit(s) of turpentine ( in the meaning of alcohol (= Dutch spiritus) the Dutch brandthus methylated spirit ( the ordinary form
spirit(s)
,
:
when any
spiritus).
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i.
225
a remarkably pure spirit. Graph. potato spirit have no vested right to poison the
spirit ferments
Times.
to spirit;
and turns
to vinegar.
in
SugRussia.
gestive Lessons,
an Vodka Annandale
,
1,180.
spirit distilled from Diet. was the profuse use
,
intoxicating
rye
Concise
**
tremens.
ii.
said it of spirit that brought on delirium Ch. I, 7. Thack., Sam. Titm. * The sudden change of my fortune giving me a flow of spirits I appeared in the most winning and gay manner I could assume. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch.
,
Some people
XXIII, 165. I made her drink a glass of the cordial to recruit her spirits. lb., Ch. XXI, 145. If you were convinced that Julia were well and in spirits, you would be entirely
content? Sher. Riv. 11,1,(226). Rebecca's wit, spirits, and accomplishments troubled her with a rueful disquiet. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 259.
,
,
boys were in great spirits. Dick., Christm. Car., II, 30. His spirits became buoyant. Mac. Earl of Chatham, (817a). Her spirits were depressed. Id. Fred., (6656). The friends of Hastings were in high spirits when Pitt rose. Id., Warren
All these
,
Hastings,
Toddy now
,
'
(645a).
** This afforded presumptive proof of the excellent quality of the ale sold within. Dick. , P i c k w. , Ch. XXVII 230.
,
and
spirits
Diet.
Along the mantelpiece were glass vessels, in which were snakes and lizards and other reptiles preserved in spirits. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl.
,
I,
106).
spoils
i.
booty.
in the singular,
|
He
silent joy.
ii.
An ample share of spoil was promised to the King of Poland. Mac, Fred., (683a). And return to thee, mine own heart's home; As to his Queen some victor
I
|
knight of Faery,
Ded
them
c.
4.
Rawdon Crawley
France from
not
Thack.,
know what better to do with the spoils than Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIII, 357.
position
to
send
her geographical
could not
directly
Mac, Fred., (6856). Every member of the league would think his own share of the war too large, and his own share of the spoils too small. lb., (687a). stables house or shed with stables. Sometimes found preceded by the
indefinite article,
i.
The
stables.
ii.
was drawn so as to exclude the dead brick-wall of a neigBbour's Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIV, 260. I met him according to appointment at a livery stables over the Iron Bridge. Marryat, Making the Best of it (Robinson, The Advanced Reader, 33). I was supplanted by a shabby man with a squint, who had no other merit than smelling like a livery-stables. Dick., Cop., Ch. XIX, 1416.
curtain
stairs
staircase.
was meant;
After the
flight
H.
Originally kept in the singular when a series of steps instances being still frequent enough in the latest English.
indefinite
article
or
or pair
(36),
which
latter
word
15
226
Sometimes
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
The
i.
either of these individualizers (36) is dispensed with: a stairs. plural is now regular in the expressions upstairs and down-stairs. She ran nimbly up the stair. Ch. Bronte Jane Eyre, Ch. IV, 27.
,
"Thank heaven,
ii.
that is over",
the stair.
Thack.,
,
I.
steal
cautiously
135.
down
the
stairs.
G.
Moore
h.
Waters,
It
Ch.
XX,
seemed impossible
the stairs.
to
summon
strength
and
will
to
down
**
It
lb., 137.
We
is
I
number
***
bedroom, up two pair of stairs. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XIII, 83. up four pair of stairs. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXX, 341. sought a back-stairs which conducted directly to the kitchen. Ch. Bronte,
hired a
92,
Jane Eyre,
****
Ch. XVII
202.
representatives of the people or governing classes. It was with difficulty that the intercession of the States of Holland saved the house of Brandenburg from the stain of an unnatural murder. Mac, Fred., (661a). He had borne the commissions of the States General of Holland. lb., (668a.)
states
Mrs. Craik
John Hal,
Ch. VIII
85.
stays
latter
= a)
application
corset (19, a); b) station or fixed anchorage for vessels. In the especially in the nautical phrases in stays (= hove in
stays)', to
In a last
miss stays.
Webst., Diet.
headlands of Clare, she missed stays. Charles Lever.
!)
endeavour
a) series
to clear the
steps of steps as at the entrance of a house or carriage (= Dutch stoep or tree); b) portable frame-work of stairs, step-ladder (= Dutch (hu is) trap). Preceded by range, flight, line or pair after the indefinite article or a numeral (36). The word is also ordinarily found in the plural
in certain collocations as to bend (direct, turn, wend) one's steps, to retrace one's steps, to conduct (guide, etc) any one's steps, to take steps, in which the original meaning of paces is more or less distinctly felt, i. They came thronging up the steps. Mrs. Craik, John Hal, Ch. VIII, 87. A great powdered fellow in yellow plush breeches pushed me up the steps (sc. of the barouche). Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. II, 2.
A hansom
Ch.
ii.
really
had rolled up
Anstey,
Vice Versa,
Ill,
53.
that tea
called down a little break-neck range of steps behind a door, "Bring up and bread-and-butter!" Dick., Cop., Ch. IX, 63a. He stood on the top of the flight of steps, in full view of the mob. Mrs. Craik,
He then
John Hal,
iii.
She descended the flight of stone steps in front of the chateau. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. V, 52. A long line of steps led to the front door. Graph. Just above him was the nursery landing, and near it, leaning against the wall, was the pair of kitchen steps with which he had hopes of reaching the roof. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 361. He turned his steps homeward. Wash. Irv. Rip van Winkle. The Greek bent his steps towards a solitary part of the beach. Lytton, Last days of Pomp., I, Ch. I, 12a. They wended their steps towards Connaught Place. Punch. He retraced his steps through the wood. Buchanan That Winter Night,
, ,
Ch. IV,
43.
The
*)
Times.
Fluoel.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
stocks
(
227
a) funds lent to the government and forming part of the national Dutch effecten); b) frame of timbers on which a ship rests while building (= Dutch schoorbalken); c) frame for the confinement of criminals ( Dutch b o k) d ) contrivance for making children keep their limbs
debt
in the
may mean transferable shares in a bank or other company (= Dutch aandeelen). In the second meaning stocks is especially
frequent in the collocation (up)on the stocks, which
is
Compare Dutch op
i.
tap el.
the
is
forced to
stock at a great
Sher.,
111,1,(390).
as the
,
amount
,
Ch. VIII
86.
believe she
owns
,
Sher.
v.
(214).
The
**
I
stocks are at
ninety,
i
money.
Thack.
Sam. T
The
am
told Mr.
i)
of this nature
new upon
|
the stocks.
Thom.
till
Brown,
noon.
****
I
*** Fetch
forth
stocks!
As
have
life
and honour,
There
shall he sit
Lear,
2, 140.
in the
hear a flying rumour that the Misses Nettingall have stood Miss Stepherd Dick., Cop., Ch. XVIII, 133a.
stores
like
a) supplies, as of provisions, ammunition, arms, clothing and the for an army, a ship, etc.; b) number of shops managed by one society or firm established in one building (= Dutch warenhuis). In the second meaning sometimes found preceded by the indefinite article. In this case the singular form is also used in the same meaning, i. The Japanese captain was so kind as to double this out of his own stores. Swift, Gul. Trav. III, Ch. I, (164a). The vessel, with all her stores and arms was sold at Dumfries. William Gunnyon, Biographical Sketch of Robert Burns, 38. The last thing he wrote was an epigram on the building of a magazine for arms and stores. Thack. E n g. Hum., Swift, 4 Note. set Annie forth in trade. Then with what she brought Buy goods and stores
,
Ten.,
ii.
Enoch Arden,
138.
The stores are situated within five minutes' walk of Victoria Station. PriceList of the Army and Navy Co-operative Society. ** If I was a co-operative stores and family hotel combined, I might be able to
in a Boat, Ch. oblige you. Jer. *** It had become a sort of small co-operative store.
,
Three men
1 ,
5.
Id.,
Idle
Thoughts,
XII, 209.
strings in the
compound leading
studies
cultivation
Jane Eyre,
Nothing happened to interrupt the quiet course of Adele's studies. Ch. BrontE, Ch. XVI, 184. Up went the king's cane, away ran the terrified instructor and Frederic's classical
Mac
Fred.,
(662a).
time to a post provided by Government: legal studies in the meantime having lapsed. Stephen Gwynn, Moore, Ch. I, 27.
at this
He looked forward
Thomas
')
Fluoel.
228
In
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
the
serious studies.
You
education of girls social accomplishments carried off the palm from more John Finnemore, Social Life in E n gl a n d II, Ch. VIII, 59find us at our studies, you see, said the Doctor. Anstey, Vice Versa,
,
supplies s= a) stores or articles necessary for an army or other great body of people; b) grant of money provided by a national assembly to meet the
effectually
cut
off.
son,
ii.
to vote supplies.
It
Diet.
that the supplies
should be stopped.
Macaulay.
*)
tablets
i.
infrequent; formerly called tables. And the Count was proceeding to enter Mr. Pickwick's name in his tablets, as a gentleman of the long robe. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XV, 133. "Stop!" exclaimed the Count, bringing out the tablets once more. lb., Ch. XV, 134. Across the waist a girdle served in lieu of pockets for the receptacle of the handkerchief and the purse, the stilus and the tablets. Lytton Last Days
, ,
= pocket memorandum-book.
Now
of
ii.
Pomp.,
I,
Ch.
I,
9b.
|
meet it is I set it down, That one may smile, and smile, and tables, be a villain. H a m 1. 1,5,107. Therefore will he wipe his tables clean. Henry IV, B, II, 4, 289.
My
terms
b) agreement; c) diction, words (= Dutch bed) relative position; e) footing. Terms in the meaning of agreement is chiefly found in certain phrases, such as to come to terms, to make terms, to reduce to terms. In the collocation in terms, in which terms is used in the third meaning, the word is equivalent to terms required by the case (= Dutch geijkte termen). In the fourth and fifth applications terms without a defining adjective means respectively equal terms and good terms. (Compare looks, parts
a)
conditions;
woordingen);
and
i.
spirits).
to
be rejected.
Smol.
Rod. Rand.,
Ch.
ii.
with concluding peace on terms favourable to Prussia, he solicited Prussian service. Mac Fred., (699a). Such a place was found on very easy terms. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. LXIV, 525. She (sc England) at once became the most formidable power in the world, dictated terms of peace to the United Provinces. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. I, 136. The town may make terms with the enemy. Id. Fred., (6976). Others were for making terms with the enemy. Walt. Besant, London, I, 31. The question for the landed and wealthy classes is whether they will make terms
rank
in the
with
iii.
it
(sc.
the
demand
for a better
My
and healthier existence ... for the masses Westm. Gaz. , No. 5219, lc. in plain terms taxed me with having
for my own use. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XX, 139. and conversation he alluded to the greatest potentates of his age in terms which would have better suited Colle. Mac, Fred., (685a). Methuen speaks in high terms of the intelligent manner in wich the Imperial Yeomanry and the Kimberley mounted corps behaved. Morning Leader. He has frequently spoken to me of your house of business in terms of great
embezzed them
his
letters
In
praise.
Business Letter-Writer,
distinctly
I.
**
He
and
in
i)
Flugel.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
iv.
229
He had maintained a contest, on terms of advantage, against the powers. Mac, Fred., (693a). He crossed swords on equal terms with one of the greatest statesmen of the
century.
Times.
v.
This week P. and M. are playing 8000 up, spot-barred, on even terms. Graph. Although he played probably as well as ever he did in his life, he could never quite get on terms with White, who eventually won by 604 points. Graph, * He lived on terms of the greatest intimacy with many persons of the highest
rank.
Preface
to
Ch. IX, 257. The English people showed that it was anxious to live on good terms with its nearest neighbour. Daily Mail. ** We have lived much together, and always on terms. Sher., Riv., V, 1, (275).
son,
terrors
It
visions of terror
(= Dutch schrikbeelden).
,
Rod. Rand., impossible to express the terrors of my imagination. Smol. Ch. XXII, 155. The bright cheery day soon put to flight the terrors of the preceding night. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., 1,118).
is
matters, affairs in a vague sense (Ch. XXXI, 57). Sometimes added to (an)other noun(s), as a vague indication of further details. Observe also no great things (= Dutch niet veel zaaks). Compare 21, s. v. shakes* They resolved to bring things to a crisis. Mac. Pitt, (297a). While things went on quietly, Fox had a decided advantage over Pitt. lb., (298a). You carry things too far. Grant Allen Tents of S h e m Ch. IX. ii. She would come wistfully into my rooms, bringing me my gruel and things* the Widower, Ch. II 26, Thack. L o v e was well enough, but Biddy was no great things. Thack., Pend. I, iii. Fanny
things
i.
Ch. XI,
thrills
113.
c).
times
in
(Ch. XXXI, 57). The plural is also usual a particular period, such as the times of
the
Stuarts, pre-historic times, those godless times, the good old times, things have changed since those times (Fowler, Cone. Oxf. Diet. s. v. time), pre-Victorian times (Westm. Gaz., No. 6065, 5a).
van
i.
Note especially abreast of (with) the times (= Dutch op de hoogte z ij n t ij d) behind the times (= Dutch zijn tijd ten achter), to keep pace with the times (= Dutch met z ij n t ij d me-egaan).
,
Times grew worse and worse with Rip van Winkle as years
on.
of
matrimony
Trol.,
rolled
Wash.
very
Irv.
ii.
It's
natural
he should think
me behind
the times.
Framl.
Pars., Ch. V, 51. The Modern Cyclopaedia is fully abreast of the times. A t h e n. The Magazine you must have to keep abreast of the times. Stead's Annual,
1906, 406.
Something which serious people must understand and appraise rightly are to koop abreast of these times. Westm. Gaz., No. 5149, lc. He makes no attempt to keep pace with the times. lb., No. 6011, 46.
tithes
if
they
tenth part of the increase arising from the profits of land and stock, allotted to the clergy for their support. I pay her rights duly and cheerfully; tithes and alms, wine and wax, I pay them as justly, I say, as any man in Perth of my means doth. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. V, 53.
230
transports
in the
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
20.
Often used
in the singular
same meaning.
ii.
had now, therefore, the satisfaction of seeing them fly into each other's in a transport. Goldsmith, Vic, Ch. XXXI, (471). They shook their chains In transport and rude harmony. lb. Ch. XXXI (474). The warmest transports of the fondest lover were not greater than mine. lb.,
We
arms
received
at
Fort
St.
of joy
and
pride.
Mac, Clive,
The
Id.,
offences
excited,
in the King.
Fred.,
(6606).
travels == a) journeys (voyages) of discovery; b) account of occurrences and observations made during a journey. The singular form is used in the sense of travelling.
i.
Dor. Gerard,
ii.
Etern. Worn., Ch. XXV. It was distant a day's travel. Bret Harte Outcasts of Poker Flat, 21. never beheld in all my travels so disagreeable an animal. Upon the whole, Swift, Gul. Trav,, IV, Ch. I, (1896).
I
I
iii.
in
my
younger days.
the
his troops
was
rapidly repaired.
Mac,
Fred.,
money.
(695a).
His feeling about his troops seems to have resembled a miser's feeling about his
lb., (6596).
at
a.
m.
Graph.
preceded by the indefinite
article.
(8)].
Storm,
Thack.,
Newc,
Confound
ii.
I,
686. a year, besides the rent of the wine-vaults below the chapel. Ch. XI, 131.
there are wine-vaults under the chapel.
i
it!
lb., 132.
Bob Sawyer had himself purchased the spirits at a wine vaults in High Street. Dick. P c k w. Ch. XXXII 284. wars seat of war. Especially in the phrases to be at the wars, to go
Mr.
,
to the
Is
wars,
to return
from
the wars.
Sattler,
E. S., XVI.
Much ado,
1,1,3/.
to the wars.
Wash.
his
Irv.,
brothers
II, 25.
Tom Brown,
waters
Hughes,
I,
Ch.
is
covered with water; b) water impregnated with such ingredients as to give it medicinal properties or a particular flavour or temperature. In the second meaning mostly preceded by a defining adjective: mineral waters, medicinal waters.
a)
tract
i.
Queen Mary,
V, 5, (6486).
Our
fleet was ordered to the Greek waters. Every region of the waters is alive with
Bain
its
Companion,
fish.
,
33.
own chosen
Suggestive
's
Lessons,
II.
I,
114.
Strong waters are apt to give me the headache. Gay Beggar Neither my master nor I drink the waters. Sher. Riv. I, 1.
,
.
Opera,
III.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ways
231
a) timbers on which a ship is launched (= stocks); b) courses. Also a plurale tantum in the word-group ways and means (usual meaning:
financial resources; means and ways is a rare variant), to find ways (= to find means),
i.
and
in the collocation
The
ii.
vessel as she appeared after leaving the ways. II. L o n d. News. Lady Lucy Hicks Beach cutting the last cord which held the vessel to the ways. lb. Let us look up to God, and every man reform his own ways. Bacon, New
(274).
160.
Atlantis,
iii.
He has got into bad ways. Lytton, Night and Morning, * He was cogitating in his mind his ways and means of paying
of rent.
certain arrears
Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. Ill, 8b. had despatched Ruy Gomez to Spain for the purpose of providing ways and means. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. II, 886, Martha had to shirk many a perplexed question as to ways and means of living
Philip
in
such a house.
Mrs. Gask.
Cranford,
iv.
There are many other ways and means by which the taxing power may be used to bring the Peers to reason. Rev. of Rev., CCIII, 452b. *** Butlers, cooks, and ladies of high standing furiously discuss the means and ways of evasion and contravention. Eng. Rev., Aug. 1912, 89. He will find ways of eluding your father's anger. Hor. Walpole, Castle of
**
plants. The singular occurs not infrequently to denote a particular noxious plant, i. They bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck'st a flower. Shakesp., Venus, 946. And I am helpless as a trodden weed. W. Morris Earthjy Par., The Son of Croesus, LXI. cast But O the pity To find thine own first love once more and then her aside, Foregoing all her sweetness, like a weed. Ten., Holy Grail, 622. ii. Small herbs have grace, great weeds do grow apace. Richard III, II, 4, 13. A wild, where weeds and flow'rs promiscuous shoot. Pope, Essay on Man, I, 7. In a world liable to become overgrown with weeds and choked with refuse, the cleansing work of a firebrand may from time to time be a necessity. Ol. Lodge, I n t r o d. to H u x 1. E s.
,
|
Occasionally found in the singular in the same regular in certain phrases, such as to be out of one's wits, to wander in one's wits, to live by one's wits, to lose one's wits, to have all one's wits about one. In the phrase at one's wits end some writers prefer to write Wits, i. e.
wits
mental faculty.
meaning.
The
plural
is
Jesp.,
Growth and
Structure,
i.
181.
shake his head. Dick., O, these are hard questions for my shallow wit.
to
II,
47).
A
all
fool
may
learn a wise
in
man
wit.
lb., 49.
plenty
your head). Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XV, 158. Will was one whose wit keeps the roadway. G.Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XL VII, 346. ** "I I didn't receive it," said Paul, at his wifs end. Anstey, Vice Versa,
Ch. XI, 219. He was at his wifs end. Flor. Montgomery, Misunderstood, Ch. V, 67. He must have been at his wifs end when he had recourse to so lame and impotent a defence. W. Gunnyon, Biograph. Sketch of Burns, 48.
232
ii.
The dulness of the fool is the whetstone of the wits. As you like it, I, He drained the jug to the great apparent refreshment and steadying
II.
1,
50.
of his
wits.
Mag.
calling
George was
It
up
his courage
and wits
I,
to
open
I,
the subject.
Ch. Reade,
,
is
to
mend,
Ch.
in
17.
**
The
her wits.
Thack.
Henry
Esmond,
318.
,
Gay was then living by his wits. Mac. Addison, (7736). The Duke was scared out of his wits. Id., Pitt, (301a). The suggestion nearly frightened the Minister of the Interior out of
his wits.
Truth,
Mrs.
to
Ward
David Grieve,
end,
... hit
off.
I,
285.
Much
ado,
66.
works
= a)
is
ground of pardon or justification wheelwork or machinery as of a watch. Works, as used in the first meaning, is often found preceded by the indefinite article, but for the rest seems to be ordinarily treated as a plural. The compound fireworks is mostly preceded by an individualize^ e. g. show, display, after the indefinite article (36), but a firework
c)
also met with. Note also earthworks (Ch. XXIII, 7, Obs. I, a) and waterworks in the familiar phrase to turn on the waterworks. * A bit of water between a i. coal-barge and a gas-works would have quite
is
satisfied
Jerome,
Three men
in a
boat,
Ch. X,
116.
like
A.
and
ii.
Common
Bennett,
Cupid
Sense,
Was
his
not Abraham, our father, justified by works, when he had offered Isaac son upon the altar. Bible, James, II, 21. Holy men have bidden penitents to hasten their path upward by penance, self-denial and good works. Ch. BrontE, Villette, Ch. XV, 202.
iii.
The
*
clock
was wrong.
II,
An
icicle
Dick.
Christm. Car.,
iv.
. .
.
31.
had never seen a firework beyond an exhibition of a dozen Harry squibs at Williamsburg on the Fifth of November. Thack., Virg. , Ch.
XXXVII, 387. A man's heart
is
its
v.
Idle Thoughts, VI, 84. ** The banquet was followed by brilliant fireworks. Macaulay. } ) ** He would aim at being noticeable even at a show of fireworks. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XLI, 306. A highly successful display of fireworks. Jerome, Variety Patter, 152. You need not go a-turning on the waterworks again. M. E. Francis, The
Manor Farm,
21.
Ch. XXI.
Some nouns,
plural
in certain
although no pluralia tantum, are always used in the phrases or collocations. This applies especially
*)
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
to
in
233
some names
pairs
of parts of the
or
larger
human or animal body, which occur numbers: hands, knees, legs, heels, feel, teeth.
in the
These require no
illustration in these pages. Also several of the nouns passed in review chiefly found in certain fixed combinations.
preceding
are
Besides the above the following nouns may here be mentioned: age: in the Middle Ages (the singular is occasionally met with); ages ago (= Dutch tijden geleden). * The Middle Age adorned itself with proofs of manhood and devotion. Emerson,
i.
119a.
ii.
of their own times, and middle age, to the rude material they found in the early legends. F. J. Rowe, Intro d. to Ten. Lane, and El., 30. ** A view of the state of Europe during the Middle Ages. Hallam. i) about I don't know when, but apparently ages ago Peggotty has told me
brilliant
my
bone:
father's funeral.
Dick.,
Cop.,
(of).
Ch.
II,
lb.
in to
a man's (good) books (= Dutch b ij i e m a n d in een goed blaadje staan (blijven); to be (keep) in (on) a man's black books (= Dutch b ij iemand in een slecht blaadje staan Dutch bij iemand uit (b ij v e n) to be (keep) out of a person's books ( d e g u n s t z ij n (b 1 ij v e n) to be upon the books (= Dutch ingeschreven z ij n) to take one's name off the books (= Dutch zich laten a fs c h r ij v e n) to close the books (= Dutch de inschrijving sluiten); to shut the books (= Dutch de zaken aan kant doen); to keep any one's books (= Dutch iemands boeken bijhouden).
book
in to be (keep) in (on)
i.
ii.
see the gentleman is not in your books. Much ado, I, I. She gave me half-a-sov this half and perhaps she'll double it next, her good books. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch V, 86.
if
Tom
keep in
iii.
The Mischiefmaker,
on the black books
Ch.
VII.
Rev. of Rev.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
am sorry to say am out of his books. She continued on the books as an out-patient.
I I
Watson. *) The young scapegrace took his name off the college books. Holme Lee. i) You cannot be admitted now because the books are closed. He has decided to shut the books because the business no longer yields a
decent profit
ix.
father's books.
G.
chance:
chances are
of
the
(=
135.
will find in
one
doctrinal essay.
will
Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XI, 222. not be happy. Stevenson, Walking Tours (Peacock,
conclusion
in
to
try
(challenge)
n).
conclusions
(=
Dutch
de proef
|
nemen;
i.
zich mete
No,
in despite of sense and secrecy, Unpeg the basket on the house's top, Let the birds fly, and, like the famous ape, To try conclusions, in the basket I. , III, 4, 195. creep, And break your neck down. H a
| |
i)
Murray.
234
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
21.
They believed themselves strong enough Ch. Kinqsley, Alton Locke, Pref.
Town-dwellers know better than
to
conclusions with street-noises. Dor. Ch. I. When the cow challenges conclusions with an express train, the cow's miscalculation of the parallelogram of forces does not avail to save her from destruction.
try
Gerard
Rev. of Rev.,
counsel:
in
to
leave
(= Dutch voor
up the cudgels for (in or on behalf of) (= Dutch h e t voor). It was neither my business nor my inclination to take up the cudgels on Hilda's behalf. W. E. Norris, My Friend Jim, Ch. XVII, 113. device: in to leave (abandon) to one's own devices (= Dutch voor zich zelf laten zorgen). What would you do if left to your own devices ? Mrs. Wood G. Canterbury 's Will, XV.
cudgel
:
in
to take
opnemen
abandoned him
in
to his
own
Truth,
dog:
throw
i.
to
go
to
the
to the
dogs
(=
sir, the country is going to the dogs. Lytton, Caxtons, II, Ch. IV, 45. he stays eating his heart out in London, he will go to the dogs in no time. Lyall A Hardy Horseman, Ch. X 84.
Egad,
If
ii,
Throw physic
He
fit:
told
Macb.
I,
V, 3, 47.
Wash.
Irv.
scream (laugh,
etc.)
schreeuwen (lachen, etc.); to throw a person into fits (= Dutch iemand een stuip geven); to beat a person (a thing) into fits iemand (iets) de baas af zijn, het geheel van iemand to give a person fits (= iemand totaal verslaan, s) w n n e n) (i e Dutch also iemand er duchtig doorhalen); by fits and starts
t
i
;
b
i.
ij
ii.
iii.
iv.
e n). The little wretch screams herself into fits. Thackeray, i) Such a proposal would have thrown him into fits. L. Harcourt. x ) ay, "all They had been sometimes known to beat a blustering Nor'-Wester to fits," as Toby Veck said. Dick. Chimes, 1,4. We goes out and tackles a East Indiaman and he gives us fits. Runciman. *) I rather guess as how the old man will give particular fits to our folks to-day.
i
,
b u
E.
v.
EOOLESTON.
!)
friend
Twins, I, 129. (= Dutch vriendschappelijk met iemand omgaan); to make friends with (of) a man (= Dutch vriendschap met iemand sluiten); to drink friends (= Dutch het afdrinken); to feel friends with a man (= Dutch met iemand op hebben). See also Ch. XXVI, 5, e, Note.
They worked
:
well by fits
and
starts.
in to be friends with
a person
Murray.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i.
235
Friends
You
can't
Cond.
I with you all. Jul. C ae s. III 1 220. be friends with your own girls. W. Besant, All S*orts and of Men, Ch. VII, 66. a real good fellow; be friends with him. Mrs. Alex., A Life Interest,
, , ,
am
59.
Ch. Kinosley,
Herew.
Ch.
* I like her and shall make friends with her. Mrs. Ward, Mar eel la, I, 181. Lady Henry has made great friends witn him. Id., Lady Rose's D aught.
,
iii.
Iv.
Ch. IV, 336. ** She resolved to make friends of every one around her who could at all interfere with her comfort. ThAck. Van. Fair, I, Ch. X, 93. The victory being thus decided, it was proposed to adjourn to a cellar hard by, and drink friends. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XVIII, 118. Tom, notwithstanding his bumptiousness, felt friends with him at once. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. I, 86.
I,
,
Tom
:
grip in to be at grips (with) (= Dutch bij de haren hebben). Even the relations of Japan and Russia, so recently at grips with one another, are
constantly increasing in intimacy. Westm. Qaz. , No. 4919, 2a. The monarchy is at death grips with murder. Rev. of Rev., CCI, 2276.
gun
s
t
a a n)
* But
first
i.
(stand) to one's guns (= Dutch op z ij n s t u k b 1 ij v e n blow great guns (= Dutch e e n storm w a a i e n). In the expression the singular occasionally takes the place of the plural,
in to stick
;
to
Augusta, though she felt sadly inclined to flee, still stood to her guns. Rider Haggard, Mees. Will, Ch. I, 7. An animated colloquy ensued. Manvers stuck to his guns. Mrs. Alexander, i) ** He stood to his gun like a man. Emily Lawless , A Colonel of the
Empire,
ii.
I
Ch. X.
had been
Ch.
Cop.,
It
in Yarmouth when the seamen said it blew great guns. Dick., LV, 392a. blows great guns indeed. There'll be many a crash in the forest to-night.
Id.,
Barn. Rudge,
For to split hairs we also find to split straws; see below. second collocation grey sometimes varies with white, venerable and similar words. Young hairs is occasionally used to mark the opposite of grey hairs. The plural is also sometimes used when grey, etc. are used
In
Note.
the
predicatively.
Early Modern English practice sometimes has the plural where the present has the singular. Observe also the singular number in His hair rose (stood)
on end (erect) where the Dutch equivalent Zijne b e r g e has the plural, * His hair i. began to rise on his head. Wash. Irv.
Dolf Heyl.
(Stof.,
I,
119).
of the pupil's head would stand on end with fright. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XVII, 151. His blood froze, his hair stood erect. Lytton, Night and Morn., 480. Uncle Tom's hair stood on end with alarm. Grant Allen, Tents of them, Ch. XI. My hair stood erect on my head with horror. Id., That Friend of Sylvia's.
**
My
hair
is
/.
!)
Murray.
236
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
21.
* I cannot Hardy, Tess, split hairs on that burning query. ** Ye stmll bring down my grey hairs with sorr6w to the grave.
It
II,
Bible, Gen.,
XLIX, 29. would also bring the grey hairs of an indulgent parent with sorrow to the Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 151. grave. Smol. The oldest man he seemed that ever wore grey hairs. Wordsworth, Resolu,
VIII.
attention
my
grey hairs.
Mrs.
Ch. 1.116.
(II.
Chesterton
3828, 3406).
***
Will purchase us a
good
II, 1, 144. Jul. Caes. How hideously look deeds of lust and blood Through those snow-white and 1 1 venerable hairs. Shelley , C e n c 49. who have white hairs and a tottering body, Will keep at least blameless I,
opinion.
neutrality.
lb.
II,
2, 39.
.
.
to have thy prison days prolonged If peradventure, reader, it has been thy lot through middle age down to decrepitude and silver hairs [etc.]. Ch. Lamb, Last Es. of El., The Superannuated Man, (322). He has shown grey wit under young hairs. Lytton Rienzi, II, Ch. Ill, 97. *** And when my hairs are white, My son will then perhaps be waiting thus.
.
SHELLEy,
Cenci,
III,
2, 25.
My
hairs
suffering,
Mrs. Gask.
Mary
Barton.
***** Bind up your hairs. John, III, 4, 68. Here in her hairs The painter plays the spider and hath woven to entrap the hearts of men. Merch. of Ven., Ill, 2, 120.
| |
golden mesh
half:
halves
to cry halves (= Dutch 'samen deelen' roepen); to go (= Dutch half staan, gelijkop deelen, voor de helft m e e d o e n) to do a thing by halves (= Dutch iets ten halve doen). Note. For to go halves we occasionally find to go half.
in
;
i.
You cannot
ii.
cry halves to anything that he (sc. a true Caledonian) finds. He does not find but bring. Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia, Imp erf. Sympathies, (203). * You have consented to halves inMacheath. 1.
I'll
Gay, Beggar's Opera, II, go go halves in the bet. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIV, 377. I wouldn't go halves in the toffee and gingerbread on purpose to save the money. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. V, 26. Borrow all you can get, and meantime we'll go halves. W. Besant, Bell of St. Paul's, I, Ch. V, 82. Mr. Beit replied that in whatever Rhodes decided to do he would go halves. Rev. of Rev., CC, 140a. ** "I'll go ha/f," he said, "if anybody will do the rest." Thack. (Trol.,
Thack.,
iii. I
Ch.
I,
60).
Jane Austen,
halves.
North. Abbey,
Christ m. Car,
women;
they never
do anything by
Dick.,
67.
When Lord
hook:
Van. Fair,
Steyne was benevolently disposed, he did nothing by halves. Thack., II, Ch. XVII, 180.
hooks (= Dutch het hoekje o m). you wish her off the hooks. Thack., Pen d., I, Ch. XXIII, 238. Mathilda as his Reverence expressed it was very nearly "off the hooks." Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIV, 139.
in the colloquial off the
Why do
Id.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
length:
in
237
to
carry to lengths
go (to) all (considerable, etc. ver, etc. gaan). Note. The singular form is
i.
(= Dutch het zoo ver drijven); to lengths (= Dutch tot het uiterste,
retained before specializing o f 4- gerund, Mrs. Tulliver never went the length of quarrelling with her. G. Eliot, Mill, Ch. VII, 46.
*
ii.
He went the length of suggesting [etc.]. Times, He carried that policy to lengths to which his father never thought of carrying it. Mac, Fred., (6726). ** I felt resolved in my desperation to go all lengths. Ch. Bronte J a n e
,
to considerable lengths. lb., Ch. XXXII, 456. to which she would not go. Don. Doyle, Sherl.
Holm.,
in
26.
lots:
in to cast
(draw) lots
(= Dutch loten).
Occasionally also
after
other
collocations, such as the lots declared. Lots were cast who should walk up to the master i. ask for more. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 30.
supper
that
evening and
to
who shall begin. Dobson , E n g. Lit., 37. take other measures for finding out the truth, and
The
lots
Mam.,
Ch.
I, 9.
(= Dutch de genade). was an orphan left to the tender mercies of churchwardens and overseers, perhaps he would have cried the louder. Dick., 01. Twist,
mercy:
If
in the
tender mercies
he could have
I, 21.
:
known
that he
Ch.
in to call names (= Dutch (u i t) s c h e 1 d e n). "Don't call names!" Dobbin replied, getting off the bench very nervous Van. Fair, I, Ch. V, 42.
name
Thack.,
nut:
Vm
in the colloquial to be nuts on (= Dutch dol z ij n op). nuts on that girl. Grant Allen Hilda Wade, Ch. II 58. She was nuts on Public Houses, was England's Virgin Queen. Jerome, in a boat, Ch. VI, 61.
, ,
Three
n
1
men
The
probability
in the probabilities
are
Dutch het
is
waarsch
ij
ij
k).
singular occurs as an occasional variant. i. The probability is that the Turkish army and the survivors of the right wing are not at Chorlu. Westm. Gaz. No. 6065, lb. ii. What are the probabilities as the result of the contest? Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIII, 106. The probabilities are all against such a Bill ever passing at all. Truth, No.
,
1802, 81a.
round
i.
singular
go the rounds (of) (= Dutch de ronde doen (in). The not infrequent, The following anecdote ... is now going the round of the papers. Thack.,
:
in to
is
Paris Sketch-Bk,
This celebrated epistle
after tea.
ii.
.
I.
.
.
created quite a sensation ... as it went the round Hughes, Tom Brown at Oxf. Ch. II. Cranf. Ch. X, 180. At last we went the rounds at half-past six. Mrs. Gask. A story is going the rounds concerning a well-know essayist. Lit. World. A letter from a London doctor which has been going the rounds of the Press. Times.
, ,
sea:
in the
high seas
also
the plural
is
238
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
the United States puts a navy head out of its shell. Rev.
will
21.
When
puts
its
on the high seas, it is like a of Rev., CCXVII, 96. be fought out on the high-seas. Times.
tortoise
which
England still held the seas. Green, Short. Hist., Ch. X, IV, 810. Freed from the dangers that threatened her rule in Ireland and in India, and mistress of the seas, England was free to attack France. lb., Ch. X, IV, 8.11. Whosoever has children, wards, etc. in the parts beyond the seas. Ch. Kinqsley,
Westw. Hoi,
No
Ch. Ill, 226. one, since Milton laid down his harp, would have written these lines on England as the sovereign of the seas. Stopford A. Brooke, Stud, in Poetry, Ch. I, 8.
shake
in the colloquial
zaaks).
(= Dutch
v e e
He'd be no great shakes. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. IV, Carriages themselves were great shakes too. Mrs. Gask.,
24.
Mary Barton,
share: s t a a n
*
in
,
to
go shares
g
e
1
to
go snacks
1
also
ij
ko p d ee
e n)
halve opbrengst).
i.
Go shares with me. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. , Ch, IV, 336. You'd want to go shares in my money. W. W. Jacobs, Odd Craft, D, 86. ** None of them replied solely upon that interest without a present to the s-t-y, with whom some of the c went snacks. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XVIII, 117.
That the place might not fall to ruin before he could reside in it himself, he had placed a country-fellow with his family, in one wing, with the privilege of cultivating the farm on shares. Wash. Irv., Dojf Heyl. (Stof., Handl. I, 109.
,
ii.
M. Briand subsequently disclaimed any desire on the part of the State to take sides in the great controversy of God and no-God. Rev. of Rev., CCVII/2386. We do not wish to take sides in the squabble. Westm. Gaz. sky:
in
to
commend
(exalt,
hemelhoog verheffen).
combinations.
i.
extol, laud, praise) to the skies (= Dutch In rhetorioal diction also frequent in other
Graham was
Ch.
II,
shortly
Ch. bronte
Villette,
14.
We
ii.
Dick., Cop., Ch. VII, 51a. intelligence will be extolled to the skies.
Jerome
Thoughts,
The
47.
Thack.,
Pend.
II,
sort: in out of shorts ( Dutch van street). She looked confused and out of sort*. DYcic. Cop., Ch. Ill, 21a. 'Tan't lawful to be out of sorts, and I am out of sorts; though sooner bear a cheerful spirit. Id., ChimesS, 11,54.
,
God knows
I'd
star
I
in
to
Dutch zijn
gestarnte zegenen)-
thanked my stars a thousand times for the happy discovery. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XX, 136. Your mother-in-law is always within hearing, thank our stars for the attention of the dear women. Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. Ill, 313.
He was thanking his stars that he was not as Thank your stars, girl, that it was not you,
I
Ribot.
Winter Night,
Compare: His
Mac, Fred.,
(6896).
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
starts:
in
239
.
by starts
Dutch sometimes sometimes by starts ( by fits and starts (See above, under fits). years, when he had made you the companion of his misery, he your pedagogue, by starts your tormentor, but never, Mordaunt, Scott Pirate, Ch. XXXIII 360.
.
straw:
s. v.
in
to
split
straws
Dutch
haarkloven).
Dick.
,
hair.
We
Not
c k w.
table
in
that I ever suffered from them (sc. governesses); I took care to turn the tables. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XVII, 214. I think I should have turned the tables on him. Lytton, Night and Morn., 227. c The tables had been turned on the Peers. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch.XXIV, 366. If you can't see that the tables are turned at last, you're a duller knave than I take you to be. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 374.
tale:
in
to
tell
(= Dutch uit
50.
de school klappen, klikken). Go and tell tales of me. Thack. Lovel the Widower, Ch. Ill, There is no use in telling tales out of school. Id. Denis Duval,
, ,
Ch.
183.
No doubt
the worthy gentleman was accusing himself of telling tales out of school and had come to a timely repentance. Id., Newc. , I, Ch. XII, 150.
Neither you
Westw. Ho!,
turn:
t
my
godson.
Ch. Kingsley,
gerund
The peasants
take
turns
in
receiving
travellers.
Longf.
,
Rural Life
light.
in
at holding a candle , as of course there was no people were waiting turns at the telescope. E. W.
,
Hornung
Times, No
,
IV.
iii. They kept watch by turns. Folk Lore. volume: in to speak (express) volumes, and analogous expressions
(= Dutch
fig.).
ii.
passed between these parties, letters which are admitted to be handwriting of the defendant, and which speak volumes indeed. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXXIV, 310. Her blush spoke volumes. Grant Allen That Friend of Sylvia 's. I questioned age; it heaved a heavy sigh, Expressing volumes. Anon. (Rainb.,
in
the
I, 20).
iii.
iv.
Henery shook his head, gazed into the ashpit, and smiled volumes of ironical knowledge. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. VIII, 71. Volumes could not have said more. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XIII, 105.
,
water: in to fish in troubled waters (= Dutch in troebel water v i s s c h e n) still waters run deep (== Dutch stille waters hebben diepe gronden). Frequently also in certain combinations in poetic or
;
rhetorical diction,
i.
And behind
is
in troubled waters.
ii.
Westm. Gaz.
is
My mind
He
always the dim figure of the old Sultan fishing No. 4977, 16. in deep waters. Stephenson, Dr. Jekyll, 82.
,
W. Raleigh, Shakespeare,
Ch.
II,
62.
240
I
rich
wind:
de n
love you, we should throw everything else to the Maggie, if you loved me as winds for the sake of belonging to each other. G.Eliot, Mill, VI, Ch. XI, 415. We see him sending care to the winds under the influences of good-fellowship. W. Gunnyon, Biographical Sketch of Burns, 36. If there were a hundred Anglo-Japanese treaties, they would all be torn to pieces and flung to the winds rather than that such a foul fratricidal contest should take place. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 36.
22.
Nouns denoting things thought of without limits naturally do not admit of being used in the plural. This applies in the first place to the names of substances, the so-called material nouns, and
to
the
names
of
actions,
states
and
qualities,
the
so-called
abstract
As
in
nouns.
occur
Dutch, the plural is possible with many such nouns when they a modified meaning: i. e. material nouns may be used in the plural when they have become ordinary object-nouns, or when varieties are meant; abstract nouns are often found in the plural when separate instances or repeated phenomena are referred to, and also, of course, when they have assumed a concrete meaning.
in
all, or in certain of their modified tantum. Some are chiefly confined to meanings For instances see the preceding certain collocations or phrases.
Some
of
these
words are
in
practically
pluralia
23. a)
nouns English usage is essentially the same as Thus English has coppers grains ices,, etc. as objectnouns; and, although for the above the Dutch has no analogous equivalents, it is not without instances of such words used in similarly altered meanings: ijzers, papieren. Nor do the two languages present any essential difference as to the use of material nouns to denote varieties. Thus mineral waters =
As
to material
Dutch.
minerale wateren.
b) For the plurals in the following quotations the Dutch would, however, have the singular of the ordinary equivalent: Oft have we seen him at the peep of dawn Brushing with hasty steps the dews away. Gray Elegy, 99. The dews of the evening may endanger the life of her for whom only
|
value mine.
Sher.
Rivals,
II
(216).
Mary, two more tumblers, two more hot waters, and two more goes of gin. Thack., Sam. Tilm., Ch. II, 19. There is sweet music here that softer falls Than petals from blown roses on the grass, Or night-dews on still waters between walls Of shadowy granite, in a gleaming pass. Ten., Lotos-Eat, Chor. Song., I. I find that all plain foods, plainly cooked, agree with me. Rev. of Rev.,
| | |
frosts of
an
arctic winter.
Stof.,
Handl.
III.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
24. a)
241
nouns English usage differs materially from Dutch. Dutch another word expressing an individualized conception is sometimes used to express the modified meaning. Thus we have doeleinden, raadgevingen, sterfgevallen,
As
to abstract
In
etc.,
as
the
plural
of
doel, raad,
When
is
many
abstract nouns admit of being used in an meaning with an ordinary plural. See also 33,
38.
But there is a considerable number of abstract nouns which hardly admit of being used in the plural. Such among many others are bravery, compassion, courage, freedom, happiness, haste, honesty,
pity,, quiet,
hunger, hurry, integrity, luck, might, moderation, obedience, patience, sadness, temperance , willingness, wisdom. When neccessity arises to express plural instances of the notions for which these nouns stand, certain individualizers, such as piece,
notions.
exactly
coincided with
all
his ready-formed
Donovan,
I, 83.
folio
Bible, the names, births and deaths of a century of Fieldings appeared rusty ink and various handwritings upon its fly-leaf. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. II, 34.
colds, heats. Neither the colds of winter nor the heats of summer seemed to have any influence on his bodily health. Roorda, Dutch and Eng.
Com p.,
The
III,
21.
party soon sallied from the castle towards the spot in which Montreal had designed their resting-place during the heats of day. Lytton, Rienzi,
Ch.
II,
131.
fears,
imaginings.
I,
Present fears
Macb.,
,
3, 138.
fears, doubts, misgivings. She was a great deal too fears doubts or misgivings. Thack. Van. Fair, I.
,
happy
to
griefs.
lb., I,
Little
Sharp with her secret griefs, was the heroine of the day.
,
Ch. XVI, 168. Religion has consoled many griefs. Ch. Reade to mend, I, Ch. VII, 85.
It
is
hopes
fears.
If
How
to be
hopes are dupes fears may be liars. Rev. E. Ch. II, 20.
,
Hardy
hopes, vanities.
there.
The dearest vanities, ambitious hopes, had all been Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 247. Considerable hopes of a settlement were excited by the announcement that another conference has been agreed upon for Tuesday. Graph.
solicitudes.
made
H.
the
To her the destinies of mankind, seen by the light of Christianity, solicitudes of feminine fashion appear an occupation for Bedlam.
,
G. Eliot,
English.
II.
16
242
talks.
at
CHAPTER XXV,
The
it
24.
but take
conversation runs on with such admirable naturalness, that we can the echo of such talks as were once the staple of conversation Chilvers-Coton. Leslie Stephen George Eliot, Ch. VI, 93.
as
,
wait.
take
at
Acted without any waits whatsoever, Henry VIII, as it is written, would least three hours and a half in the playing. Beerbohm Tree, Henry
.
VIII, 91.
the
have been in the habit every night of haunting weathers. Destitute people Embankment, where they have slept in all weathers on the seats and in any
.
.
II.
Lond. News,
b) Especial mention may be made of certain gerunds altered meaning are chiefly used in the plural.
which
in their
(mis)doings.
Trol.,
if
any, records
left
Thack.,
5.
We
on
there.
Thack.,
Sam.
Ch. Kingsley,
ts
(Compare;
It
his
I,
Ch.'IV, 21.
the
dosings, drowsings. The dosings and drowsings of old people during day are mild torpors from exhaustion. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 273a.
forebodings, i. Many a sad pang would have been spared to him, many a gloomy foreboding warded off. W. Gunnyon, Biogr. Sketch of Burns, 39.
ii.
They trembled
lest, her engagement being off with Osborne, she should take up immediately her other admirer and Captain. In which forebodings these worthy young women no doubt judged according to the best of their experience. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 189.
gossipings. They never failed, whenever they talked those matters over in Wash. their evening gossipings, to lay all the blame on Dame van Winkle.
Irv.
,
greetings. He stopped at the outer door to bestow the greetings of the season on the clerk. Dick., Christm. Car., I, 18.
happenings.
Throughout
his long
life he daily noted down the happenings Rev. of Rev., CCIV, 644a.
of
effects
of sending the
,
Westm. Gaz.
Rev.
Had
only hearkened to
Aylwin,
II,
The
misgivings in the hour of despondency and prospect of death. Burns, Note to 'A Prayer'. Hitherto it had been impossible for the discontented Whigs not to feel some
stanzas are
misgivings.
Mac, Pitt,
(292a).
filled the
rejoicing(s). i. But soon conquests of a very different kind with pride and rejoicing. lb.. (307a).
fi.
kingdom
rejoicings in England were not less enthusiastic or less sincere. lb., (695a). Scarcely had Parliament voted a monument to Wolfe, when another great event called for fresh rejoicings. lb.. (3076). The crowning of the New King of Norway took place last month amid great
The
popular rejoicings.
6a.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
25.
243
The
singular preceded by the definite article is sometimes used instead of the plural to denote the whole of a class, nation, Thus the fowl may stand for the fowls the Spaniard sect etc.
, ,
for the
all usual only of certain names imparts a ring of homeliness. In their grammatical construction these singulars seem to be mostly dealt with as singulars, except heathen, which is understood as an adjective denoting a class of persons in a general sense (like the faithful), and is, accordingly, construed as a plural. The Turk may also be understood to mean the sultan of the Turks,
This application
nationality,
to
limited, being at
it
of
which
the
de Groote Heer).
Dane
is
similarly applied:
Hor. Friends to his ground. Mar. And liegemen to the Dane. 1 15 (= the king of Denmark). You cannot speak of reason to the Dane, And lose your voice.
,
\
Haml.
I,
lb., I, 2, 44.
i.
brute, fowl.
dispute
;
|
am monarch
,
ii.
From the centre all am lord of the fowl and the brute. Cowper Solitude of Alex. Selk. leaf. The bursting of the buds and the fall of the leaf. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XI 95. You will not take it. The FrenchFrenchman. We purpose to try Dover.
I
|
of all
My
,
right there is
none
to
I.
man has
-Herew..
one
of
Gh. Kinosley,
Pagan.
Ten.,
The Pagan
yet
Hill.
Lane, and
279.
|
Polack.
To
be a preparation
Haml.,
the
II,
2, 63.
(Now
us,
obsolete.)
their
Roman.
upon us
the
For'
[etc.].
when
Ten.,
and
law
Relax'd
its
hold
Spaniard.
He has believed for years that he was called and sent into world only to fight the Spaniard. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch.
XXXI, 2346.
Their able modern historian has well likened their first struggle that between Civilis and the Roman, to their last that between William the Silent and the Spaniard. Id., Hereward, Ch. IX, 49c. The men who fought the Spaniard under Elizabeth. Preface to Nursery
Rhymes (Books
Turk.
a truce with him.
III).
Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIX, 218a. Nothing has been done to save our miserable 'proteges', whom Lord Beaconsfield thrust under the heel of the Turk in 1878. Rev. of Rev., CCIV, 564a. Germany, and even Austria, may appear one day as the Protector of the Turk against the Powers who are pressing him to open the Dardanelles. e s t m. G a z.
W
iii.
heathen.
of
And
of
walks was to
its
his
order,
heathen by myriads. Thack. Henry The heathen are upon him. Ten. Last
Harry of the glories Brethren converting the Esmond, I, Ch. Ill, 28.
tell
f o u r n.
86.
244
mend,
I,
Ch.
I, 5.
|
** Far other
in
|
Whereto we move, than when we strove is this battle in the west youth, And brake the petty kings, and fought with Rome, Or thrust the heathen from the Roman wall, And shook him thro' the north. Ten., Pas.
|
|
of Arth.,
69.
Compare: Chearfulness of Mind is very conspicuous in the Characters of those who are looked upon as the greatest Philosophers among the Heathens. Spect.,
No. 383.
What
is
fat living
a single
sermon?
compared to converting a hundred thousand heathens by Thack. Henry Esm., I, Ch. Ill, 28.
,
26.
Some nouns that have the character of collective nouns of the second kind (i. e. such as denote conceptions thought of without limits), and are, consequently, singulars, mostly correspond to Dutch plurals.
w z e n expenditure = uitgaven; knowkundigheden, kennis; information = inlichtingen; ledge = berichten; medicine = m e d c n (e n) merchandise = intelligence koopwaren; physic = m e d c n (e n) produce = voortbrengz a k e n
;
abuse
scheldwoorden;
evidence
= =
advance
;
= vorderingen;
i
business
be
ij
ij
ij
s e
e n
progress
single
vorderingen;
are to
revenue
inkomsten.
When
instances
be
expressed,
have to be preceded by such an individualizing word as piece, item (36); some may be thus used without any such word. Some of the above nouns, in other meanings, are also used as ordinary single-unit nouns
with an ordinary plural.
abuse,
i. At length the rivals proceeded to personal abuse before a large company. Mac. Pitt, (290a). She was indifferent to abuse. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII. III, 376.
,
ii.
Voltaire
to
e.
advance,
ii.
i. Those gentlemen must have quaked with fear and envy when they heard of Mr. Warrington's prodigious successes and the advance which he had made in their wealthy aunt's favour. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXVIII, 289. The aeroplane has made more rapid advance than the motor-car in the same time. Westm. Gaz., No. 5089, lc. He made wonderful advances in scholastic learning. Thack., Van. Fair,
I,
Ch. V, 47.
i.
business,
ii.
The manufacturers
are
Business
were two items of Government business, the Public and the Army Annual Bill, down for consideration. Moras
it
ning Leader.
iii.
me on
EI.,
again
the
petty
businesses
of
life.
Ch.
Lamb
Last Es. of
The
1
Convalescent,
Gimblet and
I
i)
Sattler, E.
S., X.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Now
they
<&
i.
245
Rudy Kipling,
their
Stalky
evidence(s).
leads
to
C o.
73. i>
abundant and trustworthy evidence which we now possess, these structures are the most marked cerebral conviction that characters common to man with the apes. Huxley, Essays, II, 93. No evidence fs forthcoming to establish accurately. Whitaker's Aim. 1901, 2466. There was no evidence that Miss Holland had been murdered. Times,
All the
the
ii.
Hi.
the clearest pieces of evidence of the great part which the bicycle plays modern life is the International Cyclists Congress. Times. * These evidences of an incomptatibility of temper induced Miss Betsey to pay him off. Dick., Cop., Ch. I, 120. In America there is a touch of shame when a man exhibits the evidence's of large English Traits, Wealth, 1 136. property. Emerson The more the subject was investigated, the more clearly were the evidences of pressure made out. Tyndall, Glac. of the Alps, I, Ch. I, 7.
Among
in
**
Miss Williams
gratified the
half.
expenditure,
is
i. Before any work is taken in hand, an estimate of its expenditure submitted to the council. Escott, England, Ch. V, 59. The Foreign Secretary declared that there was a fair prospect that national expenditure could be reduced considerably without endangering national safety.
ii.
Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 558a. can be issued only The remaining S 10.000.000 Bonds Railway Company for expenditures made to complete, finish
of railway.
to
reimburse the
Private Correspondence.
"But
information.
Ch. XII,
all he's got to do", said Paul , boldly offering his information to the very doctor himself, "is to keep on turning as he runs away". Dick., Domb.
103.
The map
of Asia has
Times,
ii.
At this very time the horrid practice of poisoning was so common, that, during part of the season, a Praetor punished capitally for this crime above 3000 persons in a part of Italy; and found informations of this kind still multiplying upon
him.
intelligence,
they had
,
it
in
abundance.
ii.
Wash.
Irv.,
The Storm-Ship
Punch,
Traddles
(Stof.,
Handl.
piece
1,86).
intelligence.
Tommy
who gave
at this
this
of
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
,
Doctor Kettle
little
dismayed
piece of intelligence.
Emily
Lawless
iii.
A Colonel of the Empire, Ch. VIII. An intelligence that startled me more. Lytton, Caxtons,
The
faithful
still
**
Xill, Ch. V, 346. kept intelligences with one another in the colony. Thack.,
knowledge,
I,
958.
that increaseth
Bible, Eccles.,
too
One might say that no kind or amount of human knowledge were woman. M.D.Conway, Earthen w. Pilgr. XVIII, 220. 2)
,
much
for
ii.
We must determine the relative value of knowledges. Spencer, Education.') We may say that in the family of knowledges, Science is the household drudge. Id. 3 )
*)
3)
E. S.,
E. S.,
XXXI, XXXI,
320.
335.
2)
Murray,
s.v.
knowledge,
11.
246
medicine,
ii.
i.
Advertisement.
in
medicines and strengthening food were decaying c no one wanted them. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XI,
Stores
of
places where
149.
all
produce.
progress,
the
produce
industry.
his
Mac, Hist.,
I,
With
all
progress in his
art.
Wash.
**
I
Irv.,
spent
109).
surveying,
ii.
in
which
made a
good progress.
Burns,
revenue.
origin.
European
states,
fjfth
among them,
...
Mac, Fred.,
Steps
improvement of
27.
Lit.
World.
in their ordinary meaning are single-unit nouns with an ordinary plural, may also be used as collective nouns of the second kind (i. e. such as denote ideas without In their modified meaning, they are not, however, found limits). preceded by a word denoting number (numeral or noun), which See, distinguishes them from those mentioned in the next however under shot. Such as denote persons are construed partly as plurals, partly as singulars. For details see also Sattler, E. S., XII; Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Ace, II, A, 2; and MURRAY under the respective words. In the case of some nouns a few quotations are added
.
We may
distinguish:
a)
names
The
of trees:
hills
chalk
The mansion
break into cliffs that overhang the Thames, or form valleys Mrs. Shelley, Note on 'The Revolt of Islam'. surrounded by woods of oak and beech, looks out upon a
,
spacious lake. Mac Fred., (6616). And the yellow down Border'd with palm. Ten., Lotos-Eaters, I enter'd, from the clearer light, Imbower'd vaults of piilar'd palm.
|
III.
Id.,
Recol. of the Arab. Nights, IV. The dusty high-road lay through a forest of pine. H. K. Daniels Simpler Life (in Norway), II (Westm. Gaz., No. 5418,
b) the following,
Th
2c).
among many
others:
adventure.
He was fond
115).
It
i.
of adventure.
Wash.
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
anecdote,
I,
is
sad
is
thing
to
think that a
man
call
fund of anecdote
humbug, more or
less
Thack., Notes on a Week's Holiday. That fellow is full of anecdote and fun. Id., Newc,
Ch. XII,
150.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i
247
ii.
iii.
His stores of military anecdote were falling low. Saintsb., N n e t. Cent., Ch. Ill, 158. It is one of the chief pieces of literary anecdote of our times that he (,sc. Thackeray) offered himself fruitlessly to Dickens as an illustrator. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent., Ch. Ill, 151. The event was combined with traditionary and genealogical anecdotes. Scott
,
Brid. of Trier m.
ball.
Pref.
,
The pistols were seldom loaded with ball. Dick., Pickw. Ch. II, 17. Having been long since out of powder and ball, they turn southward toward home. e s t w. Ho!, Ch. XXXII 2396. Ch. Kingsley
,
brick.
mansion
of
Dick.,
Christm.
Car.,
37.
i.
cartridge,
They fired a volley of ball cartridge over our heads. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI1I, 618a. The men themselves were debarred from giving any help beyond marching hither and thither and firing blank cartridge. Graph.
police
authorities
The
say they
believe
blank cartridge.
Morning Leader.
So serious was
to
fire,
were ordered
ball cartridgeMail. Even when one of the officers fired a shot in the air, laughter and jeering followed, and cries were raised that only blank cartridge was being used.
Daily
Times,
ii.
No. 1808, 675a. Something has been said about blank cartridges.
Id.,
ceremony.
II.
Magaz.
Emily Lawless
,
A Colonel
chronicle. The neighbourhood, at the time of which I am speaking, was one of those highly-favoured places which abound with chronicle and great men. Wash.
Irv., cliff.
The
Long
i.
(364).
have
left
a chasm.
Ten., En.
Arden,
1.
coin.
of
There were piled up, after the usage coin. Mac. C 1 v e (5216).
,
of Indian princes,
immense masses
him in such Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. Ill, 45. Pushing my hand through the hole in the lid, I drew it out full of gold pieces. "Aht" said, replacing the coin, "we shall not go back empty-handed". Rider Haqoard King Sol. Mines, 249. Times. Imperial gold coin was issued to the value of 5,780.446.
his pockets for the loose coin he usually carried about
He searched
abundance.
I
The
ii.
coin
was imported
into Malta.
Morn. Leader,
in the silver coins struck for the colonies.
Times.
connection, i. * I have some connection. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. LXIV, 529. The Miss Carkers had caught the trick of the place and piqued themselves upon
their 'aristocratic connection'.
Mrs. Gask.,
Cranf.
Ch. VII,
124.
IV, 41.
She had absolutely no literary connection. Rid. Hag., Mees. Will, Ch. ** Brough was a great man among the Dissenting connexion. Thack.
,
Sam.
Titm.,
It
Ch.
II,
11
(=
is
my
object to
of
the office as
much
as possible,
Ch. VII, 80. *** He looked for support, not to a strong aristocratical connection, but to he middle class of Englishmen. Mac, Pitt, (2876).
lb.
248
ii.
CHAPTER XXV,
27.
relationship in that distinguished quarter did not, like Lydgate's high G. Eliot, Mid., V, connections, serve as an advantageous introduction.
Will's
is
solicit
your connections.
are
the
,
friendship.
crime.
than
to
,
The Conservatives
see
disaffected
2a.
is alive
more concerned
make
capital
from
Irish
contentment.
e s
crime t m.
G a z.
Ch.
No. 4937
enemy.
fable.
Irv.
,
The scrub
I
with enemy.
Rudy. Kipling,
The
II, 23.
made myself
familiar with
all
its
Wash.
Sketch-Bk.
fact.
He ordered an investigation, and the Report of the investigators convinced him that fact once more was more terrible than fiction. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 565a. Fact is usually less entertaining than fiction. Bradley, E ng. PI ace-Names.
incident. The charm of variety there was not, nor the Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. I, 2.
invective,
i.
excitement of incident.
The chief topic of Pitt's invective was the favour shown to the German dominions of the House of Brunswick. Mac. Pitt, (2966). A nation convulsed by faction, a throne assailed by the fiercest invective [etc.].
,
lb., (310a).
ii.
His sermons
Id.,
abound with
(3836).
the
Bacon,
name was
Id.,
His
age.
already a mark for the invectives of one half of the writers of the
(584a).
Com. Dram.,
Colonel Picquart, whose splendid devotion to the cause of justice made him the mark for the savage invectives of the then dominant party. Rev. of Rev.,
CC,
of
120a.
simile. In both (sc. his sermons and his poems) there was an exuberance metaphor and simile entirely original. G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. VI, 49. proof, i. We do not dispute Pitt's integrity; but we do not know what proof he had given of it, when he was turned out of the army. Mac, Pitt, (295a). Pitt, on subsequent occasions, gave ample proof that he was one of those
metaphor,
penitents.
lb., (2956).
ii.
Mr. Stambouloff has given ample proof of courage and ability. Graph, The kindness, the earnestness of Eleanor's manner in pressing her to stay, and Henry's gratified look on being told that her stay was determined, were such sweet proofs of her importance with them, as [etc.]. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. XXVIII, 213. The proofs were all against him. Mrs. Mulock, The Sculptor of Bruges. He found in South Africa gratifying proofs of the success of the experiment. II. L o n d. News.
provision. Kingsley,
The English
fleet
Ch.
Westw. Ho!,
remark.
Mrs. Jennings at the Wharf, by appearing the first Sunday after Mr. Gilfil's death in her salmon-coloured ribbons and green shawl, excited the severest remark. G.Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. I, 71.
shell,
i.
vessel
armed with
S., XII.
six other
guns
firing grape-shell.
Hobart Pasha,
i)
Sattler, E.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Storm'd
at
249
Ten.,
with
shot
and
shell,
III.
Charge
of the
ii.
Light Brigade,
batteries at
Engaging
*
i,
They threw
shot,
Marryat.
i)
a gun. Snares or shot may take off the old birds Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XII, 148. ** projectiles. Are forty men without shot as good as eighty men with? Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIII, 1686. The air is dark with the explosion of shells and the hail of flying shot. Punch.
foraging without.
is
discharges of
an instance of shot
in this
meaning rejecting
number-indicating word: leave this place, I'll give you my fowling-piece; she will put a hundred Before swan-shot through a Dutchman's cap at eighty paces. Scott, Pirate, Ch. VIII, 97. *** persons discharging a gun. The banks of the Ganges seemed in a moment alive with shot. M c Carthy, Short Hist, Ch. XIII, 187.
after a
ii.
* discharges of a gun. Two led horses, which in the field always closely followed his person were struck down by cannon shots. Mac, Hist, VII Ch. XX, 220. The inspector of police had been firing a few shots into a crowd who had been
Graph.
of discharging 20 shots in a minute. a revolver. Pall Mall Mag.
The new quick-firing gun is capable He killed him with three shots from
Times.
They will have heard the shots. Boner, i) The shots we had heard were fired at us. Daily News. ** projectiles. The surgeon had extracted the shots from
the leg.
Mrs.
c k w.
22.
marksmen.
One can
carried.
They'll
Dick.
stone.
see by the
works are
Glasgow waterlb. *)
More Leaves.
full
The violence
subject.
subject.
The
levies,
,
and
proportions,
are
all
made
,
Out
of his
Haml.
i.
I,
2, 33.
toils the
Why
this
watch so nightly
lb.
72.
verse,
The
enwove in verse. Mary Shelley, Note on 'The Revolt of Islam'. He was now beginning to translate classical passages into excellent English verse. Life and Poems of Gray (Clar. Press),
ii.
"Hast thou flown far, thou restless bird of night?" asks Father Tom, who loves speaking in blank verses. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XXV, 281. If much of Leigh Hunt's prose must be called journalism rather than literature, practically the whole of his labours in metre must be called verses and not poetry. Sel. from Leigh Hunt, Intr. J. H. Lobban,
vote. The Liberal vote has fallen from 72.548 in 1906 to 61.366 in 1908. The Unionist vote, on the other hand, has gone up from 41.517 in 1906 to 92.168 in 1908.
5646.
Note. From the practice exhibited by the above nouns we must distinguish the occasional use of the singular for oratorical (poetic) effect, as in:
!)
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
250
28.
Many nouns not only present the same variety of use as those described in the previous but may also be found preceded by a word (numeral or noun) denoting number without taking the
,
mark of the plural. Grammatically they are then on a par with such a word as people, which in all respects is dealt with as a plural, although a singular in form: people say, these people,
the
a hundred people, many (few) people. Only the noun fish and names of some varieties of fishes are sometimes, at least
The nouns here referred to are especially the names of certain animals when described as hunted or caught for sport or
wild
for
When these animals are spoken of in another way, for profit. instance as objects of natural history, as vermin, or as enemies to man's safety the plural form is used in the majority of cases. Thus
,
accordance with ordinary practice to say to catch fish, to shoot wildfowl, to hunt pig eic; but the story of the three fishes,
it
is
in
keep fowls, to rear pigs, to kill lions, etc. also we say to kill duck, pig, when the wild animals, kill ducks, pigs, when the domesticated animals are meant.
to
Thus
to
The language is, however, in this respect rather irregular and inconsistent, i. e. not only is the rule often disregarded with one and the same noun, but to a great many names of wild animals it
does not apply at
all.
Sweet
(N. E. Gr.,
1966
ff.)
terms collective
singulars
II).
thinks that the frequent use of what he is due to the analogy of old un-
His view has been endorsed by Jespersen 192). This analogy may be the most important of the factors that have determined the rise of the idiom so far as the names of quadrupeds are concerned, but, as has been pointed out by Eilert Eikwall in a singularly pains-taking and exhaustive treatise (On the Origin and History of the
in English, Lund, C. W. K. Gleerup), does not satisfactorily account for the changed application of numerous names of fishes and birds. As to these latter Eikwall ascribes the rise of what he prefers to call unchanged plurals to the frequent use of many fish- and bird-names in a material sense, and subsequently as collective nouns with singular construction as an intermediate stage- Mr. Eikwall's treatise unfortunately came to hand only when the manuscript was already at the printer's, and could not, therefore, be turned to account. Much valuable material bearing on the subject has also been collected by Sattler (E. S. X and XII). Many of the following quotations have been drawn
it
,
Unchanged Plural
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
from his collections.
251
Compare
also
Kruisinga
of
1)
I. You may kill a few antelope. Saintsb. Ninet. Cent. i) sighted two antelopes grazing. Pinto, Africa. 1 ) The true antelopes are remarkable for the graceful symmetry of their bodies
,
Carpenter.
^)
bear. I resolved on a trip to the Lobab Valley to shoot some black bear. Graph. I heard of a man now living who has killed bear on the site of the Central Lake Park. Fred. Harrison Impressions of America.
,
beaver,
ii.
Ever caught so many fishes, Ever killed so many reindeer, Ever trapped so many beaver? Longfellow, Hiaw.3)
i.
|
How
bison.
A
i)
I
i.
Good
Lady
Words,
boar.
ii.
to
drive a
few boars
Bock,
Borneo. 1 )
some
of the guns.
buck.
Rid.
Haggard,
shoot
buck
at
Hans
Coetzee's.
lb.,
... to
buffalo, i. Beyond Denver we crossed the great prairies where seven years ago the wild buffalo were feeding in thousands. Froude, Oceana, Ch. XX, 330. ii. A few buffaloes wandered about. Bock Borneo. 1 )
elk.
i.
There
is
much more
1
All the
ii.
Year Round.
In
lb. 1 )
gaur.
I
came upon
giraffe.
many gaur in various parts of India. gaur or bison. Bell, Jungle Life. 1 ) Tracks of giraffe and larger game were frequently seen.
i.
Chamb. 1 )
Graph.
was
of grass.
guanaco.
Dixie,
ii.
The
plain
1
of
guanaco as
all
J.
it
Patagonia.
Immense numbers of guanacos covered the plain in Guanacoes resemble our deer, but are much larger.
part of the
directions.
lb.
2
)
Hawkesworth.
for every
Commonwealth.
Harp. Weekly.
at the forts.
Between four and five hundred moose are annually eaten Gr. North Land. 1 )
pig.
i.
Butler,
Here we had
told
fine sport
killing
a few pig.
Chamb. 1 )
John Masefield,
He
ii.
me
of
the
deer
In the forests.
Lost Endeavour,
Ch. VII
52.
This time there were several pigs, which were quietly driven through the second line. Bock, Borneo. 1 ) [Compare also: The recreations suited to a prince were ... to kill wild hogs. Mac, Fred., (6606)]. roe. Deer and roe are said to be there. Lady Bloomfield, Reminisc.
zebra. A lion makes a kill about every other day, that is to say he consumes nearly 200 zebra and antelope per annum. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5277, 12a.
!)
Sattler
E. S.
X.
2)
Murray.
3)
Ten Brug.
Taa
t.
VI.
252
CHAPTER XXV,
Thus
also quarry.
28.
H. A. Bryden,
French
Hunting
France
is
900).
Further illustration
a land of great forests, wherein roam wild red deer, roe, and boar, as well as foxes and wolves. Bryden (Ninet. Cent., CCCXCIX, 909). This number compares not altogether unfavourably with the 471 (sc. packs of
The
in Great Britain. lb., 907. provides not only many rhinoceros, but numerous tigers, wild elephants, marsh deer, sambur and wild boar. II. Lond. News, No. 3793, 11136. There are many tigers in the neighbourhood, as well as rhinoceroses, wild boars, wild elephants, samburs and marsh deer. lb., No. 3796, 93. These chapters treat of buck, buffalo, elephant and lion, and the various cats,
district
.
lb.,
Wild stags
?)
and hinds
have been hunted on Exmoor certainly since the No. 6017, lie.
duck. i. Are those duck or mergansers? W. Black, The New Prince F o r t u n a t u s Ch. VIII. Wild duck generally feed during the night. Westm. Gaz., No. 5454, 17c. * ii. Streaming files of wild ducks began to make their appearance high in the air. Wash. Irv. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, (360). Many thousands of square miles would appear as moors overgrown with furze, or fens abandoned to wild ducks. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 277. ** The farmers provided him with a horse. Their wives sent him baskets of chickens and ducks. lb., Ch. V, 198.
,
also.
Bird.
J)
,
fowl multiply in the earth. Bible, Gen., 1 22. And let them have dominion over the fowl of the air. lb., I, 26. And lightnings play'd about it (sc. Excalibur) in the storm, And all the little 78. fowl were flurried at it. Ten., Gar. and Lyn. Divers, kittiwakes and other strange fowl had been recently seen there. Graph. There were no wild fowl of any kind to be seen. Id. ** With its abundance of refuse grain, no country ought to produce turkeys and other fowl more abundantly and cheaply. Times. Hadn't I better kill a couple o' fowl and have th' aunts and uncles to dinner
let
. .
.
|
And
G. Eliot,
(sc. the
Mill,
I,
Ch.
II,
4.
introductory pages) were those which treat of the haunts Ch. Bronte , J a n e E y r e , Ch. 1 2.
,
jungle abandoned to waterfowl and alligators. Macaulay. The noise made by the bookmakers was like that of ten thousand seafowl on a rock. Hall Caine, Ch ri st. , 11,236. Women, however contemptible for their weakness, appeared to her as better than barn-door fowl, or vermin in their multitudes gnawing to get at the
cheese-trap.
G.Meredith,
in
Lord Ormont,
state
Ch.
II,
34.
and Ceylon. No. 5329, 5a. In later times pea-fowl were looked upon as a great delicacy of the table. lb. The wildfowl on the coast, which were so numerous this year as to recall
a
Pea-fowl occur
wild
only
in
Westm. Gaz.,
to the
their
older men memories of the good old days these fowl, too, showed foreknowledge of the changes by a marked restlessness. lb., No. 5219, 4c.
. .
i)
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
ii.
,
253
* Behold the fowls of the air. Bible, Matth., VI 26. This lonely domain is a very agreeable haunt for many sorts of wild fowls. White, i) the largest and most savoury of all our domestic fowls. Chamb. 1 ) The turkey We shall confine the remainder of this letter to the few domestic fowls of our yards. White. *) ** 1 laid in a stock of boiled flesh of rabbits and fowls. Swift, Gul-
roost.
Adam
Bede.
')
*** Guinea 1 fowls, heavy as they are, get up into apple-trees. White. ) the of trees for lb. climb to the tops highest highest security. Pea-fowls
i)
grouse. Immense heaths and downs are paved with cock. Emerson English Traits, Land, 84a.
, I
quails, grouse
and wood-
fancy
there
are
close
on
sixty
VIII.
brace of grouse.
W. Black
The New
Prince Fortunatus,
gull.
Ch.
Besides these, Mother Carey's chickens skimmed over the water like swallows, with other small varieties of gull. Froude, Oceana, Ch. V, 76.
plover.
flock
of seventy-five
man
with
a punt-gun.
a c m. Mag. spring wild at the sound. snipe, i. Snipe are not nearly so numerous in Ireland as they once were. lb. Snipe will now and then perch on trees, but never, so far as I have seen, on a tree with foliage. Westm. Gaz., No. 5107, 4c. Snipe were shot in Battersea fields by Mr. John Burns at a much later date. Punch, No. 3651 504c. ii. Others of a more domestic turn hunt hogs, and shoot snipes. Thack. Van. Fair, II, Ch. VIII, 84. What cared he to know how many snipes Lieutenant Smith had shot lb., 87.
, , !
teal.
towards
centre.
M a c m.
full
Mag.
snipes
of
and
teal.
Blackmore
Lorria
Doone,
whinchat.
we go
little
much
with that
sparrow.
Westm.
Id.,
out looking for whinchat, with our minds obsessed too we shall see it almost to a certainty in every hedgeGaz., No. 4967, 56.
bird,
woodcock.
It
The woods
makes
Id.,
of
Bosahan
and wood-
cock abounding.
is
all the difference in the bags of woodcock in different No. 5219, 4c. The result is that all the West Country, Wales, and Ireland are filled up with cock, and that the eastern gunner has very few. For they do not go back
habit that
parts of England.
again.
lb.
of birds illustrated in the following quotations, which, apparently, never throw off the mark of the plural: The recreations suited to a prince, were ... to kill wild hogs, and to shoot partridges by the thousand. Mac, Fred., (6606). Wagtails will roost in thick bushes, but if they perch on trees during the day, they almost always choose an out-jutting branch with very little screen of leaf about it ... So, too, with the swallows and martins; you may see them perching on the bare branches, but very rarely on the leaf-clad ones. Westm. Gaz., No. 5107, 4c.
i)
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
254
For many kinds, such as
is
CHAPTER XXV,
tits,
28.
resting or climbing, or
The
sea
3)
wild swans
is frozen.
come
to
finches, warblers and so on, the familiar position hopping on their feet. lb. our East Coast when the Cattegat and the neighbouring
Ac.
Id.,
No. 5219,
names
XII),
the following
of fishes. According to Sattler'S investigations (E. S., names of fishes are regularly kept in the singular:
bass, bream, brill, burbot, char, cheven, chub, cod, colefish, dace, dogfish, flatfish, grayling, green, grilse, hake, humber, jack, ling, lythe, mackerel, menhaden, mullet, murrel, parr , pike, plaice, pouting, roach, ruft, saithe, seer, skate, squid, sturgeon, sythe, tench, vendace,
whitebait, whiting, willis.
The following
mark
of the plural:
alii,
anchovy,
bloater, conger, cuddy, dab, dorce, dory, eel, fireflaw, flounder, goby,
grig, gurnard (=: gurnet), homeling, kipper, lamprey, latchet, lump , pilchard, poggy, pope, porgy, roker, ruff, sardine, smeer-dab, smelt, smolt, sole, sprat, stickleback, thornback, whitch. With the following usage is more or less unsettled: barbel, bleak,
carp, conger-eel, gold-fish, gudgeon, haddock, herring, halibut, minnow, perch, rock-coddling, salmon, shad, shark, trout, tunny, weaver. The above lists are not, of course, complete; nor can the result of Mr. Sattler'S painstaking and elaborate investigations, however valuable,
be accepted as an exhibition of
strictly
observed usage.
The following quotations, collected by ourselves, are intended to show the varied usage with the noun fish and the ordinary or regular practice as regards the names of some of the most common varieties
of fishes:
fish.
i.
anglers than for the market Suggestive Lessons, 1,97. Large fish have been caught inside of which have been found other fish, and others again inside these last. lb., 103. These noble fish are caught by thousands. 4b. , 97.
is the breeding ground for myriads of fish. lb., I, 98. These fish were once round fish, as they are now at birth, lb., 104. They had caught three or four coarse fish and a perch. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. II, 24. I have caught forty fish. Jerome, Three men in a boat, Ch. XVII, 219.
Tom
He had caught
**
ii.
ten fish.
lb., 220.
is
hurled overboard,
lb.,
100.
here but five loaves and two fishes. Bible, Matth. , XIV, 17. Brown. East had learned to swim like fishes. Huohfs, aquariums have greatly added to our knowledge of the habits and nature
Tom
Suggest. Les.
I,
102.
Fishes of every size prey upon others which are smaller. lb., I, 103. The mackerel tribe belongs to the division of oily fishes. lb., 116. If these fishes (sc. herrings) were as rare as they are plentiful, their delicate flesh would rank as a luxury for the rich. lb., I, 117.
)
names
in the
carp. I, Ch.
of fishes that are regularly or ordinarily kept singular: The moats were turned into preserves of carp and pike. Mac, Hist.,
285.
Ill,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
cod. i- The banks of New-Foundland abound with cod. Suggest. Les., Fresh cod is brought from the North-Sea fishing grounds. lb., I, 97. ii.
255
I,
97.
dace.
of jack.
Jerome,
had caught absolutely nothing, except a few dozen dace and a score Three men in a boat, Ch. XVII, 218.
haddock.
Haddock, cod,
the
117.
ling
in
down
hake.
Suggest. Les.,
I,
100.
When
lb.,
dogfishes.
The so-called flatfish, turbot, halibut. halibut swarm on the North-sea sandbanks.
jack.
1
brill,
plaice,
100.
soles,
flounders
and
lb., I,
had caught absolutely nothing, except a few dozen dace and a score of jack. Jerome, Three men in a boat, Ch. XVII, 218. mackerel. Mackerel are caught in the British Channel. Suggest. Les., I, 115.
perch. I caught fifteen dozen perch yesterday-evening. Jerome, in a boat, Ch. XVII, 217.
Three men
roach.
plentiful
The
*
enough.
salmon.
Avon in which chub, dace, roach and other coarse fish are Brown. Hughes, The bridge where salmon wait for autumn floods. Ch. Kingsley,
river
Tom
Westw. Ho!,
Ch.
I,
la.
left
Did you get many salmon after I Prince F o r t u n a t u s Ch. XV. Severn salmon, also, are esteemed.
,
Strathaivron?
W. Black,
I,
The New
Suggest. Les.,
lb.,
103.
to be gregarious.
109.
** In former days
salmon was
rarely seen in
many
parts of England.
lb., I, 108.
These trout are usually small, and no skill goes to their catching. II. Lond. News, No. 3618, 882c. Mr. Malloch is able to throw new light on not a few of the mysteries connected
Truth.
106.
turbot.
Turbot and
brill
die hard.
lb., I.
/')
names
bloater.
of fishes that
Herrings
I,
of the plural:
when only
or bloated
Sug,
gest. Les.,
chick.
119.
lb.
1
Flocks of Digby chicks take there the place of the Cornish pilchards.
19.
flounder.
halibut
brill,
plaice,
soles, flounders
and
lb., 100.
herring.
for
the
rivers and the surrounding sea spawn with fish; there are salmon and sprats and herrings for the poor. In the northern lochs the
,
English Traits, Land, herring are in innumerable shoals. Emerson 84a. (Note the varied practice.) They are taken, like herrings, in drift-nets. Suggest. Les., I, 116. Over three billions of herrings are taken out of the North-Sea every year. lb., I, 117.
pilchard. Pilchards are migratory fish. lb., 124. Flocks of Digby chicks take there the place of the Cornish pilchards. shark. The wreck was haunted by sharks. II. Lond. News.
sole.
lb., 119.
Soles, plaice and skate die more quickly. Suggest. Les., I, 100. Soles are such diet that they are in great request. lb., I, 105. were sprat. You could hardly tell from their looks whether they (sc. pilchards)
lb., 124.
125.
256
4)
CHAPTER XXV,
28.
names
clam.
bed.
ii.
i.
of
fishes:
Clove
to their gravelly
The south side of the island swarmed with turtle; they covered Sweet Story of two Englishmen. Note. The names of most fishes, and also of some other animals, may be used as pure material nouns, chiefly to denote an article of food, as in On Fridays they have fish (lamb, grouse, cod) for
turtle.
,
dinner.
Worm was
He
b)
Lond. News,
lb.
worm
Also cannon and youth, and occasionally horse present the same grammatical features. Cannon is sometimes preceded by the individualizer
piece
An Investigation into (36). Compare also Lannert the Lang, of Rob. Crus. Ace, II, A, 2.
, ,
As regards horse the use of the singular instead of the plural form, a survival of Old English practice, seems to be now confined to poetry. See also Murray, s. v. horse, I, 1, b. The singular, however, is regular in the title master of the horse. Youth in a collective sense is also construed as a singular.
cannon,
* AH that i. day from morning until after sunset the cannon never ceased to roar. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXII, 350. In that dark row of gaunt sheds the Armstrong cannon are forged. Escott, England, Ch. VI 89. In 1372 small cannon were used on board French ships. Rev. of Rev.,
,
CXCVIII, 621 a.
was now moving forward from Allahabad towards Cawnpore with cannon, and about a thousand* English soldiers. M c Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XIII 189. They had each so many thousand infantry and cavalry, and so many cannon.
six
,
** Havelock
Spenc E d u c. Ch. 276. More than two hundred vessels had been assembled, carrying pieces of cannon. Motley, Rise, IV, Ch. II, 5726. are made of iron, brass ,* bronze iii. Cannons and sometimes
, ,
ii.
generally ten
of
steel
rods
welded together.
Ch. VII, Sect.
Webst., Diet.
with
2.500
cannons.
Green,
Short
Hist.
horse. * Macb. I did hear the galloping of horse: who was't came by? Lennox, 't Is two or three, mylord, that bring you word Macduff is fled to England. Macb., IV, 1, 140. A thousand horse, and none to ride! Byron, Mazeppa, XVII. A thousand horse, the wild and free, Like waves that follow o'er the sea,
|
Came lightly thundering on. lb. The waves charging "like Phantom
**
the
Athen
Equerries are
certain
officers
the
,
royal
household
in the
department of
Annandale
Cone. Diet.
ty
Murray,
s.
v.
clam*,
1.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
youth,
i.
257
wits.
Two
Gentl.
I,
1, 2.
,
He admired Pen quite as much as any Pend., I, Ch. XVIII, 193. Soon the couples became leavened with
Hardy,
Thack.
Tess,
deal
great
rustic youth to a marked extent. Ch. I, 17. may be learnt by docile youth from work in the Lake
I,
been inspected by the parents of many university Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XX, 209. The expense of educating ten thousand youth is not ten or five times that 101. of one thousand. Bellamy, Look. Backw. The joke has afforded a moment's amusement to many generations of
,
youth.
ii.
228. Earle, Phil., moderate system of obligatory naval or military training for all our youth is eminently desirable in the interest of the national physique alone. Times, At the sixth round there were almost as many fellows shouting out "go it, Figs", as there were youths exclaiming "go it, Cuff". Thack., Van. Fair,
I,
Ch. V, 46.
The story will interest youths of an adventurous spirit. Lit. World, iii. What follies will not youth perpetrate with its own admirable gravity and simplicity? Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVIII, 187. But he was young and youth is curious. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. I, \b. The spiritual and intellectual dangers which beset ardent and intelligent youth on its entrance into the world. Nowell C. Smith, Wordsworth's 4. Lit. Criticism, Intro d.
,
29.
nouns often retain the singular form, although not. felt as collective nouns of the second kind (26). They bear some resemblance to those mentioned in 8, and in another respect to. From the former they differ those mentioned in the preceding in that they are not devoid of a plural form, from the latter in that they cannot be stripped of the mark of the plural unless preceded by a modifying word. As to this latter point compare Fish are caught in various ways with Hundreds for instance:
.
A few
are caught every day by anglers. As to some of the nouns here referred
inflection
is
to the frequent want of declension in Old English, in which certain neuters had the same form for the plural as the singular in the accusative as well as the nominative (8, Obs. II); with others it is due
survival
of
their
We may
a)
distinguish:
names
1)
of
measure;
such as denote a set of a definite number. These nouns retain the mark of the plural when not preceded by a numeral, definite or indefinite. In other cases usage is with the majority of them of
The nouns in question are brace, couple, pair, yoke; leash; dozen; score; gross; hundred; thousand and million. grace originally used of dogs, afterwards came to be applied also to other animals, especially kinds of game and fish; to
a varied nature.
things,
humour
H.
,
plural
exceedingly
English.
II.
258
Couple
is
CHAPTER XXV,
often
29.
used
>the
in
the
same connections as
brace.
In
these
it
appears to retain
the plural form
is
In other
combinations
a set of two, was anciently also used of a an indefinite number, at least in connection with certain nouns. In pair of stairs (steps) this old application survives. (20.) In its present meaning the plural form is quite as common as the singular, and seems to be the rule after an indefinite numeral.
pair,
now
denoting only
set of
yoke
is
used
especially
of oxen.
The
served regularly.
found, especially in sporting language, hares, deer etc. The plural form is, apparently non-existent. 2)ozen regularly retains the singular form when partitive of is dropped,
is
when
reference
is
to
definite number.
of
is
The
at
not
suppressed,
plural is more frequent than the singular when least when the preceding numeral denotes an
peculiarities as dozen.
indefinite number.
Score exhibits the same
Gross, which does not admit of the dropping of partitive of, mostly retains the singular form when a definite numeral precedes, the plural
being the rule after an
indefinite
by
partitive
numeral.
when
(a)
not followed
of mostly
form,
except:
(P)
for hundred (or thousand) pounds (men are preceded by an indefinite numeral in the combinations tens (or hundreds) of thousands.
;
etc.),
and
(2)
when followed by
of mostly take the mark of the pluraL due to a noun being mentally supplied after them, so that they are felt as adnominal words used absolutely. (Ch.
partitive
is
When
IV, 6,
it
is
absent, this
Note.)
c,
1,
Hundred, when denoting a subdivision of a county, as in the Chiltren Hundreds, of course, takes the plural like an ordinary noun. jyfii/ion in the majority of cases is dealt with as hundred and thousand, but takes the mark of the plural:
(1)
pounds (men,
etc.),
no matter whether
precedes; when it is followed by half or another fractional numeral. (/?) (2) occasionally when another numeral follows.
All
definite
or an
indefinite numeral
the
modified
above nouns regularly take the mark of the plural when not by any number-indicating word: dozens, scores, hundreds, etc.
fine
of
letters.
brace,
setters.
The gillie was leading or rather holding in two brace of remarkably W. Black The New Prince Fortunatus, Ch. VIII. Ten brace of pointers. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend. ** He shot E n g. G r a m.34, 55. five brace of birds. Mason
i.
, ,
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
I
259
fancy there are close on two brace of grouse. W. Black, The New Prince F o r t u n a t u s Ch. VIII. There were a couple of brace of cold woodcock. Con. Doyle, Sherl. Holm.,
,
II,
I
169.
rose and hooked six brace of capital fish. F. Francis, *) *** Three brace of Martineau. *) pistols. **** A lusty brace of twins may weed her of her folly. Ten.,
ii.
Princ.
V, 453.
It
couple,
**
i. They killed in one day 14 brace of hares, 16 couple of rabbits, 24 brace of pheasants, 13 brace of partridges and 16 couple of woodcocks. Trol. 2 )
went, twenty couple at once, ... all top couples at Car.s, 11,45. Full fourteen couple had retired in an exhausted state. Id. P i c k w. XXVIII, 255.
Away
they
all
last.
Dick.,
Christm.
Ch.
ii.
Twenty-one couples intend to be married at the same time and Only three couples had ventured to claim the bacon. All the
i.
place.
Graph.2)
Year round. 2 )
n,
47.
pair.
Two
pair of boots.
Mason
En
g.
G r a m.34,
55.
Dick., Christm. Car.s, Three pair of eyes were watching her from within the shop.
of partners.
I,
Edna Lyall,
We
Two,
18.
** Mr. Harthur lives three pair high. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXVIII, 302. It is number 92, up four pair of stairs. Id., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXX, 341.
ii.
* They sent me home three pairs of pantaloons. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. VI, 69. The old gentleman begged me to get him six pairs of lamb's-wool stockings.
lb.,
He was provided with two pairs of pistols. Lit. World. In the same tree three pairs of jackdaws, two or three pairs
bringing up their respective families. II. Mag. There was no knowing how many pairs of legs the hose for. G. Eliot Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 250.
,
were
new
proprietor
would require
**
cancelled
all
their pairs.
Daily Mail.
have bought five yoke of oxen. Bible, Luke, XIV, 19. yoke. I have seen a man ploughing with six yoke of oxen. All the Year round. 2) leash. I have acquired precisely nine hundred and ninety-nine leash of languages.
Miinchhausen's Trav. 3)
dozen,
I
i.
* Three
dozen knives.
Mason
En
g.
G r a mM,
,
55.
caught fifteen dozen perch yesterday evening. Jerome Three men in a boat, Ch. XVII, 218. "You must taste old Narramore's port wine", said her entertainer. "The fellow sent a couple of dozen". G. Gissing, Eve Madeley's Ransom, Ch. XX. A few dozen very ancient coin were turned up. C h a m b. 2 )
**
He had
Marryat.
Rid.
Haggard, Mees.
of Stilton
were pitched
at the
Cheese
55.
Fair.
ten.
score,
The days
and
10.
E n g. G r a
I
m.34,
saw
the
great metropolis
itself.
John Habberton,
Helen's Babies,
*)
48.
Murray,
Sattler, E.
S., XVI.
3)
Murray,
s. v.
leash, 2.
260
She
**
CHAPTER XXV.
29.
ii.
Stage-coaches carry you from one end of the kingdom to another in a few Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. Ill, 30. Tavern beloved of artists many score years! Id., Newc. I, Ch. XXVII, 300. What signifies breaking some scores of solemn promises. Sher., Rivals,
score hours.
,
IV,
2 (264).
thousands of good
English dinners
i)
have so
i.
many
last
Macaulav.
gross,
At
we were persuaded
Mason
,
to
us.
Golds.
Vicar.
Ten gross
were
free.
of buttons.
n g.
a m.^,
55.
"How much
ii.
are
"I
No. 3674, 414c. The fatherless little stranger was already welcomed by some grosses of prophetic pins. Dick., Cop., Ch. I, 3a.
He admitted with
Punch,
One
will outlast
many grosses
*
Advertisement.
Two hundred {thousand) pounds. hundred, thousand, i. A few hundred years ago. Miss Burnett, Little Lord Fauntleroy, 165. ** The garrison is not two hundred strong. Coleridge. A man who could get ten thousand a year by staying at home, was a fool to risk his life abroad. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXI, 218. Trumbull himself is pretty sure of five hundred. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 244 *** Poor Mrs. Cranch was half moved with the consolation of getting any hundreds at all without working for them. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 247.
****
are in want of
of
Dick.,
To
tens of thousands that are killed, add hundreds of thousands that survive with feeble constitutions. Spencer, Education, Ch. I, 236. The famine seems likely to claim its victims by tens of thousands. Rev. of
Rev., CCVI,
ii.
117o.
* In
the
sprung up. Mac, Clive, (409a"). At a very early stage of his progress, the learner will find himself able to compile a list of some hundreds of German words which have an obvious likeness to the English words with which they agree in meaning. H. Bradley, The Making of Eng., Ch. I, 2. ** How Are at this hour asleep! many thousand of my poorest subjects
|
Henry
scattered
IV,
B,
III,
1, 4.
I'm not angry with the British public, but I wish among these rocks. Rudy. Kipling The
,
16.
Times.
i. According to these reports the number of his English subjects must have been about five million two hundred thousand. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 279. ** 42.706,835: forty-two millions, seven hundred and six thousand, eight hundred
and
thirty-five.
Young
Arithmetic.
.
T We
*** Over two million copies of the Author's work have been sold. Lit. World. **** The is five millions sterling. Thack., Sam. capital of the company i t m. Ch. VI 69.
. . , ,
Froude,
i)
repented and voted over twenty millions to clear ourselves of the reproach. Oceana, Ch. Ill, 43.
S.,
Sattler, E.
XVI.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Baron Hirsch
estate.
II.
261
is
said
to
have
left
Lond. News.
number of registered electors is over ten millions. Id. The conclusion at which he arrived was that the population of England was Ch. Ill 278. Hist., nearly five millions and a half. Mac. Then it was agreed that the indemnity already mentioned should be paid by some four millions and a half sterling, in addition the Chinese Government
The
total
*****
I ,
to
opium.
M c Carthy,
,"
in opinions has cost many millions of lives. Swift, G u I. Trav. Ch. V, (1976). There were only two millions of human beings. Mac, Hist. The wheat he estimated at less than two millions of quarters. lb. A good many millions of money now spent would be in the pockets of the taxpayers. Froude, Oceana, Ch. II, 41.
Difference
IV,
2)
These nouns sometimes stand denominators of fractional numbers. without the mark of the plural, when placed immediately before the noun modified, which is their ordinary position in the language of arithmetic
and
statistics.
mark
retained.
a)
Compare Ch. XLII, 14, and quarter never takes the mark of the
by a noun.
see also
plural
New York
centuries.
has
now
Graph.
the
He received
arrears
177.
We
This
and three-quarter hours. Times. catastrophe happened at 2.20 a. m., at or about two-and-threefirst
Id.,
With ordinal numerals used as denominators of fractions, usage is divided, but the prevalent practice seems to be to place them in the plural no matter whether or no they are followed by partitive of. The longest sword is twenty-seven and five eighth inches. Chamb. i)
,
i.
my
the
three-fourth
parts
give
and bequeath
Stevenson
(Daily News). 2)
ii.
* It was a dodgy sum, and the right answer was one and seven-eighths donkeys, which, of course, looks as if it must be wrong. Barry Pain, A Change of Role, Ch. I. He found that he wanted half thirty-one and three-eighths inches from the corner. Jerome, Three men in a boat, Ch. Ill, 27. They are better in design and only half to two-thirds the cost. Times. ** I was told in the strictest confidence that the house one year with another divided a good seven thousand pounds, of which Brough had half, Hoff had two-sixths, and the other sixth went to old Tudlow. Thack., Sam. Titm. Ch. II, 12. Three-fourths of the Upper House walked in solemn order from their
,
usual place of assembling to the tribunal. Mac, War. Hast, (6486). Nine-tenths of my customers have been English gentlefolk. Times. About two-thirds of the population are Protestants. Cassell's Cone. Cycl., s. v. Prussia.
i)
Sattler, E. S.,
II.
2)
Murray.
262
CHAPTER XXV,
29.
The white people say they pay Gaz., No. 4967, 13b).
W. Archer (West m.
Note:
XIX,
3)
Possession
is
Mrs. Craik,
John
Hal., Ch.
(= nine points of the law.) compounds and word-groups with worth. With such as contain the word penny or shilling usage is divided; those which contain the word pound seem to be regularly kept in the singular. Usage is also varied
190.
which see Ch. IV, 10, Obs. II. can prepare for, and put up with a regularly bad day, but these hdporih of all sorts of days do not suit me. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, VII, 72. Take a cup of chocolate with two pennyworth of butter and cake. Punch. He bought three shillings' worth of liquor. We fell to with our swords, and had her (sc. the ship) in fifty minutes, and fifty thousand pounds' worth in her. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Hoi, Ch.
XXVIII, 214.
They got a couple of thousand pounds' worth out of me. Marie Cor., Sor. of Sat., I, Ch. XVI, 215. Three thousand pounds worth of Louis d'or and Napoleons. II. Lond. News.
ii.
When
they could eat no more, Mr. Pecksniff and Mr. Jonas subscribed for two sixpennyworths of hot brandy-and-water, which the latter gentleman considered a more politic order than one shillingsworth. Dick., Chuz. Ch. VIII, 636.
A few pennyworths of lollipops. (?), Miss Providence, One of the most interesting five-shillings' -worths he can buy.
4)
Ch. XVIII.
Lit.
World.
compounds
i.
of weight.
ten hundredweight.
of potatoes will
!)
Adam
Smith.
Reduce 5 tons 13
cwt.
76.
qrs.
lb.
Pendlebury,
Arithmetic,
Reduce 6
ii.
oz. 13 dwt.
and 8
lb.
If
head weighed four pound, and Jack's three pound three ounces and three quarters, how many pennyweights heavier would my head be than Bede, Ch. XXI, 204. Jack's? G. Eliot, In the Mediterranean shoals of tunny, a giant mackerel, weighing several hundredweights, are captured for their wholesome food and oil. Suggest.
my
fool's
Adam
Les.,
5) the
I,
116.
14 nouns horse-power and stone as names of measure. A stone Horses-power as the plural of horsepower seems to be in pounds.
occasional use.
horsepower,
the
i.
is
estimated
that
Germany are capable of developing one million horsepower. Rev. of Rev., CC1II, 4916. The German liner 'Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse' had a tonnage of 14349 and 28000 horse-power. Id., CCXIV, 342a.
blast furnaces of
Orient
Company's
Westm. Gaz.,
The
to
ii.
9,000 horse-power.
very up-to-date electric installations on the Jhelum River are expected produce some day a quarter of a million horsepower. lb., No. 5173, 106. These engines are guaranteed to exert 6600 horses power. Inscription in South Kensington Museum.
Sattler, E.
S., XVI.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
stone,
of
i.
263
George and Harris and Montmorency are not poetic ideals, but things and blood especially George, who weighs about twelve stone. Jerome, Three men in a boat, Pref.
flesh
ii.
full-grown
man
in
All
splendid
royal
stag
Graph,
i)
Note.
Where
metallic
the
Thus
also other
compounds of power, such as candle power, form when multiples are meant.
200 volts
on any supply is between 100 and 120 volts, the lamps must be at least 16 candle power: with a pressure of and over these lamps must be at least 40 candle power. Advert.
electrical pressure
in the
following quotation:
Miss Smithers?" said the lady abbess, as the aforesaid Miss Smithers proceeded to go into hysterics of four young-lady power. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XVI, 147.
the matter with
6)
the noun pound when followed by a bare numeral denoting shillings, and the noun foot when followed by a mere numeral denoting inches. pound, i. Bolder's father was ten pound ten short. Dick., Nich. Nickleby,
Ch. VIII, 476. "I should say three Twist, Ch. Ill, 9a.
ii.
pound
ten
was
Id.,
01.
Vic,
have sold him for three pounds, five shillings and two pence. Goldsmith, Ch. XII, (304). Having in his pocket four pounds two shillings [etc.]. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. XXXIII, 354, ** "The money we brought with us," said Martin, "is reduced to a few Ch. XXI, 180a. shillings less than eight pounds. Dick., Chuz. Incomes of 40.000 pounds at the time of the accession of George III were at
I
,
.
least as rare as
incomes
of
Mac, Clive,
(5256).
Ill
,
foot.
i.
He
ii.
four.
Edna Lyall,
We Two,
)
h e
do
wer
Ch.
49.
his vantage
ground
of six foot
192.
Who stood about five feet in their shoes. Ht. Martineau, Loom and Lugger, I, vii, 115. 2 Note In other cases pound and foot, like the names of other measures
1.
not
or
colloquial
777.
mentioned above, reject the mark of the plural only in vulgar 55; style and in dialects. Mason, Eng. Gram. 34 ,
VI;
Franz,
E. S., XII;
Storm,
Ask Mrs. Rouncewell how long she has been here, and she'll answer: "fifty three months and a fortnight, by the blessing of Heaven, if I live till
Tuesday. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. VII, 52. They'd have taken care on her, the Union eight and twenty mile away from where we live. Id., ChimesS, II, 55. She grudged me a hundred pound to get me out of quod. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XIX, 208. The gentleman without the elephant is worth five pound. lb., I, Ch. XIV, 150. Sattler, E.
S., XVI.
i)
-')
Murray.
264
CHAPTER XXV,
am
29.
We
a christened man, seventy foot long, ten foot Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. I, 2a.
What
II.
my
birds cost
me
Graph.
one and a half, one and a quarter, one and three quarters, and, perhaps, other mixed numbers whose first element is one, the name of the measure seems to be occasionally kept in the singular.
After
About
i3 / 4
mile due north of the City of Salisbury stands the imposing ancient
,
monument known as Old Sarum. *) One and a half hour. Mod. Lang. Quart., 1904, Oct. 127. i) The practice of keeping names of measures in the singular was III. formerly more common than it is now. One sound cudgel of four foot. Henry VIII, V, 4, 19.-) How many fathom deep am in love. As you like it, IV, 210. -)
I 1 ,
This idol they placed in the highest part of the house, on an altar erected about three foot. Swift, Tale of a Tub., Sect. II. There was four foot water in the hold. Defoe, Rob. Crusoe, 10.
Instructive, from an historical point of view, is Pope's into years in the following lines from Shakespeare:
|
changing year
Twelve year since, Miranda, twelve year since Thy father was the Duke of Milan and A prince of power. Temp., 1,2, 51.
|
According to A. Schmidt
has fathom 7 times, fathoms 3 times; mile 6 times, miles 18 times; pound 29 times, pounds 13 times. For details about the practice as regards the names of measures about the beginning of the 18th century
especially Lannert, An of Rob. Crus. Ace id.,
see
A.
the
Tennyson
archaically
cliffs
keeps
name
|
of
the
measure
in the sin-
fathom
of grapes.
and the capes, Purple or amber, dangled a hundred of Maeldune, 56. (Compare with this: with a myriad blossom the long convolvulus hung. lb., 40.
The Voyage
Id.,
Bal.
and
Bal., 582.)
following nouns:
when used
counsel in the sense of legal adviser; head as an individualizer before certain collective nouns of
game
sense of sailing-vessel or ship of any kind; stand when used as an individualizer before colours, arms, muskets, etc. (36).
a numeral the plural form of these nouns is rarely met with. not give a single instance under counsel and head. Sattler (E. S., XVI) gives a few instances of heads. The plural sails may be instanced from Shakespeare. The plural form of these nouns may be more usual when no numeral precedes, but the evidence is
After
Murray does
very scanty.
counsel,
i.
Who
happen
to
be
in
the
this
murky
afternoon besides the Lord Chancellor, the counsel in the cause, two or three counsel who are never in any cause? Dick., Bleak House, Ch. I, 2.
2)
Pres.
-Day Eng.
321.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
Jenny's position
265
was exceedingly like that of a witness being examined and cross-examined by two counsel who are not at all scrupulous about asking leading questions. Mrs. Guskell, Cranford, Ch. X, 197. The counsel were by no means fairly matched. Mac, Hist., Ill, Ch.
VIII. 189.
ii.
in this
way.
Dick.,
Pickw.
row
Those gentlemen
gentlemen
in stuff
in silk
gowns
gowns on
are Queen's counsel. The the back benches are junior counsel. Escott,
in the front
England, Ch. XXIV, 422. We thus saw about 6300 head of cattle. Contemp. Review. ) head. We ought to bag a good many head of game to make up for turning out
i.
in this
wet mist.
Edna Lyall,
Donovan,
I,
276.
2 Thirty thousand head of swine. Addison. ) He undertook to walk six miles in one hour, with
300 head
of vermin,
of asparagus.
lb. i)
Chamb.
J)
They
killed
We
killed fifty
We
to
estimated by one authority generally pays Reynard's poultry bill at least 50.000 annually for nearly half a million head of
s
t
m.
1 )
G a z.
to
No. 5448
14a.
hope
this
season
my
1
father.
Lytton
Night
Graph.
and Morning.
Wealth
is
The Count
sail.
i.
reckoned by heads of cattle. Chamb. ) killed 9302 heads of game during his sporting career.
Their force consisted of twenty sail of the line. Southey, Life of Nelson, Ch. IX, 242. Admiral Louis, with six sail, had been detached for stores and water to Gibraltar. lb., Ch. IX, 247. The little fleet of five sail assembled in Cawsand Bay. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XI, 97. The British fleet was but fifteen sail of the line strong. II. Lond. News,
I
ii.
better.
fell
Ant.
the
and Cleop.
hands
III,
7,
50.
stand.
colours
into
of the Prussians.
Mac,
Fred.,
100000
He
offered
muskets.
arms occupy the two store-rooms. him at a bargain ten thousand stand Howells. j )
II.
Lond. News.
probably obsolescent
of
30.
Separate
their
in the
mention
must be made
possibilities
of certain
nouns which as
to
grammatical preceding
differ
and from
their
a)
Acquaintance is often found, especially in older writers, as a collective noun, either of the first or the second kind [i. e. denoting a conception either within or without limits (Ch. XXVI, 7)]. When used as a single-unit noun preceded by a numeral, it seems occasionally to stand without the mark of the plural. See the quotation under ii. Compare also Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Accid., II, A, 2.
Sattlee,
E. S., XVI.
*)
Webst.
266
i.
CHAPTER XXV
*
I
30.
wish
The wish
Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. II, 1. in Bath was still uppermost with
Mrs. Allen. lb., Ch. Ill, 13. ** In reality bosom friends and intimate acquaintance have a kind of natural propensity to particular females at the house of a friend. Fielding,
Tom
Jones,
Ch. VI, 376. Most of mjt- acquaintance no sooner perceived my change of temper than they abandoned me. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 157. Girls who have been spoilt for home by great acquaintance. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. XXX, 233. I am weary of stringing up all my married acquaintance by Roman denominations. Ch. Lamb, Es. of Elia, A Bachelor's Complaint, (264). The two caps reflected on the window-blind were the respective head-dresses of a couple of Mrs. BardelPs most particular acquaintance. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXVI 235. All his acquaintance were aware that he was carrying on a desperate flirtation with Mrs. Crawley. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIX, 309. These three brethren told casual acquaintance that they were spending their Whitsun holidays in a walking tour through the Vale of Blackmoor. Hardy, Tess, I, Ch. II, 16.
III,
,
H.
iii.
They had many acquaintance in common. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch. XXV, 144. He had never been introduced to any of Rawdon Crawley's great acquaintances. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVIII, 322. George was so occupied with his new acquaintances that he and William Dobbin were by no means so much together as formerly. lb., I, Ch. XXIX, 309. Mr. Hobbs had not many very close acquaintances who were earls. Miss Burnett, Little Lord, 269.
Quarters were found for the traveller by some Irish acquaintances. Steph.
at
Gwenn,
b) Jtfane is regularly used as an ordinary single-unit noun in English. It is however, placed jn the plural when the growth of hair of several animals is referred to.
i.
John Gilpin,
at
his
horse's
side
Seized
fast
the flowing
mane.
Cowper,
John Gilpin,
XXIII.
ii.
A quantity of dark, grizzled hair, wild as a mane, hid its head and face. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXVI, 358. When enraged he (sc. the lion.) likewise erects his mane. Darwin, Descent, II, Ch. XVIII, 526. It (sc. the river Nile) ran for a hundred and fifty days' journey through
deserts
lions'
flying
serpents
heat.
and
satyrs
lived,
and
by the
Ill,
c)
Offspring is used as a single-unit noun, or as a collective noun of the nature of cattle. It is, apparently, never preceded by a word denoting number, but is occasionally met with in the plural form.
i.
Every offspring
The
ii.
ext.nt
to
is like its parent. Ch. II, Huxl., Darw. which an offspring differs from its parent
,
32.
is
slight
enough,
lb., 34.
Their mongrel offspring are very generally, but not universally, fertile. Darwin (in Huxl., Darw., Ch. II, 49). As physical maturity is marked by the ability to produce offspring; so mental maturity is marked by the ability to train those offspring. Spenc, Educ. Ch. Ill, 70a.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
It
267
is
conceivable
that
two hermaphrodites, attracted by each other's and leave offspring. Darwin, Descent
poorer, the indigent clergy.
!
Man,
iii.
the
offsprings of the
How much do
d)
preceded by an adjective, or a word doing duty as such, frequently found in a collective sense. The narrow majority is dependent entirely on the Irish vote. Times. The majority in its favour against the combined Tory and Irish vote was about 200. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 560a. Mr. Hughes, the Republican candidate, wins by a majority of 55000, out of a recorded vote of 1.617.786. lb., CCIV, 656a.
31.
When a noun in the common-case form is placed adnominally before another noun, either as an independent word, or as part of a compound, and also when it is part of an adnominal word-group, it is mostly placed in the singular. This is even
the
usual
form
when
it
represents
plural
idea as in
rose
apple-tree, cyclemanufacturer, three-volume novel, five-act comedy, fivefoot rope, three-quarter-inch spikes. The singular form
cultivation,
is
foot-warmer,
tooth-brush,
also
retained
when
the
2.
The
plural
common-case form
is
however used:
a)
when
in
the singular would convey a distinctly different meaning, as in teeth-rim (Sweet, Prim, of Phon. 21).
,
b)
the
names
of
acts,
bills,
committees
of
Parliament,
such as
Act
Rev.,
(Times), the Inebriates Act (id.), the Aliens CXCVI, 3396), the Highways Committee (id.,
is
c)
when
1)
standing by
bellows,
clothes,
e. g.
e. g.:
:
6e//ows-maker, 6e//ov's-treader,
clothes-brush
the
,
etc.
clothes-horse,
etc.
[Comp.
a).]
,
commons,
gallows,
bird,
e. g.:
Commons House
a).]
of Parliament.
Rev. of Rev
CXCVIII, 5666).
e. g.:
[Comp.
gallows
air
(Wash.
Irv.,
Sketch-Bk,
gallows-foot (Scott,
etc.
e. g.
:
Fair Maid,
goods
traffic,
rope,
goods,
goods
station,
goods-train
etc.
[Comp.
a).]
hustings,
l
e. g.:
etc.
Murray,
s.
v.
offspring, 46.
268
CHAPTER XXV,
31.
Especial mention may here be made of such pluralia tantum as are geographical names (19, 1). When used adnominally these, apparently,
retain the
1
mark
the
swear
to
wil!
Rev.
of Rev.,
The Netherlands railway. Times. The United States Government. Westm. Gaz., No. 6101, lc. The latest company of castaways rescued from the Antipodes Islands were
crew of
the four-masted
the
Id.,
In the
may be apprehended
adjective, of a similar nature as inland: The pistol of the insignificant Gerard destroyed the possibility of a united Netherland state. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 898a. The ancient rugged tree of Netherland liberty. lb. 8986.
,
goods,
e.
g.
dry-goods store
the
sale, etc.
new headquarters seat (Graph.). stairs, e. g.: the down-stairs room (Mrs. Ward, Da v. Grieve, upstairs window (G. Eliot, Mill, VII, Ch. V, 483).
quarters,
e. g.:
I,
227),
the
etc.
,
billiard,
e. g.:
billiard-marker, billiard-tab\e
etc.
etc.
domino,
e. g.:
domino-box.
draught-board, draught-book,
: ,
draught, e. gymnastic,
skittle,
spirit,
e. e. g.:
e.
g.:
e.
etc. etc.
g.
gymnastic-master gym/iasfz'c-entertainment,
wage
g.
wage-receiver (Mrs.
Ward
Pickw., Rob. E s m.
1
etc.
1 ,
264).
Thus
also in such
compounds
Others devoted themselves to the sodden and lee-dyed pieces of the cask. Dick., Tale of Cities, I, Ch. V, 43.
Two
II.
With some
i.
pluralia
tantum usage
is
variable.
Thus with:
custom-house
(id.),
custom,
ii.
(id.),
customs-duties
customs-laws
(id.),
the
a
customs-officers
(Graph.),
door. i. the out and in-door servants (G. Moore, Esth. out-door work (Wash. Irv. Rip van Winkle).
,
Waters,
Ch. V, 33),
ii.
out-of-doors reading (Ch. Lamb., Last Essays of Elia, [301]), outof-doors life (Miss Yonoe, Heir of Rede, Ch. V, 65), out-of-doors tea-drinking (Edna Lyall, Donovan, I, 129), out-of-doors statue (Westm. Gaz., No. 5048, 4a).
i. This Lord of Misrule, or reve/-master Christmas Prince. Penny Cycl., XIV, 151/1.
,
revel,
ii.
At the disposal of the actors were all the properties, scenery and dresses of the Revels Office. II. Lond. News, No. 3816, Sup. XV.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
scissor, i. scissor-bi\\ (Webster), sc/ssor-tail (id.). H. a scissors-grinder (Con. Doyle, Sherlock Holmes,
269
trouser.
ii.
i.
Mid.,
has only the Middle-age (Middleage) as the adnominal form, but the Middle-Ages is also met with:
I attribute the quarrelsome nature of the Middle-Ages young men entirely to the absence of the soothing weed. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, VI, 79.
Murray
III.
The
official
book-post and sample- post. Murray has only parcelpost, and this may be the present official term. The plural form, however, seems to be common enough:
side of
The
book-post, the sample-post and the parcels-post, although under the same
to
management, seem
panies.
Id.
cash-on-delivery system
be all competing together. Graph. (Compare: The has already been adopted by the parcel-delivery comparticularly
The Samples-Depot
coming
to Vienna.
(s.
is
useful
II.
Lond. News,
19)
the
Murray
v.
hand,
of
has
hour-hand, minute-hand,
but
felt
seconds- hand.
By the seconds-hands many a patient's pulse
IV.
in the
in his time.
big old chronometer the defunct doctor had Ch. XVIII, 184. Thack., P e n d. I,
,
The plural seems to 6e the regular form when the noun modified adnominal word group is an ordinal numeral as in:
e s t m. G a z. Such a vote requires a two-thirds majority. V. Observe also the practice in: We were strictly instructed by Authority to shoot only the half or three-quarter grown ones (sc. rabbits. Hor. Hutchinson (Westm. Gaz. No. 6011, 2c).
,
32. Obs.
I.
Owing
often
between modifier and head-word being analogous to one of those commonly expressed by a classifying genitive, and owing to the sameness in sound of the common case plural and the genitive plural, we sometimes find plural modifiers with the apostrophe of the genitive. (Ch. XXIV, 56, Obs. I.) It may here be observed that the application of such typoto
the
relation
graphical symbols as commas, hyphens, apostrophes, etc. is a matter which in England is largely left to the discretion of press-readers and compositors. Digging his hands 'deep in his trousers pockets. Thack., Newc.
7
hands
in
his
trousers'
pockets.
s
t
Lytton,
II
,
Night
Cop.,
Anstey,
Dick.
m. Car.,
26.
Id.,
her
out of a
two pair of
stairs'
window.
26.
The
parce/s'-post
electric light.
Fallen Idol. The genitive plural even seems to be the ordinary form of the names of measures of time when forming part of an adnominal word-group together with a numeral. For illustration see also Ch. XXIV, 42, b, 2; 56, Obs. I and II.
270
i.
CHAPTER XXV,
*
32.
with
,
sat
...
in
her bower,
Ch. I, 9a. years' boy, at her knee. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. It will be a ten days' break for him at any rate. Mrs. Ward,
Marc,
II,
II,
273.
Then good morning, my four months' cousin. Hardy, Tess, ** The was whether the Marshal was to be question
. . .
of
Periodical.
in the
II.
Bill.
Lond. News,
special four-year Course of Geography is required. 1906, Advert., 32. An eight or ten hour day. Rev. of Rev., CCIV, 332a.
Schoolmaster's
not receive the
interest.
Year-book,
An immediate advance
of 2
s.
week
to all grades
who do
eight-hour day. lb. Lord Haldane's three-day visit to Berlin II. Lond. News, No. 3800, 225.
The
been arranged.
fifteen-day circular ticket ... down by boat and back by Id., No. 3813, 788c.
has again
name
,
H.
Norman
however, is to retain the name of the measure of singular in adnominal word-groups of this description:
practice,
,
you wish
to thoroughly
after breakfast.
Jerome
Idle
,
enjoy your dinner, take a thirty-mile country walk Thoughts, XI, 183,
of
We
We
II.
our
five-mile journey.
settled
Sweet
to
down
our
noun year enters into an adnominal word-group together with a numeral and the adjective old, it is, apparently, almost regularly
If
the
kept in the
i.
common
case singular,
sits
the
nine-year-old Patty.
to
G. Eliot
Scenes,
,.
lb.,
fox-terrier.
Jerome, Idle
Sixty-year-old brandy. James Payn , Glow. His eighteen-year-old daughter was attacked Rev., CCXVI, 558a.
After
VIII, 123.
,
II
52.
Rev.
of
Thomas
boy,
ii.
who
strayed
into
the
fells
safely at
Troutbeck on Saturday.
Daily Mail,
Thack.
,
Sam. T
m.
24.
iii.
She picked up the revolver, and, aiming at her head, missed and that her two-years-old girl Winifred. Yorkshire Post, 26/8 1912.
,
adnominal word-groups made up of numeral + name of measure of time 4- adjective the name of the measure seems to stand regularly in the plural, whether common case or genitive.
In
other
')
109.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
i.
271
last
mention of
,
his seven-years'
dead partner
yet
that
that afternoon.
DiCK.,
Christm. Car. 5
I,
19.
(Compare: And
ii.
Marley, seven years dead, came like the ancient Prophet's rod, and swallowed up the whole. lb., I, 21.) ** That day Sir Lancelot at the palace craved Audience of Guinevere, to give at last ... The nine-years-fought-for diamonds. Ten., Lane, and El., 1160. * Mother and daughter were seen in the evenings one with a baby at her breast, the other with 3n eighteen-months'-old child in her arms. G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. Ill, 22. ** At an inquest on the body of Joseph Enoch Robinson, the four-months-old child of an Army Reservist [etc.]. Times.
face
of
|
|
A four-months-long
winter.
Merriman.
*)
measures of length, except foot, are probably as a rule kept in the singular when entering into such adnominal word-groups, i. His Imperial Majesty rode along the two-mile long lines. II. Lond. News,
of
Names
No. 3794.
ii.
After the indefinite article such a word-group as five-year-old boy is mostly replaced by boy of five or boy of five years old, in which
latter
collocation old
such a sentence as he
i.
Eng. Synt., A lad of twelve. Mrs. Alex, A Life Int., I, Ch. II, 33. ii. A heifer of three years old, and a she-goat of three years
have crept in through, the influence of years old. Compare also Onions, Ad vane. 94, and Ch. XLII, 4.
to
is five
old.
seems
Bible,
old.
Thack.,
Van. Fair,
II,
Ch.
Ill,
20.
in:
She busied herself with sprinkling the linen dried during the daytime, in company with her nine-year-old brother Abraham, and her sister Eliza-Louisa of twelve and a half. Hardy, Tess, I, Ch. Ill, 25. Observe also: We do not admire such phrases as 'the sixteen-yeared bride'.
HI.
4436, 511a.
form of measures other than of either time or a numeral to form an adnominal wordgroup, does not seem to be so infrequent as we often find it stated: You build a 45.000 tons hotel of thin steel plates. Eng. Rev., 1912, May, 308. You are at night on the bridge in charge of a 150.000 tons ship. lb.
the
plural
length,
Its
II.
that
can
be man-handled.
IV.
Instead of twopenny (etc.)-halfpenny some people prefer to say twopence (etc.)-haljpenny. , Two dozen stamps and a dozen twopence-halfpenny ones. Sweet Prim, of S p o k. Eng.
,
Note also the disparaging sense often conveyed by twopenny or twopenny-halfpenny. The reason of all this misery, rage and dissension, lies in a poor little twopenny dinner-party in Lilliput Street. Thack., A Little Dinner at Tim.,
Ch.
i)
Ill,
(312).
109.
272
Can you
Bayard?
If
Newc,
many compliments,
that
the
twopence-halfpenny was transmuted into gold Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIX, 195.
in
33.
Contrary
plural of the
is
when
Dutch practice nouns are frequently placed in the the things for which they stand are referred to each The plural individuals separately of a group of persons.
to
even the rule with many names of actions and states. (24.) See also Ch. XXXIII, 13, a. * Some were seen to Wash. Irving, put their tongues in their cheeks.
i.
Sketch-Book,
The boys took
E.
Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 8a. Mr. and Mrs. Fizziwig took their stations, one on either side the door. Id., Christm. Car.", II, 47. She asked him to change seats with her. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 246. They grasped each other's hands. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. II, 258. With your advantages you might turn the heads of half the girls in town.
their places.
,
I,
140.
Englishmen, as a rule, have broad backs and somewhat tough hides. Graph. ** Both brothers held their breaths. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch XIX, 146a. We all three held our breaths. Miss Brad. My First Happy Christm.
(Stof.,
Hand!.,
I,
71).
The
occupants with their joys and sorrows, their hopes and fears, were each living out an absorbing life story. Edna Lyall, Hardy Norse m., Ch. XVIII, 165. The saddest moment in the lives of these two persons was over and done with. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., 111,218. The only odd part is that we have waited thirty-five years before making up our minds. Graph. It is to our advantage to grow accustomed to taking deep breaths. Rippmann
three
,
Sounds
ii.
of
Spoken English,
1
4.
The poor soldiers of the Temple will not alone place their foot upon the necks of the kings. Scott, I van hoe. ) You will see how they pine for their desk or their study. Stevenson V i r,
ginibus Puerisque,
**
It
118.2)
influenced their
sent this
little
They
lb.,
Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. VI, 57. life. spar out of the wreck with their love to good Mrs. Sedley.
We
Miss Brad.
(Stof.,
Hand
This
My
to
First
Happy Christm.
common
I.,
I,
73).
Note.
in
use
of
the
plural
seems
Early Modern English than it is now. Thus the Clarendon Press Editors commenting on whither you will, so I were from your sights
II,
(Richard
used
by Shakespeare and writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries when designating an attribute common to many, in cases where it would now be considered a solecism". As further instances they cite
Foels.-Koch,
Wiss. Gram.
-')
J.
Morris,
E. S., XIV.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
273
many passages in Shakespeare, as Lear IV, 6,35; Rich. Ill, iv, 1,25; Timon of Athens, I, 1, 255; Pericles, I, 1, 74; Two Gentle-
men,
fact
I,
3,
48, 49;
in the in
Henry
above
VIII, in, 1,
68,
etc.
It
is
a significant
that
Pope
Also
into sight.
line
from
Richard
at variance with Present-English usage: Do you consent we shall acquaiht him with it, As needful in our loves, fitting our duty. H a m 1. I, 1, 173. That you vouchsafe your rest here in our court Some little time; so by your
,
|
companies
34. In
To draw him on
different
to pleasures.
a thing by an adjective the such as the definite article, a possessive pronoun, etc., mostly entails the use of the plural form. Thus we ordinarily say the Dutch and English languages but the Dutch and the English language.
indicating
varieties
of
non-repetition
of
other modifiers,
i.
guese languages.
day the basis of the French, Spanish and PortuCh. 4. Hist., The simple words in which the writer of Genesis records the proceedings of the fifth and sixth days of the Creation. Huxley, Col. Es. VIII, i, 35.
It
Mac
the course of the strife of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries England had claimed the whole and occupied much of French territory. Sidney Lee,
In
in
England,
I,
adopted, it is of supreme importance that be accepted whole-heartedly by the Liberal and Labour Party. Gaz., No. 5225, lc.
is
ii.
Whichever ^course)
Wes
should t m.
The
parities of circumstance
n g.
Rev.,
35.
The
field
singular
is
sometimes used
instead
some
first
Snowfall,
I.
ghost and spirit. It was now the witching hour consecrated to ghost and Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. XII, 71. spirit. town and village. Town and village were harried and burnt. Green. 1 )
36.
It does not seem amiss that few words should be devoted
put
into
nouns
requisition before certain pluralia tantum, collective of the second kind (26; Ch. XXVI, 7), and some other words
when separate specimens or instances are meant. These nouns are mostly indispensable after the indefinite article or a numeral but may also be met with after other modifiers. It is hardly necessary
,
to
pare also
s.
observe that they have certain meanings of their own. ComCobham Brewer, Diet, of Phrase and Fable, v. number. The following are among the most interesting:
Koch, Wis.
,
Foels.
Gram.,
274.
II.
H.
Poutsma
A Grammar of
18
274
CHAPTER XXV,
36.
bit
of news, advice,
etc.
The
best bit of news that has reached Biarritz has been taking a thorough rest.
is
that C. B.,
at
5a.
in
a body of troops,
is
etc.
Maxen.
Mac, Fred.
mostly preceded by a gerund, as in a drinking bout, a shooting bout, or followed by a gerund, as in: In the meantime we can take an occasional bout at shooting and fishing. Wash.
bout, which
Irv.,
Do If
Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
I,
138).
Dick had come to that part of the poem, wherein the bard describes as blandly as though he were recording a dance at the opera, or a harmless bout of bucolic cudgelling at the village fair [etc.]. Thack., Henry Esm., II, Ch. XI, 245.
clump, as
s. v.
in
briers, etc.
See
Murray,
brake.
in
display, as
Jit as in a fit of fever, coughing, rheumatism, illness, etc. The agonies of grief and remorse with which. she was seized, occasioned her a severe fit of illness. Miss Burney, Evelina, II, 6. At last she was interrupted by a violent fit of coughing. Thack. Sam. T t m. , Ch. II, 24. I hope you won't have a fit of the blues when you are left all alone at this festive season. Mrs. Alex., For his sake, II, Ch. II, 39.
, i
flight, as in a flight of stairs, steps (20), arrows. They shot another flight (sc. of arrows) into the air. Swift, Gul. Travels,
I.
head, as
XLIX,
359.
in
a head of cattle
game, poultry,
off
etc. (29, b;
Ch.
XXVI,
8, Obs.
II.)
like
head
of cattle.
G. Eliot,
Mid., V, Ch.
I)
;
Note. Head is sometimes dispensed with before cattle (Ch. XXVI, 8, Obs. conversely it is sometimes used where it is not absolutely necessary.
i.
,
Innumerable waggons, innumerable cattle remained in the power of the conC 1 i v e (519a). querors. Mac. During the last two years the lives of more than 700.000 cattle had been saved.
,
Times.
ii.
Next year, twenty head of black men, direct from Africa, were landed from a Dutch ship, in James River, and were immediately bought by the gentleman of the Colony. Olmsted. *)
to form Thack. Barry Lyndon, Ch. IV, 70. workhouse was born ... the item of mortality whose name
,
What
In
item, as in an item of news, crime, mortality, etc. a number of items of human crime, misery, slavery go
this
that sum-total
of glory.
is
prefixed to
Dick.,
445a.
1.
T wis t,
Ch.
I,
19.
Every month
lot, as in
of goods.
etc.).
pack,
*)
Murray,
head,
1, c.
NUMBER OF NOUNS.
pair, as
275
in a pair of breeches, compasses, etc., (19, a), indentures. The application of pair in the obsolete meaning of set (of almost any description), as in a pair of gallows, harness, numbles, armour, beads, cards,
stairs
organs (clavichords, bagpipes, etc.), drawers, survives only in a pair of a pair of steps (20). Will his vouchers vouch him no more of his purchases, and double ones too, than Haml. V, I, 119. the length and breadth of a pair of indentures.
, ,
parcel, as
in
etc.
A book,
a parcel of servants, and of a pack of footmen and ladies' maids fuddling in ale-houses. Thack., Newc. I, Ch. IV, 46.,
sir, that tells the story of
,
The Shah
agitation
artillery.
,
of Persia, finding that his Duma had become the centre of political dissolved it by the summary process of bombarding it with a park of
66.
peal , as in a peal of bells, laughter, etc. A fine new peal of ten bells has been hung Lond. News, No. 3678, 539.
piece,
as
in
etc.
in
place
II.
intelligence,
a piece of news (19, g); evidence (expenditure, information, (26); anecdote (27); cannon (28, b); advice, artillery,
good fortune, goods, money, service, statistics, water, etc. He at one time advised her to send him to sea, a piece of advice only given in the most desperate cases. Wash. Irv., Dolf Hey I. (Stof., Handl. 1,105). Some very trifling piece of business was alleged as a reason for the call. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. VIII, 141. That secret marriage between Katharine and John turned out to have been such a piece of folly. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., II, Ch. XV, 284. Considerable sensation has been excited by a startling piece of good fortune which has befallen James Plush Esq. Thack., The Diary of C. James de la
,
Pluche, Esq.
Not only not a misfortune, but probably the greatest piece of good fortune which could have come to Clara. Dor. Ger., The Etern. Ch. HI. It's a wonderful piece of goods. Thack., Sam. Titm. , Ch. II, 23. Change. Small pieces of money which may be given for larger pieces or for bank-
Woman,
notes. Webst., Diet. They were both of that decent phlegmatic order of people, to whom one may at any time safely communicate a remarkable piece of news. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre,
Ch. XXXVIII, 553. It is owing to her recollection of this piece of good service that I have the permission of wandering through these deserted halls. Scott, Fair Maid, Intro d. 11.
,
little
piece of statistics
is
talk.
E n g. Rev.,
Motley,
range, as
in
a range of steps
round, as in a round of ammunition , shot, etc. The majesty of the law fired blunderbusses in among them, loaded shot and ball. Dick., Tale of Two Cities, I, Ch. I, 17.
with rounds of
276
smt", as- in
CHAPTER XXV, 36
teeth, twins.
Besides the two men, a notched and disfigured bench ,... with a draught-board a set of draughts, ... a set of dominoes. Dick. Little Dorrit, Ch. 2b. e s t m. Ga z. No. 5277 St. He was the father of two sets of twins.
1
show, as
spell
,
in
a show of fireworks
(20).
as in a spell of work , coughing, sneezing, etc. The consciousness that after a long spell of work he was entering upon a wellW. Black. The earned holiday, was a very welcome and comfortable thing. Prince Fortunatus, Ch. VI.
,
New
stand, as
in
(20).
stroke, as in a stroke of paralysis. Just before the stroke of paralysis he had begun turn, as in a turn of work.
to gain strength.
Times.
To
1
chare.
To do
arch, or obs.
Murray.
suit, as in a suit of clothes, sables, etc. made a suit of clothes wholly of these skins. Defoe, Rob. Crusoe. We must fancy our American traveller to be a handsome young fellow, whose suit of sables only made him look the more interesting. Thack., Virg. Ch. I, 7.
,
The
Ch. XI,
He and Osborne
Ch. VI, 60.
fired
off
CHAPTER
XXVI.
CONCORD.
1.
The way
in
or clauses, are related, causes a certain analogy or agreement in number, person, gender and case, which is called concord.
Sweet,
Owing
N. E. Gr.,
to
91.
the fact that the accusative and dative of nouns and their
attributive
modifiers
before
as
the
Modern-English period,
to case to
were made uniform with the nominative long there are no instances of concord Even register, except when the genitive is in question.
all
here
traces of concord.
the extensive use of the group-genitive has obliterated almost For details see Ch. XXIV, 3 4.
CONCORD OF NUMBER.
2.
Concord
a)
b)
c)
of
number
and
is
exhibited by:
the subject
its finite
verb;
a (pro)noun
difiers
;
and
its
attributive or predicative
adnominal mo-
d) a
to
it.
subject
is
essentially equiva-
mind are
alike
unfit
To
trust
each other.
Byron
Manfred,
3.
II,
These
the
the
different
manifestations
of
i.
e.
number of the subject is mostly the same not only as the number of the finite verb but also of that of the nominal part of
,
predicate and, in case the subject is a noun, of that of adnom inal modifiers and the pronouns used in referring to it.
These boys have been
fast
its
friends since fortune brought them together. senses?" "Because," said Scrooge, "a H*tle thing affects them. A slight disorder of the stomach makes them cheats." Dick., Christm. Car.*, I, 24.
278
CHAPTER XXVI,
4.
a)
Want
of
concord
is
the most
the
subject and the nominal part of the predicate. N o t e I. It deserves notice that in this case the finite verb rigidly follows the subject, at least in carefully written English. For apparent exceptions see 6.
the
Sometimes some difficulty is experienced in deciding which is subject, and which is the nominal part of the predicate. This difficulty, however, need not last long, if it is borne in mind that, except for communications in which some part is thrown into prominence from being contrasted with some idea mentioned before or after, the predicate, as containing the information about what we
are
thinking about, has the stronger stress. Terwey, Taal en 138 ff.; Den Hertog, Ned. Spraakk., 1,7, II, 2 88; Matzn., E n g. Gram. , II, 156. Opm. 2; Paul, Princ,
Letteren,
i.
in, which was right good viands. Bacon, New Atlantis, (274). His meat was locusts and wild honey. Bible, Matth. III, 4. Her part in the world was deeds. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. XXV, 261. The nation is but the individuals who compose it. Froude, Oceana,
Macb.,
II,
3, 99.
was served
The
was
four children.
Huxl.
Darwiniana,
guide
Grieve, 1 , 238. Scriptures. Mrs. Ward , ** Not the least interesting feature of this Supplement are the illustrations. II. Lond. No. 3830, 3746. (The subject has back-position.)
David
News,
d.)
The only
Sweet,
*)
difficulty
(
in
is
said,
II,
Hue's Trav.
ii.
in
Thibet,
A crowd
talk
is
not company, and faces are but a gallery of pictures, and but a tinkling cymbal where there is no love. Bacon, Essays,
is
Of Friendship,
(74).
I
My
slumbers
if
slumber
,
Man
|
But a continuance of
1,1,3.
|
Our cradle the:sea, The rougher the billow, The happier we. (?), Our Home is the Ocean, The Scotch Lowlands were not, in the eleventh century, the poor and barbarous country which some have reported them to have been. Ch.
I.
Kinosley, Hereward, Ch. II, 20a. Portuguese officials in Delagoa Port are the most corrupt
world.
lot in the
Times.
still
Rev. of Rev.,
In
the
following
quotations
the
number
to
of the subject
finite
mere carelessness:
words.
Ch.
Westw. Ho!
III,
65.
Hodgson, Error s,
131.
CONCORD.
The pages which describe how
tradition
that
279
the 34th Osake Regiment wiped out the had survived since the Saigo rebellion is a typical piece of
description.
Times. 1 )
People do not believe now as they did, but the moral inconsistencies of our contemporaries is no proof thereof. Daily Telegraph. 1 )
b.
There may also be discrepancy as to number between the subject and a predicative adnominal noun of the second kind (7)
standing after a passive verb. In this case it is also the subject which determines the form of the finite verb, i. It was considered bad manners to put food into the mouth with the knife. Gunther, Leerboek, 71.
ii.
acquisition.
The following are the most important instances of discrepancy in number between the subject and the nominal part of the predicate
a)
is
the subject is a plural noun. Debts? What were his debts? They were a What were those masses? G. Eliot, Mill,
b)
trifle.
Pend.,
I.
The subject is the condensed relative what (Ch. XV; Ch. XXXIX, 7), the nominal part of the predicate or the predicative adnominal adjunct is a plural noun. See also Wendt, E. S., XV.
i.
visited
what were
it
at the
ii.
time the principal sights of the town. has not won the place of 1881
. .
in
This
failure
many
needless alterations in
Westm. Gaz.
c)
part of the predicate is the numeral many placed in front-position the subject is a singular noun or substantival
,
The nominal
equivalent. (Ch. XL, 93, b.) Many's the day, and many's the way in which he has backed me. Dick., Little Dorr it, Ch. X, 63a. Many's the one of us that has drunk to the Frenchman's memory over our wine. Thack. Barry Lyndon, Ch. VI 97. Many was the young fellow about town who looked with wonder at the
,
number
of these notes.
is
Id.,
Pend.,
I,
Ch.
it
I, 2.
d) The
subject representing a substantive anticipating clause, the nominal part of the predicate is a plural noun. It is my orders to you that you publish these banns no more. Fielding, Jos. Andrews, IV, Ch. II, 206. It was the Normans who began to build that fine old hall. G.Eliot, Mill,
the
I,
e)
The nominal part of the predicate, whether or no preceded by an adjective, denotes a quality (Ch. XXIII, 14, ff.), and differs in number from the subject.
i.
I,
Fanny was well enough, but Biddy was no great things. Thack., Pend., Ch. XI, 113 (= Dutch beteekende niet veel).
65.
280
I
CHAPTER XXVI,
to
56.
han not seen th' oud ladies since their sorrows, and it's but manners go and ax after them. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. XXV, 261. She was nuts on public-houses, was England's Virgin Queen. Jerome, Three men in a Boat, Ch. VI, 61. He is all faults who .has no fault at all. Ten., Lane, and 132. 1., She said that she had been taught that it was ibad manners to do so in a mixed company. Mrs. Ewinos, 4. J ackanapes,
i.
good fun. Trol., Thack. Ch. VIII, 173. They are so little trouble. Marry at, Making the Best of it (Robinson, The Advanced Reader, 34). All the weapons are dummy. Westm. Gaz. No. 6029, lc.
All these are very
I
,
like
poneys.
f)
The
is
subject is plural and the nominal part of the predicate kept in the singular because it has more or less the character
of
an adjective. (Ch. XXIII, 16, d.) They turned Christian. Rudy. Kipling, Plain
Tales,
I,
11.
very common instance of want of concord in Dutch, tha* of a singular demonstrative pronoun used as the subject of a plural nominal part of the predicate, as in Pit zijn rnij.n vri enI.
Note
in English, the demonstrative being made to nominal part of the predicate: These (those) are my friends. When, however, the latter denotes a quality (e), its subject may be a singular demonstrative: This is bad manners.
den,
is
ukno,wn
the
agree
with
ty.
Thefie
,axe,
of
course,
also
is
want of
concord between the accusative and a noun as nominal part of the predicate in the construction accusative with infinitive, but these will not be discussed in detail as being unimportant.
Calenture.
disease
in
incident
to
sailors
it
by delirium
fields,
JJI.
is
said,
and desires
Murray.
The
seems
to
be improper in:
had been a witness
to the
The thought
IV.
In
tolerable to her.
Rich.
Bagot,
The
the
use
of
the
Hist. Outl.
phrase to be friends with a man (Ch. XXV, 21) the is probably due to the blending with another A and B are friends. Compare also KELLNER, of Eng. S y n t 17; and Onions; Advanced
,
Eng. Syat.,
6.
24.
other cases of want of concord as to number are mostly due discrepancy between the form of a noun and the meaning it conveys: the former may be singular, while the latter is plural, and vice versa. Here the English language occupies a unique position among the modern languages. On the one hand it is quite common, or even usual, for a singular noun with a plural meaning to be construed as a plural on the other hand we meet with frequent instances of a plural noun denoting a singular idea being dealt with as a singular. Anything of this kind is only occasionally found in either French or German or Dutch.
The
to
CONCORD.
7.
281
Singular nouns with a plural meaning, commonly called collective nouns, are of two kinds: i. e. the idea they express is thought
-of
either -within or without limi-ts. Of the first kind are such nouns as party, army flock herd, wood, grove, etc.; of the second
,
.,
such as people, clergy, vermin, cattle, game, etc. Some nouns 'belong now to this now to that group. Thus people is a collective noun of the first kind in The English are a wealthy people; while in The Wards are wealthy people, You were away the last time she had people there (Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. I, 9) it is a collective noun of the second kind.
,
8.
Obs.
I.
peculiar feature of
is
some English
collective
kind
Pickw.
, 1
Innumerable waggons, innumerable cattle remained in the power of the C v e (519a). conquerors. Mac. There was little to inclose except a few cattle. Froude, Oceana, Ch. VIII, 110. A few cattle were lifted here and there. Emily Lawless, A Colonel
i
,
of the
saved.
Empire,
last
Ch.
VII.
During the
clergy.
two years
the lives of
cattle
had been
Times.
You
see
me
at the
I, 37.
head of a
67.
six clergy.
Hall Caine,
The Christian,
A number of
Note.
farrow.
According
Pour
in
to
of clergy as.a'aunaeral
eaten
plural' is rare.
sow's blood,
his
hath
Macb.,
folk(s).
IV, 1, 65.
He
laid
Bible, Mark.,
V, 6.
His humble rural petitioner could hardly hope to get a hearing among so many grand folks, who attended his levee. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. i, 13. Beatrix's three kinsfolk looked at one another at this intelligence. Id., Henry Esmond, III, Ch. X, 415. Many folk will be anxious to know what Shakespeare's flame was like.
,
Academy.
About half a million old folks received their pension in England and Ireland on New Year's Day, in Scotland on January 2nd. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIX, is. gentry. The six gentry went forward in the order of their rank. Hal. Sutcx., Pam the Fiddler, Ch. VIII, H8. The three gentry were dismayed by the loss of their best swordsmen,
. .
lb.,
120.
,
people. There might have been twenty people there. Dick. C h r i s t m. C a r. This morning a single-handed Negro Entertainer gave his performance on the sands to quite five people. Punch. Three people had been shot. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 2266.
282
police.
arrive.
CHAPTER XXVI,
8.
Jenkins had got in this man to help him till some more police should Mrs. Ward , arce 1 a II 75. Barkly East was relieved yesterday by Captain Wooler with fifty Cape Police and Captain Penny with twenty Hershel Mounted Volunteers. Daily Chron. A body of 50 burgher police were ambushed near Pretoria on the 10th. Times.
The
magistrate accompanied by 20 police has gone to Palmiet Fontein. lb. Springing wildly from the platform, he passed through the excited shouting crowd towards a few police who stood a short distance from the stand.
then an officer took with him a few police and got near enough to hear the fiery harangues. lb.
A
a)
similar feature
in
may
also be observed:
such single-unit nouns as fish, fowl, cannon, etc., which, when used in a collective sense, do not take the mark of the plural
(Ch.
XXV,
28);
of troops, as infantry, cavalry, rank and file, horse, foot, etc. (Ch. IV, 15). Also swine now practically belongs to the same category of nouns.
/S)
in
certain
names
(Ch.
II.
of the second kind do not admit of a similar use with a preceding number-indicating word others require an individualizer (Ch. XXV, 36) when separate units are meant. Thus we can say He expected company but not *He expected several company; and We saw traces of game, but not *We traced several game for We traced several
;
II.)
head of game. These collective nouns may be modified by the singular much and
little (less,
least).
Compare
also Ch.
XL,
62,
I
c.
company.
Ch. VIII, 88.
little
company when
went.
Thack.
Sam. Titm.,
II,
There was little company kept at the Manor. G.Eliot, Scenes, Her parents see much company. Id., Mid., Ill, Ch. XXXI, 218. game. The King return'd from out the wild, He bore but
|
little
game
in
Ten., The Victim, IV. The less small game there is about, the better the chances are of successful Westm. Gaz. No. 5448, 14a. stalking.
hand.
,
society.
in solitude,
seeing
little
or no society. R. Buchanan,
Ch.
I,
12,
Thus also they can be preceded by a great (good) deal of, not by a great many: They had a great deal of genteel company from Theobald's Road. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk., XXV, 253. Poultry is found with a numeral denoting either quantity or number, He could not raise as much poultry as that. All the Year Round. 1 ) ii. The poorest occupier of land can commonly maintain a few poultry. Adam
i.
Smith,
III.
i)
When
nouns of the second kind are preceded by the definite a genitive or a possessive pronoun, they are, practically, no longer distinguished from those of the first kind.
collective
article,
i)
Sattler, E.
S., X.
CONCORD.
Collective nouns of the
first
283
as
the
demonstrative
etc.
kind are construed as singulars as far pronouns are concerned: this family, that
party,
affords an instance of a plural demonstrative before a collective noun of this description: When you and those poor number saved with you Hung on our driving boat.
|
Twelfth Night,
sessive
I,
2, 10.
Usage varies as to the finite verb and as to the personal, posand reflective pronouns used in referring to them. These
are
singular when
the individuals
making up the
collection are
thought of jointly, plural when thought of separately. Thus it is easy to account for the alternate use of the singular and the plural in This jury returns a verdict of guilty and This jury are kept without food. The singular pronouns used in referring to collective nouns are mostly neuter, but the masculine pronouns may also be met with. See the quotations below under enemy, foe, public. It is but natural that writers and speakers do not always pause
to think
of
whether the communication given applies to the individuals which a collection is composed jointly or separately, nor is
this always clear- from the circumstances of the situation described, so that there is a good deal of vacillation and, apparently, even incongruity in the choice of the number. Some particulars about generally observed usage may, however,
be given.
a)
1)
The singular
the collective
to
construction
is
regular, or
of
all
but regular,
or of
when
things,
animals
wood,
fleet; shoal,
is
a)
when
a large body of
when
whole
larly
is
the collective noun, mostly preceded by all the or the equivalent to everybody: town, world, country; simiare used in an analogous way.
b)
1)
The plural
a)
regular, or
all
but regular:
/?)
when
the
collective
of society with
distinct reference to
some
peasantry; sex,
etc.;
284
)
CHAPTER XXVI,
when
to the
9.
the .collective
Dutch
men
noun is felt to be more or less equivalent (German man, French on): (the) people, (the)
public.
c)
when the collective noun denotes a small even when joint rather than separate action is in question: board, committee, company, council, couple, court, crew, family, government pair, party, race, staff, etc. Although the choice of number is to some extent a matter of personal predilection, attentive reading will show that on the whole the plural construction is more in favour than the singular, especially in the choice of the person-indicating pronouns, the use of the singular it, its and itself, primarily suggesting absence of sex, being more or less distinctly felt as incongruous in speaking about persons. The plural construction
2)
It
is
body
is
when
the collective
noun
is
the subject of a
nominal predicate. For particulars see also Bain, H. E. Gr., 301; 18. id., Comp., 282 ff.; Onions, Advanced Eng. Synt., Here follow some illustrative quotations; those in which the construction seems to go counter to the sense conveyed are marked with a dagger (f). It must be understood that, when only one construction is illustrated, this does not necessarily mean that the alternative is impossible or even unusual.
plural
i.
Eng. Rev.,
1912,
Sept.,
in question.)
measurement by
half
an
Standard.
,
has been stated this week that the Admiralty were contemplating a programme Westm. Gaz. No. 5543, 2a.
aristocracy. Who says that the aristocracy are proud. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. , Ch. XI, 206. The Cranford people were grateful to the aristocracy who were so kind as to live near the town. lb., Ch. X, 181.
army.
ii.
i.
380.
fThe army
i.
Queen mean
to besiege us.
The Artillery are back in camp. The Assembly has decreed. Bain, assembly,
artillery.
VI,
C,
I,
2, 65.
3712, 1726.
301.
its
hats
and went
Jer.,
Three men
in
neither the
f The assembly of these magistrates by theory possessed an authority they had power nor the courage to exerf Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 19
We
its
members
to stand out.
moment that the British Medical Association Westm. Gaz., No. 6059, 2d.
audience,
of
his
ii.
f Conscious how indifferent his audience is to the naked truth poem, his history gradually becomes a romance. Scott, Br Id. of Trierm. Pref. Then he rebukes his audience because they will not listen to the truth. Trol.
i.
,
,
h a c
i.
k.
Ch.
IV,
108.
board,
that
the
appear before
forthwith.
Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 27. has issued its new rules for the equipment of vessels
6017, 2b.
CONCORD.
ii.
285
The board were sitting in solemn conclave, when Mr. Bumble rushed into the room in great excitement. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 33. The board made periodical pilgrimages to the farm, and always sent the beadle
the day before, to say they
were going.
lb.,
|
Ch.
II,
33.
bridal.
And
The
bridal
now resumed
The
their march.
Scott
bulk.
Lady,
i.
xx.
f And
the
public,
the
great
British
public?
balk no doubt
is still
,
but little influenced by anything not prodigiously advertised. No. 6023, 76.
ii.
Westm. G a z.
The bulk
It is
abolitionist.
of the Presbyterian clergy are as fierce as the slave-holders against the J Ht. Martineau, Soc. Amer. III, 279. )
,
Shaw were influenced by any one specific grudge against the policy of the party for which" he stood. Sat. Rev. (Westm. Gaz. No. 6023, 16c).
unlikely that the bulk of those
who
cabinet,
i.
fThe
Cabinet would,
in
to
keep
its
own
counsel.
Times,
ii.
The Cabinet
incline to the
camp,
cavalry,
ii.
f The camp
i.
rose to Ms feet
6.
one man.
Bret Harte
The Luck
of
Roaring Camp,
Cavalry
is
cavalry.
The
cavalry were fifteen thousand. Mac, Clive, cavalry particularly distinguished themselves.
M c Carthy,
Weekly,
(5186).
Short
Hist.,
childhood.
class.
Childhood
is
is
poetic
There
numerous
class
readers
who imagine
that the
cannot be repeated without tautology. Wordsw., Pref. Note to You need not to suppose that your class are martyrs. Ch. Bronte, Ch. V, 78.
Shirley,
I,
clergy. In our church the clergy do not marry. Track., Henry Esmond, I, Ch. Ill, 26. The clergy were all men of enlarged men and varied culture. G. Eliot, Mill, II, Ch. IV, 151. The new Protestant clergy were often unpopular. Green, Short Hist., Ch.
VIII,
3, 378.
The
publican has thrown his weight into the same scale and the clergy certainly have not remained at home. Westm. Gaz., No. 5219, 2a.
club,
In the
summer weather
the club takes to tents, migrates to the forest, Ch. XX, 320. Froude,
and
Oceana,
commission. The Commission were of opinion that bovine tuberculosis could be communicated to man. A then., No. 4425, 167a.
committee,
spectators.
i.
A committee
Its
of wine-growers exercised undisputed authority over orders were obeyed, while the authorities remained helpless
,
ii.
of a separate classification for motorNo. 3832, 480c. Committee declare that the funds entrusted to General Booth have been f, The devoted only to objects set forth in the appeal. Graph.
Lond. News,
Murray,
s.
v.
bulk,
6.
CHAPTER XXVI,
to
9.
Lond. News,
The Committee... were faced with the task of [etc.]. lb., No. 3832, 480*. community. The community created the decedents' wealth it is entitled to a large portion of it as they pass away. Andrew Carnegie (Rev. of Rev., CCV, 296).
,
company. All the company are convulsed with laughter. Mac, Addison, (7556). The ship's company were mustered. Marryat, MidshipsmanEasy, Ch. XXVII. found themselves invaded in their f A company, called the Ohio Company
.
settlements by French military detachments. The company still control the catering. II.
Thack., Virg.
Lond. News,
conference.
The Conference could do nothing, for its constitution forbids any discussion of the internal political affairs of any of its members. Rev. of Rev.,
CCXII, 114a.
congregation, f You shall go to church to-morrow morning, and see how the whole congregation will turn away from its books and prayers, to worship the golden calf in your person. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXIV, 251. congress. The American Congress has cut down the proposed programme of naval construction by nearly one half. Rev. of Rev., CCXIX, 234a. He (sc. President Taft) replied, "My dear lady, I do not make the law, Congress
does
that."
Rita,
America
Ch. V, 102.
the confor.
constituency.
stituency of
The Independent
Ch. XIII.
105.
. . .
demanded
to
know whether
Eatanswill
Dick.,
Pickw.,
council.
5249, 2b.
has declared
its
opinion.
Wes
m.
G a z.
No.
VII (R e v. of
couple. The young couple are just setting out for Scotland. Goldsm., Goodnat. |man, III. This couple were desirous to consummate long ago. Fielding, Joseph Andrews, IV, Ch. U, 205. Tf a married couple come to settle in the town, somehow the gentleman disappears. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranf. Ch. I, 9.
,
He was more
often
inclined
to
leave
the
young couple
to
themselves.
Thack.,
Pend.,
court,
I,
* The court i. feels indignant that it is conquered. Carlyle, French Rev., I, Ch. Ill, 146. f The court /sin mourning. Thack., A little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. 111,316. ** The Constitution is what the Supreme Court makes it. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 6o.
ii.
So with
It's
the
morning
crew
all
the court
home
to dinner.
were gone. Ten., Mar. of Ger. 156. Thack., The four Georges, I,
,
6.
crew.
the
88).
were amazed.
Wash.
Irv.,
The Storm-Ship
(Stof.,
Handl.,
183, b.
The crew were saved by lifeboats. Times. The crew have been dismissed. lb., No. 1909, 707c. crowd, i. At the foot of the Capitol, an immense crowd was assembled. Lytton,
Rienzi, I, Ch. IX, 55. f There's a crowd, Monsieur Rigaud, and it doesn't love you. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. I, 76. A very large crowd for Edinburgh was assembled in the streets. Times, No. 1803, 5736. f The great crowd was most enthusiastic. II. Lond. News, No. 3835, 573.
CONCORD.
ii.
287
I,
Byron, Lara,
xxix.
necessary for a crowd to know what they are cheering about. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIII, 105. The crowd were deeply affected but they uttered no shouts. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. VIII, 118.
not at
all
democracy.
No. 6041,
H. E.
lc.
to
vote
on the
Act.
Wes
m. Gaz.,
Bain,
detachment.
A detachment
of
sent.
r.
303.
hesitated,
decision.
Rev. of
The
electorate
show
people of
this
to the idea of national military service). Outlook * The French admiral beheld the new i.
enemy,
Southey, Life of Nelson, 255. The enemy was discovered about seven miles out of Ladysmith. Times. ** They encountered the enemy wherever he showed himself and defeated him.
advancing.
M c Carthy,
Short
Hist., Ch.
IV, 33.
The enemy was surrounded, but he fought Our naval guns have temporarily silenced
ii.
Morning Leader.
guns with which he has been bombarding the town. Times, Look, yonder are the enemy. Southey, Life^of Nelson, 257. Suppose the enemy arrive. Thack. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVII, 346. Even the enemy were fellow-creatures. Buchanan That Winter Night,
the enemy's best
, ,
Ch.
IV, 38.
The enemy appear to be in large numerical superiority. Times. The enemy were cut to pieces by the Lancers. Id. establishment, f Half the establishment was writhing and crying, before the day's work began; and how much of it had writhed and cried before the day's work was am really afraid to recollect. Dick., Cop., Ch. VII, 45a. over, Europe. All Europe was on tip-toe with expectation to see how Philip would avenge himself. Motley, Rise.
I
family,
iHer family has disgraced itself. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXI, 221. Our family has done her quite enough injury already. lb. 223. Ch. II, 12. Her family was about to arrive. Id., Virg. Each family in the colony sent one or more of its young ones. Frovde,
,
to give to this
your family
ii.
now
devouring.
gentleman in place of the one which Con. Doyle, Sherl. Holm., The Blue
,
Carbuncle,
The family still resolve to hold up their heads. Goldsm. Vic, Ch. XI. Are the family well at the house, Robert? Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXI, 269. As for her husband's family of Warrington, they were as naught in her eyes.
firm.
Thack., Virg., Ch. IV, 36. i. The firm found itself in sudden and urgent need of fifty thousand dollars. Agn. & Eg. Castle, Panther's Cub, I, Ch. Ill, 28. ii. All the time he must have known what the firm were meditating. Edna Lyall, A Hardy Horseman, Ch. X 84. The firm sent him away to manage a branch of their publishing business in Bombay. Miss Flora Masson, The Brontes, Ch. XIII, 84. The manuscript was submitted to a publishing firm, who... handed it to their professional reader. W. L. Phelps, Es. on Mod. Nov., II, 38.
,
Note. The plural construction is decidedly the rule, as is also the case with substantive genitives denoting a firm. (Ch. XXIV, 50, Obs. III.)
288
fleet,
i.
CHAPTER XXVI,
9.
The British fleet was but fifteen sail of the line strong. II. Lond. News. The American Fleet has made a very successful circuit of the South American continent. Rev. of Rev., CCX1X, 234a. Thus also: The great Armada is vanquished. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!,
Ch. XXXII, 2386.
ii.
The
The The
home.
growing short
of provision, turn
southward toward
fleet are still bombarding the town. fleet have approached closer. lb.
Punch,
1893, 159a.
In these last quotations the word fleet is indicative rather of persons than things. flock. This exceptional ringing may be caused in two ways by the rapid feeding of the sheep bearing the bell, as when the flock breaks into new pasture. Hardy,
Note.
Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. V, 39. No tidings of the foe were brought, Nor foe.
i.
|
of
his
aught,
ii.
And The
time of truce he sought. Scott, Lay, III, xxxt. now the foe their covert quit. Byron, The Giaour, (203a). sun is not yet risen, and the foe Sleep. Matthew Arnold,
|
Nor what
in
Sohrab
and Rustum,
force.
ii.
I.
36.
is
Burke,
i)
vantage.
Short
from r/ie/rpostof
Bain,
generality. H. E. Gr.,
The
301.
i.
generation,
with
Each generation
zest.
of
men goes about its business and its pleasure W. Raleigh, Six E s. on Johns., V, 98.
A
ii.
later generation rises against them. lb., VI, 176. At this moment the rising generation are supplied with the best of their mental aliment by writers whose names are a dead letter to the mass. Trol. Thack. Ch. I, 28. The young generation nowadays do not read Scott. Westm. Gaz., No. 5484, 4c. The rising generation in Scotland simply do not care for Scott. lb. (In the sequel of the controversy on this subject, which was continued for a considerable time in the same paper, all the correspondents who took part in it construed the word as a singular.)
. ,
gentry.
their
own
own
coaches. Thack.,
Barry Lyndon, Ch. Ill, 50. How can any government government,
its
be well served,
(522a).
if
those
who command
to accept
forces
are
at
liberty,
without
its
permission,
without
its privity,
Mac, Clive,
ii.
The German Government feels itself once more master in its own house. Rev. of Rev., CCVI, 1156. f The Government have apologized to the British consul for having blown up his house and stables. Pun ch. The Government will act wisely for their own interests if they effect the required
improvements,
Gr a
h.
The Government are not entirely their own masters. Westm. Gaa, No.5219,2agrtmpj An excited group was gathered round it (sc. the diligence). Buchanan,
Ch. IK,
30.
Murrkt,
s.
v.
force,
7.
CONCORD.
guard,
ii.
i.
i
289
Mil. E n g
(200).
i-
The guard
,
of
J
the
)
trenches
is
neer ng 3
All the
i.
I,
n, 15.
half.
Kipling, not
Wee
Willie Winkie,
the other half lives.
live.
know how
other half
Punch,
,
No. 3710,
ii.
One half of men do not know how the One half of the men were seriously ill.
Bain, H. E. Gr.
300.
Murray.
Jul. Caes.,
usual.
I, 2, 266. Ch. Kingsley>
herd.
* The common herd was I. glad he refused the crown. The herd has been eating and drinking and marrying as
Hypatia,
**
Ch.
in
II,
lb.
8a.
which was generally to be found on the broad expanse m. G a z. No. 5261 lb. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea. Gray, Elegy, I.
Wes
of fallow deer
t
House,
ii.
i. The House (of Commons, or of Lords) resolves. Bain, H. E. Gr., 301. (This was) one of the most sophistical and quibbling speeches that the House of Commons has ever listened to. Outlook (W e s t m. G a z. No. 6059 16c). f In this business the House of Commons have no weight. Bain, H. E. Gr., 301. f The House of Lords have no legislative powers whatever in regard to any money bill. Times, No. 1811, 7446.
, ,
household,
All the
t All the household was gone to bed. Thack., household was equally instructed to pay him honour.
Newc,
Id.,
I,
Ch. V,
Ill,
55.
30.
Virg., Ch.
humanity. The three combined (sc. presentiments, sympathies and signs) make one mystery, to which humanity has not yet found a key. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXI, 268. The girl looked around for a moment as if to assure herself that all humanity was out of view. Hardy, For from the Madding Crowd, I, Ch. Ill, 18. Humanity is not averse from showing the Creator how things should have been done. Truth, No. 1802, 83a.
jury.
ii.
i.
If
it's
when
Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXXIV, 304. The jury then retired to their private room to talk the matter over. lb., Ch. XXXIV, 319Counsel usually begin in this way, because it puts the jury on the very best
retired.
terms with themselves. lb., 308. The jury were unable to agree. Times, No. 1807, 660c. The jury were absent for ten minutes. lb.
majority,
of
i.
Is
it
passage
We are certain that the majority will take no such view. It Budget? cherishes a deep and passionate feeling on the question of the Lords. Nation
the
ii.
No. 5219,
16c).
.
.
of the boys were visited with similar instances of notice, as Mr. Creakle made the round of the school-room. Dick., Cop., Ch. VII, 45a.
.
116. The majority of Englishmen are tall. Sweet, N. E. Gr., manhood. English manhood is not peculiar in being lectured from on its manners. Westm. Gaz.
time to time
mankind,
* i. Beggar-my-neighbour is not exactly the game in which mankind should waste its resources. Rev. of Rev., CCXIX, 2326. ** Not only can mankind do nothing to avoid earthquakes, but even what he can do to mitigate their worst consequences is very small. Spectator.
Murray,
,
s.
v.
guard,
9.
H.
English.
II.
19
290
ii.
CHAPTER XXVI,
mankind are
1
1
9.
All
indifferently
to but
liable
to
adverse
Strokes
of
Fortune.
Steele,
77.
Ta
one thing
at a time.
. . .
mass.
ii.
i.
f A
large
mass
the drama.
Westm.
interest in
The mass were deeply interested. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. V, 46. The mass of the men did not change their nature because they had learned to pray to Christ. S.R.Gardiner, Outline of English History. The mass of Tariff Reformers are as determined as ever to treat a victory at Westm. Gaz., No. 5478 \b. this election as a victory for Tariff Reform. million, f It was commonly believed that half a million of human beings was crowded into that labyrinth of lofty alleys. Mac, War. Hast., (627a). The ministry is afraid to refuse. Westm. Gaz., No. 5277, 2b. ministry, ii. The ministry also were tottering. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. I, 6. The ministry were to be out within five days. lb. 301. mob. i. The mob was dispersed. Bain, H. E. Gr., Is the mob more bold, more constant? Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 52. ii. The mob are so pleased with your honour. Farquhar, Recruiting Officer, I, 1.
i.
It's
always best
i.
on these occasions
to
Dick.,
Pickw.
multitude,
to
ii.
The multitude is the only proper judge of those arts whose end move the multitude, Ruskin, Mod. Paint., I, 2, Note.') The multitude were of one mind. Mason, Eng. Gram.**, 380.
Happily for
26.
is
itself,
Thack.
Virg.
It is a complete and comprehensive statement of all their actions of which the nation has reason to complain. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 886. A nation which is feeling its way through a new country should not have any laws like those of the Medes and Persians. lb., CCVI, lb.
'
neighbourhood.
bourhood.
Dick.,
The
children
idolise
Pickw.,
Wash.
Irv.,
Do If Hey
Thack.,
I.
(Stok.,
II
Hand I.,
number.
I,
113).
large
number
of
the
Pend.
opposition. 1. The Opposition shows no signs of pulling itself together. It is as one of its adherents bitterly complains, the Sick Man of British Politics. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 218a. The Opposition is not unitedly behind the Carsonites In sowing "rebellion" in Ireland. Westm. Gaz., No. 6029, 8d. ii. The whole Opposition rose to their feet. Daily Mail.
The Opposition are now alive to the gravity of destroying an unwritten ConstiWestm. Gaz., No. 5277, lb. tution. For some time it appeared that the Opposition were gaining the victory. Times,
No. 1807, 6646.
pair.
ii.
i.
They
(sc.
all
and the same pair procreates year after year. Encvcl. Brit. T, XVI, 733/1.-) 'T is when a youthful, loving, modest pair, In other's arms, breathe out the tender tale. Burns, The Cotter's Saturday Night, IX. The newly-married pair were installed in a compartment by themselves. A. B.
|
Edwards,
')
Debenham's Vow,
s.
Ch. LXIII.
2)
Murray,
v.
multitude,
4.
Murray,
s.
v.
pair,
3.
CONCORD.
parish,
ii.
291
all the parish says you have spoiled me. Goldsm., V, (227). f You speak like a lady *. all the parish notice it. Hardy, Far from Madding Crowd, Ch. IV, 36.
i.
Ecod! mother,
She
the
Stoops,
Parliament.
Until
will
be
little
stirring.
Graph. Rev.
is
Chesterton
part.
ii.
i. e s t m. G a z. f A part of the population has refused to eat meat. No. 5219, 2b. The chief part of Sir Brian Newcome's family were assembled together. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XIV, 164. i.
party,
f When
the
this
little
sea-shore,
colonel
sits
party has gone out smiling to take Us walk on the down and resumes the interrupted dessert. Thack.,
Newc,
ii.
I, Ch. XV, 179. The party had better not count its chickens before they are hatched. Westm. Gaz. The Liberal Party is in difficult straits. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 119a. The whole party sprang upon their feet. Wash. Irv. D o f H e y I. (Stof.
,
Hand!.,
Strong
i
I,
131).
in faith
to
T m e s.
such circumstances the Government could do nothing but leave the Irish party own course. Westm. Gaz., No. 5231 lc. The Labour Party are determined to support the Government. lb., No. 6029, 8rf.
In
to follow their
peasantry.
their
equally stirred by the news from France, Green, Short Hist., Ch. X, Sect. IV, 814. So far as the peasantry are concerned no very serious opposition to the Czar's
faith in
it
(sc. the
Duma).
Rev. of
Rev., CCVI,
people,
i.
1176.
the people
How
shakes itself as
if
it
had one
life.
Carlyle.
ii.
The English people showed that it cherished no animus against France and that it was anxious to live on good terms with its nearest neighbour. Daily Mail. There is but one way to restore the greatness of a people it is an appeal to
the people themselves.
Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 52. in this pretended compromise only an attempt to get the thin end of the wedge inserted; while the main grievance which had set their the invasion of their national rights, and the attack on their patriotism on fire national dignity remained unabated. D. Laing Purves, Life of Swift, 30. Tell the people how much have loved them always. Annie Besant, Autob., 331. The people of England will never consent to undertake the burden on their time and on their purse which a conscript army would involve. Rev. of Rev., CCXI, 13. was here, should be torn populace. If the excited and irritable populace knew to pieces ... should be the victim of their fury. Dick., Pickw. Ch. LI. 470. A miscellaneous and indignant populace were assembled. Lytton, Rienzi, I,
The
Irish
people saw
Ch.
Ill,
21.
population. The Roman population retained an inordinate notion of their own supremacy. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 18. posterity, i. Posterity has not yet confirmed honest Hogarth's opinion about his talents for the sublime. Thack. Posterity has done nothing for us. Daily News, 1899, May 2, 6/6.
,
292,
ii.
CHAPTER XXVI,
,
9.
In
physique
so far as posterity are concerned a cultivated intelligence based on a bad is of little worth. Spencer, Education, Ch. IV, 1186.
.
is interested priesthood, i. The priesthood solely in theological questions and its representatives in the third Duma were anything but a progressive force. Westm. Gaz., No. 6011, 26.
. . .
.
.
ii.
The priesthood
lb.,
No. 6117,
2c.
procession.
profession,
character.
ii.
To
i.
Mrs.
Wood
The
Channings,
Ch.
I,
1.
Bern.
The medical profession has not a high character: ii has an infamous Shaw The Doctor's Dilemma, Pref. xiv.
,
The whole profession in Middlemarch have set themselves tooth and nail against the Hospital. G.Eliot, Mid., Ch. XLIV, 325. proportion. A large proportion of the names on our maps are of great antiquity. H. Bradley Eng. Place-Names (A. C. Bradley E s. and Stud., 1,9). prosecution. It was announced that the prosecution were in possession of a fact
, ,
for
even a crime so
terrible.
T.
P.
'
/7s
the British public to ask it to throw up hat and rejoice over this signal victory over Trusts. Rev. of Rev., CCIV, 568a. The public has frankly given up the attempt to understand the problem of the
is
Do you suppose that the public Mid., V, Ch. XL VI, 343. playing it a little too low down upon
its
own
conversion.
Army.
not get
**
If
//
/7s
after
years of
Army
reform,
it
does
money's worth.
lb.,
CCXI,
12a.
of course, to
ii.
the public desires the assistance of an unqualified person, he is at liberty, employ such. Truth, No. 2801, 24a.
The public were a good deal surprised that Lord Palmerston had taken such a c Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. X, 128. place as that of Home Secretary. The public are not admitted into the Stock Exchange. Escott, England,
Ch.
VIII, 108.
The
rabble.
public are requested to protect their own property. The rabble call him lord. H 1., IV, 5, 101.
London Parks.
Symonds,
am
Theognis complains
monstrous laws.
Greek Poets,
race.
ii.
i.
.
.
Ser. I,
.
86. i)
Fr. A. The proscription under which their whole race is placed. Kemble R e s d. in Georgia, II. 2) His numerous and high-born race were proud of their descent. Lytton, Rienzi,
,
I,
If
Ch.
the
I,
75.
stopped there, the black race would not feel themselves so very W. Archer (Westm. Gaz., No. 4957, 136). rank-and-file. If the rank-and-file of the Liberal Party set themselves to do the spade-work of persuasion and demonstration In the constituencies, we shall have no fear of the result. Westm. Gaz., No. 5054, 2a. rascaldom. How has this turbulent Alexandrian rascaldom been behaving in my absence? Ch. Kinosley, Hypatia, Ch. II, 76. regiment, i. The regiment with /7s officers was to be transported in ships provided by His Majesty's government for the occasion. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch.
matter
much
aggrieved.
XXVIII, 292.
ii.
Idle People use to gather about a Regiment that are exercising their Arms. Steele, Tatler, C. The regiment are out already. Rudy. Kiplino, Wee Willie Winkie, (207). That regiment are devils. lb., 205.
')
Murray,
s.
v.
rabble, 2,
c.
*)
Murray,
s.
v.
race, 2, 6.
CONCORD.
Reichstag. When the Reichstag meets again, up an Imperial petroleum monopoly.
it
293
will
for setting
Westm. Gaz.
a
remnant,
of
their
i.
(sc. knights)
when Modred
Forgetful
and
440.
fealty,
clave
To Modred, and
Ten.,
ii.
Guin.
|
The remnant of the English were already to be seen. Cooper. *) rest. The rest That are within the note of expectation Already are V
,
|
the court.
Macb.,
Ill,
3, 9.
that the rest of
He observed
child alone.
Goldsm.,
to
royalty. And so the Royalty of France is actually fled. Carlyle, French Rev. Royalty in most countries is fond of the stage, but merely as a spectator. II. L o n d. News.
school.
It
Ch. Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
Ch.
VIII, 78.
often his delight, after his school was dismissed in the afternoon, to stretch himself on the rich bed of clover. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk. Leg. of
,
was
The
Sleepy Hollow,
senate,
ii.
i.
(348).
Bain, H. E. Gr.
301.
|
give, this day, a crown to mighty Caesar. If will not come, Their minds may change. Jul.
|
They
early tips.
Richard Bagot,
like
sex.
the
I
poor tradesmen
goods
Goldsm.,
66.
Good-nat. man,
Thack.,
Ch.
And
It
the shipping
Ch. Kinosley,
Westw. Ho!,
XXX,
225a.
society.
aristocratic
the
highest
sense.
short
butter
Society
staff,
refrigerated mouth. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake, I, Ch. II, 23. c Connell has the right to defend itself against injury. (A
h e n.
No.
4437, 557c).
one
ii.
All
A wise manager will never feel that his staff is woman as a member of it. Westm. Gaz. No. my staff are trained nurses. T t - b t s.
i.
,
complete without
6065,
19.
at least
to
Turks
Until
Westm. Gaz.,
man
|
table.
Had
fallen in
Lyonness about
their
Lord.
Ten.,
Morte d'Arthur,
3.
throng.
faction.
town.
In an instant the whole throng were divided by the hereditary wrath of Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 23. The town has asserted that never yet patronized a man of merit. Goldsm.,
I
Good-nat. man,
IV.
,
The town talks of nothing else. Sher., School for Scand. I, 1, (368). The whole town knows it. G. Eliot, Mill, VI, Ch. VIII, 393. tribe. He all, all his tribe are blind. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53. wardrobe, f could give away all my wardrobe, and go naked for them. Dryden,
I
Marriage
>)
la
Mode,
111,1.
MaTZN., Eng.
Gram.2,
II,
152
294
whole. world,
All
I,
of these
All the
is
1802, 119.
I.
The world
Ch.
II,
no stranger to your generosity. lb., IV. the world eats too much. Mrs. Ward Lady Rose's
186.
all
Daughter,
Just
ii.
now
the world
is visiting busily.
Graph,
to critics.
too
great a
compliment
Fielding,
is
Tom
Jones,
this
,
assumed complaisance
a matter of
youth,
i.
gravity
Quent. Durw. Ch. XXVI, 327. there. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXV, 304. * What follies will not youth perpetrate with its own admirable and simplicity? Thack., Pend. I, Ch. XVIII, 187.
,
But youth is ever so confident. Youth is not romantic. T. P. ** Youth repairs His wasted
|
Id.,
'
Ill,
54.
spirits
quickly, by long
toil
Incurring short
fatigue.
ii.
Cowper,
in the
Task,
1,
27.
The youth
caught
who worked or idled near them, were sometimes spreading movement. G. Eliot, Mid., P, Ch. XIX, 138. We are speaking of a time before Casinos were, and when the British youth were by no means so active in dancing practice as at the present period. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XIV, 136. The innocent dancing youth who pressed round her, attracted by her beauty, were rather afraid, after a while, of engaging her. lb., I, Ch. XXIV, 270.
of other nations
I
In the first group of quotations youth may also be understood to questioned age (sc. What express a personified abstraction. Compare: was life); it heaved a heavy sigh, Expressing volumes. Anon., What is
|
Life?
(Rainb.,
I.
I,
20).
Proper names of towns used as collective nouns are, apparently, regularly construed as singulars.
it
Note
Cranford had so long piqued itself on being an honest and moral town that had grown to fancy itself too genteel and well-bred to be otherwise. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. X, 180.
All
All
talking of
in tears.
Thack.,
Ch. IV,
II,
115.
41.
Observe, however, that Eton, etc. may stand for the Eton team, etc. and, accordingly, be construed as a plural. Eton were said to have one of the finest elevens that the school had ever had.
Truth,
No. 1800, 1685a. At the Oval on Wednesday Kent were beaten by an innings and 345 runs.
T i.m e s.
II.
i.
for themselves:
f About 30 per
ii.
cent of our population is underfed. Eng. Rev., 1912, Oct., 453. Ninety-five per cent of the human race suffer from chronic *blood-poison. Doctor's Bern. Shaw, 1,15.
The
Dilemma,
10.
Of the
modified
collective
by
second kind those which may be number-indicating word (8, Obs. I) are all but
nouns
of the
regularly construed as plurals throughout, also as far as the demonThe others mostly have the strative pronouns are concerned.
demonstrative
treated
pronouns
in
the
singular,
and
to
for
the
rest
are
the
same
first
principle kind.
CONCORD.
295
For the constructions of nouns that are properly single-unit nouns, but are also used in a collective sense, such as fish, fowl etc., see Ch. XXV, 28.
i
Note
first
I.
Folk
kind.
As
only archaically used as a collective noun of the a collective noun of the second kind it has from an early
is
now
date
been largely
or
replaced
archaic
dialectical.
by the plural folks, the singular being now Both folk and folks are now chiefly colloquial and
mostly expressive of kindliness or familiarity. In the literary style they kind of folk. imply slight contempt. Sometimes folk In the following quotation a folk is used in the sense of a person: Poor fellow! He likes us better than the fine folks, who don't care for him now now he is no longer a fine folk himself. Thack., Virg., Ch. LX, 625. II. The construction of people as a singular seems to be confined to vulgar language. See, however, the quotation from Ch. Bronte below.
III.
Vermin
i.
is
also
(in)definite article.
cattle,
Of
all
to this height.
Adam
Smith,
i)
it
The whole
ii.
price of cattle would fall, and along with lands of which cattle was the principal produce. 1 ) The cattle were driven from the hill. Scott, Pirate,
the profit of
36.
all
those
Ch. IV,
The
one.
cattle
are grazing
,
They are
Wordsworth A Morning in March. These cattle had not been sent up from the south.
i.
Capt. Taylor.
company,
As you
company
to dinner.
like it, IV, 3, 73. (See 18, G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. II,
b.)
10.
Cities, Ch. V, 48. Dick., Tale of There were shabby people present, besides the fine company, though these were by far the most numerous. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXVIII, 396.
i.
Two
latter
folk(s).
ii.
What seemed
particularly
odd
to Rip
was
that
amusing themselves, yet they maintained the gravest faces, the most mysterious silence, and were withal the most melancholy party of pleasure he had ever witnessed. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk. Rip van Winkle. "A small matter," said the Ghost, "to make these silly folks so full of gratitude. Dick., Christm. Car., 11,48. These little folks, having threaded the mighty flood of Regent Street, debouched Ch. I, 15. into the quiet creek of Beak Street. Thack., Lovel the Wid. The great country folk repair thither at stated intervals. Escott, England,
, ,
The
**
much
travel.
W. Black,
The"
fruit,
ii.
i.
Ch.
Our Virginian gentry were a grave aristocratic folk. Thack., Virg. 1 ) The fruit is at thy feet. Shelley, Revolt, Ded. 16. The gods give all these fruit of all their works. Swinburne, Atalanta, 380.
,
fry.
ii.
i.
stank
The
And the land obscene, Spawned in the muddy beds of Nile so numerous was the fry. Cowper, Task, II, 832. fry of the aquatic races are almost as different from their parents as the
race
.
caterpillar
from the
butterfly.
Woodward. a )
Murray.
i)
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
-')
296
CHAPTER XXVI,
10.
My
large sea-going steamer following immediately after these smaller fry. Official Wife, 245.
Savage,
The
A then.,
furniture, i. My furniture is getting shabby. Why should they buy many books when they bought so little furniture. G. Eliot, Mill, III, Ch. VI, 218. ii. f iAy furniture were all in their places. Mrs. A. M. Bennett, Beggar Girl, V, 197.')
game.
i.
profit.
the
royal
parks
and
forests
was
|
to
him a source of
Ten.,
Then (we)
it
was
This season.
Audley Court,
31.
ii.
Lions are generally found where game is plentiful. Graph. People in England are very much under the impression that big game is to be found in all parts of South Africa except just in the neighbourhood of Cape Town. lb. The game in view was rabbits. Hor. Hutchinson (Westm. Gaz. No. 6011, 2c). The less small game there is about, the better the chances are of successful Westm. Gaz., No. 5448, 14a. (See 16, d.) stalking. Elephants, rhinoceroses and other great game were abundant. Lit. World. The bleak heights which the black game love. Escott, England, Ch. Ill, 39. "I was ever moderate in my desires," said the Cardinal with a smile; "I shoot
,
game." Shorthouse. 2 ) following quotation were is probably to be regarded as a past asked them whether any man-jack of them would be a ha'porth subjunctive: better off if there were no game. Mrs. Ward Marcella, I, 246.
at
none
the
of these high-flying
In
gentry,
expressing contempt). Reader, if thou meetest one of these small gentry in thy early rambles, it is good to give him a penny. Ch. Lamb,
(in this application
A woman
Es. of Elia, In Praise of Chimney-Sweepers. should be very careful when one of these gentry from the sewers of society
and Maid, 88. presents himself as a lover. Sarah Grand, You see what sort of an opinion these gentry have of the country. Rider Haggard, She, Ch. IV, 48. These gentry of the alarmist claque see red all the time. Rev. of Rev., CCXV, 4376.
kin.
Is
Man
this
another case
undefiled English?
Westm. Gaz.,
people, i. People even for some years was not absolutely certain of her existence. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXVI, 525. ii. While the young people were making themselves perfectly happy, old Lobbs got down the pipe and smoked it. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XVII, 154. The people pressed round the learned man, with open mouths: now turning their eyes to the picture, now to Pandulfo. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. IX, 56. police. The police were upon us with uplifted truncheons. Annie Besant, Auto,
biography,
The
s.
324.
after
police
are organized
European models.
Harmsworth Encycl.
v.
Japan.
The
police have strict orders to take into custody any person found shooting soil or rubbish on this land. Notice.
During
this time a
good many
of these police
is
go round
in the evening.
II.
Lon
d.
News,
poultry, Roun
No
other poultry
to
All the
it.
Year
d. 3)
C
g.
,
h a
m b.
:i
>
)
:i
Murray,
s.
v.
furniture.
93.
Sattler, E.
S., X.
CONCORD.
ii.
297
The poultry are yours and will send them for you. Marryat. l ) There are hardly any poultry now. Hardy, f ess, VI, Ch. LI, 460. The poultry are being fed. Onions Advanced Eng. Synt.
I
, ,
18.
soldiery.
IV, Ch.
II,
The Baron's
163.
all
hours.
Lytton
e n z
1156.
ii.
Some of the best stock has been worth Encycl. s. v. farm. Stock are now doing well. Graph. 1 )
i.
,
Harms-
vermin, i. a vermin
And once
the
like
in its hole.
Ten.,
An
idle
a vermin or a
ii.
in a trap was charged with misdemeanours, and the poor vermin stood much upon her innocence. L'Estrange. i) Next time that you do me the honour to come here, I trust that we shall have cleared all these vermin from my estate. Conan Doyle, Refugees, 337. I never anywhere saw so many of these detestable vermin. Froude Oceana,
,
if
Andrew Lang
Blue
Substantive genitives when denoting a firm govern the plural form of the finite verb of which they are the subject. (Ch. XXIV, 50, Obs. III.)
Inconsistencies are not infrequent; i. e. collective nouns denoting persons are often found construed as singulars in the beginning of the discourse, naturally mostly as to the finite verb depending
II.
on them, while
cially
they are dealt with as plurals, espepersonal pronouns used in referring to them. The change of construction is the natural outcome of the fact that on first observing a body of persons physically or mentally, the speaker or writer is apt to view it as a unit, while he grows
in the sequel
as
to
the
more and more aware of its constituent members as he becomes more closely acquainted with it and proceeds in his discourse. Change of construction in the opposite direction cannot, therebe expected; nor are instances ever brought forward in discussions dealing with this subject. See also the King's English, 69; and especially C. Alphonso Smith, A Note on the Concord of Collectives and Indefinites in
fore,
English (Anglia
are given.
many
instances
to
"They mean this night in Sardis Cees. IV, 2, 27. A fearful army, led by Caius Marcius Associated with Aufidius, rages Upon our territories; and have already O'erborne their way.
army.
"Comes
his
army on?"
,
be quartered."
Jul.
Cor.,
i)
IV, 6, 75.
Sattler, E.
S., XII.
298
board.
before
I
CHAPTER XXVI,
11.
drive
Our board meets on Saturday, and never fear I'll account you down. Thack., Sam. Titm. Ch. II, 18.
,
for
it
to
them
class.
his
of emigrants
to recognise
supremacy.
Mac, Hist.,
;'/
II,
Ch. V,
106-
clique.
Supplehouse belongs
Trol.
,
to a clique
does.
which monopolizes the wisdom of England, But the worst of them is that they are given to
Framley
,
Pars., Ch.
Ill,
28.
at
Our club however has frequently caught him tripping, club. never spare him. Addison, Spect. No. 105.
crowd.
There was a crowd of people of all sorts outside the tenement house when Glory returned to Brown's Square, and even the stairs were thronged with them. Hall Caine, The Christian, IV, Ch. XV, 281. (See 18, b.)
family.
in
,
their
little
for
their relatives.
My
"em.
family
lb.,
have
faithful friends
round about
Government.
the
Hence the astonishing absence of any strong popular feeling against Government, which has expelled the religious Orders ... The Goverment believe that so long as they are not driven to shut up the churches or to imprison the clergy, they may do as they please. Rev. of Rev., CCVI, 1266.
understand what it is should like to ask them Are is: do they intend that the Queen shall have a government, or do they not? they prepared to support such men as Sidonia and Lord De Terrier? If so, I am their obedient humble servant; but shall be very much surprised, that's all. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XXIII, 217.
House.
about;
The
fact is
that the
in the least
I
doesn't
know what
it
The
question
nation.
in
whom
groaned.
pair.
I,
daily more enraged at the presence of a man beheld the incarnation of the religious oppression under which they Motley, Rise, II, Ch. IV, 2036.
that
Goldsm.
She Stoops,
(169).
party.
table;
in
all
in
nearly every house a bright fire was burning and tea was ready on the some a happy family party was just sitting down to their evening meal; there was an air of comfort and rest. O. F. Walton, A Peep behind
the scenes, Mother Mannikin's Chairs, Ch. XX. The Liberal Party is in difficult slraits. They are pledged' to social reforms which they cannot carry through without money. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 119a.
people.
Blessed
in the light of thy
the people that know the joyful sound: they shall walk, oLord, countenance. Psalm LXXXIX, 15. Aid all this foolish people; let them take Example, pattern: Lord,
is
1
Ten., St.
Simeon
Stylites,
219.
public.
will
The general public has an even more intimate interest, for it is they who be the principal sufferers. Rev. of Rev., CCXIV, 3326 That is not what the public is concerned to know. What the public want to know,
and what alone they want
to
know,
is
how
the
disaster
came
about.
T.
P. 's
Weekly,
society. Society finds no more enjoyable way of spending a vacation than drinking unpalatable waters and mingling with their fellows. E n g. Rev., Aug., 1912.
vermin.
And
Ten.,
Mar. of Ger.,
517.
CONCORD.
299
Also in the following quotation the language is inconsistent: Not one fourth of provincial tradesmen or farmers ever take stock; nor, in fact, does one half of them ever keep account-books deserving the name.
Bain, H. E. Gr., 302.
12.
plural in form, are more or less distinctly denote singular ideas, are sometimes, especially in colloquial language, construed as singulars; i. e. a) they may have the finite verb of which they are the subject
felt
in the singular;
b) they
c)
they
d) they
It
may have their adnominal modifiers placed may be referred to by singular pronouns; may be preceded by the indefinite afticle.
pecularities
at
in
the singular;
all
these
in
e.
it
may
one respect and as a plural in another. Again we sometimes find that the singular construction is more or less regular, sometimes it seems to be used almost indifferently with the plural, sometimes it is only exceptionnally met with, and sometimes, especially in the case of foreign plurals, it is due to
misapprehension.
to
draw
reliable
practice.
many cases the available evidence is not sufffcient conclusions from as to the generally prevailing For details see also Storm, Eng. Phil. 2 686; Matzn.,
In
,
Eng. Gram.-,
13.
Ill,
189;
271.
the plural nouns that, as far as the evidence given in the preceding chapter goes, are construed wholly or partially as
Among
singulars,
a) the following have or may have the finite verb of which they are the subject in the singular: alms (12), Alps (19, /), amends
(19,7),
bellows
(19,
a),
Commons
hards
(19, g),
(
damages
(20),
gardens
head-quarters (20), innings (19, /), lees (19,, e), marbles (20), matins (19, j), measles (19, c), news (19, g), odds (19, g), pains (20), scissors (19, a), tidings (19, g), United States
(19,
/),
some nouns
in ics.
b) the following have or may have the demonstrative pronouns in the singular: first-fruits (20), news (19, g), pains (20),
shanks (19,
singular:
j),
in
c) the following
indefinite
numerals
in the
means
pains (20),
tidings
wages 19,
d) the following are or may be referred to by singular pronouns: bellows (19, a), Commons (19), contents (20), marbles (20),
news
(19, g),
United States
(19,
i),
300
e)
may be preceded by
(19, j), Alps(\9,i), assizes (20), barracks (19, j), bellows (19, a), betters (19, h), colours (20), diggings
(12),
-
alms
amends
goods
(19,
/z),
/zeaaf-
quarters (20), hustings (20), innings (19, /), j(o)usts (19, y), /YnArs (20), /neas (20), measles (19, c), /news (20), ruins (20), scales (20), scissors (19, a), sessions (20), shambles (20),
stables
f/za/zA:s
(19),
sfa/rs
(20),
srores
(20),
/n/fetf
Additional instances:
It's
hardly the thing for a lady to visit a chambers at that hour of the night.
Fergus Hume,
volunteered 26 Feb.
P.
I
74.
pull
it
out with
a smith's pincers.
Sat.
Rev., 1902,
Garden of Allah, II, 226. got a shears. Hichens With a tweezers we got the intruder out. Conan Doyle, Hark.
,
Munro
Letters,
148.
Some
foreign
plurals
are
chiefly in a collective sense. (Ch. XXV, 19, h.) in this singular meaning only through ignorance
*.
agenda, *antipodes, *arcana, *effluvia, errata, *insignia, memoranda, paraphernalia , propaganda , *regalia.
14.
It
will not
seem strange
is
a)
when the subject is the name of a measure modified by a numeral larger than one, and the thing measured is thought of as singular. Bain (H. E. Gr., 302) compares: Nine tenths of the misery and vice of mankind proceeds from idleness
with Nine tenths of the miseries and vices of mankind proceed from idleness (Carlyle, Life of Schiller, II, 68).
i.
Three parts
Forty Yards
of
is
him
a
Is
ours already.
Jul.
Caes.
,
I,
3, 155.
Two
thirds
of
good distance. Sher., Riv. V, 3, (388). my income goes in paying the interest of mortgages.
Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXI, 283. Nine-tenths of every man's happiness depends upon his reception among his fellows in society. Carlyle, Life of Schiller, 11,68. With thee a thousand years is as one day. lb., 284. I believe it is by persons believing themselves in the right that nine-tenths of the tyranny of this world has been perpetrated. Thack., The Four
Georges,
Five
III,
77.
ii.
a deal of money to a man with a family. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIII, 245. The apparent increase is 43.645.085. But of this 30.046.000 was arrears from 190910. Westm. Gaz., No. 5507, lc. Two-thirds of the works have now been completed. Graph.
pounds
is
CONCORD.
In
301
the
to the meaning.
in the States.
1.
It seems rational to say twice two is four, etc., not two are four, etc.; four farthings makes a penny, etc.,' not four farthings make a penny, etc. The ordinary practice, however, is to use the plural form of the verb. Mas., E n g. 482: Bain, H. E. Gr., 305, N. Gram. 34, * Three times one are three. Annie Besant, Autob. 145. Three times 6 are 18, Pussy, that is very mean. Books for the
Note.
twice
i.
Bairns,
XVIII.
Arithmetic,
,
66.
Twice two
is four.
Mason
En
is
g.
G r a m. 34
proper
every
482.
b)
when
house,
plural
subject
the
name
moment.
of
book,
,
etc.
me down
is
Goldsm.
She
E
n
g.
Stoops,
I.
work
of great interest.
Mason
Gram. 34,
482.
'The Pleasures of Memory' was published in 1792. Bain, H. E. Gr., 302. 'The Jolly Beggars' was written in the year 1785. Note to this Poem. 'Poems by Two Brothers' was published with the date 1827. Andrew Lang,
Tennyson,
Note.
6.
Sometimes the particular nature of the subject-matter occasions the plural number. In 1842 were commenced 'The Confessions of George Fitz-Boodle', which
Thack. Ch. II, 67. were continued into 1843. Trol. 'The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon' are very pleasant to read. lb,, Ch. II, 72. 'Gulliver's Travels' ... were published in two parts or volumes. The Works 110 (William of the Rev. Jon. Swift, In trod, to Qui, Trav.
,
, ,
P.
Nimmo).
c)
when
a plural subject
are, others.
|
is
meant
to
father
teaches them
161.
Moneys
Ail
your
is
suit,
lb., I, 3, 120.
of the Shrew, IV, 1. (All things is evidently understood as equivalent to everything.) Two dead languages is too much to impose upon the generality of students.
things
ready.
Taming
Bain, Comp., 283. No landlord is my friend and brother, no chambermaid loves me, no waiter worships me no boots adm'ires and envies me. Dick. Uncom. Trav., Ch. I, 11.
, ,
15. Instead
of
these or those
we
,
when the idea to be expressed is thought of as a singular rather than a plural: i. e. when it is understood in a collective sense. The practice is especially common
numeral
name
of
measure
302
in
Stud.
Gram.'2
Bain, H. E. Gr. 309; Franz, Eng. language. and XVII; Id., Shak. Gram. 2 316; Matzn., Eng. 111,257; Ellinger, Verm. Beit., 15; id., E. S., XXXI.
,
There's that ten guineas you were sending to the poor gentleman. Goldsm. Good-nat. man, L I haven't seen her this two hours. G. Eliot Mill, I Ch. V 30. I am sick of this And so am and have been any time this two years. It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. 1 Ch. Reade 19. suppose you will be going over to help him in his canvassing this next few weeks. Mrs. Ward Marc, 1 223. Your wife has been waiting this two years for you. Con. Doyle, Sherl.
,
, , , I . .
.
Holm.,
The
I,
232.
lapse
of
street trading
a year between the age of leaving school and the possibility of for the lads. In that twelve months their parents
putting
them
,
to
them promise
Westm. Gaz.
Regularly
many a day,
,
|
year, etc.
honour for this many a day? Haml. III, 1, 91. for you This many a year have done despite and wrong To one whom ever did acknowledge nobler. Ten., Lane, and El., 1205. in my heart of hearts
How
I
does
.your
16. a)
The
to
is
singulars
of.
plural
much and little (less, least) may modify or refer nouns when it is rather quantity than number that
thought
Just. Did you perceive anything in my chocolate cup. .? Ser. Nothing,... unless it was a little grounds. Sher., St. Patr. Day, 11,4.
So much victuals had been cooked at once as were necessary to feed all the mouths which were clamouring around her. Scott, Pirate, Ch. XII, 130. A silly, ill-bred, conceited fool with as little manners as wit in his empty coxcomb. lb., Ch. XII, 141. The old fogies, as you call them, at Bays's, are some of the first gentlemen in Europe, of whom you youngsters had best learn a little manners. Thack.,
. . .
Pend.,
II,
in his life drunk so much spirits-and-water. lb. Ch. V, 63. Much solitary pipes and ale make a cynic of you. lb., I, Ch. XXXII, 349. Too much of such comforts will unfit them for their home. Trol., Framl.
I ,
350.
Too little is better than too much of these details. Alfred Noyes, William Morris, Pref. Note. Much vegetables and potatoes. Our German Cousins (Daily Mail) There had once been a great trouble about him. That was a good many
years ago
Jane Oglander,
b)
Mrs. Belloc
Lowndes
Much
plurals
cattle,
is
repeatedly
collective
and
etc.;
s.
found in Early Modern English before nouns of the second kind, such as people,
Murray,
And
I
v.
will say to
my
much goods
Id.,
laid
up
2.
for
many
years.
Bible, Luke,
Cornelius gave
XII, 19.
to the people.
much alms
Acts, X,
CONCORD.
After
303-
dinner walked to
my
much
other guests
at table at dinner.
Pepys,
Diary,
1664, 17 July.
cattle.
their
sixscore
not I spare Nineveh, that great city wherein are more than thousand persons that cannot discern between their right hand and left; and also much cattle. Bible, Jonah, IV, 11.
And should
They taught much people. Bible, Acts, XI, 26. And much people followed him. Id., Mark, V, 24. They destroyed much people of Israel. Id., Maccabees, A,
people.
I,
30.
Thus
also
archaically
in:
|
nameless
city in
changing walls of faerie Thronged with much W. Morris Earthly Paradise, Prol. , 3a.
,
youth.
to Sicily
Let us
know
If
'twill tie
much
tall
youth
That
else
up thy discontented sword, And carry back must perish there. Ant. and Cleop., II, 6, 7.
|
c)
Less
is
sometimes met with even when the plural expresses an According to MURRAY (s. v. less,.
A,
I,
1, c)
latest
now
Late
regarded as incorrect.
His
Modern English
London.
instances,
uncommon.
W. Morris,
News
Is-
from Nowhere,
The
Roman
of
The Coasts
less
8.
face
showed
Diamond
kills
traces of fatigue than did the girlish features. cut Paste, III, Ch. IX, 306. less people than you do. Bern. Shaw,
The
Doctor's Dilemma,
you
can't get
more
Eng. Rev.,
of
combi-
do not care about more or less blows of a cane. Ch. VI, 92.
Barry Lyndon,
d)
may
odds against him than this. Cowley, The Dangers in much Company, 149. (He told) the Jury that, if they acquitted this prisoner, they must expect to suffer no less pangs and agonies than he had told the other Jury they would certainly undergo, if they convicted that prisoner. Dick., Old Cur. Shop, Ch LXIII, 2306. am heartily thankful that my temptations are less, having quite enough to do Ch. XLI, 427. with those of the present century. Thack., Virg. He would very likely have followed in the steps of his father and grandfather
He
will
find
no
less
of an
Honest Man
with
less
means
at
his
theirs.
Norris,
losses
My Friend
Jim,
Ch. XII,
8-.
The
which we have suffered are numerically less than a couple of shells judiciously planted might be expected to cause in a European war.
Times. No doubt
Gaz.
,
the
receipts
\c.
in
less
than normal.
Westm.
No. 5507,
304
e)
Quite
common
in
the
No
He
tions.
than three pupils of her father had trifled with those young affecPend., I, Ch. VIII, 87. was followed by no less than ... three persons. Mis Burnett, Little
less
Thack.,
Lord Fauntleroy,
How many
263.
One
less than a
woman.
Lon
d.
Edna Lyall,
Donovan
No
There
ships
is
I,
138.
manufactured
daily.
II.
News.
Compare with the above the following quotations, in which the grammatically correct fewer is used: i. The fewer people and the more air the better. Mrs. Ward, Rob.
Elsm.,
ii.
I,
247.
East End, however, in the whole of the Tower Hamlets the occupation voters are fewer in number than the inhabited houses. Westm.
In
the
z.
No. 5501
3c.
The
iiL
failures
recorded
The
the book.
No
In
reader gets no fewer than 28 distinct poems in the 176 pages of Lit. World. fewer than 400 (sc. peers) attended fewer than ten times. Rev. of
161a.
is
Rev., CCVI,
the
course of his journeyings the President fewer than seventy-five set speeches. Times.
expected to deliver no
17.
The
indefinite article
may
also be
met with:
a) before
a word-group, consisting of a numeral and a plural noun, denoting a certain unit, especially when this word-group is preceded by an adjective, or by second, other or any equi2 valent modifier. Matzn. Eng. Gram. Ill, 189; Ellinger,
, ,
iL
three months man and wife when that man [etc.]G.Meredith. Ord. of Rich. Fev., Ch. XXVIII, 225. Since that time twelve months have passed, but what a twelve monthsRev, of Rev., CCII 373a. What was Tom Claypool with ... his heirdom to a poor five thousand acres, compared to this young American prince and charming stranger? Thack., Virg., Ch. XLV, 467. He turned out 50.000 lines in a single four years. Lit. World.
,
. . .
Eng. Rev.,
Hi.
one
year.
But
this
W.
H. Dfxon
Life of
Sarah
1).
A.
The Queen
156.
(L. v. d.
Wal,
London Pictures,
i)
CONCORD.
It
305
Eva Anstruther
is
well
(W e s
m.
Gaz., No. 4972, 9a). The movement is dead and buried, and will not be resurrected for another twenty years. Rev. of Rev., CCX 572a. May 6 was the last day for the denunciation of the treaty of alliance between Germany, Austria and Italy, the arrangement being automatically renewable for
,
a further
six years
notice of an intention to
denounce
it.
Times.
Compare with
group
is
the
to
referred
above the following quotation where the wordby one, which shows that it is understood as a
first six
t
singular:
We
months
by no means sure that when history comes to be written the not rank as one of the most important of our time. Gaz., No. 5371, lb.
are
,
will
Wes
m.
Note
I.
In
twelvemonth, fortnight
(= fourteen night) sennight or night) the word-group has become a compound. is the word-group instanced in:
a three week. Mrs. Gask.,
She... died
II.
in less than
Mary Barton,
Ch. X, 117.
numeral
remove
s.
practice of placing the indefinite article before its definiteness or to express an approximate
estimate
(Murray,
not
I,
v.
a, 2),
survives
it
when
is
still
common.
,
have
Ben Jons.
Every Man
IX, 28.
in his
Hum.,
these sayings.
in here for a
Bible, Luke,
ii.
drop of liquor since she went, except a fen days ago. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIV, 1196. Each bar (sc. of silver was) between a thirty and forty pound weight. lb., Ch. 1, 2a. He came to me, a good six years ago, and robbed me. Thack. Pen d. , II, Ch. XXXVIII, 408. The vessel was now a good ten miles to the eastward. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 140a. I'll be bound her waist's a good five-and-twenty inches. EdnaLyall, Hardy Norsem., Ch. XIII, 109. It was a good four miles of a walk. Con. Doyle, Rodney Stone, I, Ch. HI, 66. There is a good two inches of water in the boat. Jerome Three men in a boat, Ch. II, 18.
,
b)
in colloquial or jocular language before certain plural nouns denoting the things with which a person is chiefly occupied professionally.
Ch. XVI, 137. worn't always a boots. Dick., Pickw. Don't you know what a Sawbones is? lb., Ch. XXX, 266.
I
,
He engaged a
buttons.
1908,201.
,
Note.
i.
of the genitive.
ii.
There's a couple o' Sawbones downstairs. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXX, 266. lb., Ch. XVI, 139 I could worm ev'ry secret out o' the boots's heart in five minutes.
i)
MStzn., Eng.
Gram.*,
III,
189.
II.
H.
20
306
c)
certain word-groups consisting of an adjective and a noun, containing some humorous allusion to a person's
disposition.
You
He's a sly old boots. Thack. ) are an old, old Grave-airs. Id., Henry I am afraid she is a lazy-boots. Mrs. Alex., For his
i
Esmond,
Sake,
III, I,
of
light-skirts.
Henley,
Burns,
285.
Of the Dutch practice of using the indefinite article before a plural after exclamatory wat (we Ik) and zulk (zoo), as in wat een menschen, zulk een (zoo'n) menschen, there is no analogue in English. Compare the following quotations:
i.
Note.
ghastly glare of a
shapes and shadows beset his path amidst the dim and snowy light! Wash. Irv., S k e t c h - B k. XXXII, 349. What myriads of women have cried over it (sc. the teapot), to be sure! What sick-beds it has smoked by! What fevered lips have received refreshment from out of it! Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXII, 347.
fearful
,
What
ii.
The rain descended in such torrents as absolutely to spatter up and smoke along the ground. Wash. Irv., The Storm -Ship (Stof.,
Handl.,
18. In
II,
83).
some cases
the grammatical
anomaly seems
to
go counter to
When the subject together with (an)other (pro)noun(s) stands before the predicate, the latter is often, by attraction (Ch. XXXII, 4), made to agree with the nearest (pro)noun instead
of the real subject (19, a). This construction is especially met with in the older writers, but is by no means muncomon in Present English, especially in the language of the uneducated. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 117; Bain, H. E. Gr., 300; The King's 412; HODGSON, English, 66; ABBOT, Shak. Gram.*,
Errors 8
i.
III,
132;
Onions,
Advanced Eng.
|
Synt.,
17.
The posture of your blows are yet unknown. Jul. Cass., V, 1, 33. Giving you no further personal power To business with the king more than the scope Of these delated articles allow. Hamlet, I, 2, 38. The amount of that woman's charities are unheard of. Thack., Newc,
|
I,
Ch. V, 55.
**
Every one
of
II,
5, 153.
Not one
them know
-')
windows, or chimnies.
BlCKERSTAFF.
. . .
F.
W. Farrar,
occur to break the blank grey monotony St. Winifred's, Ch. XXI, 237.3)
of a jealous
woman
mad
R.
dog's tooth.
Com.
of Errors, V,
70.
All
J.
special
rights of
voting
in the election of
members was
abolished.
Green. 4)
i)
:i
Hoppe,
MStzn., Eng.
)
Gram.*,
11,148.
67.
CONCORD.
In
307
the
following
the plea of nearness of the governing noun: Pray what are become of the books ? Sher. School for Scand.,
,
Ill,
Note
I.
Quite
common
is this
Present English, when the subject is the singular distributive (n)either followed by a plural (pro)noun. Einenkel, Anglia, XXVII, 67;
8 Hodgson, Errors
i.
,
155;
The King's
Eng.,
69.
ii.
Neither of the sisters were very much deceived. Thack. i) Neither of them are remarkable for precision. Blair. 2) Either of them are enough to drive any man to distraction.
Fielding,
Tom
Trol.,
Jones,
Have
I
you
that
made an
I
offer to
your sister?
Framl. Pars.,
don't
mean
that
writers
name are
119.3)
in their
own
views.
Ruskin,
Val d'Arno,
Compare with
tion in:
In all the
the
made
jokes.
Saki
(We s tin.
Gaz., No.
Neither of us has any right to lock up the other on any principle conceivable outside chaos. Chesterton (II. Lond. News, No. 3816, 869c).
II.
is
matically
singular
when
the use of the plural instead of the gramthe subject is either kind or sort
by of + plural noun. The mistake is no doubt in a large measure due also to the subservient nature of the nouns kind or sort
followed
as
compared with the following noun. Sweet, Spoken Eng., 35; 2 Kellner, Hist. Outl. of Eng. Synt., 12; STORM, Eng. Phil. 701; Murray, s. v. kind, 14, b. Compare also c. There are a sort of men, whose visages Do cream and mantle like a standing 1 88. pond. Merch. of V e n. What kind of trees are those? Murray.
-,
|
with
the
credulous multitude.
T.
stands after the (finite verb of the) predicate, the latter in the singular, although the former
especially frequent,
is
plural.
is
Where)
(was), and
English. Compare the French il y a. In Present English it is considered more or less vulgar or dialectal. Abbot, Shak. Gram.' , 2 8 335; Franz, Shak. Gram. 672; Hodgson, Errors , III, 142; Lohman, Anglia, III, 137; A. Schmidt, Shak. Lexic, I,
,
82;
s.
Matzn., Eng.
A,
I,
Gram. 2
II,
151.
Compare
3, 146.
also
Murray,
v. be,
3.
Macb.,
II,
*)
"*)
Gram.2,
Murray.
11,149.
308
CHAPTER XXVI,
18.
e r c h. of Ven. , IV, 1 84. For thy three thousand ducats here is six. There's the two Miss Hoggs. Goldsm. She stoops to conquer. Where's her traps? Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVI, 171. There was in his countenance none of those winning looks which often told so powerfully with his young friends. Trol. Framl.Pars., Ch. XXVII, 264. There's things you might repent of. G. Eliot, Mid., Ill, Ch. XXXII, 226. At his aunt Pullet's there was a great many toads to pelt in the cellar-area. Id., Mill, I, Ch. VII, 51. I told him there wasn't many months in the year as I wasn't under the
, , ,
doctor's hands.
lb., 50.
first shift.
Mrs.
Ward, Sir
George Tressady,
You wicked
I,
III,
Ch.
I,
14a.
2)
placed
Analogously other intransitive verbs are sometimes ungrammatically in the singular when preceded by weak there. There lies two kinsmen digg'd their graves. Rich. II, HI, 3, 169. There comes an old man and his three sons. As you like it, I, 2, 105.
rarer
is
3)
Much
this
is
no weak
there, as in:
Just before us lies a couple of Lions in the way. Bunyan, Pilg. Progr., 173. To-morrow ends thine earthly ills. Byron, Manfr. , II, 3.
4)
Postposition of the subject may also be responsible for the anomaly in: That spirit upon whose weal depends and rests The lives of many. Haml.,
|
Ill,
3, 14.
|
At this hour Lies at my mercy all mine enemies. Temp., IV, 1, 259. Upon the next session of Parliament hangs the destinies of Liberalism for many a year to come. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 218a.
5)
following quotations the ungrammatical singular seems to be due to the interrogative what being mistaken for the subject: What cares these roarers for the name of King? Temp., I, 1, 77. What is your tidings? Macb. I, .5, 31. What means these dreadful words and frantic air? G. Lillo, Fatal Curiosity, HI, 2, (3106). But what matters a few failings? Thack., P e n d. XLVI.
In the
,
,
c)
In adnominal clauses the verb is often placed in the singular although the antecedent is plural, when the latter is preceded by the numeral one The mistake is apparently due partitive of. to one being erroneously taken for the antecedent. Stof. Es., XXVII, 253; Holthausen, E. S., XXXV, 186; HODGSON, Er-
rors 8 144; HORN, Herrig's Archiv, 65/j. Onions, Advanced Eng. Synt.,
,
2;
This
This
is
one
J.
published.
Culloch,
163. i)
is one of the pleasantest books about Russia that has appeared since the publication of Mr Sutherland Edward's delightful 'Russians at Home'. Spectator, 1871, 3 June, 671.
')
Hodgson, Errors 8
145.
CONCORD.
is the epoch of one of the most singular among men. Hume, i) resemble one of those animals that has been human curiosity. Goldsmith. ')
309
discoveries that has been
This
I
made
forced from
its
forest to gratify
the grammatically correct: at the time of which am speaking, was one of those highly-favoured places which abound with chronicle and great men. Wash. Irv., S k e t c h - B k. XXXII 364. This is one of the few good books that have been written. Onions, Advanced
Compare
The neighbourhood,
,
Eng. Synt.,
d)
626.
is
in the singular
when
its
subject
a part in the more extreme developments of the work has since been conspicuous on the rationalistic side of more recent discoveries. Oakeley, Hist. Notes Tract. Novement, 103. a )
e)
In
the
is
vulgar
is
language
the
tense
If
The terms
/
agreed upon. Dick., Pickw. , Ch. XII, 103. the clothes fits me half as well as the place, they'll do.
it
takes
lb.,
/ spells
it
my name)
with a 'V.
lb.,
The Papers
is full of
observations.
Id.,
Chimes*,
13.
/) The subservient nature of kind or sort, as compared with that of the following noun causes the plural of the demonstrative pronouns to be used instead of the grammatically correct singular in such word-groups as these (those) kind (sort) of apples. The practice 316, may be traced to quite early times. Franz, Shak. Gram. 2
,
Anm.
2;
Hodgson, Errors 8
36.
I
156;
Onions,
Advanced Eng.
Synt.,
I
These kind of knaves know. Lear, II, 2, 107. leave these kind of things entirely to them. Goldsm., She Stoops, II, (184)It would surprise you to hear how ready he is at all these sort of things. Sher.'
I,
1, (369).
girls.
know many
don't
like
of those sort
these
35.
Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XVI, 154. kind of apples so well as those we had yesterday. Sweet
of
Spok. Eng.,
teas'.
Marie Corelli
Murder
of Delicia,
sort (or kind)
Thus
of
also
there
is
often discrepancy in
number when
plural noun is the nominal part of the predicate strative pronoun is the subject.
the use of
which ought
to
Framl. Pars.,
Conversely thing or person is kept in the singular in the colloquial collocations this sort (kind) of thing (person).
Bain, H. E. Gr.
308.
*)
Murray,
s.
v.
more, B,
3.
310
If
The
g) There
also
seems
to be an
anomaly
in
singular
instead
of
the
plural
of
-f-
plural
all
may be understood
in
the sense of any. The whole phrase is, evidently, apprehended as expressing but one idea, so that the individual meaning of
manner
When
a
is
disregarded.
o adopt
19. a)
manner of
has been kept too long in opposition, it is inclined wild-cat theories. Rev. of Rev., CCVIII, 341a.
Owing
person
either
chiefly to the want of a singular pronoun of the third of the common gender, i. e. one that may indicate
a male or a female person (33), the plural pronoun of is often used in referring to:
the indefinite pronouns anybody (-one), each (-one), everybody (-one), nobody (-one), many a one, the interrogative pronoun who, and the numeral one.
2) a
noun
of
an inde-
finite modifier,
3)
of a different gender connected by or. Gr. 2 310; Ten. Brug., Taalst:, IX; C. Alphonso Smith, Anglia, XXIII, 242 foil; Hodgson,
,
Errors 8 152, H. WiLLERT, Anmerk. zur Eng. Gram. * How can anybody be happy while they're in perpetual fear of being seen and censured. Congreve, Love for Love, 11,2,(281). Do not you remember how any one ca'n ever tear themselves away from the country? Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. II, 16.
,
i.
worth while to be crushed by any one who can give so much ground for their knowledge. lb. 1 162. Anybody could sing, if they were taught. W. Besant, All Sorts
It
is
and Cond.
**
to
of
Men.
G. Eliot,
He was one
work
of those precious
for them.
men whom everybody would choose Mid., II, Ch. XXII, 165.
His niece looked just the same. So did heartier. Topper when he came. So did the plump sister, when she came. So did every one when they came. Dick., Chris tm. Car. 3 V, 109. *** Nobody prevents you, do they? Thack., P e n d. II, Ch. II, 19. Nobody mistook their pew for their fourposter during the sermon. Ch. Reade It is never too late to mend,. Ch. VII 83.
Nothing could be
has been comforted in their sorrow by seeing a good dish upon the table. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIV, 256. ***** Who is without their drawback, their scourge, their skeleton behind the curtain? Id., Life of Ch. Bronte, 261.
****
Many a one
****** There
in
is
when
they marry.
Jane Austen,
CONCORD.
ii.
311
* The winds play about his house in so riotous a manner must poise themselves in a very exact manner to maintain
Eliz.
that
a person
their ground.
Montagu
Letters (Westm. G a z.
it
Whenever
Trol.,
Framl. Pars.,
love,
As
for
themselves,
and
II,
what
48.
.
Ch. XLI, 397. very life-blood. Fill a person with love for runs over will be your share. Jerome, Idle
Thoughts,
creation
**
is to
how
full
a child, how
little
they
of gladness and beauty and wonder all know of fear or anxiety [etc.]. Sweet,
Old Chapel.
If
rental
either party fix their attachment upon the substantial comforts of a or a jointure, they cannot be disappointed in the acquisition.
l
Scott.
***
in
a thousand
ever
does
tell
Jerome
or
in
Idle
Thoughts,
IV, 59.
When
keep
a
it
man
green
woman
their
loves to brood over a sorrow, and takes care to sure it is no longer a pain
to them.
Go
out into
the
street,
if
man
or
and
107. Roorda, Dutch and Eng. Compared, Let him or her join themselves unto me and work with me end. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 225.
Note
plural
is in
question,
the
Both these men's eyes followed George into the house, and each had a strong inclination they were bent on concealing. Ch. Reade, It is never' too late to mend, I, Ch. II, 34. For any white man to marry out of their own colour is to commit social
suicide.
II.
Daily Mail.
is
Even everything
to
by a plural
pronoun.
The
fire irons shone like silver and everything in the room was as neat and clean and bright as it was expected for them to be. O. F. Walton,
Ch. XVIII. Everything appeared to have gone wrong with him since Nina left; and the worst of it was that he was gradually ceasing to care how they went, Prince Fortunatus.Ch. XX. The right or wrong. W. Black
,
New
b) In order to avoid this discrepancy, precise speakers often prefer to use the singular pronouns of the masculine and feminine gender in succession. In the case of every, each or either the
difficulty
may be met by
Everybody called for his or her favourite remedy. wise: All called for their favourite remedies.)
H.
E.
r.
(Other-
his or herself to
312
CHAPTER XXVI,
19.
Tnis practice, which is mostly felt as unbearably pedantic, is sometimes justified by the circumstances of the situation described, or used
for
humorous
effect.
Mr.
and Mrs. Fezziwig took their stations, one on either side the door, and shaking hands with every person individually as he or she went out, wished him or her a Merry Christmas. Dick., Christm. Car. 5 11,47. The penny fare enables every one, even the poorest working man and woman, to drive to his or her destination. Gunth., Leerb. 74. To push on in the crowd, every male or female struggler must use his or her shoulders. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. VIII, 86.
,
,
c)
Sometimes there
The
institution
is
property reduced to its essential elements, consists in the each person, of a right to the exclusive disposal of what he or she has produced by their own exertions. J. S. Mill.
of
recognition,
in
d)
As the
subject,
finite
verb
the
is
now
in
when any
of
we
Everybody has their failing, and everybody has a right to do what they like with their own money. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. XVI, 126. Ch. Kinqsley, Every one was eating their best and drinking their worst.
Wes
is
Just because a
at
If
it
Ho!, Ch. XXII 99a. woman is on the stage, everybody thinks they may throw stones her. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., 1,292. anybody knows what am going to tell, they are not to say one word until
t
w.
over.
Mrs. Ewings,
calls
,
A Hero,
I
84.
If
any one
36.
tell
them
will
be back
in half
an hour.
Sweet
Spo
k.
Eng.,
have the
Shakespeare and other Early Modern English writers sometimes 3 12. finite verb in the plural. Abbot, Shak. Gram.
,
| |
Now
leaden slumber with life's strength doth fight; And every one to rest themselves betake, Save thieves, and cares, and troubled minds, that wake.
The Rape
of
Lucrece,
|
125.
.
That
in the natures of
Lear,
II,
2,81.
in later
to
be due to
attraction, a plural noun, forming part of an adnominal modifier of the subject, intervening between the latter and the finite verb.
Every one of our unknowing actors and actresses were to be implicated more or less, in the catastrophe. Thack., Catherine, 66a. 1 ) How could he help taking his part in maintaining undivided that fair realm of America, which every one of his countrymen love as Queen Elizabeth's yeomen loved the realm of England. Besant and Rice, Golden Butterfly, 162. *) It is true that not one of the bright particular stars of Polish history were of that line or age Saturday Rev., 1865, 19 July, 242.2) And so each of his portraits are not only 'a piece of history', but [etc]. Stevenson. 3 )
,
Thus
II,
in
my
name.
Twelfth Night,
5, 154.
i)
H. Willert,
Anm.,
17.
2)
Hodgson, Errors",
152.
3)
The King's
Eng.,
68.
CONCORDS.
313
Even every thing may be found with a plural predicate. swear by all the Roman gods, Sith priest and holy water are And here And tapers burn so bright and every thing In readiness for so near, will not re-salute the streets of Rome, Or climb my Hymenaeus stand,
I
|
|
palace,
till
from forth
this place
I,
lead espoused
my
Titus Adronicus,
1,
325.
e)
Compare with this the construction in the following quotation, where the plural is used after all (= everything) + relative that. No sympathy, no kindness ... but all that irritate and offend. Ch. Lever, A Day's Ride, I, 86. i) Very rarely do we find compounds of body (one) coupled with a plural noun as nominal part of the predicate.
The unaccustomed
to
visitor
,
be prisoners.
Dick.
Little D o
Ch.
VIII
45a.
/) Compare with the quotations under a e above the following with the regular grammatical construction: Who can be angry at those assiduities which are meant to please him?
Goldsmith, She Stoops, 11,(186). England expects every man to do his duty. Southey, Life of Nelson. He did not know the stories that were told of him. Who knows the stories that are told of him ? Thack., Virg., Ch. XXVIII, 290. It seems natural that every mother should nurse her own child. Bain,
H. E. Gr.
20.
The concord of none requires some special discussion. (Ch. XL, 135 ff.) Though the descendant of the Old English nan (= ne an), corresponding to Modern English not one, and consequently
decidedly singular in import, none is mostly construed as a plural. a) When used absolutely, in which case it is felt as equivalent to either not one or not any, the singular construction is not uncommon,
although less
i.
common
None of my nephews deserves to receive any benefits at your hands. Walt. Besant, All Sorts and Cond. of Men, Ch. XXXIII, 229. None of the survivors puts the time at more than 15 minutes. Times.
It
is probable that none of the parties to the arrangement has reached such a pitch of blameless perfection as to be entitled to throw stones at
the others.
ii.
I
lb.
is
must confess he
Bleak House,
None
I
not without faults, love. Ch. XXX, 254. of us in the house have liked her.
of
None
Thack,
of us are.
Dick.,
I,
Van. Fair,
Ch.
II,
hope none
Id.,
Sam. Titm.,
may
17.
None,
Daily Chronicle.
in
When
used
substantively,
it
which case
it
is
almost exclusively
a plural.
used of persons,
is
singular construction is, older writers, after here and there. (18, b.) singular none has given way to nobody , or
!)
The
used as an archaism.
Flugel, Diet.,
s.v. all,
II,
314
i.
There is none but he Whose being do There is none that doeth good no not one.
|
fear.
l t 84.
By midday there was none in the court who had not heard of the tidings. Conan Doyle Refugees. ** None but the brave deserves the fair. Dryden, Alexander's Feast, I. The Chief is young and jealous of his rank none knows the reason better than thou, friend Glover. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXVII, 279. Had not his poor heart Spoken with That which being everywhere Lets none, who speaks with Him, seem all alone, Surely the man had died of solitude. Ten., En. Ard. 615.
,
|
Thus
frequently in proverbs:
None ever gives the lie to him that praiseth him. None goes to the gallows for giving ill counsel. None is so wise, but the fool overtakes him. None knows the weight of another's burden.
ii.
None wed
2, 192.
the
second
(sc.
Haml.,
Ill
None, except his intimate friends, know he has a great deal of wit. tator, II, None are so deaf as those who will not hear. Proverb. None are so blind as those who won't see. Id. None know how they are born. Lytton, C ax tons, I, Ch. II, 9.
Spec-
In many cases the context does not show whether none is felt as a plural or a singular. None of woman born Shall harm Macbeth. Macb., IV, I, 80. He was never known to be subject to that punishment which it is generally thought, none but a cherub can escape. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IX, 87. None can say what effect the triumph of the Revolution might have upon the Social Democrats of Germany. Rev. of Rev., CXCIX, 46.
|
when the subject is compound, the English language in determining the number of the words dependent on it for their form is essentially led by the meaning conveyed, i. e this number
is
the singular
idea.
This
is
the
first
noun
when the compound subject calls forth a singular often symbolized by the fact that the modifiers of are not repeated before the others. Compare:
A A
needle and thread was given her, but she could not sew the button on. needle and a thread were given her, but she could not thread the needle. Bain H. E. G r. 305.
,
,
For a discussion see also Bain, Com p., 285; Onions, Advanced Eng. Synt., 22b. It is in accordance with the above principle that the singular
number
a)
the
Bain
is
used:
the different
when
When
,
members
of a
compound
subject designate
infant.
same person or
H. E.
thing. the duke died, his son and namesake and successor was an
r.
303.
CONCORD.
315
A
the
similar
members
principle of the
compound
sometimes causes the singular to be used when subject are thought of as synonymous
|
terms, or as representing only different aspects of the same idea, i. The sceptre shows the force of temporal power Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings. Merch. of V e n. IV, 1 192. The very head and front of my offending hath this extent. Othello, I, 3, 80.
, ,
of
who
society
the
feudal
Hallam.
!)
I,
3, 84.
b)
when
etc.
of the
nouns making up a compound subject are the names component parts of anything, or of things, actions, qualities, thought of, some way or other as constituents of one whole.
Gram. 3
336.
,
renown and grace is dead. Macb. II, 3, 99. make Ant. Is your gold and silver ewes and rams? Shyl. I cannot tell: it breed as fast. Merch. of Ven. 1,3,97Hill and valley rings. Milton Par Lost, II 495. To recover Silesia to humble the dynasty of Hohenzollern to the dust was the Fred., (683a). great object of Maria Theresa's life. Mac Hodge and Smithers is a most respectable firm. Thack. Sam. T t m.
I
,
,
Ch. VI, 67. The wheel and axle was out of repair. Bain, H. E. Gr., 305. Bread and butter is my usual breakfast. lb. The long and short of the matter is [etc.]. Id., C o m p. 285. The ebb and flow of the tides is now understood. lb.
,
Trial
The composition and resolution of forces was largely applied by Newton. and error is the source of our knowledge. lb.
lb.
is
is
less
Hanging and wiving goes by destiny. Merch. of Ven., II, 9, 83. Thy weal and woe are both of them extremes, Despair and hope makes thee ridiculous. Shak., Ven. and Ad., 988. (Note the varied practice.) The wild swans come to our East Coast when the Cattegat and the neighbouring sea is frozen. Horace Hutchinson, Weather Wisdom of the Birds (We s tin. Gaz. No. 5219, 4c).
|
In
the
:
following
quotations
the
singular
plural
sooner was the doctor out of sight than pestle and mortar were abandoned. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 110). Blue and yellow make green. Mason, Eng. Grarn.^, 336, N.
No
Sometimes one
the
of the
two nouns
is
by
hendiadys
connected* with
other by and, but in reality stands for an adnominal adjunct. In this case also the singular number is sometimes used. Franz, Shak.
Gram. 2
i.
673.
that
renowned them
Runs
in
your veins.
Henry
V,
(= courageous
blood.)
i)
316
ii.
whom
opinion of the great is the opinion of their equals and accident cast for ever in their way. Lytton, H, Ch. HI, 86. (= the accident of birth.)
public
birth
of those
Rienzi,
On the principle designated above (b), it seems more rational to say two and two is (makes) four than two and two are (make) four. The former practice, however, is far less common than the latter. See also Bain, H. E. Gr., 305, N.
When
1
will
a pikestaff?
you acknowledge that two and two make four, and Thack., Snobs, Ch. XVII.
to
I
call a pikestaff
help
men
two make
ten.
five,
assent,
own principles, if they please to say, two and so they will but go on and say, four and four make
,
Browning, Soul's Trag. II. Two and two make four. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, VII, 112. The ordinary matter-of-fact citizen who believes that two and two make naturally takes alarm at this prospect. Rev. of Rev., CCXX, 330a. 30. 8 and 4 make 12. Pendlebury Arithmetic, Two and two are four, and two are six. Eng. Rev., 1912, July, 582.
,
four,
It was as though a distinguished mathematician had inadvertently said that two and two made five and his audience had afterwards accused him of inconsistency e s t m. G a z. No. 5277 2a. when he said they were four.
that,
of unity is symbolized by some word, such as all this (that), gathering up the different items of the com-
pound
is
i.
subject. When the bare all (not followed by the demonstrative) used for this purpose, the plural seems to be the rule,
the leader of the
To be
of
human
to
found
intellectual dynasties a more prosperous and more enduring empire, to be revered by the latest generations as the most illustrions of the benefactors of mankind, all this was within Bacon's reach. Bacon, (372a).
ancient
Mac
To
a story is much harder work than to write it. The author can sit down with the pen in his hand for a given time, and produce a certain number of words. That is comparatively easy, and if he have a conscience
think
of
in regard to his task, work will be done regularly. But to think it over as you lie in bed, or walk about, or sit cosily over your fire, to turn it all in that requires elbow-grease of the mind. your thoughts and make things fit
Troi..
ii.
Thackeray,
Ch. V, 123.
Everything about him, his coat, his wig, his figure, his face, his scrofula, his St. Vitus's dance, etc., etc., all are as familiar to us as the objects by which we have been surrounded from childhood. Mac, Bos well's
Life,
(178a).
His face, his figure, his mode of speech, his habit of thought, all were masculine exceedingly. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 306.
22.
being connected
compound
the case.
a)
seems to be due to the prethought only with that member of the This is especially subject which stands nearest to it.
of the singular
in
when
Bible, Cor., A,
n.
,
Merch. of V e
So doth
I,
1, 57.
|
CONCORD.
Sir, here
317
Gay,
Beggar's
Opera,
Upon
Wash.
b)
when
i.
the
purse
4.2)
My
III,
members of the subject form a climax. my coffer, and myself is thine. Marlowe ,Jew
,
of
Malta,
ii.
23.
referred to in 21
is
the preposition with having the force of and. i. The captain with his men were saved, Bain H. E. G r. 305. The king with his lords and commons constitute our government.
lb., 306.
En
at
at the door.
Onions,
Advanced
,
B.'s crippled baby, with all his many other failures were once forgotten by his patients. Jn. Hollingshead, Ways of Life, 139. ) We get a glimpse of the temperament which is destined to play such havoc when you meet her for the first time, as she, with other boys
:i
,
Poor Mrs.
and
ii.
girls,
T. P.'s
Weekly,
b)
No. 504,
2c.
The empress herself, with her mother Prisca, was condemned. Gibbon. 4 )
when
a singular subject
is
connected by and, so that actually two or more things are meant. Bain, H E. Gr., 176; id., Com p., 304; Hodgson,
Errors 8
III,
136.
the historical analysis of a Bain, H. E. Gr. , 307.
language generally
in
some
Fox,
degree coincide. The material and mental world have their points of union.
W.
J.
Works,
The same
is
III,
280."') faults.
Ornate and grotesque music have common Life of David Gray, 47. 5)
Rob.
Buchanan,
practice is sometimes erroneously observed when there no such plurality. A moral and honourable mode of action and thought are enforced as a
duty.
Mayhew
are
German
II
95.
>)
An
too,
attention
which I am Miss Appleton Early Education, 139. <>) His knowledge of French and Italian literature were far beyond the common. Life and Let. of F. W. Robertson, 46. ) To be active in the affairs of one's native corporation, and in settling controversies among one's friends there, are employments of the most
treating.
, ,!
order, neatness and propriety of dress, perfectly consistent with the engaging virtue of
to
and manners
laudable kind.
Melmoth, Pliny,
-')
VII, 15. ?)
J) 3)
5)
148.
III,
*)
137.
D .,
140.
318
24.
CHAPTER XXVI,
25.
As contracted sentences cannot always be strictly distinguished from such as have compound elements, they also exhibit a good deal of vacillation as to the choice of number. Leaving out of account the cases when contraction is grammatically inadmissible
when
a)
IX, 7), this vacillation naturally becomes manifest only the subjects of both (all) members of the contracted sentence are singular. The following are the chief points of interest:
(Ch.
When
by
i.
the
members
connected
the
as
well as,
the singular
plural.
Africa,
capital.
as well as Gaul, was gradually fashioned by imitation of the Bain, H. E. Gr., 306. The opulence of the monks, as well as the number of them, in the time
of
ii.
Henry II, was enormous. lb. Your sister, as well as myself, are
Fielding.
>)
greatly obliged to
you
for the
com-
parison.
At least, my family, as well as myself, have hands. Id., Jos. Andrews, IV, Ch. II, 206. The control, as well as the support, which a father exercises over his family, were, by the dispensation of Providence, withdrawn. Rev. W.
b)
Account of Ten Years' Educational Experiment among Destitute Boys, 8.*) Usage seems to be equally divided when the union is effected
Leogatt
,
by nor, the
the
plural being, however, preferred in the case of subjects differing in person. It stands to reason that the plural is practically regular when one of the members is plural.
this plural is
Compare
also
(which, by the
484 449 and Mason E n g. G r a m.8*, way are incompatible); Onions, Advanced
,
Eng. Synt.,
i.
,
22.
Neither this nor that is the thing wanted. Bain, H. E. Gr. , 307. 484. Neither John nor Thomas is mistaken. Mas., Eng. Gram. 34 , I will go where there is neither French nor English, Jew nor Gentile, bond nor free, but all are alike in the eyes of Him who made them. Ch. Kingsley Hereward, Ch. XX 88a. Neither the party nor the nation knows where it stands, nor what are s tin. the proposals put forward by a future Unionist Administration. Gaz., No. 5430, lc. intends to make any proposals which will Neither Russia nor Austria
, ,
We
deprive
lb.,
ii.
the
Allies in
lc.
No. 6083,
2,
/.
*
II,
have been
at
peace to-night.
Jul. Caes.
Neither Kent nor Sussex were among the greatest of the kingdoms which our forefathers found In Britain. Freeman. 3) Neither he nor my aunt have ever said a word about taking me abroad with them. Mrs. Alex., A Life Interest, I, Ch. XIV, 244.
i)
2)
Hodoson, Errors*,
141.
H. E.
r.
307.
CONCORD.
** Neither
319
my master
|
nor
Not thou,
I,
Nor
alone,
I drink the waters. Sher., Rivals, I, 2 (214). are injured and abused. Byron, Mar. Fal.
2 (3576).
,
Neither you nor I are ever going to say a word about it. Mar. Crawf. Rath. Lauderdale, I, Ch. XV, 281. Neither you nor I are to blame. Flor. Marryat, A Bankrupt Heart,
II,
226.
Neither
my
sister
nor
want
his
money.
Charles
Dance
The
Bengal Tiger.
*** Neither
John nor his brothers are to blame. Neither the Emperor nor his people desire war. E n g. S y n t. 23.
,
Onions,
Advanced
c)
singular is the rule when the connecting link is or, except when this conjunction is not alternative , i. e. equivalent In this latter to and, or when the subjects differ in person. case the plural is preferred, and this is, naturally, the case also when one of the subjects is a plural.
The
i.
John, James, or Andrew intends to accompany you. Bain, H. E. Gr., 307. was clear that either Monmouth or his uncle was rightful king. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 156. When Harris or George makes an ass of himself on dry land, I smile in a Boat, Ch. XVIII, 233. indulgently. Jerome, Three ** Death, emigration, or personal slavery were the only alternatives.
It
Men
Freeman.
ii.
felicity
came
Or
thrown.
***
I
Ten.
34.
asked the boy whether he or his parents were acquainted with the
George Borrow,
The Bible
in
Spain,
Ch.
I, 11
(The World's
Classics).
"After all," the average Radical will say, "either the Commons or the Lords, either plutocracy or democracy, are to govern this country. Nation (Westm. Gaz. No. 5329, 16c).
The
CONCORD OF PERSON.
25.
Concord
b) a
of
person
is
exhibited by:
finite
a) the subject
and
its
verb: /
am, thou
noun or pronoun and 'the pronouns referring to it: / and my friends, he conducted himself with decorum. In the following a few special points are touched upon.
an
attributive
26. a) In
clause
in
which the
relative
pronoun
is
the
subject, the finite verb conforms to the antecedent. have done nothing but in care of thee, Of thee, my dear one, thee daughter, Who art ignorant of What thou art. Temp., I, 1, 18.
I
| |
my
of
Why
my own?
i)
should / pry into the cares of others, Who have so G. Lillo, Fatal Curiosity, 111,1(318).
|
many sorrows
MStzn., Eng.
Gram.,
II,
162.
320
Lyons,
II,
1.
I dedicated them (sc. the verses) to you, who were my public and my critic. Mrs. Brown. Ded. To my Father. It would ill become me, who have been a humble servant to each of them, to give either any preference. Ch. I, 50. Trol. Thack.
,
b) But
head-sentence the subject or object is a and the antecedent a (pro)noun in the funcpersonal pronoun tion of nominal part of the predicate, the verb in the attribuin
when
the
made
|
to
conform
,
to the former.
Onions,
,
Advanced
i.
I
Eng. Synt.
63ft.
am
a plain blunt
Thou
If
I
art the
thou beest
man, That love my friend. Jul. Caes. HI, 2, 222. God that doest wonders. Psalm, LXX, 14. he who didst outshine myriads. Milton, Par. Lost, I, 84.
,
am
I
the
this house.
ii.
Goldsm.
to
Good-nat. man,
III.
You
take
be a
Sher.,
School
prudent old fellow, who have got money to lend. for Scand., 111,3(399).
c)
For further irregularities in Early Modern English see 3 247. Abbot, Shak. Gram. Sometimes we find the person of the finite verb in the adnominal clause depending on a possessive pronoun in the head sentence. (Ch. XXXIX, 6.) I'm acting for the innocent and good, and not for my own self, who have done no wrong. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. XXIII, 245.
,
Note.
And when
by churl
Father,
will. Id.,
call'd
[etc.].
Ten.
right
by gentle and
you
fault
Is
yours
who
let
me
have
my
d)
When
placed
i.
the antecedent
in
is
the
second person,
a vocative, the finite verb is mostly but the third person is also
,
met with.
247.
Our Father which art in heaven. Oh Lamb of God: that takest away
Book
of
Common
Henry
ii.
life,
Lend me a
B,
I,
1, 20.
27.
When the subject is the personal pronoun it, representing a substantive clause (Ch. XV, 6; Ch. XXXIX, 7, 22 ff.), the finite verb is regularly placed in the third person singular, while the
verb of the clause mostly conforms in person (and number) with the nominal part of the predicate in the head-sentence, probably owing to the fact that this latter is mistaken for the antecedent of the following relative. (Ch. XXXIX, 23, b, 1 24, b Note II; 25.) This practice is exhibited by the following paradigm:
;
It is
J
thou
who
(that)
am
art
/*
to blame.
It is
we who you
they
(that)
are
arrr
to blame.
he
are
CONCORD.
It is I
321
that absolve you from an engagement which is impossible in our present Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 191. It is you who make dress pretty, and not dress that makes you pretty. G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. Ill, 3.
misery.
ii.
thou who forgets. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXI, 315. to recommend Charles, for I pretend 'Tis you that asks books to beguile the weariness Of travelling on the Scots Express. P. C. Bainbrioge (W e s t m. G a z. , No. 6005).
Nay,
this time it is
You ask
m.e,
practice
In
in
,
French influence.
Ic
am) or
eom
hit,
which
is like the French and may have arisen Old English we find Ic hit eom (= I it Middle English became It am I. Onions,
Advanced Eng.
Who
Synt.
25.
|
coude rymen in English proprely His martirdom? for sothe, it Chaucer, Cant. Tales, A, 1460. I am thy mortal fo, and/fam/| That loveth so hote Emelye the brighte.
am
not
I.
lb., 1736.
man
I.
28.
When
name
persons of distinction are addressed or referred to by the preceded by a possessive pronoun, as in Your (His, Her, Their) Majesty (Lordship, Ladyship, Majesties, Lordships Ladyships) a) the finite verb is placed in the third person singular or plural as the case may be, b) the pronouns used in the sequel of the discourse agree in number person and gender with that of the possessive pronoun
of a quality
, ,
before the
I
name
of the quality.
heard say your lordship was sick: I hope your lordship, though not clean past your youth, hath yet some smack of age in you, some relish of the saltness of time; and I most humbly beseech your lordship to have a reverent care of your health. Henry IV, B, I, 2, 104 110. Why looks your grace so heavily to-day? Rich. Ill, I, 4, 1. Am I really to conceive your lordship to be out your senses? Fielding, Jones, VI, Ch. V, 103a. I should think your ladyship condescended a great deal below yourself. Id., Jos. Andrews, I, Ch. VIII, 18. His lordship, my kind patron, bade me to come and watch over him, and I am here accordingly, as your ladyship knoweth. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXV, 365. Your Grace hath been More merciful to many a rebel head That should have fallen, and may rise again. Ten., Queen Mary, V, II, 3. Her Majesty counts much on Fortune, I wish she would trust more in Almighty God. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, Sect. Ill, 373. Ah that your Excellency but saw the great duel which depends on you alone. Ch. Kingsley, Hypatia, Ch. II, 8a. If your Majesty would condescend to state your case, I should be better able to advise you. Conan Doyle, Sherl. Holmes, 1,22.
Tom
i)
H.
80,280. Kellner, Hist. Outl. Eng. Synt., Poutsma A Grammar of Late Modern English. II.
,
21
322
29. a)
When
subject consists of a word-group containing of or personal pronoun, the pronouns used to refer to it in the sequel of the discourse mostly depend on that personal
the
among
will resign our weapon or quit this hall , unless we are assured at least of our King's safety. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XXVII, 355. I doubt whether the wisest of us know what our motives are. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXI, 330. There are few of us that are not rather ashamed of our sins and follies as we look out on the blessed morning sunlight. G.Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. VI, 123. purblind race of miserable men How many among us at this very hour
.
forge a life-long trouble for ourselves. Ten., Ger. and En., 3. Even those of us who have the courage to be frank with other people, are seldom plucky enough to de frank with ourselves. Beatrice Harraden,
Do
The Fow
Mind
this,
e r
Ch.
IV, 183.
any of you say a word against him, you'll be dismissed Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XXX, 230. instantly. Few of us are the worse for not having too sharp an eye to keep on our own interests. Ascott R. Hope, Old Pot. 1 hope none of us will fail to do our duty in preserving the Constitution.
if
Westm. Gaz.,
Many of
most desirable
Times. way
of
The pronouns
exception.
of
the
third
The Lord
husband.
In
may
I, 9.
house of her
are so much members of one another that it is becoming extremely doubtful whether any of us can wage a successful war without inflicting almost as much damage upon himself as upon the opponent
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5376,
\c.
b)
When
the subject is followed by a clause of comparison containing a personal pronoun, the latter, apparently, determines the person of the pronouns used in the sequel of the discourse.
young, and good, and beautiful as you are," replied the away your hearts, love will carry you all lengths. Dick., 01, Twist, Ch. XL, 375. When such as / ... set our rotten hearts on any man and let him fill the place that has been a blank through all our wretched lives, who can hope to cure us? lb.
ladies as
girl steadily,
"When
"give
30.
pronouns must be used to refer to subjects of different persons, the first person is mostly used when one of the subjects is of the first person, the second when one of the subjects is of the second person and the other(s) of the third person.
.
When
You and / have our duties to perform. You and your friends have manfully fulfilled your duties. It was some time before either / or the captain seemed Stevenson, Treas. Island, Ch. Ill, 30.
to gather
our senses.
CONCORD.
323
The rule is, however, apparently often disregarded and the pronoun made to agree with the last member of the compound subject.
Your
safety,
|
for
the
Bend
request
The enfranchisement
I
King John,
to find
IV, 2, 57.
My
and
It
Lord Mayor,
the
members of
the
Common
Council for
words adequately to thank you the honour they have done me.
to themselves.
Chamberlain
is
all
(Time s).
time
Westm. Gaz.,
31. a) In the rare case that the members of a compound subject differ in person and the singular form of the finite verb of the
predicate seems preferable the latter agrees as to person with the member that is placed nearest to it. Instances are espe,
cially found in Elizabethan writers. dost thou and thy master agree? Merch. of Ven. II, 2, 107. Rosalind lacks then the love Which teacheth thee that thou and I am one.
How
Am
Lost, X,
875.
b) This also applies to contracted sentence with the conjunctions or and nor.
Advanced Eng.
Synt.,
23.
Note.
Either
Such constructions are, however, mostly avoided. Thus would by careful speakers be replaced by:
is
my
brother
going, or
am,
etc.
32.
is, perhaps, the best place to devote a few words to the pronouns which are found to refer to the indefinite pronoun one as an independent word, i. e. when not used as a prop-word after an adnominal word. (Ch. XL, 149 ff; Ch. XLIII.) a) When the independent one has a meaning similar to that of the French on, German man, Dutch men (Ch. XL, 151), the pronouns now used by careful writers and speakers to
This
refer to
I
think
if
will drive
it
out.
Made
one's
Jessie Fothergill,
or Marred.
good people in it. If one had to live over again, one might do worse than make one's home there. Froude, Oceana, Ch. XX, 321. One never realises one's blessings while one enjoys them. Saki (Westm.
California is a pleasant country with
life
Gaz., No. 6017, 9a). But in Early Modern English he and him, and especially his and himself, were# mostly used instead. Altogether one's and oneself are rather recent formations, the latter not being met with in Shakespeare. Thus in: To know a man well, were to know himself (Ha ml., V,
2T,
CHAPTER
XXVI, 32.
practice has never fallen entirely into disuse, and seems be especially in favour with American writers. Modern literature also presents not a few instances in which other equivalents of the French on, such as we, you, and they, and their corresponding possessive and reflective pronouns, are used to refer to one. Franz, Shak. Gram. 2 292, 310, Anm. I; Id., Eng. Stud., XVII; Ten Brug., Taalst., IX; Bain, Companion, 62; Id., H. E. Gr., 32;
to
,
Murray,
s.
,
v.
one,
21;
Ellinqer,
Verm. Beitr.
46;
Hodgson,
Errors 8
i.
155.
How
among
,
sickens, the worse at ease he is. As you like it, III, 2, 22. can you ever expect to marry? Marlowe. Never, unless, kings and princes, my bride were to be married by proxy. If,
indeed, like an eastern bridegroom one were introduced to a wife he never saw before tt mighi be endured. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer,
,
II, (180).
When
to
conduct, he
is
very apt to
fall
into contradictions.
W. Gunnyon Biogr. Sketch of Burns, 47. And then comes the waking, which is as though one fell asleep upon his beloved's bosom and awoke among thorns and having a crown of thorns about his brows. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud. II, Ch. X, 174.
the collection of property Baggage him on a journey. Murray.
in
ii.
One has to take the conjunct sale over the whole world before he is able to gauge with precision the popularity of an author. Bookman, No. 253, 436. As though one went to tea with a woman for the sake of talking about the very same things you have been doing all day. Mrs. Ward, Sir George
Tres.
I,
Ch. V, 34a.
I
want
to
if
against you. Id., Marcella, I, 111. One could not help but laugh, however much you were annoyed. Rev., 1912, July, 534.
Hi.
I
Eng.
is one subject on which it is pleasant to talk on a journey, and what one shall have for supper when we get to our inn at night. Hazl. On going a journey (Peacock S e 1. Eng. E s. 267). One feels we are being done in thus paying twice over for the same thing. II. L o n d. News. People may slur their words or clip them so that half the letters are left out, but one does not miss them as we miss the h. lb.
grant there
is
,
that
iv.
One must
to
all
J.
Hardy,
How
lb.,
One must be on
Ch. XII, 128.1)
that
are worthless.
b)
it
is
regularly
referred
to
her, herself.
Few came
one
who had
none
to
Christian,
248.
Who
would have dared to make a mortal enemy of one who might, ere many weeks were past, have the lives and fortunes of the whole court in the hollow of her hand. Con. Doyle, Refugees, 121.
i)
Ten Bruo.
Taalst.,
IX.
CONCORD.
It
325
although the ordinary word used in referring its synonyms a body, a fellow, a person, when devoid of any determinative force (Ch. XL, 195, a, 1) is he or a modification of he: his, him, himself, the indefinite pronoun one or
may be added
indefinite
that,
to
the
man and
its
i.
is
also occasionally
met with,
A man's
ii.
Carlyle, Hero Worsh., I, 12. Do you think it fair that a man's whole career should be ruined for a fault done in one's boyhood almost? Oscar Wilde, An Ideal Husband, II.
religion is
The same practice is sometimes observed in connection with plurals when used in an indefinite way. Divisions in one's own ranks are always the hardest things for politicians to
bear.
T. P. 's
Weekly,
No. 471,6176.
in
a man, etc. when determinative 195, a, 2), are always referred to by he etc.
The
indefinite
function (Ch.
XL,
The English
Wilde,
can't
stand
that
always saying he is in the right, but he has been in the wrong. Oscar
An Ideal Husband,
CONCORD OF GENDER.
33.
of gender is exhibited only by the pronouns of the third person singular used in referring to nouns. In Modern English the gender of a noun is determined by the sex of the person, animal or thing of which it is the name. A noun is of the masculine (feminine) gender, when it is the name of a male (female) person or animal or of any thing thought of as a male (female) being: actor, actress. A noun is of the neuter gender, when it is the name of any thing without sex and not thought of as a living being. Some nouns are of variable gender. The variability sometimes depends on a difference in meaning or a difference of associations, but is often due to an arbitrariness of usage. Thus church is neuter when the building is meant, but mostly feminine when it denotes an organized body. (38, 2, /?.) Most names of animals are either masculine or
Concord
neuter, according to the individual fancy of the speaker or writer. Names of persons that may denote either male or female individuals
are said to be of
common
gender.
Persons, and especially animals, are sometimes spoken about without their sex being taken into account. In this case the want of a singular pronoun not expressing either sex is a serious inconvenience. Sometimes the neuter pronouns are then put in requisition, sometimes masculine or feminine pronouns, the latter occasionally from a fancied prevalence of masculine or feminine qualities in the animal spoken about. Bradley, The Making of English, Ch. II, 48. This inconvenience is also felt when a pronoun must be used'to refer
to
singular (pro)nouns of different gender. (19, a, 3.) The following quotation affords a rare instance of the neuter it being employed to
difficulty:
of
it
(sc. that
woman madly
dote
Upon
flower) on sleeping eye-lids laid Will make or manor the next live creature that it sees. Mids., II, 1, 772.
|
326
now
their
own
declension,
nor
in
The
case in Old English, and is still the case in many European languages. differences of declension which depended on difference of gender, were lost long before the Modern English period. The consequence is
that the
of
gender of nouns
is
now
often
shown only by
the pronouns
the third person singular used in referring to them; or conversely the choice of these pronouns is often the only means to enable us to
determine whether the nouns they represent or are supposed to represent indicate male or female individuals, or things without sex.
,
34.
preceding observations it follows that only when the the noun is not apparent from its meaning, is there gender any difficulty in the choice of the pronouns, and it is only with such cases that we shall be concerned in the following The nouns whose gender is not apparent from their meaning naturally fall into three groups: a) such as are names of persons, b) such as are names of animals c) such as are names of things
From
the
of
personified.
35.
of persons that do not indicate sex are: nouns of common gender, a)
The names
b)
names of creatures of the imagination, or of beings that are but dimly perceived by the senses.
by nouns of common gender their sex being known or without rarely spoken more or less distinctly thought of by the speaker. When this is done, they are referred to by the masculine pronouns. Who is a neighbour, he who shows love, or he who shows it not? French,
36. a)
The persons
that
are indicated
of
are but
Parables.
Children, however, are often spoken of without their sex being matter of thought. In this case it is the neuter pronouns that are mostly used. It follows then that the pronouns used in referring to such nouns as baby, child and infant are neuter, or either masculine or feminine according as the sex is thought of or no. Sometimes
practice is variable in speacing of the same child. Thus Thackeray in relating the incidents attending the birth and early death of
first uses the neuter pronouns, which on he exchanges for the masculine, while in the concluding sentences of the narrative the neuter pronouns are used .throughout. See Sam. Titm., Ch. XII, 163166.
Sam. Titmarsh's
first-born,
some
lines further
have given suck and know How tender 't is to love the babe that milksI would, while it was smiling in my face, Have pluck'd my nipple from his boneless gums, And dash'd the brains out. Macb. I, 7, 56.
I
|
me:
*)
Murray.
CONCORD.
And
/7s
|
327
she (sc. Haidee) bent o'er him, and he lay beneath, Hush'd as the babe upon mother's breast. Byron Juan, H, cxlvih. During the past week scarcely a night had gone over my couch that had not brought with it a dream of an infant dabbling /7s hands in running water. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXI 268.
,
Don
. .
.
utter amazement, Silas fell on his knees and bent his head low to examine the a round, fair thing with soft, yellow rings all marvel: it was a sleeping child over /7s head. G.Eliot, Si 1. Mam., Ch. XII, 97. (In the sequel of the tale, when Silas has observed the child more attentively, it is referred to by feminine In
pronouns.)
pass our door where stood Mrs. Todd and the baby. It stretched out Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. X, 109. to her. The individual set up from /7s cradle in the corner such a terrific squall that we two young men beat a precipitate retreat. lb., Ch. X, 105.
She had
/7s little
to
arms
ii.
The
terrible
announcement
that the
mouth.
Dick.,
And when thou wouldst solace Wilt thou teach her to say "Father!"
flow,
Though
IX.
Seeing that the child in his arms had opened her eyes, and was looking about her, he checked himself to say a word or two of foolish prattle in her ear.
Dick., Chi es3, II, 53. The child who was thrown
under a
train at
Birmingham on
progressing as well as can be expected, in spite of the fact that she has lost both
arms and a
In
leg.
Times.
mock
of the uncertainty of the
x
the
gender of such words as baby, child and infant: Don't object to my calling the baby "if. didn't know he was a
girl.
The
that
he
way, my parents that their first-born would be a great traveller; would undergo many dangers and difficulties. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. 8.
I,
child is spoken about, or a child is referred the sex is taken for granted.
The
real objection to a child being a Socialist or Anti-Socialist is that he is someNo. 3815, 828c. thing much better, a child. Chesterton, II.
Lond. News,
The use
slight.
of the neuter
pronouns
in referring to children
when
the sex
is
Thus
in
Romeo and
practice
since
,
|
the
it
earthquake
said
When
I
now eleven years: And she was weaned wormwood on the nipple Of my dug and
| |
but as
it
felt
bitter,
[etc.].
Rom. and
yet
Jul., 1,3,30.
And
stone.
warrant,
52.
had upon
its
brow.|
A bump
as big as a
young
cockerel's
lb., I, 3,
The neuter pronouns are similarly found in childish language replacing the pronoun of the second person.
Eli.
Come
to
thy
grandam,
II, 161.
child.
it
King John,
(it
grandam grandam
Const. Do, child, go to it grandam, child; will Give it a plum, a cherry, and a See Ch. XXXIII, 6.) /7s grandam.
|
i)
98.
328
In
this
CHAPTER XXVI,
connection mention
36.
may also be made of the occasional use pronouns in speaking of grown-up persons, which mostly springs from profound contempt, but may also be prompted by the same feelings as in the case of children. The practice seems to be rare now.
of the neuter Cap. What, is my daughter gone to Friar Laurence? Nurse. Ay, forsooth. Cap. Well, he may chance to do some good on her: A peevish self-will'd
|
Jul., IV, 2, 14. Kino. A blister on his sweet tongue, with my heart, That put Armada's page out of his part! Biron. See where it comes! Behaviour, what wert thou Till this madman show'd thee? and what art thou now? Love's Labour's
harlotry
iff
|
|
is.
Rom. and
Lost, V,
2, 337. Here's Wart; you see what a ragged appearance Suf. I'll win this Lady Margaret. For whom?
|
it is.
Henry
IV,
B,
III,
2, 279.
a wooden thing!
Mar. He talks of wood: it A, V, 3, 96. Cousin Tony promises to give us more of his company at home. Indeed he shan't leave us any more. It won't leave us, Cousin Tony, will it? Goldsm.,
She Stoops,
vulgar
He
IV, (214).
According to Kruisinga (A
English quotes:
still
353)
has the
express contempt.
"Where did ye
accent.
"P'r'a'ps you'll
"Who
asked Mord Em'ly of Miss Gilliken, with a satirical you calling 'if?" demanded Mr. Barden aggressively. kindly call me 'im' and not 'if.
find
it?"
are
whose mind can have formed but a shadowy conception, are often thought of as belonging to no particular sex, with the
essence the
result that they are referred to
by neuter pronouns.
Edna Lyall,
angel.
its
wings appear.
Hardy Nor-
seman,
phantom
His colour changed though, when, without a pause it (sc. the ghost) came on through the heavy door. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, 22. Though he looked the phantom through and through, and saw it standing before
him
[etc.].
lb.,
18.
Note.
and vision
other
The ghost,
in the
pronouns when
spirits
in
also called an apparition, phantom, spirit, spectre sequel of the narrative, is referred to by the masculine recognized as Marley's ghost. With regard to the three
the tale,
than Marley's ghost, the heuter pronouns are used throughout. figure. In the deep shade, at the farther end of the room, a figure ran backit was, whether beast or human being, one could grovelled, seemingly on all fours; it snatched and growled like some strange wild animal; but it was covered with clothing, and a quality of dark grizzled hair, wild as a mane, hid its head and face. Ch.
What
it
sight,
tell:
Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
its
The
street
dangling,
for a solitary figure sitting on a post with its legs in its trousers-pockets. I, 241. Maurier,
Du
Trilby,
Greek name for a vengeful dcemon, driving its victims into desert places; and Shelley prompted by Peacock, chose it for the title of a poem which describes the Nemesis of solitary souls. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. IV, 86.
demon.
"Alastor"
the
CONCORD.
Heaven.
Ch.
I,
329
its
We
mercies.
Thack.
lb.
Virg.,
3.
Ch. V, 48.
Providence. Thus we lived several years in a state of much happiness; not but that we sometimes had those little rubs which Providence sends to enhance the value of its favours. Goldsmith, Vicar, Ch. I, (237). Something told her to change her mind and come on Friday instead of Saturday. It was Providence she said. I wish Providence would mind its own business and not interfere in my affairs. Jerome, Diary of a Pilgrimage, 22. A scholar of the Middle Ages driven to madness by the loss of his manuscript by fire knocked at the church door with his head and called Providence to witness that all relations between him end it were sundered. "Hear what I am in earnest and resolved. If by chance at the point of death say, for should be so weak as to address you, do not pay any attention". U. Lond. News.
1 I
The use
seems
I
of
the
masculine pronouns as
in the
following quotation
to
be rare:
A. and E. Castle,
think
you
37.
that child.
He was doing when He refrained from sending Diamond cut Paste, Ch. IX, 104.
sex.
Most names
of
animals
do not indicate
Nor
are animals
often spoken of with their sex taken into account, and it would be only rational to use the neuter pronouns in speaking of creatures
that
are
practically
thought
of
as
sexless.
This
is
not,
however, by any means the uniform practice. Except for the cases that an animal is spoken of in a generalizing way or as a mere object of zoology, the masculine pronouns are quite as frequently met with in referring to such animals as are represented more or less as man's companions or as familiar realities. They are almost the rule in lively narrative and in poetry. Feminine pronouns are rare, except in talk about a particular cat or parrot, and in the language of sportsmen about a particular hare. On the other hand in referring to a male or female animal in a generalizing way sex is sometimes so little matter of the speaker's thoughts that the neuter pronouns are used. See the
,
quotations below, under cow, female, hen. It stands to reason that when animals are spoken about as the emblems of certain qualities, or when particular qualities are ascribed to them, the masculine or feminine pronouns are used
according as these qualities are supposed to be peculiarly masculine or feminine. Compare Cohham Brewer, Diet, of Phrase and
Fable,
s.
v.
it
animals.
must be observed that usage is highly irregular and Finally This will quickly he brought home to any one who arbitrary. takes the trouble of skimming through the pages of an ordinary 2 reading-book where animals are spoken about. Storm, Phil. For the 99100. heut. des practice 1018; Wendt, Synt. Eng., in Defoe's Rob. Crusoe see Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Accid. II, B.
,
330
animal.
habits.
CHAPTER XXVI,
Every animal has
37.
Ml
inclinations,
appetites
and
Webst.
s.
v.
proper.
badger. The badger made his dark hole on the side of every hill. Mac, Hist.i) bird. There is a bird who by his coat, And by the hoarseness of his note Might be supposed a crow. Cowper, Jackdaw, I. (The masculine pronouns are
|
makes a mournful rattle now and then in hopping on his perch. Dick., Cop., Ch. V, 39a. Not a bird of them all was there but liked to have it done to him. Blackmore,
regularly used in the sequel of the poem.) A bird in a cage very little bigger than himself
Lo rnaLoone.
blackbird.
bullfinch.
water.
The blackbird
It'll
trolls his
11.
Magazine.
shop, that draws his
"I
Dick.,
in the
own
must
butterfly
Edna Lyall,
Donovan,
124.
1,135.
magnificent
11.
sister to the other blinking; then with a sudden spring leaped on to Agnes's lap and coiled herself up there. Mrs.
and
its
(?).
cow.
to its calf.
2).
dog. Meanwile the older dog that was basking in front of Captain Waveney, whether it was impatient of this uncertainty on the part of the younger companion, or whether it was jealous, managed unobserved to steal forward a foot or two, until it suddenly stopped rigid. Black The New Prince Fortunatus, Ch. VIII.
,
donkey.
elephant,
in
They
i.
donkey's
tail
when
it
niers of eggs.
Mrs. Henry
Pliny
tells
Wood, Or v. Col.,
Ch. V, 74.
ii.
us that an elephant having been punished for his inaptitude was observed at night to practise what he had vainly attempted during the day. A t h e n. The African elephant is chiefly hunted for its ivory. Cas. Cone. Cyclop. The Indian elephant is distinguished by its concave head and its small ears. lb.
executing
some
feat,
feather-poke.
The feather-poke
little
nest there.
Sweet,
Old
Chapel. A mammal is an animal of the highest class of vertebrates characterized by the female suckling its young. Webst., Diet. finch. There you will hear the distinctive whistle of the hawfinch; but, stalk ever so quietly, you will rarely get a glimpse of the handsome bird, for he is among the shyest of birds. Westm. Gaz., No. 6029, 13a.
female.
fox.
Some few
is
do as he
Words,
ignoble souls hide themselves behind hedges so that should the fox may have the advantage of a start. Trol.
,
Good
s b.
1,45).
(Thus throughout
in this article.)
its
goldfinch. A patriarchal gold-fish apparently retains to the last that it can swim in a straight line beyond the encircling glass. I, Ch. VIII, 65.
grass-hopper.
luxury
Earth
he takes the lead In summer That is the grass-hopper's (voice) he has never done With his delights. John Keats, The Poetry of is never dead, 5.
| |
i)
Foels.
Koch, Wis.
?)
Kruisinga,
356.
CONCORD.
The
in
331
which there
i.
great green grass-hopper and his family are among the comparatively few insects exists a visible organ for the perception of sound. Leisure Hour.i)
First catch
is
hare.
ii.
Pro v.
tii.
crouching in her form. Scott, The Palmer, V. is running races in her mirth; And with her feet she from the splashy earth Raises a mist. Wordsworth, Resolution and Independence.il. Here they found the unfortunate girl, seated, or rather couched like a hare upon its form. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. XXXIII, 310. A hare was roused by the adjutants in a potato-field. The Minister ran after it and brought it to the King. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 480, 656.
kingfisher. We have disturbed a kingfisher who was watching for his prey. has his nest in a sandy bank by the side of the pond. II. a g a z.
He
hen.
lion.
laid its
|
thousandth egg.
2)
1
And
thou then
,
To
The Douglas
a pail of water.
in his
Scott, Marm. VI, xiv. mouse. Between us we caught the mouse, and there he
hall?
Mrs.
Wood, Or v. College,
nightingale.
she should sing by day, When every goose is cackling, would be thought No better a musician than the wren. Merch. of V e n. V, 1 103. (A writer in Notes and Queries 1891 285a observes "It is not often that we catch Shakespeare tripping as a field-naturalist; but he has
and
think
When
|
neither is attended,
if
fallen
into one or two popular errors concerning the nightingale. The first is that the female bird is the songster, and her song is one of sorrow. Whereas the singer is the male bird, and the song is a buoyantly exulting as that of the lark.")
parrot.
A parrot, from the Spanish main, |.. came o'er, ... to the bleak Of Mulla's shore. To spicy groves where he had won His plumage of resplendent hue,... He bade adieu. Campbell, The Parrot. (Thus throughout
. .
|
domain
the poem.)
pelican. Ask of the bleeding pelican why she Hath ripp'd her bosom. Had the bird a voice, She'd tell thee 'twas for all her little ones. Byron, Mar. Fal.
|
1,2, (357a).
The
early
Pelican, tearing up her breast to feed her young with her own blood symbol of our redemption through Christ. Mrs. Jameson. 3 )
was an
pig.
In his devouring mind's eye he pictured to himself every roasting-p/g' running about with a pudding in his belly. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk., XXXII, 351.
robin.
box
in the apple-tree.
who
is sitting
on
five
eggs
in a nest-
sheep.
Even a sheep
I,
will
face
about a
little
G. Eliot,
Mill,
spider ,
That is how the spider waits for the fly. The spider spins her web. shows a strength that promises to extricate him how swiftly does she abandon her pretence of passiveness, and openly fling coil after coil about him until he. is secured for ever. M. Ch. Braby.*) Compare. It has never struck me that the spider is invariably male and the fly invariable female. Per.*)
fly.
And
if
the fly
stag.
When
at
The stag
i)
Scott,
Lady,
2)
3) 5)
Foels.-Koch Kruisinga, A
,
Murray. Murray,
<*)
83. Wis. Gram., 356. Gram, of Pre s. -Day Eng. Wendt, Synt. des heut. Eng., 100.
,
s.
v. bell.
332
stickleback.
stickleback
Tom
When
It
gills.
him
I,
in
II,
was a splendid fellow, with fabulous red a small basin till the day of his death.
24.
Ch.
stock-dove.
Wordsworth,
the
its
which puts
United States puts a navy on the high seas, it is like a head out of its shell. Rev. of Rev., CCXVII, 96.
turkey.
Dick.,
was
a Turkey!
He
that bird.
Christm. Car. 5,
The wren comes
II.
V. 106.
wren.
forth
z.
morning song.
Maga
shrill little
of,
The following short extracts in which two or more animals may be taken as fairly exhibiting ordinary practice:
are spoken
We
heard his dog barking loudly, and ran to the place as quick as we could, and saw him with a long snake in his mouth, and shaking it furiously, while it writhed in his jaws and sent out a most pungent and venomous smell.
,
Sweet Old Chapel. The next moment we again heard the dog bark, and when we came up to him, we found him with a prickly ball, nearly as big as one of our heads, rolling it about Ned was delighted, and cried out, 'A hedgehog, a hedgehog!' Then he said, "Shall my dog kill it? It isn't every day that can kill a hedgehog.
.
let him alone a minute, and you'll soon see. lb. pussy lives to be old, she is usually allowed to expire with peace and honour on the parlour hearth-rug. Much the same may be said of the dog, except that his end, when he grows mangy and snappish, is sometimes hastened with prussic acid. With the horse it is far otherwise. His career is almost always one of constant deterioration, and if he could only see in the future (which we hope he cannot), he would be the most miserable of animated beings. Graphic.
If
Mine can:
in referring to
|
We
have scotch'd the snake, not kill'd it: She '11 close, and be herself; whilst our poor malice Remains in danger of her former tooth. Macb., Ill, 2, 13. In proportion to its size the strength of the mountain cat is prodigious, and though he is not a fast animal, his agility in climbing is astonishing. 1 ) Some little mice sat in a barn to spin; Pussy came by, and she popped her head in; "Shall I come in, and cut jour threads off?" "Oh! no, kind sir, you will snap our heads off." Gunth., Leerb. I, 55. This dog had been sucked and reared by a cat, having lost Us own mother. He always showed the cat-like dread of wet feet. L e i s. H o u r. 2) The strength of the lion is such that he can carry off a heifer as a cat carries a rat It was anciently much more common in Asia If compelled to defend It has a horror of fires and torch-lights . himself he manifests great courage The mane is not fully developed till he is six or seven years old. C h a m b. E n c y c 1. 3)
|
|
38.
As
is
between such as
of inanimate objects we must distinguish usual in ordinary literary language, such as confined to the higher flights of poetry, and such as is only met to
personification
is
>)
Sattler.
2)
Foels.-Koch
s.
Gram.,
99.
83.
3)
CONCORD.
with
in
333
in the
homely
style, in dialects
and
,
vernacular of particular
trades or professions.
a) In ordinary literary
1) the
i.
1017.
find:
masculine pronouns in referring to the sun. The sun was shining in all his splendid beauty, but the light only seemed to show the boy his own lonesomeriess. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. VIII, 20a. The sun's diameter is 111^2 times that of the earth. His density or compactness is about one quarter of that of the earth. Young, Arithmetic. The sun's mean distance from the earth is about 93 millions of miles. His diameter is about 865000 miles and his mass is 330000 times as great as
that of the earth.
ii.
The sun performs one revolution about its own axis 9 hours and 56 minutes. Young, Arithmetic.
about 25 days,
2) the feminine
a)
-
pronouns
in referring to:
the earth and the moon. The moon is the name earth,
is
ii.
i. given to the satellite by which our earth attended in her usual course round the sun. Cas. Cone. Cyclop, The earth revolves on its axis in 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds.
Young, Arithmetic.
It
travels
in
space
solar system.
as the other
members
of the
moon.
i. Soon it (sc. the east) would boast the moon; but she was yet beneath the horizon. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXIII, 302. The moon's diameter is 2160 English miles, her mean distance from
Young,
Arithmetic.
The clouds were
driving over the moon at their giddiest speed > at one time wholly obscuring her; at another suffering her to burst forth in full splendour and shed her light on all the objects around: anon driving over her again with increased velocity and shrouding everything in darkness. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XLIX, 448.
Eclipses of the
s.
ii.
moon can
v. eclipse. is
The moon
attended
in
the name given to the satellite by which our earth is her usual course round the sun. Its large size is entirely
due to its proximity to us. Cas. Cone. Cyclop. See the bright moonl High up before we know it: making the earth reflect the objects on its breast like water. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XXXVI, 285a.
P) certain social or political institutions, considered as organized bodies,
especially
the
Church
,
church, i. The Church of Rome actually regained nearly half of whatsae had lost. Mac Popes, (541a). Many quitted the Established Church only because they thought her in danger. Id., Hal., (56a). While the sins of the Church, however heinous, were still such as admit of being expressed in words, the sins of the heathen world against which she fought, were utterly indescribable. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Pref., la. You have said yourself that you are the eldest son of the Church. If the eldest son desert her, then who will do her bidding? Con. Doyle,
Refugees,
Rev., CCVI,
222.
all
Rev. of
334
ii.
CHAPTER XXVI,
38.
years,
Against this vast organisation the Church had been fighting for now four hundred armed only with its own mighty and all-embracing message. Ch. Kingsley,
lb.
Hypatia, Pref.,
Henry was the Head of the Church. From the primate to the meanest deacon every minister of it derived from him his sole right to exercise spiritual powers. The voice of its preachers were the echo of his will. Green Short Hist.,
,
Ch. VII,
1,
349
shortly
The Church, however, we may be sure, will new situation. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 220a.
accommodate
is
itself to the
Note.
The
responsible for
301.
corporal punishments.
Bain, H. E. Gr.
University,
i.
must alter my words if I meant to give the working man a just picture of 90. Ch. Kinosley, Alt. Locke, Pref. We cannot regret that the University of Oxford has taken the time to consider the advantages and disadvantages of making so great a change in the scope of her studies. Times. It is not the least achievement of the University that she does somehow or other manage to impress a certain stamp on so many different kinds of metal. A. D. Godley, Aspects of Mod. Oxf. Ch. II, 47.
and
I
her.
ii.
We may
degrees.
then expect to see women as well as men in the birthday honours list, or even among those upon whom an ancient University deigns to confer its
Rev. of Rev., CCXI, 15a. Oxford gave him its D. C. L. in 1839. Saintsbury. Nineteenth Cent., Ch. 11,51. states, i. Though England was even then the first of maritime powers, she was not, as she had since become, more than a match for all the nations of the world together. Mac, Clive, (5006). He was only twenty-seven, yet his country already respected him as one of her
first
soldiers.
lb.
system of free trade England opened her ports to the goods and manufactures of all the world. Escott, England. Ch. VIII, 114.
Under
the
Austria
fall
in
the
of Sebastopol she
159.
made
new
effort
interests of peace c
September 1792 France was declared to be a republic. On the 22nd of September she has practically to say whether she will remain a republic
On
the
25th
of
still.
Graphic.
England was made by her adventurers. Inscription on Greenwich Hospital. I have sometimes thought that if the Cabinets were all dismissed and an admiral installed in the place of each, Europe would get on better than she does now.
Times.
England
she
ii.
is
may be
a huge fortress with a great wet ditch and like any other fortress forced to surrender. Academy,
In Pitts eyes the danger of Ireland lay above all in the misery of its people. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X, IV, 814. For a matter of three years the prospect was that the United States would henceforth feed Europe cheaper than // would feed itself. Escott, England, Ch. VIII, 116. Like the other self-governing colonies of the British Empire, the Dominion of
treaties
is already virtually independent in all respects but one. It cannot make with foreign powers without the consent of the Imperial Government but if this veto were to be withdrawn the bond of Union between the Mother Country and its offspring across the Atlantic would be one of a purely nominal character.
Canada
Graphic.
CONCORD.
In
335
spite
of official civilities
the
doctrine traditions
for the British Empire. In accordance with Monroecitizens deplore the fact that the British flag should
Fb.
and calumny has been kept up for years past by the Jingo-Unionist Press against Germany and its Kaiser. Rev. of
An abominable campaign
Rev., CXCIV,
117a.
We
The
desire to maintain the Chinese empire to prevent its falling into ruins. Times. Emperor expressed his belief that the German Empire would show more
if
it
for, the
were called upon to assume those further burdens sake of the honour and the security of the
crisis
Graph.
That
is
G a z.
Compare the following quotations in which geographical areas rather than political bodies are referred to:
over the sea, it is an artificial country; the because the Hollanders preserve it; it will vanish whenever the Hollanders shall abandon it. L i t. o r 1 d. The new and revised edition of "Holland and its people", translated by Miss Caroline Filton from the Italian of Signor Edmondo de Amicis, appears in an
is
Holland
conquest by
it, it
man
Hollanders
made
exists
attractive form.
lb.
the masculine pronoun in the following quotation is probably due to the name of the country denoting its ruler: Such news might create a panic at Vienna, and cause Russia to drop his
of
cards. y) ships.
The use
I,
The use
of the feminine
of seafaring men, and has now become universal and, except, perhaps, for smaller craft, is now almost regular.
i.
is impossible not to personify a ship; everybody does, in everything they she behaves well; she minds her rudder; she swims like a duck; say she runs her rose into the water; she looks into a port. Emerson, English
It
816.
ii.
is now ready proceed to her station. Times, Our steamer slackened speed and presently a little boat put out from the shore. Its only passengers were a woman and a child. II. Mag.
to
The wherry held its course. Lit. World. The boat was attacked by a constant fire from both
along.
banks, as
it
drifted
M c Carthy,
Short
Hist., Ch.
is
XIII, 188.
found A little boat tied to a willow tree Within ai usual home. Straight I unloosed her chain, and stepping in
|
Pushed from
b) In of
the shore.
Wordsworth, Prel.
1,357362.
the higher literary style, especially in poetry, personification is not, course, confined to any particular object. It is even extended to conceptions that are mere products of our imagination or reasoning faculties.
It
is
hardly
largely dependent on the individual fancies of writers or speakers. as a general rule we find that:
Yet
336
1)
CHAPTER XXVI,
38.
winds;
Fear,
mountains, rivers, the ocean; the seasons, Time, Day, Morn; Anger, Discord, Despair; War, Murder, Law, etc. are mostly
spoken of as
2) cities;
male
persons.
Night, Darkness; arts and sciences; Liberty, Charity, Victory, Mercy, Religion, etc. are mostly spoken of as female persons.
Nature;
the Soul;
i.
Shall come on the wild death. And Death, whenever he comes to me, unbounded Sea! Barry Cornwall, The Sea, IV, (Rainbow, 1,20). Death relaxed his iron features. Longfellow, The Norman Baron, VII.
I
Compare
seen,
|
however: Lo,
painful
in
the
vale
|
of
years beneath
Tbe
family of
IX.
Death,
their
Queen.
Gray,
Law
And
is full
of absurdities.
in strange
ways.
love,
I,
wont,
came
in
the
wake
of fortune.
Mrs.
Ward,
,
Marcel
la,
93.
Walt. Besant
Bell
'
II,
66.
like
Whose head in wintry grandeur towers, And whitens with eternal sleet, While Summer, in a vale of flowers, Is sleeping rosy at his feet. Th. Moore, Paradise and the Peri. pot. The earthenware pot cannot become a brass pot whatever he may pretend. W. Besant, All Sorts and Cond. of Men, 13.
|
rivers.
The
river
glideth
at
his
own sweet
will.
Wordsworth,
12.
|
Sonnet
to fall
seaward again,
Ten., G e Ode Eton
r.
waiting.
Than at Caerleon the full-tided Usk, Before he turn Three other horsemen Pauses, did Enid ... behold and En., 777. (Compare: Say, father Thames, etc.
.
time.
Col., 21). Time rolls his ceaseless course. Scott, Lady, III, i, 1. On the brow of Dombey Time and his brother Care had set some marks as on Ch. I, 1. a tree that was to come down in good time. Dick., Domb. So does Time ruthlessly destroy his own romances. Hardy, Tess, VI, Ch. XLIX, 443. He seems trees. Even the oak Thrives by the rude concussion of the storm indignant, and to feel The impression of the blast with proud disdain, Frowning as if in his unconscious arm He held the thunder. Cowper, Task, 228. The poplars yonder rustle that their quivering leaves may see themselves upon the ground. Not so the oak; trembling does not become him; and he watches
Gray,
,
:
|
|
himself
other
shores
Goldsmith,
Traveller,
140.
shall be the first voice to swell the battle-cry of freedom
mine
Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. V, 41. labour. Light labour spreads her wholesome store. Goldsmith, Des. Vil., 59she is still liberty. Although strange things are done in the name of Liberty, very much esteemed by those who have lost her. II. L o n d. News.
rear her banner.
mountains. Handsome masses of cumulus hang over and hide Snowdon and her neighbouring peaks. Westm. Gaz., No. 6171.
the caps of
CONCORD.
337
The
nature. Nature hath fram'd strange fellows in her time. Merch. of Ven., I, 1, 51. love of nature and the scenes she draws, is Nature's dictate. Cowper,
228.
sight
Task,
The
has
of Nature, in her magnificence, or in her beauty, or in her terrors, times an overpowering interest. Scott, Pirate, Ch. VII, 81. The subtle lawyer (was) accustomed by habit and profession to trace human nature through all her windings. Id., Bride of Lam., Ch. XIX, 195. Not only were times bad and produce overcheap, but even Nature herself
at all
seemed
to
have gone
against
last
inclement season.
Manchester Guardian.
(They) exemplify some touches of Dame Nature in her work of animal development. II. Lond. News, No. 3814, 795c. (Dame Nature Dutch' Mo eder N a t u u r.)
with
all
her busy
train.
Goldsmith,
Jul.
Caes.
I,
1, 50.
sciences.
in
"History has fared ill in many hands", writes the duke of Argyle. "But no hands has she ever fared worse than in those of party leaders. When
they
engage her as
their maid-of-all-work,
slattern.
Lit.
World.
is not to be trifled with. She demands all or nothing. Max Pemberton, Doct. Xavier, Ch. V, 256. never was on the dull, tame shore, But loved the great sea more sea. and more, And backwards flew to her billowy breast, Like a bird that seeketh its mother's nest. Barry Cornwall The Sea (Rainbow, I, 20). towns. Troy in our weakness stands; not in her strength. Troilus and
Science
Cressida,
I
I,
3, 137.
toil'd
I,
Byron
Rome
waits
simultaneously
Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. V, 42. Rotterdam is the most enterprising of Dutch cities, and she bids fair by her more aggressive policy to rival her elder and wealthier sister Amsterdam. L i t.
World.
A few examples
things,
will
suffice
to
show
also
that
the
although pronouns.
personified,
may
be
referred
by
neuter
Expressing
age.
law.
I questioned age (sc. What was life); it heaved a heavy sigh volumes. Anon., What is Life? (Rainbow, 1,20.)
Hard
it
is
upon
the
part
of the
law that
it
z.
,
down upon us
nature.
Vil., 255.
unfortunate victims.
Dick.,
h u
its
Goldsmith
Des.
reason.
virtue.
Reason
Virtue
still
keeps
the
its
throne
but
it
nods a
It
little,
that's all.
G. Farquhar,
111,2,(295).
invincible.
though not beyond her malice, which that Goddess sometimes seems to show. W. Besant, Bell of St. Paul's, II, Ch. XV, 53.
In
c)
homely style, often affected in poetry, in dialects and in the vernacular of particular trades or professions inanimate objects often have sex ascribed to them, with a decided prevalence of the female sex. Thus Thomas Russell (Westm. Gaz., No. 4983, 13) observes: "Have
Poutsma A Grammar of Late Modern
,
H.
English.
II.
22
338
"you remarked that
i.
CHAPTER XXVI,
38.
to every craftsman his instrument is feminine? gun, the driver's car are all she".
The
a book, sir?" book. "You are provided with the needful implement "Bought him at a sale", said Mr. Boffin. Dick., Our Mut. Friend. 1 ) Excalibur. Take Excalibur, And fling him far into the middle mere. Ten., Pas. of Arthur, 204. (Thus throughout the poem.)
|
pillar-box. A brand-new pillar-box stood before me. "Isn't he a dear?" said Felicity. "Look at his mouth. Punch, No. 3651 4986. lingest expression."
,
It
I
shone
in the sun-light.
pudding.
four.
ii.
reckoned 'em up when I had 'em meat one, beer two, vegetables three, and which was four? why pudding, he was
of
'em
for
Dick. ,
)
I
I am blunt said bluntly "She's pairfitly watertight".
bath. "It's (sc. the rubber bath) not watertight", sometimes. "Oo ay", said he (sc. the Scotchman). Punch, No. 3651 , 408c.
coach.
goer,
the boots and ostler that the Tally-ho was a tip-top miles an hour including stoppages, and so punctual that all the road set their clocks by her. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. IV, 66. if coaches And off she did go "All right", was the reply. "Off she goes!" be feminine, amidst a loud flourish from the guard's horn. Dick., N i c h.
He ascertained from
ten
Tom
Nickl., Ch. V,
fiddle.
266.
My
She's
more
wit than
have.
Hal. Sutcl.,
Pam
fowling-piece. Before I leave this place, I'll give you my fowling-piece; she will put a hundred swan-shot through a Dutchman's cap at eighty paces. Scott,
Pirate,
kettle.
Mr. Venus
on
the fire,
remarked
1
to himself:
)
party.
The New Man. William Harcourt (who has left the situation). "Well, 'Enery Bannerman, so you've took the place, 'ave you? I wish you joy! She used to be a liberal old party, but now she's that contrairy there's no living with her." Punch, 1899.
Franz.
Eng. Stud.,
XII.
CHAPTER
XXVII.
The names
of live beings
may
be divided into:
The
first
group contains:
a) pairs
of words indicating either the male or the female sex, which may be divided into:
1)
such
as
are
not,
or
only
remotely,
related
:
etymologically
such as are
etymologically
murderer, murderess;
actor, actress.
b)
words
that
The
a)
pairs of words that are not, or only remotely, etymologically related include:
names
of persons, e. g.:
boy (lad)
girl (lass)
340
CHAPTER
name
of animals, e. g.
:
XXVII,
34.
341
that
|
he (sc. Arthur) turned his head aside, Nor brooked to gaze As, with the truncheon raised, she sate The arbitress of mortal
|
Scott,
The Bridal
of
Triermain,
II,
xxn.
authoress.
that
we
list
World.
Ch. XXI.
them; but he
let
of her books, for he did not even know the names of her understand that he knew she was an authoress. W. Black,
This great benefactress was buried at Hughendon and lies in the same vault containing the remains of the famous author and statesmen. Lit. World.
conductress.
As a conductress
assistance
will
of
to
Indian schools,
women, your
directress.
herself, but
be
me
invaluable.
Not a soul
in
Madame
is
Beck's house
of a
lie.
Id.,
Villette, Ch.
IX, 99.
doctress.
My
I.
The woman
of
something of a doctress. lb., Ch. XVI, 217. holds the position of village doctress and nurse. Mrs. Gaskell, Life
mother herself
122.
Char
Bronte,
editress.
at the
Miss van Norden who acted for some years as editress of the Army Headquarters. Rev. of Rev., CCI, 239a.
'Deliverer'
enchantress.
Jeffrey
,
The
that
lady
is
rather
to a sort of enchantress.
Thomas Moore.
Not
she was a giantess, by any means.
giantess.
I,
Du Maurier, Trilby,
wood.
167, (T.)
huntress.
Beyond
Scott,
Bridal of Triermain,
in
inheritress.
names
She was Marcella Boyce ... the inheritress Midland England. Mrs. Ward, Marcella,
of
I,
one
10.
of the
most ancient
instructress.
of his daughter.
fair
Miss Braddon,
Ch. 1,7. He did not find this a disagreeable task, especially when he had so tress as Bessie. Rider Haggard Jess, Ch. IV, 29.
I,
,
an instruc-
The counter of the confectioner's shop is presided over by an alert and short-tempered manageress. Punch. mistress. She was too far gone to resist, and when she was mistress of herself again, she found herself in the library with some water in her hand. Mrs. Ward,
manageress.
Rob. Elsm.,
monitress.
monitress.
Ill,
243.
Let
me
to-morrow,
1, (271).
in the face of
Heaven, receive
she
my
future guide
and
Riv., V,
in
life,
was
the
munificent patroness.
poetess. Stud, in
Fel.
Dor.
Hemans ranks
11.
high
among
English poetesses.
Courth. Bowen,
Eng.,
The
tradition of a more direct self-disclosure than is common among later poets, has been continued without visible break by the poetesses. Academy.
portress.
Henceforth on
VIII, 85.
Ch. BrontE,
Villette, Ch.
prophetess.
herself,
was
whom we looked upon as a kind of prophetess, Mrs. Gaskell, Cranf. Ch. XII, 224.
,
342
. . .
CHAPTER
XXVII,
m
45.
was led into the room by his benevolent protectress. protectress. Oliver Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 26.
Quakeress.
the
I of Hanna Lightfoot pass over the stories of his juvenile loves Quakeress, to whom they say he (sc. George III) was actually married. Thack., The Four Georges, Ch. Ill, 72.
.
sculptress.
The
last.
511a.
seeress.
seeress.
Fenella
Stanley
seems
in
her later
to
have
set
up as a
Th.
The
1 I, Ch. VI, 34. painter had evidently seized the moment when Fenella's eyes expressed that look of the seeress which Sinfi's eyes, on occasion, so powerfully expressed.
lb., VII,
Ch.
Ill,
256.
traitress.
And so
Ch. Kinosley,
last
Hereward,
it
Ch. V, 38a.
tutoress.
tutoress, and
made under
with hollow eyes. Ch. Bronte, Shirley, II Ch. XVI, 327. Keenly, I fear, did the eye of the visitress pierce the young pastor's heart.
Id.,
Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXII, 451. waitress. A couple of waitresses are endeavouring to satisfy every one at once. Punch.
5.
Obs.
I.
The suffix is not used to form feminine names of animals, lioness and tigress being adoptions from the Old French lion (n) esse, tigresse. Murray, s. v. ess; Bradley, The Making of Eng., Ch. II, 58. Pantheress is, however instanced by no fewer than four quotations in Murray. We copy one Mary Stuart., was something between Rachel and a pantheress. Froude.
:
II.
Abbess (masc. abbot), duchess (masc. duke), marchioness (masc. marquess or marquis), are anglicized foreign feminines. Mistress is a modification of the Old French maisteresse.
III.
The
suffix ess
in
came
the
into English
At one time
especially
16th
of the language the process may be said to have become extinct. Thus of almost all agent-nouns in er there is no corresponding noun in ess, the former being used indifferently for males and females. Occasionally we meet with recent formations used in sport, such as:
Many
stage
century, derivatives in ess were formed In of these are now obsolete or little used.
bishopess.
citizeness.
Clive
is
full
of
humour, and
Thack.,
Difficult to get any of the free democratic citizens or citizenesses to come. Mrs. Stowe. no caricature, The French nation saw the English citizen and citizeness and their indignation exploded in laughter. but the living reality Jerome, Three men on the Bummel, Ch. VIII, 147.
cockneyess.
cockneyesses.
The country dances formed by bouncing cockneys and Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. VI, 55.
343
The Eternal millionairess. She is a millionairess now. Dor. Gerard Ch. XVIII. The young millionairess instead of squandering her fortune, takes her chief
Woman,
Note.
pleasure in adding to
In
tigress
are
Westm. Oaz. No. 4055, 156. Shakespeare the forms heiress, priestess, Jewess and unknown; the plural princes is used to include both sexes
it.
,
(Shakespeare's contemporaries also have the singular prince as a feminine); traitor is the ordinary word also to denote a female traitor, the form traitress being used only once (in All's Well, I, 1, 184), apparently as a term of endearment; both votary and votarist occur as feminines by the side of vot(a)ress. See A. Schmidt, under the respective words; and Franz, Die Wortbildung bei Shakespeare, E. S., XXXV.
Of the Old English terminations- used have left traces in Modern English:
a) en, which either sex,
is
to
still seem in vixen ( she - fox, fox's cub of but mostly ill-tempered woman). Vixen is derived from vox, in Old English a dialectical variety of fox.
b) (e)stre,
seen in 1) spinster; 2) fibster, huckster, seamster (also sempster), songster, tapster, trickster; 3) many proper names of persons, such as Baxter, Bowster, Webster; 4) oldster, youngster; 5) teamster, tonis still
which
maltster, punster,
guester.
With
all
the exception of youngster, oldster, teamster and tonguester, these nouns in ster are agent-nouns, formed from verbs. Oldster
formed on the analogy of youngster is rare, and so is tonguester. The words in ster have long since ceased to be felt as nouns denoting female agents. Hence the formation of such words as seamstress (also sempstress) and songstress. Spinster is the only word in ster which has retained an exclusively feminine meaning, but is no longer a nomen actoris, meaning only unmarried woman. Shakespeare still has it in the original meaning. Scott has spinstress in the sense of unmarried woman, which seems to show that he did not feel spinster to be an indubitably feminine word. In fibster, punster and trickster the ending ster expresses a bad habit For further details see also Sweet, N. E. Gr., 1593, and
especially
E. S.,
Franz,
XXXV.
said of Florence that her eyes would play the oldster. Major Bagstock devil with the youngsters before long "and the oldsters too, Sir, if you come to that." Dick., Domb., Ch. X, 87. We oldsters, be we ever so old, become boys again, as we look at that familiar old tomb. Thack., II, Ch. XXXVII, 396.
Newc,
rather
think
that
we two
58.
,
W. Morris,
News
as
from Nowhere,
seamster (-stress)
all
sempster
(-stress).
travellers
should be.
Kinqsley,
Two Years
Murray.
344
Izaak
CHAPTER
Walton followed
XXVII,
67.
N. H. Nicolas
the trade af a
sempster or haberdasher.
2 Note. i)
the
of
Daily News,
were two
24 July,
i)
women
Id.,
1871
6 Nov.
i)
spinster (-stress).
Cesario,
free
it
is
maids
II,
O, fellow, come, the song we had last night. Mark it old and plain; The spinsters and the knitters in the sun And the that weave their thread with bones Do use to chant it. Twelfth
|
Night,
He
4, 45.
actually
Pirate,
Scott,
songster (-stress).
unrestrained.
sweet voice
Graphic,
The song had left tears in the eyes of the reprobate Sacha himself, though they did not wash out the love-glances that he threw at the songstress. Savage, My Official Wife, 140. teamster. The wagons are propelled by means of mules driven by rough
teamsters. Alvarez, Mexican Bill, 38. tonguester. Perchance in lone Tintagil far from all The tonguesters of the 392. court, she had not heard. Ten., The Last To urn. trickster. Good heavens! what an actress this woman is. What an arch trickster what an all-accomplished deceiver! Miss Brad., Lady Audley's Secret,
,
|
II,
Ch.
Ill,
43.
7.
from infante
khedive
khediva
arbitrator
signora sultana
b) heroine
signor
sultan.
hero.
coadjutrix
dictatrix
coadjutor
dictator
executrix
inheritrix
executor
inheritor
landgravine
margravine
c)
landgrave margrave.
czar.
mediatrix
prosecutrix
spectatrix
testatrix
mediator
prosecutor spectator
testator.
czarina
d) suffragette
suffragist
Instead of
ess are
some of these feminines in trix, forms with the more familiar more frequently used. Thus we constantly meet with coadjutress,
I
think
we acknowledge
as
of
I,
in
the
inheritrix
of his sceptre
life
Thack.,
The Four
in
Georges,
ii.
one
of
the
England.
Marcella,
10.
mediatrix.
She obligingly consented to act as mediatrix in the matter. Ch. Ch. X, 105. prosecutrix. Not one of them had compassion enough to mollify my prosecutrix.
Bronte,
Smol.,
Jane Eyre,
Rod. Rand.,
Ch. XXIII,
166.
')
Murray.
345
A
to
Ockham, showed
feet.
Times,
in the costume she wore the day she bicycled her clothed from the crown of her head to the soles of her 1899, 2176.
spectatrix (-ess), i. She had been a spectatrix of the same scene at a play. Anon., Paul Ferr, 219. i) The unfortunate Hinda is at last a spectatress of the lofty fate of her lover. ii. Jeffrey Thomas Moore.
,
8.
a)
Woman
of
fication of
has sprung from a compound of man, being a modiwifman in which man of course is used as a noun
, , ,
common gender like the Dutch mensch. Man and woman form numerous compounds, which require no comment. In some cases the compound of man answers to a
milkmaid. maid, e. g. milkman b) On tracing back lord and lady to their original forms it will be found that they have both sprung from compounds which have Old the word hlaf ( Mod. Eng. loaf) in common lord
compound
of
c)
lady =s Eng. hldford (once hldfweard) Mod. Eng. loaf-kneader. Sometimes a pure alien is used, because the masculine does Such are not allow of having a feminine formed from it.
hlcefdige ==
comedienne vicereine corresponding respectively to comedian and Mention may here also be made of the only partially viceroy. naturalized beau and belle.
,
belle.
Lady Audley
is
Miss Braddon,
regularity.
comedienne. Comedian succeeded comedienne with monotonous Rev. of Rev.,* CCI, 255a.
vicereine.
Americans were extremely proud of the distinction which fell to Lady Curzon as Vicereine of India. Daily News. Just before he went to Canada, Lord Minto married a lady who is suddenly going to make one of the most successful of Vicereines who have ever ruled
in India.
lb.
Government House, Calcutta, although it flows easily, entails a amount of hard work on the Viceroy and Vicereine. Titbits.
Life
at
vast
9.
affords an instance of the name of the male individual a derivative of that of the female. being Also of the two words bridegroom and bride the feminine is the In the 15th original, from which the masculine has been formed. and 16th centuries, however, bride was used of either sex. Groom
Widower
was
substituted for
Old English
10.
guma
(==
gome, the Middle English representative of the man), when this word had become obsolete.
companion-word
to indicate the individual
The nouns
that have no
')
Fluoel.
346
a)
CHAPTER
XXVII,
1011.
names of occupations or stations (at one time) practised or held (almost) exclusively by either men or women: carpenter judge, minister, milliner, nurse, peasant, surgeon, etc.;
b)
c)
some names of nationality: Greek, Spaniard, Turk. some other names of persons: citizen, devil, fellow, pedant.
Also some compounds of man, and of woman, wife or maid are without a companion-word to denote the opposite sex: e.g. postman (11, Obs. II), clergyman, exciseman, midwife fishwife , barmaid.
,
11. Obs.
I.
names of persons mentioned in the preare also occasionally used to denote the corresponding individual of the female sex. They may then be considered as
of the masculine
Some
ceding
nouns of common gender. Her dress was entirely without ornament, except the two narrow purple stripes down the front which marked her rank as a Roman citizen. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. I, 6a. In 1885 it became the property of a citizen of the United States, Mrs. Abby E. Pope of Brooklyn. Ernest Rhys, Preface to 'Morte d'Arthur*. 8. The Spartan woman was accustomed from her youth up to account herself a citizen. Nettleship, Diet. CI as. Antiq. 3776. devil. An ill-tempered little devil! She'll be in a passion all her life,
citizen.
,
will
she?
Sher.,
Let
XI
Riv.,
Ill,
3, (250).
fellow.
the
me
,
mountains,
is
and
my
/e/Zou's.
Bible,
Judges,
She
a
fellows.
37.
good fellow,
Mrs. Alex.,
For his sake, I, Ch. XI, 180. above andsomewhat apart from her
Ch.
John Oxenham
I
Great-heart Gillian,
V
|
40.
peasant.
trust
a lowly peasant and you a gallant knight; I will not love that soon may cool and turn to slight. Whittier, King
am
Volmar and
pedant. Green,
Elsie.
(sc.
But she
Elizabeth)
was
far
Hist., Ch. VII, Sect. HI, 370. He had discovered her to be a Spaniard. Ch. Kingsley, Spaniard. Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXVII, 2096. Rumour called her a Spaniard. G.Meredith, Lord Ormont, Ch. II, 39. statesman. Victoria was a statesman when the Tsar and the Kaiser were in their cradles. Periodical. 1 )
stripling.
Short
to
this time.
Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVIII, 193. youth. Youths of both sexes invade the class-rooms
of the vesper bell.
II.
summons
Westm. Gaz.,
But
in
arises,
when the necessity of denoting sex some sex-indicating word is substituted or added in the
the case of nouns of
same way as
i)
common
gender. (12.)
Wendt
98.
347
letters to the house. I say post-woman, should say the postman's wife. Mrs. Gask. C r a n f. Ch. XIII, 235Causes in which both parties are women are determined by women, ,
judges.
ii.
Bellamy
Looking Backward,
120.
Another direction was given to our thoughts, by an announcement on the part of the principal shopkeeper at Cranford, who ranged the trades from grocer and cheesemonger to man-milliner, as occasion required that the spring fashions, were arrived. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XII, 231.
,
III.
Besides chairman, also chairwoman is occasionally denote the female incumbent of the chair:
i.
met with
to
Morning
upon Lady
Leader.
ii.
Lady Randolph Churchill chairman. Graph. Then Tressady perceived that the chairwoman had Maxwell to move the next resolution. Mrs. Ward Sir
,
,
called
George
Tres.,
Ill,
12.
The names
a) nouns of common gender: acquaintance, agent, artist, child, christian, companion, cousin, friend, guest, liege, neighbour, orphan, slave, etc.; novelist, pianist, vocalist, etc.; attendant,
correspondent
dependant.
Among
er,
most names of persons in or; mostly agent-nouns, which, though chiefly and, perhaps,
these
also reckon
we may
originally
denoting only men, are now currently used for also: reader, writer, etc.; cottager, outsider, villager, Londoner, etc.; foreigner, southerner.
women
sex,
lover is now almost exclusively applied to the male except in the plural when no particular sex is implied in the word. Conversely love mostly denotes a female person, except Somein address, when it is as frequently used of the male sex. times it is preceded by lady to denote the female sex more explicitly
The noun
(lady-love). In Shakespeare,
noun
agent.
India
of
common
should
gender,
later
in
well-wisher.
Why
not Miss
tea
Tea Company which then existed? Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XXIV, 261. artist. The baronet's daughter, who was an excellent horsewoman, and
a very clever artist, spent most of her time out of doors. Lady Audley's Secret, I, Ch. I, 6.
christian.
wife.
I
Miss Brad.,
shall
end
this
strife,
Become
Merch. of Ven.,
Rebecca
Thack.,
11,3,79.
companion.
panion.
easily
found a means
I,
com-
Van. Fair,
is that
Ch. XVI,
composer.
sister,
Who
Fortunatus,
dresser. The dresser had been told she would not be wanted yet awhile, lb., Ch. I.
348
liege.
CHAPTER
Queen
i.
,
|
XXVII, 12.
have my joy Take what had not Lane, and El., 1173. made of truth, do believe her, though
I
,
|
Lady
,
|
my
liege
in
whom
Ten.,
won
love.
I
These
jewels.
When my
lies.
know she
I
,
Shak.,
The
Pas. Pilgr.
I.
ii.
could interpret between you and your love, if I could see the puppets dallying. III, 2, 259. And in such a night Did pretty Jessica, like a little .shrew, Slander her love, and he forgave it her. Merch. of Ven. V, I, 22. O then what graces in my love do dwell That he hath turn'd a heaven unto a hell! Mids., I, 1, 206. 'Tis he! well met in any hour, Lost Leila's love, accursed Giaour. Byron,
Haml.
The Giaour,
**
444.
iii.
stupid love", she would say, "we have not done with your aunt Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXX, 318. "Dearest love", she said, "do you suppose feel nothing?" lb., 319. Let not me be a witness of the delight which you and your new lady-love will take in each other. F. J. Rowe Note to Lane, and El., 1210.
"Why, my
yet."
lover,
ii.
i.
woman
I
Byron,
Don Juan,
III,
in.
swears brave oaths and breaks them bravely, quite traverse, athwart the k e i t III heart of his lover. A s y o u 4 45. It is as easy to count atomies as to resolve the propositions of a lover. lb. III, 2, 246. The thought struck him that he should find out who this Platonic lover would be, and in due course he discovered that she was a Miss Williams, a lady of some
.
He
Lit.
this
World.
must end one way or another. My only loves me in jest. Ch. Reade,
IX, 49.
pretty follies that themselves
You
will
drive
me
to
be a priest, for
But love
is
Merch.
iv.
I
The
commit.
2, 13.
me
for
my
cause.
Jul. Caes.,
Ill,
my
good
|.
of
Rome.
The
earth
was
foe
to
him,
Let the
sea be lover.
W. K.Johnston, Terra
Tenebra,
34. i)
novelist. Beginning with Hannah More and ending with George Eliot the series includes six of our famous novelists. Lit. World.
possessor.
The
gas-light
showed her
1,232.
the
Mrs.
Ward,
reader.
David Grieve,
Id.,
Marcel
la,
I,
165.
singer. Madame Svengali, the greatest singer in Europe, had of her mind. Du Maurier, Trilby, II, 17. slave. Well, Julia, you are your own mistress, yet have you,
been a slave
Sher.,
to
I,
the
caprice,
the
whim,
Riv.,
2, (218).
speaker.
stones at
'Just
because a
I,
her', cried
woman is on the stage, everybody thinks they may throw the]speaker, growing half embarrassed as she spoke. Mrs. Ward,
Rob. E Ism.,
292.
The speaker, Mrs. Caxton, was a middle-aged lady. EdnaLyall, Donovan, I, 125. successor. William IV was lying dead in Windsor Castle, while the messengers were already hurrying off to Kensington Palace to bear to his successor her summons to the throne. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. I, 1.
')
Murray.
349
Mrs.
There
is
a daughter also,
find
a teacher in a school.
WooD.Orville College,
The only
reference she gave was to a lady at a school at Brompton where she had once been a teacher. Miss Brad., Lady Audley's Secret, I, Ch. I, 7.
visitor.
"Dearest Amelia, you are unwell!" the visitor said, putting forth Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXI, 334.
is
writer.
Miss Hope
a clear
and animated
writer.
Lit.
World.
lb.
The
b) the
elder writer did not begin her literary career until after her marriage.
bulk of the names of animals, i.e. of all animals whose sexual characteristics are not conspicuous enough for the people to feel the necessity of distinct names for the male and the
female: elephant, eagle, whale etc. The nouns dog and horse, though not usually indicating sex, are also used specifically to denote the male (adult) animal; similarly duck and goose may specifically denote the female, although more
ordinarily implying neither sex in particular.
13.
the necessity of denoting sex is felt, and the context has no indications regarding this matter, the nouns mentioned in the Such are coupled with other words indicating sex. preceding
When
words are:
a) the
adjectives male and female, which may be placed before any of the above nouns. It is by no means improbable that old Lobbs would have carried the threat into execution, if his arm had not been stayed by the... male cousin, who stepped out of his closet and walked up to old Lobbs. Dick., Pickw.
Ch.
She
her
her
as
every
well-regulated
,
Thack.
b) the
lady, lady, lord gentleman which are placed mostly before, {maid), sometimes after such of the above nouns as denote persons.
girl,
nouns boy
man
woman
Thus we have:
i.
boy-friend
girl-friend, gentleman-cousin
lady-cousin,
man-servant
ii.
woman-servant
orphan-girl,
(or maid-servant);
liege lady, liege,
,
orphan-boy
liege lord
{liege
man
{liege
man)
liegewoman
woman) servant-man
servant-maid (more commonly servant-girl). It may here be observed that some of these nouns may have other adnominal functions than that of sex-indicating words. Thus gentleman and lady often indicate rank: gentleman farmer, lady wife. gentleman. If Deborah had been alive, she would have known what to do with a gentleman-visitor. Mrs. Gask. C r a n f. Ch. Ill 58. His influence made Marcella a rent-collector under a lady-friend lady. of his in the East End. Mrs. Ward, Marcella, I, 29.
, ,
I.
350
CHAPTER
My
lady-readers,
11.
I
XXVII,
1314.
this.
am
Bellamy,
Looking
Backward,
picturesque
Readers of "The Lady's Pictorial" are already familiar with its bright and sketches of some of our well-known lady-novelists, now re-published under the title of Notable Women-Authors of the Day. L i t.
World,
The
lives
lady-writers that fill the pages of this pleasant book, embrace a wide period of time. lb., 1993, 10a. ii. We wished to ignore the whole affair until our liege lady Mrs.Jamieson, returned. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XII, 231. I may not yield to any dame the palm of my liege lady's beauty. Lytton Rienzi, III, Ch. II, 132. iii. The individual for whom the second place was taken was a personage no less illustrious than Mrs. Dowler, his lady wife. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXXV, 323. man. Bring forth men-children only. Macb. I, 7, 72.
,
The who
life,
epithet
"blue-stocking", was at first given not to the clever women attended Mrs. Montagu's informal receptions, but to her men-friends,
who were
allowed to come in the grey or blue worsted stockings of daily instead of the black silk considered 'de rigueur' for parties. G. E. Mitton,
I
Jane Austen and her Times, Ch. I, 7. have many married women-friends. woman.
Sat., II, Ch. XXIX, 116. She had two or three women-friends
c)
in the country.
Ward, Marc,
1,82.
hen, bull
filly,
buck
doe, colt
cow, boar bitch, sow, dog which are placed mostly before,
of
,
occasionally
certain animals.
Thus we
have cock-sparrow
elephant
hen-sparrow
bitch-fox,
peacock
bull-calf
sow-pig,
dog-fox
filly-foal.
cow-calf, buck-rabbit
peahen, bullboar-pig
doe-rabbit,
of peacock peahen , which in Old English was pawa, have gone out of use at an early date, so that for along time there was not a common noun for the male and the female.
seems
to
Peafowl
is
quite
...
earliest instance
quoted by
3679, 586.
Murray
dating 1804.
shot a big cow-elephant.
they
II.
Mr. Roosevelt
Parched with
rhino cow,
drink.
thirst
had
at
last
managed
waterpool, but a
with
her calf,
in
Westm. Gaz.,
Pea-fowl occur
Id.,
was bathing in it, and had made it too foul to No. 5277, 12a. a wild state only in the Indian Peninsula and Ceylon.
5329, 5a.
d) the pronouns he and she, which are placed before the names of certain animals. Thus we have he-cat she-cat, he-bear
she-bear, he-fox
she-fox, he-goat
the
she-goat, he-wolf
power
,
of the
human
fled
kodak; once a she-bear and her cubs snowstorm. Westm. Gaz., No. 5201 136.
the
I.
14. Obs.
we sometimes
and
351
Distinguishable above all, though not loud, was the sonorous voice of the master of Thornfield Hall, welcoming his fair and gallant guests under his roof. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XVII, 201. The superscription was in a pretty delicate female hand, marked "immediate"
writer. Thack. P e n d. I Ch. 1 13. Occasionally the fair author herself came and dined with us. Sor. of Sat., II, Ch. XXVIII, .95.
by the fair
Marie Corelli,
II.
The use
of masculine and feminine to denote sex, as in the following quotations, seems objectionable: King Behanzin's warriors, both feminine and masculine, had evidently grown tired of fighting against the invincible column. Graph., 1893, 630a. Not to mention that now perished generation of feminine singers, who combined a sort of belated Byronic romanticism of style with a rather humdrum domesticity of sentiment not to mention this now defunct school in the stronger voiced women-poets from Mrs. Browning, through Miss Christina Rosetti to their laterwe still find in full force the intensely personal note and the risen sisters, necessity of heart-declaration which seem to be the normal characteristics of
songstresses' song. Acad., 1891,179c. Isn't tbis a joy to the feminine shopper?
Rita,
Amer
c a
een through
English eyes,
III.
Ch.
II,
55.
Also proper names of person, particularly such as are in familiar use, are sometimes, especially in colloquial language, placed before names of animals to denote sex: billy-goat nanny-goat , jack-ass jenny-ass,
tom-cat tib-cat. For tom-cat we also find gib-cat, Gib is an abbreviation of Gilbert.
now
In jackdaw, robin-redbreast, jenny-wren and philip-sparrow, tomtit the proper names do not indicate sex. Jackass is often opprobriously applied to a stupid or foolish person. For who, that's but a queen, fair, sober, wise, Would from a paddock, from a bat, a gib, Such dear concernings hide? Ham I., Ill, 4, 190. see him Melancholy as a gib-cat over his counter all the forenoon, I think with tremulous fingers. Ch. Lamb, E s. of El., The making up his cash
| |
South-Sea House.'
IV. In
find he and she used as nouns persons, the former not always distinctly implying sex. Occasional instances occur in the latest English as archaisms. Franz, E. S., XVII.
Early
indicating
i.
am Now
that he, that unfortunate he. let me see the proudest He,
|
As you like
that dares
it,
III,
2, 414.
thee.
I'll
Henry
I,
VIII,
V, 3,
131.
spend
my penny
1, 613.
Farquhar
Re
c.
Of fie,
The
ii.
sheep-skin you scorn, I value it more than the skin of any he in Tergou. Ch. Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. XII, 63. The shes of Italy should not betray Mine interest and his honour. Cymb. ,
|
1, 3, 29.
Twelfth Night. 1,5,259. the happy man. Faryou are the charming she, and quhar, The Const. Couple, V, 3, 538. Compare with this the vulgar use of him and her in Present English ,
You are know
I
the
rest
as in:
352
"You have a son,
a
her.
All alive.
I
CHAPTER
believe", said
XXVII, 14.
"Four of 'em,
II,
Dombey.
Ch.
sir.
Dick.,
Dombey,
16.
In
Early
names
of
persons
You would
If
|
smock were
a she-angel.
|
IV, 4, 211.
thou wilt curse, thy father, that poor rag, Must be thy subject, who in spite put stuff To some she-beggar and compounded thee Poor rogue hereditary. of Athens, IV, 3, 273. My he-cousin, Thomson the butcher, is dead or dying. Swift, Journ. to
Timon
As
Stella,
LXI.
The gipsy
she-dragon who guards you. Sher., Riv., Ill, 3. exerted them (sc. her powers of persuasion) with the usual tact
,
and success of all she-things. Byron (Lytton, Life of Lord Byr., 25a). She is about as elegantly decorated as a she-chimneysweep on May day. Thack.
Ch. XXI, 219. I saw the whole business at once; here was this lion of a fellow tamed by a she Van Amburgh. Id. Men's Wives, Ch. II (329).
I,
,
,
Van. Fair,
down
is
based on the
readings of
of
Ruth
year
III,
15 in the
two issues
first
of the
zed Version
helde
it,
the
1611.
The
. . .
issue had
he went
V.
second
When
the
never expressed. The vocalists were Miss Anna Williams, Mrs. Brereton, and Mrs. who were all in good voice. Academy, 1890, 2296.
VI. Also
distinction of sex
Iver
McKay,
some of the masculine nouns mentioned in 4 and 7 may be met with as nouns of common gender, i. e. they are sometimes used, either without the feminine suffix, or preceded by the adjective female or the nouns woman or lady, to denote the individual of the female sex. 4 and 12, it follows then that agent-nouns in er and Comparing or are of three kinds: a) such as exclusively denote male persons, b) such as mostly denote male persons, but may also be used for female, c) such as are indifferently used for females and males, there
being no companion word in ess to denote the female. In some of the following quotations the use of the masculine forms may be due to the predicative function in which they are employed.
(Ch. XXIII, 16, d.)
The Lady Emily was her brother's senior by many years, and took considerable rank in the serious world as author of some of the delightful tracts before mentioned. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIII, 360, Two of these women, Lady Duffus Hardy and Jessie Fothergill, the latter the Lit. World. gifted author of 'the First Violin', have passed away.
author.
dictator. She was self-appointed dictator and sense the foundress of Shawbridge. (?) The
,
ruled
i i
by
e
f
right of
heir.
My
wife
Hero, the daughter and heir of Leonato. was heir to the property. Thack. Cox's
,
:
Compare
The
death
of
your brother
M sch Much
maker
being Ch.
in a
I.
G. Farquhar,
Recruiting Officer,
353
most sweet Jewit
Most
beautiful pagan,
Merch. of Ven.
II,
3, 19.
is
Note.
the
earlier
II,
occurs in the
Authorized Version
even
in that of in Clar. Press.)
of 16.11
(Acts XVI,
(Note to
1)
and
in
versions,
Wiclif.
Merch. of
Ven.,
5,
42
had been,
Ch.
in
Thack.,
Lovel,
I, 8.
The poet (sc. Eliz. Barrett Browning) was in her thirtieth year when Miss Mitford saw her for the first time. Literature. In 1828 the poet was advanced in her twenty-third year and had long been a published author. lb. Miss E. H. Hickey is best known as a poet. Lit. World.
poet.
regent. Appointed Governess (or Regent) of the Netherlands when only twentyseven, she displayed an ability which was really astonishing. Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXIX,
present
81a.
The translator remarks in her preface that it is only within the century that the original text of the Parzifal has been collated from the manuscripts. Academy. The English translator has done her work well. A t h e n ae u m.
translator.
H. Poutsma,
A Grammar of
II.
23
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
to
Classify
ink.
red
2)
to
individualize
Ch. XIV,
121a),
(ib.)-
Ho!,
b)
(Times),
that
the
Russian
Foreign Office
as
this
continuative
For* information
see Ch.IV,
1.
adnominal adjuncts:
awkward mistake,
troublesome boy, the ambitious, pushing Melbourne (Froude, Ch. VII, 93), the mighty, opulent Amsterdam (Mac, Hist., Ill,
etc.
Oceana,
47).
about the terms restrictive, classifying, also Ch.XVl, 1; Ch. XX, 3; Ch. XXI, 2. Note. When a continuative adnominal adjunct, the adjective sometimes implies some emotion on the part of the speaker. Thus in: As I spoke, poor Mr. Burchell entered the house (Goldsmith, Vicar), the adjective poor implies a sense of pity, while in: All the conspi-
Compare
Did that they did in envy of great Caesar (Jul. save only he, Cass., V, 5, 70), the adjective great implies a sense of admiration.
rators
|
Ch.
XXXI,
27,
b.
Like
adnominal
nouns,
whether
in
the
common
,
case or
in
the
genitive (Ch. XXIII, 3; Ch. XXIV, 7, 40), adjectives may express: a) qualities: a mild cigar a beautiful seascape a wooden bench.
,
b)
relations:
last
the
century,
my
foremost ranks, the left hand; the present reign, the daily avocations; French wine, musical instruments,
in the larger
the Abolition of Slavery, Catholic EmanParliamentary Reformation, the Poor Law, Factories Education.
Wars,
Wordsworth's
Lit.
Critic, Intro
d.
I.
Obs.
I.
The
relations that may be indicated by adjectives are of an equally varied and vague nature as those that may be expressed by adnominal nouns in the common case. (Ch. XXIII, 12.) They may be roughly divided into:
a) such
i.
as
may
also be expressed by a
noun
in the genitive,
e.
by a noun:
355
slave!
.
|
The
exulting sense.
What
Thack.
In his
a
,
special clatter,
a Week's Holiday. (= Jews' quarter.) eyes there was the expression which has always appealed to me more than any other expression, whether in human eyes or the eyes of animals. Th. Watts Dunton, Ay 1 win, XV, Ch. I, 415. (= man's eyes. Compare*
Oh, who can tell? not thou luxurious Byron, Corsair. (= slave of luxury.) crowd, and outcry there was in the Jewish quarter.
Notes on
The public health. Times. (= health of the public.) What shall be said of Mr. Taft, however, whom the American people have just placed in the Presidential chair? Westm. Gaz. (= the. chair of the
President.)
Thus
And
take
also by participial adjectives, as in: Come to my woman's breasts, my milk for gall, you murdering ministers! Macb. I, V, 49.
]
(=
ministers of murder.)
Note.
dom, goodness,
Almighty wisdom, goodness etc. may be understood as wisetc. of the Almighty. Implicitly relying upon Almighty wisdom and goodness, he looked danger in the face with a constant smile. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VIII, 898a. What one sees symbolised in the Roman churches in the image of the
Virgin
Mother with a bosom bleeding with love, I think one may witness the Almighty bounty for) every day. Thack., Pend., I,
He
gift.
G. Eliot, Mill,
Hail
to
(a
thought
gift
of nature.)
life
]
3)
the
which
that perilous
Extracts
strife.
Wordsworth,
Composed
by
22. ( strife of the elements.) Peking correspondent once more sends us a disquieting proof of Russian action in North China. Times. (= Russia's action.) The public aid has been invoked for this object. Times. (= aid of the
the Seashore,
Our
public.)
It
is
Times. (=
support
of
4)
capitalists).
in the objective genitive: This attracted to musical performers of that age. Mac, Mad.
d'Arblay
have been
(=
per-
She appears
to
by no means a
These
things
are
Andrew Lano,
Tennyson,
Times. (=
Ch.
4.
(=
The Government
is not pursuing any purpose of territorial aggrandisement. aggrandise'ment of territory.) We entertain vast schemes of territorial conquest. Rev. of Rev., CCXII, 260o. The Royal Funeral Number of the Graphic. (= funeral of the Queen.)
Note
Also in the following quotation the adjective represents a a) kind of objective genitive. Compare Ch. XXIV, 21 , Obs. II. That life was a noble Christian epic. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 8986. (== epic of a noble Christian.)
/5)
When the adjective answers to a classifying genitive, also indicate a quality. (Ch. XXIV, 40, b). His boy's face gave him quite a sheepish look. Dick., Cop., Ch.
it
may
15a.
Ill,
b)
Anto-
356
nius,
|
CHAPTER
To
touch
|
XXVIII, 3.
in this
holy chase,
Shake
Jul. Caes.
I,
2,
(=
their curse
of
sterility.)
| |
Begin to chase the ignorant fumes that mantle Their V, 1, 67 (= the fumes of ignorance.) The watery kingdom, whose ambitious head Spits in the face of heaven, is no bar To stop the foreign spirits. Merch. of V e n. , II, 7, 44 (= the kingTheir rising senses
clearer reason.
Temp.,
dom of
the waters.)
resentment was restrained by prudential reasons so effectually, that I never so much as thought of obtaining satisfaction for the injuries he had done me. Smollett, Rod. Rand., Ch. VII, 40 (= reasons of prudence.) So sore was the delirious goad, I took my steed and forth I rode. Scott, a r m. , I V xix (= the goad of delirium.) The exulting sense the pulse's maddening play, Oh, who can tell
My
That
thrills
the
wanderer
of
that trackless
way?
|
Byron,
Corsair (=
the
sense of exultation.) I had no death to fear, nor wealth to boast, Beyond the wandering freedom which I lost. lb., II, IV (= the freedom of wandering.) The descendant of such a gentleman a hundred years later was proud of the English name. Mac. Hist., I Ch. 1 16 (= the name of Englishman.) Then compass'd round by the blind wall of night Brook'd not the expectant terror of her heart. Ten., En. Ard. 488 (= terror of expectancy or suspense.) So mighty was the mother's childless cry. Id., Dem. and Pers. 31 (=cry of childlessness i. e. cry caused by childnessness.) His (sc. William the Silent's) intellectual faculties were various and of the
,
highest order. He had the exact, practical and combining qualities which make the great commander. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 899 (= the qualities of
exactness, practicalness and combination.) steals over me again. A certain mysterious feeling Dick., Cop., Ch. VI, 436. (= feeling of mysteriousness. Compare: I listen to all they tell me, with a vague feeling of solemnity and awe. lb.) That poor sinner, Foker, with whom we have all come to sympathise, in spite
,
.
and fast propensities. Trol., Thack., Ch. IV, 111 (= proof fastness.) This was received by his companion with an. incredulous shrug of the shoulders. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. Ill, 34 (= shrug of incredulity.) A generous impulse rushed into Pot's open heart. Ascott R. Hope d Pot (Grondh. & Roorda, III) (= an impulse of generosity.) For educational purposes they are unrivalled. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 3176 (= purposes of education.)
of his
vulgarity
pensities
Instances
occur also
in
Dutch, especially
(
in
colloquial
language:
is
hardly
necessary to
attributive
a preposition
Macb.
IV,
2,
(=
touch
or
beings. Compare: One touch of nature with one consent praise new-born gawds.
makes
adnominal adjunct conHe wants the natural the nature of all human
|
That
all
Ill,
3, 175.)
I,
Love,
1,
like
Duenna,
an infant in a cradle.) I have endeavoured in this Ghostly little book to raise the Ghost of an Dick., Christ m. Car., Pref. (= book about ghosts.)
(311)
(=
Idea.
357
I daresay those impudent wretches made jokes about the miserable creature's having preferred a watery grave to me. Id., Our Mut. Friend, I, Ch. IV, 56 (= grave in the water.) Then like a musical adept, To blow the pipe his lips he wrinkled.
|
Browning, Pied Piper, 101 ( adept in music.) The reports of the Parliamentary debates have suddenly become the most Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 227a interesting feature in the daily newspapers.
(=
If
debates in Parliament.)
Dr. Schofield's principles were acted upon, they would lead to something like a revolution in the treatment of nervous sufferers. e s t m. a z. ,
No. 5231
d)
from
nerves.)
adjunct
of
originally
These
relations
last adjectives
may
(of time).
or
my
visits
when I
This applies
especially to such adjectives as do not correspond to a function of predicative adnominal adjunct, as in:
noun
in the
gold-fish apparently retains to the last its youthful illusion can swim in a straight line beyond the encircling glass. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. VIII, 65 (= illusion when young; not: when a youth.)
patriarchal
it
that
II.
Relation-expressing adjectives, like relation-expressing adnominal nouns, often imply a quality in a more or less marked degree. This may
also
in the
Sometimes they have become purely qualitative. Thus Parisian novelties, which is almost equivalent to fashionable novelties (Compare: Paris boulevards, in which the modifying noun expresses a pure relation); Bavarian beer, which is now brewed in many places out of Bavaria. In the following quotations the adjectives have become
purely qualitative:
fast among the educated classes beyond the Alps. Mac, Popes, (5606). (= enlightened.) In fact we are getting autumnal tints even now. Daily News. No funereal gloom hung over the proceedings. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 2276-
(Compare with
the
meadows
this the relation-expressing noun funeral, as in: While through Like fearful shadows, Showly passes A funeral train. Lonof.,
| |
Afternoon
III.
in Febr.
I.)
is an adnominal noun by the side of an adjective, expressing a relation, but of a different description. Thus an East India Company is a company trading to East India, an East Indian Company is one established in East India. This differentation is not, however, rigidly kept up, i.e. the adjective is sometimes used where by analogy the substantive would be expected.
Sometimes there
also
Compare
the
358
i.
CHAPTER
To whom he Sam. Titm.
done
ii.
XXVIII, 3.
of
mysteries
the
Turkish business.
Thack.,
He had procured
to
his son a writership in return for electioneering services an East Indian Director. Id. Newc, I Ch. VIII 97.
,
The chairman
of
the
directors
was
Brough
Id.,
of the
house
of
Friars,
Turkey merchants.
Sam. Titm.,
Times.
Early Modern English we find a much freer use of adjectives than Present English. This often gives rise to obscurity and misconcep-
tion.
Lexic.
Gram. Obs.,
14151417.
tributaries follow him to Rome To grace in captive bonds his chariotwheels? Jul. Caes. I, 1, 39. Brut. A word, Lucilius; How he receiv'd you, let me be resolv'd. Luc. With courtesy and with respect enough; But not with such familiar instances, Nor with such free and friendly conference, As he hath us'd of old. lb., IV, 2, 16.
What
(=
instances of familiarity.) lay these honours on this man(sc. Lepidus), To ease ourselves of divers slanderous loads, [etc.] Jul. Caes., IV, 1, 20 (= loads of slander.) Our high-placed Macbeth Shall live the lease of nature, pay his breath To
And though we
time and mortal custom. Macb. IV, 1, 100 (= custom (law) of mortality.) Attend the true event. lb., V, 4, 14 (== the justice Let our just censures (correctness) of our censures (opinions).)
,
|
V, 5, 14
Cannot once
|
start
me.
lb.,
And
my son Haml.
By this encompassment and drift of question That they do know come you more nearer Than your particular demands will touch it. \\, \, 12 {= demands or questions regarding particulars.)
|
interest in this respect are participial adjectives in ed, as in His banished years. Rich. II, I, 3, 210 (= his years of banishment.) At our more consider'd leisure. Haml., II, 2, 71 {= at a time fitter for
:
Of special
consideration.)
This free use of adjectives sometimes causes an apparent exchanging of adjective and substantive. Thus murderous shame (Shak. Son. IX) seems to stand for shameful murder.
,
full of
is newly come to court Laertes; believe me an atfsolute gentleman most excellent differences. Haml., V, 2, 112 (= different excellences.) In companions Whose souls do bear an equal yoke of love, There must be needs a like proportion of lineaments, of manners, and of spirit. Merch. of Ven. , III, 4, 14 (= proportionate likeness or similarity.)
Sir,
here
There
But (she)
is
head-word
in:
communed
|
heedlessness,
babbling.)
Which
only with her little maid, often lured her from herself.
|
Cold and clear-cut face, why come you so cruelly meek, Breaking a slumber in which all spleenful folly was drown'd. Id., Maud, I, m (foolish spleen.)
V.
A
j.
relation-expressing adjective
is
sometimes joined
to a past Qr present
s. v.
participle.
A
in
Webst., Diet.,
alien.
(=
born
359
ii.
American-made boots foreign-manufactured goods. Times. The Opposition propose a Canadian-built and Canadian manned Navy. Westm. Gaz., No. 6101, 16. The foreign-residing Briton. Times.
VI.
A
an
great
fact that in a cases for a relation-expressing adjective the Dutch has adnominal noun as part of a compound. Thus naval hero ==
many
1
naval battle z e e s 1 a g nautical almanac zeeMaritime Fisheries (Times) zeevisscherij, zeemaritime porters zeemogendheid, marine shells mercantile marine native country geboorteland; schelpen; muziekinstrument. handelsvloot; musical instrument
z e e h e
almanak,
= =
Adjectives are either independent or relative, i. e. they either make complete sense by themselves or require a (prepositional)
object.
Instances
etc.,
of
independent
warm
are
adjectives
are high,
in
warm good,
etc.
as in a high tree, a
adjectives
country, a
good boy,
Relative
quotations:
the following
He is averse to active pursuits. Webst. Diet. He was bent on a day's lark in London. Thack., Pend. I, CL. XVII, 173. The ship is bound for Cadiz. Skeat, Etym. Diet. The port to which we were bound. Froude, Oceana, Ch. II, 30. The ships were bound on a voyage of discovery. Louis Becke, A First
, ,
Fleet Family,
The Boer
Ch.
XII.
ideas about the private property of strangers are not consonant with the highest administrative integrity. Daily Chron. He was deeply conversant in the ancients, both Greek and Latin. Bain,
Comp.,
XVII, 67.
143.
He seemed
to be very conversant
on the
subject.
Many
the
relative adjectives
prepositional object absorbed into them. This is especially the case when the prepositional object is vague or indefinite. Thus
sensitive,
(E.
which
is
relative in /
am not very sensitive to pain Ch. V), has become an independent that you were so sensitive. The
is
.
into
independent
for
analogous to that of
I
into
intransitive,
when was young in: able for the struggle and able; angry with a person, angry at a thing, angry with a person for a thing nothing could make him angry.
According
grammatical function an adjective is said to be used a) attributively, i. e. connected with its head-word without the aid of a verb: the Old World and the New, the present
to its
poet laureate.
360
b)
CHAPTER
XXVIII,
67.
predicatively,
aid
of
i. e. connected with its head-word by the a verb, either as nominal part of the predicate or as
The
ill.
man
is
ill,
found
Such
the
man
7.
ill.
This
made
the
man
Some
a)
are:
material adjectives.
7, Obs.
II.
Note I. Instances of material adjectives used predicatively are very rare. The following are the only ones found up to the moment
of writing:
The
the bright
sun
is
golden.
dawn is represented as silver, just as the chariot of Rowe and Webb, Notes to Ten., Tithonius, 76.
bull's head.
II.
He (sc. Moloch) was brazen and had a No. 3816, Sup. VII.
Lond. News,
The
material
adjective
is
used
dicatively in:
On
either hand stood candle-sticks, two of Besant, Bell of St. Pauls, I, Ch. IV,
Walt.
II. Not infrequent, however, is the predicative use of material adjectives in figurative meanings, i. e. when only part of the attributes they suggest are thought of. Ch. XXIII, 7, Obs. II. See also
Fijn
VAN Draat,
Her
lips
Rhythm
in
Mrs.
ashen.
grew ashen.
28.
brazen. The deficient buttons on his plaid frock had evidently been supplied from one of Mr. Jellyby's coats, they were so extremely brazen, and so much too large. Dick., Bleak House Ch. XIV, 113. I shouldn't have minded her lie so much if she hadn't been so brazen about it. Queer Stories (Truth, No. 1802, 100b).
,
flaxen.
She wished
that
her hair
was golden
Ch. V.
instead
of flaxen.
Mar.
Crawf.
Golden indeed were the expectations with which hopeful people c their historic Exhibition. Carthy, Short Hist, Ch. IX, 106. (She looked out) upon the greensward where the deepening light lay golden. Aon. & Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, II, Ch. IV, 150. Her hair shone well-nigh as startlingly golden as Emerald's own. lb.,
golden.
welcomed
Ill,
Ch.
Ill,
253.
leaden. The sky was gray and leaden. Ch. XIX. 168.
silvern.
Edna Lyall,
Knight
Er.,
We
be persons
in (?)
can fancy that his (sc. Swinburne's) hero and heroine would whose lips speech would be golden and silence silvern.
.
Periodical. 1 ) wooden. The staircase was as wooden and Little Dorrit, Ch. IV, 22a.
,
solid
as
need be.
Dick.,
At the commencement they are so wooden and so stiff. Philips, Mrs. B o u v e r i e 74. The Wilhelmstrasse is wooden in its methods like all bureaucratic institutions.
Eng. Rev.,
1912,
March,
677.
J)
111.
361
adjectives denoting a pure relation. (2, b.) arisen from the want of an attributive
adverbial
discarded
when
this
want
is
a daily journal as a much journal that appears daily {every day), but there is no occasion to say The journals are daily because such a form as The journals appear daily {every day) suits our purpose quite as well.
c)
to represent an but natural that they are no longer felt. Thus we say more convenient form than a
it
word
is
others; among the rest: joint. Our joint property. _ live. A live mouse.
lone.
for
some
Where
Waterfalls
application as a predicative word is not so infrequent as is often believed. And though she be but little, she is fierce. Mids. Night's Dream, III, 2,325. ^~Being too little ... (she) stood on tiptoe to embrace him. Dick., Christm.
Car.5, h, 41.
among
wild
islands green,
Which framed
16.
Shelley,
Revolt, Dedic,
its
little is
When
We
8.
feel
in a
they were little. G. Eliot, Silas so helpless and little in the great stillness. Boat, Ch. VI, 70.
Mam.,
II,
Ch. XVII,
133.
Jerome,
Three Men
This
is
Some
a)
relative
The
adjectives (4). use of these adjectives "would entail their being placed before the noun together with their prepositional objects, which is contrary to the genius of the language. It will be easily understood that when these adjectives have got rid of this encumattributive
brance, i. e. when they have become independent, they are often used attributively: an able man, his angry brother, etc.
may
Leaving the keyhole to the fog and even more congenial Christm. Car.5, Ch. I, 17.
frost.
Dick.,
"And
Id.,
it
(sc.
sadness
in
at last father", said Meg, with a touch of "Always/, answered the unconscious Toby.
Chimes3,
20.
The conscious footman turned pale. Croker, Three Advices. He obtained a like ticket. G. Gissing, Eve's Ransom, Ch. V.
b)
which indeed
,
is
mostly a weakened
,
Advanced Eng.
Dick.,
Synt.
25.
I,
Ill,
29.
All
had left the lamp alight. (?), Evening Shadows. wide earth and deep sky agasp in the naked blaze of Maart., My Lady Nobody, 1,9.
Maart.
Note
I.
considerable
number Draat,
XXIV).
Rhythm We copy
in
the following:
362
CHAPTER
A tall figure of a serious No such sweet ashamed
XXVIII,
8-9.
adust look. Sterne, Sent. Journ., 118(Tauchn.) Hope, Osra, 206 (Tauchn.) Here is another: In person he (sc. the Duke of Alva) was tall, thin, adust complexion [etc.]. Motley, Rise, erect, with a small head,
emotions.
.
. .
III,
Ch.
I,
339a.
/
c)
II.
Of some
(7, c.)
tative
without the
Thus
live
alone.
word for poorly. I wur terrable feard a meaakin mesel badly agayn. Mrs. Whfeler e s t m r 1 d. Dial., 45. !) i. ill in the sense of out of health, My friend is seriously ///. ii. A solemn clergyman summoned to administer consolation to a very ///man. Mamie Dick., My Father, 66. J) "Oh, he's nicely, nicely, only in illiterate use. "How's your brother?" thank you." Onions, Advanced Eng. Synt. 35. been poorly. Mac, Hist. 1 ) poorly. His wife had
,
well, in
its
varied applications,
quite
i.
He
tries to
Ch. VII
at
(322).
Id.
,
as well at the
if
alehouse as
the castle.
r g.
II,
it
22.
not be as well
rich
you
in
were
and happy
join him? Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch, IV, mind and circumstance, well and good.
106.
Id.,
Caxtons,
He does not
ii.
But neither
pills
nor laxatives
,
like,
man
sick.
Dryden
the well
Sometimes they express in reality a quality of what expressed by the predicate. Ch. V, 13, 14. More frequently they are*what have been called transferred epithets. Bain, Eng. Composition, 24. Compare also 3, Obs. I, b. weeping tears (As you like it, II, 4, 49); a sleepy potion. Swift, Gul.
grammatically.
is
,
I,
Ch.
I,
16; 17.
tender years (age). Thackeray, Barry a drunken row. Rev. of Rev., CCXI, 3a.
(117a).
Lyndon,
Ch.
I,
the
detailed discussion of transferred epithets does not belong to department of grammar, but rather to lexicography. We will, therefore, confine ourselves to a few observations.
The
a)
poetry, especially in Shakespeare, the use of transferred epithets often gives rise to obscurity. What prodigal portion have I spent that should come to such penury. As you like it, I, I, 34 (= What portion have I spent in prodigality, or as a prodigal man.) I have five hundred crowns, The thrifty hire I saved under your father. saved by thrift or as a thrifty man.) lb., II, 3, 39 (= the hire Oppress'd with too weak evils, age and hunger. lb., II, 7, 132 (= evils causing weakness or making a man weak.)
In
I
|
*)
Murray.
363
Some adjectives In able and ible, chiefly denoting a capability, are sometimes found to indicate a more active meaning.
He
is
too
disputable for
,
my company. As you
|
like
it,
II,
5,
31
(=
disputatious fond of argument.) Yet have I left a daughter, Who, I am sure, Lear, I, 4, 328 (= able to comfort.)
1
,
is
King
All's
Be comfortable to my mother, your mistress, and make much well that ends well, 86. (= comforting.)
1
,
of the
of Christ.
Com-
munion Service.
This was an uncomfortable coincidence.
c)
Cop., Ch.
V, 35a.
The
transferring of the epithet is often one from subject (normally the name of a person) to object (normally the name of a thing), with the frequent result that the transferred or objective meaning is
original or
238;
list
The
own
safety.
Mac, Hist.*)
His affairs were in an anxious
i.
I
careful,
ii.
shall
careful about getting into these Ordeal of Rich. Fev. Ch. XI, 69.
be
rais'd
|
enjoyed,
me to this careful height From that contented hap never did incense his majesty Against the Duke of
I
Clarence.
Rich.
Ill,
I,
3, S3.
is
This
latter
use of careful
said
by
Murray
to
be archaic and
'
obsolete.
How can you be so carelessl To throw away the dearest thing he owed, Macb., I, 4, 11. God knows that fond heart was fearful,
careless,
ii.
i.
i.
As
't
were a careless
trifle.
ii.
fearful enough when others Thack., Henry Esmond, II, Ch. XI, 251. Wilderspin is fearful that she may not turn up to day. Th. Watts Dunton, Ay 1 win, IX, Ch. I, 271. Fear this glorious and fearful name, the Lord thy God. Bible, Deut,
were concerned.
XXVIII, 58.
Oh, God
it
is
a fearful thing
To
see the
human
,
In
any shape,
in
any mood.
hopeful, i. Joubert hopeful. Daily Chron. ii. Here comes his hopeful nephew. Goldsmith
Good-nat. man,
I.
quarrelsome,
ii.
i.
Men who
are ill-natured
It
drunk. Fielding, Jones, V, Ch. IX. staved off the quarrelsome discussion as to whether she should or should not leave Miss Matty's service. Mrs. Gask., Cranf., Ch. XIV, 256.
latter
Tom
This
In
use of quarrelsome is rare. and reverend we find the distinction marked difference of form.
reverent
by a
10.
When
distinguish
Murray.
364
CHAPTER
XXVIII,
1011.
is
a) All the adjectives denote separate qualities of what by the following noun: a long, straight street;
b)
One
of
the
which
adjective forms a kind of unit with the following is qualified by the other adjective: excellent
case the
comma
is
it
possible to
interpose a conjunction between the adjectives. diately preceding the noun has weak stress
The
as
adjective
imme-
compared
11.
An adjective is said to be used absolutely when it is detached from its head-word, i. e. when the noun to which it refers is understood because it occurs in a previous or subsequent part of the discourse. When found in immediate connection with the
noun
it modifies, which mostly follows, but occasionally precedes (Ch. VIII, 84 ff.), it may be said to be used conjointly. Most adjectives may also be turned wholly or partially into nouns, in
.
which case they are said to be used substantively. The absolute use of adjectives is common only when the noun they
modify is found in a subsequent part of the discourse, as in the biggest of the boys, white and red roses. But the English language, unlike the Dutch, is on the whole averse to the absolute use of an
adjective when the noun modified precedes. To obviate the monotony which the repeating of this noun would entail, it is mostly replaced by the indefinite pronoun one used by way of prop-word. Sometimes an adnominal word, though not modifying a noun actually found in the discourse, is yet distinctly associated with a noun that is
In this case
it
may
also be
He
In
money.
Trol.,
Thack.
Ch.
I, 8.
the
first
always on
Tom Brown,
The
place, he half-poisoned all his neighbours, and they in turn were the look-out to pounce upon any of his numerous live-stock. Hughes,
Ch.
will
Ill,
238.
be repeatedly reverted to in the discussion of the subject different kinds of adnominal words. The use of the prop-word one will be discussed in a subsequent
chapter. Details about the substantival use of adjectives are found in the next
chapter.
CHAPTER
XXIX.
a)
When
all
an adjective is totally converted into a noun, it has most of the peculiar grammatical characteristics of a noun; i. e. so far as its meaning admits, it may be used as the subject or the object of the sentence; it may be preceded by a preposition it may be preceded by the ordinary noun-modifiers: articles, adjectives, adnominal pronouns and numerals; and it admits of inflection for the genitive and the
or
;
plural.
characteristics
of
of
them
in
(my) betters,
deep,
(pure) salt. For illustration see below. In the case of total conversion the meaning of the adjective often appears specialized, i. e. the quality or relation it expresses is
represented as being pre-eminently found in certain classes of persons or things. Thus a brilliant is a diamond of particular brilliancy.
Compare
He
lived
also:
Georges,
b)
on plain wholesome roast and boiled. Thack., The Four III 80 (in which roast and boiled stand respectively for roast
,
When
still
noun, it is word, i. e. we are more or less distinctly sensible of a noun being understood after it, wherefore it lacks most of the above characteristics, at least the most typical, i. e. that of being inflected for the
is
an adjective
a
partially converted
into a
to
plural.
the
Thus in such a sentence as The blind are much to be pitied, word blind, indeed, indicates persons, but it strikes us as equivalent to the blind people. It may, it is true, be used as the
object etc., of the sentence; it may be. preceded by a preposition, but it is found with no other modifiers than the definite article and admits of no inflection whatsoever.
subject,
is
Similarly the English in The English are almost equivalent to the English people.
the blind.
may be used
in the
366
article,
CHAPTER XXIX,
the
1.
ordinary
modifier,
we
occasionally
find
a demonstrative
pronoun or even a numeral. But, although distinctly felt as a plural, it does not take the inflection for the plural, neither does ii admit of being placed in the genitive, so that we have no hesitation in pronouncing English in the above application a partially converted adjective. See also 15. Even when an adjective, or adjectival equivalent, exhibits such an
indubitably
there the
substantival
characteristic
as
inflection
i.
for
the
genitive,
may be something lacking in its conversion: e. the inflection for plural may be wanting. This, among other cases, applies to poor (14, c),
to certain past participles (18, b), and to certain comparatives (19). Once or twice when he ventured on it (sc. the* subject nearest his heart), the tatter's countenance wore an ominous look. Ch. VII, 71. Thack., Virg. Compare: His eldest son .... led his little brothers into mischief .... A couple of the latter were sitting on the door-step. Id., Pend., I, Ch. V, 60.
,
Modification
inflection
by the
the
indefinite
article
normally
infers
c).
capability of
for
plural.
(See, however
13 and 14,
Therefore
in
the
first
which
section of the present chapter some adjectives have been included stand with the indefinite article, although at the moment of
was
available.
Many
each sometimes
of both total and particular conversion, a great variety of meanings. As the meaning of the converted adjective is often one that is incompatible with the notion of plurality, it is sometimes impossible to tell whether we have to deal with total or partial conversion. Such doubtful applications will be for the most part discussed under partial conversion. Anything like an exhaustive treatment of the various senses of converted adjectives cannot be attempted in these pages, but must be looked for in the dictionary. We will here confine ourselves to a detailed tabulation of one, taking as an instance the adjective good, which has a very extensive sense-development.
adjectives
admit
in
a)
i.
not yet
come
to hand.
Bus.
good than
burthen.
the
certitude
,
year could never bring anyone a more substantial of having helped another to bear some heavy
that
There
'per se'
ii i.
is
G. Eliot Letters (Times, No. 1809, 703d). a weird opinion, held by modern stupid people, is a Good. e s t m. G a z. No. 6035, 6b.
Work
iv.
is no good hiding the truth. Rider Haogard, Mr. Mees. Will, She was a charitable woman, and did a great deal of good. Ch. Bronte,
It
v.
Villette, Ch. VIII, 86. The world enjoyed what good was
Ch.
I
in
them.
Carl.
Sa
t.
Res.,
Thack.,
Ill,
11.
can't
help
thinking that
there
in
him.
Sam. Titm.,
Out
Ch.
XIII, 181.
of such friendship no good comes in the end to honest men. lb., Ch. XIII, 180. I dare say he has good about him. Id., Newc. I, Ch. XII, 151. Mrs. Doria would hear no good of Lucy. G. Meredith, Ord. of Rich. F e v. Ch. XXXV, 314.
, ,
367
The chances are that she'll come to no good Dicx., Chimes^, I, 36. He wished he might come to good. lb., 01. Twist, Ch. Ill, 45. He came, as most men deem'd, to little good. Matthew Arnold, The
Scholar Gipsy,
vii.
IV.
The Tunbridge
Ch. XXIX, 299.
waters
it
did
no good
to
his
deafness.
Thack.,
Virg.
do you!
I,
Much good
it
has
ever
done you!
Dick.,
Christm.
viii.
It
Car.o,
11.
was
,
his
children
Burns
ix.
dearest wish and prayer to have it in his power to keep his under his own eye, till they could discern between good and evil. L e 1 1 e r t o D r. o o r e , (51a.)
Should he repay good with evil? Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. IX, 81. Mrs. Hardc. Wasn't it all for your good, viper? Wasn't it all for your Tony. I wish you would let me and my good alone, then. good?
Goldsm.,
"It is
She Stoops,
11(194).
good, my dear young sir! for their temporal and their spiritual goodl" cried Mr. Trail. "And we purchase the poor creatures only for their benefit." Thack., Virg., Ch. I, 5. (Note the use of benefit as an alterfor their
word for good.) Friend Jim, Ch. IV, 32. ordered for our good. Norris, He was gone to the sea for the good of his health. Blackmore L o Doone, Ch. XXVI, 155.
native
All is
My
.
na
x.
xi.
can only make for good. Westm. The Duke of Connaught's presence Gaz. No. 5436, 2a. one whom, if I one with whom was with an equal might argue saw good, might resist. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXIV, 500.
. .
P)
partial conversion, some applications of a doubtful nature, Where the good cease to tremble at tyranny's nod. Shelley, Death,
i.
ii.
True knowledge
of
is
it.
Ruskin,
Pleasure Eng. 1 )
iii.
He was going to get all the good out of this. Howells, Silas Lapham.2) He could not possibly hold out much longer, not a hundred thousand francs
the
to
good,
am
told.
Maart. Maart.,
My Lady Nobody,
I,
28.
Unionist Party were three seats to the good. Westm. Gaz., No. 5484, 16. (= in advance.) 100.000 to the good. Id. Income-tax is up to now *** Lord Selborne's declaration that the Opposition will repeal the Parliament Act is, of course, all to the good of the Liberal Party. Id., No. 6029, Sd.
as a balance on the right side.) ** After the first day's polling the
(=
iv.
.
That is You've got rid of him for good and all. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. Ill, 38. She had quitted Wales for good. Th. Watts Dunton, Aylwin, XVI, 463.
Exhibition at Earl's Court naturally brings about intercourse between the subjects of Edward VII and Francis Joseph. Rev. of Rev., CXCVIII, 565a. to the good and only to the good.
v.
The misery with them all was, good, in human matters, and had
30. C a r.s, A God who ordered
1
,
clearly,
lost the
power
all
i)
Murray,
s.
v.
good, C,
II,
*)
368
Madame
there
to
conditions.)
T. P.'s
Weekly,
Advert.
TOTAL CONVERSION.
2.
was more usual in Early Modern English than it now. (14, b, Obs. II.) In the latest English, however, it seems to be on the increase. It is spreading from the language of business, where brevity is particularly aimed at and often practised regardless
Total conversion
is
,
of the genius of the language. Thus it is convenient to use empties for empty bottles , packing-cases jars , etc. ; balds for bald people.
,
American English is especially prone to this kind of formations. For instances of late conversion ee especially 12. It must, furthermore, be observed that it is especially adjectives
belonging to the foreign (Romanic) element of the language that afford frequent instances of total conversion. With such as belong to the native element instances are less common. Many totally converted adjectives are practically piuralia tantum. Such of these as have already been illustrated in Chapter XXV, 19, g, will be passed over in silence in the following discussions. For information
on the subject
in
Spraakkunst,
47;
3.
De Dr e tivs im heutigen English; Fijn VAN Draat Talen, XIV, 39 ff;* Ellinger, Verm. Beitr., 22. According to certain characteristics most of the adjectives that admit of total conversion, may be united into certain groups, which are sometimes overlapping. A large group is made up by such as end in certain suffixes
i
belonging to the foreign element of the language. Some of these seem to be (still) more or less unusual in their changed function. In the following illustrations they are marked with a f. Note that the plural form is uniformly used of any converted (Ch. adjective giving its name to a bill or an act of Parliament.
these
adjectives are used in several meanings. The meanings belongs to the department of lexicoin
graphy, and has not, therefore, been attempted The suffixes referred to above are chiefly: able,
these pages.
an, ant, ar,
ine,
in
al,
(i)al,
{i)an,
ien,
ible,
ic,
He,
ior,
ist,
ive,
spaced type
369
The
quantities
of
any time
to the senses.
Times.
. .
aggressive.
aggressive.
alien.
Austria
(is)
,
certainly
no
position
to
support
German
Westm. Gaz.
to
language, words may be classed as Naturals, Murray, Diet. Pref. to Vol. I, 19. annual. Convolvulus minor and major are florist's names of well-known garden annuals. Murray, s. v. convolvulus. astringent. A gargle with some- astringent will be found a simple remedy. Walt. 15. Rippmann, Sounds of Spok. Eng.
their citizenship in the
As
barbarian. passed through many regions of Asia, among the barbarians mountains as a pilgrim. Johnson, Ras. Ch. XII, 73.
I
,
of the
captive.
The English
See under
20.
captives were
left at
the
mercy
of the guards.
Mac, Clive.
casual.
alien.
in fact a revival of a
ceremonial.
J,
This was
a
Ch.
II,
classic.
He
measures with Moliere. George of the World'. letters to Madame Novikoff will probably do more to preserve memory to future generations than his classic of the Crimean War.
is
classic
and worthy
to
tread
Rev. of Rev., CCXXXI, cleric. The new method rank. Westm. Gaz.
clerical.
She
2606.
is
Rev. of Rev.,
CCXX,
confidant. Whatever his sensations might have been, however, the stern old would have no confidant. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXV, 384.
man
consumptive.
the
remember reading
consumptives,
of
in
New
exclusion
of
who may
Times.
alienating
constituent.
constituents of
vious.
The impolicy
and exasperating the majority of the a colony which had just been trusted with self-government, is ob-
Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 53. contemporary. The object of the book is to show the relation of these great ones to the work of their predecessors and contemporaries. Acad., No. 1765, 209a.
cordial.
corrective.
to
belongs to that class of f degenerate. The prisoner nerates who offer such a singularly difficult problem to the
.
Times,
moralist and the jurist. No. 1816, lb. dependant. His generosity made him courted by many dependants. Johnson, Ras., Ch. XVI, 98.
f detrimental. Victor Mowbray, if his uncle does not make him his heir, is all Mrs. that any man could desire, but if not his uncle's heir, a mere detrimental. Hunoerford The Three Graces. 1 ) (= undesirable suitor, e. g. younger son,
,
slang.)
It
was a thousand
i)
pities
Johnny's Luck.
H.
De Drie Talen, XIV. Fijn van Draat Poutsma A Grammar of Late Modern English.
,
,
II.
24
370
dissuasives.
CHAPTER XXIX,
No
3.
II,
39.
s.
,
domestic.
Ch. XX,
The
Prince
now saw
all
the
domestics cheerful.
Johnson
118.
f eccentric. Wilderspin is one of the noblest-minded and most admirable men now breathing, but a great eccentric. Th. Watts Dunton, Ay win, XV, Ch. VI, 429.
1
ecclesiastic.
revolution.
The
ecclesiastics
,
Westm. Gaz.
The new
can
electric.
steam
trains are so clean that passengers are beginning to give the trains the 'go by' and wait for an electric.
Times.
f effeminate.
minates.
elastic.
feel
and with a
just disdain
Frown
at effe-
Cowper, Task,
See under rigid.
t epileptic. The hundred or so acres of land are being reserved for the physical incapables, the epileptics and so forth. H. Norman, The World's Work.^)
exclusive.
He
is
as
much among
1
exclusives as
if
he were
at St.
James's. Lytton,
Vases
of
exotics
bloomed
on
all
sides.
Ch.
Bronte
Jane Eyre,
an expectant of death.
Kinglake,
The
In-
takes too
much and
fop.)
His style is exquisite certainly, as is the style of an exquisite who too conscious pains about his dress. Truth, No. 1802, 82a.
confess that
(= coxcomb
f extravagant. Must
that bankrupt in fortune
Charles
that
that
it
,
libertine,
that extravagant,
I
and reputation
to
he
is for
I,
1
whom
am
thus anxious
and malicious?
familiar,
i.
Sher.,
(364).
whispered
Wash. Irving,
Sketch-Bk.
Timothy's Bess, though retaining her maiden appellation among her familiars, had long been the wife of Sandy Jim. G. Eliot, Bede, I, Ch. II, 14. His genius made him the familiar of princes. D. Laing Purves, Life of
Adam
Swift,
ii.
39.
The
toad, bat, and cat were supposed to be familiars of witches and acquainted with their mistresses' secrets. Note to Haml. , III, 4, 190 in Clar. Press.
(=
It
spirit.)
(sc.
its
II,
Ch.
(=
household.)
I hope they will at length put a check to the inordinate capacity of some fanatics for believing evil of political opponents. Westm. Gaz., No. 6153, 46.
fanatic.
f A
fashionable.
146.
11^.
Ch. XIV,
Id.,
Sam. Titm.,
Id.,
Ch.
22.
,
Pend.
I,
n
2)
Fijn
van Draat ,
Dr
Ta
e n
XIV.
44.
371
flippant. The stern were mild when thou wert by, The flippant put himself to school And heard thee. Ten., In CX.
|
Memoriam,
infest all the
highways of
society.
Fraser's
Commissioners are agreed on what we may call fundaNo. 4931,1a. It is one of the fundamentals of our politics that legislation which has for its object the grant of public money or the imposition of burdens upon the taxpayer, is under the entire control of the House of Commons. lb., No. 5060, 16.
f fundamental.
All
the
mentals.
Westm. Gaz.,
who had
Mac, Hist.,
I,
f human.
in
it
(sc.
For days too, the dry, tight cold had drawn up the nerves of the the high Alpine valley) to a sharp, thin pitch of exhilaration.
3c.
is
humans
Westm.
still
continue to wallow in
the mire of ignorance. lb., No. 6111, 13a. I almost wish I were a human. lb., No. 5412, 8d.
Mr. Barton's Bill excludes not only idiots and criminals, but illiterates, and persons likely to become paupers. Times. Think of our 75 per cent of illiterates, of our undeveloped resources, of the ruins which lie around us. Rev. of Rev., CCXIX,. 2606.
illiterate.
f imaginative.
Imaginative.
2
)
Mr.
Chesterton
(II.
Lon
d.
Alas! O goddess, if thou slayest me, What new immortal can serve W.Morris, Earthly Par., Atalanta's Race, 366. Thus for a few shillings, the reader may have a whole bookshelf, of the immortals. Advert. Everyman's Libr.
immorta.
but thee?
f incapable. See under epileptic. The ravages committed by this unfortunate rendering her dismissal necessary, she was succeeded by a long line of incapables. Dick., Cop., Ch. XLIV, 3186.
It cannot be said too strongly that every part of the world is too crowded to want an incapable. Truth, No. 1802, 1126. The mental incapacity, but physical vigour of certain negroes suggests, at least, that we may make a sub-distinction in our class of incapables. Westm. Gaz., No. 6035, 10a.
Apart, then, from the incidentals of these particular volumes, there be hoped for from a study of sixteenth or seventeenth century Holland, than from a similar study of Holland in the succeeding centuries. We-stm. Gaz., No. 6111, 116. It is this question which Russia was called upon to settle as an incidental in the last rites to the Grand Duke. lb., No. 4937, 16.
f incidental.
more
to
is
f incompetent.
this
Highland Cousins. 3 )
f inconstant. But, alas! Rand., Ch. XXII, 150.
J)
the inconstant
had no intention
to return.
Smol., Rod.
3)
Fijn
44.
Dr
Ta
e n
XIV.
372
incurable.
CHAPTER XXIX,
A
a
serious and useful
3.
scheme
to
make an
Title of
7 indifferent.
have
and indifferents into one camp or the other. Westm. Gaz. No. 6153, 4a. t inevitable. These are inevitables of the situation. Westm. Gaz., 6165,
,
16.
-J-
infuriate.
Infuriates dashed
at
the
Forbes,
Me-
indocility
Wouldst thou have had this innocent grow up to the grossness and which too often accompany maturer swinehood? Lamb., D s. upon
i
Roast Pig,
(257).
,
What an example you set to this Innocent. Thack., Virg. Ch. L, Thus wandered these poor innocents, Till death did end their grief. Children in the Wood, XVI (Rainbow, I, 51).
|
518.
(?),
The
Dec. 28, festival of the slaughter of children by Note: a) Innocents' Day Herod (Matth. II, 16). 0) Massacre of the Innocents (in Parliamentary slang) sacrifice of measures at the end of the session for want of time. This is alluded to in: Why should we make haste to clasp hands still dripping with the blood of massacred innocents. Rev. of Rev., CXCIX, 36. Beside this annual slaughter of the innocents, the massacre which made King Herod infamous,
ii.
pales into insignificance. lb., CC, 210a. "Go along with you!" exclaimed Susan,
giving
you, too!
Dick.,
Domb.,
like
{inseparable.
Now,
Christine
all girls
7 f
insolent.
was forced
He
i.
to
draw aside
I,
to
the
wall,
and wait
until the
hoary
Lytton, Rienzi,
opposed
the
cruel
i)
Ch. V, 41.
against
insolvents.
insolvent.
laws
Dowden
The
Lit.
See imaginative.
'a
where
ii.
I
it
is
(Compare also: The King's English, 22, word was apologized for by The
intellectuals
Spectator
natural reason.
j-
as
convenient neologism'.)
men
,
of
tolerable
would
own
Swift
Letter to
cold
fit
Young Clergyman,
intermittent.
Ague
= the
intimate.
and intimate. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. IV, 19. He has been an intimate of courts and royal personages. No. 496, 5776.
P's Weekly,
need not give a second thought to the deliberately disloyal irreconcilable. utterances of a few Irish irreconcilables. Times.
We
7 irrepressible.
irrepressibles were
It
all
awed
seemed so very quiet and solemn that even our young into wondering whispers. Brooks, A Trip to Washing-
ton, 46.2)
hands, of course, take no notice of this order to look joyful. who, during many days, cultivate the 'Commercial smile', and look as if afflicted with face-ache. Westm. Gaz., No. 5376, 3a. judging from these specimens of aged juveniles the stage does not seem to sap the
juvenile.
old
The
Not so
the juveniles,
vitality of
those
who
tread
its
boards.
360a.
i)
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
Ellinoer,
Verm. Beitr.,
22.
373
III.*)
fat.
Moore,
We
really
right
not
to
harass him
remedies, but rather to throw in cordials and lenitives, natural termination of the disorder. Jeffrey, Wordsworth. mandatory. France is the mandatory of Europe. Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXVI,
,
3136.
,
mercenary.
Lytton
nz
I ,
Ch.
II
20.
ruined
Savage,
My
commune.
cheap success (they) belaboured unmercifully the miserables Forbes Memories and Studies. 1 )
,
of the
militant.
his militants.
King Ferdinand appears to have succeeded once more Westm. Qaz. No. 6005, 2a.
,
in controlling
moderate.
mortal.
I
The
a repudiation of
its
allegations of the Standard have elicited from a leading charges. Rev. of Rev., CCVI, 125a.
fall.
Moderate
36.
fiat
am
Dick.,
Christm.
Car.o,
II,
national.
England
. .
.
powerless
to
of
Russia.
Times.
West m.
at Calcutta.
Fortune
it,
I,
As you like
half-witted person.) You always were the greatest natural that ever Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, II, 228. strings.
2, 44.
(=
was
let
necessary.
negative.
Ch. XXXIV.
Love
is
a necessary of
life
to her.
Bern. Shaw,
Getting Married,
,
(219).
Two
negatives
make an
affirmative.
Blackmore
Lorna Doone,
July to
neutral. The invitation of the Russian government to meet at the Hague in consider the questions of the rights of neutrals [etc.]. Rev. of Rev.,
CXCVII, 4486.
f notable. February has carried off many notables. lb., CCVII, 289a. f obstructive. The obstructives had the game in their own hands. lb., CXCVII,
486.
ordinary. They seem for the most part shabby in attire, dingy of linen, lovers of billiards and brandy, and cigars and greasy ordinaries. Thack., Van. Fair, I,
Ch. XXVIII, 293.
orient.
The toughest
pearl-diver may dive to his utmost depth, and return not but with true orients. Carlyle, Sart. Res., I, Ch. II, 5.
oriental. Divan among the Turks, and other orientals, a court of justice. Annandale, Cone. Diet. Europeans are essentially envious, while Orientals accept in principle the status quo, because they believe it to be the result of a fatal evolution. Rev. of Rev., CCXXII, 65a, * All that know me do me the honour to say I am an original. Wych., original, i.
Plain Dealer,
J
II,
1.
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
374
**
ii.
CHAPTER XXIX,
3.
I can read Dante in the Spencer, Education, Ch. I, 27a. original. Kindly return the testimonials, as they are originals. Everybody's Letter
Writer. The reader familiar with Adonais will of which we here have the originals.
in
,
that
poem
Shelley's
Sweet,
Adonais,
particular.
68.
he
Peculiar. This menace is kept before the public by the Peculiar People. The Peculiars, as they are called, have gained their name by believing that the Bible is
XVII {= one of Bern. Shaw, The Doctor's Dilemma, Pref. Peculiar People, a modern religious sect having no church organization and relying on prayer alone for cure of disease. Now obsolete in this sense. Murray,
infallible.
,
the
s. v.
peculiar
b.)
modern doctor
thinks nothing of
lb.
hell
been employed
in
composing a pereffect.
Rod.
could not have had a more instantaneous or favourable Rand., Ch. XXII, 154.
Smol.,
whole farm with all its pertinents is let to six tenants. The Duke of Argyll, Scotland as it was and as it is. 1 ) was made use of not only by the good people who f politic. The morality wanted Jto instruct, but also by the politics and fanatics who wanted to convince or confute. J. J. Jusserand, Lit. Hist, of the E n g. People, V, Ch. V, 9. f political. The gaol was crowded with prisoners many of whom were 'politicals'. Rev. of Rev., CXCVII 495a. preliminary. The exegetical and theological discussions, which are the preliminary of dining, have not been quite so spirited as usual. G.Eliot, Scenes, Ch. VI, 48.
T pertinent. The
I,
him without preliminary. lb., Ch. VII, 58. private. The party moved on again, the two amateurs marching with reversed arms like a couple of privates at a royal funeral. Ch. XIX, 164. Dick;., Pickw.
to see
,
She would go
proficient. A correspondence followed, which may be studied with advantage by those who wish to become proficients in the ignoble art of flattery. Mac, Fred., (6636).
Rev. of Rev.,
reactionary. The Conservative Republicans hold the Centre and the Reactionaries the extreme Right. lb., 455a. (See also under ecclesiastic.)
f
f
regular. northward.
religious.
The
chief
part
,
of
the
Thack., Virg.
Most
itself. 2)
requisite. The most important requisite for the practical phonetician is Introd. 6. handling phonetic notation. Sweet, Prim, of Phon.
, ,
facility in
reverend.
The Reverends
In
F. V.
Morris,
I.
G. Ward,
etc.
Macm. Mag.
revolutionary.
the
the Revolutionaries.
past he has never hesitated to defend even the excesses of Rev. of Rev., CXCVI 3526.
J)
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
44.
375
For convenience we may describe the two sections as the Rigids and the Westm. Gaz. No. 6153, 56.
,
Here was exactly the kind of problem that called on a romantic for a solution. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 474, 7146. Justin McCarthy lived and died a romantic. Id., No. 495, 546a.
f romantic.
the experiment of dropping it by the cottage of a solitary in the hope that he would bring it up to its advantage and to his own regeneration, would hardly be tried by a judicious philanthropist. Leslie Stephen, George Eliot, Ch. VII, 106. Downward from his mountain-gorge Stept the long-hair'd long-bearded solitary.
f f
royal.
The
*)
solitary.
At least,
one had
Ten.,
in
specific.
Rod. Rand.,
attached
him
the
more
to
his
stimulant.
of her apathy.
supposed she required strong stimulants Mrs. Gask., Cranf. Ch. XVI, 311.
,
to excite her to
come
out
T ultimate.
lation will
Before the ultimate is arrived at, a great deal of international legisbe necessary to keep these half-ton birds of the air (sc. aeroplanes) from endangering the lives of the citizens of the countries over which they fly. Rev.
3146.
to land,
of Rev., CCXXVI,
T undesirable.
were
on the score
that they
destitute undesirables.
151.2)
unfortunate, i. She thanked you in the name of France for all your benevolence towards our unfortunates. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIV, 380. The aforesaid Martin was one of those unfortunates who were at the time quite out of their places at a public school. Hughes, Brown, II, Ch. Ill, 237. His first idea was that some unfortunate had thus ended his life and his miseries. Mrs. Craik, The Sculptor of Bruges.
Tom
ii.
See also under incapable. Now we have again the same co-workers, a
Sat. R
e v. 3)
especially a homeless street-walker. Probably , in the first place, the popular usage arose from a misreading of Hood's lines: One more Unfortunate , Weary of breath, Rashly importunate, Gone to her death.)
(=
prostitute
unseizable.
seizable.
Public
curiosity
will
make
Id. 3)
f unusual.
amongst
us.
We
soon grew
to
T. P.'s
Weekly,
feel
that there
was an "unusual"
vegetable. I have dinner at 2 o'clock, fish occasionally, joint or poultry always, two, and sometimes three, vegetables. G. R. Sims (Rev. of Rev., CCXIX, 2406). visitant. There are some nations that send few visitants to Palestine. Johnson,
66.
down to the piano, she rattled away a triumphant voluntary on Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XIII, 140. The organ begins a little voluntary. I. Zangwill, The Next Religion, I, 54. (= organ solo played before during, or after service.) voluptuary. This led many to regard him as a sensual and intellectual voluptuary.
Sitting
keys.
Mac, Fred.,
(664a).
i)
44.
2)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.,
22.
3)
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
376
CHAPTER XXIX,
f vulgar,
ii.
i.
35.
1
What
of
We
talk
vulgars call a bore. Storm, Eng. Phil. ) credulous vulgar, without always recollecting that there
is
vulgar incredulity.
4.
Scott, Fair
Maid,
In trod.,
13.
Some denote
a)
a nationality.
These include:
American, Australian, Belgian, Italian, Prussian, Russian, etc. b) a few others: Arab, Asiatic, German, Greek, Norman, Roman, Saxon.
:
names
in
an
the Asiatics and Africans invade their coast? Ch. XI, 66. The Persians are called the French of the East; we
Cannot
Johnson,
will call the
Ras.
Arabs
Oriental Italians.
Carlyle
all
Hero Worsh.
works
of
44.
alone, of
Mac.
Popes,
We
Note.
no
must look cautiously at theories as to the Ocean and island routes by which Asiatics may have migrated to people the New World. Edward B. Tylor, Anthropology, Ch. Ill, 105.
Nationality-names in ese and the word Swiss, although having also come under this heading. (Ch. XXV, 8, b.) Those ending in sh or ch (15), on the other hand, admit only of partial conversion. When these latter nouns are used to denote a language they must, however, be regarded as true nouns. (5.) They deserted together with three others: one Swiss, one Austrian, and one a Russian. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI, 313a.
inflection for the plural,
5.
Some
are
names
of
languages.
These adjectives may be regarded as but partially converted into nouns when, as is sometimes the case, they are preceded by the definite In the last group of the following quotations they may also article. be considered to be used absolutely, with the noun language which
occurs in a preceding or subsequent part of the discourse, understood. This view however, loses some plausibility from the fact that the definite article might have been suppressed, apparently, without detriment
to idiomatic correctness.
i.
English,
,
like
all
living languages,
4.
to generation.
Sweet
** But
invest
Sounds,
supposing
the
my own
with
its
skill
in
peculiarities, a translation must have been necessary for the benefit of the general reader. Scott, Fair Maid, Intr., 16. By this compromise the wretched curate was put more than ever into the
dialogue
power
of his pupil,
Thack.,
The
and
Ch. VI, 68. elder (sc. of the young men) seems to know a power of Latin, though, speaks the French and the German too. Id., Virg. , Ch. LXI, 632.
I,
Pend.,
Can he speak
lb.
his rugged Saxon prejudices thought it necessary that his children should know French, and quite unnecessary that they should be well versed in German. The Latin was positively interdicted.
Mac, Fred.,
!)
(662a).
Fijn
van Draat
Dr
Ta
e n
XIV.
377
ii.
during many Ch. I, 4. The rich and energetic language of Luther driven by the Latin from the schools of pedants, and by the French from the palaces of kings, had taken
centuries, been predominant.
Id.,
Hist.,
I,
refuge
among
the people.
Id.,
Fred.,
(6756).
languages are not all equally flexional, this character has its The Greek is not so rigidly flexional as the Latin. But both of degrees. them are far more so than any of the languages of modern Europe. Of the great languages, that which has most shaken off inflexion is the English, and next to the English, the French. Earle, Phil., 223. Quotations, words, phrases, proverbs and colloquial expressions from the Greek, the Latin and modern foreign languages. Webst., Appendix.
flexional
It may here be observed that in some combinations the definite article does not bear being suppressed. Wendt, E. S., XV, 471. i. What is the French of 'I do not understand?' Think of the French (sc. equivalent). Compare the French (sc. equivalent). ii. The book has been translated from the German. (But: Translate this from
The
German
6.
into English.)
Many denote a creed, sect or party. Most of these end in al, an, ant, ic, ite,
CCXX,
331a.
ive: Radical, Lutheran, Protestant, Catholic, Methodist, Jacobite, Conservative. (See also 3.) The Moderates swept the Progressives from the field. Rev. of Rev.,
7.
Some
are
comparatives, which
mostly preceded by a possessive pronoun or a genitive. Those belonging to the native element are usually found in the plural: better, elder, younger; junior, senior, inferior, superior, major, minor.
To these we may add the adjectives coeval, equal also indicating the result of a comparison.
As Murray marks
all
and
like, as
Note that elder(s) sometimes means practically the same as parent(s). this sense as obsolete, it seems advisable to produce
the available evidence to disprove
i.
Murray's
better,
better.
It
in
never entered his head, while conversing with Jack and Tom, that he was any respect their better. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. XXX, 317.
,
ii.
The American was his .match in most things, and his better in many. Virg., Ch. XVI, 159. The family endeavour to cope with their betters. Goldsmith, Vic, Ch.
It
Id.,
X.
isn't
for
poor chaplain
321.
to
meddie with
Thack.,
Holding his own opinion, and asserting his rights as a wise elder. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. X, 876. "A cursory visit," said the Doctor, "a formal inspection you cannot fairly judge boys by that. They will naturally be reserved and contrained in the presence of an elder. F. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 370. Sara Bernhardt is another youthful elder who sets time at defiance. Rev.
378
CHAPTER XXIX,
7.
ii.
the Fiddler, Ch. VII, 99. * Our elders say The barren touched in this holy chase, Shake off their sterile curse. Jul. Caes. 1,2, 7. When we left the Jews' quarter, the elders of our party wished to return to the hotel. G.Eliot, The Lifted Veil, 309. Our concern is for the group of youths from sixteen to twenty-one, who are going the same way as their incorrigible elders. Times. ** While Becky Sharp was on her own wing in the country, Amelia lay snug in her home of Russell Square; if she went into the world, it was under the guidance of her elders. Thack., Va n. Fai r, I, Ch. XII, 118. Theo's elders, thankfully remembering their own prime, sit softly by and witness this pretty comedy performed by their young people. Id., Vlrg.,. Ch. LXVIII, 717. He ruled with me that the matter had gone out of the hands of the parents on either side; that having given their consent some months previously, the
Hal. Sutcl.,
|
|
Pam
elders
had put themselves out of court. lb., Ch. LXXVII, 819. (Here elders occurs, apparently, to obviate the repeating of parents.) A stray 'Waverley' came in her way; and when that was returned to its owner before she had finished it, she began writing out the story for herself, till her elders got it back for her. Leslie Stephen, G. Eliot, Ch. I, 11. She accepted everything with the quiet confidence of a child who is vaguely conscious that there is trouble in the house, but is quite certain that its elders will soon make it all right. Edna Lyall, Knight Err., Ch. VII, 53. *** The elders of the synagogue, the elders in the Apostolic Church. Webst.,
Diet.
The
Kirk
Session
i)
is
M c Cullock.
ii.
composed
and of
lay-elders.
junior, i. Percy Bysshe Shelley, the elder of the two Byron's junior by four years. Saintsbury, Ninet.
(sc.
was
Cent., Ch.
81.
*)
to their juniors.
Bentley.
senior, i. The Colonel told his senior briefly, and in broken accents, the circumstances of the case. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XIX', 203. He was the girts senior by several years. Buchanan That Winter Night, Ch. IV, 40.
,
ii.
Mr. Long waylaid three or four of the seniors as they were hall after chapel. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. VII, 96.
school-
younger.
Ch. V, 406.
He was
his
younger by many
years.
Ch.
Kinosley,
Westw. Ho!,
Note. This seems to be the only application of younger as a (quasi-)noun. Note the use of younger ones as compared with the preceding elders in:
Children of all ages, the elders doing their share in porterage, held by the hand. Times, No. 1808, 685a.
the
younger ones
He is forlorn among his coevals; his juniors cannot be his friends. Lamb., of Elia. 2 ) never saw your equal. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVI, 165. equal, ii. Friendship is a disinterested commerce between equals. Golds., Good-nat.
coeval.
Essays
i.
man,
like.
II,
i.
I.
Every
like
is
Proverb (Hunt
Note
to Jul. Caes.
2. 129.)
!)
Murray.
*)
Murray,
s. v.
coeval, B,
1.
379
Therefore 't is meet That noble minds keep ever with their likes. Jul. Caes., I, 2, 308. Pass, and mingle with your likes. Ten., Princ. , VI, 321. ** Are there no harems still left in Stamboul for the likes of thee to sweep and clean? Du Maurier, Trilby, 210. The likes of her doesn't condescends look at the likes of me. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Jane Oglander, Ch. Ill, 41. She's not for the likes of me. Will H. Oqilvie, (Westm. Gaz., No.5409,3a).
|
And
that
is
all
chinson
Note
of like
that
II.
i.
I.
is
it
is
the last quotation this latter application apologized for by means of inverted commas, it would seem now hardly admissible in Standard English.
very well for him and for "the likes of him". 6053, 2c).
Hor.
Hut-
Tom Humbold,
r g.
Ch. V,
46.
These people and their like gave the pompous Russell Square merchant pompous dinners back again. Id., Van. Fair, II, Ch. VII, 77. You and your like have your fixed ideas of the upper class and the lower.
To
ii.
III,
205.
itself
was an ordeal
LI, 464.
of degrading personal
com-
pulsion.
My
And
aunt did
lastly
.
.
the like.
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
that
I
LII, 371a.
ladyship
out of
many
fat
manor
ere
now
which I blush to repeat. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Ch. Such dresses, such diamonds you never saw the
,
I,
9b.
like.
Hall Caine,
The Christian,
8.
I,
331.
Some denote
bitter,
the
of a
substance:
Byron
,
Some
o'er
the
flowers
its
bubbling venom
flings.
i 1
d e
Harold,
9.
lxxxii.
Some
are
names
of periodicals,
bimonthly, quarterly.
Destined to perish
10.
Thus
in shilling dreadfuls.
Harrison,
Choice Books,
67. *)
Some are names of colours, and have in their altered function a great variety of meanings. To give an instance: blue \) blue colour, 2) pigment of a blue colour. 3) blue clothing or dress, 4) blue species or variety of (animals, objects or substances), 5) blue sky, 6) blue sea, 7) Blue-coat boy, scholar of Christ's College, 8) bluestocking, 9) femalelearning or pedantry, 10) second ring from the centre of the largest coloured blue, 11) a man wearing blue as a badge. As a plurale tantum we find blues in the sense of 12) company of
troops distinguished by wearing blue, 13) blue-devils. Murray. The other names of colours are found in an equal variety of meanings. i. Anight my shallop ... drove The fragrant, glistening deeps, and clove The citron-shadows in the blue. Ten., Recol. of the Arabian Nights, II.
| |
Murray,
s. v.
dreadful, C.
380
I'm
sea!
I'm
on
the sea!
I
|
am where
And
With the
ii.
Barry Cornwall, The Sea (Rainbow, I, 19). As Harry speaks very low, in the grey of evening, with sometimes a break in his voice, we all sit touched and silent. Ch. XCII, 990 Thack., Virg. (Compare: When I wake at night..., in the greyness of the evening, some vague image seems to hover on the skirt of vision. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. XX, 114.) The three shadows throw their crimsons, and clarets, and bronzes upon the fringe of the deep blue sheet of water. Conan Doyle, Ref. 289. There have been no risings of blacks against whites in the Transvaal. Froude Oceana, Ch. Ill 47.
blue
silence
go.
on the boulevard after dinner, and all the world goes gaily by English, Americans, Russians, Germans, Spaniards, all colours, shapes Italians and Turks Whites, Yellows, Blacks, Browns and sizes. John Oxenham, Great-heart Gillian, Ch. VII, 53.
sit
You
out there
(sc. in
Paris)
Note
colours
I.
Peculiar to English
is
names
of
when modified by an
adjective
or
an adnominal noun of a
classifying import, the whole being preceded by the indefinite article. When a preposition precedes, such a noun as colour or shade is readily supplied, and the adjective may then be considered to be only partially
converted.
position.
article
In
But
this
this is less plausible when there is latter case the Dutch practice,
and, which
accordingly,
preceded by
an
i.
modifier, is also met with in English, His nether garments were of a bluish grey. Dick., C h u z. Ch. IV, 23b. Its colour had changed from a gaudy blue to a faint lack-lustre shade of
,
adverbial
grey.
ii.
lb.,
Ch.
II,
136.
The head-waiter
Meg had
lb., Ch. LIII, 4156. turned a deadly white. Id. Chimes 3 1 34. Its nose is a delicate red with black spots. Jerome, Three men, Ch. VI, 67. You know my hair is a sort of golden brown, and a dark red matches it
, , ,
got to be a bright-scarlet.
beautifully.
lb., 75.
Their
In
eyes
last
(Westm. Gaz.,
his
blue or grey, their hair a light brown. No. 4967, 136). days the hair had become a silver white. T. P.'
were
W. Archer
s
Weekly,
The eye was dark blue with an expression both majestic and benignant. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. I, 54a. In such a sentence as the following the converted adjective is used II. in a collective sense, denoting clothes, while the preceding word is an ordinary adnominal modifier: Lady Winterbourne was dressed from heart to foot in severe black. Mrs. Ward,
Marcel la,
11.
I,
163.
Many do
In their
changed
belong to the native element, among many others: black (Ch. XXV, 19, g), cold, cool, dark, deep, dry (by analogy to wet, as yet only in occasional use), eastern, flat, good (\c), holy (in
as
the
Holy of Holies),
left,
19, g)
381
XXV,
XXV,
pare:
well,
19, g), round (Ch. XXV, 34), runaway, shallow, sweet (Ch. 19. g), thoroughbred, three-year-old (as the name of a horse, comthe three-year-old the three-year-old children), upright, wanton,
XXV,
XXV,
19,^), worthy.
cold.
The cold became intense. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, 1,16. He was left out in the cold. Fowler, Cone. Oxf. Diet. (= not looked after.) He has caught (a) cold. The cool of the day, the cool of the evening or the morning. Webst., Diet. cool. In the cool of the evening Dr. Riccabocca walked home across the fields. Lytton,
My Novel,
Go
A Hardy Norseman,
dark. (He turned out) after dark. Dick., Christm. Car., I, 2 (= after nightfall.) I reached home after dark, drenched to the skin. Norris, My Friend Jim, Ch. V, 37. Can you walk in the streets at dark"? Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53 (=at night). Father, I am lonely in the dark. Dick., Crick., II, 47 (Compare: Even in the darkness they have no fear of lying down. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. XX, 117.)
deep. i. If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter? I shall ride and sleep. Barry Cornwall, The Sea, II (Rainbow, I, 19). ii. Anight my shallop, rustling thro' The low and bloomed foliage, drove The fragrant glistening deeps. Ten., Recol. of the Arab. Nights, II. Love and hate and greed go down into the deep of Nature, but boundaries are our own invention. Truth, No. 1802, 83a.
|
Such remarks are generally made in the dry. Westm. Gaz., No. 6011, 3a. To how many maimed and mourning millions is the first and sole angel Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XVII, 224. visitant, him easterns call Azrael. When Easterns of some education say to me: "We can't respect our women; they are not like you English," give the obvious retort "Because we are brought up
dry.
eastern.
differently." * i. flat.
Westm. Gaz.,
Striking
hand against that which the armourer expanded Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. Ill, 37. ** He was blowed if he didn't think Pen was such a flat as not to know what coaching meant Thack., P e n d. I, Ch. Ill, 41.
the flat of his
towards him.
ii.
The
Manch. Exam. 1 )
he would perform the feat of writing with his G. Eliot, left. Bede, I, Ch. I, 3. The long-nosed lad, who sat on the other side of the table on Mr. Swindles' left, was everybody's laughing-stock. G. Moore, Esth. Waters, Ch. II, 15. open. Together let us beat this ample field, Try what the open, what the covert
left.
He made
movement as
if
Adam
yield.
Pope,
Essay on Man,
1,10.
I should like to draw attention to the historical incident which brought this question out into the open. Westm. Gaz.
right.
He
rough. round,
sat on the right of Mrs. Brough. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. Wholesale wreckage by an East-end rough. Police News. i. His social obligations compel him to make a round of visits.
VII, 74.
Escott,
England,
Ch.
I,
9.
He made him
Mich. Drayton,
Ii.
turn,
To
gallop,
seized.
and
24).
70.000 rounds of
Daily Chronicle.
Murray.
382
runaway.
which
is
CHAPTER XXIX,
They
(sc. the
11.
The
often used to stop the runaway. II. Lond. runaway is never brought to a sudden stop with the lariat.
policemen) must also be expert wielders of the lasso r News, No. 3679, 581 ^
lb.
thoroughbred.
Laud.,
II,
(Thus also three-year-old. The race was only open to three-year-olds. occasionally similar combinations with other numerals: Tell me something else about the emotions of the fifty-year-olds. El. Glyn, Refl. of Ambrosine,
III, Ch. II, 291. Compare also: They make the prettiest, quaintest groups you need wish to see, these London bairns, especially the babies, who toddle in twos and threes, the six-year-old leading the four-or three-year old. Westm. Gaz., No. 5185, 14a.)
an apparatus for inflicting the punishment of death by upright, gallows hanging, usually consisting of two uprights and a cross-piece. Murray, s. v.
gallows.
wanton,
i. Philip of Spain wondered how "a wanton" could hold in check the 3, 371. policy of the Escurial. Green, Short. Hist., Ch. VII, What was she after all but a mere capricious wanton. T. P. 's
Weekly,
My
husband
squandered
my
fortune
among
1
wantons.
Beyond
well.
the
Dreams
of Avarice.
We
whom
the venerable
Westm. Gaz.
Japan and China are reorganising themselves without direct European and their commerce benefits more than ever from Westerns. Rev. of Rev., CCXXII, 65c.
western.
influence,
wet.
In
thick
upon
the
trees,
wet.
Dick.,
barn.
Westm. Gaz.,
Pickw.,
wet these boys dwindled, one by one, and shifted into the large empty No. 601 1 3a.
,
worthy.
Dick.,
to
whom
Mr. Pickwick
was
introduced.
Ch. XXX, 267, "has Miss Norah returned as that worthy presented himself "Oh, Barker" yet?" Agn. and Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, I, Ch. V, 67.
among many
others:
common
(Ch. XXV, 19, g), expert, extreme, future, gentle, infidel, modern (Ch. XXV, 19, g), mute, noble, past, opposite, present, quiet, reverse, sage, saint, savage, simple, sovereign, strait (Ch. XXV, 19, g).
extreme.
the other
It
It
way
to
is
difficult
believe
that
Mr. Asquith and his colleagues can feel that the them in pushing matters to extremes. Westm.
for us both. C. James. might not have been in vain. Lytton
VIII. a)
2
,
future.
My
sacrifice
What
Ch.
i)
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
2)
Murray.
383
at
this
show.
Mids. Night's
Dream,
126.
All Cheltenham was drawn out into the High-street, the gentles on one side and the commons on the other. Mad. D'Arblay, Diary, 1788, 16 Aug. 1 ) The simples are not bound to pick up what the gentles throw away. Mrs.
Raven's Tempt.,
Ch. V, 36.
Ill,
8. i)
There is a gentle's voice under a dark cloak. Disraeli, Viv. Grey, V, Ch. III.i) "What! gentles," said he, "have ye finished already? Lytton, Rienzi,
I,
Note.
mute.
noble.
council.
Now
We
tied
only archaically, or as a comic vulgarism for gentlefolks. on our cloaks as sadly as mutes at a funeral. Mrs. Gask.,
197.
Cranf., Ch. X,
When
the
called
his nobles to
Dickens.
past. The Lords of Life and Death would never allow Charlie Mears to speak with full knowledge of his pasts. Rudyard Kipling. *)
sage.
instructed
,
them
II,
told
10.
them
of public
Johnson, Ras.
Ch.
savage.
bald,
knife
The savages
I
whole party
to death.
Mrs. Inch-
Ch. X, 31.
|
bought an unction of a mountebank, So mortal that but dip a Where it draws blood, no cataplasm so rare, Collected from all simples that have virtue Under the moon can save the thing from death That
simple.
|
is
Haml.,
|
IV, 7, 145.
The
Told him
had saved
of
Ten.,
Lane, and
El., 857.
Note.
it
The use
25.
to
is
contrasted
with
simple to denote a person is usual only when noble or gentle. See above under gentle, and
neither
.
compare
Ch.
II,
spare
12. Finally
unusual
mention should be made of a conversion that is felt as and more or less at variance with the genius of the
language.
a)
Many
adjectives are frequently found converted into nouns from a of convenience, brevity or jocular effect, to denote either persons, or things. Several instances have already been given in 2,
desire
and also in Ch. XXV, 19, g. Of especial frequency is conversion of certain opprobrious adjectives, particularly in (reported) emotional What a stupid you sentences, such as / never saw such a stupid!
are.
He
2 Eng. Phil.
Compare
inverted
Storm,
by way
bald.
Advertisement
were these, and brothers gigantic in stature. Longfellow, Courtship of Miles Standish. VII, 30. There is no concealing the horrors which have accompanied the recent operations against Bambaata and his Zulu braves. Daily News.
brave.
Braves of the
tribe
!)
Murray.
384
CHAPTER XXIX,
12.
Note. This use of brave has been applied since 1800 chiefly to warriors among the North American Indians (after the French in N. America). Murray.
The drunk and disorderlies had been disposed Camden Pratt, Unknown London.')
disorderly.
droll.
of
in the
morning.
Such a thoroughly light-hearted droll. Lockhart, Scott. 1 ) friendly. Near Fort Inugu some "friendlies", while gathering corn,
killed
have been
by the rebels.
Courtesy
is
Times.
it
gay.
a gallant gay.
Scott,
Rob Roy. 1 )
I,
gawky.
good.
What
gawky
was.
Ch. V,
48.
Very good people indeed, you will notice, dress altogether in black, even to gloves and neckties, and they will probably take to black shirts before longMedium goods indulge in light trousers on week-days, and some of them even go so far as to wear fancy waistcoats. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, XIII, 221. I never knew what it was to be lonely. But clumsy grown-up. As a child
grown-ups come along and tramp right through the dream-garden. Annie Besant, Au tobi og. 41. Children as well as grown-ups have their foolish moods. Jerome, Paul Kelver,
,
Wes
m.
G a z.
have-nots of the world.
have-not.
Personal service
in aid of the
Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXVIII, 517a.
nondescript.
Ch. IX, 47a.
in
out-of-work. This winter the out-of-works were seventy-five thousand in Chicago". Rev. of Rev., CCXIX, 295a. A recruiting sergeant was stopped by ... no fewer than fourteen out-of-works.
'
Tit-Bits,
powerful.
History
of
We
the
1
find
that
Men
of
it consisted of three tribes, termed in the tract 'Of the Alban' the three powerfuls in Dalriade. Skene, Celtic
Scotland.
red.
He was
a Radical, a Red.
Mrs.
II,
92.
of foreigners would, some people said, naturally include large numbers c . Carthy, Short. Hist., Ch. of the 'Reds' of all continental nations. IX, 108. (Compare: It was more of the red men and the blacks that we were afraid. Thack.,
The crowds
Virg., Ch. XC, 955.) O, don't bother, Maggie! you're such a silly. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. V, 27. silly. You're just an old silly. Agn. & Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, I, Ch. Ill, 39. you that any one might have (Compare: Who'd 'a thought you was so wilful? taken for one of the silly-softs. G. Meredith, Ord. of Rich. Fev., Ch. XXX, 250 stalwart. He was a stalwart of the stalwarts in the war against war. Rev. of Rev., CXCIX, \2b. An interval of less than a week covers the loss of two stalwarts of the older Libe-
The Lords
No. 5555, 2a. have come in for their share of blame, no doubt, in the opinion of the mover of the resolution and the 39 stalwarts supporting him on this "burning question". Times, No. 1826, 10536.
ralism.
,
Westm. Gaz.
Lieutenant
suspect.
number
of 'suspects'.
M c Carthy,
A Hist, of Our
Own Times,
!)
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
385
storm and
call
women, and a woman's ideal man is someone Jerome, Idle Thoughts, VIII, 128. us stupids? Hardy, Far from the Madding
XXXII, 245.
curate's wife with the legion family clothed
cast-off.
The poor
and ends
empty.
These
Deductions for
(sc. nuts)
from the odds C.James, Rom. Rigmarole, 148. 1 ) empties returned must not be made from remittances.
Price List.
to find occasionally, these empties
one in Hutchinson
encyclical.
were no empty shells; or if there were but the empty shells were but in the proportion of something like seven or eight to those in which you would find the fat nut. Hor.
(Westm. Gaz.
237a.
Rev.
Eliza
of Rev., CCI,
Cook,
homeward-bound.
is
her
crew.
left-over.
What
do with
left-overs.
Henry Stead
Good House-
keeping.
pretty-pretty. Thus the famous closing apparatus on the bridge, paraded as a device of greater safety, with its attachments of warning bells, coloured lights,
and all these pretty-pretties, was, in the case of this ship, technical farce. Eng. Rev., 1912, July, 582.
There are no carpets, curtains, cushions or pretty-pretties
No. 3723, 392a.
of
little
better than a
any kind.
Punch,
raw.
The
literary dispute of
slightest touch of
which I had seen the beginning, was a "raw", the which made them wince. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. Ch. II, 33.
,
tailor-made.
ugly.
I,
Types
it
in tailor-mades.
Westm. Gaz.,
Well,
it
gave
me
pleasure,
with
El.
just to try
(sc.
my
Ch.
Ill,
35.
wireless. The wonders of his wireless are News, No. 3481a, Sup., VII.
now
familiar to
all.
II.
Lon
d.
Westm.
b)
Sometimes
this
occasional conversion
is
conditioned or favoured
its
opposite.
generals. The boy seemed to have begun with the generals of life, and never to have concerned himself with the particulars. Hardy, Jude the Obscure.2) (The conversion of particular is not confined to this combination. See 3.)
right(s)
.
. .
wrong(s).
Don't
try
to
go confounding
of
the rights
and wrongs
,
of
Dick.,
rights
the
case.
Open
Sesame,
Two
x
184.
Proverb.
van Draat
English.
Murray
s.
v.
legion.
$0
Fijn
D
II.
Ta
e n
XIV.
H.
25
386
The
rights
CHAPTER XXIX,
and wrongs
of
12.
the
matter are
not affected
by these incidents
1912,
Sept. 287 (For
No. 6159, 2a. The wrongs so far outweigh the rights. rights see also Ch. XXV, 20.)
short(s)
long.
. . .
Westm. Gaz.,
Eng. Rev.,
syllables)
long(s).
,
Two
shorts (sc.
s
i
short
are
equivalent to one
Tom Hood
.
Eng. V e r
Matrimony
c.
sweets
{Sweets
c)
sours.
also
is
delicious
*)
common enough when standing by itself. Ch. XXV, 19.) In Shakespeare and in the older Modern English writers we also find converted adjectives that have the value of Present8 20; English abstract nouns (in ness). Abbot, Shak. Gram.
is
,
77. Franz, Shak. Gram., A sudden pale usurps her check. Venus and Adonis, 589. Say what you can, my false o'erweighs your true. Meas. for Meas.,II,
4, 170.
Let
III,
no face be kept
2, 84.
in
mind
As you like
it,
off.
Twelfth Night,
Shyl.
4, 100.
I
offer.
This
Merch. of Ven.
hurried
They
deceived.
Hume, Es.
and pathetic away no leisure to perceive the artifice by which they were of Eloquence, XIII, 104.
find this practice archaically in: Tho' I love him heartily, I can spy already in him. Ten., Beck., Prol., (696a).
|
We
strain of
Thy
frail
to judge of fair.
|
Id.,
OZnone,
very hour Do forge a life-long trouble for ourselves By taking true for false, or false for true. Id., Ger. En., 4. Children learn by such Love's holy earnest in a pretty play And get not overBut seeing, as in a rose-bush Love's divine \... Become early solemnised,
us
at this
<
Mrs. Brown.,
r.
Leigh,
I,
57.
after
pronouns
+ partitive
character has
Some words, primarily adjectives, in which, however, the adjectival now become more or less obliterated, exhibit a survival
Such are:
applications for which see Murray, s. v. evil, B. Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof. Bible, Matth. VI, 34. Tait and Stewart, The greatest of all mysteries the origin of evil.
,
in
many
The world
ii.
Univ., VII 269. 2) is a mass of injustice, and a little more Edna Lyall, Don., 1,263. difference. He does no evil. Lytton Z a n o n 29. a )
, ,
Unseen
or less
evil-
makes no
good,
ill in
i.
in
almost
all
many
yet
Murray,
Will
s. v.
ill,
B.
/'//.
Oh
In
we
that
somehow good
be the
final
goal of
Ten.,
Mem.,
LIV.
VI.
*)
Murray.
387
I
Strange natures
I
made
ill
a brotherhood of
///.
Shelley, Rev. of
si.,
X,
vi
can think no
of him.
,
Murray.
To
iv.
Fowler
still.
Concise
|
Oxf. Diet.
heaping on the fear of
107.
ill
|
a divided will
Still
The
fear of
men, a coward
Ten.,
Two
Voices,
for the sake of. short, in the collocation for short, in which for Gustavus Adolphus (they call him "Gusty" downstairs for short) is a very good
sort of dog.
Jerome, Idle
Thoughts,
but
I
VIII, 119.
His baptismal
name was
Chantilly,
I,
called
him
Glow-Worm
Ch. VII, 327.
Tilly
for short.
Payn,
Tales,
is
K,
183.
Compare: What
Note.
iv
Saintsb.,
Ninet. Cent.,
,
With for short compare for good as instanced above 1 c v) and for any one's good (a, ix), in which also for has the meaning of for the sake of or on account of. Frequent instances of similar combinations occur in Middle English. For an exhaustive discuss(fi,
and
PARTIAL CONVERSION.
13.
and
Adjectives are found partially converted into nouns in varied degrees in different applications, sometimes confined to certain com-
binations.
Note. Leaving the grammatical function in the sentence out of account, as the least important, the changed nature mostly extends no further than the capability of taking the definite article. Sometimes we also find other modifiers, i. e. a genitive or its equivalent, a possessive or demonstrative pronoun, an adverbial or adnominal adjunct, and even a numeral or the indefinite article, and occasionally inflection for the genitive is possible. But even when preceded by a numeral or the indefinite article, or placed in the genitive, we cannot pronounce
these adjectives to have
for the plural. (1
,
b.)
In
the
may be
14. a)
the different ways in which an adjective following converted into a noun are passed under review. partially
adjectives and participles denoting a quality or a state
to
Most
be used
denote a class of
persons
in a
may generalizing
way.
i.
(Ch.
XXXI,
He
evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. Bible, M a 1 1 h. V, 45. The only wretched are the wise. From ignorance our comfort flows,
5, b.) on the
To the Hon. Charles Montague. He frequented the voluptuous and the frugal, the idle and the busy, the merchants and the men of learning. Johnson, Ras. Ch. XVI, 98. grow weary to behold The selfish and the strong still tyrannize Without
Prior,
,
reproach or check.
It
Shelley,
is
seldom
that the
its
period.
Mrs. Shelley,
young know what youth is, till they have got beyond Pref. to First Col. Ed. 1839.
388
Where
the
CHAPTER XXIX,
good and
14.
eternal rest.
the bad and the worst and the best Have gone to their Poe, The City in the Sea. He, by some law that holds in love, and draws The greater to the lesser long desired A certain miracle of symmetry. Ten., Gard. Daught. 10. Everybody pilgrimized who could even the poorest and the lowest. Walt. Bes.
| | |
London,
1 ,
69.
The poorest could go as well as the richest, because the pilgrim wanted no money. lb. The blind are objects of compassion not of sorrow. Annie Besant Auto, ,
biography,
.
342.
has always been my wish to look with an impartial eye alike upon the just It and upon the unjust. Norris My Friend Jim, Ch. IV, 26. Note I. Generalization is not incompatible with some limitation as to time, place or other circumstances, and the converted adjective may, accordingly, be accompanied by some specializing adjunct, i. e. a genitive or its equivalent, a possessive pronoun, a classifying adjective or adnominal noun, an adnominal word-group or an adverbial adjunct. Frequently the specializing element is not expressed. (Ch. XXXI, 5, b.)
,
i.
Diary
All,
Where England's
loveliest shine.
Thack.
But signs are not wanting thrill through the veins of wholly out of the hearts of men. Annie Besant, Autobiography, 331. ** The lowest vulgar of Athens were his (sc. the orator's) sovereigns and the arbiters of his eloquence. Hume, Es. XIII, Of Eloquence, 105. The unsoaped of Ipswich brought up the rear. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXIV, 219. Whitehall was filled with the most corrupt of mankind. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 318. Lo, the leader in these glorious wars Now to glorious burial slowly borne,' Follow'd by the brave of other lands [etc.]. Ten., Ode on the Death of
|
(329). that the passion for justice and for liberty, which the world's greatest in the past, has not yet died
Pluche,
Duke of Wei., VIII, 194. That only shows how mistaken the wisest of us may be every now and
Norris, *** Our
then.
My Friend
Jim,
Ch. V, 36.
.
. .
and wait for gentlefolks tremble at the brink (sc. of matrimony) whole years, until they find a bridge or a gilt barge to carry them across; our poor do not fear to wet their bare feet, plant them in the brook, and trust to Ch. LXXXI, 853. fate and strength to bear them over. Thack., Virg. The wiseacres who look after the education of our young have been mortified to observe that the last thing in the world the children have been learning is No. 5412 8d. e s t m. G a z. English.
,
****
great
fn
at
eas t
certain,
in
is
that a
deal
of
superfluous pity
away upon
it.
Thack., Virg.,
is
due
A then.,
This
(sc.
policy)
scouted
in
as
fantastic
Westm. Gaz.,
possible
G.Eliot, Mill.
Persecution makes the stronger among us bitter; the weaker among us hypocrites. Annie Besant, A u to b log., 173.
the manners There is also shewn in the plays the most perfect knowlege of and the methods of the greatest in the land. Sir Edwin Durnino-Lawrence,
.
Bacon
is
389
Wych.,
pure
least
and are
least exceptions.
Plain Deal.,
The mentally
in spirit, the
II,
1.
deaf
ii.
There are human tempers, bland, glowing and genial within whose influence is as good for the poor in spirit to live, as it is for the feeble in frame to bask in the glow of noon. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XIX, 245. The art of biography has its peculiar difficulties, no doubt, in dealing with the recently dead. A then., No. 4405, 357a. In France the decrease in number of the classically trained has elevated the standard of attainment. lb., No. 4463, 5146. Only five hundred of the vanquished were slain. Mac, Clive. The besieged were not without hopes of succour. Id. Fred., (688a). Till down she came And found fair peace among the sick. Ten. , P r i n c. VII, 29. We justified our conquest to ourselves by taking away the character of the
it
,
conquered.
Froude
Oceana,
Ch.
HI.
The
inspector of police had been firing six shots into a crowd, stoning the military. Graph.
who were
II. The converted adjective may also be preceded by an adjective of continuative function. The lordly manner in which one of your correspondents suggests that cooks and tweenies should be included in the list of the Great Tipped makes one almost think that he must be at least the father, or at best the follower, of cook or scullery-wench. e s t m. G a z. He may look very well on the outside, but I detect at once in his speech the
mob,
the commonalty.
Friend of Sylvia's.
III.
ordinary nouns. Ch. XXIII. See also Wendt, Die Synt. 21; id., Synt. des heut. Eng., 109. A sick(-)room a deaf-and-dumb asylum, the retired list (= the retired from active service), mad-doctors, madhouse.
,
of those
IV. Sometimes an abstract noun takes the place of the adjective. The rank, talent, and beauty of Great Britain joined in the solemn requiem with which the funeral service closed. Intro d. to Ten. 's Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wei. (Macm., Eng. Clas.).
Also word-groups whose primary function is not that of adjectives are sometimes used as converted adjectives. But the most miserable and therefore the most urgently in need of assistance are those convicted of the unpardoned crimes. Periodica?. 1 ) Nothing short of the wilds of Niagara this picture would conjure up in the minds of the matter of fact. Westm. Gaz. No. 6029, 9c.
,
,
b)
When one
no class
person
is
in
a generalizing sense
is
spoken
of
either
in
indefinite
i.
its
young
Froude,
Oc,
Ch.
III.
The
object
of
this
book
is
to
show
work of their predecessors. Acad., Try to think of those ten patients as ten shipwrecked men on a Shaw, The Doctor's Dilemma, I, 31.
i)
Bern.
117.
390
ii.
CHAPTER XXIX,
I
14.
* Never
the righteous
man
forsaken.
Goldsm.,
it
Vic,
Ch.
III.
it,
The
**
.
regenerates or ruins, Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 54. Bible is the poor man's comfort and the rich man's warning. Ch. Kingsley,
,
man may
direct
a state;
but
is
the enthusiast
who
18.
man
Ras., Ch.
man mad.
after
is
Note
of
The use
in
of
prop-words
persons
his
a generalizing
18, c).
way
whole class
(Ch. XL1II, 6;
compare also
To edge
keep
its
distance,
way along the crowded paths of life, warning all human sympathy to was what the knowing ones called "nuts" to Scrooge. Dick.,
I,
Christm. Car.s,
8.
The wise ones of the earth may Dom. Stor., E, Ch. HI, 116.
Mrs. Craik,
Of more frequent occurrence is the use of the determinative those followed by the adjective (or the adjective equivalent) to serve the same purpose.
XXXVI, 12, c, Note; Ch. XL, 152.) Mistakes are occasionally committed even by those most experienced. Times, No. 1851 , 491 c. A mere list of those eminent in literature ... would be a dull string. Periodical. 1 )
(Ch.
,
II.
In Early
referred to under b, and even in the Latest English instances of the ancient practice are not infrequent as archaisms. The adjective fair seems
case
at all times to
i.
Let the dead bury their dead. Bible, Matth., VIII, 22. So spake the seraph Abdiel, faithful found Among the faithless he Among innumerable false. Milton Par. Lost, V, 898.
|
faithful
only
The
care.
I'll
prince,
Gazed on
the fair
Who
caused his
Dryd.
Alexander's Feast.
all
sacrifice
it
to thee,
my
generous
fair.
Farquhar,
Constant Couple,
2 (57). I have served at home, sir, for ages served this cruel fair. lb., Ill, 2 (298). Show me the fair would scorn to spy, And prize such conquest of her eye.
I,
|
Scott,
Lady,
oft
II,
v, 15.
And
dealt
That not when prize of festal day Was wore jewel in her hair, So highly did his bosom mute farewell. lb., II, vi, 7. trust ... in my rightful cause, more than in a vain resistance, which would but cost the lives of my best and bravest. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XXVII, 355. As safe to me the mountain way At midnight as in blaze of day, Though with
after,
the
him by
Who
e'er
his
boldest at
25.
his back,
the track.
Id.,
Lady,
II,
XXXV,
"I was not always," she said, "that which I now am. I was not always the wise, the powerful, the commanding, before whom the young stand abashed, and the old uncover their grey heads. Scott, Pirate, Ch. X, 113. (Observe the different application of the two last adjectives.)
'
last.
Byron, Cors.
III,
i.
And
Id.
Lara,
I ,
xxi.
i)
118.
391
the fairest and the gayest present. Ch. Ginevra Fanshawe was the belle BrontE V II e 1 1 e Ch. XIV, 176. I'm acting for the innocent and good, and not for my own self. Mrs. Gask.
,
referring to her lover.) The King sent a message to the Commons expressing his deep regret that so eminent a person as the Chancellor should be suspected of misconduct. His
Mary Barton,
(The speaker
is
Mac,
Lord Bacon,
I
(3796).
There are enough unhappy on this earth. Ten., OZnone, 235. It may be have wrought some miracles, And cured some halt and maimed.
|
Id..
St.
in
let
Simeon Stylites,
No me
|
136.
Id.,
For
those days!
Guin.,
40.
pass, My father, howso'er I seem to you, Not all unhappy, having loved God's best And greatest. Id., Lane, and El., 1087. The mamma of my loveliest smiled radiantly upon her child. Miss Braddon,
So
Captain Thomas.
Lord Jocelyn asked
Ch. XXXVIII, 255.
that industrious idle,
W. Besant
to take leave of, to see, perhaps, for the last time, their
Sat. Rev.
(W e s
m.
G a z.
He (sc. Cardinal Wolsey) was forced to borrow the bare necessaries of life. The mighty had fallen indeed! Beerbohm Tree, Henry VIII, II, 43. He could not rid himself of the sense that he was a weak-knee'd idler, staying
at
Pam
ii.
home among women while his youngest the Fiddler, Ch. VII, 98
Hal. Sutcl.,
The poor
None
is hated, but the rich has many friends. Bible, Pro v., XIV, 20. but the brave deserves the fair. Dryden Alexander's Feast.
,
Was
to
beg bread ?
let
the
inquisitive
answer from
it.
Conway,
Ch.
I, 2.
As indefinite article to denote a single person. the plural is never used analogously, there is no total conversion in the proper sense of the term. (1 , b.)
Such men as he are never at heart's ease Whiles they behold a greater than themselves. Jul. Caes., I, 2,209. A braver never to battle rode. Scott, Lay, I, In trod. 51. A braver never drew a sword; A wiser never at the hour Of midnight spoke the
|
may be made
word
of power.
Id.,
Marm.
of
III,
xix.
1.
"We
talked but
now
Wolfe," said
"Here, indeed,
is
Thack., Virg., Ch. XCII, 989. Ten., Locks Jilted for a wealthier.
I.
Loudly spake the Prince, "Forbear: there is a worthier". Id., Ger. & En., 556. The sea is mighty, but a Mightier sways His restless billows. Bryant, A
Hymn
O
Time!
levelled
of the Sea,
I,/.
great Chronos! and is this your power? Have you dried up seas and mountains and left the tiny human heart-strings to defy you? Ah, yes! they were spun by a Mightier than thou. Jerome, Idle Thoughts. Like a greater than himself, to the critical question at the critical time he did not answer. Hardy, Tess, VII, Ch. LVIII, 515.
392
CHAPTER XXIX,
The use
14.
in the fol-
Something wild within her breast, down. Ten., Princ, VII, 223.
tives as vocatives.
Infirm of purpose High and mighty,
IV, 7, 43.
\
A greater
than
all
me
the daggers.
Macb.
set
II,
2, 52.
You
shall
know
am
Haml.,
Love,
thrall
Of
bitter
dropping sweat, of
,
Go, perverse
I
111,1.
me,
fair,
Scott,
Id.,
Kenilw.
Mrs.
5).
Caroline Norton,
The Arab
to his
Horse,
cried
II
(Rainb.,
II,
arrogantly?
the Orsini, "Knowest thou him whom thou addressest thus Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. V, 39. fairest, hear me now who do thy will. W. Morris, Atalanta's Race, 366. Not even you, beloved, can I admit to this hour. Aon. <& Eo. Castle, Dia-
"InsolenV."
mond
Note
cut Paste,
I.
II,
language of rebuke some adjectives are currently thus used after you, also in Present English. A handsome young fellow, you impudent begone out of my sight. Wych.,
In the
!
II,
1.
swopped
all
my
is
G. Eliot,
Mill,
marls with the little fellows, and cobnuts are no fun, you I, Ch. V, 26.
Compare:
1
This
don't want
your doing, Peggotty, you crue/ //h7i. Dick., Cop., Ch.IV,22o. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. V, 27. silly thing.
is
II.
Quite
common
the use of certain adjectives (or equivalent parsweet, as vocatives after my.
,
Look
Ch.
I,
dear, answered she, "I can't say". Mar. Edoew., Patron., II. at the birds, my pretty, look at the birds. Dick., Little Dorrit,
my
i)
I,
3b.
brother?" asked the child, pointing to the Baby. "Yes, my pretty," Ch. Ill, 20. Id., D o m b. My sweet, I am only going to reason. Id., Cop., Ch. XLIV, 317a. "And, my sweet," she continued after the curtains had been accorded [etc.].
"Is that
my
answered Richards.
Thack.,
A Little Dinner
,
at
Timmins's.
not wise."
beloved.
sweet," she said, "as yet I Pygm. and the I m. 170a. For two days she was with me,
"My
am
my
My
I,
dearest,
how
tell,
220.
,
Oh
my
precious.
Id.
Overruled.
,
But most adjectives used as vocatives preceded by my, now seem to require a noun or the prop-word one.
how beautiful thou seemest My boy, my precious babe! Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch.
beautiful!
I
How
one,
my
rose
I.
')
Murray.
393
Some
of
these
vocatives
of
possessive pronoun.
Sweet, leave me here awhile. Haml. III, 2, 237. Sweet, adieu. I'll keep my oath. Merch. of Ven. II, 9, 77. I want to speak to you. Only one word, dearest. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XLIX, 456. "And have you answered them (sc. the letters), Blanche?" she asked, putting them back. "Oh no! not for worlds, dearest," the other said. Thack., Pend. , I, Ch. XXIV, 257.
,
,
am not in the clouds, dear; I am only anxious. Miss Braddon, Cloven FooU) of Kfng Acris., 816. Forget it, sweetl W.Morris, Earthly Par., "O sweet," he said, "this thing is even love, Whereof I told thee. lb,, Pygm.
I
Doom
and the
IV.
m.
170a.
If
we must
part,
it's
Punch,
In colloquial language dear with the mark of the plural is often used as a vocative, in addressing more persons than one. i. Now hear me, my dears. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. XIII, 112.
know, my dears, that we shall not Christm. Car. 5, IV, 101. know, my dears, all the Hoskinses
I
I
quarrel
in
easily
among
ourselves.
Id.,
England.
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.
Ch. V, (322).
Ch.
ii.
Ill,
27.
,
Good-bye
dears.
Id.,
A Little Dinner
Goldsmith,
at
Timmins's,
II.
Thus
Back
my
pretties.
She Stoops,
V. Dear has further developed into a pure noun with a possessive pronoun or an (in)definite article and with the mark of the plural when more than one individual is referred to: my dear, your dear, his dear; a dear, the dears. Most of these developments are as yet met with only in colloquial style. Dear is also a pure noun in such interjectional expressions as Dear knows! (= Goodness knows, or Heaven knows, I do not), Dear bless you!
Murray,
|
s.
v. dear, C.
|
|
ii.
ounce, or cat, or bear, Pard, or boar with bristled hair, In thy eye that shall appear When thou wak'st, it is thy dear. Mids. II, 2, 33. John Gilpin's spouse said to her dear. Cowper, John Gilpin, II. You are shej my dearest dear, Therefore it shall be done. lb., V. I met my dear. He found his dear. Murray. She is no longer very young, or beautiful but a dear for all that. Hall Caine,
it
,
|
Be
The Christian,
I,
332.
Jack Belsize liked to dine with Lady Kew. He said "she was an old dear, and the wickedest old woman in all England;" and he liked to dine with Lady Julia, who was "a poor suffering dear, and the best woman in all England." Thack., Newc, I, Ch. X, 125. You are such a devoted old dear. Miss Braddon J u s t as I am, Ch. XLV.
,
iii.
Byron,
Don Juan,
XV, lxxvi.
Dearest and sweet, indeed, may stand with a possessive pronoun in other functions than the vocative, but exhibit no further development into pure nouns.
What
Par.,
feat
Doom
do ye
This eve
in
honour
of
my
sweet and
of
King Acris.,
806.
Murray.
394
e)
CHAPTER XXIX,
14.
The
is
adjective poor seems to occupy a unique position, inasmuch as it used not only to denote a class in a generalizing way, but also a specialized number of persons. It may, accordingly, be preceded by the definite article, a genitive or its analogue, by a possessive pronoun, and even by a demonstrative pronoun or (in)definite numeral. As for
these last kinds of modifiers, instances are infrequent, some prop-word being mostly added. When poor is modified by a genitive or its
it is
a class in a generalizing way or a specialized number is meant, * He firmly believed that he was doing right, and defending the cause of the poor against the wealthy. Mac, Fred., (675a). It only concerned the daughters of the poor. Rev. of Rev., CXCV, 307a. He has taken much interest in the housing of the poor. lb., CXCVI, 350ft. ** The intimate knowledge of the London poor. At hen., No. 4463, 514ft.
ii.
at least
**
The proverbial kindness of the poor to the poor is nowhere displayed more abundantly than among the poor of Little Ireland. Good Words. How the poor of Windsor showed their affection to the Queen. Graph. Money left to the poor of the parish. Murray s. v. poor, II 7. *** The surface of still her poor were England began to look pleasant wretched. Ch. BrontE, Shirley, I, Ch. X, 214.
, , .
Thou noble
poor.
beg. *
,
Father of
D e d.
to
let
34.
their
Times,
had
to attend to
iii.
Mamma
her poor.
Sir Miles regaled his tenants with notoriously small beer, especially thin broth. lb., Ch. L, 513.
and
his
poor with
among their poor. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI, 309ft. do aught but sympathise with any combination that aimed at the raising of these poor? 100. Annie Besant, Autobiog. *** He has taken several poor off our hands. Fielding Jos. Andrews,
They spend
**
their lives
I
How
could
at
your gate,
Ten.,
no poor at Mellor no woi k to do? Mrs.WARD, M a r c e a I, Ch. II, 17. At that time a great many poor people had to quit the country from want of employment. Croker, Three Advices (Gunth., Handb., 50).
Shall
I
Compare:
N o t e I. In certain collocations or compounds we even find poor, as a class-indicating word, in the genitive. He that read the loudest, distinctest and best, was to have a halfpenny on Sunday to put into the poor's box. Goldsmith, Vicar, Ch. IV. She draws her mouth till it positively resembles the aperture of a poor's box. Sher., School for Scand., II, 2, (380). Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. IV, lift. pay a good deal towards the poor's rates The use of an adjective denoting a class of persons in the genitive may have been more common in an older stage of the language. Thine eyes that taught the dumb on high to sing And heavy ignorance aloft to Have added feathers to the learned 's wing. Shak., Son., LXXVIII. fly The man, in life wherever pleased, Hath happiness in store, Who walks not in the wicked's way, Nor learns their guilty lore. Burns, The First Psalm, I.
I
| |
|
395
Thus
etc.
for
we now
and poor-rates.
Note
II,
III.)
Compare
Murray,
v.
poor,
to
7, d.
dust not only the paupers, but those who had just risen above that state, and were obliged to pay poor-rates. Mrs. Shelley,
the
of Islam. you have no work of your own, I can supply you from the poor basket. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. VII, 74. If she were to turn you off, you would have to go to the poor-house. Ch. Bronte,
If
Jane Eyre,
He
Ch.
II, 8.
, I
built a school
We were at Compare
at the
II.
and a poor-house. Leslie Stephen Q. E o t Ch. 3. a poor-school a few mornings ago. Westm. Gaz., No. 5185, 14a. also: "I am the Poor Man's Friend", observed Sir Joseph, glancing
i
,
Dick.,
Chimes,
in the
II,
32.
indefinite article
adjective
to
Cafe's
and restaurants abounded on either hand, electric trams flashed by, crowded with a prosperous poor returning to their homes. MaxPemb., Doctor
Ch. XVI, 846.
Xavier,
III. The construction in the following quotation is probably due to sheer inadvertency on the part of the writer or the compositor: V
Our poor
Ch.
II,
is
numerous enough
already.
Fielding,
Joseph. Andrews,
IV,
205.
IV. Finally it may be observed that rich and, perhaps, other adjectives are, by analogy, occasionally made to assume some of the peculiar applications of poor.
Wherever there are any poor she relieves them; wherever she [etc.]. ThAck., Virg. Ch. LIV, 560.
,
there are
any sick,
of dividing the payers of direct taxation into three classes, approximately equal voting power, so that the few rich in a constituency may counterbalance the many poor, was described by Prince Bismarck as the most wretched of all systems. Westm. Gaz.
/) Also the application of young as a converted adjective requires some comment. Not only is it used to denote a class of persons in a generalizing way, like the adjectives mentioned above under
a), but
this
we
find
it
it
meaning
is
employed
also in the sense of offspring (of animals). In to indicate a) a class, naturally with
,
some
or indefinite
Instead
P)
a definite
young ones, which seems to be a particular specimen is referred to. (Ch. In familiar style young one(s) is also met with in the
also find
young we when
are the
absent.
396
In
class of animals
rest
its
i.
it
the following quotations old is used to denote a by analogy with the preceding young; but for the does not, apparently, admit of the extended application of
first
of
II,
old of both sexes are alike. Darwin, Desc. of Man, Ch. VIII, 238. The young are coloured in nearly the same manner as their parents. lb.
of her throes. Pope.
ii.
The eggs disclosed their callow young. Milton. *) Round her new-fallen young the heifer moves, Fruit Iliad, XVII 6.
|
iii.
Here they hatch out and feed their young. II. L o n d. News. We know that the annual produce of every pair is from one to perhaps a million young. Huxley, Darwin iana, Ch. I, 18. These burrows are generally used by the sows wherein to deposit their litter of three or four young. Westm. Gaz. No. 5048, 13a. A single oyster can produce 16.000.000 young. The squirrel is monogamous, and in the spring 'usually rears two or three young. Id., No. 6059, 13a.
,
iv.
The
It
v.
is
note
the
young ones from the ground. An eagle that had young ones.
vi.
Fables,
22.
Give the young one a glass, R., and score it up to yours truly. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. Ill, 42. ** The man whom all the young ones loved to look at, was now the object of conversation at freshmen's wine-parties. lb., I, Ch. XIX, 203.
and ending in the blade-point blade sibilant (spelled se), are quite commonly used to denote the nation at large (i. e. in a generalizing way), mostly without any limitation, but also
frequently with some limitation as to place, time or other circumstances. Occasionally they are also found expressing a (mostly indefinite) number of individuals. Accordingly they are
generally found preceded by the definite article, less frequently by a genitive or its analogue, by a possessive pronoun, by a
pronoun (in this position always depreciative , by a number-indicating word(-group) and sometimes without any modifier or no other modifier than an
Ch.
demonstrative
XXXVI,
2),
adjective:
i.
ii.
In India the English and the French had been employed, ever since the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, in cutting each other's throat. Mac, Pitt, (300o). We promised to protect them from the Dutch. Froude, Oc, Ch. Ill, 51. The Dutch are slow to move, but when moved, are moved effectually. lb. Sigtryg threw up an earthwork, and made a stand against the Cornish. Ch. V, 386. Ch. Kinosley H e r e w a r d Our Englishmen are as good as any two Norsemen as the Norse themselves say. lb., Ch. XV, 66a. William's French are as good as those Norsemen. Ch. Kinosley, Hereward, Ch. XV, 66a.
, ,
,
')
Webst.
*)
FLiiOEL.
397
What said you, my good Lord, that our brave English] Had sallied out from Calais and driven back The Frenchmen from their trenches? Ten.,
|
Queen Mary,
iv.
V, 2 (6426).
little
No
prone to admire
13.
at
all
as those French of
Voltaire.
Carlyle
Hero Worship,
like
They
Ch.
all
Thack., P e n
very elves.
266.
,
Those English have ever been a thorn in our sides. Con. Doyle, Ref. 95. He (sc. McCarthy) took his share with the other Irish, when those Irish behaved like rebels and were treated like outlaws. Chesterton (II. L o n d. News, No. 3814, 7956).
v. * Five
hundred English, under command of Colonel Edward Chester, abandoned the* fortress of Valkenburg. Motley, Rise, IV, Ch. II, 567a. As yet only ten thousand English and the same force of Belgian troops had been able to assemble. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X, IV, 835. ** Monte Nero being the resort of many English, we did not wish to find
ourselves
in
the
travellers.
Mrs. Shelley,
perish at their
Note on Poems
The few English that could be brought to resist him would posts. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXII, 351. There's a lot of Irish here. Id. Pe n d., 1, Ch. XXIX, 315.
Many British are said to have been wounded. Times. A considerable number of Colonial Dutch are reported
Boers.
lb.
to
The
vi.
first
shipload
Italians,
of refugees, consisting mainly of native Jews, with some nearly all of the poorest class [etc.]. Daily Mail.
,
live
Lytton Night and Morn., 230. You English are strange. Grant Allen, Hilda
Cooperation between Irish and Liberals No. 5231, 16.
Liberals, Irish
to their
is
Wade,
a familiar fact.
fight their
Wes
Ch. VII, t m.
battle
196.
G a z.
therefore,
still
own
and
trust
own
right hands.
No. 5243,
lc.
We
cannot respect our women they are not like you English. Id., No. 5555, 4a. Every sort of language seems to be spoken, and one hustles, or is hustled by, Greeks, Turks, Italians, Russians, Dutch, German, Swedes, Poles, HunSeen and a large element of foreign Jews. Rita America garians through English eyes, Ch. II, 49 (The use of German as a partially converted adjective seems to be very rare.)
,
,
** Because
they
are
chiefly
insight.
Rudy
b) But
Kipl.,
The Light
37.
when it is not the nation at large which is meant, these adjectives are generally followed by a noun by way of prop-word this prop-word often making up a kind of compound with the
,
preceding adjective.
with what truth we do not know, that Locke is to-day better It has been said, known by educated Frenchmen and Germans than by his own country- men. ') The Boers had, or imagined that they had, a list of grievances as long as an Irishman's. Froude Oceana, Ch. HI, 45.
,
i)
38.
398
Note
"I
I.
to
denote the
some
limitation.
say come, Amelia," the civilian went on; "never mind what she says; why we to stop here and be butchered by the Frenchmen?' Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXII, 353.
flying,
the
Id.,
Henry Esm.
I,
South Africa can only be ruled constitutionally by conciliating the Dutch people there. Froude, Oc, Ch. Ill, 51.
II.
A few
never used
nationality to denote
nation
at large, the
Some quality-expressing adjectives preceded by the definite article, may be used to denote what appears a person in a generalizing
way,
other
chiefly
as
objects
of the
to
verbs,
especially
commit and
play.
Instances are
infrequent. Compare Murray, s. v. do, 11, y; play, 34. i. For my part I watched our new friend with some curiosity and amusement, especially when Caroline and Matilda appeared, trying to do the amiable. Mrs. Craik Domest. S t o r. II 185. The young gentlemen of our party began to buck up and tried to outvie each other in doing the amiable. De Bonelli Travels in Bolivia,
, , ,
28. i)
They do
grand.
ii.
the
grand
at
our expense.
Woordenb.
s.
v.
iii.
(The pig) was lying with his head in her lap, and making no effort to play the agreeable beyond an occasional grunt. *G. Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. I, 72. He had always a great notion of committing the amiable. Dick., Pickw. ,
Ch. XIV,
125.
I.
Note
also,
above combinations the converted adjective may be understood to indicate a quality in a generalizing sense. (31.) This is decidedly the more plausible view
In
the
with
some
justice,
One
confesses, goes to mass, and does the proper. in I s t r a. 2 ) She affected the masculine in her attire. (?)Marcia in
i
R. H. R.,
Rambles
Ch. IV, 44.
Germany,
more usual
to play agreeable.
it
Thack.
Martins.
Scott,
Black
my
dear.
Lockhardt.
2)
above the following quotations in which a Compare noun, or a noun preceded by an adjective, is similarly used in a genewith
the
ralizing sense:
He is accused of having acted the hypocrite. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. Ill, 87. made a point to act the fine gentleman completely. Thack., Barry Lyndon,
I
Ch.
Ill,
48.
Murray,
s.
v.
buck, V-.
*)
Murray.
-^
Fluoel.
399
Some
appear partially as nouns from their head-word being suppressed. They are trjen virtually proper nouns, may
take the inflection of the genitive (as far as their meaning admits), and differ from other proper nouns only in that they are preceded by the definite article. Even this last trace of their originally
when denoting
attributes of
particular beings
We may
distinguish:
Being, such as the Almighty, the a) epithets of the All-Good, the All-Seeing, the A 11- True, the Alt-Powerful, the Eternal, the Everlasting, the Highest (the Most High), the
Omnipotent, the Supreme,
i.
Supreme
etc.
is
He
is
in
Merciful.
The eye
of the All-Seeing is
shall protect.
of the All-Powerful
Ch.
164.
Doubt no longer that the Highest is the wisest and the best. Ten., Faith. We have put up our thank-song to the Supreme. Meredith, (Athen.
No. 4434 4386). If it should please the Almighty to spare him for a few years longer. Murray. In sudden whirlwind ... The Spirit of the Highest came. Whittier,
,
|
Ezekiel,
our father
ii.
IV.i)
rest.
solemn messages had been delivered, the Rev. of Rev., CCXVII, 236.
noon, came
to
All- Merciful
bate
This day,
he seemed
I
at height of
,
my
sphere
spirit,
zealous, as
,
to
know
IV, 566.
More
one
Milton
Para,
dise Lost,
only
want
to live like
II,
Dickens
The
Chimes3,
intense.
iii.
54.
Stopford A. Brooke
All-Good!
for
Do
thou,
such thou
In
Burns,
APrayer.
b) epithets of sovereigns placed after the proper name , as Tarquin the Bold, William the Silent, Louis the Desired (Thack.,
Van. Fair,
I,
Note
Paint
I.
Such
after
personal. pronouns.
him the
14.
ruthless,
Scott, Fair
Maid,
the weakly, was left behind, while the strong man was taken. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. VIII, 85. does he build fortresses Does he the cautious, the wily, the profound and erect towers, and not see from his battlements the mighty fabric that Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53. I, too, have erected? And never knightly deed of arms was done By him, the frank, the chivalrous, the bold, Which more enduring fame hath nobly won Than with
|
i
this
J
simple legend
is
enrolled.
Sidney,
X.
Murray.
400
II.
use of the
i.
comma.
help
all
ii.
us against Harold the perjured, then will WilHarold would have done, and more beside. Ch. Kingsley, Hereward, Ch. XV, 656. Torfrida was the most beautiful woman in the room more beautiful than even Richilda the terrible. lb., XIV, 62a. And Lady Godiva called for old Abbot Ulfketyl, the good and brave; and fell upon his neck, and told him all her tale. lb., Ch. XX, 876.
If
liam
that
c)
epithets
of seas, machines, ships, etc. as the Pacific, the Adriatic, the Atlantic, the Mediterranean; the Swift (bicycle),
the Majestic (ship) the Oceanic (ship) etc. Mention may here also be made of the derisive the the many-headed beast or monster, after Horace many-headed Ep. I, 1, 76: Belua multorum es capitum. Then there came a turnip, then a potato, and then an egg: with a few
the Splendid (stove)
;
, ,
Note.
other
little
Dick.,
Pickw.,
18. a)
Some
The
participles may be used to denote (a) single individual(s), either with the definite article or with a genitive or its analogue.
practice
especially
those
illustrations
only with some; with not a few, which are marked with a dagger (f) in the following below, it seems to be more or less
is will
17.
common
unusual.
accused.
Ourselves
II
,
hear
Richard
accused.
Miss Fodge rushed forward and placed herself between Mr. Barton and the G. Eliot Scenes Ch. II 24. The accused was found guilty. Mrs. Craik, The Sculptor of Bruges.
,
I ,
adored. Being well fed and the adored of his mistress Ammona had naRudy Kipling, T h e Light that turally two loaded pin- fire cartridges.
anointed, accountable to
clamorous multitude?
bereaved.
Mrs. Gask.,
Mary
Barton.
The bereaved married within a
year.
s.
caressed.
i.
He was
Ch. Lever.
'>
chosen,
ii.
They regarded
|
Hardy, Tess, IV, Ch. XXVIII, She was one Made but to love,
chosen.
was
his
Who
was her
Byron
t.
Don Juan,
t.
ecu.
i)
Wendt
Syn
d es h e u
g.
108.
401
offer them a place in the ranks of His chosen. Ch. Bronte Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXIV, 494. Alas! for this gray shadow, once a man So glorious is his beauty and thy choice, Who madest him thy chosen, that he seem'd To his great heart none T i t h o n u s 13. other than a God. Ten. Mr. J. Dumphreys is the chosen of the Unionists. II. Lond. News, No. 3679, 573.
|
| |
condemned. Drop = small platform or trap-door on the gallows, on which the condemned stands with the halter round his neck, and which is let fall under his feet. Murray, s. v. drop, 117. learned the whole story of the deceased. deceased. On returning to the inn, Wash. Irv., Sketches, XXX, 323.
I
departed.
to
Here
the
am
enable
disgrace
Ill,
memory
black
of the
dear departed.
Jane Austen,
Ch.
28.
In
doomed.
their fate.
the
Dick.,
Tale
prison of the Conciergerie the doomed of the day awaited of Cities, III, Ch. XIII, 386.
Two
f drowned.
elder-born.
Sutcl.,
The
off his
coat and
1
Periodical.
The Lone
thought suddenly of Rupert, her elder born. Adventure, Ch. II, 36.
.
Hal.
eldest-born.
He should have been here to claim his right, as the eldest born, to Id., Pam the Fiddler, Ch. IV, 62. elect. If the Gods have ceased to guide nations, they have not ceased to speak to their own elect. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. II, 6b. They (sc. the deputies) are the elect of the people. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 5196. employed. The savage outbreaks of industrial war have had the effect of very thoroughly arousing the national consciousness to the importance of securing more effective means for solving disputes as they arise between employers and their
take Kit's place.
employed. f envied.
Times,
He had succeeded ignominiously in his examinations, but he was envied of some who had taken honours. Periodical. 2 )
fallen.
it
had no
121.
fallen.
Hal.
Pam
VIII,
(The reference
one person.)
first-born.
born, that
ii.
I do believe that, every day of her life, the mother thinks of the firstwas with her for so short a while. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. XII, 165.
And
in the land of Egypt shall die, from the first-born of upon his throne even unto the first-born of the maidservant behind the mill, and all the first-born of beasts. Bible, Exodus, XI, 5. When his first-born was put into his arms, he could see that the boy inherited his own eyes. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXVIII, 556.
all
the first-born
that
sitteth
Pharaoh
Note.
worst Died
= first-born:
Masefield,
the
65.
3 f forsaken. Pen's forsaken was consoling herself. Thack., Pend. ) words shot injured. Across all her anxiety for the loved and the injured, those again and again, like a horrible pang. G. Eliot, Mill, VII, Ch. Ill, 458. last named. How you hated every man she shook hands with, every woman she kissed the maid that did her hair, the boy that cleaned her shoes, the dog she nursed though you had to be respectful to the last named. Jerome, Idle
Thoughts,
i)
VI, 94.
119.
lb., 118.
*)
3)
van Draat
Ta
e n
XIV, 33.
II.
H.
26
402
lost.
CHAPTER XXIX.
18.
The two gentlemen who were there, turned their heads away. The lost was found again. The dead was alive. The prodigal was on his brother's heart, his own full of love, gratitude, repentance. Thack., Virg. Ch. XL, 511. long-lost. I could no longer confirm her belief that the long-lost was really here. Mrs. Gask., Cranf. Ch. XV, 297.
, ,
oppressed. The oppressed can save himself by martyrdom but the oppressors must bear the full consequence of moral enfeeblement. Times, No. 1842, 3096. God's ordained! I. Zanqwill, The Next Relig., I, 35. ordained. And you
,
possessed.
into the city,
And
and
they that kept them (sc. the swine) fled, and went their ways told every thing, and what was befallen to the possessed of
VIII, 33.
the devils.
Bible, Matth.,
rejected. It is possible that the rejected of Manchester may become the accepted of Dundee. Newspaper. 1 ) (The reference is to Mr. Winston Churchill, who was defeated at the poll at Manchester.)
ruler
(sc.
f ruled. The
saved.
the
the
spirit)
is
(sc. the
body).
Francis Thompson,
later
message from
number of survivors aboard her as 705. Times, No. slain. The death of the Roman boy was soon forgotten, the parents of the slain. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 17.
forgotten almost
by
dove,
my
undefiled
is
but one;
VI,
9.
she
is
the only
one
of her
Solomon's Song,
vanquished. Whoever lands on the island (sc. St. Helena) flies to Longwood, where the vanguished of Waterloo resided and was buried. Daily Mail. This is no rough-and-tumble fight, with no quarter for the vanquished. Francis Thompson, Health and Holiness, 31. (The reference is to the fight between the body and the spirit.)
left
Maurice, the younger-born, would go out with the Rising; but behind. Hal. Sutcl., The Lone Adventure, Ch. Ill, 61.
i.
My
lord
Percy said
Id.,
Pam
Old Richard passed through the chattering throng, and looked for Kit, his youngest born. lb., Ch. IV, 60. Note. Thus also in She's an Australian born (Agn. & Eg. Castle,
I, Ch. IV, 42) the word-group Australian born may be apprehended as an instance of partial conversion (Ch. XXVIII, 3, Obs. VI), although, of course, it seems more plausible to understand Australian as a noun modified by born.
Panther's Cub,
b)
Some
participles occur also with other modifiers, i. e. a demonstrative pronoun, the indefinite article, an indefinite numeral; or
A few
last
of course, become plural, nouns. pure i. One week we were congratulating him on being an advocate, the next this fair unknown had lured him on to the stage. Edna Lyall, Knight Errant,
the
in
which
Ch. XVIII, 163. he must . render the account of his doings towards this youngestSoon the Fiddler, Ch. XII, 201. born. Hal. Sutcl.,
. . .
Pam
i)
119.
403
fairest
What is thy beloved more than another beloved, women. Bible, Solomon's Song, V, 9. (For
thou
among
only with a possessive pronoun in this book.) Catharine and an unknown. Catharine driving at a foot's pace, and the unknown walking beside her. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. , I, 126. A first-born, who died an infant, was yet the eldest son. Dean Alford, The 215. Queen's E n g.
,
iii.
iv.
Arnold stands, at the beginning of the twentieth century, by virtue alike of his work and its influence, among the few, the very few elect of his generation. Arthur Wauoh, Introd. to Matth. Arnold's Poems, 5. There has been a rush of unemployed across the border. Rev. of Rev.,
CCXVI,
v.
I
562.
beloved's, and my beloved is mine. Bible, VI, 3. Dr. Johnson felt the deceased's pulse before prescribing. Titbits. And then comes the waking, which is as though one fell asleep upon his
am my
Solomon's
Song,
vi.
bosom and awoke among thorns and having a crown of thorns about his brows. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., II, Ch. X, 174. The Prison Chaplain entered the condemned 's cell for the last time. Westm. Gaz., No. 4983, 9a. What is the reason that men fall in love with me and desert their chosen intendeds. Dick. N i c h. N i c k e b y Ch. XII. i) The suburb huts where base-borns dwelt. Edwin Arnold, The Light
beloved's
.
. .
of Asia.2)
Craving food of low-borns. lb. 2) Others talk of their beloveds, and
they
shall
be made
to
hear of mine.
Spuroeon.
c)
With most of the above participles constructions with some propword would seem to be unusual. Such combinations as the
accused (adored,
beloved,
bereaved,
etc.)
Less unusual, although also uncommon the man (or person) accused (adored, beloved, bereaved, Here follow some quotations exhibiting the unusual practice. also Ch. LIII, 6.
See
Again David gathered together all the chosen men of Israel, thirty thousand. Bible, Samuel, B, VI, 1. Directly she set eyes on Tess, she divined that she was to be the chosen one of somebody who was no common outdoor man. Hardy, Tess, IV, Ch. XXXII, 264. He who called my boy a coward ., because he would not join some crackbrained plan against the valley, which sheltered his beloved one! Blackmore,
. .
the genitive
is
responsible for
Tess,
IV, Ch.
II,
Murray,
Fijn
v.
intended.
3)
id., s. v.
beloved.
2)
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV.
404
II.
CHAPTER XXIX,
With other
is
18.
participles,
struction
The man
to
Hyp., Ch.
II,
96.
The construction
by the following quotations would seem of the participle being, perhaps, due to
Rhythm
in
Eng. Prose.
VII, 79.
(Anglia, XXIV, 17 ff.) The plundered man described his loss. Lytton, Caxtons, III, Ch. The sergeant, however, again accused him of being the wanted man.
III. Another substitute for the converted adjective, frequent than that with one, is the construction with the determinative those. (Ch. XXXVI, 12, c, Note; compare also 14, b.) The chief amongst those confined was Francis Bonnivard. In trod, to Byron's Pris. of Chil. (Allman's Clas.).
d) Analogous in nature to the above participles are the adjective dead and the participial adjective living, which exhibk similar
pecularities in their applications. 7>ead is used to indicate a class; a single individual, in which case it may be preceded by the definite or indefinite article or by a possessive
pronoun; and also a definite or indefinite number of individuals; but it allows of no inflection for the plural, and cannot, therefore, be considered to have become a pure noun. The use of dead after the indefinite article, and as a plural without any preceding modifier, seems to be rare. Except for military reports, this may also be said of the use of dead after a number-indicating word. See also 20 and Ch. IV, 15. i. Let the dead bury their dead Bible, Matth. VIII 22. Around them, still and silent as the dead, clustered the whole English army.
, ,
ii.
The dead of other days? Bryant, The Prairies, 40. The dead speaks still to you and commends to your care her children. Lytton, Night and Morning, 104. The funeral was over: the dead shovelled away. lb., 41. She spoke in whispers and walked softly, as if the dead could be disturbed.
*
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
IX, 64.
The who
**
church
is
dead
Times.
so must you a dead.
Lo (As ye
asleep,
i)
Edwin Arnold,
The
Light of Asia,
***
burial.
I
iii.
The mother was still beside her dead making arrangements for the Mrs. Ward, David Grieve, 1,307. would have none touch my dead save myself, An. Bes., Autobiog., 126. In the heap on the left are forty-nine dead and dying. II. Lond. News,
,
No. 3841
**
803a.
lot of dead where they fell. TimesShe asks in bewilderment, "Where are the dead?" He answers, "There are no dead", and the curtain falls. Chesterton (II. Lond. News, No. 3689, 4c) lb. It is quite useless to tell children that there are no dead.
They buried a
***
The
field
no
tales.
Times. Proverb.
strewn
all
of
,
dead men
lay
Dick.
Handb.
63).
Fijn
van Draat,
Drie Talen,
XIV,
33.
405
Xiving may indicate both a class of persons and a single individual; in the latter application, apparently, only in conjunction with dead similarly employed. In its converted function it is always preceded by the definite article.
i.
ii.
The land of the living. Bible, Psalm XXVIi, 13; LHI, 5. The true way to mourn the dead is to take care of the living who belong to them. Burke, Cor. ) Still, there was a deep difference between that devotion to the living and that indefinite promise of devotion to the dead. G.Eliot, Mid., V,
1
Ch. XLVIII, 355. Every night before I lie down to rest, I look at the pictures and bless That Winter Night, both the living and the dead. Buchanan Ch. Ill 27.
, ,
e)
Here also mention may be made of such collocations as your obedient for your obedient servant, in which the adjective has the value of a present participle turned into an adjective.
.
Ladies, your most obedient. Sher., School for Scand., II, 2,(380). Mr. Snake, your most obedient. lb., I, 1, (365). "Mr. Surface, your most obedient." "Sir, your very devoted." lb., I, 1, (366).
lb., V,
1, (421).
The
last, and the comparatives former and superlatives first are refer often used to to one or more particular individuals latter, out of a series (of two), spoken of in a preceding part of the
and
They are then preceded by the definite article or a demonstrative pronoun. (Ch. XXX, 11.) The comparatives admit of inflection for the genitive. The use of other superlatives and to denote individuals is now archaic. (14, b.) comparatives single He was always the first himself to cry at their (sc. of those wonderful Irish I, Ch. V, 58. ballads) pathos. Thack., P e n d. If am the last to you dare utter a word against me, you will find that as
discourse.
i.
,
care
for
threat,
153.
so
am
Lytton,
L.
Night
Murray,
and Morn.,
ii.
latter s vivacity.
Eng. Gram.5,
delicacy.
I,
102. i)
iii.
He would have been afraid to offer more, lest he should offend the latter's Thack., P e n d. I, Ch V, 58. The dispute had raged between mother and son during the whole of the latter's last days in Virginia. Ch. LV, 569. Id., Virg. The young one is to come first. He is to marry an heiress, and, when he has got her, up is to rise the elder brother! When did this elder brother show? Why, when the younger's scheme was blown, and all was up with
,
,
him!
20. In
lb.,
Ch.
LIII, 552.
referring to
the casualties of battles or accidents such partislain, wounded etc. are often used to
indicate persons in any grammatical combination, without, however, ever taking the inflection for either the genitive or the plural.
These words thus used may also be understood as a variety undeveloped clauses. (Ch. IV, 15.)
*)
of
Murray.
406
The total losses are 24 killed and 46 wounded. Times. He was lying surrounded by a mass of Dervish slain. lb. The killed on British railways last year was 1.117. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI, 308a. Dead and dying lying about owing to lack of transport. II. Lond. News,
No. 3841
In the
,
803a.
left
heap on the
are forty-nine
lb.
Note.
less
The same
practice
is
sometimes extended
to cases
more or
To how many halt or maimed has Robert taken you ? Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. A trainload of 250 cripples and 115 blind arrived at Hunstanton recently for a day's outing. Tit- bits, No. 1291,404c.
The list of saved is mainly composed of women. Times, No. 1842, "What is your average list of killed in a pheasant battue?" "What
kind of killed?" I asked laughing. "Guests or beaters or dogs but the birds." El. Glyn, Refl. of Ambrosine, II, Ch. VIII,
301c.
what
anything
174.
21.
Some adjectives admit of denoting a quality in a generalizing way. They are then normally preceded by the definite
article.
Compare a similar use of nouns, as in The lion is a beast of prey. (Ch. XXXI, 5, b; 31 ff.) The same combination, definite article -f adjective, is used to denote
a class of persons (14), but the context mostly precludes all ambiguity. Moreover, when the converted adjective is the subject, the singular or the plural form of the finite verb sometimes brings out whether a quality or a class of persons is referred to.
There was nearly half as much of the entertaining as of the contemptible about the man. Poe Purloined Letter, 183. These poems are specimens of the burlesque and fanciful. Mrs. Shelley, Postcript to sec. Ed. In this Shelley resembled Plato; both taking more delight in the abstract and the ideal than in the special and tangible. Id., Pref. to first collected Ed., 1839. Their scope was to awaken mankind to aspirations for what he considered the true and good. lb. The mirth of Mr. Bob Sawyer was rapidly ripening into the furious; Mr. Ben
,
the sentimental. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXXVIII, 352. the particular, we may say that nowhere was a
,
deeper consternation spread than in the electoral division of West Barsetshire. Trol. F r a m 1. Pars., Ch. XXXVII 355. In the buildings good sense and good taste combine to produce a happy union of the comfortable and the graceful. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 314. His (sc. hair) has too much o' the red in it. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. XII, 137. She passed from the temporal to the eternal. Id., Life of Ch. Bronte, 297. We needs must love the highest when we see it. Ten., Guin. 654. This led him to fly at the highest, while he overleaped the facts of ordinary life. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. II, 13. It is worse than useless to deplore the irremediable. lb., Ch. 1,1. The beautiful can never die. Ch. Kingslfy, Hyp., Ch. II, 6b.
,
,
407
been trenching on the ornamental. Spencer, Ch. I, 10. The early Methodists were firm believers in the miraculous. W. Mottram, The True G. Eliot, Ch. II, 28. Nothing is certain but the unforeseen. Froude, Oceana, Ch. VII, 99. with some allowance for his habits and opinions, the Cape Dutchman If let alone, would have acquiesced in the inevitable. lb., Ch. Ill, 45. The impossible has to be proved impossible, before men will consent to limit their
Education,
endeavours
to the
compassing
of the possible.
60.
played and set aside for an hour only the obstinate claims of the actual. Anth. Hope, The King's Mirror, Ch. II, 37. Sin is the deliberate and wilful act of a free agent who sees the better and chooses the worse, and thereby acts injuriously to himself and others. Sir Oliver Lodge,
We
The Substance
Note.
bad.
II
i.
of Faith.
Many
peculiar idioms.
ii.
Stephen would very likely go to the bad altogether. Edna Lyall, Don., (= Dutch de slechte weg opgaan.) Would not most men have gone to the bad altogether? Mrs. Ward, Marc, I, 116. He was between 70 and 80 to the bad. Pall Mall Gaz., 1884, 6 Feb., 4. (= Dutch t e k o r t.) Even if we allow that the population has increased ten per cent in that time, that will leave us still 100 millions to the bad. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII 2506. The actual decrease in the nine months is 2.800.000 to the bad. 5.029.000, or
,
149
Westm. Gaz.
better, i. The better is the enemy of good. Proverb (Bain H. E. G r. , 29). ii. His perseverance got the better of me. Thack., Sam. Titm. Ch. XIII, 183. (= Dutch de baas zijn, te slim af zijn, overwinnen.) I am sure I could have tripped his old heels up easily enough, and got the better of him in five minutes. Id., Denis Duval, Ch. VI, 254. There is not the slightest doubt that one of the ways in which many animals have the better of man is in being very much more sensitive to and quickly aware of coming changes in the weather. Hor. Hutchinson, Weather Wis, ,
dom
iii.
of the
illness
No. 5219,
4c).
sprong hebben.)
The
Times. (=
Affairs
in
the Prime Minister has taken a decided turn for the better. Dutch ten g o e d e ) the Near East have taken a decided turn for the better this week.
of
Westm. Gaz.
Thus
also: to alter (or change) a thing
collective.
sation has
8d.
Women
in the collective
it
for the better, a change for the better. must make the sacrifice, for the highest civilito destruction.
no value once
is
doomed
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5519,
(= Dutch als een geheel, met elkaar.) common. He stood impassive as if he had witnessed nothing out of the common. Hugh Conway C a e d B a c k 87. (= Dutch buitengewoons.) The two who waited for him saw nothing out of the common in his appearance. John Oxenham The Simple Beguiler (Swaen A Selection of Eng. Prose and Poetry; II, 140). There is something romantic in it out of the common way. G. Eliot, Compare
,
Mill,
Ch.
VI, Ch.
Ill,
358.
defensive.
366.
to be
Scott Fair Maid, to keep the defensive. (= Dutch een verdedigende houding beware n.)
to
sive, to act
408
extreme.
full.
i.
CHAPTER XXIX,
It
21.
is
ii.
is behind, and at the full. Coleridge, Christ., 1,18. (= Dutch vol.) This young Columbian was succeeded by another to the full as eloquent as he who drew down storms of cheers. Dick., Chuz. Ch. XXI, 184a. (= Dutch ten voile.)
,
The moon
Accepting to the full his altered situation. Graph. He meant to the full all that he said. John Oxenham, Ch. IX, 69.
Great-heart Gillian,
Thus
gross.
also:
fed
to the full.
,
only man be taken in the gross? Pope, Mor. Es. 1, 17. (= Dutch in z ij n g e h e e 1.) They have been able to find few flaws in his nature, and therefore have denounced it in the gross. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 9026. (Compare: But the full sum of me Is sum of nothing; which, to term in gross, Is an unlessoned girl, unschooled, unpractised. Merch. III, 2, 160.)
Shall
| \
loose,
i.
Of
this
(sc.
collection
in the
s.
per
,
up
lb.
form
** In
the
loose
(loose
freely
ii.
from
to
that part of the game of Rugby football in which the ball travels player to player, as distinguished from the 'scrimmage'.)
both
brilliant,
fast
at the police court in order to give evidence for one of your has been out upon the loose. Punch. 1 ) (= on the spree, Dutch a a n d e r o 1.)
Having
appear
friends
who
main.
In
Times,
the main he has devoted himself to an analysis of the Free Trade case. No. 1808, 6836. (Dutch in hoofdzaak.)
in his
offensive. It is clearly evident that Kuropatkin nourished an intention of assuming the offensive.
own
half-hearted fashion,
,
<=
Dutch
Thus
keep on
the
offensive,
to
mean.
To observe
the golden
mean. Proverb.
maa
t.)
ordinary. So far there was nothing out of the ordinary. Westm. Gaz., No. 5060,1c. (Dutch buitengewoons.) Compare: common and usual. in the right, Prussia right. It is certain that, whoever might originally have been
had submitted.
h e b b e n.)
Mac.
Fred.,
(666a).
(= Dutch net
bij
accord with right about. If it (sc. the arrangement) don't act well, or don't quite Dick., Cop., our mutual convenience, he can easily go to the right about. Ch. XV, Ilia (= Dutch rechtsomkeert.) e 1 1 e , Ch. Bronte V Professor Emanuel had sent me to the right about. Ch. XX, 258.
,
rough.
the rough. **
(He was) a good and gallant but unpolished man, a sort of diamond in ette Ch. XIV, 165. (= Dutch in ruwen staat.) Ch. BrontE, V Contemplating people in the rough. Webst., Diet. (= Dutch in het al*
i
1 1
ge
m e e n.)
Murray.
')
40
My objections to certain parts of it (sc. the Budget), when it was outlined the rough, were exactly in proportion to my belief in other parts of it e s t m. a z. , No. 5277 , 4a. (= Dutch in trekken.)
ruwe
Note.
sly.
i.
Sometimes without
lb.,
the
lc.
definite
article:
Such
in
rough
is
the Draft
Constitution.
No. 4925,
He had cunning ways of doing you a mischief by Mill, II, Ch. Ill, 145. (= Dutch in het genie p.)
I
the sly.
G. Eliot,
ii.
can hardly bear to think of all the rough work she did with those lovely hands all by the sly. Id., Scenes, I, Ch. VII, 55. (= Dutch in stilte.) This diversion was enjoyed on the sly and unknown to the ladies of the house. Thack., Virg., Ch. XVI, 157. (= Dutch in stilte.)
|
sudden. Following the fliers at the very heels, With them he enters; who upon the sudden, Clapp'd to their gates. Coriol., I, 7, 52. Then Galahad on the sudden and in a voice Shrilling along the hall to Arthur,
|
call'd [etc.].
Ten.
Holy Grail,
Note. Apparently
usual.
frequently, (all) of a
only archaic and literary, (all) on a sudden, and, sudden being mostly used instead.
My
request
1912,
is
feel
an embarrassment. Eng.
Rev., Aug.
31.
Compare:
common and
worse.
the worse.
ordinary.
on the Eton and Harrow match-day has suffered a change for My Friend Jim, Ch. VIII, 54. (= Dutch ten kwade.) Either it (sc. Liberalism) or Europe, or both, have gravely changed for the worse, since the middle-aged men of to-day were young. For the worse, we No. 5255, 16). (Obsay, but not for the worst. Nation (Westm. Gaz. serve the nonce-formation for the worst.)
Lord's
Norris,
forgiven
178.
it,
Thack.,
Sam,
the public
(= Dutch het mis hebben.). much in the wrong. Mac, Fred., (6716).
a nose inclining to the aquiline. a
little
Note
also:
He had
the
story
Smol.,
Rod. Rand. r
Irv.,
He thought Postcr p
i
on the extravagant.
Wash.
Legend,
t.
22. Obs.
I.
Sometimes the converted adjective denotes at once a quality a generalizing way and all the objects in which this quality is found. Thus in He admires (is always in quest of etc.) the beautiful and the picturesque we think not only of beauty and
in
all
things
He
of
(sc. Scott),
saw
in the fresh
all
he loved.
The language is, however, scarcely capable of expressing a purely concrete generalized idea by a converted adjective. Thus
for
the
Dutch
Het oude
is
could not say *The old is sometimes more valuable than the new. The English for this would run (The) old things are sometimes more valuable than (the) new. (For the use of the article see Ch. XXXI, 33, a.)
het
nieuwe we
410
Also
CHAPTER XXIX,
22.
when the generalizing must be understood with some limitation IV), the construction with the converted adjective is mostly unavailable. Thus the Dutch Hij verkocht het oude en behield het nieuwe would be translated by He sold whatever) vjas old
(Obs.
{everything that
was
that
old,
all
new (everything
was new,
new
things); not
by *He sold
the
Some converted adjectives, however, admit of expressing a notion which resembles a generalized concrete idea with some limitation. fat. All the way down from London, had a rogue of a fellow in front of me,
I
eating the fat of the land before me. Blackm., They live on the fat of the land. Graph.
Lorn a Doone,
mortal.
The black
of the
Death
Duke
This application of
yawns: the mortal disappears. Ten., Ode on the of Wei., IX 269 (= all that is mortal of him. mortal seems unusual.)
earth
,
quick. He bites his nails to the quick. Fowler, Cone. Oxf. Diet. Stung to the quick. Annand. Cone. Diet. The powerlessness of the strong man touched my heart to the quick. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXVII, 54. These creatures had now found out a way of galling him to the very quick.
,
Mac, Fred.,
raw.
have
If
(678a).
to the quick.
lb., (690a).
he accuses
me
hit
me on
the raw.
monstrous and almost heroic vulgarity, he will Chesterton, (II. Lond. News, No. 3684, 751c).
Special mention may be made of certain superlatives, such as: best. Eliza ... now came trying to sit on my knee, and kiss me, and give me the best of the pan. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. XXII, 126.
worst.
thing,
II.
When
lb.,
me
we sometimes find: noun indicating a person or animal which is regarded as the embodiment of the quality. Such a noun may stand with or without the definite
i.
article,
|
Again
astray;
might desert fair virtue's way: Again Again exalt the brute and sink the man.
in folly's
path might go
Burns,
Stanzas
In
ii.
the Prospect of Death. But 't was a face more frank and wild Betwixt the woman and the child. Scott Brid. of Trier main, II, xiv. The woman in her was yet deeply asleep. Agn. & Eo. Castle, D a m. cut Paste, I, Ch. II, 29. An alarming amount of devil there. G. Eliot, Mill, VI, Ch. II, 348. He held that a revolutionary fanatic was a mixture of fool and scoundrel. Leslie Stephen, George Eliot, Ch. I, 2. And in that mystery Where God-in-man is one withman-in-God, Prayed
|
for a blessing
on
his wife
and babes.
Ten.,
Enoch Arden,
187.
P) an abstract noun, which, when denoting a generalized quality, normally stands without the definite article. (Ch. XXXI, 34, a.) Then the inspiring love of novelty and adventure came rushing in full tide through his bosom. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl. I, 124). There were many striking contrasts in the character and behaviour of Shelley, and one of the most remarkable was a mixture, or alternation, of awkwardness
411
with agility of the clumsy with the graceful. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. II 24. (Note the varied practice.) At last it was the turn of the good old-fashioned dance which has the least of
vanity and the most of merriment in
III.
it.
G. Eliot
Mill, VI
Ch.
407.
is
identical
in
determines
it when denoting generalized ideas as adjectives in this function stand with it. (Ch. XXXI, 31, a; 34, a.) Thus my own conception of right or wrong (Shelley) my own conceptions of the right or (the) wrong.
IV.
Compare my own apprehensions of the beautiful and just (Shelley). As in the case of a class of persons (14, a, Note), the generalizing of a quality is sometimes to be understood with some limitation, which finds
:
expression
sition, or
i.
ii.
in an adverb, an adnominal word-group containing a prepoan adnominal clause, or must be understood from the context. The sole aim of art is to attain the supremely beautiful. J ) For indeed knew Of no more subtle master under heaven Than is the maiden passion for a maid, Not only to keep down the base in man, But teach him high thought [etc.]. Ten., Guin. 476.
I
|
Id.
To
the Queen,
life.
/.
G. Meredith,
(A then.,
me
iii.
iv.
rubbed her smooth cheek affectionately against the rough woollen frock Mar. Crawf., K a t h. L a u d. I, Ch. XII, 229. The poet might as wisely and as easily determine that his mind should no longer be the mirror of all that is lovely in the visible universe, as exclude from his contemplation the beautiful which exists in the writings of a great Pref. to Prom. Unbound, contemporary. Shel. In recording the doings of a large school the bad has to be told with the
Charlotte
of her
sister's
good.
It
Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. VI, 92. sweet and bitter mixed that gives life its flavour. John Oxenham G r e a t - h e a r t Gillian, Ch. VII 52. I think from the In conclusion foregoing I have proved how futile it is for statesmen to continue the controversy regarding the fiscal policy of this country. E n g. Rev., Sept. 1912, 280.
is
the
Note.
may correspond
to
sentence modifiers:
i.
all evil, grovelling and repellent Presently the rude Real burst coarsely in as she too often is. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XII, 134. His (sc. Soft's) force had made the beautiful dead alive. Stopford Brooke ,
Stud, in Poetry, Ch. II, i, 66. And he would have looked round for Westm. Gaz. No. 6135, 36.
ii.
The clearly inevitable has duly happened in Parliament, inevitable, not what is clear inevitableness.)
i)
(= what
is clearly
V. But for
is
which see Obs. VI, the converted adjective another construction when the limitation is one mostly replaced by
some
i)
Wendt
39.
412
that
is
CHAPTER XXIX,
or
22.
clause.
This construction
)
/?)
an abstract noun: He was much struck by the novelty of this idea. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. V, 57. They laughed and jested at the absurdity of the notion. Mac. Clive, (5136). We expected that the Dutch should recognize as instantaneously as ourselves the wickedness of the institution. Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 44. a word-group consisting of all (or everything) -f- adnominal clause, or a substantival clause introduced by whatever). He was liberal in his commendations of all that he thought beautiful in
the
In
poem.
every venerable precedent they pass by what is essential, and take only what is accidental, they keep out of sight what is beneficial and hold up to public imitation all that is defective. Macaulay. *) Thousands who were incompetent to appreciate what was really valuable in
his speculation eagerly welcomed a theory which [etc.]. Id. *) with everything that is most endearing in not Death is there associated
.
and
whatever in darkest in human nature human destiny. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 195. doubt not that however Grant me, pray you: have your joys apart. changed, you keep So much of what is graceful. Ten., Lane, and El., 1212.
social
and domestic
I
in
y)
an adjective followed by thing by way of prop-word. remember is waking up with a feeling as if had had a The next thing Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. Ill, 16. frightful nightmare. The strangest thing about it was that from the crown of its head there sprung a bright, clear jet of light. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, n, 34. The very first thing that I saw on entering the drawing-room was a little group composed of Hilda, Lady Mildred Bracknell and Jim. Morris, My
I I
Friend Jim,
Ch. IV,
29.
The strange thing is that even in this he has no real fire. Stopford Brooke, Stud, in Poetry, Ch. II, n, 68. thought that the Government had done the right thing. Times.
I
VI.
The
special
cases
referred
to
in
the
adjective is used for epigrammatic effect. This is especially done when there are two placed in juxtaposition expressing opposite notions. i. The long and short of the matter is that, if I cannot procure 5000 1. befpre Sam. Titm. Ch. X, 131. Saturday, our concern is ruined. Thack. Note. Also with the order of the adjectives reversed, and in Older English the short of the thing (matter): * Indeed, the short and the long is, I serve the Jew. Merch. of Ven. ,
,
,
II,
2, 135.
And
**
the short
and
the long
our play is preferred. Mids. , IV, 2, 35. of the matter was that ... not one would help Stevenson, Treas. I si., Ch. IV, 31.
is,
ii.
The short of the thing is, that if you like me, and I like you, we may chance to swing in a hammock together. Conoreve ,Love for Love, III, 3 (250). As to arguing with himself about the right and wrong of the matter, such a notion never occurred to him. Edna Lyall, Hardy Norseman,
Ch. VI, 49.
i)
39.
413
in
appears
in
materially
modified meaning
I
II.
the
dead of
winter,
when
nature
without charm.
Wash.
the
season.
Irv. *)
full
of the season.
Thack.,
lb.)
Newc.
(Compare:
of fashion.
thought
in
crowd etc. Good Heavens! have I often and often midst of a song, or the very thick of a ball-room, can people prefer this to a book and a sofa, and a dear, dear cigar-box? Thack., Fitzthe thick of a town, a
the
boodle, Pref.
If
(219).
you rode straight away from my door here at a round trot for an hour and a half, you would still be in the thick of London. W.Morris, News from Nowhere, Ch. X, 72. gave him the flat of my hand on his head, and down he went in the thick of the milk-pans. Blackm., Lorna Doone, Ch. XXII, 126. I don't like to think of that child in the thick of such a crowd. Norris My am for going into the throng of Friend Jim, Ch. IX, 59. (C o m p a r e
I
, :
temptations.
y)
I,
(140).)
adjective is one of certain superlatives. As is evidenced by the following quotations, the conversion seems to depend with most of them on the presence of an adjunct containing the preposition of, the propword thing being mostly required when there is no such adjunct.
The
best.
It is sufficient to add in general terms, that he did the best he could Pickwick; and the best, as everybody knows, on the infallible authority of the old adage, could do no more. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXXIV, 319. The best I can wish my readers is, that they may be mercifully preserved from finding it anywhere. F. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIX, 383. This, of course, offers no immediate redress to Turkey, but it is the best that can be done and by no means a bad best. e s t m. G a z. We have done the best we could to your kind order. Bus. Let. Writer,
i.
for Mr.
IX.
(= Dutch Wij
wij
gemaakt wat
**Our books contain the best of us. G. Meredith (Athen. No. 4434,437c). You have so plainly here the best of it. Browning, Luria, 1,1. *** The fathers and the mothers laugh; but the young ones have the best of
them.
Blackm.,
Lorna, Doone,
And now both Annie knew, and I, that we had gotten **** To make the best of a bad matter, he formed a
call
an assembly of the rest of the foxes. sop's Fables, LXVI, 145. To make the best of a bad matter [etc.] Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. I, 8b When things are inevitable, what can a wise man do but make the best of them? Norris, Friend Jim, Ch. V, 36.
My
of his way for town as soon as the bats began to flit Wash. Irv., Do If Heyl. (Stof, Handl., I. 112.) The two brothers made the best of their way towards Bristol. Freeman
the best
*****
He made
about
in the twilight.
Norm. Conq.,
i)
II,
Murray,
s. v.
dead, B,
2.
414
******
CHAPTER XXIX,
To
the
22.
best of his
life
means and
almost.
ability he comments on all the ordinary Thack. Eng. Hum., Swift, 2. did to the best of my power. dance, which
,
will
obey
you
to
the
best of
my
ability.
Norris,
best.
My Friend
Irv.
,
Jim,
One way
or other
all
Wash.
Dolf Heyl.
somehow
hesitate
was for
or other, for the best. lb., 143. the best. Norris, Friend
My
Jim,
Ch. IV, 26. All is for the best in the best of possible worlds. the French: Tout est pour le mieux dans le
lb.,
32.
(An adaptation of
poss
I I
i>
e.)
did
it
;
all
know
for the best. James Payn, Glow-Worm Tales, II, D, 55. you meant for the best. Aon. & Eo. Castle Diam. cut Paste,
,
III,
first.
shall be able to stem the first of the flood. Marryat, Poor Jack, XXIU) According to Murray (s. v. first, II, 5, c), now obsolete in this application, except in the phrases the first of the ebb flood or tide. highest, i. We heard from him when the ship stopped at Queenstown, when he
We
Note.
was
ii.
in the highest of hope. Ch. II, 25. Dick., Uncom. Trav. His fury was wrought to the highest. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXVII, 389.
,
hottest. Snatching a shield from a soldier, and otherwise unarmed, Caesar throws himself into the hottest of the fight. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. I, la.
last.
*
after
Donovan,
216.
Id.
Francesca was just in time to see the last of the planet. Few had come to see the last of one who had left none
Knight E r.
Ch. X,86.
to
The Christian,
I
II,
298.
should
like
to
Ch. Reade
It
is
mend,
** That
I,Ch.
II, 38.
was the last they saw of Svengali. G. du Maurier , Trilby, II , 176. *** In the last of May. Webst. Diet. **** In carrying that on, he lost the last of his money. Trol., Thack., Ch. I, 8.
,
least.
It was unlucky, to say the least of time to discover her beauty. Norris,
it,
that he
My Friend Jim,
is
|
strangest.
This
is
behind.
Mac, Mach.,
(30a).
thickest. He through the thickest of the fight had led The fearless on to Victory and to fame. Bernard Barton, Sir Philip Sidney, V. (Compare: Thus at seventy-two years of age he fell in the thickest battle. Mac, Fred., (689o).
ut(ter)most.
i.
The utmost
and despatch.
he performed G. Eliot,
was
him
half-gravely.
Blackmore
Lorn a
Doone,
show everything
at its best.
Rev. of Rev.,
(Times,
J
to the utmost.
G. Eliot,
Letters.
Murray.
415
earnings
him woke
to the uttermost.
first
,
babe's
first
,
n.
Ar
d.
To save all
Had he
I
trust
you
me
Edna Lyall,
Donovan,
Bus.
Let.
Its
Writer,
XVII.
splendid fighting qualities have been largely neutralized by want of foresight of those whose business it was to utilize the fighting qualities to the utmost. Times.
on the part
Even when relations between this country and other States have been strained to the utmost, Lord Salisbury has, with scarcely any exceptions worth mentioning, been spoken of with undeviating respect. lb.
worst,
**
i. *The worst that could have happened to him would have been no such serious matter in his case. Norris, My Friend Jim, Ch. I, 10.
The enemy seem to have had the worst of it. Times. Note. For this Scott has the worse: believe the Clan Chattan the worse. Fair Maid, Ch. XXVI 274.
I
,
will
have
ii.
He feared
the worst
Anstey,
Vice Versa,
The
**
general view seems to be that the worst had been experienced. No. 1802, 936.
Truth,
// the worst come to the worst, ye can but walk the two days back again and lisp at the manse door. Stev., Kidnapped, Ch. I, 1. when the worst came to the (I hoped) that she might have to hold by me,
worst of
it.
Blackm.,
it in
Lorn a Doone,
Ch.
XX,
117.
(Note
the unusual
addition of 'of
Thus
latives
also
:
after
the
chief. She could perceive that the chief of it was overheard by Mr. Darcy. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej. Ch. XVIII, 102. She was never satisfied with the day unless she spent the chief of it by the side of Mrs. Thorpe. Id., North. Abb., Ch. V, 24. extreme. Sam was waving his hat about, as if he were in the very last extreme of the wildest joy. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXIV, 219.
,
. .
. ,
The use
of
prop- word
thing,
as in the following
that his
17.
Jack
London,
VII.
The
I,
of the specializing element has in some cases almost reduced the converted adjective' to an ordinary noun, the definite This applies article being the only, trace of its original function. especially to some applications of certain superlatives, such as first, highest, last and lowest and to future, past and present. For a discussion of at (the) first and at (the) last see Ch. XXX 38.
,
The suppression
first.
This
is
it.
Sher.,
first.
**
I,
When
remember how good you have been to me from the first, Hall Caine, The Christian, 11,302.
Glory to
could cry
highest.
God
in rV?e
Hosanna
last.
*
in the highest.
Ten.
Puertorico will
be next considered,
the
Times.
416
CHAPTER XXIX,
22.
** Be patient till the last. Jul. Caes., Ill, 2, 12. It was not until the last that he expressed the wish.
Dick.,
last.
Little Dorrit,
Thack.
,
at the
r g.
certain that he
was,
to the last,
Trol. Thack., Ch. IV, honoured by his soldiers. Mac, Hist. Ch.
111.
1,
137.
To
the
last he
Hall
Norms
My Friend
Jim,
To
Hyp.,
last
against the
new and
vulgar superstitions.
Ch. Kingsley,
Cronje says he will fight to the last. Daily Chronicle. **** Towards the last the pain seemed to leave him, and his end was very peaceful.
Murray,
lowest.
s.
v. last, 9, e.
The
Bright
one
in the highest
Is
Ten.,
Dem. and
|
Pers.,
94.
Till the
light
future dares Forget the past, his Adona s unto Eternity. Shelley
|
fate
I.
and fame
was part of their plans, for the present and the future. Dick. Bleak House, Ch. XIV, 112. He did not seem disposed to dwell upon the subject, nor indeed any other that was connected with the present or future. Norris, Friendjim, Ch. XVII, 112.
,
My
Note. Of particular interest are the phrases: as for, or as regards the present, Dutch voorloopig. for the present
Monmouth
lock,
prove himself to have been born in lawful wedblood, king of England, but that, for the present, he waived his claims. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 144. (Compare: How I have thought of this, and of these times, 1 shall recount hereafter; for this present, I would not, so with love I might entreat you, Be any further moved. Jul. Caes., I, 2, 765.
declared
that he could
right of
and
to be,
by
a)
the" future (= as for, or as regards the future); in the future (= the time subsequent to some moment of the past or the moment of speaking or writing; /?) at an indefinite time or date of the future; "/) from
in
For
/?)
the present moment); in future (= a) from the present at some or any time or date of the future).
moment, henceforth;
For
future future
the future
(y)
(/?)
and seem
in
can, in practice, hardly be distinguished from in the future (a). Instances of in the future (y) and of in to be infrequent.
of for the future, and also of in the future (y) and in future (a) are in het vervolg or voortaan; of in the future (a) in de "toekomst; of in the future (/?) mettertijd, and of in future (/?) t e e e n i g e r t ij d. i. The insinuation put me upon observing the behaviour of my mistress more
narrowly for the future. Smol., Rod. Rand., Ch. XIX, 125. The sky, though far from cloudless, was such as promised well for the future. Ch. Bronte Jane Eyre, Ch. XXII 297. Friend Jim, I'm going to be a good boy for the future. Norris,
, ,
My
Ch. XVII, 111. I turned again and again on my pillow and said that my life for the future would be little more than a curse to me. Hugh Conway, Called Back, Ch. I, 3.
417
ii.
you undertake to behave better for the future. F. Anstey, Vice Ch. XIX, 377. He had better be careful for the future. W.W.Jacobs, Odd Craft, H, 145. He promised amendment for the future. Punch, No. 3709, 129c. * There seemed no order in these latter visions, save that they were in C h r s t m. C a r. 5, IV, 101. the future. Dick. In the future, as in the past, Germany and Britain will never meet on the field of battle, save as comrades and as allies. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 5226. Attempts to combine contradictory methods will lead in the future as they have led in the past, to confusion and failure. Froude, Oc. Oh. Ill, 62.
Versa,
** All that will be altered in the future. However great the relief may be when
Times.
martial law ceases,
some
of
its
restrictions are likely to be adopted in the future. lb. Lord Kitchener told Botha not only that even a modified
form of independence could not be discussed, but that anything of the kind was barred as likely to lead to renewed war in the future. lb.
I
***
will
be better
that
in the future.
Mrs. Alex.,
in
A Life Interest,
of an
I,
Ch.
I
I, 29.
.
.
trust
it
you
will
by
iii.
in
the future.
mind and
\The
Way
Eagle,
II,
promised them that never a week should pass in future that I did not them. Ch. Bronte Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXIV, 478. Here they proposed to reside in future. Norris, My Friend Jim, Ch. IV, 27. I hope you will behave yourself properly in future. Mrs. Alex., A Life
I
,
Interest,
**
I,
Ch.
1, 29.
Whenever,
in future,
compare them.
Ch. Bronte,
Jane Eyre,
VIII.
The converted
in
which the
adjective is largely used in certain adverbial phrases loss of the definite article has obliterated almost all trace
of the converted nature of the adjective. Some of these are found in various shades of meaning, for which see the dictionary. It may be observed that the preposition has so closely coalesced with the fol-
lowing word as
in brief.
at
is
to
have become
little
more than a
prefix.
had no imperfection but that of keeping light company a time. Scott, Wav. Ch. XIV, 536. (Compare: In very brief, the suit 11,2,146.) impertinent to myself. Merch. of Ven.
In brief, (he)
,
in
in
whisky-and-water was even more decided than Ch. IX, 102. (= commonly, ordinarily.) I,
perform at
full.
at
Yet
If
all
Ten.,
Morte d'Arthur,
43.
in full.
you
will
the oil paintings they are not according to your taste, will be at liberty to exchange them for others, or if preferred, the money
on receiving
be refunded
in
in full.
Correspondence.
in general.
still look grave, and say he did not like the general, and must disapprove the play in particular. Jane Austen, Mansf. Park, Ch. XVII, 164. Note. In the older writers we often find in the general, occasional instances 2 occurring somewhat archaically in Present Engilsh (Franz, Shak. Gram.
Edmund might
scheme
268).
H.
II.
27
418
CHAPTER XXIX,
22.
Your observation, in the general, is undoubtedly just. Rich., Clar. VII, 337.1) What boy at school ever is a coward, in the general? Trol., Thack., Ch. IV, 110. at large, i. He spoke at large of many things. Ten., Mil. Daught. XX. (= Dutch in den breede, breedvoerig.) If we went at large into this most interesting subject. Mac, Popes, (6556). Compare: The Academy largely described. Swift L a p u t a Ch. V, Arg. He expatiated largely on its having been done 'after dinner'. Dick. P c k w.
, ,
,
Ch.
Ill,
23.
Compare
of study.
ii.
also: in broad outline (= Dutch in breede trekken): It might be instructive to trace briefly, in broad outline, the development of that branch
Times,
I am speaking of the nation at large. Jane Austen, Ch. IX, 96. (= Dutch in het algemeen.) day he was the poet of England at large. Green Short Hist.,
You
In
are speaking of
London,
Mansfield Park,
his
own
it
f.
i
Ch. VII,
iii.
I
7, 415.1)
think h e
Mans
v
r
ij
Park,
d.)
i.
if
you
really
103.
(= Dutch
in large.
in large,
There
saw my name
XXIII, 133.
ii.
(=
Dutch in
groote
,
Blackmore, letters.)
Lorna Doone,
|
Ch.
Where
the strong and the weak, this world's congeries, Repeat in large what Old Pictures in Florence, XXI. ! ) they practised in small. Browning
(= Dutch
in little,
i.
of
every sprite
Heaven would
in little
show.
As
you like
A
ii.
2, 129.
{=
all
Dutch in
grace
|
miniature
that
of
loveliness,
Summ'd up and
Ten.,
Gardener's Daught.,
Those
fifty,
13.
(=
iii.
would make mows at him while my father lived, give twenty, forty, hundred ducats a-piece for his picture in little. Haml. II, 2, 388. Dutch in m i n a t u u r.)
an
,
(=
call Brussels Paris in little. Jerome Diary of a Pilgrimage, 46. Dutch Parijs in miniatuur, Parijs in het klein, klein Parijs.) Here in the land of Craven a civil war in little was imminent. Hal. Sutcl.,
They
Pam
II,
27.
of old. In the times of old. Psalm, XLIV, 1. From of old they had been zealous worshippers. In the brave days of old. Mac. Lays, H o r.
,
Carlyle,
Hero Worship,
145.
in ordinary, i. A physician or chaplain in ordinary is one in actual and constant An ambassador in ordinary is one constantly resident at a foreign service. court. Annand., Cone. Diet,
ii.
iii.
is one not in actual service, but laid up under the direction competent person. lb. Their talk took place in the wainscoted parlour where the family had taken their meals in ordinary for at least two centuries past. Thack., Virg. Ch. IV, 42. (= on ordinary occasions, in this sense now obsolete.)
ship in ordinary
of a
in particular.
One
is,
obelisk
in
particular signalized
itself
from
all
I,
others by
I,
its
Ch.
14.
course, impossible to deal in anything like a comprehensive huge mass of material, or to offer at short anything in the way of a considered judgment of its general bearing. Times. (= at short notice, Dutch voets toots.)
of
manner with
this
i)
Murray.
419
ever
is is right.
Norris,
in large.
My Friend
Jim,
Ch.
IV, 26.
in small.
See
Note.
a
Numerous
the
superlative,
are the combinations of the preposition at with latter sometimes with, sometimes without the
definite article (Ch. XXX, 41). i. Life is at best very short. Webst.,
ii.
The
east,
etc.,
least. Jerome, Sketches. and south and their compounds such as northas used in the following quotations, are adverbs
turned
i.
into
quasi-nouns,
just shifted
the
intermediate
step
being that of
adjectives.
*
The Wind
Pope, Ep.
Cob ham,
64. i)
Barking is 7 miles to the east of London. Murray. To the north Rhodesia extends into the heart of the continent; but S.Rhodesia, bounded on the north by the Zambesi, may be included in S. Africa. Harmsworth Encycl. s. v. South Africa. *** In the same East men take off their sandals in devotion. Ro,
**
ii.
bertson, Serm. , Ser. Ill, hi, 38. i) e s t m. G a z. Heavy clouds hang over the Near East. The blustering East shall blow. Bryant, Return of Birds,
IV. i)
Note. Instead of to the east (etc.) of we also find east (etc.) of. The traces left by ages of slaughter and pillage were still distinctly perceptible many miles south of the Thames. Macaulay. 2 ) The viceroy has sanctioned the construction of 550 miles of tramwayrailways
in
the
districts
Times.
/?)
Thus
are
also eastward, westward, etc. as in to the eastward, etc. adverbs used as quasi-substantives. The definite article is
occasionally suppressed. i. The ship had passed them during the night and was now a good ten miles to the eastward. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 140a.
Don Guzman
They were
ii. The Note.
lb., 141a.
to attempt their original plan of landing to the of the town. lb., 1426.
westward
lb.,
this
collocation
eastwards,
etc.
sometimes appears
The Olympic
had turned out into the Solent from Southampton Water, shaping her course for Spithead to the eastwards. Times, No. 1812, 2b. (Compare in the sequel of the sentence: and the Hawke
. . .
was coming
23. Certain
into Spithead
from
the westward.)
superlatives partially converted into nouns, and in their altered function denoting a quality thought of substantively, may be modified by a possessive pronoun, sometimes in several shades
of
i.
I
ii.
iii.
She
I
best and his worst. Thom. W. Goring. 1 ) conscious of looking her best. Melville Brookes. *) did my best to hold my peace. Blackm., Lorna Doone, Ch. XX,
*)
114.
i)
Murray.
Foels.
Koch
Wis. Gram.,
265.
420
iv.
CHAPTER XXIX, 23
Dressed
24.
in her best she went to church. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. Ill, 29. He dressed himself in his very best. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XXVIII, 298. He dressed himself "all in his best" and at last got into the street. Dick., C h r s t m. Car.o, V, 107.
i
v.
Mr. Warrington
his best.
sit
of
first.
that
even
now
manhood.
Ma cb.,
highest.
2nd
last.
1886.
i.
to
Some
,
time
after
the
receipt of
your
last,
embarked
for
Bordeaux.
of
Goldsm.
In
Letter.
I
my
last
some
life
half-forgotten
humours
some
would
Oxford
behind,
in the
|
Vacation,
She
(sc.
the
cat)
the
,
cares
last.
of
And
44.
III
,
slept as she
Cowper
C o r s.
i.
Jerome,
Three Men
in a
Boat,
II,
15.
Have you heard Professor X's last. Murray, s. v. last, 3, d. worst, i. Do your worst. Browning, Pied Piper, ii. Even if Thackeray's idea of nabobs be taken at its worst, the comforting fact remains that nabobs must have been scarce. Times, No. 1808, 683a.
(See also under best.)
ut(ter)most. i. Try your utmost. Annandale Cone. Diet, ii. Nerves and brain were strained to their uttermost. Mrs. Ward, Rob.
,
Elsm.,
I,
226.
Note
a)
I.
word-groups consisting of at + possessive pronoun + superlative, which are equivalent to predicative superlatives, whether or no
preceded by the definite
article (Ch.
XXX,
at,
36, b);
/?)
the
to express
1. ,
XXX,
e a
s.
I
37).
s
67.
ii.
The dock was now at its busiest. Stephenson T r The birds were singing their loudest. Punch. ** He led me, in a courtly manner, stepping at his
,
tallest,
to
an open
119.
Blackm.,
Lorna Doone,
:
Ch. XXI,
Finally
we
call
attention
e e n
t
j
on one's lonesome
(=
Dutch
op
ij
e)
as in
man
of his friends is
season the old, old conundrum as to whether a annual vacation on his lonesome or in the society cropping up once more. Pick-me-up, 8/8, 1903.
24.
The
latter
superlatives first and last and the comparatives former and are often used to refer to one particular matter out of a
(of
series
two),
mentioned
in
They
i.
by the
commonly,
by a demonstrative pronoun.
(Ch.
XXX,
11.)
first is
* They yield bear and potatoes, much of the Pennant, Tour in Scotl. in 1772, 238.1)
s. v.
used
in distillation.
*)
Murray,
first,
II,
5, a.
421
and as the
apathetic
conquered
to
either eagerly republican, eagerly patriotic or eagerly materialist, in the end the age became not sad, but contentedly
,
ideas,
Brooke, Stud, in *** Civilities were exchanged; Brooke opened the door, and Tremaine rang the bell. "Come, Tremaine," said the former, "we two have been trespassing on
Mrs. Rashleigh's time". Mrs. Alex., For his sake, I, Ch. II, 31. **** They would try a new venture with new hopes, perhaps new dangers; they were inured to the latter. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXIII, 169a.
ii.
anything but peace and pride and a Poetry, Ch. II, n, 69.
full
purse.
Stopf.
rid of
like you, but "Oh, they liked you well enough, I daresay. you sometimes." There could be no doubt as to this last.
I
like to get
Jer.,
Paul
Kelver,
Presently
I,
Ch.
I,
14a.
therefore I slipped away from the noise, and mirth and smoking Blackm., Lorna Doone, (although of that last there was not much). Ch. XXIX, 174. I don't think we believed this last, quite. John Masefield, Lost Endeavour, I, Ch. II, 13. ** I have had a great deal to do both with English and American locomotives, and the result of this experience shows that in point of fuel economy the English are the better, but for facility of erection and running repairs, the Americans stand first. This latter is owing to the complication in the English,
due
Times.
25. Partially
used to indicate an indefinite persons only they occur in pairs of opposites. In this application they stand without any modifier. Great and mean Meet massed in death. Shelley, Adonais, XXI. High and low, all made fun of him. Thack. Van. Fair, I, Ch. V, 41.
converted
adjectives
are
number
of
when
there
must be
rich
and poor.
lb., II,
am
not
surprised at
alike
young or old
Pend.
I,
Ch. XI,
attained
117.
vow themselves
G. C.
by
purity.
Macaulay
Pref. to
Tennyson's Holy
Grail, 14. An attempt is being made to bridge the abyss that at present separates brown from white. Rev. of Rev., CCXIII, 218a. Upon the whole the tyranny of the world is that of male over female rather than that of rich over poor. Chesterton, (II. Lond. News, No.3718, 124c). Pam the Gentle and simple came to him with their plans. Hal. Sutcl. Fiddler, Ch. IV, 55.
,
Note
Ch.
is
II.
I,
I.
Thus
also
when one
of the
words
is
a noun.
What was
29a.
and employed.
Spencer,
Education,
The key-note
In
organisation.
Escott
England,
following quotation the adjective may be understood to be totally converted (11, b): The butler is especially warned not to allow noble or simple to go into the cellar. Thack., Four Georges, 1,3.
the
Conversely there
I
is
always said the gentle had all the the bairns at home. Hal. Sutcl.,
sit
and nurse
Pam
VIII, 119.
422
26.
26.
varied is the use of partially converted adjectives to indicate an indefinite number of things. We find them in this application:
a) in certain sayings in
I
in
my wedded
ward, for better for to love and to cherish till death us do In And such as I am love indeed
|
wife, to have and to hold from this day forworse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health,
part.
Book
of
Com. Pray.
in
fierce
extremes
good and
ill.
Byron,
I
Maz., V
(319a).
|
to espy The home and sheltered bed, The sparrow's hard by My father's house, in wet or dry My sister Emmeline and I Together visited. Wordsworth, The Sparrow's Nest, 8. O'er rough and smooth she trips along. Id., Lucy Gray, XVI.
started
seeming
1
dwelling, which,
Away
and
thin.
Wash.
Irv.
Legend, Sketch-
Book,
He was determined to throw his lot for good or ill with Maud's brother. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. XXXIX, 423. Then after a long tumble about the Cape And frequent interchange of foul and fair, [etc.]. Ten., En. Ard., 529. And over rough and smooth he rode. W. Morris, Earthly Par., The
|
Man born
Just
after
to be King, 416. something has befallen us which, for good or ill, will make a great change in our lives, what a totally new aspect the common everyday things about us are apt to wear! Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XIII, 252. If the present administration were indeed the only possible one, the plain
duty
of
all
Liberals
would
be
to
support
fight
it
through
thick
and
thin.
Daily News.
What we are witnessing is a stubborn Gaz., No. 6153, 4a. For good or ill should have weighed
I
Wes
m.
all
voting.
lb.,
No. 6141,
Ac.
of preceded by the interrogative what the relative what(?) (Ch. XXXIX, 24, d), certain indefinite pronouns or numerals: all (Ch. XL, 3, Obs. Ill),
(Ch. XXXVIII,
8,
b),
enough
(?) (Ch.
II;
XL, 47,
I;
Ill;
b,
67, Obs.
77, Obs.
83,
100,
Note), little, less, least (?) (Ch. XL, Obs. I), much, more, most(?) (Ch. Obs. II; 105), aught (Ch. XL, 24,
Obs. IV), something, anything (?), everything (?), nothing (?), Ch. XLIII, 38, Obs. II), or by the compounds whatever (?) and whatsoever (Ch. XLI, 10, Obs. I).
Up
words marked with a(?). It may, however, be safely assumed that a more prolonged search would have brought some to the light, What is there of ill in't? Wycherley, Plain Deal. II, I. What is there of good to be expected? Jane Austen, Pride and
i.
,
Prej., Ch. XLIX, 295. That unutterable something which springs from the soul, and which our sculptors have imparted to the aspect of Psyche, gave her beauty I know not what of divine and noble. Lytton Last Days of Pomp.,
,
Ch. I, 126. (I) could hear the lips that kiss'd and sweet. Ten. , T t h o n u s
I,
i ,
Whispering
wild
61.
423
O
Id.,
ii.
what In
to
her shall
be the end?
VI,
xi.
And what
to
me
remains of good?
Memoriam,
I
You
For
in other countries.
Dryden,
Marriage
all
la
Mode,
I,
1.
|
Had
Scott,
,
Lay,
vision
VI
xxi.
Conversant with speculations of the sublimest and most perfect natures the in which he embodies his own imaginations unite all of wonderful, or wise, or beautiful, which the poet, the philosopher, or the lover could Alastor, Preface. depicture. Shelley Or good, or lovely, which the sacred past In truth or fable All of great, consecrates, he felt And knew. lb., 72.
,
\
| I
From the Capitol to the Lateran swept, in long procession, all that Rome boasted of noble, of fair, and brave. Lytton, Rienzi, IV, Ch. V, 175. And when the heat is gone from out my heart, Then take the little bed on which I died For Lancelot's love, and deck it like the Queen's For richness, and me also like the Queen In all I have of rich, and lay me
| | |
on
it.
Of
us,
all
it
Ten., 'Lane, and Elaine, 1113. that such a recollection implies of saddest and sweetest to both of would become neither of us to speak before the world. Eliz. Barrett
,
iii.
Browning Dedic. To My Father. He taught his friend all that he knew of good, brave and generous. Symonds, Sir Ph. Sidney, Ch. IV. Stones like those at Stonehenge have but little of new or marvellous for him who has seen the rocks beyond the Atlantic. Moore, Mem., VI, 337. think no more of deadly lurks therein, Than For that inscription there, in a clapper clapping in a garth. Ten., Princ. II, 208. His eyes had more of gray and less of blue in them. Edna Lyall, Hardy
I
| |
Norseman,
Pilgrim
lonely
. .
.
Ch.
II,
15.
became again
... the
the
so goes, through so
child
iv.
many
little
whom
much
v.
vi.
Ch. XIV, 102. I would not aught of false. Ten., Princ, V, 392. The other answers as if something of extraordinary had past betwixt us. Dryden Marriage a la Mode, IV, 4. That fulness and luxuriance of life's life has in it something of divine. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VII, 51. Whatsoe'er of strange Sculptured on alabaster obelisk, Or jasper tomb, or mutilated sphinx, Dark ^Ethiopia in her desert hills Conceals. Shelley,
I,
,
. . .
| | |
What became
of
Pam,
Alastor,
Our bond
of 27. Obs.
ill,
|
112.
is
man and
Ten.,
wife.
This good
is in
it,
whatsoe'er
It
Lane, and
EI.,
1200.
I.
most of the above quotations the converted adjective may be understood as an abstract noun (12, c). This view finds corroboration in the use of indubitable abstract nouns in the same position, and mostly in practically the same meaning. He has, know not what, Of greatness in his looks. Dryden,
In
also
Marriage
All
la
Mode,
IV, 3.
of love.
lb., V, 5.
regal splendour.
I.
!)
Murray.
424
II.
CHAPTER XXIX,
27.
When any
partitive of,
of
the
there
is
above words is followed by an adjective without no conversion, the adjective having the value of
an
undeveloped clause: anything {everything, nothing or something) beautiful anything {everything, etc.) that is beautiful. See Ch. IV, 17, c. Thus also in:
=
is
i.
What
Dick.,
there
real
in
either
23.
(sc.
life
Pickw.,
Ch.
Ill,
ii.
What lovelier of his own had he than her? Ten., Aylmer's Field, 22. What better could a poor lady do? Ch. Kingsley, Herew., Ch. VIII, 48a. What worse can you say of English Ministers than that they should be led by a woman? Mrs. Ward, Sir George Tres. Ch. II, 8b. To thee whose temple is all space, Whose altar, earth, sea, skies, One
,
|
|
iii.
being raise;! All nature's incense rise! Pope, Univ. Pray., XIII. There was little grand that I could see in this journey. Froude, Oceana, Ch. XX, 330. There was indeed little new to be communicated. W. Black, Sunrise, II, 57.
chorus
let all
iv.
praiseworthy in the cricket. Daily News, she loved me even when she left, me: that was an atom of sweet in much bitter. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXVII, 546. (Bitter like the preceding sweet, may also be apprehended as the name of a substance [8].)
There was
I
little
had a
belief
v.
whatever judge ... that neither years, poverty, misfortune, nor infirmity had broken the spirit of this remarkable woman. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. Ill, 45.
in her fortune
there
was miserable
in
her dwelling,
it
was easy
to
III.
the analogy of its positive /// or frequently used to denote an indefinite number of things independently of the constructions mentioned in 26 a) and b). Gfid grant, that some, less noble... Deserve not worse than wretched Clarence
evil,
is
I
did.
Rich.
Ill,
II,
1.
Never so rich a gem Was set in worse than gold. Merch. of V en., II, 7, 55. And me and mine he spared from worse than woe. Byron, Cors. II, xm. And one, in whom all evil fancies clung Like serpent eggs together, laughingly Would hint at worse in either. Ten., En. Ard. 478.
,
i
Hall Caine,
The
Christian,
If
I,
268. to
this
come.
Anstey,
Vice Versa,
Happy
him
if
Note
I
I.
The comparative
at his
better,
this application.
hands.
for
Rich.
I
Ill,
m,
5, 50.
There
no hope
IV,
of better
left
him
No
Ten.,
Queen
|
Mary,
3 (6306).
|
This truth within thy mind rehearse, boundless better, boundless worse. Id.,
II.
That
boundless universe
IX.
Is
Two
Voices,
quotations
i.
The use of bad in this application, as illustrated by the following may be due to its being coupled with good or worse: If God sends us good, he seems to send bad too. G. Eliot, Adam
Bede,
ii.
I,
Ch.
II,
19.
,
Thus bad begins and worse remains behind. Haml. III, 4, 179. So bad proceeded propagated worse. Wordsworth, Son. Liberty,
II,
xlvi.
425
In the following quotation worse seems to be used absolutely, HI. the prop-word one which occurs after the preceding bad, supplying the place of a noun.
He's a bad 'un; but there's worse that put him on. Ch. Ill, 27.
IV.
Stevenson, Treas.
si.,
in
This seems to be the most suitable place to mention the curious idioms to make light of (= to treat, consider or represent as of small or no importance), and to make short of a long story (= to make (cut) a long story (tale) short). (Ch. XVIII, 24, Obs. V.) i. Making light of what ought to be serious. Jane Austen a.A) It seemed to Mark as though Mr. Forrest made very light of the whole transaction. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XII, 117. have wanted an object. Dick., ii. To make short of a long story, I am afraid
,
Emm
Bleak House,
Note.
With to make light of compare to make little of (Ch. XL, 67, Obs. VI) and to make much of (Ch. XL, 93, Obs. IX): Mr. Forrest had made so little of the whole transaction that he felt himself Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XII, 118. justified in making little of it also. He made as little of his real wound as he made much, the day before, of his
imaginary one.
28. Ch. Kingsley,
Westw. Ho!,
The
to
adjective
noun,
is used as a partially converted adjective both with regard persons and things, mostly in a collective sense. According to Murray (s. v. own, 3) this use of own is, except for *
And pass his days in peace among his own. Ten. Like one who does his duty by his own. lb., 329.
I
En. A
r d.
47.
The cup from which our lord Drank at the last supper with his own. Id., Holy Grail, 47. Keats was a Cockney, and Cockneys claimed him for their own. B a c k w. Mag. The moor loves her own, as human mothers do. Hal. Sutcl., The Lone
1
Adventure,
**
ii.
That trouble which has left me thrice your own. Id. G e r. and En., 736. Within a few days Francesca might be his own. Edna Lyall, Knight Errant, Ch. I, 10. * My gracious lord, I come but for mine own. Rich. II, III, 3, 191.
both
,
'
We
Is it
me
to
do what
will with
himself of his
own
any time.
Goldsm.,
She
Stoops,
When
Titm.,
III,
(199).
rogues fall out, honest men come by their own. Thack., Sam. Ch. X, 117. Others observed with a shrug that if the devil did carry off the youngster, it would but be taking his own. Wash. Irv., Do If Heyl. (Stof. ,
Handl.,
I,
126).
first.
at last,
hey?"
Dick.,
Christm. Car.5, IV, 88. To them he (sc. Monmouth) was still the good Duke, the Protestant Duke, the rightful heir, whom a vile conspiracy kept out of his own. Mac, Hist.,
II,
Ch. V,
145.
!)
Murray.
426
And who
CHAPTER XXIX,
here enters the railroad rebate
fight to
28.
for crushing those
the
modern battering-ram
Miss Tarbell (Rev. of Rev., CXCVI, 4176). ** If she take what you can get. The jewels are your gives you the garnets own already. Goldsm. She Stoops to Conquer, 111,(201). (= in your
save their own.
, ,
Bible, Corinth., A,
,
XIII, 5.
(=
her
own
****
profit or interest.)
And
if
the
you, cousin.
shortcomings.)
fool should come again would tell him his own Wycherley, Gent. Dane. Mast., I, 1, (138). (=:
I
,
warrant
his
own
Note I. Of especial interest are to hold one's own ( to maintain one's position or standing against opposition or rivalry. Murray), the colloquial or vulgar on one's own (= on one's own account, responsibility or resources),
and
i.
to
come
into one's
own
to
come
to hold
Ten., Har.,
I,
1,
(6576).
I,
Until
now
the
Ch.
I, 3.
ii.
iii.
spirit enough to hold her own. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. XXVIII, 318. You Gentlemen by dint of long seclusion From better company, have kept your own At Keswick. Byron Don Juan, Dedication. V. One can greet the play 'on its own', to borrow a popular phrase, e s t m. G a z. 1 ) The Times... appear to have inserted the notice on their own. Law Notes. 1 ) With the founding of the "Overland Monthly" Bret Harte began to come into his
Compare:
literary
own.
Acad, and
Lit.
31.
Little Billee
And
II.
shall
would have come into his own again. Du Maurier, Trilby, II, we ever come into our own again? Hardy, Tess, 1, Ch. I, 6.
In
address
in the
we
same sense as dear or sweet (14, d, Note II). Did you speak, my own? Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXVII, 214. My own heart's heart and ownest own, farewell. Ten., Maud, I, xvm,
III.
much
74.
such turns of expression as This is a house of my own; He has several houses of his own She has no children of her own we have to deal with an adjective used absolutely.
In
;
;
IV.
as either absolute
or substantival:
Her
a
faults
were mine
is
The poem
written
in
her virtues were her own. Byron, Manfred, II, 2. Spenserian stanzas, with a rapidity of movement and
(Compare:
that are Shelley's own. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. V, 96. There is a richness and energy in this passage (sc. Byron, Childe Har., Ill, xxxm), which is peculiar to Lord Byron. Jeffrey.) Here at least his thoughts were his own. Barry Pain, The Culmin. Point. His house is his own. Sweet, N. E. Gr. 2116.
dazzling briUiance
')
Murray,
s.
v.
own,
3,
c.
CHAPTER XXX.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
1.
in:
a quality or state
III,
9,
Opm.
2) a distance in space or time: near, far, early, soon. also belong the prepositional adverbs in, up, etc.
b)
little
{few).
Note
II.
I.
For
nouns
and
Ch. XXIII, 4,
II;
17, d.
A
its
for
quality or a state is often expressed by a word-group having chief component parts a preposition and a noun, e. g. at
:
liberty,
Such a word-group is often furnished with the intensive adverbs more or most, which does not essentially differ from placing it in the comparative or superlative degree. As soon as am a little more at leisure, mean to look in at their rehearsals
at leisure.
I
too.
Jane Austen,
Mansf. Park,
of
2.
Germanic way, which is effected by the and the French way, which is effected by
and most.
The first mode may be called terminational, as opposed to the periphrastic, by which term the second is
commonly
designated.
To express different degrees of a quality in a falling line language has no terminations, but mostly applies the adverbs less and least. These forms with less and least may, of course, with equal justice be called periphrastic comparison as those with more and most, but present no features requiring any comment in this connection.
I.
Note
the
II. Some adjectives belonging to the foreign element of the language have the value of comparatives or superlatives, without either of the above suffixes. Such are a) major, minor; anterior, posterior; inferior, superior; and other Latin comparatives in ior; /?) chief, principal,
Some
of these are
part
of
The major
the
sometimes understood as positives (30). conversation was confined to Mrs. Weller and
,
the
reverend Mr. Stiggins. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXVII, 244. None but a few very privileged visitors were allowed to go near the sheds. Therefore, the honour of seeing some of the premier flying-men of the world, as it were, at home was all the more appreciated by those able to do so. II.
Lond. News,
428
The
CHAPTER XXX,
24.
razor, which excels all others, ... has attained and kept its premier position by virtue of its reliable qualities. lb., No. 3777, 4276. Whichever (course) is adopted, it is of supreme importance that it should be accepted whole-heartedly by the Liberal and Labour Party. Westm. Gaz. No. 5225, \c.
,
3.
In
Old English the comparative was usually formed by or (ur), the superlative by ost (ust, ast, est). The full termination or {ur) was only found in the comparative of adverbs; in the comparative of adjectives the o was elided; thus: leof (=dear) leofost. leofra, leofre, leofre
ieldra
have
In
find
the
relic
of
another comparative
These
of)
a few
superlatives,
of this ending was forgotten, the other, and the new double ending mest was
was superadded,
mast,
through confusion with mcest, the superlative of much. Hence fyrmest was made into formest, foremost; ytemest, utemest into utmost, etc. In these and others (see below) most is not, therefore, to be regarded as the superlative of much, though all these compounds arose under the direct influence of this superlative. Stof. Taalstudie, I, 30;
,
Sweet, N.
314,
(= last) and nipemost (= lowest) Middle English severally substituted aftermost and nepermost, the forms after
and
nef>er,
Undermost was formed on the analogy of nepermost. Other superlatives of place now came to be formed directly from comparatives
tives.
by adding most; thus furthermost, innermost, lowermost, uppermost. From furthermost was formed the double comparative furthermore. The ancient forms innerest utterest, etc. are occasionally met with
,
archaically.
And
In
all
of
The Voyage
the
them redder than rosiest health or than utterest shame. of Maeldune, 65. (The reference is to apples.)
the comparative suffix er
Ten.,
was added
to the old superlative form(a). Chaucer has forme-fader for Present English fore-father.
wyse
[etc.].
Tale
creat
15,
Adam
in
4.
Some
adjectives and adverbs undergo spelling before the suffixes er and est.
a) Final e is dropped: large
b)
modification
in
larger
largest, free
freer
freest.
y preceded by a consonant is changed into i in the case of all adjectives or adverbs of two or more syllables: pretty prettier
Final
prettiest.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Of adjectives of one syllable they
slyest, spry spryer In the comparative
is
429
slyer
spryest, shy
shyer
shyest.
c)
and superlative of dry, however, the y is drier driest. dry The y is, of course, regularly retained when preceded by a vowel, as in gay gayer gayest, A final consonant when single and preceded by a stressed vowel is doubled: big bigger biggest. The / is also doubled when preceded by an unstressed vowel:
mostly changed into
/:
cruel
5.
crueller
cruellest.
and adverbs, many of which are among those most frequently met with, form the degrees of comparison in an This is also the case with the numerals much irregular way. and little. We may distinguish the following groups: (many) that have the comparative and superlative derived from words a) an obsolete base different from that of the positive: bad(ly), il(ly), better best; worse, worser, badder worst; good evil(ly) more most. littler little least, littlest; many less, lesser,
adjectives
b)
Some
adjectives
lative
and adverbs that have the comparative and superformed from the positive, but show epenthesis, contraction or vowel-change. Some of these have also regular forms with different meanings, one has cumulative formations in more and
(3)
,
most
far
furthermore
later, latter
farthest
elder
c)
late
latest, last;
near
nearer
older,
oldest, eldest.
adverbs that are also used as prepositions either of the same form or with some prefix, and have the superlative formed by most, which is attached either to the positive or the comparative (3): (be)fore foremost, first; (be)hind former hinder inner in(ner)most; (be)neath hind(er)most; in nether, nethermore nethermost; off (originally af) outer, utter after aftermost; out out(er)most, utiter)over overmost; up up(per)most. upper most\ (ab)ove Note. Superlatives like the above are sometimes formed of words which are ordinarily compared regularly. Thus the ordinary degrees
of
also
It
lowest,
we
(sc.
bladder)
I. ,
is
situated
at
the
lowermost point
the
abdomen.
Pears' C y c
s. v.
bladder.
d) adjectives and adverbs, which have one or other degree wanting: middleere erst; mid middest, midst, midmost; middle etc. under eastern eastermost, most; undermost;
To
of
rather
is
rathest, ratherest,
in
now
common
use in
standard English.
430
CHAPTER XXX,
57.
In the following discussions the observations under a) deal with the form and grammatical function, those under b) with the meaning of the respective adjectives and adverbs.
6.
gad
a)
(badly,
ill,
illy,
evil,
evilly)
worse
worst.
1) Illy is
now
in dialects.
Murray.
2) In
Middle English worse was pronounced in two syllables, as in: is my prison worse than beforn. Chauc, Cant. Tales, A, 1226. The dissyllabic worse may afterwards have suggested the form worser, which is repeatedly found in Shakespeare, mostly us an adjective, but also as an adverb.
Now
i.
ii.
O O Hamlet thou hast cleft my heart in twain. Haml. Queen. throw away the worser part of it. Haml., Ill, 4, 154. wis your grandam had a worser match. Rich., Ill, 1, 3, 102. "How do you now, lieutenant?" The worser that you give me the addition Whose want even kills me. Oth., IV, 1, 105. I Is he married? cannot hate thee worser than do, If thou again
I
|
say
'yes*.
An
t.
& CI eop.
11,5,90.
In Late
in the
Modern English worser is used archaically in poetry, and language of the illiterate. Franz, E. S. XII; id., Shak.
, ,
Gram. 2
i.
217.
the worser
Or
at
end
(sc. of life)
quiet grave
till
doomsday rend
6a.
15a.
the earth.
W.Morris,
The Earthly
Par., Prol.,
lb.,
Nay, friends, believe your worser life now past. Lest unto thee there fall a worser thing. Id., The
ii.
"Who, Joe?
But
None
roared the fat boy in sooth Mr. Slope was pursuing Mrs. Bold in obedience to his better instincts and the Signora to his worser. Trol., Barch. Tow.,
Proud King, 93a. "Worser than that," Pickw., Ch. VIII, 68.
Ch. XXVII, 225. (Here, evidently, due to the preceding better, the sentence not being the utterance of an uneducated man.)
3) Originally
worse and worst belonged only to ill and evil, bad being baddest. The latter forms were supplanted compared badder by worse and worst when bad had assumed the meaning of evil, Badder and its original sense being, probably, hermaphrodite.
in the literature
baddest occur
(in
from the 14 th
to the 18 th century
it
Defoe,
is
1721).
Murray.
badder
In
Present English
I
is still
found
in dialects.
He
b)
very bad,
sir;
than* ever,
do
think.
Mrs. Craik,
John
Hal., Ch.
XIII, 130.
Worse
better
I
less, in like
a.)
manner as
hadn't the pleasure of knowing his distresses till he Sher., School for Scand.,
Qood (well)
a)
better
best.
Down
to the
end of the 16 th century, and archaically in occasional we meet with the form bet as a comparaand as a predicative adjective. Compare
bet then they.
We
Ferne.
i)
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
ii.
431
114.
Bet Bet
is to
is to
dyen than have indigence. Chaucer, Cant. [Tales, B, be wedded than to brinne. lb., D, 52. (brinne to burn.)
Best shows the same contraction as last. Gooder is sometimes jocularly used for
better.
Murray
does not
XI, 151.
acknowledge
It's
this form.
gooder
to
be back.
Rudy. Kipling,
in Ihe
The Light
b)
1) Better
is
sometimes used
E. S.,
i.
XXXI,
meaning of a) more ox longer (Stof., 264), p) greater in the better part, half. Compare b, 3.
,
Lady B. is better than three months advanced in her progress to maternity. Byron (Lytton Life of Byron, 22a). "Wy, Sammy," said the father, "I han't seen you for two year and better."
Dick., Pickw., Ch. XX, 177. Rather better than twelve years ago. Id., Little Dorrit, Ch. X, 61. * But were I not the better part made mercy, I should not seek an absent argument Of my revenge, thou present. As you like it, III, 1, 2. The better part of valour is discretion. Henry IV, A, V, 4, 121.
|
|
ii.
Swift, Let.
Note also the following idioms: * And be good to her, do you hear? Else I'll let you know better. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. V, 30. They would know a great deal better than to insult a sister of mine. Blackm., Lorn a Doone. Ch. XXX, 177. hope you know better than to tempt her to disobey me. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. I, 18.
i.
I
ii.
If I let you shriek your abominable little throat hoarse, you'll learn better than to torment your uncle. John Habberton, Helen's Babies, 39. For further instances see also Ch. XVIII, 7, Note; 28, e. Mr. Acland appeared disconsolate at the breakfast-table, feeling keenly his
**
utter
dependence on
A Life
Int.,
I,
Ch. V, 79.
Of the following idiomatic applications no Late English instances have been found: iii. His health was never better worth than now. H e n ry IV, A, IV, 1 27.
,
(= more
The
iv.
worth.)
gown was
all
my
father's lands!
Henry
to
VI,
B,
I,
3, 89. to
He damns himself
do
it.
All's
VIII,
Well,
Surrey
III,
(=
Henry
It
2, 253.
v.
Meas. for Me
as.
V,
189.
(=
must, alas!
2)
on the analogy of uppermost, uttermost, etc., although by Murray pronounced to be a colloquialism, seems to occur also in ordinary literary English. Its meaning is rather that of a comparative than a superlative. Murray's definition is "best (relatively rather than absolutely)". those that work with their hands, even the bettermost of such Others, workers could live in decency and health upon even such provision as he could earn as a clergyman. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XIV, 139.
used part
in
Bettermost formed
the
in the collocation
(33).
Compare
432
CHAPTER XXX,
78.
Admiral Bowster stared during the best part of the service, his very hardest. Miss Braddon, My First Happy Christm. (Stof., Handl., 1,70).
She
will
sit
up
wi'
of
the night.
Mrs. Craik,
John
Hal.,
Ch. XIII,
130.
Stof. (E.
the
8.
S. XXXI, 264) observes that best has the sense of most in epithet best-abused as in the best-abused statesman in the United
,
kingdom.
cCittle
less, lesser
least.
a)
Except for
lesser, which now occurs almost exclusively as an attributive adjective, these forms are used as adjectives, indefinite numerals
and adverbs.
Little
its
as a predicative adjective
in
is
uncommon
(Ch. XXVIII,
7, c),
being 'mostly taken by small. As an indefinite numeral it is used both attributively and predicatively. Less, both as an adjective and an indefinite numeral, is applied both attributively and predicatively. Least as an adjective is used only attributively, as an indefinite numeral both attributively and predicatively. Shakespeare has lesser also as a predicative adjective and as an adverb. Lesser-known occurs as a rhythmical variant of less-known.
place
this
application
b)
As
size,
adjectives less and least mostly refer to significance, seldom to i. e. they correspond rather to the Dutch geringer and
to the Dutch kleiner and kleinste. The line demarcation between significance and size cannot, however, always be strictly drawn. According to Murray (s. v. less, A, 1, 2, a) the use of less in the sense of "of lower station, condition or rank; inferior" is now obsolete, except in phrases like "no less a person than". Late Modern English instances cannot, however, be said to be infrequent. According to the same authority (s. v. least, I, 2) the use of least in the sense of "lowest in power or position; meanest" is now archaic. With regard to size, smaller and smallest are the ordinary substitutes, littler and littlest being occasionally met with, chiefly archaically and dialectically, sometimes to express some emotional notion. Small and its degrees of comparison are quite frequently used to denote significance, small and especially smallest sometimes in a way which makes it difficult to distinguish them from little and least as indefinite numerals, i.e. as equivalents of the Dutch weinig
geringste, than
of
en minste. Smaller is also used as a variant of lesser. In some combinations slight and its superlative slightest are in especial favour when an idea of significance is to be expressed. Also such superlatives as faintest, remotest, etc. are in some combinations practically equivalent to least. Lesser mostly denotes one (group) of
two (groups
of) persons or
minor importance or significance as compared with the other. It is, accordingly, mostly preceded by the definite article, which, indeed, when occasion requires, is replaced by another modifier: a demonstrative pronoun, or a genitive or possessive pronoun. Less frequently does it denote the least important of a
things
which
is
of
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
larger
433
without a plural, by the use of lesser to denote size, i.e. in the sense of the Dutch kleiner. In some cases lesser may have been preferred to less, and vice versa, for the sake of rhythm or metre. Compare Fijn van Draat,
in
in which case we may find it preceded by the the following word is a plural or an abstract noun a numeral or no modifier at all. Not infrequent is
En g. Prose, The
Rhythm
Adj.,
34.
For illustration of little, less and least as indefinite numerals and adverbs XL, 64 ff. For the application of less with reference to a plural
XXVI,
who
16.
tall
own The
sex,
prefer littler women. Thack., littler the maid, the bigger the riddle
II,
Greenwood Tree,
Where love is To hold The poorest, of Corinth, IV, 1.
littlest.
|
and gawky by some and a Maypole by others of her P e n d. I, Ch. XXI, 213. to my mind. Hardy, Under the
,
Ch. V,
109.
Haml.
III,
2, 183.
page
the
in
reverence.
Queen
It
in
littlest
things.
III,
I
suppose in these days anybody who held such a doctrine as that would have been saluted as the littlest Roman. Sir W. Harcourt (Time s). I have lost him now for ever and he will not love me the littlest bit ever any more only hate me. Hardy, Tess, VII, Ch. LVI, 497.
.
less,
as an adjective, used a) attributively, 1) to denote significance: You may be assured I'd not sell my freedom under a less did rriy estate. Farquhar The Recruiting Officer, purchase than
I
,
IV,
(306).
I meekly told the waiter that I had bought beer at Jerusalem at a less price. Thack., Notes on a Week's Holiday (Pardoe, Sel. Eng. Es., 450). To have seen her, quiet in her coffin, would have been a less surprise.
Dick.,
It
Chuz.,
would probably be a rare exception to find any large property in the present day on which the contract system does not exist to a greater or less extent. Escott England, Ch. Ill 28. Some forty others were injured in greater or less degree. II. Lond. News,
,
When
2)
to
old
man;
man.
if
he were always a
ever a big old man, he has shrunk into a little old man, he has dwindled into a
187a.
less old
Dick.,
3)
in the sense of lesser: So doth the greater glory dim the less. Merch. o f V e n. V, 1 93. What great ones do the less will prattle of. Twelfth Night, I, 2, 33.
,
James
and Fable,
Add
6)
apostles.
greater being
Young, Arithmetic.
predicativ'ely,
"Sometimes
H.
1)
less
to denote significance: "But is the fever less?" and sometimes more, I imagine." Trol., Framl. Pars.,
English.
II.
28
434
2)
CHAPTER XXX,
denote size: Or
8.
to
ask of yonder argent fields above, Why Jove's satellites Pope, Es. on Man, 1,42. Little as she had always looked, she looked less than ever when he saw her going into the Marshalsea lodge passage. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. IX, 53a. In stature it (sc. the quagga) is rather less than the well-known zebra.
|
Cassell's Cone. Cycl. The average size of the antlers than it was even a few years ago.
lesser
...
is
considerably less
a)
with
the Lesser Antilles, the Lesser Bear. And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, lesser light to rule the night. Bible, Gen., 1,16.
and the
Woman
As
the
is
Ten.
Locksley Hall,
151.
notice,
more important schemes could not be commenced at a moment's she would begin with the lesser. Walt. Besant, All Sorts and
Escott, England, Ch. IV, 48. comparing two words A and B, belonging to the same language, of which A contains the lesser number of syllables, A must be taken to be the more original word, unless we have evidence of contraction or other corruption. Skeat, Etym. Diet., 23. Note. In Lesser Asia (now mostly Asia Minor) the definite article
In
ii.
Cond. of Men, Ch. VI, 39. Perpetrators of larcenies of the Lesser kind.
is dropped. (Ch. XXXI, 28, a.) Lear rebuked him and said that these lesser evils were not
felt,
where a
greater
.
malady was
fixed.
Lamb,
Tales, Lear,
i.
160.
iii.
/?)
you
at
the
moment,
81.
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
Ch. VII,
By taking one third you would only get a lesser share. John Bloundelle Burton, The Hispaniola Plate, Ch. XXXIV, 108. The majority who took up arms at the second call, were men who shouldered a rifle at 5 s. a day, considering it a lesser evil than semi-starvation seaboard towns. Times. seems to be present to The power of feeling without actually touching a greater or lesser extent in most animals accustomed to moving in the dark. Westm. Gaz., No. 6047, 13a.
in the
.
.
ii.
It
Fix'd on the summit of the (sc. the king's majesty) is a massy wheel, highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand Issser things Are
| | |
* In
Ham III, 3, 19. wearing mine (sc. my favour) Needs must be lesser likelihood, noble That those who know should know you. Ten., Lane, and El., 365.
1.
,
|
all
kinds,
fifty
of Personal Dignity, which has been since so largely lost. Bell of St. Paul's, I, Ch. II, 41.
Walt. Besant,
Such genius as
its
as an element
of much lesser men. Westm. Gaz. The far-reaching questions which Burke
Parliament are
now
2)
raised almost daily by lesser Burkes in the High Court No. 1808, 6836.
of the two was daughter of the Neither his daughter, if we judge by duke That here was at the wrestling manners; But yet indeed the lesser is his daughter. As you like it, I, 2, 284.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Laurence saw before hjm a young man of his
lesser stature.
,
435
own
Walt. Besant, The Bell of St. Paul's, I, Ch. II, 31. Her breathing now was quick and small like that of a lesser creature than a woman. Hardy, Tess, VII, Ch. LVIII, 516.
b)
c)
predicatively: Lesser than Macbeth and greater. M a c b. I, 3, 65. adverbially: Some say he's mad, others, that lesser hate'him, Do
,
|
call
it
valiant fury. Id., V, 2, 13. He has since travelled in New Guinea, the Solomons islands which lie north and north-east of Australia.
It
is to the Zoological Gardens that one must go to get into contact with the lesser-known species. Westm. Gaz. No. 6264, 13a.
,
Note.
In
is
merely used
as a vocable:
We
in
rejoice at the
such matters.
Westm.
of greater or lesser
least:
a) denoting significance: G r a mM, 34. How strange that she should never Captain Thomas.
Mason, Eng.
Miss Braddon,
the
least
idea.
stanza
is
the
least
of
and arrangement
. .
.
group rhymes
of
lines
involving
all
the
where
Punch,
social
No. 3712,
Adver-
tisement.
6)
life,
the
whole
princes' nails!" said this least of women. Dick., Little Emily was sitting by my side on the lowest
166.
Little
,
Cop.,
and least
Dorrit
seemed
the least,
,
and weakest
said
,
of Heaven's creatures.
c)
"Thy
fear,"
Zephon bold,
,
"Will save
wicked
Milton
In these
Par. Lost,
IV,
865.
days Mrs. Proudie considered herself to be by no means the least among bishops' wives. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XVII, 163.
small,
,
to the
Dutch weinig:
, ,
and small Thyrsis and Menalcas would have had hard labour to count them I time fear for singing songs about Daphne. Lytton C a x t o n s , XVII Ch. I, 449.
,
The
little volume . gave small promise as to his Lordship's future hours being well employed. Id. , Life of Lord Byron, 156. So with small food and much of Homer and the accordion, a week passed over the heads of the outcasts. Bret Harte, Outcasts, 29.
. .
smallest, denoting quantity, corresponding to the Dutch minste: She had not the smallest remorse or compunction for the victim whom her tongue
was immolating. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIX, 199. There was not the smallest hope now. Edna Lyall, Donovan, 1, 190. He took not the smallest spoken notice of her. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., II,
smaller, as a
slight.
301.
variant of
lesser:
Our smaller
colonies.
Graph.
He was
436
CHAPTER XXX,
89.
* I don't think he has the slightest slightest, faintest, remotest, etc. i. Prince Fortunatus, Ch. XXIV. idea where she is. W. Black, The There cannot be the slightest doubt that Mr. Gladstone's words inspired the Boers with new courage and new hope. Just. c Carthy, The Transvaal. ** Your lady and mistress is not at all impressed by your cleverness and not in the slightest. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, talent, my dear reader
New
XXIII, 229.
ii.
iii. I
You never gave me the faintest hint that you had a wife. Bern. Shaw, Overruled (Eng. Rev. No. 54, 183). haven't the remotest idea how old you are. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, V,
Ch. V, 264.
9.
Much (many)
more
most.
a) These words are now used only as indefinite numerals or as adverbs, and as such are, therefore, discussed in Ch. XL. Here we may observe that much represents the Old English micel, which was used in the sense of both great and much, the modern many being the equivalent of the Old English manig and fela. The degrees of moist, the form mara being comparison of micel were mara (ma) chiefly applied as an adjective, ma as a numeral or adverb, mcest either as an adjective or as a numeral or adverb.
b)
1)
The use
now quite obsolete. When often varies, however, with It is, perhaps, owing to these adjectives, especially great. adjectives being felt more or less as indefinite numerals that the indefinite article is sometimes dropped before the nouns they
of much as an adjective modifying certain abstract nouns,
is
it
modify. See, however, Ch. XXXI, 38, /. to have been much harm done. Trol., Framl. i. There does not seem Pars., Ch. XXI, 206. A difficulty which had not caused him much dismay at that period.
lb.,
project.
is out of place where there's great beauty. Thack., Ch. XXV, 278. I declare a dividend had great pleasure in hearing Mr. Brough of six per cent. Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 84. If he does do so (sc. admire you very much) , ... it would give me Framl. Pars., Ch. .XX 200. very great pleasure. Trol. ** You seem to take a great interest in Mr. Middlewick. H. J. Byron
I
think
wit
Newc,
I,
Our Boys,
Some
I
I.
fathers set too great a value on books. lb. had a great respect for Mr. Meadows. Ch. Reade too late to mend, I Ch. IX 97.
, ,
It
is
never
Thack.,
iii.
replied
that
of large fortune.
Barry Lyndon,
iv.
51.
He bared
his head, as
my
aunt, for
whom
it was always his custom to do, when he saw he had a high respect. Dick., Cop., Ch. LI, 360a.
The semi-adjectival much is sometimes preceded a possessive pronoun, especially in Early Modern English.
Note.
Thanks
I
by
am
1
,
for
Mea
s.
V, 534.
IV,
100.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
I
|
437
pray thee that thou blot from this sad song All of its much mortality and wrong. Shelley Epipsychidion, 36. The King in utter scorn Of thee and thy much folly hath sent thee here His kitchen-knave. Ten., Gar. Lyn., 899.
,
| |
2)
Also
more as a pure and indubitable adjective is now quite obsolete. however, frequent enough in Early Modern English. In Shakespeare {the) more and less is a standing expression.
Instances are,
i.
give
II,
ii.
O, take his mother's thanks, a widow's thanks, Till your strong hand shall him strength To make a more requital to your love. King John,
|
1, 34.
less
Now, when
did
IV,
the
lords
|
Macb.
I
V, 4, 13.
lean
to
him
came
in
Henry
B,
I,
1,
209.
is still
use as an archaism.
falling over the rocks.
of
them perished by
Freeman,
Norm.
Par.,
Conq.,
1
led
ashore
166.
the
more part
of our
men.
W.Morris,
The Earthly
Pro I.,
Thus also in (the) more is the pity and the more fool (you) we may consider more as an equivalent of greater, i. e. as a kind of adjective. the more's the pity. G. Eliot, There's no amends I can make ye, lad Adam Bede, V, Ch. XXXVIII, 349. Edna Lyall, Knight Errant, Ch. I, 8. It is true enough, more is the pity. The more great big blundering fool you, for giving the gold piece to him. Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. Ill, 54.
Before the names of certain abstractions more varies with greater etc., manner as much varies with great, etc. Thus in: He had more respect for his father than anybody else we could replace more by (a) greater or (a) higher or a word of like import. Also in the applications illustrated by the following quotations more may be understood as adjectival,
in like
i.
Kind
hearts
,
are
more than
coronets.
Ten.,
e r e
55.
the blind.
ii.
Honour and shame were scarcely more to him than light and darkness to Mac, Hist., II, Ch. I, 168.1) These doubts that grew each minute more and more. W.Morris, Atalanta's
Race, LXXXV.
And
the
individual
withers,
142.
and
the
world
is
Ten.,
Locksley Hall,
3)
also disappeared from the language, except in the common phrase for the most part. (Ch. XXXI, 19.) The combination most and least is a poetic survival.
i.
at
your most need help you, Swear. Haml., in apprehension. Meas. for Meas.,
[
I, Ill,
5, 180. 1, 78.
lost
most Byron,
Chi
I.,
VIII.
i)
Murray.
438
ii.
As you
,
like
it,
HI. 2, 435.
How many thousands of people are there, women for the most part who are doomed to endure this long slavery. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXII, 242. The currents for the most part set in towards the French coast. Times, iii. Forth he spurred, Taking no thought of most or least. W. Morris, The Earthly Paradise, The Man born to be King, 416. And nigh him in his glorious hall (he) Beheld his sages most and least. lb. 40a.
|
]
names of certain abstractions most varies with greatest etc. in like manner as much varies with great etc. Thus more could be replaced by the greatest or a word of like import in:
Before
the
life
Mac, Clive,
(530a).
10. Far
farthest, furthest,
Further and furthest are not, probably from forth, as is sometimes believed, but from fore. Further was formed from fore
by the comparative suffix ther, and the notion that it is the comparative of forth has sprung from the false assumption that Sweet, N. E. Gr., fur ther was to be divided further. 2 1047; Skeat, Et. Diet., s. v. further; Franz, Shak. Gram. 220. The th in farther and farthest has intruded through analogy with further and furthest. The vowel in further and furthest happens to coincide with the vulgar and dialectal form
,
for far
= fur.
as
And
II,
all
we've got to do
126.
is to
trusten,
Master Marner
to
do
the
right thing as
to trusten.
G. Eliot, Sil.
Mam
Ch. XVI,
,
2)
farther , further , farthest and furthest are used both as adjectives and adverbs. As an attributive adjective far is freely used to denote that of two (groups of) things which is farthest removed from the speaker: the far end, corner, etc., varying with the farther end, corner, etc.; the Far East , West, etc.; all of them distinctly suggesting the existence of the opposite, the near end, etc. In other applications the current use of the attributive far is confined to certain combinations, such as a far
Far
a far stretch, a far cry, at far intervals. Collocations far countries, far relatives are either unusual or impossible, far being replaced by far-distant, far-off or far-away, or by such synonyms as distant, remote. Farthermost and furthermost are used only as attributive adtraveller, like
t
jectives.
b) Farther
to a large extent
(Stud, on the Lang, of Sam. R c h. are used by Richardson without the least
to
distinction.
According
"farther is usually preferred in standard English where "the word is intended to be the comparative of far , while further "is used where the notion of far is altogether absent." Both farther and further are sometimes used to indicate that side of a river,
Murray
is
not standing,
i.e.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
439
as a synonym of other; the ordinary alternative being this and the literary hither (Ch. XL, 165, a). For this the Dutch has in ordinary language de
to
the
exclusion of
of more,
is
in the
meaning
observe that further is sometimes used substantively more. Furthermore varies with further. (Ch. VIII, 64, e; Ch. X, 14.) FartherFinally
is
we may
more
quite obsolete.
Furthest and farthest are used in the same shades of meaning, but the latter is the ordinary word.
Furthermost and farthermost are comparatively rare, and seem used indiscriminately.
far,
to be
Mrs. Reed, herself, at far intervals, visited review the contents of a secret drawer in the wardrobe. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. II, 9. In that far land. Mrs. Craik, Dom. St or., E, Ch. II, 114. In the centre of the church seats were raised in an amphitheatre, at the far end of which was a scaffolding a little higher than the rest. Lytton, Rienzi, Ch. Ill, 91. It Pall Mall Mag. is not a far cry from Fifeshire to East Lothian. It is a far cry from humanity to the cochineal insect. T. P.' s Weekly, Vol. XVIII, No. 467, 492a. (= Dutch een heele sprong). Women who go with their menfolk to far corners of the Empire [etc.]. West m. Gaz., No. 5137, 156. The outer door is in the wall on the left at the near end. The door leading to the inner rooms is in the opposite wall, at the far end. Bern. Shaw, The Doctor's
it
as an attributive word:
room)
to
(sc. this
Dilemma,
far-away,
ii.
III,
53.
i. They gave a cheer that started the echo in a far-away hill. Stevenson, Treas. lsl., Ch. XIII, 97. The bard was then pursuing on far-distant shores that mysterious career, which excited almost as much of the marvel as of the admiration of his countrymen. Lytton, Life of Byron, 11a. His mind goes back to the far-distant days when he talked over the same kind E n g. of thing under different conditions with the English Marquis of Carabas. Rev., No. 53, 122.
etc.:
iii.
The far-off
II, xiv. i)
Dick.,
Barn. Rudge,
Farther
farther, a)
India.
I
used adjectively 1) in the ordinary meaning: The British Colonial Pocket Atlas.
at the
still
stood
He had
Pain
2)
,
more boys
The Culminating
Point.
in the meaning of other: Just below our encampment flowed a little stream on the farther side of which was a strong slope. Rider Haggard,
61.
meaning
I
Goldsm.,
Good-nat. man.
IV.
However,
Sher.,
am
very sorry you have put any farther confidence in that fellow.
,
I,
1.
*)
Murray.
440
Moses
CHAPTER XXX,
10.
shall give me farther instructions as we go My lord, the farther tidings are heavy for me Durw., Ch. XXVII, 351.
I
together. to tell.
lb., Ill,
1.
Scott, Quent.
hope there
will
be no farther delay.
Jane
Austen
Mansf. Park,
used adverbially,
listen
no farther.
Tell
me
in the ordinary meaning: Fanny could 1) Jane Austen Mansfield Park, Ch. XII 123. in the first place, if you will, and upon my honour it shall go no about this Insurance Company of yours. Thack., Sam. Titm.
,
,
79.
make a few simple pleasing phrases go farther than ever much substantial benefit-stock in the hands of a mere bungler. Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIX, 197. You can, if you please, decline to pursue my story farther. G. Eliot,
skilful artist will
so
Scenes,
2)
I,
Ch. V, 39.
in the
In
meaning
I
of more:
IV.
will
ask
no farther.
Goldsmith,
The
Good-nat. man,
that case,
befell the Rev.
Amos
should have no fear of your not caring to know what farther Barton. G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. V, 39.
further, a)
India.
Further
The
British
Further India.
We
m.
G a z.
Newc,
2)
take their places at the further end of the table. Thack., Ch. XIII, 154. He stepped across to the further window. Con. Doyle, The Refugees, 8.
I,
young men
in the
right
meaning
|
of other:
in
And
,
fair,
That ran
it
pools and
looking round (he) beheld a brook shallows here and there, And on the
|
further side of
a pool.
W. Morris
The Earthly
I
Par.,
The Proud
King,
3) in
this
I
93a.
the
was
meaning
so.
of additional:
Dick.,
am very sorry to Ch. XIX, 164. Id., Pickw. His further remarks were cut short by the sound of the front-door bell. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., 1,271. If ever poet were a master of phrasing, he was so, and the fact that he was so is quite unaffected by the further fact that he was sometimes unconsciously indebted to his predecessors. A. C. Bradley, Com. to Ten. In Mem.,
Ch. VI, 75.
Times.
Note the use of further in: Mr. Preston did not take any notice of her letter, Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. X, 123 (= beyond further than to return it.
returning
b)
it).
used adverbially,
Pickwick,
he
I
1) in the ordinary meaning: Stop! said Mr. had gone a few yards further. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIX, 164. Reuben did not know what to make of him However, a mile further on
after they
didn't
made another attempt. Mrs. Ward, David Grieve, 1,112. get home till near one, and some of us had further to go.
Tell
Sweet,
are.
2)
me now
further,
Bunyan, Pilg. Prog., (146). Mr. Casaubon did not Question further.
G. Eliot,
Mid.,
XLIV, 324.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
It
441
be hoped that his policy may be allowed to pass over without inflaming further the international jealousies connected with the Moroccan question. Rev. of Rev., CCXVIII, 1326. The Germans, however, are understood to desire to reduce it still further.
is to
still
lb.,
CCXIX,
of
2326.
c)
used substantively
fytte
Harold's pilgrimage:
Shall find
farthest.
It
of more: Here is one him may further seek to know some tidings in a future page. Byron, Childe H a r. I, xcm. has become a holiday pastime to ride on a bicycle from the Land's
|
in
the
meaning
of
Ye who
End
with thatch, where see manufacturing towns and seaports renowned to the farthest ends of the world. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. HI, 277.
We
we now
furthest.
of the
If
the
fame
of that treatise
were
Ch.
known
world.
Dick.,
Pickw.
I, 3.
The
very furthest end of Freeman's court. lb., Ch. XX, 171. At the furthest end of the room. W. Morris, News from Nowh., Ch. IX, 57. At Morton's furthest point he was able to discern on the opposite of Smith Sound a lofty mountain. II. Mag., 1803,738. His two companions were much younger men the one furthest from Donovan
,
was
faring badly.
farthermost.
furthermost. Pusey, Min.
Edna Lyall, Don., 1,232. The farthermost expansion of Smith's strait. Kane, Arct. Expl.i) He instantly sets himself, to flee to the then furthermost West.
J
Proph.
We
find
demands on
flight
attempted
hither.
native villages for so much rubber per month, .. .meaning into the furthermost recesses of the forest. A t h e n as u ,
On
the
W. Morris
. .
.
The Earthly
Par., The Proud King, 95a. She delighted in having discussions which turned upon such things as seem to promise a link between the hither and the further side of death's boundary. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. V, 91. The Hainault is still called the Hainault upon stamped paper beyond the frontier line, while on the hither French side living speech alone recalls it.
H. Bri-LOC,
11.
Mons (Westm.
5a).
Late
a)
1)
later, latter
latest, last.
Last, from latst, syncopated from the Old English latost, affords an illustration of the law that the t is apt to be assimilated to a following sibilant. Cf. best from betst.
2)
Late,
later, latest and last are used both as adjectives and as adverbs, latter occurs chiefly as an attributive adjective. We find it also used absolutely and as a partially converted adjective.
b)
1)
The
positive late is often used in the sense of recent, i. e. without any notion of a series, where the Dutch commonly has the de laatste e. g. the late storm superlative 1 a a t s t e storm, de storm van onlangs. Note especially of late years (= these last few years in de laatste j are n), which admits of flo, such variation as of late days, weeks, Instead we find in these later (latter or last) months, etc.
,
*)
Murray.
442
CHAPTER XXX,
11.
days, weeks, months, etc., a construction which is, of course, also used with years. In late years is an occasional variant of of late years. Of later days is met with in Thackeray, of latter years in Trollope. In these late days, as a metrical variant of in these later (etc.) days, occurs in Byron.
Thus
2)
in
den laatsten
is
tijd.
3)
is now chiefly used with regard to position in a series, i.e. to denote what has been mentioned last in a series of two, rarely of a larger number. As such we sometimes find it preceded by this. (Ch. XIX,
Xafter
Its opposite is former, also (the) other(s) is occasionally met 19, 24.) with as such (Ch. XL, 165, Obs. I, d), but frequently it stands without either of these alternatives. For latter in this application we also find in some connections last-named (-mentioned). Sometimes latter simply means the last of two, without any distinct notion of things placed in a series, as in: exploit is accented on the latter syllable. More or less archaically we also find latter in the sense of subsequent or more (or most) recent. In this shade of meaning it is now especially common in the collocation latter days, and before part, half and end, where it is used practically to the exclusion of either last or latest. Compare the latter half (part, end) of the 19th century, etc. (of a sultry afternoon, etc.) with the last quarter of the 19th century, etc. and the
(Murray) also the latter half, part or end end (rarely former half, etc.) and the latter days of July etc. with the last days of Pompeii, etc. Latter days or years sometimes stands fox last days or years of a man's life (= Dutch laatste levensjaren); latter end for death. Note furthermore Latter-day Saints, the name by which the Mormons
; ,
call
In
themselves. Similarly by analogy Latter-day Philistines, the Authorized Version the Latter Day the Last Day
etc.
= the
Day
:
of Judgement.
From
latterly
=
e.
latterly
a)
later
on,
afterwards
lately,
(=
Dutch in
is
i.
den allerlaatsten
tijd).
4) Latest
late,
i.
now
chiefly used with regard to time, both in the sense of most as the opposite of earliest, and in the sense of most recent,
as the equivalent of the Dutch jongste, nieuwste. In the latter sense it implies t'.iat the end of a succession or line of things has mot yet been attained. In literary English it is frequently met with to
e.
in a series, i. e. as the opposite of first. In this case be equivalent to last, from which it is, perhaps, only distinguished in being more solemn and more emphatic: latest very last. Thus the two last lines of the Introduction to the first canto of Scott's the Lay of the Last Minstrel run: And, while his harp responsive rung, 'T was thus the Latest Minstrel sung. Here as well as in other passages latest may have be'en preferred simply for the sake of the
denote
it
position
to
seems
metre.
Compare
34.
Fijn
van Draat,
Rhythm
in
Adj.,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Thackeray
.
443
in
one and
See below. the same Latest also varies with last in the expression the latest word, in which it means final. Instances, however, appear to be rare.
Occasionally, we find it, in literary language, denoting a pure relation of place the last in point of place. As an adjective it occurs 5) Last mostly refers to position in a series.
:
chiefly in
two meanings:
two, occasionally
a) following all the others in a series mostly of more than of two. In connection with a numeral last is now
first,
commonly placed
the order being reversed before the 17th century. When used as part of the name of a period in connection with such words as days, months, years,
few.
mostly followed by either a definite numeral or the indefinite seems to be superfluous and is, perhaps, sometimes inserted for the sake of rhythm. Compare the similar use of few with first (14) and next (12). Few appears to be mostly absent in such names of periods as contain the demonstrative these. Except for these last cometc., it is
The
latter
binations, past sometimes replaces last in names of periods. Note the Last Day == the Day of Judgement; the Last Supper
the
Eucharist.
y?)
In this
with regard to the moment of speaking or writing, less commonly with regard to a moment in time past. Note especially the frequent last year, half, quarter, month, week or night without the definite article, in which last corresponds to the Dutch verleden. Last evening instead of last night is unusual. Also last century would appear to be rare, the ordinary expression being in (during) the last century. Likewise the last night etc. for the night before, etc. occurs only occasionally. Further meanings are: y) lowest (in rank); 8) only remaining, often with the secondary notion of 'most unlikely, most unwilling, most
s)
unsuitable';
last
word;
importance or consequence
in the last degree;
(= of^he
>;)
first importance,
last straits,
farthest, uttermost;
In this last
#)
most recent
meaning
latest is
much
feel,
to the Dutch laatste: The late sad event has, made me more apprehensive. Mrs. Gask., Life of Cfi. Bronte, 278. remember well wishing my lot had been cast in the troubled times of the
a)
corresponding
lb.,
late war.
266.
The
After
financial
embarrass-
ments
mother
of the his
Company.
late
cow he thought
first.
,
e e s b.
1 ,
^ Compare:
The
b) in
i.
The
recent
fire.
Times.
II.
recent great
fire in
the City.
Lon
d.
News.
of
late
of
the
late
years,
days,
in
late
years:
!)
Murray.
444
CHAPTER XXX,
11.
Of recent years the American learned book has shown a perilous tendency towards the involved periods and the dryness of statement and method characteristic not of the best, but of the average, German practice.
Compare:
J.
P.
Hartog,
The Writing
of
English,
103.
ii.
recent years the bad feeling upon both sides has increased. No. 1813, 783. The tone of freedom and almost impertinence which young George
Of
Times,
Esmond
iii.
had adopted of late days towards Mr. Washington had very deeply vexed and annoyed that gentleman. Thack., Virg. Ch. IX, 91. I have heard allude, in late years, to Lord Palmerston as one who had often been associated with him then in the mimic military duties which they had to Life of Charl. Bronte, Ch. III. perform. Mrs. Gask.
, ,
c)
late: Everything beautiful in form or colour was beginning of late to have an intense fascination for me. Ch. Kingsley, Alton Locke, Ch. IV, 72. In their education the useful has of late been trenching on the beautiful. Spenc, Educ, Ch. I, 10a.
in
the collocation of
d)
the
collocation
|
in late
these
late
and never
II,
Till
in
these
days did
days: Yet this existed long before, I see you thus. Byron, Mar. Fal.
1, (361a).
later,
a)
used adjectively,
1)
in
miscellaneous combinations:
Milton alone was of a later age, and not the worse for it. Hazlitt, Lect. Eng. Poets, Ch. Ill, 59. The change of opinion seems to have taken place between the composition of the earlier and later cantos of Childe Harold. Tozer, Childe Harold, Intr. 18. During the later months of his life the Prince Consort had been busy in preparing for another great international Exhibition to be held in London. McCarthy, Short. Hist., Ch. XVIII 251. We should have liked a more liberal citation of Windham's strangely intro,
No. 4448
spective Diary, published in 1866, particularly during his later years. 85a.
,
At hen.,
will
letter
the collocations
lost
these
later
days,
etc.
Soon
thy voice
be
Byron, XCIV. (You) have never walked forth with the younger members of my family; meaning (for I am very young) my elder brothers born in these later years.
throng
,
|
amid
the
,
Of louder minstrels
Childe H a r.
II
Car.s, 111,58. us in these later days to conceive the profound and stirring influence of such an alteration on thought and literature. G. H. Mair, Eng. Lit.: Modern, Ch. 1, 1, 13. We have restored Egypt to a position of prosperity, such as she has never
Dick.,
It
Christm.
is
difficult for
3)
known in these later centuries. Times. in the collocation of later days Mr. Esmond
:
often rode to
Windsor,
,
the Secretary.
Thack,
.
.
.
Henry Esm.
5.
Ch.
II,
327.
o)
and Beacon
Times,
1882, 12 July,
latter
in a series of two, 1) preceded by the: i. Alfieri thought Italy and England the only countries worth living in: the former because there nature vindicates her rights, and triumphs over the evils inflicted by the governments; the latter because art conquers nature,
,
a)
denoting position
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
445
ii.
and transforms a rude, ungenial land into a paradise of comfort and plenty. Emerson E n g. Traits, 83a. His hands and wristbands were beautifully long and white. On the latter he wore handsome gold buttons given to him by his Royal Highness the Duke of York, and on the others more than one elegant ring. Thack.,
,
Pend.,
iii.
I,
Ch.
I,
1.
in the tatter's
*
Ch. XVII,
174.
Ch. XIII, 125. Dick followed Torpenhow wherever the latter's fancy chose to lead him. Rudy. Kipl., The Light that failed, Ch, II, 21. The day after I had been introduced to Busl, the latter asked us to dine with him. West. Gaz., No. 5388, 8c. (Here the use of the latter instead of he (or this gentleman) seems uncalled for.)
faint scruple.
Id.,
I,
'
Van Fair,
2)
the fine
this (these): There were shabby people present, besides company, though these latter were by far the most numerous. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXVIII, 396. I have had a great deal to do both with English and American locomotives, and the result of this experience shows that in point of fuel economy the English are the better, but for facility of erection and running repairs the Americans stand first. This latter is owing to the complication in the English, due to the use of plate framings and insifle cylinders. Times.
preceded by
3)
of two without any distinct notion of in a series: Exploit accented on the latter syllable. to Jul. Caes. 11,1,317. the Rhine is not so romantic as its earlier career in Ger, ,
About Holland,
than two:
Mr.
10. i)
the ices,
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
of
,
c)in the
meaning
,
more
I
(or
most)
,
|
recent,
will
1)
miscellaneous combinations:
the aim or to find both of Ven., I, 1, 151. One is somewhat at a loss
|
in watch
r
Me
c h.
in
eloquence
in latter ages.
Hume, Es.
XIII,
in
Swinbure,
Atalanta,
in the
i.
collocations
months, etc.) end, part and half. latter days been subdivided into several tenements.
242.
days of July in the year 185, a most inportant question was for ten days hourly asked in the cathedral city of Barchester. Trol, B a r c h. Towers, Ch. 1 5. Objection might be raised to the inclusion of naturalists of so recent a date as the latter years of the eighteenth century. At hen., No. 4422, 95a. A fine proof of the prosperity of Australia is made available from the returns of the revenue paid to the States during the latter six months 1906/7.
the
latter
,
392a.
will sing
it
in the latter
end of the
play.
s.
IV,
223.
!)
Murray.
446
CHAPTER XXX,
11.
At the latter end of the spring of 588. M. Pattison, E s. I, 17 *) One who believes in or practises quietism; especially applied to one Quietist. of a sect of mystics originated by Molinos, a Spanish priest in the latter end of the seventeenth century. Annandale, Cone. Diet.
,
iii.
We
It
last
can only hope that the gentle reader has not found the latter part of the chapter extremely tedious. Scott., Pirate, Ch. V, 49. was in the latter part of a calm, sultry day, that they floated gently with
the tide
Hand I.,
iv.
Wash.
Irving,
Do If Hey
I.
(Stof.
125).
Masque. A form of amateur histrionic entertainment, popular at Court and amongst the nobility in England during the latter part of the 16th. c. and the first half of the 17th. c. Murray. (Note the use of first as the opposite
of latter.)
3)
in the
i.
collocation
days
they had rude virtues, which are not the less virtues, because in these latter days they are growing scarce. Froude, Oceana. Ch. Ill, 46.
In these latter days of civilisation, however, we see that in the dress of men the regard for appearance has in a considerable degree yielded to the regard
for comfort.
Manifestly
days.
ii.
Spencer, Education, Ch. I, 10a. are becoming too elaborate and far too costly Times, No. 1826, 1049d.
toys
literally
in these latter
Liddy seemed
to
in these
few
latter hours.
4)
5)
Far from the M*adding Crowd, Ch. LIV, 451. in the collocation of latter years: Mr. Plomacy had never worked hard and of latter years had never worked at all. Trol. Barch. Tow., Ch. XXXV, 305. in the collocation latter days or years, meaning the last days or years of a man's life (= Dutch laatste levensjaren): Our good Colonel's house had received a coat of paint, which, like Madame Latour's rouge in her latter
Hardy,
,
days,
only
served
to
make
her
Thack.,
Newcomes,
She has
retired into private life in her native town of Newcome, and occupies her latter days by the management of a mangle. lb., I, Ch. XIV, 167. when he was The time had been in the latter days of his father's life-time
the greatest man "of the close. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XL, 385. All the latter days of aged men are overshadowed with its gloom. Jefferson. *)
6)
in the collocation latter end, meaning death: Would'st thou thy every future year In ceaseless prayer and penance drie(= endure, suffer); Yet wait thy latter end with fear Then daring Warrior, follow me. Scott, Lay, II, V.
| | |
It
was time
Ill,
for
me
to lay
by and think
end.
G. Eliot,
is
Mill,
I,
Ch.
7)
10.
it
in the combination Latter-day Saints, etc.: Alas, alas, break asunder the bonds of the Latter-day Philistines. Trol.
,
very hard to
Framl. Pars.,
Ch. IX
8)
88.
in
the
,
collocation
,
the
Latter
Day:
For
know
that
Day upon
the earth.
latterly,
I must introduce myself to you as Captain Frewin formerly of the steamer Astick, latterly of the Metora. Edna Lyall, Donovan, 1,245. Beauchamp had latterly favoured me with a good deal of his company. Norris, Friend Jim, Ch. XVI, 109.
i.
My
!)
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
When
447
separated from the Red Cross Knight, a lion fawns on her and becomes her attendant. Latterly she is married to the Red Cross Knight. Annandale,
Latterly, there
Diet., s. v. Una. was a rude attempt to decorate this bower with flowers and sweetThe Luck of Roaring Camp, 12. smelling shrubs. Bret Harte
,
Concise
ii.
He was
She has
a meeker
latterly
Hot Ch. Kinosley, latterly than he used to be. suffered the worst tortures that American newspaper notoriety
man
Westw.
can bring upon a sensitive person. Morning Leader. Latterly officials have been breaking into closed stores, and removing whatever they thought necessary. Times. It (sc. serviette') may now be regarded as naturalized, but latterly has come to be considered vulgar. Murray, s. v. serviette.
latest, a)
as an adjective, 1) in the ordinary meaning of most late: Every group fresher than the last and bent on staying to the latest moment. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XXII, 188a. He was rescued from the chronic state of impecuniosity in which, despite constant literary work, he had long lived, by a Crown pension and some other assistance in his latest days. Nineteenth Cent, Saintsbury
,
Ch.
II,
98.
The passengers
enough.
Graph.
2)
in the
least
meaning
latest
in
the
word
was published
at of most recent: The last word of Count Tolstoy in which he sums up his message to his generation the Times of August 31st, 1905. Rev. of Rev., An-
nual
1906, 386.
. .
The latest and last of this well. 'Stronger than Love', by Mrs. Alexander known writer, whose death occurred shortly after she had revised the final
proofs.
Times.
Robert Allitsen showed her
I,
Compare:
Har.,
All
all
Ships,
give books are recommended to apply to Messrs. Methuen for details newest volumes. Advertisement. The newest plea is that, since the proportion of raw materials in our exports to manufactured goods grows higher, the exports are in consequence deteriore s t m. G a z. ating in character.
of their
who
3)
as
still
last:
had hopes my latest hours to crown Amidst these humble bowers to 20. lay me down. Goldsmith, Des. Vil. As my first glance Of love and wonder was for thee, then take My latest
,
| |
Byron, Manfred, III, 2. May you rule us long And leave us rulers of your blood As noble till the latest day Ten. To the Queen. For thou, the latest-M\ of all my knights, In whom should meet the offices of all, Thou wouldst betray me. Id., The Passing of Arthur, 292.
look.
|
Id.,
Enoch Arden,
451.
relates
how
,
the
chief
brave followers had perished round him, and uttered his latest prayer. Mac. C 1 v e (507a). To his latest day he sang, with admirable pathos and humour, those wonderful Irish ballads which are so mirthful and so melancholy: and was always the first himself to cry at their pathos. Poor Cos! he was at once brave and maudlin, humorous and an idiot; always good-natured, and sometimes almost trustworthy. Up to the last day of his life he would drink with any man, and back any man's bill: and his end was in a spunging-house
i ,
of the Fatimites, when all his drank his latest draught of water
,.
448
where the
I,
CHAPTER XXX,
11.
sheriff's officer, who took him, was fond of him. Thack. , Pend. Ch. V, 58 (Note the varied practice.) Skeat has now performed the like service for the work, which next to the 'Canterbury Tales' is the latest and ripest fruit of the poet's genius. A t h e n.
,
The
of
found an interest ... in its pages as an investigation the circumstances attending the production of Dickens's latest work. It abounds in documentary evidence, it reveals with Thom. singular suggestiveness the evolution of Dickens's latest manner. Seccombe (Bookman, No. 254, 113a). This is characteristic of Shakespeare's latest manner. Note to Temp.,
the
all
I,
2, 7 (Clar. Press.).
4)
as
variant of
word
a
last
in the
II.
expression
En.
the
latest
word
The
the
latest
5)
in hotel comfort.
denoting
street,
|
Lond. News, No. 3859, 4506. relation of place: For Philip's dwelling fronted on
house
to
The
latest
landward.
Ten.,
Arden,
728.
(Possibly
latest is
150. Nursing the sickly babe, her latest born. Ten., En. Ard. There rode Full slowly by a knight, lady, and dwarf; Whereof the dwarf 188. lagg'd latest. Ten., Mar. of Ger.
|
last,
a)
as an adjective
times
|
1)
referring to
A hundred
Farewell, like
I, 6.
Ten., Love and Duty, 65. The kettle had had the last of its solo performances. Dick., Crick., He (sc. Mr. Lewes) used the beautiful walking-stick in the last days his life). Letters (Times, No. 1809, 703d). G. Eliot
endless welcome, lived and died.
,
(sc. of
2)
said
of a series of two: I can so clearly distinguish between the criminal and his crime, I can so sincerely forgive the first while I abhor the last. Ch. Bronte , J a n e Eyre, Ch. VI , 66.
Very important are the researches at the 'Kolonial Institut' and the Tropical Diseases Hospital. At this last I made the acquaintance of Dr. Fiilleborn. SiH. H. Johnston, Germany in 1910 (Westm. Gaz., No. 5531, 5a). 3) followed by a numeral: The 'Spectator' cannot doubt that good will come from the crisis through which the nation has been passing in the last 16c. ten days. Westm. Gaz., No. 4961 The last two volumes of their new edition of Macaulay's History. Daily
,
News.
I
am
of that,
perhaps,
for the
4)
moment,
last
in the
House
of
Commons
Times.
Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton. of common fame. Hazlitt, Lect. Eng. Poets, Ch. Ill, 60. I think he's walked a little slower than he used these few last evenings. Dick., Christ m. Car.5, IV, 98.
preceded by
numeral:
had
justice
The two
have
5)
followed by few:
that for the last
I.
This
is
if
Ch. II, 11. Here then we have the issue made plain, shorn of all the verbiage of the
few
days.
Westm. Gaz.
Mr. David T. Day writes upon the petroleum resources of the United States, how largely they have been drawn upon during the last few years. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 1716.
**
The
years.
have made great progress these last few cavalry and artillery T. P. 's Weekly, No. 468, 5286.
.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
ii.
449
* Fate had dealt him some severe blows the last years. Westm. Gaz., No. 5107, 2a. Sacheverel's dark face, grown a little heavier in the last years softened as the beautiful music wore on his senses. Bar. von Hutten, Pam, II, Ch. I, 77. ** do not know what has come over George in these last days. Thack.
,
Virg., Ch.
I
IX, 93.
The
in
I've
at all in these last days. lb., Ch. XVI, 169. ancient Empire of Persia has been witness in these last days to events
which England once would have had something to say. Rosebery. let many an 'if slip in and frighten me during these last days.
,
Hal.
Sutcl.
6)
Pam
h e
Fiddler,
Ch.
Ill
44.
replaced by past: The heat of the past few weeks had worn her down. Rudy. Kipl. The Light that failed, Ch. XI, 158. Of all the many cheap series of standard works to the production of which so many publishers have, during the past few years, devoted themselves, it is not invidious to say that "Everyman's Library" maintains its triumphant lead.
,
Daily Telegraph.
Inter-urban trolleys have America than the railways.
7)
few years
in
in the meaning of immediately preceding the present (Ch. XXXI 19) This edition contains about 90 pages more than the last edition. The Bookman.
, :
In
Academy.
18
those
in
the
last
Parliament.
Id.
Graph.
Parties are balanced pretty
much
I,
Ch. X, 162.
their
second
8)
syllables.
... in the last century were stressed on 253. Sweet, Short Hist. Eng. Gram.,
in the made a
Irv.,
meaning
scanty
at
of immediately preceding (a night, etc.,) in the past: He breakfast on the remains of the last nights provisions. Wash.
(Stof.
,
Dolf Heyl.
books), or that
Han
I.
1,123).
The answer
the
last
several
that
month, or
shops was, either that they were just out of them (sc. they never kept them, or that they had had a great many they expected a great many next week. Dick., Domb.
to the landing-place where they had left their goods last night. Ch. XXIII, 195a. eyes) encountered the personage who had received me last night. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. V, 5!. The next day, at ten o'clock, Tom was on his way to St. Ogg's, to see his uncle Deane who was to come home last night. G. Eliot , Mill, III, Ch. V, 204. I reflect that it would have been much better if I had stopped up last night. Jerome Idle Thoughts, VI 77.
9)
meaning
first.
of lowest
,
(i
rank): The
1 ,
last of nations
now, though
Cowper
Expo
t.
242
1).
10)
in the
To
remaining:
We
ready are to
last
try
our fortunes,
can be no doubt Buckle C v z. *). She was the last person F e r d. and Is. 1 ).
There
to
Prescott,
!)
H.
II.
29
450
11)
CHAPTER XXX,
in the
word.
11.
meaning
its last
Spectator.
If you have not investigated the merits of the Blickensderfer Typewriter, you do not know the last word in typewriter conveniences. Adverti-
sement
The German Government, which has been schooled
and
which
letters
is
in the
school of Bismarck,
the
last
word
of
efficiency
and
scientific
method
[etc.].
Westm. Gaz.
The
... are certainly not to be described as the acme of perfection, word in style. Id., No. 6029, 4b. The Empress Hotel here (sc. in Victoria, British Columbia) spells the last word in luxury. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 460, 581.
or the last
12)
in the
meaning
i.
It
was of
i
A Life
An express of
ii.
II.
iii.
Such proved weapons were of the last consequence to their owner. Scott. Fair Maid, Ch. XXXIV, 361. To fighting he was averse from his earliest youth, as indeed to physic, the Greek Grammar, or any other exertion, and would engage in none
of
Thack.,
Pend.
I,
Ch.
II,
25.
iv.
He was
Dick.,
It
Mag.
W. Black
v.
His lame
Chuz.,
attempt to seem composed was melancholy in the last degree. Ch. XXX, 2406.
the last degree.
IX.
I 1
,
Compare
made
13)
also:
are obvious
think the advantages by the proposal which have and many, as well as of the highest importance. Swift,
in the
to
their
Her
over
of
all
Commingled with
like eclipse,
|
the
gloom
imminent war,
as
the
variant of
latter
before
part:
He has permitted
his
last part of it, to be translated- into English by one whose of the language is imperfect. Gaz., No. 6111, 116.
work, or knowledge
Westm.
15)
variant of latest in the meaning of most jongste, nieuwste): Your suit is not of the very last
as
i
recent
(Dutch
Ch.
fashion. Thack.,
23.
the last
news
of the nobility.
Id.,
Pend.,
I,
II,
from talk of the last fashion to pore with 3. Cecil over despatches and treasury books. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, The last news from this region was that [etc.]. Westm. Gaz., No. 4977, 16.
She
(sc.
Elizabeth)
could
turn
b)
as an adverb,
last.
1)
in the
meaning
last
of after
all
others:
Love
thyself
Henry
VIII,
m,
2, 444.
2)
in the
in
meaning
of on Me
Shelley,
occasion
before
the present
When
:
Cenci,
last
V, 2, 22.
the
meaning
meaning
|
of as
/Ae
Last, but not least, is it not Invested with flesh and blood?
4)
the
thing to be mentioned or considered very property of man that he is a spirit Ch. Kinosley, Yeast, Ch. XVII.
in the
plea,
of
in
the
end
,
The King
Mused
|
for a
little
on his
|
...
to the shores
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
last-named.
451
This flow of quotation and hospitality in Wegg indicated his some little querulousness on the part of Venus. "Why, as to u t. friendly move", observed the last-named gentleman [etc.]. Dick., Our Friend, III, Ch. VI, 90.
observation
of
12.
Near
a) 1)
nearer
nearest, next.
properly a comparative, the descendant of the adverb near (neor), or the adjective nearra, the Old English positive rieah (neh) being represented by Modern English nigh, which survives in archaic, especially poetic, and dialect use. Note the
is
Near
The transition from the comparative to the which was furthered by the analogy of here, there and far, seems to have begun with verbs of motion, such as to go and to come, with which even now near is more or less felt Thus also with the Dutch naar, originally as- a comparative.
literary
well
nigh.
positive sense,
comparative of na. Except for dialects traces of near as a comparative hardly go beyond the beginning of the 16th century. 2 1048. 218; Sweet, N. E. Gr., Franz, Shak. Gram. The near in blood, the nearer bloody. Macb. II, 3, 146. Still creeping near and near the heap. Chapman, Iliad, XXIII, 206.
the
, ,
2)
Near,
nearer, nearest and next are partly adjectives, partly adverbs. When followed by a (pro)noun they largely partake of the nature of prepositions. For the use of to after these words see Ch. Ill, 14, Obs. in. Next is also used as a conjunctive
adverb. See Ch. X, 17. As an adjectiva near, unlike the Dutch na,
Punch.
b)
1)
is used to denote proximity as to place, or as to kinalso find it in ship, friendship, or any other emotional tie. the sense of shortest, most convenient or direct, especially in the collocation the nearest way. In Early Modern English it some-
Nearest
We
times stands for most malignant (Dutch ergst, mostly before foe or enemy. Sometimes it is equivalent to next. 2) Next is now chiefly used in indicating proximity as to order or rank or as to time. When denoting proximity as to time, it is used with
,
regard to the moment of speaking or writing, or to some moment in the past. In the former case the definite article is almost
regularly
dropped,
is
The dropping
What next! (as an exclamation of next after (== coming immediately after), next to (= coming immediately after, almost); next-door, next-door neighbour; the next room (= the adjoining room); (with)in (for, etc.) the next few days (in which next is mostly followed by
surprise);
latter it is more commonly retained. met with in adverbial adjuncts, only adnominal genitives and their periphrastical
in
the
chiefly
few.
Compare last and first). Modern English next is often used where present practice would require nearest. The language of the law preserves
In
Early
452
CHAPTER XXX,
12.
the ancient practice. There is, accordingly, a difference between next-of-kin and nearest-of-kin the former designating mere claims of succession, the
;
claims of blood or family feeling. Thus also we say my next brother to indicate the brother succeeding in a line of brothers (= Dutch de broer die op mij volgt). In the following illustrations the purely adverbial applications have been passed over as exhibiting no remarkable features.
latter also
nearer. "Before I draw nearer to that stone to which you point", said Scrooge, "answer me one question". Dick., Cristm. C a r.5, IV, 102. You must be much nearer together. Edna Lyall, Don., II, 119. Never was there a time when the Navy was nearer to the people's heart. T. P. 's Weekly, No. 466, Y 516.
nearest , a) denoting a relation of place: Mrs. Gamp took Dick. C h u z. Ch. XXV, 207a. that was nearest the door.
, ,
the
chair
b)
denoting a tie of kinship, etc.: These nearest-of-kin were naturally impressed with the unreasonableness of expectations in cousins. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 243. Vendetta. A blood-feud: the practice of the nearest-of-kin executing vengeance on the murderer of a relative. Annandalf. Cone. Diet. The next three months were marked by anguished mental struggle, by a consciousness of painful separation from the soul nearest to his own. Mrs. Ward Rob. E s m. II 203. He could gratify all his nearest wishes. Miss Burnett, Little Lord, 62. took an opportunity ... of speaking One misty June evening Sir Michael upon the subject nearest to his heart. Miss Braddon, Lady Andley's Secret, I, Ch. I, 13.
, ,
c)
in the
thee? foe?
|
sense of most
Harry, do
IV,
I
malignant:
thee of
But wherefore
foes,
|
do
art
tell
these
news
to
Why,
tell
my
Which
my
Henry
of
A,
III,
2, 123.
d) in the
that
sense
the
of next: Of
.
Didymasan Apollo
II.
numerous Oracles of Apollo in Asia Minor, was of great importance, ranking nearest in L o n d. News, No. 3777, 406.
the
.
next,
the
a) indicating proximity as to order: Next to Club-Room sits Captain Sentry. Spectator, II. Paul's chair was next to Miss Blimber. Dick., Do m bey, Ch.
Sir
Andrew
in
XII, 105.
,
b)
indicating proximity as to rank: Next to the capital an immense distance, stood Bristol. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 330. One man is next to another in excellence. Webster. One is next in rank or dignity. Id.
of
In
but
next at
c)
indicating proximity as to time with regard to the moment speaking or writing: Next week (next year, next meeting, etc.) everything will be arranged.
Scotch
use
'next'
is
thus next
Friday, the
employed to designate the days of the following week; Friday of next week, is contrasted with this Friday, that
Murray.
d)with regard to so some moment in the past: i. *'T was the next day my aunt found the matter out. Sher., Riv. I, 2, (217). The next Sunday Susan was busy preparing two rooms for Mr. Eden. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. VIII, 82.
,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
453
ii.
** The next day was a Sunday, when there was no business to be looked for. Stevenson l ). That day the indefatigable Gus was obliged to run post haste for doctor Salbs, and next morning a little boy was born. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. XII, 163. Susan was up betimes next day. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to
mend, Compare: On
I.
the following
,
to be
arrested.
e)
in
ii.
College,
Ch.
Ill
50.
I
i.
I'm sure!
far the best
What
next,
wonder!
Punch 2).
Hi.
Miss Mitford, Our Village 2 ). Poulterers and grocers' trades became a splendid joke: a glorious pageant, with which it was next to impossible to believe that such dull principles as bargain and sale had anything to do. Dick., Christ m. Car. 5 I, 16. Ships, they had few; trained seamen, yet fewer; wealth, next to none. Grote,
,
Greece-),
iv.
Trying
to
hide
is
himself,
II,
behind the
45.
girl
Dick.,
Christm. Car.&,
The
idea
** Persons
next-door to blasphemous.
Spurgeon,
Sermons, XXIV 2 ).
who
live
two or three
as next-door neighbours.
v.
vi.
miles' distance in the country are considered Fielding, Jones, IV, Ch. XII, 586.
Tom
She
If
is
keeping up her spirits for the next few weeks, I shall think our time well spent. Jane Austen, Mansfield Part, Ch. XIII, 131. Nothing will be done in the next few weeks which will conflict with this e s t m. Gaz. No. 5237, lb. plain declaration. Within the next few days the programme must be ai ranged for a fight or T h e N a t o n. for a surrender.
.
. .
we
/)
in
i. when a Fox is very much They say troubled with Fleas, he goes into the next pool. Addison, Tatler, CCXXIX2). He was obliged to make a short confession to the next priest that was at
,
ii.
Goldsmith, Hist. Engl. II, 257 2) and maritime towns next the continent. lb., I, 23 2 ). Mr. Rushworth had still more to say on the subject next his heart Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. VI, 56. To mourn mischief that is past and gone Is the next way to draw new mischiet on. O t h e o 1 3 204. Peas and beans are as dank here as a dog, and that is the next way to give poor jades the bots. Henry IV, A, II, 1, 9. The next way from that place to Mr. Harrison's house. Cries of Blood 2 ).
hand.
All the trading
. .
.
|
)as
law-term:
to
be assessed to
all
parochial
rates in the parish next adjoining. Blackstone, Coram., I, 113 2). Placing wooden rails on the side next the glebe land, and field stakes
on the
Law T m e s XC
i ,
395
).
2 by their next friends. Rules Supreme Court ). expressions designating proximity of kinship: And Naomi said unto her, The man is near of kin unto us, one of our next kinsmen. Bible,
Ruth,
II,
20.
Having previously communicated his intentions to his five next-of-kindred. Goldsmith, Hist. Rome, I, 13 2 ). The betrothal shall be made by the next-of-kin. Jowett, Plato, V, 91 2).
*)
Gunth.
Man.,
419.
-')
Murray.
454
13. Old
older, elder
oldest, eldest.
a) 1) Elder
2)
eldest
Elder is, consequently, never followed by than. The latest quotation with a predicative elder given by Murray is of the year 1683; but instances may still be met with in writers of the earlier half of
eldest are
now used
only attributively.
Sattler, E. S., VI, 36. such sentences as He is the elder (or eldest) of the brothers, She is about four years the elder (an unusual construction for She is about four years older) She is the eldest of the family , the two words cannot properly be regarded as predicative adjecIn the first and the third they are used absolutely, in tives. the second elder is partially converted into a noun. 3) Elder is mostly preceded by a definite modifier, chiefly the definite article or a possessive pronoun, such constructions as an {no,
the 18th century.
In
,
some, any), elder brother of his or elder brothers of theirs being uncommon. Nor is elder possible after an intensive, such as far,
still,
much, as in *a far (much, still) elder brother of his. It is hardly necessary to add that both eldest and oldest, like all superhave a
are
definite modifier.
b)
1)
chiefly used as opposites of younger and youngest, less commonly of earlier and earliest, and rarely of newer and newest, more modern and most modern, more youthful and most youthful. They are, therefore, chiefly applied to persons. Before the names of things we find them only in the case
now
of personification or as literary archaisms. In the rare case that they are used with regard to animals, the reference is mostly to a tie of companionship.
)
Elder
is
now used
to indicate:
aa) the senior(s) of two (groups of) persons that are thought of as belonging together by reason of some tie of kinship,
friendship of name.
/?/?)
or
the or
of
earlier of two persons bearing the same name, two (groups of) persons or things, belonging to
different periods. When a tie of kinship is in question, elder is used almost to the exclusion of older. More frequent is the latter
when persons are spoken of as friends or companions, or connected in some other way. In American English, and
in
is
a tendency to
Phil.-, 904, 1036. Before proper names of persons elder, whether in the sense of senior or earlier, is used to the exclusion of older.
Storm, Eng.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
or
less
455
distinctly
institution,
university,
thought of as persons, such as church, country, etc., and also before such words as geneetc.
designating persons.
now used
persons belonging
to indicate that (those) person(s) of a group of to the same family that exceed(s) all the others as
to age. In contradistinction to elder it is not usually applied to persons that are connected by a tie other than that of kinship, but like elder
it is found almost to the exclusion of oldest before nouns denoting family relationship. Instances of oldest for eldest are, however, more frequent than those of older for elder.
2)
now
but
replace elder and eldest in all connections not as they have come into use only slowly, we Early Modern English the irregular but original
It
forms
in
cases
is
hardly necessary to observe that traces of the earlier practice are still met with as archaisms. Also the use of the irregular forms when
years
of
still
standing,
was
to
common
experience or membership are in question, which about the middle of the 19th century, may be said
be
It
that older and oldest, merely point to or (non)existence, as opposed to elder and eldest, which also imply some of the concomitants or characteristics that are commonly associated with these ideas, such as superiority in rank or station,
duration of
precedence as to aright, a responsibility, etc. Hence oldest is the ordinary word in such combinations as express mere superiority as to age: next oldest , second oldest, oldest surviving, etc.; but eldest-born. See also
page
elder,
401.
a)
used attributively, 1) denoting superiority as to before common names of persons when the reference is to some tie of kinship: There were two brothers on
age,
a)
for both of them in the only boat that would consent to go, until the elder took the younger by the waist and flung him in. Dick., D o m b. Ch. IV, 31. When his elder brother died elder seems a strange word for he was only seven year old remember this one took it sorely to heart. Id., Old Cur. Shop, Ch. LV, 203*. Lieutenant Colonel Newcome, C. B., a distinguished Indian officer, and elder brother of our respected townsman and representative, Sir Brian Newcome, Bart. Thack., Newc I, Ch. XI V, 167.
swamped,
neither of them
Jane,
elder sister, held that Martha's children ought not to expect so much as the Waules. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 243. There was a strong contrast in the children. The elder, who was about
the
fifteen,
am
(than me).
Sweet,
'N. E.
G
/?)
r.
2087.
before
is
common names
some
tie of
to
replied to the bullying look of his father with another so indicative of resolution and defiance that the elder man quailed in his return. Thack., Van.
Fair,
I,
When
they parted for the night, they shook hands with the greatest cordiality;
456
the
CHAPTER XXX,
13.
to
,
leave
Chatteris without a
Pend.
I,
Ch. X, 110.
at one another, the tall, stalwart young man, so and free in bearing, and the old man, languid, sickly, prematurely broken down. "Sir," said the elder, "1 have to thank you" [etc.]. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. XII, 123. "But really now," urged the younger of the two (sc. Englishmen) with some warmth, "you can't possibly maintain such a notion. Do you think we are not in the last two hundred years?" "The increase vastly improved improved of civilization gives us a better appearance, do grant," said the elder, "but
is
lessened".
Ch.
I, 9.
Two
ragged
flung his
little Neapolitans were sauntering along the Chiaja; the elder had arms caressingly round the other's neck; the younger held in his hand
a ragged cap
full
of cherries.
lb.,
Ch. XIV,
115.
grassy spot of the age inspires. Symonds, Shelley, I, 10. At Eton Shelley was not popular either with his teachers or his elder schoolfellows, lb., Ch. II, 12. The elder boys are expected to take care of the younger ones. Sweet, N. E.
younger and an elder boy at school, walking in some the playground with that tender friendship for each other which
a
r.
2090.
to
be the elder of the two girls. George Gissing, Eve MadeCh. V. Two or three minutes after the train had started, the elder man looked forward, moved slightly and spoke. lb., Ch. I. In a reserved first-class compartment were two ladies. The elder v/oman had snow-white hair, the other, her niece, was a pretty girl with a slim figure. Croker(?), Pour Prendre Conge, Ch. I.
Eve seemed
ley's
Ransom,
v)
these facts
too ,
William had insisted strongly in his conversation with the elder Osborne: and had thus been the means of reconciling the old gentleman to his son's memory, Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch.XXXI, 346. just at the close of the elder man's life. Pendennis the elder had a proper and constant dread of the opinion of his neighbour. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XV, 153.
A
)
before such words as church, country, institution, are few things to me more affecting in the history of the
the
,
university, etc.
There
two great nations than the recurrence of that word Ch. I, 7. younger towards the elder country. Thack., Virg. The change I mean is an amalgamation with the Infirmary, so
shall be regarded as a special addition to the elder institution. G. Eliot, VII, Ch. LXVII, 506.
Mid.,
A solemn
e)
law, long in vogue in the elder university, prohibits the use of the 1 colleges during vacation to the undergraduates. Graph. )
branch, generation,
,
line:
Of
at
this
Younger
line
have enough
to write in time
Carlyle
!)
C)
His favourite gods are those of the elder generation. Mac, Milton, 25. J ) before the name of an animal: Gabriel had two dogs. George, the elder, exhibited an ebony-tipped nose [etc.]. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. V, 38.
Sattler, E.
S., VI.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
2)
457
of standing, experience or membership: younger clerks were miserably paid, the elder enriched themselves by trading on their own account. Mac, Clive, (499a). She was anxious that the parish vicar should be one with whom she could Should she appoint an elder man, this might herself fully co-operate probably not be the case to the same extent. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. I, 3.
.
The
Society
was
started
with
the
,
idea
303.
is
curates.
Graph.,
1881
26 March
Captain
Arthur Wellesley
Clarke
1 1.
the following quotations, where there is not, apparently, any reference to any tie, is archaic: There being present, besides the bride and bridegroom, an elder mariner and
his wife.
He was
The
damsels
of the vicinity.
Lytton, E u
,
g.
Aram.
elder inhabitants
new shopkeeper.
men. Morley,
169.') The characters of journalist and novelist are joined also in elder Eng. Lit., 413. 1 )
G. Eliot,
Broth. Jac.
in:
Hughes,
Tom Brown,
Ch.
II,
to the elder
The time has long gone by when, as in the days of the commerce could be made to flourish in and by means of
"Taxes," said the elder
Pitt, "are
Times.
Commons,
No.
and
of the
Commons
of
alone."
We
a voluntary
s
t
gift
,
m.
Gaz.
The death
3857, 330.
Pliny the
Elder by suffocation.
.
Lond. News,
The prose
form,
owed its inspiration, in its of his (sc. John Lyly's) school ultimately to Cicero, and in the decorations with which it was embellished, to the elder Pliny and later writers of his kind. G. H. Mair,
. .
Eng.
/?)
Lit.:
Modern,
Ch.
I,
2, 17.
archaically before
of
it
common names
of
persons: The
forms
are maintained by the elder authors. Bulwer, Ken elm Chillingly. 1 ) The elder writers understood but little of the pathetic. Thack., Virg. l ) 'Nugget' very nearly in its present form occurs in our elder writers. Trench,
y)
English Past and Present, 81. *) archaically before names of things: A knightly tale of Albion's elder my lay
|
Hear then
day.
attentive
,
to
Scott
Ma
m.
n t r o d. I xvii. Are you such a wretched Christian as to suppose I would in the present day levy war against the Ashton family, as was the sanguinary custom in elder times. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. VIII, 185. The mystic action of the drama recalls, not tl;e human stir and passion of our modern tragedy, but the solemn movement of the stories of the elder world. Vida D. Scudder, Introd. to Shelley's Prom. .Unbound, 3. His style as a poet was but weakly imitative of our elder drama. Morley,
I
,
,
Eng.
Lit.
i)
!)
Sattler, E.
S., VI.
458
'Hum-bugg' may be,
CHAPTER XXX,
after all, the elder
13.
Compare:
usual
in
The
their
form of the term. II. Lond. News. 1 ) to have been less fortunate than collection of comparatively uncommon words. A then., No.
earlier
dictionaries
seem
4460. 421a.
b)
rest, told
him
that he
e c
t.
CXXX.
i)
next
elder to
Carl.,
Fred.,
V, 211.
i)
There were few amongst them elder than Angelo. Lytton, Rienzi, 154. (Compare: And at her feet lay one older than the rest.
Ch.
I,
Ch.
I,
lb.,
IV,
155.)
following quotation elder is essentially predicative: might have raised romantic ideas in elder minds than those of Joseph and Fanny. Fielding. 1 ) (= minds older than.)
I
In the
older, a)
a)
used attributively 1) denoting superiority as to age before names of persons when the reference is to some tie of kinship: The office had passed out of the family on the death of an older brother of his father. Masson, C h a tt e rt on. i)
before names of persons when the reference tie of friendship, companionship, etc.:
is
i.
/S)
Arnold,
Life & Corresp. x ) Although so much senior to Roberts, there was fellowship between them almost from the first. The older man recognized, no doubt, in the younger that same ardent longing to achieve distinction which dominated himself.
Graph.
of the
.
whether Athena was aware of two men wondered had been her announcement of a singularly insignificant fact. As to the older man ... he had turned and deliberately looked away as the door opened. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Jane Og lander, Ch. Ill, 50.
The younger
how
dramatic
Note.
is
In
Rose's Daughter,
An
the opening chapter of Mrs. Humphry-Ward's Lady the senior of the two persons introduced
twice referred to by the older, subsequently by the elder: elderly gentleman flung himself out of his cab, and hastily went to meet a young man, who was at the same moment stepping out of another hansom. The pleasure in the older man's voice rang clear, and the younger met him with an equal cordiality The older man paused outside the line of servants waiting at the door... "What a charming house!" said the elder, looking round him.
.
ii.
still
older friend than Lord Jeffrey wrote of him in not less affectionate
language.
y)
Trevelyan
Macau
a
,
y.
, , :
institution church university, etc. country These exercises have never been adopted at London, as, indeed, they have slowly gone out of fashion at the older universities. Academy. 1 )
The
ill-suppressed
exultation
in
the older
religion affected
them with
terror.
All the
Year Round.
i)
Sattler, E.
S., VI.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
8)
459
, ,
:
branch generation line etc. Differences pronunciation between the older and the younger generation are not 7. only possible, but inevitable. Sweet, Prim, of P h o n. The older generation and the younger do not speak exactly alike. Rippmann,
,
The Sounds
It
of
Spoken English,
man who
belongs
to
17.
e)
easy to love a
an older generation.
things: The
Note.
In the
painters have no longer the stimulus of attacking the older of things. Athen No. 4459, 409a.
,
of whom the older inhabitants of Dillsborough still spoke, when they gave vent to their feelings in favour Trol., A m e r. Sen., I, 12. 2) Younger boys than he had triumphantly redeemed older girls than Florence.
following quotations older could hardly be replaced because there is no notion of any tie of friendship,
etc.
Dombey.
boys see older people smoking, no amount 1 prevent them from doing likewise. Graph. )
2)
When
of
etc.: You are an older hand at this than I thought you, Tupman, you have been out before. Dick., Pickw. , Ch. XIX, 166. His name in gilded letters still attests his victory over many older competitors.
)
I
Makes one very unpopular at the club Oscar Wilde An Ideal Husband, I.
,
get rid of as soon as possible! Bad habit, by the with the older members.
. .
denoting earlier existence, a) before common names of the older philosophers, dramatist, writers etc. (Instances persons:
i.
moment
are
Many
instances
probably, not infrequent, are not going to press.) found in Shakespeare and still older writers.
of
')
Notes and Q
/?)
u e
r.
The
the
distinction
is
quite
of
modern
French,
of
correct.
to have shunned that dangerous kind which has involved two modern establishments in destruction.
of business
Chamb.
Jou r n. ) b) used predicatively: She is ten years older than her sister. Murray. the greatest age/ 1) before names of eldest, c) denoting persons, a) when the reference is to some tie of kinship:
Webst.
Carlyle
I
,
Infante,
s. v.
was
am
54.
your eldest-born.
Wordsworth,
is
White Doe
I,
/?)
to
all
some
the
girls
of
friendship,
I
Of
the
school
was
the
1 youngest, and you were the eldest, or nearly the eldest. Wilkie Collins. )
i)
Sattler, E.
S., VI.
*)
Storm., E n
g.
Phil.,
706.
B)
Murray.
460
CHAPTER XXX,
Examined closely, that group was was reading in the newspaper the
far
13.
from insignificant; for the eldest, who portentous proceedings of the French parliaments, and turning with occasional comments to his young companions, was as fine a specimen of the old English gentleman as could well have been found in those venerable days of cocked-hats and pigtails. G. Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. II, 85.
last
b)
before such words as generation, dynasty, etc. Instances seem to be rare: In my blood she venerates the eldest dynasties of earth. Lytton Last Days of Pomp., Ch. IV, 226. denoting the most years of standing, experience, membership, etc.: the eldest member of a club, the eldest partner of a firm, etc.
2)
,
I ,
in Late A'.odern
English;
this
use of eldest
may
O, my
|
It
oldest,
a)
1)
when
far
the reference
I
is
to
some
tie of
of persons, As kinship:
i.
was about ten years of age, and the youngest about four. Mrs. Gask., Life of Charl. Bronte, 41. Willie Stead, my first-born and oldest son, was suddenly summoned hence on December 14th, 1907. Rev. of Rev., CCXVII, 18a. "I guess he means 'trunk'," said my oldest nephew. John Habberton,
as
remember,
the
oldest
Helen's Babies,
It
41.
Joseph
Jacobs,
(Compare: He flung the ball, and off he goes as quick as lightning, and comes In this tale oldest and eldest to the eldest brother's house. lb., 135.
are used indifferently.)
LXXI,
138.
ii.
Off he went as fast as the wind, ... until he brother's house. lb., LXXI, 134.
came
to the
second oldest
They have
brother.
jolly
139.
shake-hands, and
off
lb.,
The
2)
first-born,
etc.).
or the
oldest surviving
s.
(member
son,
daughter,
Murray,
v.
eldest,
2.
when
the reference is to
some
companionship:
Scott.
1
of the oldest of Prince John's followers. oldest monk of all. Longfellow J). of
II.
the
tenants
Lond, News,
there
is
their
Note.
When
no notion of any
oldest
is
now
regularly used.
In a word, it was one of those unparalleled storms that only happen once within the memory cf that venerable personage, known in all towns by the name of "the oldest inhabitant". Wash Irv. The
,
Storm -Ship
Methuselah
was
lived.
Alford,
The
Queen's English,
There should be a pause
at
minutes in the winter, and consecutive periods of teaching, the periods themselves not exceeding fifty minutes, even in the case of the oldest pupils of school age. Sounds of Rippmann,
least
ten
in
the
summer between
The
Spoken
J)
Engl.,
1
5.
I,
293.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
b)
461
denoting the most years of standing, experience membership, If 1) before nouns denoting friendship or enmity (?): would tell him what thought; but as any man but you insulted her, suppose you have the privilege to doubt my you are my oldest friend,
I
honour.
The
P e n d. I Ch. VI 77. question whether he was Veneering's oldest friend, or u t. Friend, I, Ch. II, 9. (Note the newest friend. Dick., Our contrast: oldest newest.) His own neighbour was Mrs. Vandeleur, one of his aunt's oldest friends. Oscar Wilde, Dorian Gray, Ch. II, 53. Yesterday-evening you wrote me a very beautiful, womanly letter, asking me for my help. You wrote to me as one of your oldest friends, one of
Thack.
, ,
insoluble
your husband's oMesf friends. Id., An Portugal is the oldest of all our allies.
Ideal
Husband,
IV.
He would
Times,
2)
Eternal blessings crown my ea/7/esr friend. Goldsmith, Traveller, 11. before other nouns: The company was only three years old,
Compare:
had not six months more standing in it than I. Ch. VI, 65. He made very few foolish bets with the jolly idle fellows round about him and the oldest hands found it difficult to take him in. Id., Virg. Ch. XXIX, 299. During fifty days the young captain maintained the defence with a
clerk in
it
.
Sam. Titm.
firmness, vigilance, and ability, which would have done honour to the oldest marshal of Europe. Mac, Clive, (5066).
The
c)
Westm. denoting earliest existence: The oldest historian is William of Poitiers. Chamb., Sketches, I, 79. )
situation.
,
oldest Parliamentary hands confess themselves baffled by the present G a z. No 6135, lc.
of the
Conquest
The
the
oldest historical
document
I,
in
which Arthur
to
is
famous
'Historia
Brittonum' ascribed
14.
Nennius.
King Arthur,
Note
Ch.
and
earliest in:
The
Finnish date back only a few centuries. Those of Hungarian are older; but even the earliest of them are less conservative on the whole than Modern Finnish. Sweet, Hist, of Lang., Ch. VII, 133.
14.
(Be)fore
a)
1)
former
to
foremost,
first.
As
above
2)
Fore as an adverb occurs now only as a nautical term as the opposite of aft, the form before having taken its place in other applications. As an adjective it is always attributive; itsopposites are back and hind. Both as an adverb and as an adjective it is found in innumerable compounds, being, indeed, a kind of prefix, used as a living formative. Note also the expression to the fore, in which fore is an adjective partially converted into a noun. Former is used as an attributive adjective and may be partially converted into a noun. A very common derivative is the adverb
formerly.
Sattler, E.
S., VI.
462
CHAPTER XXX,
14.
Foremost and first are found as adjectives, chiefly attributive, and as adverbs or predicative adnominal adjuncts. First often occurs partially converted into a noun.
b)
is
now used
only to denote
is used with reference to time and to order or position in a two. In the former application it now mostly points merely to a period or occasion anterior to that in question (Dutch vroeger); in the sense of the earlier of two (Dutch eerste) we now find it only before half and part, earlier or first being, however, the ordinary word.
Former
of
series
Murray,
exclusively discourse,
strictly
s.
In the latter application it is now almost v. former, I. used to denote the person or thing mentioned first in a
e.
i.
as
the
local
meaning
rare.
of
opposite and correlative of latter; in the more standing or occuring before the other it is
comparatively
Former
in the
is
Foremost
voorste)
sense of foremost is now quite obsolete. especially used to denote a pure relation of place (Dutch or of rank (Dutch voornaamste), as opposed to first,
which points rather to time and to order or position in a series (Dutch eerste). The two ideas are not always clearly discriminated, and in some combinations the words are, apparently, used indifferently. Thus Murray does not distinguish between head first and head foremost.
Note the regular use of first in the meaning of utmost before importance, a sense which differs but little from that of foremost, most important. Compare last. Sometimes the two words are used in succession for
more emphasis:
first
and foremost.
etc.
years,
enz.
for
the
Compare
*)
the
use
of
few with
last
next.
i.
Fore and
aft.
Marryat.
to the fore.
ii.
If
14 Sweet, Prim, of Phon., Webster, Diet. he has not me to the fore to prove what said, he can do
I
Lever,
.
.
Dal tons,
,
II,
Ch.
ill.
the fore. J. Payn, The steward though stricken in Myst. Mirbridge, Ch. VI. -) (= still surviving.) How many captains in the regiment have 2000 to the fore? Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 257. {ready to or at hand, to the good, forthcoming,
available.)
In
spot, within
call.)
iv.
Paris
the
Graph.
(=
(Compare: And in truth though politics were always well to the front among Moore's interests, they never dominated his life. Steph. Gwenn, Thorn. Moore, Ch. I, 16. Here was the wily self coming to the fore again. Edna Lyall, Donovan,
Churchill
is
to the fore.
lb.
Ch.
II,
147.
i)
Flugel.
-')
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
former,
written
463
letter
a)
in
in
the
the
sense
terms
of the
of
was
Ch.
precise
the former.
Bride of Lam.,
XXX,
I
291.
was observing to Mr. Jarndyce and Miss Summerson that you had had two former husbands, both very distinguished men. Dick., Bleak House,
Ch. XVIII,
In
107.
the terror of
II,
all
bourhood.
Edna Lyall,
Donovan,
,
118.
b)
Though it (sc. the uniform spelling) represents the pronunciation of a former age, we still use it. Rippmann The Sounds of Spoken English, 17. in the sense of the Dutch eerste: (They pass) their evenings at cards among each other; while the former part of the day is spent in spleen
and envy, or in vain endeavours to repair by art and dress the ruins of Letter to a young Lady on her Marriage, (4746). time. Swift
,
The government
s. v.
of
Rome
in
Murray,
pornocracy.
It
Compare:
c)
is
the
my
story
opens. in a
Lytton, Rienzi,
Ch.
I,
9.
strictly local
former
meaning:
Of dissylables, formed by
accented.
affixing
termination, the
I,
syllable is
commonly
348.1)
d)
in the sense of first-mentioned: Two treaties were drawn up one on white paper, the other on red, the former real, the latter fictitious. Mac,
Clive,
e)
(5176).
in the
sense
fell.
Two
C ae s. V, 1 80. a relation of place, 1) used as an attriforemost, a) denoting butive adjective: The king himself fought and" fell in the foremost ranks
mighty eagles
u
I.
, ,
2)
3)
Gibbon, Decline and Fall, II, Ch. XXVI, 41. i) The foremost row. Punch. used as a predicative adjective: The giant was foremost now but the dwarf was not far behind. Goldsmith, Vicar, Ch. XIII. used as an adverb .or predicative adnominal adjunct: a prince, A chief of thousands, and could lead am or rather was
of the battle.
,
Them on where each would foremost bleed. Byron, Maz. To put one's best foot foremost. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col.,
bed with the wrong foot foremost. Errant, Ch. XIX, 169. He fell from his whole height, face foremost to
of
VII.
Ch.
II, 37.
He got out
Stevenson,
Treas. Island,
b)
36.
denoting pre-eminence,
tive:
If
this
thoughts?
used as an attributive adjec1) man could be raised up now, what would be his foremost Dick., Chrlstm. Car.s, IV, 96.
home
the pleasing illusion that a confectioner
,
He
carried
must be
at
once the
G. Eliot Brother Jacob, 346. was a solemn act of homage to the foremost
,
Bookman.
when he succeeded Southey honestly thought himself what Wordsworth him, was, the foremost poet of the day. lb. Johnson was the foremost man of his age. Graphic. (These books) won for Messrs. (?) and Gillen a foremost place among anthropological observers.
1911,
Autumn,
!)
9.
Murray.
464
2)
She Stoops
first
,
to
a
Conquer,
I.
a)
1)
denoting
series,
Spenser was
followed by
goat.
2)
The Light that failed, Ch. I, 5. used as an adverb or predicative adnominal adjunct
Rudy. Kipling,
first
first
Mr. Weller and the guard squeeze the cod-fish into the boot, and then tail first. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXVIII, 245.
head
of his gig and knocked, headfirst, against a mileCh. XLIX, 447. Thus saying, Mr. Bumble put on his cocked-hat wrong side first. Id., 01. Twist, Ch. V, 58.
b)
denoting pre-eminence,
jective:
The
old
fogies,
1)
as
II,
is entitled to
Mac, Addison,
He fully expected to He was opposed by
Ch. VII, 900a.
If
(7666).
play a first part in Parliament. lb. (7636). the first captains of the age. Motley, Rise, VI,
they
2)
they (sc. Mexico and Argentina) continue progressing at the will soon rank among the first nations of the world.
2666.
Rev., CCXXXI,
used as
electric
predicative adjective:
was
still
For
street
lightning
arc-light
easily first.
c)
in the
excelling all competitors, practically equivalent to best.) sense of utmost. The climate is of first importance. Times, 1898, 610a. This accession of strength in the matter of long-range guns is of the first
(=
II.
Lond. News.
it
as
the correlative of
latter:
is
com-
monly observed
that the early writers are in possession of Nature, and their followers of Art; that the first excel in strength and invention, and the latter
e)
in elegance and refinement. Johnson, Rasselas, Ch. X, 59. in connection with foremost: Till her boy was twelve years old, she had lived for him first and foremost. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm., I, 79.
15.
Hind
a)
hinder
hind(er)most.
b)
The mutual relations between these words is uncertain: only this much is an established fact that hind(er)most is not a double superlative like foremost. Murray. All these words occur only as attributive adjectives, the corresponding
adverb of the first always having the prefix be behind. Hind, the opposite of fore, is especially said of things existing in pairs, front and back, as the limbs of quadrupeds, the wheels of a
:
c)
wagon,
etc.
Murray.
Hinder, notwithstanding its comparative form, does not differ in sense from hind, but is more frequently used. Cf. yon, yonder.
Murray.
It
is
not restricted in
its
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
465
hind, the hind legs of a quadruped; the hind toes, the hind shoes of a horse; the hind part of an animal. Webst., Diet.
hinder,
wagon.
lb.
wain. Milton, us, 190. hind(er)most. But until we all agree to cry halt, it is each for himself and the devil take Rev. of Rev., CCX1X, 2326. the hindmost.
ii.
Com
in,
and
sat
down on
the
end
of the
hindermost bench.
Herew.,
Ch.
IV, 33a.
16. In
inner
1)
in(ner)most.
(3).
a)
2) In is only
used as an adverb or a preposition; but in the former function it is often found adnominally, usually making up a kind of compound with its head-word, as in in-patient, inmate, the in party (= the party that is in office). The adverbial in has been converted into a noun , as in the ins and outs (= the party in and out of office), the ins and outs of a garden (= the nooks and corners of a garden), the ins and outs of a road (= the windings or turnings of a road) the ins and outs of a
,
character
the particulars of a character), etc. Inner, inmost and innermost are practically used only as attributive adjectives: the first is totally converted into a noun when
(=
denoting the centre of a target, the two last may be partially changed into nouns. As a term of phonetics inner is occasionally met with as an adverb. The forms inly and innerly are found used both as adjectives and adverbs; only inly as an adverb is at all used in ordinary standard English of the present day.
b) Inner in
etc.;
its literal sense is especially said of rooms, courts, recesses metaphorically it is chiefly used in the sense of spiritual, Note the inner man mental, as opposed to physical (cf. outer). (= the inner or spiritual part of man, the soul or mind), which is
to the
stomach or
'inside', as in to refresh
mensch versterken.)
heart.
rooms,
human
and
outs.
the ins
Byron,
Don
Juan,
XIII, xxiv.
He knew
and outs
any of
us.
Boldrewood,
Baroness von
IV, 47.
knew the Hutten, Pam, Ch. VIII, 43. He chuckled inly. Lytton, The Caxtons, inly. Here were the covert taunt ... the careless exaction
which could not outwardly be resented, but which
given.
Id.,
II,
Ch.
Rienzi,
IV,
Ch.
I,
157.
H.
II.
30
466
inner,
i.
The
still
W. Black
For-
tunatus,
She was
Ch. V.
the inner
inner apartment. lb., Ch. XX. room, she left him waiting.
. . .
Ward, Rob.
She locked both the inward and outward door of the tower. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXVIII, 308. ** She had been conscious of a strange inner restlessness, as they all stood
waiting for the vicar of Elsmere. lb., 157. In this outer life Carlo went through the series of farewell performances at New York, in his inner life he fought a terrible battle and came out conqueror. Edna Lyall, Knight Errant, Ch. XXXIII, 328. *** The living product of the whole inner man. Farrar, Orig. Lang, I, 32. *) **** Opera-glasses are allowed in the Galleries, but the appearance of a
Compare:
newspaper brings the attendant down on you very quickly; nor are you allowed to refresh the inner man. Graph. Being thus fortified in the inner man, and exhilarated in the spirit, I venture
ii.
to suggest a short railway journey. Punch, Beginning with two inners, he then put together
five
successive bull's-eyes.
Daily News. 1 )
iii.
Hence although
classes
can
be
as
Sweet,
The Sounds
In,
. .
front of the
of Eng., 125. there ran another fosse, second enclosure was led between the second and the innermost enclosure.
. .
Scott, Quent.
the
in the
like that of the innermost chamber Turkish Bath. Walt. Besant, The Bell of St. Paul's, II, Ch. XVI, 53. It is possible, although not natural, to form inner or rather, innermost 120. p, 6 as far back as the arch-rim. Sweet, The Sounds of Eng.,
Durw., Ch. Ill, 50. New Thames Street the air was
ii.
Desperately
this
inmost
heart.
Hyp., Ch.
I, 3b.
The
flourish
the
guard's
68.)
horn went to the inmost hearts of the pupils Miss Braddon, My First happy Christm.
Handl.,
I,
was a passionate wish to do his duty to Sandy's Dan. Grieve, I, 66. orphans. Mrs. Ward To be the strength, the inmost joy of a man who within the conditions of his life seems to you a hero at every turn there is no happiness more penetrating for a wife than this. Id., Rob. Elsm., 1,261.
his inmost heart there
,
17. (Be)neath
nether, nethermore
nethermost.
a) 1) For the formation of nethermost see above (3). Neath although an aphetic form of aneath,
is understood as and, accordingly, often written with the apostrophe: 'neath. Aneath is the northern form for beneath; cf. afore, ahind, the northern forms of before and behind. Neath is only met with as a word of poets and in dialects, the ordinary form in standard English being beneath. The 2) Beneath is used only as an adverb or as a preposition. comparative and superlative forms, on the other hand, occur
a shortened
beneath,
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
i
467
b)
Nether, the opposite of upper, is especially said of the lip or jaw, the legs or their clothing, and of the earth or world when contrasted with heaven or the upper regions, in this latter combination mostly
preceded by
regions
r
this. It is most frequently met with, however, before world to denote what lies, or is imagined as lying, beneath the earth. For the rest it is rare and only literary, lower or under, also in the combinations mentioned above, being mostly used instead. Nethermore is very rare; also nethermost is uncommon and merely
*
being lowest. nether jaw protruding so hideously that his teeth could never meet. Buckle, Civiliz., II, Ch. VIII, 469. i) ** His nether garments were of a bluish grey. Dick., Chuz., Ch. IV, 236. *** Neptune, besides the sway! Of every salt flood and each ebbing stream,! Took in by lot 'twixt high and nether Jove, Imperial rule of all the sea-girt iles. Milton C o m u s 20. So slow The growth of what is excellent, so hard To attain perfection in this nether world. Cowper Task, I, 85. Chance people on the bridges peeping over the parapets into a nether sky of fog. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. I, 1. The greath reservoirs of melted matter ... in the nether regions. Lyell, Princ Geo I., I, 397 1).
nether.
Nor them the nethermore abyss nethermore. The heavens expelled them of Dante, Inf., Ill, 41. *) receives. Longfellow, Trans nethermost. A scoundrel from the topmost hair of his head to the nethermost atom of his heel. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XIV, 1236.
;
|
1.
18. Off
after
1)
aftermost.
a)
Off appears in the oldest English as af, later as cef in the strong and of in the weak form. The termination ter in after is a modification of ther see above (3). Aftermost is now understood as a formation of after or the nautical aft, on analogy of foremost, hindermost, etc.
The discussion
after and aftermost, and of their mutual relations, the scope of this book.
2)
beyond
Off is used as an adverb, a preposition, and an adjective. After is used as an adverb, a preposition, a conjunction, and an adjective. Aftermost occurs only as an adjective.
of the innumerable
to the
b)
meanings and applications of department of lexicography. We shall, therefore, confine ourselves to some few illustrations. Aftermost is only met with as a nautical term.
The enumeration
off
off.
ii.
i. to beat (keep, ward, etc.) off; far off; to shake (take, etc.) off; to break (leave, etc.) off; to clear (drink, pay, polish, etc.) off; well (ill, comfortably, etc.) off. off the table, my hands, etc.; to dine (breakfast, etc.) off beef (pork,
iii.
off duty, the off-bow of a ship, the off horse (foot, leg, wheel) opposed to the near, nigh or left side].
etc.);
[=
the right, as
Murray.
468
after,
i.
own
first
and
let
these
|
come
after.
Murray.
Jack fell down and broke his crown And Jill came tumbling after. I never spoke to him after. Murray. I was never so treated either before or after. Id.
Soon
ii.
to
iii.
(a day, a year, etc.) after; the day (the year, etc.) after. bawl (run, etc.) after a person or animal; to look (see) after a person, animal or thing; to ask (seek, etc.) after something; after three months (a year, etc.); after the custom (fashion, manner, etc.); to name after a man. After he had come,
In after
iv.
days (years,
etc.);
yards,
etc.).
To
gracious tribute.
begun Thackeray, in long after years, paid a Hallam Lord Ten., Ten. and his Friends, 89.
aftermost. We found a cluster of people at the aftermost part of the felucca. Scott, Cruise of Midge, 63. ] ) Poop. The aftermost part of a ship; the stern; also the aftermost and highest deck, often forming the roof of the cabin built in the stern. Murray.
19.
Out
a)
1)
outer, utter out(er)most, ut(ter)most. For the formation of the superlatives see above (3). The forms utter and ut(ter)most are older than outer and out(er)most. These latter came into use when the older forms ceased to show clear relationship to out. They are not common
until the 18 th century.
2)
Out is used as an adverb, as a preposition (only when preceded by from), and as an adjective. The adverbial out has been converted into a noun, which occurs in several shades of meaning, mostly corresponding to those of the substantive in. Note gentleman of three outs (i. e. out of pocket, out of elbow, and out of credit). Outer and utter are almost exclusively used as attributive
adjectives;
as a term of phonetics outer is also applied as an adverb. In the language of archery outer occurs totally converted into a noun. Out(er)most and ut(ter)most are also chiefly used as attributive adjectives; outermost as an adverb is instanced by one quotation in Murray. Utmost and uttermost are often partially converted into nouns. Utterly is a frequent derivative of utter.
b)
For the different applications of out see the dictionary. Outer and utter are now fully differentiated; the former being used in describing a relation of place, the latter having the meaning Utter in the sense of outer occurs as an occasional of absolute.
archaism.
between out(er)most and ut(ter)most has been Outmost and outermost, which are used indifferently, refer to position with regard to a central place. Utmost and uttermost, which also are practically interchangeable, are found in a spatial meaning, and in a more abstract sense. In the former they refer to position with regard to a place near the speaker and
differentiation
less
strictly
The
carried
out.
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
are
469
synonymous with
the
greatest, last or extreme. As quasi-nouns utmost is usual form, uttermost being, apparently, restricted to poetic language.
outer,
* Mr. i. Higgs looked exceedingly grave as he came into (he outer rooms. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 250. ** But the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness.
Bible, Matthew,
And
and
VIII, 12.
cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall be gnashing of teeth. lb., XXV, 30.
weeping
Its shrill, sharp, piercing voice resounded through the house, and seemed to twinkle in the outer darkness like a Star. Dick., Crick., I, 6. *** The child was more beautiful than ever, but in other outer respects the Rose of Whindale had undergone much transformation. Mrs. Ward, Rob. E 1 s m. ,
I,
268.
****
Now
ii.
forgotten. the
lb., II,
198.
two
from com-
munication with the outer world. Times, We distinguish between inner and outer back.
98.
Sweet,
of outers
Sounds
of Eng.
iii.
all
around them
bull's
Ma cm. Mag.
)
|
outmost.
clan,
|
This murderous Chief, this ruthless man, This head of a rebellious Hath led thee safe, through watch and ward, Far past Clan-Alpine's outmost
|
Scott Lady, V, xn. Beyond the outmost wall she stood, of Trierm. II, ix.
guard.
, ,
wood.
Id.,
Br id.
I,
In
the
i)
temple
all
Farrar,
Early Chr.
422,
Note,
outermost.
They have
revolve about Mars, whereof the innermost is distant from the centre of the primary planet exactly three of his diameters, and the outermost five. Swift, Gul. , III, Ch. Ill, (170a). c Cunn, Longstone (is) one of the outermost of the Fame Islands. Mrs.
The
Select,
of
from Wellington.
these lines, which were three in number, ran from the sea by Alhandra on the Tagus, a distance of 29 miles. Rowe & Webb, Tennys. Note to line 104 of Death of the Duke
,
mobile. The supposed outermost sphere, added in the Middle Ages to the Ptolemaic system of astronomy, and supposed to revolve round the earth from east to west in twenty-four hours, carrying with it the (eight or nine) contained spheres.
Primum
Murray.
utter,
Thack.,
He
ii.
me his opinion that Clavering was an utter scoundrel. Ch. XXXII, 351. rolled that box back and forth with the most utter unconcern. Habberton,
i.
He confided
to
Pend.,
II,
Helen's Babies,
Arthur's
67.
|
In utter darkness, round the pole. roll Scott, Lay, I, xvn. (Compare the two quotations from Matthew, higher up.) utmost, i. So that he was renowned into the utmost part of the earth. Bible, Maccabees, A, III, 9. Then we will go together to the utmost reaches of the earth. Hall Caine, Deemster, Ch. XXXI, 232.
*)
Murray.
470
ii.
is
the
utmost.
Sher.,
School for
Scand.
II,
2.
"How, reverend
father!"
Since the author of Tom Jones was buried, no writer of fiction has been permitted to depict to his utmost power a man. Trol.,
among us
Thack.
uttermost,
i.
Is
he
not yoftder
in
those uttermost
Parts of the
morning?
ii.
Ten., Enoch Arden, 223. People come from the uttermost ends of the earth, though, of course, there are many Londoners here. Beatr. Harradan, Ships, I, Ch. I, 4. They were the men and women who dared to leave moderate comfort behind and go to the uttermost ends of the earth to seek gold. Daily Mail. France found herself overwhelmed with demonstrations of sincere sympathy, not merely from the uttermost parts of the Earth but more especially from those powers which she chooses to regard as her hereditary foes. Rev. of Rev. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing. Bible Matthew, V, 26. If he married her before his father's death, he was to forfeit the whole to the uttermost farthing. Mar. Crawf., Johnstone's Son, Ch. XIII. They have proved themselves to be fighting material upon which a general can rely to the uttermost limits of human endurance. Times.
,
Adam
20. (ab)ove
a) 1)
over
overmost.
The
positive ove does not seem to have been ever used in any English of which we have any record.
by
itself
Over
2)
is
not
now
felt to
(3).
be a comparative.
,
of overmost see
above
used as an adverb, as a preposition and as an attributive The adverb over has been converted into a noun. Overmost is found only as an attributive adjective. b) For the different meanings and applications of over see the dictionOvermost is seldom met with. Murray's latest instance is ary. dated 1649.
is
Over
adjective.
21.
Up
a)
upp(er)most. upper For the formation of uppermost see above (3). 2) Up is used as an adverb and as a preposition. The adverbial up appears converted into a noun in the colloquial collocation ups and downs (= alternate states of prosperity and adversity). Upper occurs only as an attributive adjective; it is converted into a noun in uppers, i. e. the leather used for the upper part of boots or shoes, in contradistinction to that used for the heels
1)
or soles.
Uppermost and upmost are mostly predicative adjectives. They are capable of being turned into quasi-nouns. b) For the different meanings and applications of up see the dictionary. Upper is used with regard to place and social rank or status.
Upmost seems
to be rare.
Uppermost
at the
is
upper part
,
house as he threw
Dick.,
Pickw.
in
Ch. XIV,
the
shuttered,
Mrs.
106.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
ii.
471
The upper house of a legislature; the upper ten thousand. Webst. You and your like have your fixed ideas of the upper class and the lower. Mrs. Ward Rob. E s m. III 205. Note the idiom in: If he come by the upper hand, he will have Julian's
,
head. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXXIII, 358. She had the upper hand of the whole house. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch.XI, 100. upmost. Ye skum That still rise upmost when the nation boils. Dryden, D o n S e b. IV, 3. i) * uppermost. It is our profession to turn the world upside down; and we live ever the blithest life when the downer side is uppermost. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXIV, 266. (Note the curious nonce-formation downer.)
|
'Well
don't mind', said poor Winkle, turning his gun-stock uppermost. Dick.,
Pickw.,
The
22. Ere
In
Down came
Dragon uppermost.
lb.,
Ch.
II,
12.
desire of earning fame in the sports of the field, the air, and the water uppermost in the breast of his friend Winkle. lb., Ch. I, 3.
was
erst.
is now used only as a preposition and as a conjunction, in the latter function now only archaically. Erst is in standard English met with only as an adverb with- its superlative force highly dimmed, its meanings being that of at one time (formerly, of old), and not long ago (a little while ago). In the former sense it is now archaic or poetic, in the latter almost quite obsolete. For or as a secondary form of ere, and for such combinations as or ere, and or ever see Ch. XVII, 21.
erst.
i.
erst
was irksome As
to
me,
I
|
will endure.
As
you like
it, III, 5, 94. Forth skipp'd the cat, not now replete Retired Cat, 100.
Cowper,
The
Beneath yon eastern ridge Stand yet, but, Stranger! hidden from thy The ivied Ruins of forlorn Grace Dieu; Erst a religious House, which day and night With hymns resounded. Wordsworth, Inscription for a seat in the groves of Coleorton, 5. Did I pity him as erst? In the "Ours", or "sincere lover", I saw Dr. John. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XIV, 174.
.
.
view,
ii.
This
horrid
spectacle,
Which
1543.
erst
my
|
eyes
Milton
Samson Agon.,
half-opened
From
the
gleamed.
W.Morris,
The Earthly
door there streamed The light that erst far off had Par., The Man born to be
23.
King, 42c. Mid middest, midst, midmost. Mid is now only used as an adjective, which mostly forms a kind of compound with its head-word or with which it is commonly
hyphened: midday, midland, midnight, midriff,
current,
etc.;
mid-air, mid-
mid-ocean, mid-September, mid-wicket, etc. Also in combinations with adjectives, such as mid-arctic, mid-oceanic, mid-monthly, mid-Victorian, etc., it is rather an adjective than an adverb. Middest, an uncommon word, is also used only as an adjective.
Midst
is
chiefly
it
preposition
!)
is
Murray.
472
at
midst,
the
Murray.
the midst of those smiling heavens he had seen a sword hanging. G. Eliot, Romola, II, Ch. XXI, 182. On Earth join all ye creatures to extol Him first, him last, him midst, and without end. Milton, Par. Lost, V, 165. Midst others of less note, came one frail Form, A phantom among n\en.
|
From
ii.
Hi.
Shelley,
Adonais,
i.
XXXI.
the
midmost,
VIII,
High
on
midmost bark
Pope, Iliad,
270.
i
ii.
iii.
iv.
The midmost and the brightest (sc. of the stars) lent a ray sympathetic and attent. Ch. Bronte V e 1 1 e Ch. XXXI 289. We are made to feel the young girl's enjoyment even in the midmost of her grief. E d n b. Rev.') Then midmost in the battle was led in spirit. Coleridge, Pic, V, m. And pardon me, Who strive to build a shadowy isle of bliss Midmost the beating of the steely sea. W.Morris, The Earthly Par., Apologue, VI. It stands midmost a marsh-country. Longman's Mag. )
,
24. Middle
middlemost. Middle is used as an adjective, only attributively, and as a noun. It forms frequent compounds, such as Middle Ages, middle class, * middleman. Middlemost, now somewhat rare, is also used only as an attributive
Folding gates, the middlemost of which Ch. XVI, 517. i)
is of iron.
J.
adjective.
middlemost.
25.
Bigland,
(3).
used as a preposition, as an adverb and as an attributive adjective. In the latter function it mostly forms a kind of compound with its head-word: under-officer, under-sheriff, etc. Undermost is only found as a predicative adjective.
is
Under
b)
of the artificially
often
G.Eliot,
Scenes,
ideas
get
My
By
best
undermost
know.
Mid.
I,
the
Ch. Kingsley,
Hypatia,
26. Eastern, etc.
Ch.
Ill,
16a.
easternmost,
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
etc.
473
may be converted
etc.
Instead of northernmost
eastern,
ii.
we also find highest northern. Eastern question: a general term for the political problems relating to Eastern Europa. Murray. * These degenerate Easterns, who rush at and devour French novels of the lowest type. Graph. 1 ) Sir Walter Scott is our common countryman. He made us northerns and us southerns conscious of one flesh and blood. Daily News. 1 ) ** One hears such not seldom among us Easterners. Lowell, Big low
Papers.
end
1
earstemmost,
The railway crosses this road close by the easternmost Smiles Stephenson, 51. i) The southernmost of the mountains. Rid. Hag., King Sol. Mines, 29. The northernmost of these islands they called Kotelnoi, or Kettle Island, from the fact of a kettle having been found tfiere. 1 u s t r. Mag.
etc.
i.
of the cottage.
ii.
Undoubtedly
Lieutenant Lockwood belonged the honour of having penetrated to the highest northern point on the globe which has ever been reached by a human being. Id.
to
27. Rath(e)
rather
rathest, ratherest.
Rathe (a and th as in lathe) and rath (a and th as in lath) are met with as adjectives, rathe also as an adverb. Rathe as an
adjective
is
the least
uncommon,
ingly rare.
Rather now occurs almost exclusively as an adverb; as an adjective it seems to have been uncommon at all times. Of the superlatives, which are instanced in Murray, both as adjectives and adverbs, only the adjective rathest is not marked
as obsolete or dialectal.
b)
The
adjective rathe
is
used with regard to rapidity or eagerness of to time. For the different meanings of
The rath sower ne're borrows o' th' late. Ray, Pro v., XXII. i) Laying his head in a rath grave. Scott, Antiquary, Ch. XXXIX. 1 ) Beginning thy rath orisons here. Hogg, Allan of Dale. 1 ) but look to thy sell. rathe, i. Art there, lad? ay youth's aye rathe Scott, Rob Roy, Ch. VII. i)
ii.
iii.
Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies. Milton, Lycidas, 142. Where... the rathe primrose decks the mead. Scott, Rokeby, IV, n. Thy converse drew us with delight, The men of rathe and riper years. Ten. , In Memoriam, CX. (Some editions have rather.) Why ryse ye so rathe. Chauc, Cant. Tales, Mil. Tale, 582. Thus is my Harvest hasten'd all too rathe. Spenser, The Shepheard's
|
Calendar, December,
Till
98.
|
rathe she rose, half-cheated in the thought She needs must bid farewell to sweet Lavaine. Ten., Lane, and El., 338.
rathest.
i.
Idylls.
i)
Murray.
474
ii.
Hume
Hist.
Douglas. 1 )
IV, 2, 19.
ratherest.
and periphrastic comparison were for a long time used indiscriminately, but by degrees the former has come to be
chiefly to the shorter and familiar, the latter to the and more unfamiliar words. Terminational comparison the only one in use of all words that are compared
applied
longer
is
still
irregularly. In Present
com-
chiefly a matter of euphony, rhythm, convenience and diction, partly one of meaning. Franz, E. S. XII; id., ShakGram. 2 215; KlaPperich, E. S., XVII; Ellinger, E. S., XX;
parison
is
I, 299; Storm, Beit., 24; Matz., Eng. Gram. 682; LOUISE POUND, The p. of Adj. in Eng. Eng. in the XV. and the XVI. Cent.; Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Ace id. III, A; Uhrstrom, Stud, on the Lang, of Sam. Rich., A, 2. See also Murray, s. v. more, C, 1, b and c.
id.,
Verm.
Phil. 2
Com
a) 1)
It
is
a) of
euphony which causes inflectional comparison to be avoided: words ending in a harsh consonant-group, i. e. one that offers
some
difficulty in articulation. This applies notonlytodisyllabics, such as modest, robust, etc., but with scarcely less force to monosyllabics, such as just, lax. But there is nothing harsh in such forms as kinder, -est, limper, -est, profounder, -est, pleasant, -est, owing to the vowellike nature of the nasals. It may also be observed that there are
Thus there is less difficulty in two successive stops as in abrupt, strict etc. than in pronouncing a sequence of a sibilant and a stop as in crisp,
different degrees of harshness.
uttering
robust, just, etc., a sequence in the opposite direction as in lax being a shade easier than the latter.
/?)
of
words ending
in oqe,
syllable. The tendency of the language being to throw the stress on the initial syllable, it follows that the majority of
polysyllabic
aa)
As
words prefer periphrastical comparison. such as have more syllables than two, this practice is observed with great regularity at least in standard English. Inflectional comparison is least uncommon with such trisyllables as are (felt to be) opposites of disyllabics with
to
,
which
PP)
inflectional
comparison
is
usual,
e. g.
unhappy, ignoble,
impolite, unpleasant.
as are
made up
of only
two
syllables, usage is
is,
variable.
Inflectional
comparison
however,
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
475
usual enough with those in which before the endings the vowel in the unstressed syllable is reduced to a mere glide or, at least, loses much of its sonority and length, so that the number of syllables is not really or sensibly extended beyond two. This is in greater or less degree the case with adjectives ending in al, el, il, er, le (preceded by a consonant), on, ow, y; in a less degree with such as end in ed, et , id, ful, and some: dismal, cruel, civil, bitter, able, common, narrow, pretty; wicked,
quiet, vivid, painful
,
Elementarbuch
der Phon.,
It
13, 43.
must be observed that terminational comparison is not equally frequent all adjectives ending in the above terminations. Thus it is common enough with: bitter, clever, and tender, but rather infrequent with proper, and, apparently, impossible with eager and real.
with
Thus
kindly; princely, etc. prefer periphrastic comparison. But early, which is not, of course, a similar formation, mostly has terminational comparison.
Adjectives in ing, such as charming, taking, etc., now admit only of periphrastic comparison, at least in ordinary written and spoken English. This applies with even greater strictness to participial adjectives in {e)d,
such as pleased, tired, staid, etc., even when monosyllabic. Terminational comparison is also practically impossible with adjectives in le preceded by a vowel, such as agile, docile.
There
tives of
end in such words as complete, divine, polite, remote, severe, sincere, etc. These observations apply in particular to superlatives and attributive comparatives, terminational comparison being less common with predicative adjectives. It is even non-existent in the case of disyllabic adjectives with the prefix a (Ch. XXVIII, 8, b), even when they end in only one consonant-sound. Thus only more (most) apart
(awake,
2)
It
nothing unharmonious in terminational comparison of adjecsyllables that have the stress on the last syllable, unless they a harsh consonant-group. It is, accordingly, quite usual with
is
two
etc.).
euphony which mostly causes the same form of comparison be preferred with all of a number of adjectives that modify one and the same noun, or with different adjectives placed in parallel positions in a compound or complex sentence. In the case of periphrastic comparison the adverb more or most is sometimes placed only before the first
is
also
to
i.
222. of a series of adjectives. 216; Franz, Shak. Gram. 2 nor foolis her No system was ever wiser than that of the ancient epicureans than that of their opposites. Fielding, Jones, XV, Ch. I, 98a.
,
. .
Tom
My
uncle
was one
Dick.,
Pickw.,
Who
has not remarked the readiness with which the closest of friends and honestest of men suspect and accuse each other of cheating when they fall out on money matters. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 186. He looked up with the solemnest, tenderest smile. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm.
II,
285.
in the boldest, horridest
She can do nothing but sing and strut about the stage way. Miss Braddon, The Venetians, 11,21s. 1 )
i)
Ellinger, E.
S.,
XX.
476
CHAPTER XXX,
28.
ii.
And thus Fate plucks from me my noblest friend and my justest counsellor. Lytton R e n z V, Ch. Ill 207. was the quietest, the clumsiest, and, as it seemed, the The latter youth dullest of all Dr. Swishtail's young gentlemen. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. V, 40. The musicians ... now directed the melody into a more soft, a more gay, yet it may be a more intellectual strain. Lytton, Last Days of Pomp., I,
,
Ch. Ill, 17a. Within the limited territory comprised by a portion of the British Isles has grown up a language, which has become the speech of the most free, the most
and the most powerful portion of the human race. Shaw, Hist, of Eng. Lit., Ch. I, I. You really are without exaggeration the most beautiful, the most good, the most charming, the most divine, the most perfect human creature that ever
energetic
trod this earth.
Jerome
in his hand or more wise when he had. Graph. Gabriel was paler now. His eyes were more meditative, and his expression was more sad. Hardy Far from the Madding' Crowd, Ch. VI 43.
foolish
iii.
dare appeal to any clergyman in this kingdom, whether the greatest dunce in he parish be not always the most proud, wicked, fraudulent, and intractable
of his flock.
Swift, Letter to a Young Clergyman, (4716). A shrew from Billingsgate would be a more easy and eligible companion. Letter to a Young Lady, (472a).
Id.,
Thus also periphrastic comparison may be occasioned by nation with less or least following in the sequel. London is the most wealthy and one of the least commodious capitals
Escott,
It
combiworld.
in the
England,
Ch. V,
69.
"Likko" has
is
made me more
fit
and
less
fat already.
Punch,
hardly necessary to add that the laws of euphony often practically forbid this uniformity in the mode of comparison. When several adjectives with different forms of comparison modify the same noun, euphony requires those that have periphrastic comparison to be placed last. He is the falsest, craftiest, meanest, cruellest, most sordid, most shameless of men. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XXXI, (250a). It was the completest and most desirable bedroom ever seen. Id., Cop.,
Ch.
Ill,
156.
Dare any soul on earth breathe a word against the sweetest, the purest, the tenderest the most angelical of women. Thack., Van. Fair, I.
,
3)
of
we
taste, it naturally differs with different often meet with instances in which variety of
comparison seems to have been deliberately aimed at. Not infrequently the variety seems to have been a matter of metre or rhythm (b), or indeed, of mere chance. Christianity always made the most easy and quickest progress in civilized countries.
Swift, Letter to a Young Clergyman, (171a). (Observe the exceptional precedence of the periphrastic superlative.) Since the new system of feeding has come in, the coffins are something narrower and more shallow than they used to be. Dick. 01. Twist, Ch. IV, 47. In London one may spend the day in walking through streets squares, and entire
,
,
neighbourhoods, without encountering any, or many, visible signs that the wealthiest and most luxurious capital of the world is also the scene of the most numerous
and, in the aggregate, busiest England, Ch. VI, 79.
human
Escott,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
,
477
Never had she been kinder, more gentle. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. I, 157. His clear-cut, slightly reddish face was smooth-shaven, and the mouth was at once its most interesting and its handsomest feature. Bar. von Hutten
,
Pam.
The
I,
Ch.
I,
77.
(Note
the
exceptional
.
superlative.)
brilliant
face
had grown
II, 9.
No
b)
1)
cap was ever simpler, nothing could be more easy to make, or to copy. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Mary Pechell, Ch. III.
Instances of the choice of one or the other mode of comparison being determined by metre or rhythm are, of course, chiefly afforded by poetry. But attentive reading will show that these factors are also
In several of the
Thus
also in:
that
was only
for
softer, and her grief more mild, Scott, Mon., Ch. XXVII, 299. I find there is a slipperier step or two. Byron. There are in London several old inns, once the headquarters of celebrated
coaches in the days when coaches performed their journeys in a graver and more solemn manner than they do in these days. Dick., Pickw., Ch. X, 78. Here his step grew quicker and more light. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. X, 61. In the reign of Aurungzebe the inhabitants of those regions began to descend
.
.
on
For
the
Mac,
War. Hast.,
thro' that dawning gleam'd a kindlier hope. Ten., En. Ard. 828. Our bond, as not the bond of man and wife, Should have in it an absoluter trust To make up that defect. Id., Lane, and El., 1185. I would have all officers of state chosen by lot out of the wisest and most fit.
,
|
Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 144a. Next morning when Meriem came round to the tent, Le Marchand met her with a sadder and more anxious face than usual. Grant Allen The Tents of S h e m Ch. XIII.
, ,
2)
It is especially comparatives placed after their head-words which for the sake of metre or rhythm prefer periphrastic comparison.
more light, a step more true, Ne'er from the heath-flower dash'dthe Scott, Lady, I, xvm. (Compare: A prettier foot, a gayer heart, a more dirhpled face, or a smarter form, never bounded so lightly over the earth they graced, as did those of Maria Lobbs. Dick., Pick., Ch. XVII, 151).
foot
|
dew.
(This) gives me now a pang more keen than I can express. Sher., Riv., V, 1. Scarcely a year but some new discovery found itself surpassed and in its turn discarded, or lessened in significance by something still more new. G. H. Mair,
Eng. Lit.: Modern, Ch. I, 1, 13. But the rhythm would be destroyed if terminational comparison were substituted for periphrastic in: There, do you ever desii to see any body madder than that? Sher., Critic,
III,
1
(481).
c)
1)
It
chiefly a matter of convenience that periphrastic comparison is preferred of relative adjectives, i.e. such as make complete sense only when followed by some adjunct. (Ch. XXVIII, 4.) Thus terminational
is
comparison
is impossible of averse, exempt and many other adjectives: Such chaps are more fit to be sent to school, and well disciplined with a cato'-nine tails, than to poke their heads into a play-house. Miss Burney,
Evelina,
XXIII.
478
There
is
CHAPTER XXX,
sometimes
28.
we have
mora free from the admixture of Latin. Trench, Past and Present, i) The house seemed to my sister and to me warmer, more full of interest and
peace
I
in
like.
Deane
G. Eliot,
Mill,
I,
Ch. VII,
45.
But this factor often takes no effect on monosyllabic adjectives. have been fonder of you than you know. Baroness von Hutten, Pam, II, Ch. IV, 103. When shall we think it worth while boasting of an Empire with the happiest, brightest, most cheerful people, freest from poverty, from distress, from misery. Lloyd George (Times, No. 1853, 522c).
I
The following
which
|
it
would be
difficult
to find parallels in ordinary prose. And earthly power doth then show likest God's
M e r c h.
IV,
196.
|
2)
trod. Nor feel (I) much liker to a God Than when beside my sheep W. Morris, The Earthly Par., The Man born to be King, 406. Convenience also causes periphrastical comparison to be used of groups of adjectives forming a kind of unit, such as free and easy, neat and attractive, etc.
Tongues were vastly more free and easy. Thack., Virg. She was not, as some people pretended, more clever and
elder sister.
,
Ch. XVI,
158.
G. Eliot Middlemarch. Mrs. Glegg's front to-day was more fuzzy and lax than usual. Id., Mill, I, Ch. VII, 45. Scotland is more rugged and hilly than England. Chambers. 2) Its cottage-homes and hamlets are considered more neat and attractive than those of any other nation. 2) (This) brought a gleam and a giggle to the faces of even the most sad and tired. Westm. Gaz., No. 6111,76.
Note. When each of such a group of adjectives would require periphrastic comparison, the adverbs more or most are not repeated. "Oh no..." said Mrs. Jamieson in her most delicate and ladylike tone. Agn. <S Eg. Castle, D a m. cut Paste, II, Ch. II, 135. t
i
d)
1)
comparison being more artificial than terminational, we and applied to the longer words. Thus prone, jocose, morose, verbose, supine, and many other adjectives which are used only in literary diction, are never found in terminational comparison. The colloquial, and especially the vulgar language prefers terminational comparison even of adjectives in ing and the longer words. Unusual terminational comparison is sometimes applied to
Periphrastic
it
find
produce a ludicrous
effect.
Instances of terminational
comparatives
of adjectives of three or more syllables are, however, very rare. i. He had not reached his fourteenth year before he was pronounced by all the neighbourhood to be a wicked dog, the wickedest dog in the
ii.
Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 104). "Curiouser and curiouserl" cried Alice (she was so much surprised, that for the moment she quite forgot how to speak good English). Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Ch. II, 19.
street.
Sattler, E.
S., IV.
2)
.Foels
Koch,
Wi s. Gram.,
100, 3.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
2)
It
479
High
to preclude any notion of familiarity that the Most preferred to the Highest as a denomination erf the Supreme Being. (Ch. XXIX, 17, a.) i. Thou hast begun to reject the Counsel of the Most High. Bunyan, Pilg.
is,
perhaps,
is
Prog.,
ii.
(154).
Let us
the
remember
that Nature,
at her best to
footstool
of the Highest.
The Pilgrim's
Scrip.
(Motto to
Francis Thompson).
Difference in meaning between terminational and periphrastic comparison chiefly exhibited in comparatives used predicatively: the former
the attention to the quality expressed by the adjective as compared or contrasted with that denoted by another, the latter to the excess of the quality as found in one of two (groups of) persons or things. Thus This division of the profits would have been fairer may suggest some such subaudition as although not, perhaps, so profitable to the directors; while This division of the profits would
directing
have been
call forth
such
effected by the directors. Compare also This not richer with This made him
in
i.
if
more happy
words.
at the
ii.
both juster and more economical that we should apply the money beginning. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5607, \c. "Shall we spend it (sc. the hour) in the library or in the drawing-room?"...^ "The library; it is more cosy." El. Glyn, Refl. of Ambrosine, II,* Ch. XIV, 263.
It
is
It
follows that,
when
a contrast
latter,
is to
also
owing
to the
awkwardness
of
stressing the suffix, is mostly formed by more. Thus: The tyrant thinks he is free, because he commands slaves: the meanest peasant in a free state is more free than he is. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53.
If
evil
is
strong,
good
is
more
strong.
more
further possible difference is, that periphrastic comparison, as being explicit, is more emphatic than terminational.
In this connection it may also be observed that more sometimes has a meaning which differs but little from that of rather (Ch. XL, 103, Obs. I). It stands to reason that a combination of this more and a positive does not bear being replaced by a terminational comparative. Such chaps are more fit to be sent to school than to poke their heads into a play-house. Miss Burney, Evelina, Ch. XXIII, 112.
.
3)
not
With some adjectives terminational comparison is quite common, or uncommon, in one (or some) application(s), while it is unusual, or even impossible, in (an)other(s). Thus ready in the sense of prompt,
readiest, but hardly brooks quick is ordinarily compared readier terminational comparison in the senses of prepared, willing, inclined.
The
quickest, or, as they are called in the trade, the readiest hands. J.Devlin,
I,
Shoemaker,
J
43. ')
Murray,
s. v.
ready,
5.
480
CHAPTER XXX,
28.
it is
2)
syllables it is only a few with which comparison is more or less common. This form is the usual one with early and is not unfrequent with often. The latter, however, is mostly replaced by frequently when there is
occasion to use the degrees of comparison. The numerous adverbs in ly have periphrastic comparison in ordinary language, poets sometimes using the terminational form for the sake of metre or rhythm. It must, however, be observed that in colloquial language the termination ly is often thrown off, so that the adverb is reduced to its adjectival base, and is compared like it. 1524 Ten Bruq., Taalst., V. ProseSweet, N. E. Gr., instances of terminational comparison of adverbs in ly are rare. 3) With adverbs of more syllables than two periphrastic comparison is practically the only form.
g) The factors which determine the choice of the form of comparison are not of equal potency, that of meaning being apparently the weakest and subservient to the others. The following quotations, for a considerable part exhibiting exceptional rather than normal practice, may be acceptable as affording illustration not always readily accessible. For convenience of reference the alphabetical arrangement has been chosen.
A d. G r a e m
dull.
57. i)
His history
is
more
dull, but
I,
Hume.
fine.
fit.
I
Van. Fair,
is
Ch. V. 93.
as the
challenged the
most fine gold. Bible, Sol. Song, V, 11. Times to say who is the man they have in their eye more
fit than
I am. Morn. Chron. Mr. Crawford and Miss Bertram were Mansf. Park, Ch. X, 109.
gay.
much more
gay.
Jane Austen,
girl was gladder than she could quite explain, even to Bar. von Hutten, Pam, III, Ch. 1, 112. In truth Mrs. Quilp did seem a great deal more glad to behold her lord than ii. might have been expected. Dick., Old Cur. Shop, Ch. L, 1826. hard. Most men find it more hard to break through a green sod than a grated
glad.
i.
The young
herself.
door.
Scott, Mon., Ch. XXX, 330. have been more kind and more just,
sir.
Dick.,
Cop.,
and
comparative,
Verm. Beitr.
1)
a juster
more concise
i)
XX,
196.
Ellinoer,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
No
481
none kinder, more capable or more juster or more open-minded censor ever sat in the seat of Aristarchus. i) considerate See also the first quotation under e), page 479.
2)
predicative.
Academy
in
About the middle of the eighteenth century it (sc. the France) altered the spelling of five thousand words. Perhaps it would be juster to say that it indicated, in the case of a number of these, what one should be adopted of several forms which were then in use. Lounsbury, Eng. Spel. and Spel. Reform, Ch. I, 51. ** Nature was more just than that. G. Eliot, Mid., II, Ch. XVII, 123. Nowhere have these complaints been more just than in the China trade.
I
6)
am
the
more earnest
in this matter,
because
it
is
a general
(466a).
complaint, and the justest in the world. Swift., Let. to a See also the first quotation on page 476.
Clerg.,
keen.
helped
lax.
The enthusiasm
and
the
...
unification
stirred by the celebration of the fiftieth year of Italian prospect of a French protectorate in Morocco have doubtless to make the Italian desire for territorial acquisition more keen than before.
Times,
No. 1813, 7836. Martha, more tax on the subject of primogeniture, was sorry to think that Jane was so 'having'. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXV, 243. The rules which govern comic verse are not more lax than those which sway serious
composition.
54.
mad.
We
t
mad
than
I.
Ch. Kinosley,
e s
w.
Ho!,
odd. Amongst the many peculiar methods of fishing in the South Seas there is one that has been noticed as being, perhaps, the most odd: that is fishing by means of a kite. II. Lond. News, No. 3777, 393. proud. A Christian, said Luther, "is the most proud lord of all and subject to no
one".
54, 309.
of
the
Lytton, Last
Days
of
Pomp.,
,
I,
Nowhere on earth are race ambition race hatred , ancestral feuds and bloodvendettas more rife (sc. than in the Balkan States). Eng. Rev., No. 50,
(Alternative practice, apparently, non-existent.)
right.
She's been
more
.
right than you're aware of. Aon. & Eg. Castle , D i a m. IX, 308. (Alternative practice, apparently, non-existent.) . whose pale brow and stern features seemed by that light
.
paler
and
companions.
strict.
By
Ch. XII, 71. it is very near a million to one that you have
to
visit
none (sc. wit). Swift Let. to a Clergyman, (4686). found it needful, according to the strictest good sense and honour, Lorna. Blackm., Lorna Doone, Ch. XXXV, 210. forms a more true estimate of true. i. It is a theory of mine that each
I
. . .
his
work
critic.
Holme Lee,
175.2)
all
"People are
every day.
"I
find that
true
wan.
221.
Laura saw with alarm that the dear friend became every year more languid and weary, and that her pale cheek grew more wan. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXI,
(Alternative practice, apparently, non-existent.)
!)
*)
H.
Gram, of Pres. Day Eng., Verm. B e t r. 25. Poutsma, A Grammar of Late Modern English.
Kruisinga Ellinoer
, , i ,
584.
II.
31
482
CHAPTER XXX,
28.
the subject than Mr. Yates. Jane Austen. Ch. XIX, 181. wild. Pen used to come day after day, rushing in and galloping away, and growing more wild about the girl with every visit. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. VI, 70.
,
Adjectives
of
two syllables.
able. i. Indeed, in such a matter as this, Mrs. Grantjy was a more able woman Framl. Pars., Ch. XVI 153. than Lady Lufton. Trol. ii. Many of the best and ablest philosophers, who have been perfect lights of science In matters of theory, have been wholly unable to reduce them to practice. Dick.,
, ,
Pickw.,
agile.
I,
Ch. XIX,
166.
Scott,
ancient.
Saviola
290.
Lord of Ormond.
Carlyle,
Cromwell,
angry,
**
I
191.
ii.
letters to his angrier mistress. Burton, Scot. Abr., I, IV. 191.'*) angrier with myself. Spofford, Harp. Mag., 1883, 130/1.1) * He would have been sorry even in his angriest moods for any harm to happen G. Eliot, to his grandfather. Bede, I, Ch. XII, 106. ** He never failed ... to confront the states or the people in their most angry hours. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 901a.
Angry
little
felt
Adam
have always found him the bitingest and lightest screw in London. Dick., III, Ch. XIII, 227. * At other times his resentment at his fate showed itself in language of bitter, i. even more bitter contempt against his race. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 466, 450a. ** No wind that blew was bitterer than he. Dick., Christm. Car.5, I, 7. it is bitterer than death. To ask a loan of neighbour, and be denied Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. I, 15. Mrs. Ward, ii. The next three months were the bitterest months of Elsmere's life.
biting.
I
Rob. Elsm.,
careful.
You'll
II,
203.
to
have
E. Robins,
of morning robes. Mrs. Hungerford, Phyllis, II, 28.2) was imagined that by living apart, they would be much cleanlier. Anson, Voy., II, n, 135. i). Clever. She was very accomplished, too, and more clever than was always quite
The charmingest
cleanly.
It
Marc, 1 45. agreeable to her father. Mrs. Ward Their eyes and souls were tortured by the sight of sufferings which they were unable to relieve for want of the commonest appliances of the hospital. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. XI, 152.
,
,
common.
The horses distrusted the commonest objects. P u.n c h. cruel, i. He went on to be more cruel than ever. Ch. Kinqsley, The Heroes,
I, I, 25.
ii.
at this
time
is
ill
fortune.
Sher.,
School
Cop.,
If
foot. Dick.,
Ch. V, 36a.
The
kindness.
would not have wounded him more than the glance of hopeless Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXV, 393. She reproached herself for the cruellest of women. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Hoi, Ch. XI, 916.
i)
Murray.
*)
1.2,
684.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
deadly.
dismal.
in her
483
The beating rain crushed me with a deadlier paralysis than I had experienced while the air had remained serene. Ch. BrontE, Villette, Ch. XV, 195.
The
festival
was
the dismallest of
all
I,
the entertainments
honeymoon.
divine. The Host, in the eyes of the Catholics, is the divinest object in the world. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI,'310a. eager. No evolutionist was ever more eager to find the missing link than was I on attempting to return home from the theatre in the dense fog last Wednesday. (?) Mr. Graham sees in Russia a Power more eager for conquest than any other country.
h e
n.
No. 4461
I
4536.
have decided that we must not meet again. To make this easier I shall go away to-morrow. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, V, Ch. IV, 261. ** Mamma is more easy about him. MissYouNGE, Heir of Rede, I, Ch. VIII, 133. It is about time something was done to make arbitration more easy. Rev. of
easy.
*
Rev., CCXXVI,
foolish,
i.
I
311a.
much
when
of five-hundred-thousand two-legged animals without feathers lie round us, in horizontal position, their heads all in nightcaps, and full of the foolishest
Upwards
dreams.
Carl.,
i.
Ill,
15.
She was perfectly beautiful when she was a girl; much handsomer handsome, than some fine ladies I've heard of. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, IV, Ch. IX, 221. ii. The coachman was instructed to purchase for him the handsomest pony which could be had for money. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXI, 229. * think nobody could be happier than we are. G. Eliot, Sil. Marn., happy, 158. Ill, Concl., have been for years. Her letter to me about you has made me happier than Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, III, Ch. VIII, 156. ** was never displeased with those harmless delusions that tend to make us
i. I I I
more happy
Goldsmith
is
Vic,
to be
Ch.
Ill
(253).
An
ii.
old
bachelor
J.
far
Rev. E.
Hardy,
How
either a
wife.
II, 27.
The most happy being in the. household was a plump, blooming lass. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl., (Stof., Handl., 1,140). haughty. And the knight Had vizor up, and show'd a youthful face, Imperious,
| |
and
of haughtiest lineaments.
I
Ten.
is
Mar. of G e
most healthy
r.
190.
the
of exercises.
G. Eliot,
Mid.,
12.
i.
honest,
ii.
One
wordliness'is a
little bit
lb., II,
Mr. Rawdon's marriage was one of the honestest actions which record in any portion of that gentleman's biography. Thack., Ch. XVI, 165. See also the third quotation on page 475.
i.
idle.
idle fellow.
Miss Younqe,
Heir of Rede,
I,
knowing.
ance.
more idle than many boys of his age. EdnaLyall, Don., I, 130. Mr. Deane, he considered, was the "knowingest" man of his acquaintG. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. VIII, 64.
lovely. Just look at that sea, and tell saw anything lovelier. Bar. v. Hutten
,
me
if
in
Pam,
238.
484
CHAPTER XXX,
28.
lucky. Jos and Mrs. O'Dowd, who were panting to be asked, strove in vain to procure tickets but others of our friends were more lucky. Thack. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXIX, 310.
;
mellow.
The
He
is
cuckoo
flitted
,
mellowest notes.
Sweet
from place C h a p.
to
.
place
and uttered
its
deepest and
modest.
It
the modestest
man
alive.
Goldsmith,
She Stoops,
I.
is
Jane Austen,
than
it
Mansf. Park,
Ch. V,
pleasant.
out you.
life
much pleasanter
VI, Ch. VI, 315.
Hutten,
Pam,
profound. The English have been exposed to greater political changes, and profounder, though quieter, political revolutions than any other nation. Meiklejohn, The Eng. Lang., Ch. II, 1.
proper,
Tool,
ii.
They sometimes use the Adz..., when the Ax, or some other properer 120. !) not at hand. Moxon, Mech. Exerc. ** What more proper course could any one have adopted? Times, No. 1809, 706d. in their younger days, 't was Sir Anth. My process was always very simple if he demurred, I knocked him down and if he grumbled "Jack, do this;"
i.
lies
at that,
way,
quiet.
Mrs. Mal. always sent him out of the room. conscience! Sher., Riv. , I, 2, (222). She has passed a quieter night. Standard.
I
o'
my
ready,
**
i.
Gave him
IV,
credit for
I,
much
Mac, Hist.,
regret
Ch.
497. i)
.
make him more ready to Every day thus unemployed was tending to that some other play had not been chosen. Jane Austen, Mansf.
Park, Ch. XVIII, 170. William found a more ready source of revenue in the settlement of Jewish traders.
Green,
ii.
Short
the
Hist.,
II,
He
is
readiest
man
him
sick with
Wooden World
The
good Liquor.
E.
Ward,
Devlin,
Diss.,
l )
quickest, or, as they are called in the trade, the readiest hands.
1 ,
. .
J.
Shoemaker,
The Sub-prior
him.
real.
.
43.
Scott,
Mon.,
hastened to prescribe the readiest remedies which occurred to Ch. XXVI, 280.
Just as
Lancashire and Warwickshire are more real to their inhabitants than politics, so Maryland and Virginia are more essential than the T. P.'s Weekly, No. 482, 35b.
forefather,
remote, i. Forbear, forebear. An ancestor, remote than a grandfather). Murray. I haven't the remotest idea how old you ii.
are. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, V, Ch. V, 264. robust. There is a sort of puny sickly reputation, that is always ailing, yet will outlive the robuster characters of a hundred prudes. Sher., School for Scand.,
your son, in his recklessness and ignorhas not tried to raise money by holding out his future prospects. G. Eliot, Mid., II, Ch. XIII, 93. ii. This year the epidemic has been far more severe than in 1910. Times, No. 1811, 743d. shabby. Marian was even stouter and redder in the face than formerly, and decidedly shabbier in attire. Hardy, Tess, V, Ch. XLII, 364.
I
am
by no means sure
that
will
use
no severer word
!)
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
485
simple, i. Let's discuss some simpler question. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, II, Ch. V, 106. us call things by their proper names. It makes matters simpler. Oscar ii. Let
Wilde
slender.
An Ideal Husb.
I.
Being of a more slender figure than Mr. Jarndyce, he looked younger. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. VI, 43. sober. His poor brother was of a much more sober sort. Thack., Virg., Ch. XVI, 158. solemn. See the fourth quotation on page 475. solid. The solidest of men who yield the solidest of gossip. Emerson.
stupid. You will find Ch. XVIII, 726.
me
F.
W. Farrar,
St.
Winifred's,
Mr. Tupman's process, like many of our most sublime discoveries, was extremely simple. Dick., Pickw. , Ch. XIX, 166. subtle. He had ended by seeing a very unsatisfactory reflection of himself in the coarse unflattering mirror which that manufacturer's mind presented to the subtler G. Eliot, Mid., II, Ch. XIII, 94. lights and shadows of his fellow-men.
sublime.
The
beauty was touched by the Elsmere surroundings. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm. 1,287. In a way More has less invention than some of his subtler followers. G. H. Mair, 2, 21. Eng. Lit.: Modern, Ch. I, sunny. His countenance beamed with the most sunny smiles. Dick., Pickw.,
fastidious
love
for
the
quieter,
subtler sorts
of
Ch. XIX, 168. tender. As to Mr. Lincoln's nature he was the kindest man, most tender husband and loving father. A t h e n.
tidy. vivid.
He must
more
tidy.
Rose looked
him,
at the
132.
usual.
Mrs.
thoughts
the day of thy deserved doom, other wholesomer than the vain-glorious ravings of a vain philosophy. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXII, 339. wicked. They will soon have something wickeder to digest. Fitzgerald (Hallam
yellow.
Lord Ten., Ten. and his Friends, 113). Morecombe came in pinker and yellower than
ever.
Bar.
v.
Hutten,
Pam,
III,
Adjectives
absolute-
of
See the seventh quotation under b) , page 477. comfortable. Grief in easy circumstances and supported by the comfortablest springs and cushions was typified in the equipage and the little gentleman, its proprietor. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XXXIV, 364. curious. See the second quotation under d), page 478. excentrical. Of all the excentrically planned things from Bradshaw to the maze at Hampton Court, that room was the excentricallest. Jerome, Idle Thoughts, XII, 208. generous. George thought he was one of the generousest creatures alive. Thack.,
Van. Fair,
ignoble.
Ch. XX, 206. I, But besides the lesser and ignobler robbers, there had risen in Italy a far more formidable description of freebooters. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 20. personable. If I could but look personabler. Rhoda Broughton, Nancy, I, 264.1)
slippery. sociable.
sity,
See the second quotation under b), page 477. Sending them (sc. the children) to a public school and then to a univerdoes .. produce sociabler men. Bern. Shaw, Getting Married, Pref., (121). Storm, Eng. Phi
1.2,
i)
1047.
486
unhappy.
unhealthy.
CHAPTER XXX,
She looks the unhappiest woman
in
28.
England. Mrs.
Ward, Marc,
III,
106.
Few
of
us realize
how
made London
The
it
Graph.
Adverbs
hard. which
general
effect
of
one syllable.
children in great towns, on Times, No. 1811, 743c.
of a hot
summer, even on
high. I do think your grand-daughter might look higher. HI, Ch. Ill, 124.
Bar.
v.
Hutten
Adverbs
I
in ly:
i.
Adverbs of two syllables. Bound am to right the wrong'd But Ten. Gar. and Lyn. 785.
I
|
straitlier
bound am
skirts of a
Id.,
En. Ard.
523.
|
To
Princess,
V, 318.
,
ii.
John Addington Symonds) brooded darkly as a youth darklier as a man prime of early maturity. Acad., 1895, 2 Feb., 95b. 1 ) All her (Scotland's) sons and daughters think more highly of their country that
He
(sc.
in the
often,
it. W. Gunnyon Biogr. Sketch of Burns, 50. Then Mrs. Bangham began ... to be found, oftener than usual, comatose on pavements. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. VI, 386. He turned the conversation that way oftener than a well-regulated understanding recurs to any one topic. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend,
Burns was of
i.
I,
Ch.
I,
23.
to
Bar.
v.
Hutten,
Pam,
**
Ch.
II,
15.
,
Do come to us more often. Osc. Wilde An Ideal Husb. The heron is perhaps more often seen alone than in company. Hor. Hutchinson The Avine Hermit (Westm. Gaz., No. 5231 4c). These sentences often are, but still more often are not, quotations from standard authors. Fowler Concise Oxford Diet., Pref.
I.
,
,
She
ii.
is
participator in sin.
I
T. P.
's
Weekly,
*
What
me
at the
visit, is
an
error of quite a different description. Ch. Lamb, But the house where he visited oftenest and lay
Elia, Bach.
Com pi.
G. Eliot,
**
Mid.,
came Pauline Yeoland and "the man", as Christopher Through Cazalet had most often heard him called. Bar. v. Hutten, Pam, Ch. II, 8.
. .
.
XLVI,
343.
Adverbs
of
Touched with pathos that appeals directliest average man. Rev. of Rev., 1896, 15 Dec,
the
i)
552a.
Adverbs
He
If
that have thrown off the termination ly and have thereby become capable of terminational comparison.
P r o v.
couldn't speak finer if he wanted to borrow. G. Eliot, Mid., II, Ch. XIV, 96. you looked closer you saw that the shoulders were narrow. Mrs. Ward, Rob.
I,
Elsm.,
As
the
42. in the
Annie
Besant,
!)
Autobiography,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
29. a)
487
adjectives the first of whose members is an adjecan adverb, mostly have periphrastic comparison in the manner of polysyllabic adjectives and adverbs: high-minded
Compound
tive or
more high-minded most high-minded. But terminational comparison, particularly the superlative, of the first element is not unusual, if this element is an adjective or adverb that regularly or more or less commonly has terminational comparison. This is especially the case when the component parts of the compound are used in their primary, literal
sense, and, accordingly, present to the mind distinctly separate notions and functions thus kinder-hearted and kindest-hearted
:
more and most kind-hearted; broader-chested and broadest-chested as well as more and most broad-chested; but only more and most far-fetched, more and most near-sighted. Sometimes only the terminational form is current: thus only better-behaved and best-behaved, better-regulated and bestregulated, larger-sized and largest-sized. Sometimes the superlative has only one form, while the comparative has two: thus most well-to-do, but better-to-do by the side of more well-to-do. Sometimes only the comparative is in actual use, the corresponding superlative, whether terminational or periphrastical, being wanting: thus only better-off, the form best-off or most
as well as
well-off being, apparently, never used. The compounds are of various descriptions:
i.
e.
they
may
be made up
1)
of:
adjective
+ substantive + formative suffix ed. These formations, which can practically be freely made, often have terminational comparison of the first element, especially in the case of superlatives. Very frequent are those with better and best, most of which can hardly be replaced by their periphrastical equivalents,
i.
be an utter contemner of all distinctions can give you; because it will neither make you richer, handsomer, younger, better-natured more virtuous or wise than if it hung upon a peg. Swift, Letter to a Young
I
to
which a
petticoat
Lady,
Isabella
.
(474a).
. .
since her
girlhood. ** "Oh
79.
Tom
shower
Dick.
acts
,
doing such little giants in their way them as might have belonged to Id., Chuz., Ch. XV, 128a.
friend
,
Leofric
of
Chester;
and
the
shrewdest-headed
hardest-handed Berseker
in the
Ch. Kingsley, Hereward, Ch. IX, 51a. long companionship they had elected Pambo for theirabbot the wisest, eldest-hearted and -headed of them. Id., Hyp., Ch. I, 36.
North Seas.
Duly
after
488
CHAPTER XXX,
29.
He was one of the biggest-chested and longest-armed men ever saw. Rid. Haggard King Sol. Mines, 14. He was one of the noblest-minded men ever saw. Philips, Mrs. Bouv., 83. Wilderspin is one of the noblest-minded men now breathing. Theod. WattsDunton, Ay win, XV, Ch. VI, 429. The kindest-hearted and gentlest of men. Punch, 1889, 101a.
I
,
"Gifford," George Eliot wrote, "though the best-tempered of severe with his pen." At hen., 1892, 4516.
It
men,
is terribly
is
Man
evident to the dullest-witted observers, that the aeroplane has conquered. 314a. II. Lond. is the shortest-lived of the beasts. No. 3831 , 428a.
News,
is
the
lowest-priced Semi-Cottage.
Both expressed
more
public-spirited, a
more independent, a more enlightened, more noble-minded, a more disinterested set of men
to
than
those
who promised
Ch.
XIII.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
We
live together, and a better or more kind-hearted fellow does not exist. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. Ill, 26. We were more mean-minded than other people. E. Robins, The Floren-
the sweetest-tempered, most generous-hearted boy in the Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch. XLIII, 243. He is without an exception the highest-minded, the most independent spirited man I know. Dick., Chuz., Ch. IV, 24b. Swift's life has been told by the kindest and most good-natured of men, Scott. Thack., Eng. Hum., Swift, 4.
in the
The formations
,
reddest-faced,
following quotation are used only for fun: and turnedest-up-nosed girl looked
pretty.
Money Mortiboy. i)
adverb 4- past participle of transitive verb. Also these compounds, which like the above can be freely formed, frequently have terminational comparison of the first element, particularly as regards superlatives. Formations with better, and especially best, are again those most frequently met with. * To cumber our better-advised devotions. i. Scott, Abbot, Ch. XXIII. 2 ) To learn his change of opinion ... from her better-informed child. Mrs. Gask.,
Ch. V.
2)
personality of the elder sister, Miss Miranda Hill, whose life flowed parallel with that of her better-known junior, shines through the comparatively small and secondary references to her. A then., No. 4463, 5156. ** families. Dick. Ch. II.
Best-regulated
Pickw.,
,
She made the oldest-established families in the country ... to pay the bride and bridegroom honour. Thack., Virg. Ch. LXXIII, 773. I had time... to take out my work, and to commence it amidst the profoundest and best-trained hush, ere M. Emanuel entered. Ch. Bronte, Villette,
Ch. XXI, 300.
Our
forefathers
I,
were by
far
the
Mac,
Hist.,
Ch.
I, 24.
The
path now lay straight forward to the accomplishment of his longestcherished wishes. G. Eliot, Sil. Mam., I, Ch. XV, 117.
Kruisinoa
Gram,
of Pre
s.
-Day
Eng.,
592.
2)
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
.
. .
489
should write for free booklet describing the least expensive, Book-lovers best-made, handsomest, and only perfect Sectional Bookcase. Eng. Rev.,
1912,
May, Advert.
is
in the
Empire.
Id.,
the bond drawn tighter by the marriage of Lushington and best-loved sister. Hallam Lord Ten., Ten. &
his Friends,
It
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam) is now certainly one of the best-known pieces of the kind in the language. lb., 103. These three organs (sc. the liver, the kidneys and the bowels) are the hardestworked of any in the body. Advertisement. The latest-created Knight of the Garter. II. Lond. News, No. 3873, 52a.
(sc.
ii.
world.
Her coming there was the most unfortunate, the most ill-judged thing Ch. XLIII, 246. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej. I should expect 'All Awry" to be one of the most widely-read books
,
in the of the
year.
T.
P.'s
Weekly,
6 Oct., 1911,421a.
3)
adverb
are
past participle of intransitive verb. These compounds, which limited to some few combinations, seem to have terminational
parish.
comparison wherever the first member admits of it. * There was not a better-behaved young woman in the whole
VVks., X, 276.1)
**
Bentham,
He Car. 5,
is
Dick.,
Christm.
IV, 100.
Lord Robert declares he has the best-behaved army in the world. Times. What? You an Englishman native of the most-bathed country in the world and you don't know the joys of a mustard-bath? II. Lond. News, No. 3849, 117.
4)
+ present
for
participle.
frequent,
seem
the
most part
to prefer periphrastical
parison.
i.
harder-working woman or a better mother never lived. Dick., Old Shop, Ch. LIX, 2156. She had to admit that she was much better- looking than Lady Fan. Mar. Crawf. Johnstone's Son, Ch. IV. Oh, younger than M. leCure, and better-looking ever so much better-looking.
Cur.
Adam
John Oxenham, Great-heart Gillian, Ch. II, 16. was good-looking none better in Guelgoat. lb., 18.)
(Compare: He
Children are... so much harder-working than their parents. Westm. Gaz., No. 6123, 56. ** The quietest and easiest-going car I have ever been in. II. Lond. News, No. 3804, 416a.
These
ii.
tyres
are
it
is
No. 3832,
Advert,
never one that many a face that was more good-looking looked half so good. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. XI, 114. ** His most c Carthy, A Hist. far-reaching stretches of imagination.
of
V, 309.
nent parts,
Other compounds with an adjective or adverb for one of their compothat admit of comparison, occur only in some few isolated instances, for some part only as more or less humorous nonceformations.
!)
Murray.
490
i.
The reforms
in
127a.
their
own
helper,
among
**
They were
would
the better-to-do neighbours. lb., CCXXVH1, 5176. the sons of his most well-to-do parishioners.
Sweet,
Old Chapel.
ii.
That
enable
her to
leave Johnny
better-off.
Kath. Tynan,
Johnny's Luck.
ill.
iv.
In a few moments a large circle of "most mousy-quiet" small people, ranging from four to fourteen, listened for full twenty minutes to the tale of "Snow- White and the Seven Dwarfs". Westm. Gaz., No. 6141, 46. Children almost always are more wide-awake than their parents. Blackm., Lorna Doone, Ch. XXXIV, 206. letter
v. It's
the old girl's birthday; and that is the greatest holiday and reddestday in Mr. Bagnet's calendar. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. XLIX, 409.
vi.
It
Francis
was not so with our fortunate (or, at least, earth-happier) Thompson Health and Holiness, 22.
,
ancestors.
b)
Compounds
have
.periphrastical comparison. The commonest and most out-of-fashion colour she can think No. 3666, 2526.
Punch,
"T. P.'s Magazine" maintains its unique position among English Magazines as the most up-to-date illustrated review. Advertisement.
is
simply added
adjective.
at
the end,
as
are,
if
the
Such formations
in
how-
best-natur'dst,
pains-taking' st
V,
5.
man
the
parish.
Farquhar,
Recruiting Officer,
Eng. Husb.,
20.
is the latest and up-to-datest woman paper. Lit. World, 1895, 13 Dec. He's the stuck-uppest thing I ever saw. G. Atherton, Am. Wives and
We
the United States which claim to be "the go-to-meetingest" country in the world. Newspaper. 1 ) The most earnest student of the fourpenny-halfpennyest of magazines barely believes in him or takes him seriously. Periodical. 1 )
believe
it
is
30. In
the older writers we find numerous instances of terminational and periphrastic comparison occurring together. This use has to a large extent been preserved in vulgar English. Franz, E. S.
id.,
, ,
XII;
2 Shak. Gram. 2 217; STORM, Eng. Phil. 778, 949; Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Ace, III, B. am more better Than Prospero. Temp., I, 2, 19.
i. I
|
This was the most unkindest cut of all. Jul. Caes. III, 2, 187. I have not art to reckon my groans: but that I love thee best, O most best,
,
believe
it.
H ami.,
wrap
Why do we
He's the
ii.
more rawer
breath.
parish.
Id., V, 2, 126.
best-natur'dst,
pains-taking'st
man
in
the
G. Farquhar,
V, 5 (338).
,
Ch. XXXIII, 297. Veil, p'raps it is a more tenderer word. Dick., PIckw. all the artful and designing orphans that ever I see, Oliver, you are one
most bare-facedst.
,
Id.,
01.
Twist,
147.
Ch.
Ill,
42.
Wendt
Syn
t.
d es
h e u
t.
Eng.,
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
491
(I) made myself quite conspicuous enough as it is, and if I tried to talk from the platform, I sh'd only make myself more conspicuouser than before. W. Pett Ridge (Westm. Gaz. No. 6011,9a).
,
a par with this is the vulgar accumulation of suffixes, as in: He fixed his eyes on Mary, and replied: "I knows a nicerer". Dick., Pickw. 1 ) You knows much betterer than he. Id. C h u z. !) "He is, ma'am," says I, "very miserable indeed nobody could be miserablerer."
,
On
Thack., Misc.,
IV, 138.2)
For the use of worser see 6; for that of lesser, which is not in any way felt as a vulgarism, see 8. Decidedly vulgar, on the other hand,
is leastest.
if
bit o'
still
and
M.
also in
all know security Is mortals' chiefest enemy. Macb., Ill, 5, 32. Must man, the chiefest work of art divine, Be doomed in endless discord to repine? Farquhar, The Beaux' Stratagem, 111,3,(410). To execute any caprice or order of her patient's was her chiefest joy and
And you
reward. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XVI, 164. For the first few weeks she spoke only to the goat, that was her chiefest friend on earth. Rudy. Kipling, The Light that failed, Ch. I, 5.
ii.
Another
113. extremest misery. Mason, Eng. Gram, 34 performance was painfully interrupted by Farmer Boldwood's appearance in the extremest corner of the barn. Hardy, Far from the
He died
in the
Madding Crowd,
Also junior
is,
evidently, sometimes
He was
In
too junior to
felt as a positive. Thus: Pall Mall Mag., 1904 Nov. 3896. (Compare: be placed in supreme command. Sat. Rev., 1899, 23 Dec.)
,
the
following
to
quotation
set
in
the
use of the
comparative after
less
seems to be due
wall
|
mere carelessness:
the silver sea, to a house,
|
Which
1
one of two successive adjectives to be placed sometimes kept in the positive, when modi, ,
3 398. fying one and the same noun. ABBOT, Shak. Gram. i. The IV, 6, 13. generous and gravest citizens. Meas. for Me as. ii. The dearest friend to me, the kindest man, The best-conditioned and unwearied spirit. Merch. of Ven. 111,2,290.
|
32.
When two qualities are compared, periphrastic comparison is the rule, usage being, perhaps, equally divided with monosyllabics. When terminational comparison is used, the second member of
the
comparison
III.
is
always a
full
clause
in English.
Ch. XVII,
128, Obs.
i.
ii.
He is more witty than wise. Mas., Eng. Gram. 34 The wall was in some places thicker than it was
109.
high.
Miss Braddon,
I,
Ch.
I,
1.
Franz, E.
S., XII.
2)
1.2,
778.
492
33.
CHAPTER XXX,
33.
When two
persons or things are compared, the comparative is by careful speakers and writers. But the superlative is mostly used in ordinary spoken English. The
preferred to the superlative
is,
latter
perhaps, sometimes
is
preferred
is
as
the
stronger
form.
Thus She
the worst of
She
is
much
worse
almost equivalent to She is 2 N. E. Gr., 2081; Storm, Eng. Phil. 2 Gram. 215, Anm. 2.
,
the worse of the two is rather worse than the other. Sweet,
,
707;
Franz, Shak.
,
i.
This
If
line is the longer of the two. Mason, Eng. Gram. 34 112. anything, Miss William was the better of the two. Sarah Grand,
I,
The
Heavenly Twins,
25.
,
Angelica was the dark one and she was also the elder, taller, stronger and wickeder of the two. lb., I, 9. If you have reason to choose between two styles of versification, select the
more
difficult.
Tom Hood
is
Eng. V e r s
you or
c.
f.
13.
The
ii.
case for gold ought to be far and away the stronger of the two.
see
Punch.
to
We'll
which
I.
the strongest,
I.
Goldsm.,
She Stoops
Conquer,
their
to
whom
universally
well
the eldest possessing the most amiable character, and the youngest, the most dissipated and extraspoken of
Sher.,
I,
1.
come
66.
to himself,
Chuz.,
Ch.
I,
Angelica is much the worst of the two. Sarah Grand, Heav. Twins, I, 54. Here are two roads; I wonder which is the shortest. Sweet, Spok. Eng., 35.
I. But the comparatives hinder, inner, lesser, nether, outer, upper and utter can hardly be replaced by superlatives. First and last are, however, occasionally used for former and latter (11, 14). We must distinguish between fortune-hunters and fortune-stealers. The first are those assiduous gentemen who employ their whole lives in the chase without ever coming at the quarry. S p e c CCCXI (287). Glory and danger go together. And I am as ready to share the last as the Lytton, Rienzi, IV, Ch. II, 162. first. "You know, sir, I can't resist a card or a bottle," says Mr. Sampson. "Let us have the last first and then the first shall come last. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXI, 318.
t.
,
Note
is
also
fixed
in
the
idiom
illustrated in the
a) Silence would surely have been the better part. The better part of valour is discretion.
Times.
IV,
Henry
I
A, V,
But
in
(7, b).
religiously followed the doctor's
During mandate.
(sc. the
month)
Jerome, Idle Thoughts, VI, 73. He (sc. Disraeli) had a nervous breakdown in his twenties, which lasted e s t m. G a z. No. 5448, 9c. the best part of three years.
/?)
Once
III,
of the staff.
Farquar,
3, (397).
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
III.
493
part
is the usual form in the collocation the greater and, apparently, the only form in the synonymous phrase the greater number. * At the i. period of his death he had reduced the number of obedient provinces to two; only Artois and Hainault acknowledging Philip, while the other fifteen were in open revolt, ihe greater part having solemnly forsworn their sovereign.
The comparative
(9),
**
Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 900a. Throughout the greater part of the dinner my opinion of the young man rose steadily but surely. Grant Allen, That Friend 6f Sylvia's.
How
is
it
number
was a moment
To
the greater
Mansfield
Park,
ii.
of it (sc. my little fortune) was left me by my uncle. Goldsmith, She Stoops, 11,(187). During twenty-eight years a rivalship subsisted between Francis I and the Emperor Charles V, which involved not only their own dominions, but the greatest parr of Europe, in wars. Gibbon (Best, Extr. for Trans 1.,
No.
40).
The greatest part (sc. of Scripture) would be unintelligible to them. George Borrow, The Bible in Spain, Ch. I, 8. Compare with the above also the collocations illustrated by: The clergy are lost in the crowds of their parishioners. They are known
i.
to
the
as
preachers.
Jane Austbn,
is
Mansf. Park,
Saintsb., Ninet.
prose.
iii.
Mr. Gumbo proposed to ride by the window for the chief part of the journey. Thack., Virg., Ch. XX, 202. The major part of the conversation was confined to Mrs. Weller and the reverend Mr. Stiggins. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XXVII, 244. His very first step would of necessity be the transfer of the major portion of this immense responsibility to other shoulders. Rev. of Rev., CXCI, 496a.
,
IV.
Conversely the superlative could not he replaced by the compain first of the two.
He came
34.
Sweet
N. E.
G
is
r. ,
208.
A
is
the.
When
the
as
or
when
a restrictive adjunct
The
is
lative
emphasized by
very.
a periphrastic superlative the may sometimes be placed to prevent its being understood as absolute. (44.)
Before
i.
Plain speaking
is
best
when
I,
the
mind
I,
is
made
up.
Ch. Reade,
It
is
never
Ch.
18.
Courth.
6.
It is evident, therefore, that from a grammatical point of view it is not only simplest and easiest, but also most correct to regard 'but' in 'he is tall but not strong' as a word-connecter. Sweet, N. E. G r. 405.
,
My
mother was merriest, for over Victoria and myself there hung a unreality. Anth. Hope, The King's Mirror, Ch. II, 34.
veil of
494
First
ii.
I.
The churches were the freest from it (sc. the stare of the blazing sun). Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. I, 2a. The notion of its being Sunday was the strongest in young ladies like Miss Phipps, who was going to accompany her younger sister to the confirmation.
G.Eliot,
Scenes,
III,
Ch. V, 218.
kept the sheep he had stolen till his neighbour grew the strongest and stole them back again. Mrs. Craik, A Hero, 39. Saturn gave the deepest tone, as being the farthest horn the earth; the Moon gave the shrillest, as being nearest to the earth. Lewes, Hist.
He
Phil., 53. (Note the varied practice.) and again he (sc. Thackeray) paused and blessed amid the torrent of his anathemas But his anathemas are the loudest. Trol., Thack.
Now
The caps
iii.
to be forgotten. * Plain
percussion caps), being such a small item, were the most apt Hor. Hutchinson (Westm. Gaz. No. 6011, 2c). speaking is the best you can do. have been the loudest of any in their complaints. Small holders Graph., No. 2257, 336. ** And she was of Ten., fairest of all flesh on earth.
(sc.
,
.
.
Coming
Arthur,
iv.
I
3.
doubt whether the actions of which we are the very proudest will not us, when me trace them, as we shall one day, to their source. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXI, 330. Note I. In such a sentence as First impressions are the deepest the second superlative is, perhaps, best considered as an adjective used absolutely, the noun impressions, which is understood, being the
surprise
A similar interpretation may be put on the superlatives in: And beware of despising or neglecting my instructions, whereon will depend, not only your making a good figure in the world, but your own real happiness, as well as that of the person who ought to be the dearest to you. Swift,
nominal part of the predicate.
Letter to a Young Lady, (472a). The as used in some of the above sentences may be considered II.
as the definite article.
the actions of which
But
we are
such a collocation as
35.
The bare
superlative is also the rule with adverbs, but the is not infrequently met with, especially before periphrastieal superlatives, which without it might be apprehended as absolute. (44.) we are understood least by those that have known us longest. i. Frequently
Bain,
H. E. Gr., 96.
Things hardest to define are mostly those which are least in need of defi423a. nition. Earle Phil., I came to this town where least of all I thought to pitch my tent for life. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. I, 9. They admire most what they least understand. Graph., 1891 552a. The new Government desires to keep in touch with the Powers, and with
,
least.
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 4931
2a.
Alarm and distress were the emotions she felt the most and which most were impressed upon her speaking countenance. Lytton, Rienzi, I,
Ch. VI, 47.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Of
I
495
all
my books
Dick.,
Cop., Pref.
of all the people
see that good and faithful servant the best. lb., Ch. IX, 66a.
whom
upon
earth
love
He was the greatest patriot in their eyes who brawled the loudest and who cared the least for decency. Id., Chuz. Ch. XVI, 141a. AH the stout people go off the quickest. Id., 01. Twist, Ch. IV, 47. It was he who was the most moved, sudden as the shock was to her. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XVIII, 183.
,
It
was
difficult to
Id.,
tenderly.
Pend.,
men seemed
most
Of all these boys William writes the worst. Mas., Eng. Gram.**, 274. But the mother of the king hid away the weakest child, which was born the last. Rid. Hag., Sol. Mines, 112. This passage led back into that very part of the house from which you thought yourself the farthest. Miss Brad., Lady Audley's Secret, I, Ch. I, 3. Don't you think, Eustace, good people are always the least understood and the most persecuted. Grant Allen, Tents of Shem. Ch. XVI.
,
Note.
It
however, an indubitable article in the adverbial phrase the used as a variant of in the least, which looks like the original expression. In the least and the least are used indifferently "before adjectives, but only the former is used as a verb-modifier. Note that the least always stands before its head-word, and that this is also the ordinary place of in the least when modifying an adjectfve. * All that wished for was that one of those saucy, grinning footmen should say or do something to me that was the least uncivil. Thack., Sam.
is,
least
i.
Titm.,
I
Ch.
I
Ill, 37.
do not
recall
them
experiences) to
in
or
**
because
am now
the
least
unhappy
ii.
Ch. XXXV, 300. Everything in the house that was in the least pretty or ornamental had been carried together in this apartment. Dor. Gerard, The Etern. Worn., Ch. XV. I am not in the least tired. lb. It is not in the least likely that Lord Staines would have been angry with Friend Jim, Ch. I, 8. any one. Norris, Though he has been writing for 30 years, he has never become in the least old-fashioned. Times. *** He is a comely youth and not proud in the least. Lytton , R e n z I , I, Ch. Ill, 25. If I moved in the least, she gave me the cruellest poke with her foot. Dick.,
Bleak House,
My
Cop., Ch.
VIII, 118.
V, 36a.
me
in the least.
Anstey,
A Fallen Idol,
Ch.
Thus
I
also the
is
an indubitable article
in
for the
think
to
my
me
that
Lorna
36. a) In
comparing
the
different
intensities
a quality
in either
substances, or in states or actions, as they appear in different places, at different times or in different circumstances generally, the English has a predicative or an adverbial superlative,
as the case
may
the.
496
'
CHAPTER XXX,
36.
be
Before a periphrastic superlative the use of the may sometimes due to a desire of preventing its being understood as
absolute. (44.) * The raw afternoon is i. rawest, and the dense fog is densest, and the muddy streets are muddiest near the leaden-headed old obstruction. Dick., Bleak
House,
Irving,
was always
greatest.
Wash.
Madame
was most
farce.
comedy
which bordered on
Once when the church was coldest and the draught most piercing, he in the very middle of the vicar's sermon winked deliberately at us three boys. Miss
Braddon
My
First
is
Happy Christ m.
highest,
(Stof. ,
Handl.,
70).
When
s. v.
the
sorrow
then
is
the
remedy
nighest.
Skeat, Diet.,
next.
The waters
area.
42. Earle, Phil., ** Then his conduct was the most execrable.
III,
Chr
m. Car.
I,
71.
settle
where
Lytton,
My Novel,
My
I
warmest when my
I,
distance.
find
Eliot's Life,
the
is
137. i)
him
most
a
excellent
on a Sunday.
Ill,
ii.
Religion
plant
that flourishes
best where
happiest.
Besant,
All Sorts
I
and Cond.
when
II,
Men,
Id.,
The Bell
of
St.
Paul's,
Ch. XIII,
The indomitable
darkest around.
spirit of Civilis
Rise, Hist Intro d. 8a. ** With waves in wild motion we love it (the sea) the most. The green banks where the dew falls the thickest. Lit. World.
Motley
,
in:
am happy where you are, but we were happiest of all at Walcote Forest. Thack., Henry Esm., I, Ch. I, 8. (= het allergelukkigst.) Note. The exact grammatical function also of this the is hard to determine. It may be understood as the definite article before the
predicative superlative of an adjective; but this cannot possibly be character when it stands before an adverbial superlative.
its
b) Instead
of
the
bare
superlative- preceded
usual only with terminational superlatives. It does not seem to differ materially from that mentioned under a), but has a wider sphere of application, being the only available one
construction
is
in
WENDT,
i.
other functions than that of the nominal part of the predicate. E.S., IV; id., Synt. des Adj., 41; Stof., E. S., XXVIII.
,
The dock was now at its busiest. Stephenson T r e a s. I s People are never at their best in a crowd. Sarah Grand
,
I.
67.
Our mani-
fold Nature,
i)
84.
X.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
When
In
its
497
seemed
to be
the
subject
of
the
ball
was at
its
highest, there
an extra
shine on
glossy surface, lb., 63. the luncheon hour the house-boats are at their gayest and the laughter at earliest. Graph., 1891,70c.
its
Just
ii.
when I am at my most diabolical. Isr. Zangwill, A Diet, in Distress (Weersma, Col. of Stor. and Sketches, 79). Even at his ungainliest and his most wilful Mr. Thompson sins still in the
grand manner.
In 'Doctor Dick'
It
A c a d e my.
we have
!)
shows
and
liveliest.
Burke at his best is English at its best. 2) It was Emerald Fanny at her most effective, who responded. Agn. & Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, II, Ch. IV, 147. At his most sensational you are never aware of invention. Punch (Westm. Gaz., No. 6047, la).
Note.
In
this
construction
the
sometimes replaced by
(Ch.
neuter singular possessive pronoun is as the following superlative is felt as may be considered as the definite article.
XXIX,
is
21, 23.)
She
of
its
the
when
glory
house of Douglas, a house that has intermarried with mine, even and power were at the highest. Scott, Bride of Lam.,
wall
The
just
first
Roman
4.
was
built
between the two Friths of the Clyde and the Forth, Id. Tales of a Grand,
the
1.
Lytton
What
will he do
(6306).
I,
Instances of the preposition at falling out in this construction, as in the following quotation, seem to be very rare:
crossest,
The Halo,
I,
Ch.
I,
13.
Such nouns as height and full sometimes do practically the as the superlative.
i.
same duty
The
at
was
its
when
height, the sliding was at the quickest, the laughter a smart crack was heard. Dick., Pickw. , Ch.
,
XXX,
271.
While the fire was at its height, a tank containing 16 tons of creosote became ignited and burst. Times.
**
of
the most interesting moment of his passage to England, when the alarm French privateer was at the height, she burst through his recital with the proposal of soup. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. XIX, 185.
In
ii.
like
when
Walter Besant,
The Bell
Barry
of St. Paul's,
Ch. XIII,
Compare
Lyndon,
year
[etc.].
also: My
Ch.VI,.94.
later,
fortunes
Thack. ,
,
Three weeks
when Dorlcote
Mill
was at
its prettiest
moment
in all the
G.Eliot, Mill,
!)
a)
41.
H.
Poutsma, A Grammar of
32
498
37.
To
express
the
like
adverb very for greater emphasis. i. The two women shrieked their loudest Thack., Pend., The birds were singing their loudest. Punch. The noise reached its loudest when Mr. Bartley
. . . . .
.
declared
it
to
be an
outrageous scandal [etc.]. Times. The emissaries from Ulster worked their hardest to alarm the electors No. 6311, lb. about Home Rule. Westm. Gaz.
,
ii.
Admiral
Miss Braddon,
1 ,
My
II,
First
Happy Christmas.
Other stars
Rita,
a n d
1.
70.)
scintillated
and sparkled
America
me,
in
Ch.
39.
Note
He
led
I.
an open place
Lorna Doone.
Ch. XXI,
119.
six that morning till past noon the huge wood fire in the kitchen roared and sparkled at its highest. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd,
From
Ch.
II.
LII, 422.
The precise grammatical character of this superlative is somewhat hard to define. The most plausible view, apparently, is to consider it an adjective partially converted into a noun. (Ch. XXIX, 21, 23.)
38.
Many
the
is
superlatives
at.
form
In
adverbial
the
preposition
usually
suppressed.
of
The
adjuncts in connection with majority of these the definite article suppression is sometimes attended
meaning, but may also be a matter of metre or rhythm. The grammatical nature of the superlatives is that of an adjective partially converted into a noun. (Ch. XXIX,
by a modification
mention at the best as an alternative form. Instances, however, occur Shakespeare has in the best in the sense of at best.
268. Franz, Shak. Gram. * And wel we weren esed atte (= at the) beste. Chaucer, Cant. Tales, Pro 29. (= fully at ease.) Good Brabantio, take up this mangled matter at the best. Othello, 3, 171. ** The Orsini are and the Colonnas are, at the best, as bad. tyrants Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. Ill, 22. It is a mad policy at the best. Times. At the best we cannot expect any but a gradual return to normal conditions In France. Westm. Gaz., No. 5436, \c. II. His pace was at best an awkward one in the street. Dick., Chimes, II, 37.
2
,
i.
I.
I,
box at
best.
Dor. Gerard,
The
Etern.
Woman,
Ch. XVI.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
iii.
499
most
foul,
Murder most
unnatural.
foul,
,
as
in
the
best
it
is;
But
this
strange
and
at (the)
i.
is
likely to receive
more frequently used than suppressed, an answer for eight or ten weeks at the earliest.
Mrs. Alex.,
Chuz., Ch. XXXIII, 2686. cannot hear from Dick at the earliest before Tuesday evening. Life Interest, II, Ch. XVIII, 291.
ii.
I charge thee not to attempt to travel till to-morrow at earliest. Scott, I van hoe Ch. XL, 416. The division won't be till half past ten at earliest. Mrs. Ward, Marc, III, 37. The little pink bells do not show till June at earliest. John Lloyd Warden
Page,
in
i.
The Coasts
of
Ch.
II,
12.
Present English, Travel you far on, or are you at the farthest? Pedant. Sir, at the farthest for a week or two; But then up farther, and as far as Rome. Taming of the Shrew, IV, 2, 75. Let it be so hasted that supper be ready at the farthest by five of the clock.
Tranio.
I
Merch.,
"I
II,
2, 122.
ii.
be avay more than a day or two, sir, at the farthest" said Sam. Dick., Pickw., Ch. LII, 479. In two or three days at farthest. Goldsm. Good-nat. man, III. The secret complaint will kill him in a few months at furthest. Flor. Marryat,
shan't
,
Open Sesame,
A
at fewest.
In
all
105.
second lieutenant considers himself very badly treated by Fate if he does not attain a lieutenancy within a couple of years at farthest. Graph.
instances
peculiar
Darw.,
at
a)
further instances than the following have come to hand. I have yet investigated, the substance of this germ has composition, consisting of at fewest four elementary bodies. Huxl., Ch. V, 199.
No
which
(the)
first.
the
article is
found
in the
sense of
the first, at the outset (= Dutch al dadelijk); b) in the earliest times; c) in the beginning (= Dutch in het eerst). At first is used in the sense of a) in the beginning ( Dutch in het
from
eerst, in het begin), b) the first time (= Dutch de eerste keer), at once, directly ( Dutch dadelijk), d) first (= Dutch het eerst), e) in the beginning of life, in like manner as at last sometimes means in the end of life. In the first sense it is found in statements that are thought
c)
of as a contrast to another, which, accordingly, often opens with but. These may be the principal shades of meaning of at the first and at
first.
Altogether
it
is
often
difficult
to
Only at
i.
English.
is at all common in Present See also Franz, Shak. Gram. 2, 268. * Let him that moved you hither Remove you hence: I knew you at the first You were a moveable. Taming of the Shrew, II, 197. saw the O never was there queen So mightily betray'd yet at the first treasons planted. Ant. and C e o p. 2, 25. "Did any of them know of your coming?" "Yes, My Wife and Children saw me at the first, and called after me to turn again." Bunyan, Pilg. Prog., (151). For it was thro' me This evil came on William at the first. Ten., Dora. ** Anything so overdone is from the purpose of playing, whose end, both at the first and now, was and is, to hold as't were, the mirror up to nature.
1 ,
Haml.,
Ill,
2, 23.
500
Thy cloud goes up,
valleys green.
|
CHAPTER XXX,
As
at the first,
38.
And keep
her
Bryant,
Hymn
of the Sea,
,
***
Dangerous conceits are, in their natures, poisons: Which at the first are scarce found to distaste. Othello, III 3, 327. Lieutenant Smith, her grandfather, had been at the first very much averse to
our union.
Thack.,
position
... is
Sam. Titm.
II,
The
end.
very
Lytton, Rienzi,
t
88.
The Camp
Wes
m.
G a z.
I
No. 601
8c.
ii.
thought there would be only one course, that of putting Paradyne away. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. Ill, 46. ** Duke S. Art thou thus Or else a rude bolden'd, man, by thy distress Orl. You despiser of good manners, That in civility thou seem'st so empty? touch'd my vein at first. As you like it, II, 7, 94. Ruined love, when it is built anew, Grows fairer than at first. Shak., Son.,
Just at first
| |
CXIX. (Compare the Dutch Op oud ijs vriest het licht.) *** Well was it fit for a servant to use his master so ... Whom, would to God, I Then had not Grumio come by the worst. had well knock'd at first, Taming of the Shrew, 1,2,34. I thank him, makes no stranger of me; we are familiar This worthy signior,
| | |
at
first.
Cymbeline,
1,3,7/7.
Nothing but your passion and violence, you silly fellow, prevented my telling you at first. Sher., Riv. III, 1. He thought it best to make a stand at first, and civilly refused such dangerous
,
companions among
his troops.
Mac, Fred.,
|
(6946).
**** Let's each one send unto his wife; And he whose wife is most obedient; To come at first when he doth send for her, Shall win the wager which we
|
will propose.
Taming
r
i
of the
727.
Shrew,
V, 2
68.
I
"True
is it,
my
Co
(I)
1.
1,1,
need them at
at the highest.
last.
abused not my health and my vigour at first That I never might Southey, The Old Man's Comfort, II.
\
No
The
range of the French and German rifles is 800 yards, that of the British rifle at the highest is 600 yards. Times, No. 1825, 1031rf. (These) suggestions ... at the lowest deserve careful consideration, at the highest, have only to be stated to carry conviction. Times (Westm. Gaz., No. 6264, 3c).
point-blank
In
Early Modern English at last and at the last were used 2 The latter is now rather .268. Franz, Shak. Gram. uncommon and seems to be chiefly applied in the sense of at the last moment; compare* to the last (= up to the last moment of life). The discourse does not, however, always bring out this meaning very clearly. At last is mostly used in the sense of at length (= after the removal of all impediments); but is occasionally found in the meaning of after all.
at (the) last.
indiscriminately.
,
The phrase
at
last.
at
(the)
long last,
now
infrequent,
represents an emphatic
Shakespeare has in the last in the sense of at last. U * Gad, a troop shall overcome him, but he shall overcome at the last. Bible, Gen., XLIX, 19. At the last I saw, as it were, a narrow gap. Bunyan, Grace Abounding, 312. i) So that at the last we may come to his eternal joy. Com. Pray., Gen. Oonf.
i)
Franz, E.
S., XVIII.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Sleet
501
and rain beat hard upon the mourners, but all was sunshine at the last. Garnett, Life of Carlyle, 165. i) She spoke at large of many things, And at the last she spoke of me. Ten., Miller's D aught., XX. So you have come back to me at the last. Eng. Rev., No. 52, 597. ** Woman, disturb me not now at the last. Ten., En. Ard., 869. He was so delighted with the presentation of Dinah, and so convinced that the readers' interest would centre in her, that he wanted her to be the principal
|
Eliot's Life,
11,195.2)
drew aside little Swanhild at the last, and left the father and son to have Edna Lyall, A Hardy Norseman, Ch. IV,, 39. their parting words alone. Rider Haggard, It is no uncommon thing for the mind thus to fail at the last. Mr. Mees. Will, Ch. XXI, 225.
Sigrid
ii.
joy,
Unco mm.
of a timid
of perfect courage at last. Motley, part of his life.) *** hadn't ate it all at last.
temperament or not, he was certainly possessed Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 903a. (= in the latter
Dick.,
the
They
R.
Christm.
Car.s,
m,
iii.
This
Woman,
say
was at
Long Last
prevail'd
upon
L'Estrange, Tables, CXCVIII, 168.3) We can find a useful and instructive solace in a hearty abuse of human nature, which at the long last is always to blame. Lowell, Study Wind, 131. 3 ) ** The supremely important thing is that, at long last, the Russian nation is to be supplied with an articulate representative assembly. Rev. of Rev.,
read.
We
iv.
I ar long last, get together the rudiments of a Society in parts of the English-speaking world. lb., CXCV, 226. learned, ar long last, that its career was over. Ryan, Lit. Lond. , 28.
Francis
was
j
Pam
we
In the last,
When
The
look'd
than glory.
Coriol.
V, 6, 43.
at (the) latest.
i.
article is
in
Ordinary
bed-time
his
mind meant
m. or
10.30
at the
latest.
1.
Lond. News.
The
ii.
general belief in town and camp with us by Monday night at the latest.
column
will join
hands
Times.
latest.
Ready
to set sail
of the
1.
,
morrow, we should
Treasure Island.
Stephenson
T r e a s.
87.
at (the) least. When attached to a quantitative designation to indicate that the amount referred to is the smallest admissible (= Dutch op zijn
minst), the article seems to be regularly used. Conversely suppression seems to be now all but regular, when the expression is used in the sense of at any rate, at all events (= Dutch ten minste). According to Al. Schmidt (Shak. Lex.), Shakespeare observes no difference between at the least and at least. See also Franz, Shak. Gram. 2, 268 and id., Eng. Stud., XVIII.
Ten Brug., Taalst.,
XI.
i)
*)
lb.,
X.
3)
Murray.
502
1.
CHAPTER XXX,
She saved 600
I
38.
I.
a-year,
at the
least,
Thack.,
Sam.
Titm., Ch. X, 115. How many have killed? Nineteen, at the least. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVIII, 1386. The thing must have weighed three pounds at the least. Jerome, Sketches. hope to remain for three weeks at the least. Paul Cheswick, In the Land
I
of
**
Dreams,
Go
it
Ch.
I.
You look
to
Con. Doyle,
call
Rodn. Stone,
|
I,
Ch. V, 115.
and
Two
Gentl.
IV, 2, 118.
Let
suffice,
Page,
at
the least,
II,
if
Merry Wives,
1, //.
ii.
At the least this was certain, Miss L. had no fortune or Virg.. Ch LXXV, 794. At least we'll die with harness on our back. Macb. V,
,
expectations.
5, 52.
Thack.,
at longest. The following is the only instance found: At longest they were only twelve minutes behind another express. No. 6323, \b. at the lowest.
Westm. Gaz.,
The article seems to be regularly used. People who profess accuracy and assume a heavy responsibility, cannot escape condemnation, if they choose to accept ready-made lies from sources that ought to have aroused suspicion, or at the lowest to have suggested caution. Times, No. 1261, 1466. was, of course, put forth by Mr. Dillon either as a Every foolish bit of gossip fully-substantiated fact, or at the lowest as a strong presumption calling for inquiry.
.
.
lb.,
146a.
at (the) most.
i.
ii.
The article seems to be mostly dropped, Even at the most, Sparta gains nothing by these wars. Lytton, Pa us. 1 ) After these entered a tall child, at most but in her thirteenth year. Mrs. F. Brooke, Old Maid, No. 30, 177.2) At most it increases what they already possess. Goldsmith, i) At most he was sent to make a short trip in a man-of-war. Macaulay, Hist. 2 ) The following
is
at the poorest.
It
a challenge to the ordinary Congress-goer, who at the poorest is aseven-andsixpenny person with a margin for railway-fare and for lodgment during the week, in case local hospitality cannot be found. Times, No. 1814, 803a.
is
The only
yet,
I
instance found
is
Though
Temp.,
at (the) worst. The article is rarely dispensed with, the worst or at the best, we should not be divided. Lytton, Rienzi, II, i. At Ch. VIII, 115. At the worst, obscure honesty is better than gaudy crime. lb., IV, Ch. I, 149. She had probably had some experience in such matters, and felt tolerably certain of being able, at the worst, to manage the old gentleman in the gold spectacles. F. Anstey, Vice Versa, Ch. XI, 217. Even at the worst an emergency service could be carried on. Times, No.
1809, 702d.
Ii.
At worst it was scarcely more than an exaggeration of what his state had been for months. Kath. Cec Thurston J o h n C hi cote, M. P., Ch. VI, 61.
, 1
i)
Sattler, E.
S.,
XXXI,
349.
2)
Murray.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Note. when the
39.
In
503
superlative
At ten o'clock
none of the above expressions is the article ever ommited is emphasized by very. at the very earliest. Grant Allen, Tents of Shem, Ch. III.
gradual increase of some quality is mostly expressed by two comparatives connected by and, the adjective being placed only after the second more or less in the case of periphrastic
comparison,
i.
By
that
time
Sam
ii.
and less distance between themselves and the good old town of Bury St. Edmunds. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XV, 136. The plan was simply this, to demand larger and larger contributions till the Rajah should be driven to remonstrate. Mac, War. Hast., (6296). * He grew more and more untractable every day, and lost favour in the eyes of both the doctor and the housekeeper. Wash. Irv., Dolf. Heyl. (Stof.,
placing a less
Hand
**
I.,
I,
100).
less
and
the
less
capable of control.
Dick.,
Chuz.
Note
i.
Either
ever.
the
first
or
second comparative
is
sometimes
preceded by
ii.
II.
She had sunk ever lower and lower. Jerome, Three Men in a Boat, Ch. XVI, 213. And there Her constant motion round him, and the breath Of her sweet tendance over him, Fill'd all the genial courses of his blood With deeper and with ever deeper love. Ten. G e r. and En., 927. The placing of ever before the first comparative may occasion the
| | |
The case
bust as a genuine work by Leonardo da Vinci gets No. 5179, 2b. She was as sweet as before, but more aloof. The condescension was ever more marked, and the appeal for sympathy and pity ever fainter. Agn. & Eg.
for
the
Berlin
ever thinner.
Westm. Gaz.
Castle,
III.
Diamond
similar
cut Paste,
of
I,
when
second comparative is quite usual suppression sentence contains an adverbial adjunct with every, each (Ch. XL, 54, Obs. HI), or one like daily, day by day, constantly. i. Onward she came the large black hulk seeming larger at every fathom's length. Scott, Pirate, Ch. VII, 83. N e w c. I think my pretty cousin looks prettier every day. Thack. Ch. XXVII, 301. (= Dutch ziet er met den dag aardiger uit) The old man was drawing nearer to her every day. Beatr. Har., Ships,
the
the
II,
Ch.
II,
119.
that
he stood
alone.
'
all
"I
find that
true every day. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., love you, if possible, each day more truly
Their
path
became
daily
Mrs.
Gask.,
Mary
Barton,
iv.
The
hatred
Queen seemed
the people.
May Winne,
31.
She hated the state of tutelage with a hatred by hour. Agn. <& Eg. Castle Panther's
Cub,
Ch. VI
66.
504
v.
Mac.,
War.
Hast.,
(6246).
IV. Thus also when there is a series of successive words requiring periphrastic comparison, and -\- the second more is mostly suppressed-. In time Labby (i. e. Labouchere') frequented it (sc. Pope's Villa) less and less,
and the invitations came more rarely and more scantily. T. P. s Weekly, No. 497, 610c. (instead of more and more rarely and more and more scantily.}
V.
a)
'
second comparative
scanty
II,
is
Caleb's
occasionally chosen for the sake of variety, hairs were turning greyer and more grey. Dick.,
Cricket,
ii.
37.
|
And
He whispered
/?)
a positive
poetry.
Faint, cavern,
is
chiefly in
37.
Fijn
in
and more faint, its (sc. the hurricane's failing din Return'd from cliff and linn. Scott, Lady, I, in, 17. She gradually drew near and nearer. Id., Mon. Ch. XXV, 270. And then advanced with stealth-like pace, Drew softly near her, and more near. Wordsw., White Doe, VII, 105. Faint she grew and ever fainter. Ten., Lord of Burl., 81. And her breath came fast and faster. Rose H. Thorpe, Curfew must
,
|
y)
not ring to-night, IV. And the eastern breeze Grows fresh and fresher. W. Morris The Earthly Par., The Proud King, 96a. the adverb still or yet is sometimes inserted where most convenient. And hark! and hark! the deep-mouth'd bark Comes nigher still, and nigher. Scott, Lay, III, xv.
|
It
(sc.
the
fire)
swayed or
to
fell before the mighty gale only to rise higher ravage and roar yet more wildly. Mrs. Gask., Mary
,
Barton,
As
Ch. V, 46. the years passed , we two Rid. Hag., She, Ch. II, 20.
to each other.
The Way
of the
Eagle,
She
I,
Ch. V, 55.
in this
forward
slowly
Times,
&)
the comparatives more or less are sometimes divided by the adjective. Saint George's banner, broad and gay, Now faded, as the fading ray Less
|
|
bright,
and
less,
was
flung.
Scott,
Marm.
I,
u.
40.
A proportional increase of two qualities is expressed by placing the adverb the before two comparatives. See also Ch. VIII, \5d;
Ch. XVII, 142; Ch. XXXI, 6,
i
b.
The rougher the billow, The happier we. The nearer we drew, the more familiar the objects became
Dick.,
that
we
passed.
Cop.,
Ch.
Ill,
21a.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
The more
I
505
reflect,
the
more
am
pudence of that fellow. Lytton Night and Morn., 377. The more we change, the more we remain the same. Besant,
,
London,
I,
102.
Curious that in lodgings the rule of life is reversed: the higher you get up in the world, the lower you go down in your lodgings. Jerome. Idle Thoughts, XII, 203. The more people* earned, the more they spent on beer and spirits. Graph.,
1889, 178a.
Note
More
I.
In proverbial
II. Also in the following quotation the reference seems to be to a proportional increase. And farther as the Hunter stray'd, Still broader sweep its (sc. that of the lake) channel made. Scott, Lady, I, xm.
|
is
the
more enraged
mother became.
T. P.'s
Weekly,
The
is
of
the
increase
also found before a comparative to indicate the dependence of some quality on what is expressed in an adverbial
adjunct or clause of cause. It may interest the foreign student that these adjuncts or clauses may open with a great variety of prepositions or For conjunctions, for and because being, however, the usual words. instances see also Ch. XVII, 39. An exhaustive study of the subject has been given by Olaf Johnson in E. S., XLIV, 212239. For so-called errors in the application of the see the King's English 7074; Uhr-
48.
you don't seem one whit the happier at this. Sher., Riv., IV, 3, (268). ** Mr. R. had shown a all the more very marked interest in Mr. B's daughter marked because of the reserved manner with which it had to contend. Mrs.
Why man,
I,
Ch.
Ill,
29.
(sc. sullen, dull and dogged) by my sense of being daily more and more shut out and alienated from my mother. Dick., Cop., Ch. IV, 23. **** She might stand beside any lady of the land and look the better for it. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXVI, 252. A young man with long black hair that seemed the blacker for the whiteness of the bedclothes. Dick., Chuz. Ch. XXV, 2106.
the less so
*****
The storm, though gathering swiftly had not yet come up; and the prevailing stillness was the more solemn from the dull intelligence that seemed to hover in
'the air, of noise
and conflict afar off. lb., Ch. XLII, 326a. Maclean looks as if she would be the better of some sparkling wine. Graham Travers, Mona Maclean, 74. "By Castor, if a man swears a woman's oath," said another something worse of
****** Miss
wine, "let us not lament." Wallace, Ben ******* I think a little the worse of him Ch. II, 10a.
ii.
Hur,
on
101.
this
account.
Dick.
Chuz.,
This worthy
man found
the latter disliked port wine at dinner. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXX, 325. They (sc. the horses) stretch their shoulders up the slope towards the bridge, with all the more energy because they are so near home. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. I, 2. ** They went about with muffled tread: the rather forasmuch as to entertain any suspicion that they were awake, was to be atheistical and traitorous. Dick.,
Tale
of
two
Cities,
I,
Ch.
I,
16.
506
***
Green,
*****
Short
Hist.,
VII,
III,
375.
with
You don't think the country would be game to-morrow. Mrs. Ward M a r c e
,
we could do away
V.
Pewter
VI.
Very rare
is
longer.
is
Compare
the practice of replacing the first comparative by the Dutch hoe langer hoe (des te) beter, etc.
XII, 136.
pewter, and grows the longer the duller. Scott, Pirate, Ch.
The adjunct
or clause
is
in
the context.
the
sport
Van. Fair,
I,
languid to sting, he had the more venom refluent in his blood. G. Eliot, Mid., Ill-, Ch. XXXII, 226. The eight or nine weeks' change of scene renders him the fresher and the more capable of work when he returns. Escott, England, Ch. I, 15. don't seem to be any the wiser, have passed the Higher Standard, but Rudy Kipl., The Gadsbys, 12. Note the idiom in: a) Why, then, don't stand as if you was VII. afraid, woman; who's the wiser? Dick., Christm. Car. 5, IV, 92. (= Dutch Wie weet er iets van?) We went away to Germany together, and no one was a bit the wiser. G. Du
Too
Maurier, Trilby, II, 189. Heartily wishing I could be quietly dropped overboard and so come to an end Mrs. Craik, A Hero, 6. at once without anybody's being the wiser. could not imagine what it was all about at first, and I was not much the
I
wiser, even
ft)
when
her
Fanny
in
Punch.
to teach
him
how to learn, ... learning every word of his part herself, but without his much the forwarder. Jane Austen, Mansf. Park, Ch. XVIII, 172.
being
For not the less, nath(e)less, never the less and none the less see Ch. XI, 8. For a further discussion of the idiomatic use of none and its variants before the comparative see Ch. XL, 143, a.
is sometimes omitted, apparently for the sake measure or the rhythm of the sentence. Yes, it is sweet to be Awaited, and to know another heart Beats faster for our coming. Lewis Morris. (Compare: 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark Our coming, and look brighter when we come. Byron, Don
VIII.
The adverb
the
of the
Juan,
I,
CXXIII.)
Burns was
of
it.
In IX. the following quotation yet has approximately the same function as the. How much Hath Phoebus woo'd in vain to spoil her cheek, Which glows I, lviii. yet smoother from his amorous clutch! Byron, Childe Har.
! |
41.
times a person animal or thing exceeds express another as to the intensity of a certain quality the English uses the same turns of expression as the Dutch; i. e.
:
To
how many
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
507
a) a comparative preceded by a multiplicative: He's about twenty times stronger than I am. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud.,
II,
b) a positive preceded
He
42,
is
as.
the measure by which a person, animal or exceeds another as to the intensity of a quality, either
precede
or
In the latter
case they are always preceded by the preposition by; they precede, by is only used with superlatives.
i.
but
when
half.
The
other's
economy
in selling
it
to
Sher.,
He was
man
than
man,
should say, by ten thousand pound. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXVI, 283. This gave her more trouble by half than many people take to earn a good income. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. II, 20. 284. He is older by two years. Mason E n g. G r a m. u Three turns of the wheel left him richer by twenty pounds. Rudy. Kipling, The Light that Failed, Ch. Ill, 33. * The boy is younger than he by five years. Mark Twain Pudd'n head
Tom
Wilson,
** He
ii.
12.
is
more than
I,
Ch. Reade,
It is
never
on the
tallest hill
1. ,
105.
Note.
To
I
By
not
is
lessen by a third.
Webst.
Diet. (=
the
by any circumstance. Scott, longer or make shorter.) The fugitive had survived his brother by several months. Graph., 1889, 337. lived longer than.) (
will to
add
or diminish
narrative
43.
A frequent intensive both of comparatives and superlatives, denoting an indefinite large measure by which any person, animal or thing, exceeds another as to the intensity of a quality, is the adverbial much. (Ch. XL, 95, d).
i.
British
India is a pretty big appanage of the English crown, but British Africa promises to be a much bigger. Graph. On our side a Reciprocal Preference would have become much harder to
devise.
Times,
is
ii.
the greatest commoner in England. Swift, Journ. Stella, XLII. It is much the genteelest attitude into the bargain. Sher., Riv., V, 2, (280). He writes something like you, but yours is much the best. Thack., Pend.,
The
Secretary
much
to
I,
The
quasi-historical part of the work contains much the fullest notice of Arthur's military exploits. W. Lewis Jones, King Arthur, Ch. I, 14. It was the eyes that were so much the most expressive feature in his face.
T. P.'s
Weekly,
508
CHAPTER XXX,
I.
43.
Note
by by far, when preceding a comparative; mostly replaced by by far, when following a comparative or a superlative; regularly replaced by by far when following a superlative. * He was i. far more eager than any of his companions. W, Black, The
Prince Fortunatus, Ch. VIII. This year the epidemic has been far more severe than in 1910. Times, No. 1811, 743d. The Canadian decision is something far deeper than a verdict on an economic dispute. lb., No. 1813, 782d.
The victory of his opponents after twenty years of Opposition is far more than the victory of a party or a cry. lb. ** The other boy, who was two years older and by far bigger than he, had by far the worst of the assault. Thack., Henry Esm. I, Ch. VII, 67. To have matched our fair cousin with young 'Twere better by far
,
|
New
ii.
iii.
Scott, Mar mi on, V, xr. better-natured missile and then exchanging a facetious snow-ball far than many a wordy jest. Dick., Christm. Car. 5 Ill, 59. You will find it better far to choose the best man among you, and let him demand. Ch. Kinosley, The Heroes, II, iv, 156. fulfil the duties which * Had he been able to carry out his own policy, he would have been by
Lochinvar.
*
Now
far the greatest minister that England has ever seen. Lit. World. After C. B. by far the most conspicuous outstanding Minister is John Burns. Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 132. I think the Lower House by far the greatest blow to a happy married life. Oscar Wilde, An Ideal Husband, II. By far the most important is Mr. Gosse's sketch of Swinburne. E n g. Rev., No. 50, 331. ** The best and far the largest part of his work is prose. Saintsbury,
Nineteenth Cent.,
Three patterns
the cheapest.
iv.
Ch.
II.
of saddlery,
English, Indian and Austrian were sent out, all Indian pattern having the advantage of being far
of
Times.
them
all.
Our
service
term
is
Times.
b)
less colloquial,
chiefly
more rarely before attributive comparatives. Far and away, evidently formed by hendiadys from far away, is much the more
frequent form.
i.
The
*
delight
Mad. D'Arblay,
Early Diary,
ii.
187. i)
The
ought
to
Punch,
**
The Century Dictionary bids fair to be far and away the largest, and best general and encyclopaedic dictionary of the English language. Athen. Of the actors Lieutenant G. N. was far and away the best. Punch.
c)
(by) a long chalk, by (long) chalks, only in colloquial language: by long chalks appears to be the ordinary form. i. As regards the body of water ... the Indus ranks foremost by a long chalk.
De Quincey. 2 )
Murray.
2)
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
ii.
509
first.
Her second haul was a better one by long chalks than her
Ch. XXI.
(?)
Miss
Providence.
**
Alured's steed
They whipped and they spurred, and was by long chalks the best.
But Sir
Ingoldsby Leg. 2
He
his glove on the parquet with the remark that, if anybody present wasn't by long chalks the prettiest girl in the room, well Lady he knew what he could do about it. Punch, 1912, 17 July, 50.
somewhat
of
la).
Murray.
is
the
best by
all
odds
Chamb. Journal
in the
(Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5219,
e)
These companies are to-day by all odds the greatest power of Rev., CXCVI, 4196. (by) a long way, apparently unusual.
i.
world. Rev.
The
ii.
made a speech too a jolly good one; better than Parkinson's by a long way. Punch, 1912, 17 July, 506. There has been no difficulty at all in awarding the prize. N, N. is a long way first Westm. Gaz., No. 5027, 6c
President
really,
after the Latin facile princeps, but and occasionally before a comparative.
Lord Rosebery
5261
,
is
Gaz., No.
,
Westm.
Individually, he (sc. Mr. Balfour) was easily No. 471 6176. ** Harvard has easily the finest gymnasium (Harp. Mag., 1883 Nov. 997). i)
, ,
T. P.
world.
'
Weekly,
W. Blackie
in
the
ii.
The
is
chief
Insurance Act.
easily the
issues in the East Edinburgh by-election are Home Rule and the If question time statistics are a trustworthy guide, the latter
quotations illustrating each word is a familiar feature of the Dictionary, in which it easily surpasses all competitors. Athen., 4446, 33a. M. Mengelberg is known to be a fine interpreter of Strauss's music, and his clear, powerful rendering of 'Also sprach Zarathustra' showed that as such
of
Compare
Times,
No. 1831,
81c.
he
is 'facile
princeps'.
In
lb.,
truth,
,Cur.
might have been expected. Dick., Old Ch. L, 1826. The article aroused a great deal more interest and attracted far more Hor. Hutchinson (Westm. Gaz., attention, than I had any reason. to hope. No. 6117, 3c).
behold
her
lord
that
night, than
Shop,
.
h)
many
It
times:
Oxenham,
is
Two lone women are many times Great-heart Gillian, Ch. XIV, 99.
difficult to
John
always
we
perplexed.
II.
Bookman,
estimate literary values; but call dramatic, the difficulty No. 253, 58a.
Other intensives of some interest are: Still and yet, mostly immediately before or after comparatives. Metre or rhythm sometimes causes these adverbs to be shifted to other
places.
i.
.
still
greater.
Me as.
for
Me as.-,
V,
8.
Murray.
.i
510
***
benefit of
ill!
now
find true
That
better is
by
evil still
made
better.
Shak.,
Son., XCX.
ii.
But poorly rich, (he) so wanted in his store,! That, cloy'd with much, he pineth still for more. Id., Lucrece, 98. * It is not only for the sick man, it is for the sick man's friends that the Doctor comes. His presence is often as good for them as for the patient, and they long for him yet more eagerly. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XV, 154. We cannot doubt that her place (sc. that of the "Libert^") will be filled, as soon as may be, by a yet more powerful naval unit. Times, No 1813, 783c. ** In this respect his acquaintance with Italian opened him yet a wider range. Scott, Wav., Ch. 111,31a. Foggier yet and colder. Dick. C h r s t m. C a r.&, I.
, i
very, before superlatives: When the pheasants came, which the Major praised as the very finest birds he ever saw, her Ladyship said they came from
Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVII, 176. Admiral Bowster stared his very hardest. Miss Braddon,
Logwood.
My
First
Happy
the
Christm.
44. In
(Stof.,
Handl.,
1,70).
superlative
in the
meaning
See whe'r
of
most
Jul. Caes.
I,
1,
76.
Milton II Penseroso, 12. The bright blue sky of Rome, and the effect of the vigorous awakening spring in that divinest climate, and the new life with which it drenches the spirits even to intoxication, were. the inspiration of this drama. Shelley, Prom. Unb., Pref. A surface In clearest air ascending, showed far off All the northern downs dappled o'er with shadows flung From brooding clouds. Wordsw., Ex curs., I, 4. And first with nicest skill and art Perfect and finished in every part, A little model the Master wrought. Longf., The Building of a Ship, 17. The Queen's eye, however, was her own; and pity, goodness, sweet sympathy, blessed it with divinest light. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XX, 268. A stronger lens reveals to you certain tiniest hairlets, which make vortices for these victims. Q. Eliot, Mid., I, Ch. VI, 41. owed her deepest gratitude. El. Glyn, Ref 1. of A mb r., Ill, Ch. V, 320. had quickly ripened into closest intimacy. The friendship with Lushington Hallam Lord Ten., Ten. and his Friends, 91.
Hail, divinest
Melancholy
Note
In
fell
I
I. An ordinary superlative preceded by the definite has the value of an absolute superlative.
article, often
the
state of
Rome,
little
Ha ml.,
man
was
letter
valued a
and
The
II.
other accomplishments unaccompanied by that. 1 ) written in the kindest terms. Kath. Tynan, Johnny's Luck.
of
intensive
of forming an absolute superlative is by means adverbs of degree very, highly, largely etc. Also the
superlative most
l
often
employed
Kruisinga,
Gram,
of
Pres.-Day Eng.,
609.
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
Finally
511
Thack.
(he)
offer.
e n d.
I ,
is
of
of
the
a word-group consisting
superlative, as in:
Although the court was of the narrowest, the houses opposite were mere phantoms. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, 1,5. Inside the shop was of the roughest. Mrs. Ward, Da v. Grieve, I, 311. Spear-heads of the finest, swords of the stoutest. Walt. Bes., London, I, 46. His whole attire is of the frowsiest. Graph. The information he picked up in that country was of the slightest. Punch, No. 3729, 520.
Occasionally
IV.
we
find this
word-group followed by a positive: El. Glyn, Refl. of Ambr., II, Ch. IX,
in
187.
Ch.
XXXI,
33, b: English is
easiest of languages, in which the generalizing definite article is suppressed before a plural noun preceded by a superlative of, has the value of an absolute superlative.
45.
The comparative may, in a manner, be said to be used absolutely, when it approximately expresses the same meaning as rather or
very -f positive, as in: Tis dangerous when the baser nature comes
points
|
Between the pass and fell incensed Of mighty opposites. Haml. V, 2, 60. (= those of rather inferior courage and address.) Hark, how each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs to the torrent's aweful voice beneath! O'er thee, oh King! their hundred arms they wave, Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breath. Gray, The Bard, I, ft But in the fishersman's cottage There shines a ruddier light. Longfellow,
|
Twilight,
Then
,
II.
the great stars that globed themselves in.Heaven; The hollower bellowing ocean and again The scarlet shafts of sunrise but no sail. Ten. En. Ard., 694. He (sc. Wycherley) was, indeed, a worse Congreve. Mac, Com. Dram., (578a). The following lists comprise all the strong verbs that occur in the texts given in this book, together with several others of the commoner ones. Sweet, A. S. P r i m. , 24. The mist, like a fleecy coverlet, hiding every harsher outline. Hal. Sutcl., Pa m. the Fiddler, Ch. I, 1.
I I
In
it
may have
1 .
positive,
Helpe then, O holy virgin chiefe of nine, Thy weaker novice to perform thy will! Spenser, Faery Queene, Prol., I, ft
46.
The use
the
of
mountain
==
such forms as the topmost mountain for the top of is due to classical influence. Thus s u m m u s
poor men of your sort) to Tiber banks, and weep your till the lowest stream Do kiss the most exalted shores
|
mons
tears
j
culmen montis.
(sc. all the
Draw them
of
all.
Jul. Caes., I, 1, 64. A drawer impending o'er the rest Half open in the topmost chest, Of depth enough and none to spare, Invited her (sc. the cat) to slumber there. Cowper,
!
|
The Retired
(Enone,
10.
Cat,
HI.
Behind the valley topmost Gargarus', Stands up and takes the morning.
Ten.,
512
47. In
in
CHAPTER XXX,
47,
Early Modern English we sometimes find the superlative used connection with a word-group of an excluding import: the greatest of captains since born, a man the strongest of his sons, the greatest error of the rest, the best of all other medicines,
the best medicine
of
This
Of
the greatest error of all the rest. Mids. all other affections it is the most importune.
is
So passed they naked on, nor shunned the Light thought no ill:, So hand in hand they passed,
I
Of
God
or angel,
for they
That ever
\
since
in love's embraces met; Adam the goodliest man of men since born His sons, the fairest of her daughters Eve. Par. Lost, IV, 319-324. It (sc. the Sentimental Comedy) is of all others the most easily written. Goldsmith (Eighteenth Cent. Lit., Clar. Press, 1909).
I
it
S.
in the following quotations, in which excluding word-group seems to be used erroneously. For further discussion see Ch. XL, 11, Obs. IV.
the
Macb. V, 8, 4. rejoice to say that the young man, whom of all others particularly has left Bath. Jane Austen, North. Abbey, Ch. XXVII, 208.
Of
I
all
men
else
abhor,
that
There was no particular reason to expect that he should be irregular on particular day of all others. Mar.Crawf., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. XV, 277.
CHAPTER
XXXI.
THE ARTICLE.
FORM.
1.
As
the,
in
Dutch there are two articles in English: the and the indefinite article a or an.
definite article
2.
The definite article has but one form in the written and printed language; but it is pronounced in at least three different ways, i. e. with the e as the ee in see when full-stressed, with the e as in the second syllable of picnic when unstressed and followed by a vowel and with the e as in the second syllable of father when unstressed and followed by a consonant. Sweet, N. E.
,
Gr.,
1130.
I.
Modern English and, archaically, in later poetry, shortened to th before vowels and h, as in th' enemy, th' hilt, and even before other consonants, as in th' world, where the w was probably dropped. Compare Present English he'll for he will, he'd for he would. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 1129; Jespersen, Progr.,
In Early
Note
is
the
often
i.
199; Matzn., Eng. Gram. , I, 340. Th'one sweetly flatters, th' other feareth harm. Shak., Rape of Lucr., 172. If he should speak o' th' assignation, I should be ruined. Farquhar, The
3
Recruiting Officer,
111,2,(294). . Th! applause of list'ning senates to command, Their lot forbad. Elegy, 61. (Thus throughout the works of this poet.) In th' olden time Some sacrifices ask'd a single victim. Byron. 1 )
. .
|
I
Gray,
ii.
"Thou
I
hast not,"
quoth
th'
miller,
"one groat
in thy purse."
The King
of Mansfield, V (Percy, Rel., VIII, xxi). changed o' th' sudden from the most fickle lover to the most constant husband in the world. Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer, III, 1, (288). Ay, there's a pattern for the young men o' th' timesl Id., The Constant
Couple,
In
(44).
the
t
th or
i.
language of the uneducated the practice of curtailing the into has not yet become extinct,
missis
is in
My
One day,
i)
th'
labour, and, for the love of God, step in while I run for Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. Ill, 17. butcher he brings us a letter fra George. lb., Ch. IV, 28.
she's fearful bad.
MStzn.
Eng.
G r a m.3,
340.
II.
H.
33
514
ii.
CHAPTER XXXI,
girls
2.
But the
taught regularly
their share.
II.
were intensely shy and reserved. As "t vicar's daughters" they in the Sunday-school, and a certain amount of visiting fell to Flora Mason The Brontes, Ch. VI , 33.
,
The forms
other,
that
the
tother (t'other) and the tother (the t'other) have arisen from in which that represents the old neuter definite article. When
had become the usual form for the three genders, that other and its correlative that one (the w now heard in one was not developed before
the 15 th century) kept their ground for some time. Owing to the gradual beginning of initial vowels the / was then understood to belong to other
and one, which gave rise to the tother and the tone. In an analogous manner the n of the indefinite article has joined itself to some words with initial vowel in some dialects. In Whitby (Yorkshire) apron, aunt and ointment are severally represented by nappron, naunt and nointment. In newt from ewt, a variant of evet or eft, and in nickname from eke-name, the n has found its way in literary language.
18 th century tother or tother was very common in colloquial innumerable instances being found in Swift, Addison, Steele, English, Lady Montagu, etc. In the second half it became more and more vulgar, and at the present day it is only heard from the uneducated. Franz,
In
the
E. S., XII
and XVII;
id.,
Shak. Gram. 2
,
269;
2 I, 340; STORM, Eng. Phil. 779; LANNERT, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Ace, V, B, 1; Jespersen, Elementar-
e.
g.
your
And so
and by
bifel,
that
in
the tas
(=
Thurgh-girt
I
(=
pierced
through) with
many
a grevous blody
I
(=
in
due place),
Bothe
in
wounde, Two yonge knightes ligging by oon armes, wroght ful richely, Of whiche
\
ii.
(= was called) that oon And that other knight hight Palamon. Chauc, Cant. Tales, Knightes Tale, 156. No man may serve two lordis, forsothe ethir he shal haat the toon, and love
two, Arcita hight
the
tother;
other
tothir.
Wycliffe,
not proved
Matth.,
VI, 24.1)
... is
0' the f other side, the policy of those crafty swearing rascals worth a blackberry. Troil. and Cres. V, 4, 8.
,
^r
iii.
serjeant, I shall see who is your captain by your knocking t other. Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer, 111,2(300). "What's the tother name?" said Sam. Dick., Pickw. II, 47. 2) When you mentioned the t other's name, you see he couldn't stand it. Virg., Ch. I, 6.
Now,
down
the
Thack.,
I'll
lean upon one crutch and fight with tother. Coriolanus, I, 1, 246. She vaunted 'mongst her minions t'other day, The very train of her worst Was better worth than all my father's lands. Henry VI, B, wearing gown
|
!
I,
1,
246.
A young
and
poet
is liable to
the
same
vanity
the great
man who
woman who
looks kindly
upon tother, are both of them in danger of having the favour published with the first opportunity. Conoreve, Love for Love, Dedication. When her love-eye was fixed on me, tother, her eye of duty, was finely obliqued. Sher., Riv. IV, 3.
,
i)
780.
lb., 779.
THE ARTICLE.
,
515
There's a barrow t'other side the hedge. Dick., Pickw. Ch. XIX, 163. Will, what a pity it was you had not George, instead of f other, to your hand! Thack., Virg., Ch. LXI, 630. We saw the Scotch play, which everybody is talking about, t'other night,
lb., 631.
(Thus very frequently in this work.) "Who's t other man, then?" said Mrs. Tall.
Hardy,
Madding Crowd,
iv.
Let
me
IV, 3, (314).
When
friend. 3.
the affairs of
advise with
my t other
The
i.
indefinite article has two forms a and an the former being used before a consonant-sound, the latter before a vowel-sound. a man, a yard, a ewe, a unit, a European, such a one, a o/zce-admired
beauty,
ii.
etc.;
etc.
Note
The
preservation
initial
of
the
n before vowels
(8) is
due
to the
gradual beginning of
vowels.
Jespersen,
Elementarbuch
course, also used before silent h, i. e. before heir, honour, honest, hour, hostler (also spelled ostler) and their derivatives: an heir, an heiress, an honour, an honourable action, etc. Usage is divided before weakly aspirated h in unstressed syllables, but the ordinary practice is to keep the n. It must, however, be observed that Americans and speakers hailing from the North of England are said to aspirate this h distinctly, and this is often done also
6, 21.
by over-precise speakers from the south, especially ladies, who are anxious to avoid the taint of vulgarism attaching to the dropping of the aspirate. To these people the use of the shortened form of the
article
preferable.
Rippmann,
Sounds
of
Spoken E n g.
35.
There is no valid reason for substituting an for a before /i in syllables with secondary stress, as in a hippopotamus , a hypothetical clause. i. an historian [Freeman 1 )], an historical Arthur [J. S. Mill*)].
ii.
a hysterical
1 [Scott i)], a historical professor [Freeman )], a hysterical Eliot, Sil. Mam., II, Ch. XVI], a hypothesis [ib., II, Ch. XVII, 139], a hypothesis [Huxley 1 )], a historian [Macaulay 2)] a hereditary possession [Mac, Fred-, (6686)], a habitual drunkard [Annand., Cone. Diet., s. v. sot], a hotel [Jerome, Three men in a Boat, Ch. V, 52; Shaw Getting Married, I, (210)], a historian [W e s t m. G a z. No. 5329, 9c].
fit
manner
[G.
iii.
a hypothetical clause [Mason, Eng. Gram. 3 *, [R. C. Leslie, Sea-painter's log, 192 3)],
longer retained before sounded h than before any other consonant, the h being, perhaps, less strongly aspirated in earlier English than it is now. In Shakespeare a is the usual form,
III.
but the
l
opposite
is
Authorized Version
80, N.
(1611).
)
)
Murray. Murray,
2)
s. v.
Foels
Koch, Wis.
2.
Gram.,
horizontal,
516
CHAPTER XXXI,
the
3.
middle of the 18 th century the present practice of using a before h seems to have been observed by the majority of writers. Occasional instances of an before sounded h are, however, met with even in the latest English. 864 ff; Storm, Eng. Phil. 2 Sweet, N. E. Gr., Al. Shak. W. A. 1003; Schmidt, Wright, Bible Word-Book; Lex.;
By
sounded
Thun, Eng. Stud., VIII; Lannert, An Investigation into the Lang, of Rob. Crus., Ace id. I; Uhrstrom, Stud, on the Lang, of Sam. Richardson, 35. The following cutting from the Westm. Gaz. (Sat. Ed.), No. 6141, 46 may be acceptable:
,
"To
Sir,
the Editor of the "Saturday Westminster". I was sorry to notice, in the leading article of the
of
Westminster
yesterday, a solecism, general in America, but from which our first-class journals have usually kept themselves free, namely, putting the article a instead of an before such words as heroic. Euphony demands that in cases where the syllable beginning with h, even though aspirated,
Gazette
an and not a shall be used as the preceding article. a but an hotel; a history, but an historical novel; a hovel, say: hero, but an heroic action. The error, which is very distressing to a cultivated ear, no doubt arose from imperfectly instructed persons modelling their language on the precepts of a Grammar Primer instead of the practice
is
not accentuated,
Thus we
of
people of education and refinement. Yours faithfully, Francis W. Caulfield, B.A., Oxford." Interesting is the extract from a letter written by Hume to Robertson,
Thun (Anmerkungen zu Macaulay's History VI, Eng. Stud. VIII). "But what a fancy is this you have taken of saying always an hand, an heart, an head? Have you an ear? Do you know that this n is added before vowels to prevent the cacophony, and ought never to take place before h when that letter is sounded? It is never pronounced in these words: why should it be wrote? Thus I should say a history and an historian, and so you would too, if you had any sense. But you tell me that Swift does otherwise. To be sure there is no reply to that, and we must swallow your hath upon the same authority." * Humble was pronounced with the h mute down to the 19th century and, consequently, had an as the form of the indefinite article (Murray). An humble fugitive from Folly view. Sher., School for Scand. V, 3, (438). And (I) from their lessons (sc. from the lessons of the Dead) seek and find
quoted by
,
|
Instruction with
an humble mind.
A correspondent in the 1894, in page 21 observes that Parliament still presents an humble address to the Queen, but that Uriah Heep and his mother would have made this pronounciation impossible to the present generation, even if it had had any currency among educated speakers at the time when David Copperfield appeared.
Compare the following passage: "I am well aware that am the umblest
"let
I person going," said Uriah Heep, modestly; where he may. My mother is likewise a very umble person. We live in a numble abode, Master Copperfield, but have much to be thankful for. My father's former calling was umble. He was sexton". Ch. XVI, 117a.
III.
the other be
i.
An horn (Chauc, Cant. Tales, Prol., 116), an hundred crowns (Taming of the Shrew, V, 2), an humble heart (Jul. Caes. III, 1, 35), an Hebrew
,
THE ARTICLE.
517
11,5,57); an hill (Bible, Matth., V, 14), an an hundredfold (ib., XIII, 8), an hundred words (Spectator, I), an hundred realms (Goldsm., Trav. 34), an hundred years (Scott, Marm. vm), an hero's eye (id., Lady, II , VI, Intr. xxn), an hundred miles (Lytton, Night and Morn., 33), an heresy (id., Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 10), an hospital (Nuttall, Eng. Diet, s. v.
house
(ib.,
(Two Gentlemen,
X,
12),
lazaret).
ii.
Exodus, XXV,
10),
,
a hairy man
29).
(id.,
Gen., XXVII,
11),
Jeremiah,
XXIII
form an is also occasionally met with in Present English whether stressed or unstressed, and before one. This is keeping up the tradition of Earlier English, in which u was pronounced as a falling diphthong as in the Dutch nieuw, and the lipback consonant was not heard in one. Abbot, Shak. Gram. 3,
IV.
full
The
before u or eu,
80;
Franz, Shak.
id.,
Gram. 2
1137;
,
200;
N. E. Gr..
270; Sweet, Sounds of Eng., Lannert, An Investig. into the Accid. I; Uhrstrom, S t u d. o n the
,
35.
is
the
now
(Murray).
Sounds
i.
"To write an before such words is a gross mistake" (Rippmann, of Spoken Eng., 45).
an usurer's chain (Much Ado, II, 1, 197), an eunuch (Twelfth Night, I, 2, 56), an union (Ha ml., V, 2, 283), an uniformly good man (Rich., Pamela, IV, 140 !)) an universal good (Scott Brid. of Trier m. Pref.), an unanimous enthusiasm (Mac, Hist., Ch. I, 137), an universal
,
rout
ii.
(id.,
Fred.,
(697a)).
1 VIII, 313) ); Ch. Kingsley, Herew., 276, Browning, Soul's Trag. II; Jerome, Paul Kelver, 146; W. Mor-ris, The Earthly Par., Prol., la), many an of King Acris., 73a). Morris, The Earthly Par., The
,
Doom
is
Dick.,
I
law supposes that,' said Mr. Bumble 01. Twist, Ch. LI, 481. shall take a early opportunity of mentioning
the
of
'the
law
is
a ass
Ib.,
a idiot.
Ch.
't
it
to the board.
II,
25.
A aged woman
family of some such yours in Blackmoor Vale came originally from these parts, and that old ancient race. Hardy, Tess, III, Ch. XVII, 139. Once there was a old aged man over at Mellstock. Ib., 142.
ninety
.
.
told
me
that
name
as
were a
MEANING.
4.
The primary and most important function of both the definite and the indefinite article is to indicate that the thing of which we have formed a conception, is marked off or defined, i. e.
thought of within certain physical or imaginary outlines or limits. This must be understood thus. When there is no notion of defining, there is no room for either article; but, as the following discussions
!)
Uhrstrom, Stud.,
40.
518
will
CHAPTER XXXI,
show, there are many cases
in
45.
which one or the other
is
article is
absent,
conveyed by
the discourse.
5.
Besides
which
its primary function of marking off or defining, has in common with the indefinite article, the definite article has the secondary power of denoting:
this,
it
specialized,
we are speaking of, is (are) individualized or connected in our thoughts with (a) particular person(s), animal(s) or thing(s). This individualizing or specializing is mostly expressed by (a) word(s) used for the
i.
e.
purpose, but it is often indirectly indicated by the context, or even left unexpressed altogether, as being readily underIn the function here described the stood or unimportant.
definite article is practically a weak determinative, i. The wine which he drank was sour,
ii.
He was armed
right hand, the the rapier with
I
with a rapier and a dagger, the rapier he held in his 126. (i.e. dagger in his left. Mason, E n g. Gram.si, which he was armed, etc.)
is
the flower.
Murray,
(i.
e.
plucked.)
iii.
And God
the light, that it was good: And God called the light
and there was light. And God saw and God divided the light from the darkness. Day, and the darkness he called Night.
Gen.,
The
air
3-5.
full
(i.
was
e. the light that he had created.) of the sweet smell of the hay. Thack.,
Sam. Titm.
(i.
e.
the
air
of a certain
district;
the
When
Dick.,
vessels
are
Chuz.,
about to founder, the rats are said to leave 'em. Ch. XVI, 133a. (i. e. the rats that are in them.)
is
The Queen is still in London, (i. e. the Queen of England.) The bride is dressed, (i. e. the bride who is in our midst, who
to be married, etc.) Observe the idiom in:
going
They were
No. 5382, 2c. be hanged or shot or die at the stake beloved lord would but give them the word. lb.
,
Westm. Gaz.
willing
to
if
their
Note
I. Things that are single in their kind, such as world, sun, universe, etc., although not, of course, admitting of individualizing in the same sense as others, may yet be thought of in relation to other conceptions. Their names are, therefore, preceded *by the
definite article
II.
under the same conditions as ordinary class-nouns. that classifying adjuncts (Ch. IV, 1) do not imply any notion of defining, and are, accordingly, of no inIt
may be observed
as
usual,
distracted
in
the
energies of Northumbria.
Green,
Short Hist.
Blue ink
is
not so
much
early, wise
Lit.
is
World.
that
One
of
his
opera
chance
to the
human
voice.
Lond. News,
THE ARTICLE.
III.
519
on the other hand,
Individualizing
or
specializing
adjuncts,
(4)
made
to the
adequate
Durbar
traffic.
fining may be absent in an individualizing adjunct. At one end of Tynemouth a new building has been constructed, with adjacent pleasure-grounds and picturesque walls; it is a winter garden and aquarium,
by the inhabitants of the place on ground which is given them by the benevolent despot of the district, the Duke of Northumberland, for a nominal rent. Escott, Eng. Ch. Ill, 30. Mr. Summer was mistaken in concluding that love of slavery and hatred of the
built
,
Union dictated the foolish things that were often said and the unrightful things c were sometimes done by England. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XXIV, 375. The story of his hair-breadth escape, and how it was thought of her that had nerved him to endurance, would move her he was sure. John Oxenham,
that
Great-heart Gillian,
inquiries No. 1814, 799d.
Visitors
From
made
at the India
appears that
[etc.].
Times,
. .
from Europe will be well advised to obtain, as soon as may be, handbook of information on the Dehli Durbar railway. lb. Readers who appreciate this paper, may give their friends an opportunity
the official
of
seeing a copy.
lb.
The absence
the
specializing
II
when
Obs.
and
let
III),
root of empire. Nineteenth Cent., No. CCCXCXVI, 258. us rush to the conclusion that treaty law and international obligations Westm. are useless, because they break down under some emergencies. Gaz., No. 4961, lb. The only safe hypothesis for us, to whom sea-power is vital, is that what a competitor can do, he will do or may do. lb., No. 4961, lc.
Family
life is the
Do
not
b)
that the
conception
we
have formed
is
generalized.
Ch. XXIX,
Sweet,
N. E. Gr.,
Auto-
biography,
ii.
342.
die. Ch. Kingsley, Hypatia, Ch. II, 66. an instrument for indicating the pressure of steam in a
'
Hi.
The steam-gauge
boiler.
is
Webst.
"<
^-
iv.
As
the
I.
Germans
Westm. Gaz.
Note
specialized
conception
may
in
its
turn
be generalized.
(Ch. XXIX, 14a, Note I.) The African elephant is taller than the Indian. The care which covers the seed of the tree under tough husks and stony cases, provides for the human plant the mother's breast and the father's house.
Emerson,
II.
Domestic Life
(Eliz.
Jane
Irv.,
Lit.
Read.,
111,238).
generalized conception must not be confounded with an indefinite number of individuals of the same class indicated by a singular noun preceded by the definite article, as in The king went out to hunt the
wild boar.
I
a.
Eilert
Ekw all
in Eng.,
4.
520
III.
CHAPTER XXXI,
5.
conception generalized sometimes approximates to a conception that is single in its kind. Thus in the following sentence the field representing a generalized conception, and the air and the water indicating conceptions single in their kind, are understood in
of
thing
the
same way:
in the sports of the field, the air, and the water, of his friend Winkle. Dick., Pickw., Ch. I, 3. is
that the
meant
of
whatever
article
is
by
I
the
In
this
function
the
definite
stress.
Ant. C 1 e o p. IV, 6, 30. the ablest, the most celebrated, the highest in rank, the highest in fortune, of all the fraternity. Mac, Ess., Clive, (535a). 270. He is the pianist of the day. Onions, Adv. Eng. Synt., This hero, so well-known that his name need not be mentioned, because he is
am
and
Clive
was eminently
the
Nabob,
who should he be except Siegfried? Vernon Lee, of Xanten (Westm. Gaz., No. 4961,36). The Young Men's Christian Association would not deny that humility is a virtue. It is because there are some people who think it the virtue, that the row begins. Chesterton (II. Lond. News, No. 3677, 495c). "Good Housekeeping". The Magazine for the Home. Advertisement. Observe the use of the thing, as in: Miss Pole clutched my arm, and begged me not to turn, for "it was not the thing". What "the thing" was I never could find out, but it must have been something eminently dull and tiresome. Mrs.
the champion, the victor
The Victor
Gaskell,
Cranford,
He
to
be a
Sam. Titm.
Ch.
II,
22.
Quest.
it
Why was
Answ. Because
was
Punch.
Note I. This full-stressed the differs but little from another, which has the force of marking that of all possible specimens or varieties a particular one of special importance or significance is meant.
We
was
spoke of many subjects, but not of the subject,
nearest to
(i.
e.
the subject
which
my
heart, etc.)
This is also the force of the definite article in the Shakespearean expression to die the death when, what is mostly the case, it is applied to the death inflicted by law.
She hath betray'd me, and
Either
I,
to
die
the
death or to abjure
Ant. and Cleop., IV, 14, 26. d s. , For ever the society of men.
1, 65.
For God commanded, saying, Honour thy father and mother; and, He curseth father or mother, let him die the death. Bible, Matth., XV, 4.
II.
that
Strong-stressed the
it?"
may be used
absolutely.
pushing the bottle towards him. up, and having surveyed and smelt it, said with extraordinary ex"The?" "The," returned the instrument-maker. Dick., Domb.,
"All well,"
III. When it has become conventional to denote a particular person animal or thing in the above way, the definite article loses its strong stress, while the noun assumes the character of a proper name. (23.)
THE ARTICLE.
This
521
is the case in The Lord (= God), The Bible, the Scriptures the Nativity, the Conquest, the Reformation, the Peninsula, etc. She thinks of nothing but the Isle of Wight, and she calls it the Island, as if there were no other island in the world. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park, Ch. II, 17.
When London
IV.
is
mean
the
Thames.
GUnth., Leerb.,
To emphasize the notion of particular importance the noun sometimes followed by an adjunct made up of of + the plural
same noun.
is
of the
the question
of questions
all
in Russia.
Rev. of Rev.,
their
eminent characte-
(7, d.)
have
this function
She was quite the woman of business, and always judged for herself. Mrs. Gaskell, Cranford, Ch. XIII, 238. I was going on behind the screens, when a gentleman (quite the gentleman, I can assure you) stepped forwards and asked if I had any business he
could arrange for me. lb., Ch. IX, 167. He is quite the gentleman. Lytton, Night and Morning, 315. Babcock was too much the gentleman to mention it again. Anstey, Fallen Idol, Ch. XVI, 209. Compare with this also the construction in: Enrico was of the Germans, German. Edna Lyall, Knight-Errant, Ch. 1, 8.
6. a)
The
definite
article
neuter
demonstrative
article.
a definite
the descendant of the Old English pronoun pcet, which was used also as Even in Present English the definite article
is
of
demon-
me, Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me into this And swim to yonder point? angry flood, Upon the word, Accoutred as I was, I plunged in. Jul. Caes. I, 2, 104. {the this.) He meditated curse more dread, And deadlier, on the clansman's head, Who, summon'd to his chieftain's aid, The signal saw and disobeyed. Scott, Lady, III, xi, 6. (The article before clansman's head is deter| |
'
is
demonstrative.)
the eager
And from
upon
his place
on the coach-roof
the city, with the sort of longing desire which young soldiers feel the eve of a campaign. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXV1I1, 297.
In some combinations the use of the definite article instead of the demonstrative pronoun has become the rule. Thus in:
for the day. The hammering of the Steam-Boiler Works had stopped for the day. Walt. Bes., The Bell of St. Paul's. upon the instant. Light flashed up in the room upon the instant. Dick., Christm. C ar 5 H> 33- (The meaning of this phrase passes into that of at the same instant, immediately. It has another meaning in: Important decisions which have to be taken on the instant, are not likely to offer no
-
No
5388, 16c.)
522
of the kind.
ellenbogen.
CHAPTER XXXI,
Wash.
say
67.
to the heiress of
,
Katzen164.
Sketch-Bk.
not
anticipate
16.
Spectre Bridegr.
anything
Needless
to
we do
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 5219,
at (for) the moment, i. At the moment it what incomplete appearance. II. Lond.
ii.
News,
He looked down upon the basket, which he had for the moment forgotten. C h u z. Ch. XXXVI, 285a. He cannot for the moment recall it to mind. Notes and Queries. For the moment we are over-supplied. Westm. Gaz., No. 5382, 2a. for the purpose, i. The young Count Von Altenburg had been recalled from the army for the purpose. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk., Spectre
Dick.
, ,
Bridegroom,
By an Order
ii.
155.
Council, passed for the purpose, he has been promoted Times. to the rank of an Admiral of the Fleet.
in
fiddler plunged his hot face into a pot of porter, especially provided for that purpose. Dick., Christm. Car.5, 11,46. where we all went together, every I occupy my place in the Cathedral, Sunday morning, assembling first at school for that purpose. Id., Cop., Ch. XVIII, 1326. at (for) the time. i. * There was a heavy gale at the time. A Ship
The
e e s b.
1,3).
at
High-
Dick.,
Cop.,
(She
crying).
had) her darlings about her (for the time neither quarrelling nor Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. I, 1.
The
"His head is low, and no man sadly Enoch answer'd her. cares for him. 1 think I have not three days more to live; 1 am the man". Ten., En. Arden. 897. (i. e. that man whom we are speaking about.)
Slowly and
>
b)
The definite article, as the descendant of the old instrumental case fty of the neuter demonstrative pat, is used adverbially before comparatives as in the more the merrier, the worse for
liquor.
Ch.
XXX,
40.
c)
function
of
definite
certain predicative superlatives and before adverbial superlatives, as in the actions of which we are the very proudest, he writes the worst, is hard to define. Ch. XXX, 3436.
before
7.
The
indefinite article has the special function of marking that our conception is one that has not yet been mentioned, and that it is not specialized. Its force may furthermore be:
a) that of a weak one, especially before the as in a foot high wait a minute.
:
,
names
of measures,
b) that of a There is a
to fortune.
weak some
or a certain as in:
men,
Which, taken
on
Jul. Caes., IV, 3, 218. Let a man go down with the proper messages, let a servant carry a note. Ch. II, 18. Thack., Virg. Once upon a time there was a youth named Kilwych. Now Kilwych set 274. out on a gray steed strong of limb. Onions, Adv. Eng. Synt.,
,
THE ARTICLE.
Note.
value
In
523
often
Early
especially in connection with certain. 2 3 355; MStzn., Eng. Gram. , 111,272. Franz., Shak. Gram. i. Gentle Lucetta, fit me with such weeds As may beseem some well-reputed of the
indefinite
|
11,7,43. A man is never undone till he be hanged, nor never welcome to a place, some certain shot be paid and the hostess say 'Welcome!' lb., II, 5, 6.
page.
c)
Two Gentleman,
weak any
as in:
till
that of a
I
ever paid me a particular attention, whom I would not III, 1, (391).' Sher., School for Scand. She was scrupulous in her devotions, good to the poor, never knowingly did anybody a wrong. Thack., Virg. Ch. IV, 37. An island is a piece of land surrounded by water. Onions, Adv. Eng.
Synt.,
175.
I.
Note
Compare with
stress,
differs
from
like any child. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Ch. XIX, 846. Shakespeare foresaw the difficulty of representing a merchant ... as executing a bond so hazardous in its conditions, that any child would shrink from signing it. Furness, Note to 'Merch. of Ven., I, I, 2'. (Macm. Eng. Clas.) He bathed her face with a care equal to any woman's. Eth. M. Dell, The
Way
Or,
to
it
of an Eagle,
I,
Ch. IV,
is
43.
there
were a sympathy
j
(sc. love),
Making
|
it
momentany
War, death or sickness did lay siege as a sound,! Swift as a shadow, short
| | |
Mids. Night Dream, 1,1, 141-144. Meeker than But the meek maid being to him Swiftly forbore him ever, any child to a rough nurse, Milder than any mother to a sick child. Ten.,
as any dream.
j
850-2.
Conversely the indefinite article sometimes has the value of strong any. There a dozen girls in this dead-alive neighbourhood, who are a thousand times prettier than you, and who can play, or paint, and all that, while you can't do a thing, and yet a fellow can't get you out of his head. Bar. von Hutten,
Pam,
Eng. Gram. 3
II.
Ill,
276,
Franz, Shak.
Gram. 2
352,
Anm.
I.
any, the indefinite article is sometimes hardly distinfrom the guishable generalizing definite article. (5, b.) Thus it is A lion is a beast of prey and difficult to see any difference between. The lion is a beast of prey. (The indefinite article before beast is a
As a weak
weak some.)
2 Compare MaTZN., Eng. Gram. Ill, 191. Similarly in be changed by the would hardly meaning
,
lost its pupil, and was glaring and spectral; but the other had Sketch-Bk. XXXII 359. a gleam of a genuine devil in it. Wash. Irv. Charles was more of a gentleman than a king, and more of a wit than
a gentleman,
i)
*)
I.
Schmidt, Eng.
Gram.,
304.
524
A
cigarette
CHAPTER XXXI,
78.
its
is for the trivial moments of life; a cigar for its fulfilments, in the pleasant comfortable retrospections; but in real distress a pipe is man's solving of a question, the fighting of a difficulty
eternal
solace.
130.
John Chilcote,
M.
P.,
Ch. XII,
li.
I was ever of opinion that the honest man who married and brought up a large family, did more service than he who continued single, and Vicar, Ch. I. only talked of population. Goldsmith Old and broken-down as he (sc. the horse) looked, there was more of the lurking devil in him than in any young filly in the country. Wash.
,
Irving,
Sketch-Bk.,
XXXII, 359.
By
disposition, perhaps, he
was more
Westm. Gaz.,
Thus
the
Note the varied practice in: Until pride be of a fool than of the sinner. Scott,
also of
in
subdued, there
is
more hope
the sup-
following
pression
either the indefinite or the generalizing definite article Note IX). See also the latter part of the first sentence on
John Chilcote,
and a cool head are usually man's best weapons. M. P., Ch. XV, 164.
Sometimes it is open to question whether the indefinite article be understood as a weak any or a weak one. Thus the following sentence is ambiguous: You are not listening to a word am saying. Oscar Wilde, Dorian
to
I
Gray,
IV.
Ch. V, 89.
of
meaning
a fellow,
(Ch.
XL,
195, a.)
d) to indicate that a person, animal or thing in characteristics is meant (5, d), as in:
their
emipent
So was
So is it now I am a man. Wordsworth. began; till he can defy wind and weather, range the woods and wilds, sleep under a tree and live on hunter's fare. Wash. Irv.,
it
when my
life
A man
is
never a man,
(Stof.,
Do If
Heyl.
I
Handl.,
I,
133).
I
But teach high thought, and amiable words And courtliness, and the desire of fame, And love of truth, and all that makes a man. Ten., Guin., 480Since the author of "Tom Jones" was buried, no writer of fiction among us has been permitted to depict to his utmost power a Man. Thack., P e n d. P r e f. (The author has man printed in capitals.)
,
Also in this function the indefinite article to a certain interchanges with the definite. (5, d.) This is shown by their alternative use in:
extent
Note.
When you durst do it, then you were a man; And, to be more than what Be so much more the man. Macb., I, 7, 57. you were, you would "You are too much a man of the world not to see with the eyes of the world. If other people think Sotherton improved, I have no doubt that you will." "I am afraid I am not quite so much the man of the world as
|
me
in
some
is
points."
Jane Austen,
Mansfield Park,
Old English an
,
The
indefinite
article
the
descendant of the
THE ARTICLE.
which was used both as a numeral and as the
525
Late
to
Even in indefinite article. Modern English a(n) often has practically the same value as the numeral one. The use of a(n) instead of one causes the sentence stress
be thrown forward on to the following noun, which, as unity is the prominent idea in our minds, seems to be contrary to sense. It is especially
frequent after:
1) the
He
(Ch. XL, 119, Obs. I.) dark empty house, with not a man, a woman, or a child, to say he was kind to me in this or that, and for the memory of one kind word I will be kind to him. Dick., Christm. Car.&, IV, 96.
negative not.
lay
in
the
2)
meaning
certain prepositions. In this combination a(n) often has the secondary of the same. For instances in Shakespeare see Abbot,
,
Shak. Gram. 3
at.
The
preposi-
Seven
tide
at
of
blow.
Andrew Lanq.
is
human progress
Sarah Grand,
He emptied
It
Pickw.,
I,
see
it
all
at a glance.
Byron,
Our Boys,
(12).
To
catch a hundred fish at a haul. Webst., s. v. haul. proud Death! What feast is toward in thine eternal cell, That thou so many princes at a shot So bloodily hast struck? Haml. , V, 2, 377. Martha ... told them ... how many hours she worked at a stretch. Christm.
| | |
Car.s,
Its
III, 72.
(sc.
of of
the
(Also, but less frequently (up)on a stretch, see below). Budget) rejection by the Lords would at a stroke reduce the
to
House
Commons
Westm. Gaz.
Murray.
long do you keep him out at a time? Dick., Pickw., Ch. I, 5. They saw that he sat for a few minutes at a time like one in a brown study. Id. Old Cur. Shop, Ch. XXIV, 91a. For months at a time (they lived) on the most amicable terms. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXVIII, 393. He had transmuted the subject at a touch. Mrs. Ward, Rob. E 1 sm. , I, 149.
,
How
in.
At
this
la
RpuMrs.
blique."
Times.
delightful!"
73.
"How
in
a breath.
Philips,
Bouverie,
They were
crying,
a breath.
Annie Besant,
Auto-
biography.
Loder realised in a glance that the most distinguished of women could wear such ornaments and not have her beauty eclipsed. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XIII, 142. In a word it was one of those unparalleled storms. Wash. Irv., The Storm-
Ship
of.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
I, 83).
You'll find
Pro v.
I,
1.
The gentleman of the profession ben't all of a mind. Sher., Rivals, We are of a mind once more. Id., School for Scand. III.
,
At Spa no two guests are of a nation. lb., II, 2. All their proceedings were of a piece with this demand. Ch. II, 232.
Mac, Hist.,
526
I
CHAPTER XXXI,
people
fads
of
8.
detest
with
their
who are always doing 'outr' things like that about no stays and Jaeger's woollen clothes.
.Ch. XIII, 110.
these princes
it's
all
of a piece
Edna Lyall,
Hardy Norseman,
The power
Swift,
*)
was much of a
on. They were both tall and their eyes were on a level. G. Eliot Mid., V, Ch. XLIII, 319. Ch. XL, 3196. I don't put myself on a level with you. Dick., Chuz. Our prudery in this respect is just on a par with the artificial blushes of a courtesan. Sher., Critic, I, 1. We always played seven hours on a stretch. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. I, 2. (Also, apparently with no appreciable difference (up)on the stretch, as in If he goes to London for months upon the stretch. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, III, 50. 2 ) Compare also: He then sleeps for six weeks on an end. Punch. (= a a n
,
een
to.
k).
He always succeeded
in
T.
P.
'
Weekly,
The
little
very gold and silver fish ...to a fish, went gasping round and round their world in slow and passionless excitement. Dick., Christm. Car.s, III, 61. (= not one fish excepted.) The monks were Danes to a man. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Ch. XXVI, 1086. Kath. If the men wavered at all, the women, to a woman, were on Johnny's side.
,
Tynan
Johnny's Luck.
my
1 1
without. Mrs. Bretton ... desired me to open which I did without a word. Ch. BrontE, V i
1 1
my
dresses;
Note
at.
I.
also used in
The following quotations may show that the numeral one some of the above collocations. Thus after:
not
is
You do
know what
Dick.,
it
is, -at
,
fascinating creature.
Pickw.
The appointment
of the Bishop York has startled many people. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 517a. These myriads of cows stretching under her eyes from the far east to the far west outnumbered any she had ever seen at one glance before. Hardy, Tess, III, Ch. XVI, 133. (Also in one glance: The young stranger, comprehending in one glance the result of the observation ... answered [etc.]. Scott, Quent. Durw.,
,
one blow, to be deserted by a lovely and Ch. XI, 89. of Stepney at one bound to the Archbishopric of
Ch.
If
II,
43.)
We
Go
Ch.
in-
with physical force, let us abolish the Navy altogether and save 32 000 000 at one stroke. Rev. of Rev., CCXIX, 232a. If the Peers are determined not to assent to the Licensing Bill in anything like its present shape, then it is better that it should be disposed of at one stroke.
we can dispense
G a z. a quantity of anything supplied at one time. Murray. Scripture subjects; such as I have never seen since in the hands of pedlars, without seeing the whole of Peggotty's brother's house again, at one view. Dick., Cop.,
m.
Ill,
156.
In
me must
Goldsmith
of.
Good-nat. man,
against
,
V.
He has conspired
Dick.
me,
226.
like
the
rest,
feather.
Chuz,
Ch.
Ill,
The Bishops who lately met at Lambeth, were of one mind with Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI, 311a.
i)
Trade Unionists.
Murray.
2)
Fluoel.
THE ARTICLE.
527
Compare
one man.
All
with
(he
Dick.,
western
and
II,
i. Mr. Pickwick and his followers rose as Ch. XXIV, 218. south-western England rose as one man^ Green, Short
:
above also
Pickw.,
Hist., Ch.
5, 82.
man
its 6.
lb.,
Ch. V,
4.
The camp
ii.
rose
to
as one man.
Bret Harte,
The Luck
of
Roaring Camp.,
They
iii.
(sc. the birds) will rise, when they finally do go, like one bird, will cross the sea in a large and various crowd [etc.]. Westm. Gaz., No.5454,3a.
She wondered by what gift he could be sleepless and saddlesore, serene and temperately gay all at the one time. Hal. Sutcl. The Lone
, ,
Adventure,
iv.
Ch.
II,
36.
it
it
She said in the same breath that Boldwood, and that she couldn't do
to
would be ungenerous not to marry save her life. Hardy, Far from
the
Madding Crowd,
v.
II.
Quesada, the conqueror of New Granada, ... cannot be named in the same breath with Vasco Nunes de Balbao. A t h e n. No. 4451 183a. That you should make fun of his infirmities and vulgarities in the self-same breath... is simply unendurable. James Payn, That Friend of Sylvia's. Instances of the indefinite article being used in the sense of the
,
numeral one or the same when no preposition precedes, seem to be very rare. The following is the only one to hand at the moment of
writing:
These
b)
foils
have
all
a length.
1.
V, 2, 276.
Sometimes the
pronoun.
find
it
indefinite
article
It
is
then
practically
in this
meaning especially:
expressions such as
after a fashion, for a time, in a manner, in
1) in certain
a)
/?)
a measure, in a sense, of a kind (sort), (up)on a day; have a way, to have a trick. * The i. Nationalists, indeed, have a policy, after a sort, though even they are not by any means agreed, either in their objects or in their
methods. Times. ** The hotel has
.
.
separate
traveller
is
done
Westm. Gaz.,
***
for
bedrooms and beds of a sort, and the more frequently "done") after a fashion.
3a.
The effect of the successes of Edward the First and of Henry the Fifth was to make France, for a time, a province of England. Mac,
Hist.,
I,
Ch.
I,
18.
Ebro the English won a great battle, which for a time decided the fate of Leon and Castile. lb., 19. Flying-fish =s a fish which can sustain itself in the air for a time by
On
means of the long pectoral fins. Annand., Stud. Diet. He complained loudly of thus being in a manner dispossessed of his territories by mere bugbears. Wash. Irv., Dolf. Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 114).
****
Torture in
Russia.
It
public
school
is
as
much
(in
licensed
as the knout
resist
it.
is in
would be ungentlemanlike
a manner) to
Thack.,
Van. Fair, I, Ch. V, 44. ***** Goodness in a measure 1 implies wisdom. Smiles, Charac, I, 8. ) ****** This was in a sense compulsory upon the writer. Mrs. Gask.,
Life of Ch. Bronte,
x )
403.
Murray,
s. v.
measure,
14, 6.
528
It
CHAPTER XXXI,
was
in
8.
ii.
a sense, the great event of his life EdnaLyall, Hardy Ch. IV, 39. In a sense it is true; in another sense it is false. Athen., No. 447, 676. (Here the indefinite is even used in contrast with another.) ******* He had, of course, 1 predecessors of a kind. Athen. ) He held convictions of a kind, but what these convictions were, nobody knew. Norr:s, Friend Jim.*) ******** It was upon a day a summers day. Byron, Don Juan, I, CH. in her bower Now on a day about the year 1054 Lady Godiva sat with her youngest son,... at her knee. Ch. Kingsley, Herew., Ch. 1, 9a. * Brown Major, had a trick of bringing up unpleasant subjects. Mrs.
!
Norsem.,
My
Wood, Orv. Col., Ch. VI, 94. ** The carrier had a way of keeping Dick., Cop., Ch. Ill, 146.
He had a way
and
then
leaving
his
head down,
of suggesting, not teaching putting things into them to work out their own problems.
my head,
Lytton,
that
some or a
certain could be
Sufficient doin most or all of the above collocations. cumentary evidence is not, however, to hand at the moment of writing to prove this. She was perhaps unconsiously wishful that he might in some measure be subject to her influence. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. I, 3. II. Sometimes the indefinite article would seem to be preferable to some, when the latter might be understood in the sense of some considerable. (Ch. XL, 178, Obs. II). Thus in the combination for a time.
propriety
III.
"Are they all brothers, sir?" inquired the lady who had carried the "Davy" or safety lamp. "In one sense they are, ma'm", replied Squeers. Dick., N i c h. N c k 1. Ch. VI 29a.
i ,
,
2)
before the proper name of a person preceded by a title. When the title is absent, one takes the place of a. (Ch. XL, 159.) She is engaged to be married to a lieutenant Osborne, a very old flame. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIV, 145. He inquired for a Mr. Maldon. Miss Braddon, Lady Audley's Secret,
I,
Ch. V, 57.
indefinite article often has the value of the some. (3840.) I find a knowledge of the Greek and Roman types of mind a help, not a hindrance to a study of the conditions of modern life. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 469, 578a. Of late years, the value of a knowledge of natural science has become generally indefinite
Before abstract
nouns the
numeral
in
Bookman,
No. 261,
103.
d)
Further pregnant meanings of the indefinite article may be observed in: 1) Scrooge was not a man to be frightened by echoes. Dick., Christm. Car., I, 20. (= a kind of (a) man, the word-group a man being a kind of prop-word. Ch. XL, 195, a.) 2) His habit is to regale his readers with four false quantities to a page. Mac,
Add.,
i)
(736a).
(=
to
each page.)
-')
X.
Roorda,
I,
17.
THE ARTICLE.
e)
529
The
sometimes found before a numeral (+ plural or to express an approximate estimate. This usage, which at one time was as common in English as it is in Modern Dutch, is now usual only when the numeral is preceded by good (Ch. XXVI, 17, a, Note II), and before many and few (Ch. IV, 6). See also Murray, s. v. A, adj. 2 2.
indefinite
to
article
is
noun)
remove
its
definiteness
/) What appears as an indefinite article now in such expressions as twice a day, is in reality a worn-down proclitic form of the Old English preposition an or on. It was at first used only before nouns denoting time, but, when its meaning as a preposition was no longer felt, it came also to be placed before other nouns denoting measure; as in a penny a mile, sixpence a pound, tenpence a hundred, so much a head. This distributive use of the indefinite article appears now as a modification of the numerical meaning. (7, a.) Compare Murray, s. v. A,
adj.-,
4;
,
prep.
Ill,
1
,
8,
b;
Sweet,
N.
E.
Gr.,
2046;
MaTZN., Eng.
I. The following quotations may show that other idioms with approximately the same meaning as that of the indefinite article in the above combinations, and corresponding to those used in Dutch, are current in English also: a) with the definite article: i. Wheat was at twenty shillings the quarter.
Gram. 2 Note
191.
Mac, Hist.,
ii.
I,
Ch.
Ill,
409.
in
Manitoba
in
Times.
yield of the district this year is 30 bushels to the acre. lb. of dirt in the Chicago atmosphere, at a height of 35 ft, is
Westm. Gaz.
iii.
Oxford were rowing at about 34 to the minute. Times, No. 1839, 2596. He bullied and punished me; not two or three times in the week, nor once or twice in the day, but continually. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. I, 5. Two or three evenings in the week he used to disappear mysteriously for several hours. Ch. Kingsley, Alt. Locke, Ch. VI, 68. He devotes one day in the week to receiving the widows and the orphans. Lytton, Rienzi, IV, Ch. I, 151. Twice in the week, however, under the graceful direction of Stella, there were public days at the deanery. D. Laino Purves, Life of Swift, 27. Give him ten drops of this in a little water, every thirty minutes; that is
to say twice in the hour.
How many
XI, 95.
4.
P) with the indefinite article: i. The trees blew steadfastly one way, never writhing round, and scarcely tossing back their boughs once in an hour. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXV. He comes in his cab twice or thrice in a week. Thack., Pend. II,
,
Ch. V, 51.
They (sc
in
the old bay posters) were drawing my aunt's yellow chariot, which she never went out but thrice in a year, d., Sam. Titm. ,
VIII, 91.
Ch.
My
day.
ii.
dear
girl
Dick.,
is
Bleak House,
to
has been to see us lately every day, sometimes twice in a Ch. LX, 500.
regale
his readers with four false quantities to
His habit
a page.
34
H.
English.
II.
530
y)
CHAPTER XXXI,
with each:
89.
Among the musical disciples who assembled, one evening in each week, to receive his instructions in psalmody, was Katrina van Tassel.
Wash.
Irv.
,
350.
6) with every:
of St.
Twice every Sunday did we march down the centre aisle Mary's church. Miss Braddon My First Happy Christ m.
,
(Stof.
ii.
Han
1.
66).
This medal
is to
be awarded once
is
Times.
frequently used in a sense similar to that of the above a, especially in language referring to the paying or receiving of money. In this combination day, month and year are and annum, mostly severally replaced by diem, * i. They begin, about fifty, to attend twice per diem at the polite churches and chapels. Fielding, Jos. An dr., I, Ch. VIII, 16.
II.
mensem
mensem rising by annual increments of Rs. 50 per mensem. A then., No. 4398, 145c. *** This unlucky page engaged in an evil hour at six pounds ten per annum, W3s a source of continual trouble to me. Dick., Cop., Ch. XL VIII, 3436. 130 per annum. Life Her (Lady Byron's) sole income at this time was of Byron (.Chamb., Childe Harold),
The
salary is Rs. 500 per
,
**
to Rs. 750
ii.
The works
5
s.
of
George Eliot...
in 19
Volumes.
per volume.
CabinetEdition.
writer suggests various methods of preventing waste of what is still the cheapest source of light per candle power. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 1716. 26 in 1871 to 25 in 1901. The production per head sank in Victoria from
The
lb.,
CCXXXI,
256o.
The
remuneration will be on a scale of 1 s. 6 d. per paper examined. Acad, and Lit. Mr. Wyndham promises us a tax of 2 s. per quarter on corn and flour.
Westm. Gaz.
USE.
9.
When
conceptions. are of a nature as described above, the definite or indefinite, is yet often suppressed. article, is sometimes simply a matter of arbitrary the suppression Though usage, and any attempt to account for it would often seem to be futile, yet it will be found that in the majority of cases there
our
whether
it.
the nature of
certain
its
limits, and cannot be accompanied by any specializing adjunct, so that there is no need for either article. This is the case with proper names when used in their ordinary
thought of within
function,
empire.
as in John is a lazy fellow, England is a mighty For those cases when proper names, owing to a peculiar
by either the
definite
or indefinite
The omission of the article is often extended to ordinary common nouns, when they are applied in a way which causes them to resemble proper names, as in Will you help me, father? There's father coming. For details see 16, 43.
THE ARTICLE.
b)
531
of
the
article
is
omitted
of an
(Ch.
XXIII,
16).
For
details see 44
2)
52.
the
character
indefinite
pronoun or
the
artfcle.
modification
often
entailing
to this,
the
loss
of
Thus we
find
because things and plenty are respectively synonymous with the indefinite it and much. For details see 5760.
c)
The
chief
specializing is function is to
vague, so that there is no call for a word whose announce the fact that the conception indicated by
in a specialized way. Thus we find he went for a walk, He was taken to hospital, because the specializing notions are but dimly thought of. For details see 15. d) The noun is part of an expression whose component parts are not thought of separately, but are understood as denoting a kind of unit.
the
After
dinner
Thus we grace,
e)
etc.
anchor,
these
to
change
countenance,
stand
for
to
expressions
one
idea.
say For
To
which make themselves felt in ordinary language, we may add the universal vis inertia?, i. e. the desire of saving time, space and trouble, which is especially prevalent in commercial language, and in a still higher degree in the language of telegrams and advertisements. The article being the part of speech, which of all others can be best dispensed with, it is but
the above causes,
literary as well as colloquial,
natural
bridge,
Thus for at foot of it should be the first to be dropped. tram-terminus and facing main entrance to palace, which is a portion of an advertisement, ordinary language would have at the foot of the bridge, the tram-terminus, and facing the main entrance to
that
the
f)
It
palace.
stands to reason that, when the noun is preceded by a modifier which, besides other functions, has the power of indicating specialization, there is no occasion to use the definite article. Thus we say this book, my book, John's book, not *the this book, *the my book, *'the John's book. Thus also the king's book, in which the definite article belongs
modifier, and where the use of an additional definite article modifier of the head-word alone would occasion an incongruous accumulation of articles. But there is no such reason to drop the
to
the
as
article
in
the
the periphrastic equivalent of the last-mentioned collocation: in which, on the contrary, its absence would
result in an impossible construction *book of the king. Similarly when an attributive genitive is modified by a demonstrative pronoun, a
possessive
brother's book,
definite article.
pronoun or another genitive, as in this boy's book, my my master's mistress's maid, usage invariably rejects the
In a collocation containing a classifying genitive (Ch. XXIV, 44, Obs. V), the definite article may, however, belong to the head-word:
532
The
than
CHAPTER XXXI,
ladies' umbrellas
911.
which I sold that day, fetched a higher price Compare also Sweet, N. E. Gr.,
g) Finally it must be observed that in verse the article, whether definite or indefinite, is often discarded, when it would interfere with the
measure.
i.
ii.
Sweetest nut has sourest rind. As you like it, 111 ,2, 115. There rode Full slowly by a knight, lady, and dwarf. Ten., Mar. of
|
Ger.,
187.
it is, for the same reason, sometimes used where ordinary prose would reject it. It is not that dread the death. Byron, Pari sin a, XIII.
Conversely
in verse,
He goes on Sunday
His hair
is
crisp,
to the Church. Longf. ,Vil. Blacksmith, V. and black and long, His face is like the tan. lb.,
|
II.
to
may
be responsible
in
Dutch and
not in the
especially the definite article that is more frequently English than in Dutch, chiefly owing to the fact that in English it has retained more of its original demonstrative or determinative force than in Dutch. It is hardly necessary to observe that when strong-stressed (5, c), its suppression is out of the question. Conversely it will be seen that the indefinite article is often found in positions in English, where the Dutch idiom rejects it. In both languages, however, the use or suppression of either article often seems to be quite arbitrary and presents a great many
dropped
in
inconsistencies, which baffle all explanation. Owing to the multiplicity and uncertainty of the causes that may be assigned for the use or suppression of the articles, it is particularly
difficult
to
is
discuss the details with any degree of method. which at the moment of
to be the
most
rational
and convenient.
IN DETAIL.
Conceptions primarily undefined, may become defined through being individualized or specialized. This may, or may not, occasion the use of the definite article, according to the nature of the
specializing adjunct.
11.
When
the
clause,
adnominal
of years ago.
He forgot to return the money I had lent him. The circumstances recorded in this story, took place some score
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.
Ch.
II,
10.
Note
[when (or that) etc.]. i. Time was he would have envied the dandies Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIX, 311.
THE ARTICLE.
533
ii.
Time was when you called him better names than rogue and swindler. Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 244. Time came when you might stand in the little bare stone church on the hill in rapt admiration of that lovely face, wondering what manner of man it was that painted it. John Oxenham, Great-Heart Gillian, Ch. VII, 49. The time had been when no such exhortations would have been necessary. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXXIV, 367. The time was when we might have a good piece of salmon up from London for you. W.Morris, News from N o w h e re, Ch. XXII, 167. Compare also: There was a time when the two were inseparable. Roorda,
12.
expressed
of the article
Apart from the defining being sometimes more or less vague or (57), this seems to be chiefly owing to the fact that the
:
prepositional word-group, if not containing the preposition of, is felt more or less as an adverbial adjunct. Compare events in South Africa (Times) with the events of the last few years. Thus also Boulevards
Paris were thronged at night is practically identical with In Paris Boulevards were thronged at night (Graphic). Also adjuncts with of are. often incapable of causing the article to be used, when they form a kind of unit with their head-word: Members of Congress. When there is no such unity, the suppression is much less usual. See the quotations marked with a +. For convenience of comparison with later quotations the following arrangement has been made alphabetical, the singulars having been divided from the plurals.
in
Singulars.
force.
life
to
force of arms.
T.
P.'s
Weekly,
literature,
Butler and
In
English
literature
Hume
are greater
I
Dowden
*).
love,
f You
think
will risk
my
i)
life
and
Opinion
in
Austria
Hungary
is
clearly
in
Westm. G a z.
suggested.
opinion in the press is to be taken, both sides are rather nervous at what lb., No. 6329, lc.
trade,
ii.
i. Durban lives simply on the up-country trade the trade of the two Republics, whose annexation is now demanded. iMorning Leader. The trade of the city is at a standstill. Westm. Gaz., No. 6353, lc. Trade with the United States is decidedly better than it was. lb., No. 4977, 2b.
hailing the Underwood tariff as a new opportunity for British trade with the United States. lb., No. 6353, 2a.
civilization
itself
may
disappear.
Rev. of
')
171.
534
occupation
ii.
This is the most valuable lesson taught to us and to others by events in the Mediterranean. lb., No. 1814, 803a. I want you to understand how impossible it is, after recent events in Canada that your present system can be maintained. lb., No. 1815, 820a.
members.
political
As
in
Members of Congress
demagogues who shout the loudest. Times. Members of the Liberal Party will have read with the words in which the Prime Minister declared [etc.].
5459, lb.
Westm. Gaz.,
.
.
No.
reveal clearly Weekly reviews of the home and foreign situation profound concern and dissatisfaction with which all classes of society regard the international outlook and the present situation of Germany. Times, No. 1815, 815c.
reviews.
the
trade returns. It seems safe to predict that the trade returns for the remainder of the year will not come up to the average of the first seven years. Times,
No. 1814, 799c.
Note
value
I.
article
may be due
to the
stressless
See especially Ellinger, (65, c.) Beitr., 31. * He was at first somewhat annoyed with himself, at feel of the thrall of her beauty. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. VIII, 59. ** Here at sound of their voices, madame came bustling in from the back. JohnOxenham, Great-heart Gi li an, Ch. IV, 35. And suddenly at sound of quiet footsteps, you might turn and blink your startled eyes in amazement, as they fell on the living image of the pictured face.
of
Verm.
lb.,
Hal. Sutcl. the Fiddler, Ch. VII, 101. At sound of her words, his secret ambitions quickened to stronger life. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XXII, 233. (Thus passim, throughout the book, always without the article.) *** M. le Cure (was) gratified at thought of this mighty widening of her outlook. lb., Ch. IX, 67.
He turned
Pam
In the following quotations the absence of the article seems to II. be due to the demands of measure. Compare Abbot, Shak. Gram. 3
267. 89; Franz., Shak. Gram. , Who comes so past in silence of the night? Merch. of Ven., V, 1, 25. If you would walk in absence of the sun. lb., 725. Will you be pricked in number of our friends. Jul. Caes., Ill, 1, 216.
2
The
13.
'why'
is
plain as
way
to parish church.
At you like
When
is
the individualizing is indicated by an adnominal noun in the case (Ch. XXIII, 3, b; 12), the definite article
common
THE ARTICLE.
a)
535
less
These
adjuncts
often
partake
more or
of
the
character of
classifying adjuncts (Ch. XXIII, 13, Obs. II and III), which, as has been pointed out in 5, Note II, are of no influence as to the use of
have raised their prices partly due to the fact that, perhaps, more is meant than simply tailors that carry on business in the metropolis, there being, possibly, an intention to refer to a certain degree of superior skill by which these representatives of
the definite article.
in
Thus
London
tailors
may be
The
in
defining notion is sometimes more or less vague. (57.) Thus the above sentence the adnominal noun London marks off the
the
tailoring
trade
of
of London, the
c)
would be done by the prepositional word-group employment of which, accordingly, would entail the
article. in the genitive.
The adjunct is often felt as an equivalent of a noun Thus in the same sentence London stands (9, /.)
London's.
practically for
d)
often
more or
tailors as
interpreted as tailors in
used London.
Singulars.
interest.
Douglas owed
Ch.
II,
his
33.
appointment
to
Thorn. Moore,
life.
How
of
London
life
proud he would be, if he could show Thack., Virg., Ch. XVI, 168.
I
young
friend a
little
Previous to the inauguration of penny postage ... the cost of letter from London to Edinburgh or Glasgow was 1 s. 3i d. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 471; 6346.
postage.
sending a
practice.
more on
trade.
trade.
The German, Paul Haenlein, constructed a dirigible balloon much day practice. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIX, 30a. Nowhere have these complaints been more just than in the China
the lines of present
exist
in
Times.
circumstances
Id.
Similar
trade.
the
in the
South Africa
Plurals.
men.
He
Is
apart.
T. P.'s
Weekly,
people, i. The Edinburgh people are, indeed, the most responsible of God's creatures. Id. No. 471, 620a. ii. Edinburgh people have a way of their own. lb.
Cape politics had been so disagreeable a subject that persons in politics. authority at the Colonial Office dismissed them from their minds. Froude,
Oceana,
streets.
Ch.
Ill,
48.
He
was
wanderer
in
London
streets.
T. P.'s
Weekly,
.
536
14.
CHAPTER XXXI,
Also
14.
when
is
the individualizing
is
effected
by an adjective (Ch.
remains absent.
article often
to the
are main, dropping of the article in the case of the individualizing being expressed by an adnominal noun in the common Thus in All men are swayed and chained by public case. (13.)
the
responsible
the
Ch.
Ill,
86),
more
or less classifying;
notion
;
of
defining
implied
by the adjective
is
more or
less
vague
c)
the adjective
In
is
The year 1907 was a boom year for British and European trade (The Nation, in Westm. Gaz., No. 4961, 16c), the adjectives British and European are distinctly adverbial in import, as may be seen by comparing the above sentence with The year 1908 was a year of gradually declining trade in Great Britain. Trade at home
remained fairly good
until
May
etc.,
(ib.).
The suppression
such' as English,
is,
apparently,
regular
in
many word-groups
French,
history,
language), policy, influence, commerce, trade; English {French, etc.), public opinion, public feeling (but the popular or general sentiment), popular liberty and, probably, many more in which the adjective
it
modifies.
Singulars.
But Matilda, though of the royal Saxon blood, was not the their monarchy. Scott, Ivan hoe, Ch. XLII, 448. commerce. It has been the fashion for some time now to decry British
blood.
to the
Commerce
at
Times.
diplomacy. founded on
No. 49,
148.
The whole
the
basis
of
idea of Turkey in
drama.
No. 5231
,
attributed to
Our leading dramatist has some interesting and curious remarks him concerning American and English drama. West. Gaz.,
lb.
feeling. In the ten days since the affair of the caravans had been reported from Persia, public feeling had run high. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John C h c o t e , M. P., Ch. XXV, 275. (Compare sentiment.)
i 1
government.
history.
In
For
all
practical
government remains
this
in fact
and
of
in
purposes the great machine of German theory what it was before. Westm. Gaz.
there abode,
in a
by-place
nature,
remote period of
of the
name
of Ichabod Crane.
Wash.
made
2c.
Public
interest
in
it
(sc. the
increased than diminished during the months Times, No. 1816, 8436.
National Insurance Bill) has rather it has been before the public.
THE ARTICLE.
learning.
the
537
the quickening influence of
4,
New
Learning.
before the
Erasmus embodied for the Teutonic peoples Green, Short Hist., Ch. VI, name of this movement in this book.)
306.
(Thus regularly
it
liberty. Ghent was what it ought always to have remained, the bulwark, as been the cradle of popular liberty. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 900a.
had
,
not always of the feminine gender Mill, VII, Ch. II, 455. we cannot pretend to understand it, but there are some points about British opinion which we hope he will bear in mind. Westm. Gaz., No. 5231 lc. No student of ihe French Press can have failed to detect the existence of a similar Times, No. 1819, 9036. spirit among influential sections of French opinion.
opinion. Public opinion, in these cases, G. Eliot, the world, but the world's wife. Mr. Redmond understands Irish opinion as
,
is
policy.
It
pressure.
Westm. Gaz.
Opposition in the trying years that followed during the ministries of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and Mr. Asquith, will be fresh in the general recollection. Times, No. 1819, 894a.
recollection.
the
ritual.
Her
Green,
Short
sentiment. find an admirable summary of the general sentiment in the which Lord Rosebery made. Westm. Gaz. (Compare feeling.)
taste revolted from the bareness of Protestant ritual. 3, 378. Hist., Ch. VII, This is in tune with the popular sentiment. Rev. of Rev., CCV, 276.
(sc. Elizabeth's)
We
felicitous
speech
trade. (This) would not compensate him for what he must lose, if the European trade should be driven by his violence to some other quarter. Mac, Cli.ve, (513a).
Plurals.
affairs.
The prominence
No. 1816, 9436.
Times,
circumstances. It cannot be said too often of the Government is an asset of all parties.
in
Westm.
conditions. In existing conditions it seems fairly certain that only war can Austria hope to gain her ends. Westm. Gaz.
events. Recents events... have drawn the eyes of the world to Canada. No. 1816, 8436.
elections.
,
Times,
A number of Canadian correspondents have written complaining of opinions alleged to have been expressed by the Times on the result of the Canadian elections. Times, No. 1815, 819c.
magazines.
magazines.
politics.
It
"T.
P.'s
magazine" maintains
in
its
unique
position
among English
Advertisement.
was an innovation
American
politics.
Westm. Gaz.
the gap between intelligent native opinion (= the opinion of intelligent natives) and the official bureaucracy is to be bridged, official India must necessarily revise
some
of
its
traditions.
Westm. Gaz.
at the
Note especially: in due time (season, course, course of time). The party was landed Van. Fair, I Ch. VI 54. Royal Gardens in due time. Thack.
,
538
In
Madcap,
hot
air
of
London.
W. Black, * *
* A good old gentleman, one of the olden (the) old(en) time(s) (days), i. time. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XXIV, 260. ** The talking was about the olden times. Mrs. Craik, A Hero, 35. In the old days our legislators seem to have had more staying power. Westm. Gaz., No. 4967, 4b.
.
.
ii.
fall drip, drip, drip, upon the broad flagged pavement, called, from old time, the Ghost's Walk. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. II, 6. ** If not of those in that were wont to
goodly proportions present Maypoles olden times, (it) was a fair young ash. Id., Barn. Ru dge, Ch. I, 16. We'll talk over Boniface and old times. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIX, 316. In old days men managed by hook or crook to publish Scandals of the Court or Horrible Revelations of High Life. Chesterton. (II. Lo'nd. News, No. 3684 A, 741.)
Compare with this in ancient times, which does not, apparently, admit of a similar variation.
This quarter derives
15.
its
appellation
in
Wash.
XXV,
242.
denoting conceptions primarily defined (4), may yet stand without the definite article, when not accompanied by any
specializing
Some nouns
adjunct
(5),
tfie
omission being partly a survival of E. Gr., 2061), partly the in 9, c, d, and e. Compare
Omission
is
especially
common
a) before the names of certain localities, institutions and establishments, such as bed, chapel, class, college, confessional, court, church, dock,
(ex)change, harbour, home, hospital, jail, market, port, prison, school, town, when the reference is rather to the proceedings carried on
than to the material thing. Murray, s. v. at, 5; in, 1, b; Ill, 214; Ellinger, Verm. Beitr., 35. The altered application sometimes causes some of these nouns to be practically abstract nouns, and the suppression is favoured by the specializing being often so vague that the noun appears almost
there
used
in
a generalizing sense.
(7.)
It
is,
to question, whether it is the individualizing or generalizing definite, or the indefinite article which is suppressed. (7, c, Note II.) Com-
pare also 36 and 63. The omission of the article seems to be favoured, and in the case of some nouns even conditioned, by the presence of prepositions denoting a relation of either place or time.
nouns we may add certain names of actions, which meanings, and also under the same conditions more or less regularly reject the definite article. Such
To
the above
resemble them
in their altered
term,
large
tion.
trial, etc.
Town, without
the article,
means
the
town where we
in
live or the
town, often the metropolis, referred to The town indicates the place referred
THE ARTICLE.
539
human
residence.
35.
10.000
Matzn., Eng.
Gram. 2
Ill,
214;
year
sold for
at auction.
Times,
The
These
captain sells the fish by auction. Daily News, 1881, 29 Dec. 6/4.1) ... were put up from time to time to auction. Rogers, Pol. Econ., XIII, 21.*)
bed. i. It would have been in vain for Scrooge to plead that the weather and the hour were not adapted to pedestrian purposes; that bed was warm, and [etc.]. Dick., Christm. Car.a, 11,35. In due course there was bed; where, but for the resumption of the studies which took place in dreams, were rest and sweet forgetfulness. Domb., Id.,
Ch. XII, 110.
ii.
To go retire, etc. to bed. (lie, stay, etc.) in bed. She has not been out of bed since. Mrs. Adams, Lett, 349. l ) I won't go to bed. Dick. P c k w. Ch. VIII 66. His companions remained in bed. lb., 67. I gave Gus a lecture about spending his Sundays idly; and read out one of Blair's sermons before we went to bed. As I turned over in bed, could not help thinking about the luck the pin had brought me. Thack., Sam. Titm.,
To be
Ch. IV,
46.
Compare:
the
bed.
Mrs.
Wood
Orville Col., Ch. II, 23. To lie or sleep in the bed one has made = to accept of one's own conduct. Murray, s. v. bed, 5, c.
camp.
How
is
the
skill
from a few afternoons in a drill-hall and a fortnight at the outside in camp once a year? Times, No. 1825, 1031. The artillery are back in camp. Punch, No. 3712, 1726.
chapel,
ii.
i.
might
lie
O r v. never stirred out of the hall that night after chapel. Mrs. Wood Col., Ch. V, 66. He read the service in chapel when his turn came. Morley, Crit. Misc.,
Lamb
Pattison,
III,
156. i)
Compare: When
Scott,
church,
I
they
retired
together
from
the chapel.
i.
48.
ii.
To
of you forget church. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. II, 17. be at church. After {before, during) church. To be (stay, etc.) in churdi. To come (go, etc.) from (to, out of) church. But soon the steeples called good people all to church and chapel. Dick.,
hope none
Christm. Car. 5,
III,
62.
Compare:
the church.
He
told
that he
in
Note
In to go into the Church (= to take holy orders, to become a clergyI. man); to be in the Church (= to be in holy orders, to be a clergyman); to leave the bar for the Church and similar expressions, church has a collective meaning, and the article has a generalizing function. (32, a.)
II.
In
the
He goes on Sunday
l
is used merely for the sake of the metre: Longf., Vil. Blacks., V.
Murray.
540
class.
Isn't
CHAPTER XXXI,
Yeats the poet the Yeats No. 408, 709c.
15.
who was
in class with
us at school? T. P.'s
Weekly,
college,
ii.
I
left
college.
Meredith, Ord.
remember Allworthy at
"I
(Compare:
At my Pend.,
college. Fielding, Jones, IV, Ch. X, 56a thought", said the Parson, "he had never been at the University." lb.) father's death I paid what debts I had contracted at college. Thack.,
Tom
II, Ch. XX, 216. After college he hung about his mother's house.
Thackeray.
*)
confessional.
He communicated
(sc.
a curious account; that you had been to him that Ch. Bronte, V i 1 e 1 1 e, Ch. XVII, 230.
1
in
church and
Compare:
council.
of the confessional.
in council.
Oxford Diet.
Times. it is true to say that as yet his weight in council has not been felt. by order in Council (= Dutch b ij K o n n k ij k B e s u i t.) court, i. * For Arthur on the Whitsuntide before Held court at old Caerleon
Perhaps
Note
**
146. Ten., Mar. of Ger. thou never wast at court, thou never sawest good manners. As you like it, III, 2, 71. (Compare: Those that are good manners at the court are as ridiculous in the country as the behaviour of the country is mockable at the
upon Usk.
If
court.
Our
director,
his
lady,
court.
Thack.,
Sam.
ii.
Titm., Ch. VII, 84. A friend at court is always an advantage. T. P. 's Weekly, No. A photograph of the prosecutrix was produced in court. Times.
468, 529c.
If they had seen that this would be the outcome of the proceedings, they. would not have been in such a hurry to go into Court. lb.
lb., No. 1816, lb. Mr. A., the plaintiff, who brings the complaint into court. Anna Buckland Our Nat. I n s t i t. 43. Out of court they (sc. the judges) had human minds like yours and mine. W.J.Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing, Ch. Ill, 45. Compare: i. Out west they would never have left the court alive. lb., Ch. V, 70. ii. My poor wife and I walked out of the court, and back to our dismal room in the prison. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. XII, 157. Silence in the court there! lb., Ch. XII, 151.
The proceedings
In
in Court.
is
these
cases
it
They had rather a grumpy time of it in divan that night. Lockhart, I, 187. 2 ) He (sc. the American interviewer) and his notebook are on the spot as the "liner" comes into dock. Rita, America Seen through Eng. eyes, Ch. Ill, 63. exchange. Scrooge's name was good upon 'change. Dick., Chrstm. Car.5, \ t 5.
divan.
dock.
in
the
heart
of
it
(sc. the
city);
hall. After hall they went to Mr. Buck's to take wine; and after wine to chapel. Thack., Pend., I, 168.3) / Then they went to hall. W.J.Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing, Ch. XVII, 180. On the same evening, his Royal Highness dined in hall. 1. Lond. News, No. 3835, 566. Soon as the meal was over, she stole out of hall. Hal. Sutcl., Pam the Fiddler,
1
i)
:i
Foels.-Koch,
Wis. Gram.,
chapel.
273.
=0
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.
36.
Murray
s. v.
THE ARTICLE.
harbour.
541
may now, we think, be reckoned as No. 5001, \c. I woke to hear we were in harbour. lb., No. 6347, 5a. headquarters. He had no quarrel with Mr. Cadogan, but only with those at head-quarters, who had belied him. Thack., Henry Esmond, II, Ch. XV, 284. home. i. There is no place like home. Pro v. Home is home, be it ever so homely. Id. ii. am wandering from my story, and must get back to home. Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. I, 19. At one hour he was sure to be at church; at another, at market; in his office at a third; and at home when respectable men should be ai home. Ch., Reade,
African
Constitution
safely in harbour.
The South
Westm. Gaz.,
It
is
to
mend,
Ch.
5.
minute
we were
in the street
Mem.
Lady
made
of Sherl. Holm., II, B, 77. I walked towards home. Th. Watts Dunton, Aylwin, II, Ch. X, 113. She is at home, as usual, every evening for a few people. Mrs. Ward,
Rose's D aught.,
hospital,
ii.
i.
I,
Ch.
I,
9b.
to
They
will
be allowed
proceed to
their
homes, instead
of being
prisoners, as soon as they can leave hospital. Times, My father died of his wounds in hospital. .Meredith, Lord
Ormont,
Ma re el la,
A
III,
I
Nobody could
patient
I
live
III,
in
hospital like
for
Edward
33.
weeks, had
Id.,
be removed
to hospital.
am
going
Sir
George Tres.
I,
Ch.
of
IV, 28Z.
(Compare:
As they went
was saying to the porter. lb.) Lord Hardinge was taken to hospital. Westm. Gaz., No. 6111, lc. (Compare: The Viceroy said manfully, on being taken to the hospital, that this attempt on his life had made no change in his feelings towards India and her people. lb.)
the things she
jail.
To
be
in jail.
To
let
out of
jail.
To
the
He had been
arrested
or suspicion
of
in jail.
Meredith, O r d. of Rich. Fev., Ch. V, 34. lesson. Never before and never again, while Tom was
strike a
I
boy
in lesson.
Hughes,
Tom Brown,
Tom
ii.
second lesson, if renewed the discussion after second lesson. lb. market, i. He attended market and sessions. Thack.,
shall get floored to a certainty at
at school, did the Doctor Ch. VIII, 156. I'm called up. lb., II, Ch. VII, 316.
I,
Pend.
I,
I,
Ch.
II, 20.
But yet
In
run before
my
horse to market.
Rich.
Ill,
1, 160.
the first place, I shall be seen, and that is no small advantage to a girl who brings her face to market. Goldsm., She Stoops to Conquer, III, (203). The eggs we had counted on selling at market were broken. Thack., Virg. , Ch. LXXX, 847.
Bathsheba said very little to her husband all that evening of their return from Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XLI, 317. There rode by a butcher with a basket of meat hastening to market. Robin Hood (Gunth., Handbook*, 24). If you could take a cup of tea with us on your way hpme from market, my father would be glad to see you. Reade, It is never too late to mend,
market.
II,
Compare:
ii.
i. When the market was over, one of them invited Robin with their company. Robin Hood (Gunth., 25). I was first at the market. Lytton , R i e n z i I Ch. IX , 55.
Hood
to dine
Handbook*,
,
,
On
reaching the town, Robin Hood put up his -horse at an inn, and then went into the market. Robin Hood (Gunth. Handbook*, 25).
,
542
CHAPTER XXXI,
in the
15.
My
2a.
poor dear nother's own sherry was (Thus regularly in this collocation.) larger pen with a very flexible nib,
.
market
then.
Dick.,
Cop.,
Ch.
I,
Rev. of Rev., CCXXX1, Advertisement. (Thus regularly in To say (sing, hear, attend etc.) mass. Murray. mass. When mass was ended, they retired together from the chapel.
i.
Scott,
Quent.
ii.
Mass had been said in the grey old church among the trees. Hal. Sutcl., Pam the Fiddler, Ch. IV, 55. She heard mass at a very early hour. Times, No. 1818, 887a. To be (stay etc.) at mass. To come (go, etc.) from mass. To go to mass. Murray. We had all been to mass at the Cathedral. Westm. Gaz. No. 4949, 9a. The maids were slow on their feet from Mass. lb.
,
Durw.,
Ch. H, 48.
office,
ii.
i.
To
To
be (stay, etc.) in office. To come (go, etc.) into (out of) office. Jack in (out of) office. Murray. For the fourth time in succession Sir Wilfrid Laurier has been returned to office by a General Election. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVII, 403a. Neither is it well for the same party to remain continuously in office. lb, Compare: When I came back to the office, I pretty soon let the fellows know [etc.]. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. II, 20.
port. i. Doubt was expressed ... as to the possibility of the measure reaching port this year. Echo,' No. 3273, 2. i) Is there any doubt, Master Pathfinder, that we shall reach port in safety. Cooper,
The Pathfinder. 2)
ii.
some rare vessel, and compete the prize of towing Gaz., No. 6023, 3a. He captured two Dutch East Indiamen and brought them safely into port. lb..
sighted
up
to port.
9c.
Westm.
No. 601
prison.
am
Gay,
Beggar's Op.,
She had only just come from the prison, where she learned my Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. XII, 167. My poor wife and I walked out of the court, and back to our dismal room in the prison. lb., Ch. XII, 157.
address.
Compare:
rehearsal. Don't you] think it is time to go to rehearsal? Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XI, 116. When Miss Costigan came home from rehearsal [etc.]. lb., Ch. XII, 23. The next day to rehearsal. Oscar Wilde, An Ideal Husband, II, 43. A certain orchestral player at Drury Lane Theatre had suffered sundry admonishments at rehearsal from his revered conductor. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 468, 524a. Compare: My poor Theo had a nice dinner waiting for me after the rehearsal. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXXIX, 842.
school,
i.
He
ii.
liked all to
make
their
Mrs. Wood, Orville College, Ch. VII, appearance on the eve of school. lb Ch. I, 9.
-
101.
Murray.
About ten minutes before school Martin and Arthur arrived in the quadrangle. Huohes, Brown, II, Ch. IV. There had been some talk on occasions of my going to boarding-school. Dick.,
Tom
IV.
Cop.. Ch.
We
')
Thack., Pend.,
36.
I,
Ch.
II,
28.
Murray.
2)
Ellinoer,
Verm. Beitr.,
THE ARTICLE.
Did you not say you had a sister at boarding-school? Compare: The school is not quite deserted ... A
still.
it
543
Id.,
Thack., Pend., I, Ch. H, Both Arthur and Mr. John Pendennis had been at the school, ib.,
this school.)
was
(=
at
They saw
service.
five
or six nearly
I,
new
balls hit
Tom Brown,
I
Hughes,
Ch. IX.
doubt not but you will be honoured with some portion of her notice, Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch. XXVIII, 158. Service concluded, the governor began to turn a wheel in his pew. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. X, 112. Stool of Repentance. A low stool placed in front of the pulpit in Scotland, on which persons who had incurred an ecclesiastical censure, were placed during divine service. E. Cobham Brewer ,Dict. of Phrase and Table. study. One afternoon when he came down from study with Pen, ...she went out and shook hands with him with rather a blushing face. Thack., Pend.,
when
service is over.
I,
town.
Lady Jane
is
Thack.
Sam.
Ill,
Titm., Ch. Ill, 40. Town is very dreary. Mar. Crawf., A Tale of
ii.
Lonely
Par., Ch.
23.
and celebrated "blood", or dandy about town was this young officer. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. X, 97. (He) was, I do believe, as happy, whenever his friends brought him a guinea, as he had been during his brief career as a gentleman on town. Id.,
perfect
Sam. Titm.,
Edna Lyall,
I,
Ch. XII
159.
Donovan,
gave
her
I,
140.
Compare: He
Ch.
II,
all
Thack.,
Pend.,
19.
Have you authority to put me in the pillory before trial? Ch. Reade is never too late mend, I, Ch. I, 18. c Five men and a woman were put on trial for the crime. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XXII, 318. Two days later we were committed for trial at the Central Criminal Court
trial.
It
Annie Besant,
Autob.
209.
After the trial it was proved that one of the five prisoners was c never near the spot on the day of the rescue. Carthy, Short Hist, Ch. XXII, 317. It was represented to the jury that this statement substantially corroborated the evidence given by Fletcher and other witnesses at the trial. Times, No. 1814, 803c. c Carthy, Short Hist.. Ch. XXII, 316 They now began to be put on their trials.
Compare:
b)
meals, such as banquet, breakfast, dinner, lunch(eon), meat, mess, supper, table, tea, and tiffin when used in a more or less immaterial sense. Also before these nouns the omission
before
the
of
names
the article is especially frequent, when they are preceded by a preposition denoting a relation of time or place likewise in many collocations, such as to ask {invite) to {for) dinner, etc. to stay {stop) tea or to tea,
of
;
etc.
etc.,
(Ch. V, 11), to wait dinner etc. (ib.), to come {go) to {into) dinner to take out {take in) to dinner, etc., in which the omission is so usual as to be almost regular. Conversely the article would appear to be commonly used after prepositions not denoting any relation of either
is
time or place, but the evidence available at the time of writing scanty to make this more than a surmise.
too
544
i.
CHAPTER XXXI,
15.
Supper's ready, Sir. Dick., Pickw., Ch. VIII, 65. entrance of supper opportunely adjourned this difficulty. G. Eliot, Mill, I, Ch. Ill, 17. Dinner was over. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. II, 12. Prince ForDinner will be served almost directly. W. Black, The tunatus, Ch. XIV. "Dinner is served", he announced, in his discreet and well-trained voice. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XXII, 250.
The
New
**
She seemed
,
to
be engaged
in a
Pickw.,
Ch. XXVI
I
236.
am going to stay tea. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. VI, 87. My master has been waiting dinner for you these three hours. Robin Hood (Gunth., Handb., 140).
***
I
Dick.,
Pickw.,
ii.
After tea the young gentlemen withdrew to fetch up the unfinished tasks of that day. Ch. XII, 107. Dick., D o m b. One evening after mess he told Colquhoun that [etc.]. Besant and Rice, Gold. Butterfly, Ch. XIII. i)
,
** At breakfast
I announced to Diana and Mary that I was going a journey. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. XXXVI, 519. He paid Dobbin fifty pounds that evening at mess. Thack. Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIII, 133. We were talking about it at mess yesterday. Id., Pend. I, Ch. X, 103. He was absolute master of the life and liberty of all who sat at meat with him.
, ,
Mac, Fred.,
the Queen. The father
(6766).
banquet twice or
EI., 731.
thrice
Lane, and
table.
Mrs. Ward,
,
Marc,
I, 33.
Before tea they all went for a walk. Dick., D o m b. Ch. XII, 106. **** Only once during dinner was there any conversation that included the young gentlemen. Dick., Domb., Ch. XII, 106.
*****
***
He
invited
Sam. Titm.,
I
in
Myddelton Square.
Thack.,
just
want you
come
to
my rooms
in St.
What became
off
of
Pam,
for dinner.
Ch. Reade,
is
Come
to
Mrs. Craik,
John
*******
My husband was
ask him to dinner. Murray, s. v. ask, 21. Her fear was lest they should stay to tea. Ch. Bronte, Shirley, I, Ch. VII, 144. The guest stayed to dinner. Lytton, Caxtons, III, Ch. VII, 79. I have come to take Miss Yeoland and you out to dinner. Baroness von
ought
We
i)
Hutten,
What became
i.
Compare:
Pickw.,
of -Pa m, Ch. XIII, 90. The dinner was as hearty an affair as the breakfast.
Dick.
Ch. XXVIII, 254. The supper was ready laid. lb., Ch. IX, 72. The supper passed off without any attempt
at a
general conversation.
lb.,
Ch.
out
VIII, 66.
On
of chapel.
ordinary evenings the supper was served immediately after they Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. I, 16.
came
!)
Murray
THE ARTICLE.
545
e s t m. G a z. I will go rest here awhile till the breakfast is ready. No. 4949, 9a. Throughout the greater part of the dinner my opinion of the young man rose
ii.
during the course of the dinner. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XXIII, 251. He had made acquaintance with him at the mess by opening the conversation. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIX, 314. All during the dinner she was playing the coquette openly, for every one to W. Black. , The see. Prince Fortunatus, Ch. XIV. I am told that it was through you that the boy was invited to the dinner
little
Allen
That Friend
of Sylvia's.
New
to-night.
lb.
curious instance of divided usage is: Tea was served in a style no less polite than the dinner. Ch. XII, 107.
Dick.
Dombey
Note
I.
When
is
the article
used
in
II.
The dinner was not so good as might have been expected. Nor is the article ever wanting when the individualizing
sat
is
expressed.
Dick.
,
He
c)
down
the fire.
Christm.
Car.s,
IV, 97.
Before the names of the main divisions of a day, such as day, evening
(eve, even, eventide), morning (morn) to a natural phenomenon or to an
is
epoch. In either application the article seems to be regularly omitted after such prepositions as at, till (until), towards. The article is not dropped when distinctly a period is meant: consequently it is never absent after the prepositions during and in. It should also be noted that forenoon and afternoon, although frequently denoting an epoch, apparently, rarely lose the article. Compare We won't go home till morning with We won't go
home
i.
Irv.,
S ke tc h
-B
k,
Spectre Bridegr.
more
difficult, until
159.
evening. lb., Ch. VIII, 71. her breathing becoming more and
evening
and
until
G.Eliot,
Scenes,
When day
He read
enemy was no more to be seen. Macaulay. J ) book calmly but earnestly in the warm air, till day declined. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. VI, 82.
Evening came. lb., Ch. V, 55. It wanted but two hours of day. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch.XVII, 1336. Gloomy day passed into gloomier night. G. Gissino, Eve Madeley's
Ransom,
ii.
I
Ch.
I.
Goldsm., Vicar. slept undisturbed till morning. In that equivocal kind of weather, when a fire becomes agreeable
evening. Wash. Irv. , Sketches, One afternoon it began to freeze,
toward
150.
increased with evening. Ch. Ill, 22. Gabriel had watched the blue wood-smoke curling from the chimney with strange meditation. At evening he had fancifully traced it down the chimney to the spot of its origin. lb., Ch. IV, 28.
Hardy,
i)
H.
272. Foels Koch Wis. Gram., Poutsma, A Grammar of Late Modern English.
,
II.
35
546
The
at a
CHAPTER XXXI,
Kaiser at that
15.
We
in sport by day and jollification at night Rev., CCXXVIII, 509. Eth. M. Dell, The Way of an
I, Ch. Ill, 37. Boats were being got ready for landing parties No. 1814, 802d.
Eagle,
towards evening.
i)
Times,
Compare:
The day had been uncommonly sultry. Wash. Irv. i. The afternoon came on wet and somewhat misty. Ch. Bronte
,
Jane Eyre,
last girl
Ch. IV, Thack., Sam. Titm. There he stood gazing for some minutes fell. Mrs, Ward, Ma reel la, 1,73.
It
45.
lost in
many thoughts
ii.
seemed as if the morning would never come. Sweet, Old Chapel. e s t m. G a z. The day was closing in. What enabled Sir George Cary's illustrious ship, the Content, to fight singlehanded, from seven in the morning till eleven at night? Ch. Kingsley, Westw.
150a.
She stated that two men had attacked her during the night. Times, No. 1814, 787a. Twice during the morning he drove to the entrance of Clifford's Inn. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. VI, 61.
Note
Ch.
I. The article is also usually dropped when these words are modified by the name of a day, the reference being in this case to an epoch. On Midsummer Night the emigrants get up an entertaiment. Froude, Oceana,
II,
41.
Late on
Monday
night therj
at the British
Wagon Works,
Swansea.
II..
Times,
definite
etc.
The
however, appears
to
is
to
the
morning,
It
referred
writer's
i.
Compare
was rather expected that he would pay a round of calls on the Monday morning to explain and apologize to the Cranford sense of propriety. Mrs. Gask.,
Cranf., Ch.
Early on
the
II,
27.
Thursday morning Captain Bretton was roused from a short and uneasy sleep on the sofa In his study by the sound of voices on the staircase. Edna Lyall, Knight Errant, Ch. XXXVIII, 375. We reached Dresden on the Wednesday evening, and stayed there over the
Sunday.
ii.
Jerome,
II,
Ch. VII,
133.
It
was Monday
Hist.,
III.
ticular request,
The
article
On Wednesday morning Monmouth was to die. Mac, (Compare: On the Wednesday morning, at his parDoctor Thomas Tfenison came to the Tower. lb., 192.) is also frequently dropped before such nouns and word.
. .
(=
day-break), cock-crow{ing)
"dawn{ing), dead of
night, dusk, midnight, noon, nightfall, peep of day, pudding-time, sundown, sunrise, sunset, twilight, etc., which, like the above, are used to denote a
natural
phenomenon
connection
the
only
or an epoch. After a preposition, which is practically in which the majority of these words and word-
groups are found, the article seems to be suppressed almost regularly. i. Noon approached, and after many adieux and promises to return, he tore himself
away.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
i)
Foels.
Koch, Wis.
Gram.,
272.
THE ARTICLE.
As
twilight
547
deepened, we descended a valley, dark with wood, and long had overclouded the prospect, I heard a wild wind rushing amongst trees. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, Ch. V, $5. Afternoon had made way for twilight, and twilight for dusk. Westm. Gaz., No. 6347, 9a. (Note the distinction made betv/een twilight and dusk.)
alter night
ii.
Here he sate on the banks of an unknown lake... and that at deep midnight. Wav., Ch. XVI, 60a. The fire broke out at dead of night. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch.XXXXI,
Scott,
524.
(In this
phrase the definite article occasionally appears, apparently, for measure At the dead of night a sweet vision I saw. Thom.
:
Campb. The Soldier's Dream, II.) I must be on horse before cock-crow. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXXIV, 369. From cock-crow he had been travelling. Southey, Well St. Keyne. J ) The character would vanish like a ghost at cock-crow. Goldw. Smith (Atl. Monthly, No. 268, 208). i)
All this
starlight.
Emerson,
391a.
Young Ame-
rican,
I
Dick.,
He only returned home at dusk. Ch. BrontE, Villette, Ch. XXI, 285. Doubtless at high noon ... the garden was a trite, trodden-down place
Ch. XII, 130. at nightfall on this side the Pontine Marshes. Lytton, Rienzi, HI, Ch. I, 123. Shortly after sunrise they crossed those fatal swamps which had already been partially drained by Boniface VIII. lb., Ch. II, 123. It would be better if you were to proceed onward to Fondi, where I will join you at sunset. lb., 137. He rode on until sundown. Books for the Bairns, No. 56, 316. Dick wanted to be there before dusk. W.Morris, News from Nowhere, Ch. XXVIII, 210. Collation the light repast or refection taken by the members of a monastery
enough.
lb.,
The band
halted
at close of day.
By
early
dawn
i.
this
Murray, s. morning
v.
harbour end.
Times,
No. 1823,
Compare:
ii.
Meanwhile the noon was passed, and little impression was made on the iron gate. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXX, 329. These 'thaumata', or wonders, last... till the boy goes to school, and then,
somehow
cockcrow.
or other,
the
'thaumata'
t
Lytton
year
Cax
on
I ,
air, like
ghosts at the
Year
rising
after
hymn
he took part with excited fancy in the procession of the to the College tower on May day, to sing at the sunto the Trinity. Alice S. Green, In trod, to Green,
well,
we'll
Short Hist.,
5.
at the dawn to-night Percy asks us to ride out him. Hal. Sutcl. P a m the Fiddler, Ch. IV, 57.
,
answer
an exceptional application of midnight: Thack., Pend., I, Ch. IV, 51. before the names of the seasons: winter, spring, summer and autumn, and also before such nouns as Carnival, Lent, harvest, term.
IV.
is
The following
they
fall
Then
i.
With such sentiments, upon a beautiful day in the latter end of harvest, the king mounted his horse. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XXXVI, 446. Winter came early and sudden that year. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. IV, 36.
s. v.
Murray,
548
Once he stopped
"It's
CHAPTER XXXI,
15.
to pick up the large brown fan of a horse-chestnut leaf. pretty, isn't it? only it shows that autumn has come." lb., Ch. I, 10. Carnival ends on the 5th of February. Eng. Rev., No. 58, 225.
ii.
of
the
rally in spring.
Thack.,
I
Newc,
II,
There are few things that I enjoy so much as the rare invitations which receive to spend a few days during term at one of the colleges in the Unie s t m. G a z. versity of Oxford.
The winter was gloomy at home as well as abroad. McCarthy, Compare: Short Hist., Ch. XI, 151. As the summer drew on, she passed more of her time in the open air. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. LVI, 459.
i.
ii.
lb.,
LVI, 459.
take
(Thus probably
place
in
regularly
The
I
general
election
will
most
probably
the
autumn.
Daily Mail.
did
come
here
last
year,
M.
E. Francis,
Honesty,
II,
Ch. X.
And how shall you live in the winter when shows that autumn has come no out-of-door work to be had. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. I, 10. Through the winter Alfred girded himself for this new peril. At break of spring his army closed round the town. Green, Short Hist., Ch. I, 5, 48. The threats of the Montenegrins and Serbs are held in check by the approach of winter, and until the spring comes, they are not likely to make any serious
there is
e s t m. G a z. move. The winter has been long. I am glad spring What became of Pam, Ch. IX, 63.
is
coming.
e)
before
the
from
its
names of months, days and festivals. Epiphany, however, meaning, seems to stand regularly with the article. (24, c.)
will return at Christmas. His taxes are in arrear, quarter-day passes by, another quarter-day arrives. Dick. S k e t c h e s 1 2a. I did not go to the office till half an hour after opening time on Monday. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. IV, 41. Late In October Pam caught her heel in a hole in the stair-carpet. Bar. von Hutten, What became of Pam, Ch. XIV, 102. Lord Mayor's Day was observed on Wednesday in London in the traditional
, , ,
He
fashion.
It
Times.
when
156.
I
was
came
to
Dunster town.
Black-
more,
Lorna Doone,
Ch. XXVII,
Note.
The definite article is not infrequently met with when the month, day or festival is distinctly associated in the speaker's or writer's mind with another. Sweet, N. E. Gr., 2032; Ellinger, Verm.
Beitr., 26;
It
VI, 26.
would be easy to catch Will Wilson on his return from the Isle of Man, which he had planned should be on the Monday; and on the Tuesday all would
be made clear. Mrs. Gask. Mary Barton, Ch. XXIII 239. As it was, however, it (sc. the letter) reached Silverbridge on Sunday, and lay there till the Monday. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch.V, 39. (Note the varied practice.) On the Saturday Thompson died. Huohes, Brown, II, Ch. VI, 290. Thompson was buried on the Tuesday. lb., 201.
, ,
Tom
THE ARTICLE.
16.
549
When
a noun
it
so that
name, we
is applied to a particular specimen of a conception, partakes of the character of a significant proper sometimes find the specializing definite article dropped.
in
address, which
of
may
be:
names
I
of relationship:
your maidenish
airs;
know
all;
assure you, sister hath told me all". Fielding, Jones, VI, Ch. VII, 946. If your own horses be ready, you may whip off with cousin, and I'll be bound that no soul here can budge a foot to follow you. Goldsmith,
Tom
She Stoops,
Father-in
lb., I, (174).
this
half year.
Sam. Titm.
New
Dick.,
Road.
Ib.
young
Cratchits.
Chris tm.
Had
of
it anything to do with father's making such a mommet (= blockhead) himself in thik (= that) carriage this afternoon? Hardy, Tess, I,
Ch.
Ill,
22.
the map. Scott, *) be observed that these nouns are usually preceded by a possessive pronoun, when the speaker is not related to the person spoken of in the way indicated by them.
Papa
will
show you
the
two counties on
Note.
It
may
here
'He (sc. Tiny Tim) was very light to carry", she (sc. Mrs. Cratchit) resumed "and his father loved him so And there's your father at
,
.
the door".
Dick.
this
Ch
22.
m. C a
r. &,
IV, 99.
'T
was on
I,
home
in the vlee.
Hardy,
Tess,
2) certain
Ch.
titles
of courtesy,
especially:
Madam, now no
entitled to
longer substituted for the name of a lady be addressed as 'madam' (Murray), mistress being used instead, except in the language of shop-assistants, i. Poor Harry can keep nothing quiet, and then there would be a pretty Ch. VI, 61. quarrel between madam and me! Thack., Virg When madam began to write, she gave us brief notices of Harry and
,
his wife.
ii.
lb.,
Ch.
LXXXV,
909.
;
want a rose, please; a large pink rose" madam; I will get some one to attend
"I
"Yes,
to
madam;
certainly,
Jones,
madam
Westm. Gaz.,
The
Master, i. * Master thought another fit of him a visit. Sher., Rivals, I, 1. Master sent me over with the shay-cart
the house.
the gout
to carry
Dick.,
Pickw.,
257.
Foels.-Koch
s.
Gram.,
550
CHAPTER XXXI,
16.
Master says he can't eat no dinner. G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. ** But tell us, Mr. Fag, how does young master? Sher., Riv., I,
VIII, 61.
1.
(= Dutch
will take a
poor mariner's
last night,
I,
gift,
there
it
is.
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw.
ii.
fetched soon.
Scenes,
Miss.
We
Rivals,
There was another person besides Miss at my aunt's house. Thack., Virg. Ch. LXXVIII, 825. He came hither... to pay court to Miss. lb., Ch. LXXXIV, 895. i. He's in the dining-room, Sir, along with Mistress (Missis, Missus), mistress. Dick. C h r s t m. C a r. 5, V, 109. "Missis is not at home," said the man. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. VII, 81. Missis always turns off the gas at the main herself at half past ten. Mrs.
, i
Alex.,
ii.
A Life Interest,
I,
Ch.
I, 20.
Master and Missis are going out to dinner. lb., 16. I have spoke to Mr. Helder, friendly, an' he laughed, an' did me a picture of the missis that is as good as a coloured print. Rudy. Kipl., The
Ch. V, 61.
find
it
in
her
heart
to
of
upon him.
s.
Bishop (reproving delinquent page): "Wretched boy! Who is it that sees and hears all we do, and before whom even I am but a crushed worm?" Page: "The missis, my lord." Punch.
the
mistress
the
names
case their
not confined to the language of servants. "Is your master at home, my dear?" said Scrooge to the girl. Dick., Chris tm. Car. 5, V, 108. Where is your mistress? Kath. Cecil. Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P.,
certain
names of professions, especially such as are held by domestic servants, the absence of the article expressing good-humoured familiarity. cabby, i. She sprang out of the carriage before cabby could descend. Mrs.
Alex., A Life Inferest, I, Ch. I, 15. Call the cabby up for my trunk and hat-box All the Year 1859, No. 34, 177. coachman. Coachman comes out with his waybill. Huohes,
ii.
!
Round,
Tom Brown,
will take
I,
cook.
care
You had
you.
better
of
Sarah,
II,
my
go down with Sarah into the kitchen; cook love, take him down to cook. Marryat,
Jacob
Fa'ithful, Ch.
,
lb.
While he operated, the maids, and Buttons and cook... crowded round him. Thack. A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. V, (325). The second-floor arch in a London house ... by which cook lurks down before daylight to scour her pots and pans in the kitchen; by which young master stealthily ascends down which miss comes rustling in fresh ribbons ... for conquest and the ball. Id., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXVI, 279. Would you like to go and see if cook has got your dinner ready?
. .
. ,
Westm. Gaz.
ii.
was domiciled
Marryat,
Jacob Faithful,
Ch.
II,
Sb.
THE ARTICLE.
She put questions
Little
to
551
the cook's health.
Thack.,
Dinner
at
Timmins's,
Ch.
II, (313).
guard, i. Guard emerges from the tap. Hughes, Tom Brown, I, Ch. IV, 74. Guard looks at him with a comical expression. lb., 76. ii. The guard is locking the hind boot. lb., 75. Ostler, Boots and the Squire stand looking after them. Lb., 70. !) (h)ostler.
i
lb., 69.
take
Care of
biog.,
20. i)
head-waiter. "Tea or coffee, sir?" says head-waiter, coming round to Tom. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. IV, 74. nurse, i. There was room enough at Framley Court for baby and nurse.
Tom
glow
of a bright fire,
nurse
at
well-ordered comfortable room, lit by the her needlework beside the large table, and a
. .
neat nursemaid sitting on the floor showing a picture-book to a little boy There was a pause, every one looked up, and then nurse slowly rose, exclaiming, "Law, Miss Marjory". Mr. Alex., A Life Interest, I, Ch. I, 20. She makes nurse give us jam whenever we want it. Bar. von Hutten,
Pam,
ii.
Ch. X, 54. The nurse said she was come her duty. Thack., A Little
to
nuss
(=
Dinner
in:
at
The omission
of
names
of professions
seems
to be rare or obsolete.
Thus
Lord keeper and lord treasurer were proposed (sc. at the club). Swift, Journ. to Stella, XXV. Policeman said he'd call again towards evening. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton,
Ch. XXIII, 241.
ditto
for
himself.
Tom Brown,
4)
Hughes,
I,
certain plural
nouns denoting the things with which a person is chiefly occupied, or for which he is conspicuous, such as boots, buttons, lamps, etc. Stof., Eng. Leesb., I, 143. boots, i. Another (sc. of these worthies) buttoned on a pair of gaiters, with many execrations at Boots for not having cleaned his boots well. Wash. Irv.,
Bracebridge Hall
Boots looks
in
(Stof.,
Eng. Leesb.,
ii.
and says [etc.]. Hughes, Brown, I, Ch. IV, 69. "You make use of my name", he added proudly "Bob, boots at the Lion." Lytton, Caxtons, V, Ch. I, 106. "Thank'ee, sir", said the Boots, and away he went. Dick., Pickw.
,
Tom
1,7).
Ch.
II,
16.
He asked
In
Thack.,
Pend.
I,
[etc.].
Lytton,
Caxtons,
good-naturedly informed
me
Buttons. Little Buttons bounced up to his mistress, said he was butler of the Thack., A little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. VI. The united strength of the establishment Butler, Footman, Coachman, Lady's Cuthbert Bede, Adventures of Mr. maid, Housemaid and Buttons.
family.
Verdant Green,
!)
I,
16.2)
Murray.
2)
Hoppe
Sup. Lex.
552
CHAPTER XXXI,
16.
Compare
nite article:
"I
the following quotation containing several denominations all of them, however, with the defi-
thought you were the King's taxes." "No!" said Mr. Winkle. "I did indeed," responded Bob Sawyer, "and I was just going to say that I wasn't at home, but if you'd leave a message, I'd be sure to give it to myself; for he don't know me; no more does the Lighting and Paving. I think the Church-rates guesses who I am, and I know the Water-works does, because I drew a
tooth of his
when
first
came
is
here."
Dick.,
Pickw.,
The
variable practice
I tapped the barometer, and it jumped up and pointed to "very dry." The Boots stopped as he was passing, and said he expected, it meant to-morrow. I fancied that, maybe, it was thinking of the week before last, but Boots said, No, he thought not. Jer., Three Men in a Boat, Ch. V, 52.
5)
the
Mrs. Veneering does not expect that Mr. Twemlowcan for such insipid things as babies, but so old a friend must please to look at baby. Dick., Our Mut. Friend, I, Ch. II, 11. She put questions to him regarding baby. Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. II, (313).
noun baby:
i.
in
nature care
much
ii.
The usage
What does
little
The baby howled a great deal during the day. lb., Ch. VI, (327). is sometimes extended to terms of endearment.
little
birdie say
In her nest at
peep of day?
Let
me
fly,
says
birdie
[etc.].
Ten.
b)
the
names of certain legislative bodies, such as Congregation, Congress, Convocation, Council, Government Parliament. Congregation, in the sense of "a general assembly of the members of a University, or of such of them as possess certain specified The suppression seems to be pracqualifications." Murray, s. v. 3b.
,
tically regular.
This week Congregation has passed the preamble to the financial statute setting up an advisory and supervisory Council. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5625, 2a.
Congress,
i.
in the
The suppression
Congress
is
sense of the Congress of the United States of America. decidedly the rule, not wiser or better than Parliament. Emerson, Eng. Traits,
is
Result,
The
1286.
is Froude, responsible to the nation and to Congress. Ch. XIII, 203. Congress will not meet till December. Times. As in every other crisis, Members of Congress are trimming to the political demagogues who shout the loudest. Id. It is not easy to read a Roosevelt Message to Congress without using a bad word. Saturday Review.
president
Oceana,
ii.
The Congress
U. S.,
I,
shall
assemble
at least
once
in every year.
Constitution,
rest,
l.i)
The Congress mistrusted him. Thack., Virg., Ch. XCII, 983. (For the apparently, regularly with the definite article suppressed in this novel.)
in the sense of a) "in the Church of England: A provincial synod or assembly of the clergy, constituted by statute and called together to deliberate on ecclesiastical matters." Murray, s. v. 3;
Convocation,
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
b)
"in
553
the
English
Universities:
The
great
legislative assembly of the University, consisting of all qualified members of the degree of M. A.; also a meeting of this body (the earlier sense). In the University of London and the Royal University of Ireland: a body
all registered graduates, having the power of discussing and expressing an opinion on any matter connected with the interests of the University, and of electing certain members of the Senate." Id., s. v. 4. In either meaning the suppression appears to be regular, As the head of the English Church, he (sc. the king) summons and dissolves i. Convocation as the assembly of the clergy of the Church of England is called. Anna Buckland, Our Nat. Inst., 7. Convocation is an ecclesiastical Parliament, summoned in each Province by the archbishops under the command of the King. lb., 69. ii. Every measure, before it reaches Convocation, must go through Congregation; and Congregation, as the Act finally passed, means the whole body of residents and next to nobody else. Sat. Rev., 1863, 300. i)
consisting of
am
if
be offered
place
the
certain
of
Greek
proposed
exception
that
Passmen, with
the
of
Westm. Gaz. No. 5466, 4c. Last week Convocation accepted the compromise on the Greek question, whereby students taking honours in science and mathematics are exempted from compulsory Greek.
Westm. Gaz.,
the
to a body assisting the governor of a or dependency of Great Britain in an executive or legislative capacity, or in both. Mr. Satyendra Sinha, who is appointed legal member of Council, is a lawyer of high
Council,
when
reference
is
Crown colony
Westm. Gaz.,
No, 4961
2a.
sense of the English government. The suppression of Government, the article is unusual, i. What changed his nature was the famine and the way in which Government behave in face of it. A c a d. 2 ) Government must educate the poor man. Emerson. This he sent up to Government. Hogg, Life of Shelley, II, 210. ii. The Government have acted wisely in laying these important facts before the
English people.
Times.
Parliament,
absent.
is,
i.
In
sense of the English Parliament. The article is mostly Green, A Short Hist, of the Engl. People, the article
in the
,
Parliament
ii.
perhaps, as frequently used as dropped, will be opened by the Queen. 19. Bain, H. E. Gr. I wonder you don't go into Parliament. Dick., Christm. Car. &, I wonder whether it would be worth any gentleman's while now,
obserwation
I,
12.
to
buy
,
that
Parliament. Id., Chimes 3 1,13. The Papers is full of obserwations as it is; and so's the Parliament. lb., 14. On the 27th of November the Parliament reassembled. Mac, Wil. Pitt. The Parliament itself rose and bowed to the vacant throne, when his name was mentioned. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, 1, 350. Above all, we see the Parliament destroyed, the business of the nation stopped, its finances thrown into confusion by one exercise of the power now claimed.
Westm. Gaz.,
*)
No. 5207,
lc.
Murray,
s.
v.
congregation, 3b.
X.
554
When
the
word
is
distinctly
may be
the rule.
Tor the early part of the Parliament the procedure has been to wait on the No. 6294, 2a. chapter of accidents, snap divisions [etc.]. Westm. Gaz.
,
17.
The names
of conceptions that are single in their kind are mostly found with the definite article, under the same conditions as in Dutch.
earth. And God saw Bible, Gen., VI, 5.
that
the
in the earth.
Moses was
Id.,
very
weak above
all
Ye
is
Numb.,
Id.,
Matth., V,
The
in its revolution
sea.
Soon
the
Ch. Kinqsley,
Westw.
Hof,
So much
sun.
is at
is vital to this country. Gaz. stake for us in keeping the command of the sea. lb.
Westm.
No. 4925,
4c.
See under
ecliptic.
universe.
adversity.
The
greatest
,
is
a good
man
struggling with
the whole,
Goldsm.
Peggotty told
me
it
the
world.
Ye
I.
V, 14.
Note
Sometimes the
|
article is
Coming
dropped for the sake of the metre. sun with smoke and earth with blood ..
For the
common
chiefly
suppression of the definite article before earth, and on, and before sea, chiefly after
The
the
all.
definite
article
is
often
is
if
i. They had given him an opportunity of displaying before the eyes of all nations and all ages some qualities which irresistibly call forth the admiration
and love of mankind. Mac, Hist., I, C h. I, 64. Of all modern English poets Tennyson has most readers. Wallace G e n. I n s t r. to T e n. s P r n c. , 10. An inspector came up and asked to see all tickets. Westm. Gaz., No. 5024, lb. I did more work in half an hour than he had done all day. Jerome, Idle
, ' ,
Thoughts,
ii.
VI, 75.
in
community.
GUnth.,
All parties in the Reichstag repudiated the Kaiser's imputation of unfriendliness to England. Rev. of Re v., CCXXVIII, 509. All
German
news of the day will be found in 6.30 Final Edition of the Westminster Gazette presented in the most readable form. Westm. Gaz., No. 5277, 13. This accounts for the universal sigh with which the passing of Mr. Balfour has been received by all parties and sections of the House of Commons. T. P. 's Weekly, No. 471,6176.
THE ARTICLE.
Compare*,
Hist.,
If
i.
555
to
All
the five
were sentenced
death.
M c Carthy,
Short
ii.
of all the kingdoms were laid at my feet in exchange for my would spurn them all. Westm. Gaz. (after Fenelon). * These rufflings and patchings will only make us hated by all the wives of our neighbours. Goldsm., Vicar. 1 ) Who were the supporters of the Irish people in this demand? All the forces of democracy in this country. Times, No. 1815. 820c. ** Now the man Moses was very meek, above all the men which were upon
the
crowns
I
books,
Bible, Numbers.
,
XII, 3.
both.
Both young ladies applied themselves to tending Mr. Pecksniff's wounds in the back parlour. Dick., C h u z. Ch. I, 6b. She spake for a few minutes to both children. Mrs. Alex. A Life In t.
i.
,
I,
ii.
Ch.
I,
21.
Both
sons
of
i.
my
their
fortune
in
Australia.
Compare:
The
ii.
Both the prisoners were sent to the Tower by water. Mac. l ) his character enabled him to bid defiance to both the extreme parties. Id. Hist., I Ch. 1 49. * Both the Houses of Parliament gave a hearty assent to the measure. ** Both the poets you mention have equally contributed to introduce a false taste into their respective countries. Goldsm., Vicar. 1 ) In natural courage and intelligence both the nations which now became connected with England, ranked high. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. I, 64.
force
of
.
.
19.
Common
certain
a)
is
also
the
suppression
is last,
of
the
definite
article before
is
meant.
When
modifier
the suppression
is
regular in
case the
beheld them full of lusty life, Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay. Byron C h i 1 d e H a r. III XXVIII. Your conduct of last evening was of a description which no gentleman could endure. Dick., Pickw., Ch. II, 16. It was only last holidays he had in a manner robbed the great apple|
Last noon
tree.
Thack., Pend.,
the servants
. . .
I,
Ch.
II,
31.
All
bowed
or curtseyed to
him.
I
do so
last holidays.
lb.
He tamed two snakes last half. Hughes, Tom. Brown, II, Qh.Ul, 234. was there late last evening. Mrs. Alex* For his Sake, I, Ch. X, 162. No such procession was allowed in France even under the monarchy of last century. Rev. of Rev. CCXXVI, 3106. The following passage ... is one of the finest pieces of English written last century. lb., CCXXXI, 277a.
At last Election the Liberal-Labour men were returned by a majority of about 6.000. Rev. of Rev., CCX XVI, 3106. Last tour everybody was talking about it. Times, No. 1823, 981 d. Thus also in: Because I thought you brave, night before last, was no reason why I should have thought you a coward yesterday. Mar. Crawf.,
ii.
II, Ch. XV, 279. (More usual: the night before last.) but sure the Lady Isabelle- were fit for travel after the horrors of the last night, we would not increase the offence by remaining here an instant longer. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XXIII, 293.
Kath. Land.,
Were
i)
Foels.-Koch,
Wis. Gram.,
284.
556
I
CHAPTER XXXI,
have lived
in
19.
Avignon with
my
Terror ruled, Ch. I, 14. Note The use of these phrases preceding a moment of the past, is this case the use of the article may
I.
to denote an epoch immediately unusual and seems improper. In be more common. For instances
XXX,
11.
Dick.,
left their
goods
last
ii.
He made a scanty breakfast on the remains of the last nights provisions. Wash. Irv., Dolf. Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 123). She left me sitting in the neighbouring chamber, the scene of the last
. . .
nights quarrel.
II.
Thack.
N e w c.
II
Ch. XLII
437.
following quotation the suppression of the article is exceptional, and due to an excessive desire of shortness: Kite. But, sir, you have got a recruit here that you little think of. Kite. One that you beat up for last time you were in the Plume. Who?
In country.
the
Farquhar,
the
Recruiting Officer,
is
1,1,(254).
b)
When
suppression is met with chiefly in adjuncts and adnominal genitives or their periphrastic equiIn these it is regular when the reference is to an epoch valents. immediately succeeding the moment of speaking or writing. Usage is divided in denoting an epoch following upon a moment in the past. Ch. XXX, 12.
modifier
next,
the
adverbial
i.
will
have greatly
we say?
P., sorts of
John Chilcote,
They promise
Bill
M.
all dreadful deeds next Session, if the Home Rule goes through. Westm. Gaz., No. 6305, 36. There ought to be a General Election before next Session. Westm. Gaz., No. 6329, 2a. In the Weekly Times of next week a new serial will be begun. Further details will be found in next week's issue,
ii.
't Was the next day my aunt found the matter out. Sher., Riv., I, 2, (217). About the middle of the next day ... a sudden noise below seemed to speak whole house in confusion. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., the Ch. XXVIII, 159. j That day in private they went into the thing together, and saw that some roguery was being played. The next day it was all out, and ruin stared them in the face. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. Ill, 50. The next morning Mr. Eden visited some of the poorest people in the parish. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to men d, I, Ch. VII, 83. The next morning little Capitaine Crepin came back in a great state of excitement. W. Black, The New Prince For tun. Ch. XIV. ** He was early at the office next morning. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, V, 109. Susan was up betimes next day. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to
,
mend,
Note.
also
Next sometimes occasions the dropping of the definite before other nouns than such as express time. Thus
:
the
girl
Dick.,
Christm. Car.s,
II,
45.
THE ARTICLE.
The sound appeared as if it was Marry at Olla Podrida.
,
557
our house instead of next-door.
in
/?)
exceptionally in:
You'll cross a lane after next field.
Hughes
Tom
20.
The
a)
It
definite
article
is
often
dropped
also
before
superlatives:
mostly omitted before the indefinite numeral most. Ellinger, Beitr., 27. Sometimes the dropping is attended by a change of meaning: compare He has eaten most apples with He has eaten the most apples. In the first sentence there is a comparison of the apples that have been eaten and those that have been left. In the second there is a comparison of two or more persons as to the number of apples that each has eaten. But, as the following quotations
is
Verm.
show, the article is often dropped where, according to the principle underlying the distinction between the two above sentences, it ought to be used. In not a few cases the principle cannot be applied
at
1)
all.
The
i.
article is not
uncommon, before
,
1
the
conjoint
most.
This was the part of his life on which he afterwards looked back with most pride. Mac. Lord C v e (530a). Like most writing which is at once very good and very laboured,
i
,
Lecky, Hist, of
of most things and himself of almost anything. Times. But, if the question is who in his own time, or indeed in any other, gave the world most harmless amusement, there will be but one
answer.
In
Id., No. 1832, 11 Id. the production of most vowels the tongue is
convex
to the palate.
Jones,
ii.
Pron. of Eng.,
20.
What
a troublesome world this is, when one has the most right to expect it to be as agreeable as possible. Dick., Cop., Ch. IV, 226. It is those who injure women, who get the most kindness from them. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XV, 158. Perhaps it was the hardest task of all which Laura had to go through in this matter: and the one which gave her the most pain. Id.,
Pend.,
I
I,
like
to
talk
who can
lb., I,
Ch.
XXX,
the
317.
As
on
question of drink, the races that produce the most effect world are those that consume the most meat and the most alcohol. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., II, Ch. X, 181. Ask the beggar whom he gets the most pence from. Lytton, Night
for the
and Morn.,
are
136.
most children? Notes and Queries. most mischief in civilised communities, Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Jane Oglander,
the
the
Note
the change of
article in the
meaning which the omission of the definite following quotation would entail:
341.
2)
ib., 345.
i)
Sattler, E.
S.,
XXXI,
558
The
religious belief of the
the
first
CHAPTER XXXI,
most civilised number it (sc.
20.
among
2)
nations, and the rude traditions of the the delight of meeting at Christmas) joys of a future condition of existence. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXVIII.
is less
common
before the
absolute most
my
lose
most
of
without
aunt's consent
till
Sheridan,
Most
block.
the
Dick.,
evening whistling and talking with Roundhand on the verandah. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. IV, 43. It was four hundred acres, all arable and most of it poor sour land. Ch.'Reade, It is nevertoo late to mend, I, Ch. I, 2. Most of the assembly were dissolved in tears. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. II, 58.
sat
He
most
the
Most
of
the
work
in these
departments
is
Good Words,
.
1885 (Stof.,
Leesb.,
I, 94).
ii.
were most of them daughters of well-to-do families Miss Wooler's pupils in the neighbourhood. Miss Flora Masson, The Brontes, Ch. V, 28. The most of them (sc. his followers) answered "There is no contravening that" Scott, Mod., Ch. XXXV, 376. There you must spend the most of your time. Jane Austen, North.
.
.
Abbey,
The most
I
Ch.
of
XXX,
233.
my
New Arabian
Nights,
30.
Jews) have the most of it (sc. your money) already. Ch. XV, 118. Trol., Barch. The millionaire must be regarded as the working bee, the most of whose golden store must at his death be appropriated by the community. Rev.
believe
they
(sc. the
Tow
of Rev., CCV,
'Heart'
is
28.
many compounds, the most of which need no special explanation. Webst., i. v. heart. 'Fellow' is often used in compositon, indicating an associate or sometimes The most of these are self-explaining. Id., equality: as 'fellow-student'.
used
in
s. v.
fellow.
You have a great deal more Mrs Oliphant. *) He (sc. Quiller-Couch) believed
that the most of them Old Testament) could wonderfully improve 'the talent e s t m. G a z. call it. No. 6240, 8rf.
the
of the ear', as he
would
3)
Usage seems to be about equally divided before the substantive most, which is generally used of things, rarely of persons. * Those who know most of Sir Thomas. Trol. i. 2)
think I have ** He is more
I
The Way
ii.
done most by sea. Lady Barker, Lett. 141.2) generously equipped in the matter than most. Ethel M. Dell, of an Eagl e, II, Ch. XII, 94.
|
They who know the most Must mourn the deepest o'er the fatal truth The Tree of Knowledge is not that of Life. Byron, Manfred, I, 1. It was Mrs. Dibble who could tell the most. Miss Burnett, Little Lord, 240. Of all our dramatists Shakespeare loses the most by a dumb-show performance. Westm. Gaz. No. 6353, la. ** Sunk ... Too deep for the most to discern. M. Arnold Y o u t h of
,
|
Nature,
i)
71.3)
VI.
II,
2)
Sattler, E.
S.,
XXXI,
343.
3)
most, A,
7, b.
THE ARTICLE.
To To
4)
the most, indeed, he had become not so much a S art. Res. Ch. Ill, 11.
559
Man
as a Thing.
Carl.,
the Editor of these sheets, as to a young enthusiastic Englishman, however unworthy, Teufelsdrockh opened himself perhaps more than to the most. lb., 13.
Some
The
hardly ever dropped: a) when most is modified by by far. As pre- (prae-) and pro- are great Latin prefixes,
it
most
of
t
the
words
E. D.
is
,
in
this
section
are
of Latin origin
Murray, Pref.
Note
/?)
o N.
premisal
prophesier.
when most
The
rat
is
All the
Year Round,
Murray, Fowler,
letters
Ill,
,
This is really the most that I can concede. The most that can be hoped for, is [etc.].
s. v.
most A,
II,
5.
Concise Oxford
the
Diet., Pref.
Note
Dick.,
the
z
idiom
n.)
in
t.
If
it's
Our M u
ij
Friend,
the
Ch.
27.
(=
Dutch:
mooi
;)
in the
phrase to
make
most
of.
have not made the most of our victories. Swift, Conduct of the Allies, Pref., (421a). How to make the most of her beauty. Gay, Beggar's Opera, 1,4. Every pretext for physical recreation was seized and made the most of.
Ch.
We
BrontE
1 1
1 1
We
<5)
it. Dick., Pickw., Ch. I, 3. cannot complain if Protectionist writers and speakers make the most of this plum. Westm. Gaz., No. 5543, lc.
make
the
most of
in the
in the
Ch.
i.
XXX,
Pend.,
I,
Ch.
outsiders.
Good
Words
ii.
(Stof.,
Leesb.,
I,
94).
In Germany as elsewhere, the ninety-and-nine Public Men can for most part be but mute train-bearers to the hundredth. Carl., Sart. Res.,
Ch.
Ill,
I.
16.
When not preceded by for, most part seems to stand mostly without the article. The article is regularly dropped before this phrase used adverbially, * i. went and took a view of most part of Hungary. S. L. tr. Fryke's Voy. E. Ind., 2.i) was puzzled to bequeath most part of my clothes ... to Lorna. Blackm., Lorna Doone, Ch. XXXVII, 217. ** Mere resin and noise most part. Carlyle, French Rev., I, 109.-') Old official gentlemen, military most part. Id., Fred. 2 ) His nature was most part a cold one. E. Fitz Gerald. 2) ii. My dear little girl was, thank God, unable to understand the most part
Note
I I
of their ribaldry.
Thack.,
Sam. Titm.,
2)
!)
Murray,
s.v.
most, A,
1, c.
Sattler, E.
S.,
XXXI,
346.
560
Some few
the
CHAPTER XXXI,
20.
but of the younger grovelled at his knees, and kissed his feet, most part kept a stolid indifference. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXV, 1846. II. Before most when equivalent to most part, the article seems to be dropped regularly. It had rained most of October, but November was, though dark, fairly dry. Baroness von Hutten What became of Pam. Ch. XIV, 102. Compare with the above: The personal charms which Tess could boast of were in main part her mother's gifts. Hardy, Tess, I, Ch. Ill, 21.
. .
.
b)
What has been said of most most probably applies, in the main, also The evidence to hand at to least when used as an indefinite numeral. the. moment of writing is, however, too scanty to justify the drawing
of
any definite conclusions, He showed least mercy conjoint, 223. I.Schmidt, Eng. Gram.,
i.
,
to
those
who had
forsaken
him.
ii.
Of the well-defined vowels that which is articulated with least effort is [a]. 37. Rippmann Sounds of Spok. Eng., The fewest words will probably do the least harm in the long run. H. B. Mayor, The Fallacy of the Elder Brother (Nineteenth Cent., No. 393, 813). Of all people in the world the English have the least sense of the beauty of literature. Oscar Wilde, The Pict. of Dor. Gray Ch. IV, 62.
i.
absolute,
in their
Those who have most virtue in their mouths have least of it Goldsmith, She Stoops to Con qu er, II, (190). last it was the turn of the good old-fashioned dance which has the least ii. At of variety and the most of merriment in it. G. Eliot, Mill, VI, Ch. X, 407. substantive, i. The truly modest and stout say least and are least exceptious. Wych., The Plain Dealer, II, 1. The few who are wealthy ... are the ones who have least to fear. L t.
bosoms.
i
World
il.
Those
obey the
best.
G. Farquhar,
The Recruiting
V.
(In this
Officer,
(307).
Marryat, Pirate,
proverb
the article is mostly suppressed before both superlatives.) We, of all the peoples, have the most to lose and the least to gain by
war.
49, 151.
Note.
a)
when
the
hypothetical
or
interrogative
contexts
it
has
meaning
function (Ch.
any however small. (Ch. XL, 18, Obs. IV). In this approaches, however, distinctly to an ordinary adjective.
8, s.v. least, a.)
XXX,
Fire-escape intended to be always ready without the least preparation. II. Catal., Gt. Exhib., 330. i) all the scenes that were in the least degree associated with Winnie, I visited Th. Watts Dunton, Ay 1 wi n, XIV, Ch. I, 386.
least
idea
of
Bern. Shaw,
Getting Married,
in the
(241).
We
phrase to say the least (of it). hold the moral law to be as much, to say the least of it, the appointc ment of God as any natural law. Cosh, Div. Govt., II, ii, 197. i)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
y)
561
when modified by
"And what
will
possible:
for dinner, mem?" "Oh, the least possible!" Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, HI, Ch. I, 239. e s t m. They only wish to do the least possible that will satisfy Wales. Gaz., No. 6147, la.
you have
Aon.
&
c)
reasonably be assumed that fewest exhibits, in the main, the practice as least as regards the use of the article. Anything like adequate documentary evidence is not, however, available at the moment
It
may
same
of going to press.
,
Of
all
my
acquaintance he
I.
223.
Those who have fewest children have fewest cares. Scott, Mon., Ch. II, 61. The present Prime Minister has set an admirable example of forcible, condensed speaking, but he has few imitators, and perhaps fewest on the front benches. Westm. Gaz., No. 5549, 2a.
d)
The
superlative first often loses the definite article in the adverbial the first thing {place), especially in colloquial language, in which unimportant words are often suppressed for the sake of brevity.
phrase
i.
to,
first place?
first
Mrs. Gask.,
Mary Barton,
What were you fretting about, You must pay him first thing.
I
place? lb., Ch. V, 42. G. Eliot, Mill, III, Ch. IV, 203. meant to have a few words with you on this subject first thing.
breakfast early.
Mrs.
lb., I,
Ward, Sir George Tres., HI, Ch. XXI, 177a. You can order a fly first thing, and bring me my
Ch.
ii.
II,
14a.
He must go
Norsem.,
Go down,
next day.
Edna Lyall,
Hardy
G. Meredith, Ch. LXXI, 251. the first thing to-morrow morning. Flor. of him
18.
a goal
Hughes,
lb. i)
Occasionally we find the article dropped also before other superlatives than the above, mostly as it seems, for the sake of metre or rhythm. Instances are especially frequent in earlier English. Compare 28, a,
3,
a,
Note
II;
64,
c;
37;
and see Dubislaw, Beitr., 9, Ellinger, Einenkel, Streifz., 28; Franz, Shak.
shall have the longest moans. Rich. II, V, I, 90. Best safety lies in fear. Haral., 1,3, 41. As richest soil the most But grace abus'd brings forth the foulest deeds, luxuriant weeds. Cowper. *)
|
Blighting
my
life
Byron,
Lam. of Tasso,
,
IV, 21.
Thus
also chief sometimes loses the article: Caius Marcius is chief enemy to the people. Coriol. I, 1, 8. O Son, in whom my soul hath chief delight. Milt., Par. Lost, Bar. Orczy, The Stapylton has chief control of its finances. i s s E 1 1 i o 1 1 Ch. II 18.
III,
168
Case
of
M
i)
H.
II.
36
562
21.
CHAPTER XXXI,
21.
The
definite article is often suppressed before one, when used as the correlative of the other, another, other or of another one. See Ch.XL, 155-158, and compare also Ten Brug., Taalst., VI, 28. a)
When
1)
it
is
XL,
155, a).
Suppression
a)
i.
practically regular:
when the two words are connected by or * When the question is settled one way
believe
or nor.
Mr. Brough
will
81.
had the
tell
it
and health
of the servants'
hall in keeping.
Heaven can
them
rightly:
but,
was
pill
or the other with equal belief in her authority. Id., Virg. , Ch. XLV, 465. to escape conscription They want to eat their cake and have it It cannot be done, and cut down the Navy gentlemen! It is one or the other, as Cobden saw fifty years ago. Rev. of Rev.,
CCXVIII, 127a.
The overwhelming
,
majority of the books noted are so prejudiced that they are quite negligible. e s t m.
Gaz. No. 6147, 116. ** The tide of battle seemed to flow now toward the southern, now toward the northern extremity of the lists, as the one or the other party prevailed. Scott, van hoe, Ch. XII, 123.
I
ii.
It
but two months since you were sighing at her feet making placing them in hollow trees by the river-side. poems to her
is
I
knew
all.
watched you
to
that is, she showed them to me. was in earnest, perhaps; but it is too begin a new attachment. Thack., Pend.
,
when
I
the reference
v
is
indefinite.
he has accused me of stealing Van den Bosch's spoons and tankards when we dine there or of robbing on the highway. But for one reason or the other he has chosen to be the jealous of me. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXX, 743. (The one
don't
know
that
other would be equivalent to the former... the latter. See 2, a.) Sometimes they (sc. these chieftains) hired themselves to one state to protect it against the other. Lytton, Rienzi, Ch. IV, 103.
y)
when the two words, connected by and, form a kind of unit standing for each or both. When Laura appeared blushing and happy, as she hung on Pen's arm, the Major gave a shaky hand to one and the other. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XXXVIII, 399. She had taken unfair advantage of him, as her brother had at play. They were his own flesh and blood, and they ought to have spared him. Instead, one and the other had made a prey of him. Id.,
Virg., Ch. XLVIII,
496.
Thus
also the definite article- is regularly dropped in the to and fro. phrase: one way and the other To flounce to throw the limbs and body one way and the other,
Webst.
To wag
Diet.
to
lb.
THE ARTICLE.
563
six
Note also the regular absence of the definite article in the saying: of one and half-a-dozen of the other (= Dutch o u d 1 o o d
o u d
ij
z e
r.)
skill
or idleness.
of the other.
<5)
Dick.
Bleak House,
when
in reciprocal relation an intervening having occasioned the substitution of the other for another. (Ch. XL, 156, c, Obs. III.) i. They walked one behind the other. Conan Doyle, Refugees, 317. We depended one upon the other. Besant, All Sorts and Cond. of Men, Ch. XVI, 126. ii. Here the two bodies are inimical the one to the other. Athen. No.
the
preposition
4447, 61c.
2)
The article seems to be almost regularly retained before one: when the word-group is used substantively and equivalent )
. . .
to the
the latter. former The First Minister of State has not so much business in public as a wise man has in private; if the one have little leisure to be alone, the other has little leisure to be in company. Cowley, Essays, Of Solitude, 50.
i.
The one vanquished by a single blow, the other by efforts successively Goldsm., Vic, Ch. I. Mr. Bumble had a great idea of his oratorical powers and his importance. He had displayed the one, and vindicated the other. Dick., 01. Twist,
repeated.
Ch.
ii.
II,
24. in the market came, one as easily as the other, to stormy dale. Hal. Sutcl. Pam the Fiddler,
,
who
tilled the
the
conjunctive
expressions
.
on the other,
in the
i.
(Ch. X, 10.) The acute Roman took care, on the one hand, how he betrayed to the Knight more than he yet knew, or he disgusted him by apparent reserve on the other. Lytton R i e n z i II Ch. IV, 105.
.
one case
in the other.
ii.
power of the party to pass any legislation in the teeth of any popular movement; in the other the party is to be brought to a full-stop, unless it will submit itself to a e s t m. G a z. plebiscite. ** Guarded by his own conscience on one hand, on the other, by the remoteness of the hamlet, ... he had maintained the old decencies of worship here. Hal. Sutcl., Pam the Fiddler, Ch. IV, 56.
is
* In
the
no
limit to the
3)
For the rest usage is divided, but there seems to be a distinct tendency to suppress the article. One hand may wash the other, but both the face. Proverb.
i.
You look at it, Arabin, from one side only; I can look at it from the other. Trol., Framl. Pars, Ch. XXXVI, 353. Of the two rival claimants, one did homage to Philip and the other to Edward.
Short Hist. There are two drawers to my table; in one I put my copy-books, in the other my letters. Gunth. Leerb. der Eng. T a a 1. The Commissionaire plumped down into the chair, and stared from one to the other of us. Con. Doyle Sherl. Holm. The Blue Carbuncle,
Green
,
ii.
were both so exactly distinguish the one from the other. Lamb.,
They
(sc.
the
twins)
alike, that
it
was impossible
Er.
,
to
Tales, Com. of
212.
564
The product of the You the one half,
Ch. IV, 105.
and
year, great or small, shall be divided amongst us. my men the other half. Lytton, Rienzi, II,
old moss-grown paling, from the neighbouring the other. Id., Night and
Morning,
155.
Captain de Catinet had hardly vanished through the one door, before the other was thrown open by Madlle Nanon. Con. Doyle, Refugees, 85.
b)
When
(Ch.
one
is
the
correlative
of
of other
XL,
XL,
158),
it
regularly stands
i.
ii.
horse, while another may leap over the Ch. V, 76. One good turn deserves another. Punch, 1894, 155. He tried to reassure himself with an old and favourite maxim of his,
not
look
at a
Mrs.
Wood, Or v. Col.,
that
all
Wash. Irving,
Do If
The
iii.
Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
124).
longer it goes on, the nearer it must be to a settlement one ox other. Dick., Bleak House, Ch. XIV, 112.
way
One
after
out.
Hall Caine
DeemCh.
ster, Ch. XXIV, 170. One said this and one XXXVI, 213.
22. Partly
Blackmore,
Lorna Doone,
stands
contrary to ordinary Dutch practice, the definite article before nouns modified by such participial adjectives as
(afore)said), before-mentioned, etc. The said face indicated an independent dignity. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. X, 109. Annual subscriptions, which must be prepaid, are received to the under-mentioned
periodicals.
Times, Adv.
THE ARTICLE BEFORE PROPER NOUNS.
23.
in
their
primary and
article.
As
in
may assume the character of class-nouns, take the definite or indefinite article. In their altered
application they admit of being used in the plural, i. The lighter, which might have been compared to another garden of Eden, of which my mother was the Eve, and my father the Adam to consort with,
was entered by
ii.
this serpent, who tempted ful, Ch. I, 3a. He is a plain John Bull, and has no
her.
Marryat,
relish
for frippery
Wash.
Irv.,
309.
The
Hi.
lofly
alliance
very Roxana.
had converted the once gentle and dreamy Rose into a Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho! Ch. XIX, 1466.
young
Cratchits
became
livid.
m.
Car. 6,
68.
Note in this connection the placing of a before names of persons used as war-cries. This a is now mostly treated as the indefinite article, but is in reality the representative of the obsolete interjection a, which
THE ARTICLE.
is
565
s.
dialect
See Murray,
hist. Synt.
des Eng.,
a.
Henry
VI,
B,
"A Hubert! a Hubert!" shouted the populace. Scott, Ivanhoe, Ch. XII, 137. "A Colonna! a Colonna!" "An Orsini! an Orsini!" were shouts loudly and
fiercely interchanged.
Lytton, Rienzi,
I,
Ch.
I,
14.
The little town was in an uproar with men running to and fro, and shouting "A Monmouth! a Monmouth! the Protestant religion !" Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 142. Such as had possessed themselves of pikes in the city waved pennons in the air and cried: "A Roy! a Roy of Calverton". Max Pemberton, crown thee king, Ch. XVIII 234. They were sore weary, laggards in hope, but still they cried: "A Wyat! a Wyaf. lb., 233. 24. Many proper names are distinctly significant, and are, conseI
,
quently,
more or less regularly preceded by the definite article. The function of the article is twofold, i. e. it suggests a specializing
or individualizing element, as in the Channel (= the Channel between it indicates pre-eminence as in the Book
This difference is Cf. 5. a) and c). Bible). however, here insisted on, as being of no importance for any
The following groups of significant proper names may be distinguished. a) names of persons and deities: the Devil, the Father, the Lord,
the Redeemer, the Saviour, the Virgin, the Speaker, etc.
b)
c)
names of localities: the Channel, the Exchange, the Levant, the Mall, the Mint, the Peak, the Poultry, the Strand, the Tower, etc. names of institutions and social or political events: the Inquisition,
Synod, the Reformation, the Restoration, the Revolution, etc. also the Epiphany or the manifestation (sc. of the infant Jesus to the Gentiles in the persons of the Magi), chiefly used as the name of a church festival, also called Twelfth Night.
the
Thus
d)
names of books and other publications: Standard, the Times, the Globe, etc.
Book, the
little
illustration
book.
Swear upon
the
reveal
it,
till
Enoch Arden,
the
834.
With the coming of the new year a minor improvement has been made
of administering the oath in the courts. No longer is to kiss the Book. No. 5201 , 2b. e s t m. a z.
way
it
necessary
Epiphany.
of
Nativity,
Epiphany.
Harmsw.
to be universally observed as the day the feast of January 6, twelve days after, was retained as the E n c. s. v. Epiphany. (The absence of the article
,
the Epiphany.
Common
Irv.
,
Prayer.
,
the Tower.
Wash.
Sketch-Bk. XXV,
244.
substitutes often lose the article in imprecations, Conoreve, Love for Love, 11,2,(235).
its
devil on't.
Pox on
her!
566
249.
Van. Fair,
Intro
d.
ii.
The
devil take
me!
Congreve,
V, 2, (301).
O' the devill what damned costive poet has given thee this lesson in fustian to get by rote? lb., Ill, 3, (241).
The
devil fetch
me
if
do
G. Farquhar,
The Recruiting
Officer,
IV, 3, (320).
Compare with
are one and the
/?)
the above:
same person
a)
Captain
The
To what
Who
The
the deuce
was she?
Id.,
Pend.,
VII, 70.
II,
found
in
a plague means
my
What Twelfth
Night, I, 3, 1. What a pox does this Foresight mean by this civility? Congreve, Love for Love, II, 2, (236). II. Also Lord sometimes loses the article in the language of invocation. Lord send we may be coming to something better in the New Year nigh upon
us!
Dick.,
Chimes 3
I,
14.
Lord love you! Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. Lord deliver us! Buchanan, That Winter
VIII, 82.
Night,
Ch.
Ill,
29.
The
25. a)
Farquhar,
the significant meaning of such words ceases to be understood, they are apt to lose the article. This is the case with Christ, God; Eden, Heaven, Hell, Paradise, Purgatory; Elysium, Hades, Orcus, Tartarus.
When
And a river went out of Edeh to water the garden. Bible, Gen., II, 10. He descended into Hell; The third day he rose again from the dead. He ascended into Heaven. Common Prayer. A visitant from if it (sc. the bird) were in winged guise I know not P r s. of C h Paradise. Byron X, 34. In Homer Tartarus is a place beneath the earth, as far below Hades as heaven is above the earth. Cassell's Concise Cycl. Note I. Christ is sometimes found with the article. Thou art the Christ. Bible, M a 1 1 h. XVI 16.
.
.
i 1.
We
I
which
is,
Id.,
John,
as
if
lay their hands in mine and swear To reverence the King, he were Their conscience, and their conscience as their King, To 467. break the heathen and uphold the Christ. Ten., Guin.
made them
Christ is dealt with as an ordinary appellative and may, accordingly, stand with any of the ordinary noun-modifiers, when it denotes an image used as an object of worship.
At a meeting of the paths was a crucifix, and between the feet of the Christ No. 6182, la. a little red patch of dead poppies. Westm. Gaz. to in the singular or as whether is divided II. heaven, Usage
,
the plural.
The singular in its various shades of meaning, mostly stands without the article; apparently, regularly when it denotes the Supreme
THE ARTICLE.
m
Being,
567
in the
sense of
the Universe.
The plural, on the other hand, in all its varied applications, is almost regularly preceded by the article, except in the vocative. (Ch. XXV, 20.) See also Ellinger, Verm. Beitr., 26.
i.
In the
The sun
When
ii.
beginning God created the heaven and the earth. Bible, Gen., 1, 1. slowly sank in the heaven. W. Collins, After Dark, 81. *) from the heaven does not smile a listening Father, it soon becomes
1.
an empty space. Annie Besant, Autobiography, 133. * Heaven's Ovid's Met., high canopy that covers all. Dryden Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven. Milton, Par. Lost,
,
I,
263.
Trees,
As high as heaven.
Ten.,
Sea Dreams,
100.
of great height are said by hyperbole to reach to heaven. Murray, heaven, lb The clouds, winds, breath, fowls of heaven. lb., 2. ** (1 would) speak with her, if Heaven gives me an opportunity, as Heaven, I feel assured, will give. Ch. Kinqsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1436. *** There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt
Things
s.
v.
of in your philosophy.
Ham
1. ,
I,
Papa
...
if
he could.
Trol.,
Orley
Anti-
Farm,
Nothing
New
meant, and before Paradise when it is not the abode of the blessed, but the Garden of Eden that is referred to. Franz, Shak. Gram.-', 265. The heaven such grace did lend her. Two Gentlem., IV, 2, 41.
that
riot
Adam
Err.,
takes
that
kept
Adam
that
IV, 3, 15.
the
definite article,
is
when preceded by a
continuative
the Almighty God. all the blessings He had bestowed on him. * I am the Almighty God; walk before me. Bible, Gen., XVII, 1. ** Great and manifold were the blessings, most dread Sovereign, which Almighty God, the Father of all mercies, bestowed upon us, the people of
England.
Authorised Version.
to to
in St. Paul's Cathedral the King and Queen rendered thanks Almighty God for the safe and happy course and ending of their visit India. Times, No. 1832, 116d.
On Tuesday
On
The
b)
God
also, perhaps,
Almighty Power, as
in:
Almighty Power
is here.
Ebenezer Elliott,
Love,
II.
The suppression cannot, however, always be accounted for in this way. As is also shown by a comparison of the nouns mentioned
in
24 and 25,
a,
it
is
of language. mostly omitted before Scripture, notwithstanding the significancy of the word. The plural, however,
economy
is
Thus
the
definite
article
seems
!)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.
26.
*)
Murray,
s.
v.
heaven.
568
i.
father.
So spoke, in the emphatic words of Scripture, Scott Fair Maid, Ch. XXXV, 373.
,
. .
the helpless
and
bereft
read the service in a lively agreeable voice, giving The clergyman almost a dramatic point to the chapters of Scripture which he read. Thack., Virg., Ch. XV, 148. We have the authority of Scripture for believing that the unjust steward, though he fears not God and regards not man, nevertheless is roused to action if the importunate widow will but be importunate enough.
.
406a.
** The Prayer. Scripture moveth us in sundry places [etc.]. I asked the boy whether he or his parents were acquainted with the Scripture and ever read it. George Borrow The Bible in Spain, Ch. I, 11.
,
Common
ii.
Dutch
tiles
s,
designed to
illustrate
the
Scriptures.
Dick.,
Christm.
Car.
|, 21.
main by her own intelligence and an was an aid to her in this matter. Rudy. Kipl., The Light that failed, Ch. I, 4. There's an infallible guide both for you and me, and that's the Holy
Her religion, manufactured
in the
Scriptures.
Mrs.
Ward
Da v. Grieve,
Mrs. Gask.
I,
238.
2) In
article.
"Flesh
26.
There are, however, numerous cases in which the article continues to be used, although all significancy in the name is practically
gone, or at least forgotten.
a) before
b) before
all
Thus
the article
is
regularly used:
in
plurals (Ch.
XXV,
19, /).
Those mentioned following singulars. group have a Dutch equivalent without the article.
the
j.
the
second
the Carnatic, the Crimea, the Hague, the Herzegovina , the Lindeness, the Lizard (= Lizard Point), the Minch, the Naze (= the Lindeness), the Nore, the Palatinate, the Punja(u)b (Punjab), the Sahara, the Solent, the Sound, the Sudan, the Ukraine. the Deccan, the Grisons, the Morea, the Texel (as the name of
ii.
Note.
iii.
the article,
A few
Lindeness.
The
I, 2.
coast
isles
from
its
southern
Ch. Bronte,
Jane
Eyre,
Ch.
Lizard. It was only on the ninetheenth of July that the sails of the Armada were seen from the Lizard. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, VI, 41& Arthur's ship is sighted off the Lizard. Grant Allen, Hilda Wade, Ch, I, 25. Lieutenant Prowse was washed off the conning-tower platform of submarine "C 37" near the Lizard on Saturday of last week. II. Lond. News, No. 3703, 528a. Morea. Its modern name, the Morea .... was given to it from its resemblance in shape to a mulberry leaf. Harms w. En eye I., s. v. Peloponnesus.
i)
Foels.
Koch, Wis.
Gram.,
267.
THE ARTICLE.
Punjaub. During his few years of office he annexed the Punjaub. Hist., Ch. XIII 175. The manufacturing industry of the Punjab is more extensive than
569
M c Carthy,
in
Short
any other
H,
province of India.
Texel.
They
(sc.
ships)
were said
to
be
in
the
Texel.
Mac, Hist.,
Ch- V, 119.
While his small fleet lay tossing in the Texel, a contest was going on among the Dutch authorities. lb., 139. The Dutch fleet from the Texel, which was to protect a French force in its descent upon Ireland, was met by a far larger fleet under admiral Duncan. Green, Short Hist., Ch. X, 810. We may be anywhere between the Texel and Cap Gris Nez. Ch. Kingsley,
Herew.,
Before
some
Ay res,
the
Carac(c)as,
the article has disappeared or is disappearing: the Buenos the Hainault, the Honduras, the Mauritius, the
Buenos Ayres.
ii.
She must have been bound from the Buenos Ayres, or the Rio de la Plata, in the south part of America, beyond the Brazils, to the Havana, in the Gulf of Mexico. Defoe, Rob. Crusoe, 192. The mean temperature of Buenos Ayres is nearly the same as at Cadiz.
i.
Harmsworth Encyclop.
Carac(c)as.
Caraccas.
i.
s. v.
Argentine Republic
it
331a.
at the
(This)
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw.
How
ii.
I
it to the Caraccas? lb., be governor of La Guayra in Caraccas. lb., Ch. XII, 1006. Caracas is connected with La Guaira by a narrow-gauge line. HarmswdTth
far is to
seemed, to some Sefiora or other Ho!, Ch. XXVII, 206a. Ch. XV, 124a.
am
Encycl.
Hainault.
i.
Its*
Mons) marks
,
it
H. Belloc,
line.
ii.
Mons (Westm.
is still
The Hainault
lb.
No. 5317, 5a). called the Hainault upon stamped paper beyond the frontier
of
v.
Gaz.
From the middle of the 11th century down to 1477, the countship was almost continuously united with it. Harmsworth Encycl., s.
i.
Hainault
Flanders.
Don't you mind William # Prust, that Captain Hawkins left behind Honduras, in the Honduras? C. Kingsley, Westw. Hoi, Ch.XX, 153a. ii. Honduras is burdened with a heavy external debt. Harms w. Encycl.
Mauritius,
ii.
The ship bore for the Mauritius. A Ship on Fire (Stof., Leesb. 1,5). On Thursday she sighted the Island of Rodrigues, and arrived at Mauritius on Monday 23rd. lb. He is now the holder of a Government appointment in the island of Mauritius.
i.
,
The omission
list
of
Holmes, 11,280. these colonies and some others, such as Mauritius, from the
lb.
Tyrol, i. I will send you a guide-book from the Tyrol. Beatr. Harraden, Ships, I, Ch. XIX, 107. The castle, which is the largest in the Tyrol, has fallen from its former high estate. Westm. Gaz., No. 5388, 1 3a. Motorists travelling the Tyrol should note the new police regulations regarding motor traffic. lb., No. 5394, 13a. ii. The Alps of Switzerland being extended into Tyrol. Cassell's Concise
Cyclop.,
s. v.
Tyrol.
570
The
With
table,
II.
the
Adige,
and, the
s. v.
their
courses
in
Tyrol.
Harmsworth
cultured
Encycl.,
romantic
Lond.
landscape, its many historic associations, and its hospipeople, Tyrol has an irresistible appeal for every traveller. New, No. 3816, 891a.
i.
Peloponnesus (Peloponnese).
ii.
Sparta
Peloponnesus.
u, 110.
s. v.
Sparta.
The Heroes,
II,
Peloponnesus consolidated and enlarged their ancient league. Harmsworth Encycl., s. v. Greece, 333a. Note. According to Wendt (S y n t. d e s h e u t. E n g. 164) Barbado(e)s apparently a plural, often stands with the article, Bermuda is getting more and more common for the Bermudas when the whole archipelago is designated, the Bahamas has not yet been ousted by Bahama, the Havana occasionally appears for Havana.
, ,
27.
An unconscious
or dim perception of the significancy that originally attached to all proper names, may also account for the occasional use of the definite article before certain ancient family-names of
Scotch or
Irish,
of English history.
of
The article is said to have the force of representing the bearer the name as a person of note and (or) as the head of his clan
or
find it especially in the family, but its use is highly irregular. old ballads and the romantic tales of Scott. Instances also occUr in Shakespeare and, indeed, in the oldest literature. In the latest English we also find it before the names of famous beauties, or 'stars'. Some-
We
is
revived
of
in
mock-heroic poetry.
|
We
us.
will
persuade the
Duke
Burgundy
To
|
My
was
Is
Henry
Rome
there
a king. Jul. Caes. II, I, 54. not my father, my uncle and myself? lord
is
Edmund Mortimer, my
Douglas?
lord of
Henry
IV,
A, II, 3, 27. The Douglas and the Hotspur bo*th together Are confident against the world in arms. Id., A, V, 1, 116. Can not frame afever'd dream, But still the Douglas is the theme? Scott,
|
Lady,
Pour
xxxv, 75.
Graeme!
Take arms,
you love the Stewart. Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXXV, 373. Robert the Bruce was present, and assisted the English to gain the victory. 256. Id., Tales of a Grand f.
,
Baldeary O'Donnel,
in Spain.
ii.
who
title
far
prouder
in
and the O'Nale They were great, but what were they compared to Miss Fotheringay. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. V, 57. Your manner reminded me of Mars. Did you ever see the Mars, Miss
I've
seen
Siddons,
sir,
Fotheringay? lb., Ch. XI, 113. The Fotheringay was uncommonly handsome,
skin.
lb., I,
in a
splendid,
Newc.
I,
Ch.
XXV,
278.
THE ARTICLE.
I
571
never knew the Bernstein but as an old woman. Id., Virg., Ch. XXVII, 281. the Cattarina wrote him billets-doux, I fear Aunt Bernstein would have bade him accept the invitations. lb., Ch. XXVIII, 289. The Yarmouth bears no malice. lb., Ch. XLI, 422. She had not so grand an appearance as the Symonds. James Pain, GlowTales, I, H, Ch. II, 149. When the Symonds broke her leg, there was nothing for it buf to engage
If
worm
lb.,
|
152.
;
|
The Balfour and the Chamberlain Were walking close at hand They wept like anything to see So great a waste of sand: "If Asquith would but plough it up", They said, "it would be grand". Westm. Gaz. No. 5249, 5. want to present Mr. Dummer the Dummer, mustn't forget Oh! you know. Anstey Voces Populi.
|
Compare
with
investigate the subject, may consult the chronicles of of Bruce , by Archdeacon Barbour. Scott , Fair
above the following quotations: Those who wish to Winton, and the History Maid, n t r o d. 16. the partaker of the illustrious blood of Douglas. your call ...
the
I
,
lb., In trod., 14. Concerning the Exploits of Robert Bruce. Id., Tales Bruce struck Comyn a blow Douglas went in disguise to
Edward Bruce,
of a
the
Grand f.,
39a.
lb., 26a.
one of
lb., 326.
28. Also
is
not significant,
we may
find
it
pre-
ceded by the definite article. This is often the case, when it is accompanied by an adnominal adjunct, whether restrictive or Den Hertog, Ned. Spraakk., Ill, continuative. 34; Stof., Stud., B, 16; Einenkel, Streifziige, 2; Kellner, Hist. Outl. of Eng. Synt., 137; Ellinger, E. S., XX; Id., Verm.
Beitr., 29; Matzn., Eng.
a) Restrictive
Gram. 2
Ill,
164.
adjuncts
of the
definite article.
1)
When
I
the
adjunct
clause,
the
article
would seem
Sedan, not
to
be
indispensable.
am
referring to the
Napoleon who
of Saint Helena.
to the
When the adjunct is a prepositional phrase, the article is seldom absent, unless the phrase is felt as part of the proper name. i. Could the England of 1685 be, by some magical process, set before our eyes, we should not know one landscape in a hundred or one building in ten thousand. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. Ill, 276. The difference in salubrity between the London of the nineteenth century and the London of the seventeenth century was far greater than the difference between London in an ordinary season and London
in the cholera.
ii.
lb.,
Ch.
III.
The same may be said of the numberless entries London of the last century. Periodical. 1 )
applying to
!)
Wendt
165.
572
CHAPTER XXXI,
When we
we
**
28.
look
at Italy
are amazed.
of the Renascence, at England of the sixteenth century Health and Holiness, 24. Francis Thompson
, ,
Frankfort-on-the-Main, Newcastle-on-Tyne
the tale,
(Thus throughout
3)
Practice
a)
is
an adjective.
With quality-expressing
divided,
(participial) adjectives usage may be equally they enter into a free combination with their headwords. There seems to be a tendency of omitting the article, when the restrictive force of the adjective is weakened, i. e. when the
when
names
is but dimly present to the speaker's mind, of persons, i. The other was John Comyn usually called the Red Gomyn, to distinguish him from his kinsman the Black Comyn, so
,
. . .
named from his swarthy complexion. Scott, Tales of a Grand f., 25a. had given the chain to the wrong Antipholis. Lamb. The goldsmith
.
.
Tales, Com. of
with.
lb., 222.
Er.
219.
all
.During this time the old Mr. Dickens was confined in the Marshalsea Prison. Miss Dick. (Stof. Leesb. voor Aanvangsklassen, I, 16). The result was his marriage and the adoption of the new Mrs. Acland's
,
Mrs. Alex., A Life Interest, 1, Ch. II, 33. in a comfortable chair sits the modern Alexander, a battlefield before him. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 114a.
son.
There
It
map
of the
ii.
Thack., Van. Fair, Ch. XIII, 128. always, had never before looked so
names
of countries, towns, etc. i. I see already rising the liberties and the grandeur of the New Rome. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. V,40. They had institutions derived partly from imperial Rome, partly from Hist., I Ch. 1 67. papal Rome partly from the old Germany, Mac. The sight of the new Boston. Bellamy, Look Backw. 38. Burglary was not among the perils of the modern Boston. lb., 39. There is a long chain of lakes, extending from the ancient Phrygia into
,
Cappadocia. Cassell's Cone. Cyclop., s. v. Asia Minor. The New Egypt. Title of a Book. Remains of the Ancient Olympia. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIV, 124. Neither our sympathy with the new Turkey, nor our improved relations with Russia, could justify us in encouraging or helping on this adumbrated e s t m. G a z. Slav Confederation.
#
The Powers are all but agreed upon Westm. Gaz., No. 6177, 16.
ii.
autonomous Albania.
religion of
that of ancient
Rome is spoken
the
**
New
memory
whom
Lit. World. have done to death Greater London has got over 100 theatres and music-halls. No. 2267, 723c.
Graph.,
I. But when the adjective forms a kind of fixed or standn g combination with its head-word and (or) is understood as part of the proper name, the article is dispensed with,
i
Note
i.
New York, New Orleans, New Zealand, New Caledonia. Lesser Asia. Webst. , Diet, (more commonly called Asia Minor.)
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
573
Mrs.
Wood, Or v. Col.,
passim,
Ch. XXXI, 346; the elder George. lb., II, Brutus. Lytton R i e n z i , I Ch. V, 39.)
II.
In
the
be due
I
following quotations the absence of the article may to the superlative being understood as absolute. See,
e.
however, 20,
Lamb,
Tales, Com. of
Er. ,213.
When
i.
met with,
,
the adjective expresses a relation, the article is but rarely at least before the names of countries, towns, etc. Northern and central France had by this time fallen into utter ruin.
Green Short Hist. Reaumur's thermometer is used only in North-Western Europe. Cassell's Cone. Diet., s. v. thermometer. was supposed that Eastern Roumelia would in reality be restored It to Turkey. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI, 3156. Of Roman London and of Saxon London little is comparatively known. John Dennis, Good Words (Stof., Leesb., 1.78). They had institutions derived partly from imperial Rome, partly from papal Rome partly from the old Germany. Mac. Hist.,
, ,
are
agreed
that
rule in
Modern Europe.
. .
g.
right of
The Turks
have not recently taken any special military measures or precautions in European Turkey. lb. Mediaeval Europe was a camp with a church in the background.
.
William Barry
ii.
The Papacy,
use
of
Prol.
17.
Beyond
as the
region lies another vast tract, which may be regarded Hinterland either of the Egyptian provinces or of the French
that
Congo.
Times. (The
name
of
the
article
may be due
felt
to
Congo,
although the
the river.)
a territory, being
still
as the
name
of
The following quotations must be given without comment: "Tell me about my uncle", cried Virginian Harry. Thack., Virg.
Ch.
XV,
150.
the
in
eighteenth-century Paris.
Athen., No.
b) Usage
1)
is
equally varied
when
the adjunct
continuative:
the adjunct
at is
The
article is regularly
dispensed with,
that
I
when
a clause
used to meet
Dumdum. Thack.,
Dick.,
Van. Fair,
I
I,
was
II,
of Sheffield.
Cop.,
but
Ch. 2)
Usage
there
a)
when
the adjunct
is
is
an adjective,
when
the adjective
information
about what
head-word
/?)
to
omit it, when it is purely emotional, i.e. expressive of some emotion (mostly of sympathy, pity, or admiration, sometimes of contempt) on the part of the speaker or writer.
574
It
CHAPTER XXXI,
stands to reason that
28.
we must meet with variable practice with many the nature of their meaning, are always more or among many others, are beautiful, cruel, fair,
The cruel Macbeth. Scott,
great,
little,
noble.
i.
names
of persons,
I,
Tales
of a
Grand.
father,
lived at
%b.
.
.
and the good old /Egeon ; Ephesus many years. Lamb, Tales, Com. of Er. 228. On this, as on all other occasions, he (sc. Mr. Pickwick) is invariably attended Ch. LVII 526. by the faithful Sam. Dick., P c k w. (This respite) made the timid little Amelia almost as happy as a full reprieve would have done. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXV, 264. It had been as well for Arthur if the honest Foker had remained for some time at College. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XIX, 193. "Bless me, father", said eagerly the young Pisistratus. Lytton, C ax tons. The young Cola bent his mind to listen. Id., Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 11. So deeply did the young Adrian feel the galling truth of all he uttered. lb., I,
Antipholis of Syracuse married the fair Luciana
,
Ch.
Ill
24.
ii.
"Oh, how dull art thou?" answered the fair Irene. lb., I. Ch. IV, 31. The inestimable Toots. Saintsb., N n e t. Cent., Ch. Ill, 150. "I am your father!" cried he, "young Rip van Winkle once old Rip van Winkle
i
Irv.
Sketch-Bk.
Harry
is
Will.
much better company than you are, and much "Tong, indeed, confound his tong," growled envious
"To
again, you
little
Ch. XVI, 169. rogues!" says facetious papa. lb., Ch. L, 518. asks simple Harry. lb., Ch. LIX, 615. resting in her coffin dapper little George ... is dancing
,
a pretty dance with Madame Walmoden. Id., Four peorges, II, 55. They sent this little spar out of the wreck with their love to good Mrs. Sedley.
Id.,
Van. Fair,
find
I,
"We'll
means
to
them the
slip,"
said
dauntless
little
Becky.
lb.,
Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. I, 16. and a boy young Tennyson was remarked both for acquisition and performance. Andrew Lano, Alfred Tennyson, Ch. I, 4. names of countries, towns, etc. i. The mighty London. Wash. Irv. , Hist, of New York. was the rich and popular The place where the British exiles had congregated Amsterdam. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 118. The ambitious, pushing Melbourne. Froude, Oceana, Ch. VII, 93. ii. You have persuaded me to leave dear England, and dearer London. Thom.
Ch. XXV, 266. See us at the palace next week, young Cola.
As
a- child
1,1, (161a). Cornwall, especially on such a day, every guest was welcome. Ch. Kinosley, Herew., Ch. V, 36b. I was heartily glad, when ... I was whirled away from gouty consumptive Buxton
Southern,
In
Oroonoko,
hospitable
to
I
London.
fell
Jerome, Idle
,
Thoughts, VI,
.
75.
wonder that comfort-loving beings could live in horrible New York. John Habberton Helen's Babies, 34. had daunted the courage even of. Its long struggle with Teutonic Caesars unwearied Rome. Willian Barry The Papacy, Ch. 1 34. The responsible Ministerial journals do not indulge in ebullitions of this kind
into a
.
.
Times.
,
Even
populated London miles upon miles of streets are lined with No. 5255, 4c. wage-earners' cottages. Westm. Gaz.
in
thickly
THE ARTICLE.
In
575
of a first-class carriage.
Ib.
r
happy England
complement
No. 5283, 4c. Going south through sleeping France the difficulty is to keep them (sc. the footwarmers) out on a moderately warm night. lb. Catholic Spain is as free as Protestant England. Westm. Gaz., No 5561, 156. Few persons would give a longer expectation to poor Russia than to rich Germany. Id., No. 6059, 3a. The meeting of the Eucharistic conference in Protestant England. Rev. of
of
the
town
of
its
itself
Town
Hall survives as a
is
monument
Bolsward
example
this,
Graph.,
Sometimes the use or absence of the article is conditioned by the metre. Compare the two following pairs of sentences, * Here the noble III 2. Antony. Jul. C ae s.
I.
i.
, ,
Note
Did
V, 5, 70.
the free Britannia, bears
,
|
The
|
last
land.
Childe
I,
** Full
II,
xm.
lonely
his
way
Where proud
unsubdued.
II.
lb.,
as
Some adjectives lose (almost) entirely their original meaning, when used emotional words. This is, for example, the case with old, poor, and, to a large extent, with dear, little. There is, consequently, a wide difference between poor John and the poor John, old John and the old John. Poor duke of Shrewsbury has been very ill of a fever. Swift, Journ. io Stella, XXV, June 25. As spoke, poor Mr. Burchell entered the house. Goldsmith, Vic. He would make a gentleman of the little chap, was Mr. Osborne's constant saying regarding little Georgy. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXI, 227.
I
For
following quotations the use of the article seems to be improper: who now lay in this sad friend, the poor Jack Wildman condition. Blackmore, The Maid of Sker, HI, 177. i) The Laird of The poor Marie wept for him constantly. Mrs. Oliphant
In the
it
was my honest
Nor law,
III.
II,
133.1)
Tow.,
this matter been too lenient. Trol., Barch. Ch. IX, 60. Poor dear old Dad has just told me that he has had a big loss on 'Change. Westm. Gaz.. No. 6101 6c. Our reader must now please to quit.., the humdrum life of poor little Fairoaks and transport himself ... to London. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXVIII, 296. Twinkling in her breast poor old Pen saw a locket, which he had bought of Mr. Nathan in High Street with the last shilling he was worth. lb., Ch. VI, 74.
Some emotional adjectives are apt to attach permanently to their head-word, insomuch that they are more or less felt as part of the proper name. Thus Little Dick (Goldsmith, Vicar), Tiny Tim (Dick.,
IV.
Christm.
i)
Car.). XX.
Ellinger, E.
S.,
576
CHAPTER XXXI,
28.
Also distinctly descriptive adjectives which are constantly used before in the course of a narrative or in the daily con-
versation of certain circles, are apt to lose some of their independence, and, consequently, to discard the article. Thus Black Sambo (Thack., Van. Fair), Blind Bertha (Dick., Crick.). The loss of the article imparts a certain degree of familiarity to the combination, and is, therefore, incompatible with the dignified style of poetry. Hence in Tennyson's Idylls of the King there is no omission
of the article before the permanent epithets given to the principal knights, unless required by the metre. Thus the fine Gawain , the meek Sir Perciv ale, the pure Sir Galahad, etc., but:
So
Ten.
And pure
Sir
Galahad
to uplift the
maid.
Some of such combinations have become traditional. Such are Bloody Mary, Good Queen Bess, Bluff King Hal; Merry England, Old England, Sunny France. The English are very fond of their country; they call it 'Old England' and 'Merry
England'.
Scott
Tales
of a
Grand
f.
i)
Adjectives that are used as titles, such as honourable, noble, reverend, are not, of course, emotional, and, consequently, do not dismiss the article.
V.
The Right Honourable Francis Goodchild, Lord Mayor of London. Thack. 2) The Worshipful Francis Goodchild, Esq. becomes Sheriff of London. Id. 2 )
also when the person is indicated by his social status or rank, as in: That refined patron of the arts, and enlightened lover of music and the drama, the Most Noble the Marquis of Steyne. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XIV, 140. They are Suffolk people, and distantly related to the Right Honourable the Earl of Bungay. Id., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. I.
Thus
VI. This also applies to participles used as adjectives. Note that when such participial adjectives as aforesaid, before-mentioned are placed after the head-word, the article is dispensed with. 1. "Plead you to me, fair dame?" said the astonished Antipholis. Lamb, Tales,
of Er. 218. The said Eliza, fohn and Georgina were now clustered round their mama in the drawing-room. Ch. BrontE, Jany Eyre, Ch. I, 1. This association does hereby return its warmest thanks to the said Samuel
,
Com.
FHckwick Esq.
Dick.,
Tom Brown,
II.
[etc.].
Hughes,
Ch.
Ill,
237.
to pass to Francis afore-
In default of said.
Thack.
which issue the ranks and dignities were Henry E s m. III Ch. VI 380.
, ,
VII. Adjectives, especially when purely descriptive, are not often placed before geographical proper names, a class-noun being mostly inserted between them. Thus the populous Amsterdam is less usual than the populous city of Amsterdam. %
In the centre of the great city of London lies a small neighbourhood which goes by the name of Little Britain. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk., XXV, 241. Close upon the village of Clavering before-mentioned. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 19. My godmother lived in a handsome house in the clean and ancient town of Bretton. Ch. BrontE, Villette, Ch. I, 1.
.
i)
Foels.
Kock, Wis.
Gram.,
255.
2)
lb.,
257.
THE ARTICLE.
At
last
577
Irkutsk.
we reached
Ch. XJ, 130.
the
large
handsome town of
never used
Conway, Called
is
Back,
VIII.
The
article is,
of course,
when
the head-word
vocative.
relic of
departed worth.
Byron,
all
Childe Har.
II,
lxxiii.
29.
or
ficant, reject or take the article those made up of only one name.
30.
When
a)
one
or
all
is
the
significant,
usage
parts variable.
of
are
The
Thus
definite article is
mostly used
when
is
a plural.
Hills;
the Kaatskil Mountains, the Rocky Mountains; the Ochil Sulu Islands; the Low Countries, the Netherlands , the United States.
in:
the
alternative usage is instanced by: leads across Marlborough Downs in the direction of Bristol. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIV, 118. The Armada dropped anchor in Calais roads. J. R. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, 6, 419.
The
b)
The
definite article is
mostly used,
when
is
an adjective.
Adjectives derived from proper names, such as Atlantic, Caspian, Chinese, etc., are considered as significant words: i. the Arctic Ocean, the Antarctic Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the
Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, the North Sea, the Pacific Ocean (= the South Sea. Ch.
Kingsley,
ii.
Westw. Ho!,
the
the
iii.
the British Museum, the Inner Temple, the Middle Temple, the National Gallery, the Royal Exchange; the White House. iv. the Holy Ghost, the Holy Virgin. To the N. W. (sc. of the Capitol) are the Treasury, the White House, and [etc.] H a r m s w. E n c y c 1. s. v. Washington.
,
Note
I.
In
some
of these
names
the
noun
is
sometimes or usually
suppressed: the (Antarctic, the Atlantic, the Baltic; the Mediterranean, the Pacific; the Argentine, the Transvaal; the Engadine. The United States will increase its fleet in the Pacific, and possibly in the
Atlantic also.
e s t m. G a z. There was a remarkable volte-face
Transvaal.
Times.
II.
We
II.
Lond. News,
According to Wendt (Synt. des heut. Eng., 166) White House no longer requires the article. Excepted are a) some names of streets, which are more frequently found without than with the article; the High Street is, however, quite common, especially in referring to the smaller towns.
H.
II.
37
578
I
CHAPTER XXXI,
30.
was charged seven dollars to go to Central Park from Thirty-second Street and back again. Rita, America Seen through Eng. eyes, Ch. I, 31. The Windsor hotel in Fifth-Avenue was destroyed in three hours. Graph. There are shops in Main-Street that would make a good figure in Paris. W. Archer iWestm. G a z. , No. 4931 4a). 1 began to wonder whether I were not back among the Vanderbilts and Goulds in Fifth-Avenue, lb., No. 4967, 12c.
,
High Street,
i. Pen felt a secret pride in strutting down High Street with a young fellow who owned tandems, talked to officers, and ordered turtle and champagne for dinner. Thack. Pend. I, Ch. Ill, 43. Alleys which lay between High Street and the Avon. Mrs. Craik, John
, ,
Hal., Ch.
ii.
Ill,
29.
,
He turned into the High Street. Dick., Pickw. Ch. I, 9. The Messrs Foker and Pen strolled down the High Street. Thack., Pend.,
I,
Ch.
Ill,
42.
We
a pavement in the High Street of our town of Norton Bury. Mrs. Craik, John Hal., Ch. I, 5. Neither the ignominious procession up the High Street, nor the near view of death had power to disturb the gentle and majestic patience of Argyle. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 131.
actually
boasted
the noun Road seem Also names of streets made up of an adjective to have the definite article as a rule. Aunt and Mary used to walk gravely up and down the New Road. Thack.,
/?)
districts, towns, boroughs, etc., which regularly stand without the definite article, e. g.: Great Britain, Mid-Lothian, East Anglia, West-Ham, Westminster, Grand Rapids, Green Hill, etc. Can you tell us the way to Green Hill? Sweet, Country Walk.
y)
especially Holy Church, Holy Kirk, Holy Week, Holy Writ, which almost regularly lose the definite
Holy Church, i. Holy Church is merciful. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch.XII, 174. Can you expect that the king dare pass over such an offence against Holy
Ch. I, 116. Church. Ch. Kingsley, Herew. Was not the blessing of Holy Church upon their union? Ch. Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. XVII, 74. who was intended for Holy Church. Westm. Gaz. It was not
,
Reade,
,
The
I,
ii.
were to let thee go hence at large, I were thereby wronging the Holy Church. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXXI, 339. (For the rest, apparently, regularly
If
I
Holy Kirk.
Kirk.
ii.
i.
We
shall not
be wanting
... to
lb.,
Holy Week.
emotions.
Holy
the
out-door world
stirred
by strange
4967, 15a.
ii.
This week being Holy Week, Her Majesty's and the Haymarket will be closed all the week, reopening on Easter Monday. Morn. Leader, The Pope designs to officiate at some of the Functions of the Holy Week.
Lond. Gaz.
!)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
Holy Writ.
It
579
|
Trifles
light
as
air
As
Othello,
Writ.
3, 324.
foretold in
Holy
Ch. Kingsley, Herevv., Ch. XXVI, 108c. of the negro, manifested in character, courage, e s t m. strong as proof of Holy Writ that [etc ].
is
mostly used,
when
is
Thus regularly in the names of hotels, inns, etc., and of theatres, as Swan hotel, the Bull Inn; the Court Theatre , the Blackfriars Theatre,
the Globe Theatre, the Criterion Theatre; and also almost regularly in the names of some other buildings, such as the Queen's Hall, theGuidhall, the
i.
Mansion House,
The
stranger continued to soliloquise, until they reached the Bull Inn, in the High Street, where the coach stopped. Dick., Pickw. , Ch. II, 9. The lad and three others were discovered making a supper off a pork pie and two bottles of prime old port from the Red Cow public-house in Grey
Friars Lane.
Thack.
N e w c.
I ,
Ch. VI
68.
at the
ii.
Mr.
N.
N.'s
Times.
The Tyranny of Tears at the Criterion Theatre. Graph. The Gay Lord Quex at the Globe Theatre. lb. Compounds with Hall: * It (sc. the Mayor's Court) is held at the Guildhall before the recorder. Harmsworth Encyclop., s.v. Mayor's Court. Among them (sc. the famous buildings) may be mentioned the Guildhall, ... St. Paul's Cathedral; the Mansion House etc. lb., s.v. London. Sir Harry Johnston will be received by the Mayor and Corporation at the
e s t m. G a z., No. 6177, 8b. Herr Havemann gave a recital at the Queen's Hall, Truth, No. 1802, 105a. The memorable occasion of last week at the Queen's Hall. Times. In Free Trade demonstration at the Queen's Hall. Westm. Gaz., No. 4949, lb. Guildhall. **
iii.
The wooden
giants in Guildhall.
Wash.
Irv.,
Sketch-Bk., XXV,
244.
At a great Free Trade meeting in Queen's Hall on March 9 Lord Avebury presided. Westm. Gaz., No. 4949, 5. there are two very interesting concerts, Among the coming musical events fixed for the afternoons of Oct. 3 and 10 at Queen's Hall. II. Lond. News, No. 3777, 3946. (In the same article a few lines further down: One of the signs that tell of the autumn season is the reopening of the Queen's Hall on
.
Sundays.)
iv.
Other compounds.
Hazel l's Annual,
One
No. 4967,
* The musical performances given at the Crystal Palace have attained a great reputation for their high standard of excellence.
1894.
(transparency) represented a moonlit landscape, the other the Houses of Parliament and Clock Tower at Westminster. W. Archer (Westm. Gaz.,
12c).
Funds are
collected at the
Mansion House
for distribution
among
sufferers
from war, pestilence , floods and other misfortunes. Harmsworth Encyclop., s.v. Mansion House. ** The Dalai Lama the next day drove to Government House. II. Lond., News, No. 3703, 535.
The
)
alternative usage
is
found
in
some names
of
University College.
580
Sir
CHAPTER XXXI,
30.
W. Anson, Warden of All Souls College, has been nominated as ViceChancellor for the ensuing year. Times. Dr. Mayrath, Provost of Queen's College, laid down the office of ViceChancellor, lb. Professor Osbert Chadwick delivered an address at University College.
/?)
lb.
towns: Cape Town, Cedar Rapids, etc. A meeting of Africander members of Parliament was held
in
names
of
in
Cape Town.
lb.
Times.
Speaking
y)
at
that [etc.]
names
An
old
of streets:
Bow
Street,
Dock Lane,
etc.
woman
XXV.
Wash.
Irv.
Sketch-
Book,
244.
The steeple of Bow-Street. lb., XXV, 244. The Red Cow public-house in Grey Friars
Ch. VI, 68.
Lane.
Thack.,
Newc.
I,
He
in
(sc. Disraeli) outdandied every other dandy in London, and drew after him bewildered crowds as he walked down Regent Street or up Bond Street,
melodramatic stage.
T. P.
Weekly,
XVIII
Note, however,
the
Haymarket:
He took
printseller in the Haymarket. Thack., Walking down the Haymarket the other day,
Newc,
I
that
delightful old
bow-windowed shop.
(the
Graph.
the
Cape Colony
i.
Cape Colony.
far
An
old Boer
hunted
Lit.
Cape Colony so
last century.
World.
ii.
detachment of troops was sent to secure the line of communication between Cape Colony and the British territories to the North. Times. The real danger is in Cape Colony. lb. The British possessions in South Africa comprise Cape Colony, Natal, Harmsworth the Orange River Colony, the Transvaal and [etc.] E n c y c I. s. v. South Africa. The Cape Colony was originally a Dutch colony. Froude, Oceana,
,
Ch.
Ill,
42
the
Land's End,
usage being,
perhaps, equally
There
the
is still
Scilly Isles
End
J.
a tradition that
Rowe,
Note
to
El., 35.
Westm. Gaz.,
Norman
has added to his studies of wild life at Land's End. No. 6147, 14c. The invaders doubled the Land's End and ravaged Cornwall. Freeman, C o n q. I, Ch. V, 295. i) Does this 'bus go to the Land's End? Westm. Gaz.
,
i.
The
society's
in
ii.
animals are lodged in the Zoological Gardens Regent's Park. H a r m s w. E n c y c I., s. v. Zoological Society. Baines represents the house in the Regent's Park. Thack., Newc, Ch. XXVII, 299. I hired a furnished house in the Regent's Park. Dick, Letters 2 ).
s. v.
I,
Murray,
double,
9.
*)
VI.
THE ARTICLE.
d) The definite article word is a proper
1)
It
581
the defining
is
now name.
used
is
mostly dropped
structures:
St.
other
Hall,
before the names of buildings, bridges and Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Victoria
Station,
Paul's
Cathedral,
Lincoln's
jail
,
Inn,
London Bridge,
Bridge.
Carthy, Short Hist., Stephens was committed to Richmond Prison. Ch. XXII, 314. So Aldred ... sat in York keep. Ch. Kingsley, Herew., Ch. XXiV, 103a. "And why not "You will not burn York? O God! is it come to this? York town, or York minster, or Rome itself with the Pope inside it, rather than yield to barbarians? lb., 1036. A sermon was preached in Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Times. (Compare with this: the Westminster Cathedral, the
Mc
name of the seat of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster.) Exeter Hall was crowded on Saturday afternoon. Times. The annual meeting was held at Grosvenor House. Id. The Emperor William devoted Thursday morning to this duty at Buckingham
Palace.
Graph.
If
like, we can telegraph to some friend to meet you at EdnaLyall, A. Hardy Norseman, Ch. XVII, 156. His father, John Dickens, was at this time stationed in the Portsmouth dockyard. Forster, Life of Ch. Dick., I, Ch. I, 16. (Compare: Their home, shortly after, was again changed, on the elder Dickens being placed upon duty in Chatham dockyard. lb., I, Ch. I, 26).
Irregularities:
you
definite article is, however, almost regularly used in the names of hotels, museums and theatres, but names of hotels with the name of the proprietor in the genitive stand without the article: the Clarendon Hotel, the Windsor Hotel; the South Kensington Museum;
The
the
Garrick Theatre, the Savoy Theatre; but Claridge's Hotel. also in the Alexandra Palace, the Albert Hall the Fleet Prison, the Marshalsea Prison and in certain foreign names, such as the
Thus
Mont
i.
Valerien.
ii.
The Budget Protest League held a dinner at the Ritz Hotel on Thursday to commemorate the close of its work. Westm. Gaz., No. 5179. 16. One of the most disastrous fires of recent years was that by which the Windsor hotel in Fifth-Avenue was destroyed. Graph. ** am at Claridge's Hotel. Max. Pemb., Doctor Xavier, Ch. VI, 29a. Sir Norman Lockyer last week distributed prizes at the South Kensington Museum. Times.
I
ill-
Times.
S. Pinafore, which will be proSavoy Theatre, lb. The new play at the St. James's Theatre. II. L o n d. News. ** On Sundays Mrs. Hoggarty used to go to Saint Pancras Church, then just built, and as handsome as Covent Garden Theatre. Thack,, Sam. Titm., Ch. X, 120. There is a tale to the effect that a certain orchestral player at Drury Lane Theatre had suffered sundry admonishments at rehearsal from his revered conductor. T. P.'s ekly, No. 468, 524a.
Mr.
N.
N.
duced
at the
We
iv.
is
582
The
It
CHAPTER XXXI,
Times.
was
late
30.
frequenters of the Albert Hall were exacting as ever in the matter of encores.
before the
Hall.
Graph.
The Fleet Prison is pulled down. Dick, Pickw. Pref. There had been taken to the Marshalsea Prison a debtor, with
narrative has
whom
this
some concern. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. VI, 296. He was confined in the Mont Valerien pending the Esterhazy trial. Times.
Curious
of father
of the
is
and daughter: The most notable event of Drama was the production at Worthing Theatre
month
in the Revival
My
of "Julius Caesar" by the daughter, has written the following report of the
at the Worthing Theatre." Rev. of Rev., CCXXXI, 267a. Here follow some instances of divided usage; the head-word is: When he met the Princess, he was a university, college, school, etc. student at Bonn University. Times.
i-
ii.
a Convocation of Oxford University Dr. Meyrath, Provost of Queen's College, laid down the office of Vice-Chancellor. lb. Cuff, on the other hand, was the great chief and dandy of the Swishtail Seminary. Thack. Van Fair, I, Ch. V. 41.
In
Times.
At a court the Victoria University held in Liverpool the degree of Doctor of Science was conferred on Lord Lister. lb. Dr. Saundby, Professor of Medicine at the Mason University College delivered the address at the opening of the Cardiff Medical School. lb.
,
hall.
i.
Short
In
great public meeting was held in St. James's Hall, London. Hist., Ch. XXII, 316.
M c Carthy,
George's
the
party
heard
sacred concert
in St.
Hall.
Graph.
recital
The only
audience
ii.
announced by M. Paderewski this season, drew a large James's Hall on Tuesday afternoon. Times, Mr. Louis de Rougemont gave his first public lecture on Monday in the St.
to St.
Id.
James's Hall.
I
note
with
satisfaction
that
meeting
hospital.
in the
Ulster Hall.
Id.,
of holding the
Among
Cycl.,
ii.
these
Edinburgh has some noble hospitals and charitable institutions. Heriofs Hospital Watson's Hospitals. Penny are
. . . .
.
IX, 275/1.
A curious position of affairs has arisen at the St. John's Hospital for Diseases of the skin in Leicester Square. Truth, No. 1802, 75a.
I.
Note
is
sometimes dropped
in the
names
of
buildings that are preceded by the definite article. The father of the Marshalsea. Dick. Little Dorrit, Ch. VI 29a. The marriages were subsequently celebrated in any building within the Liberty
,
of the Fleet.
Harmsworth
Cycl.
privileged to assemble so large and distinguished an audience gathered at the last night of the season at the St. James's.
Graph.
*)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
It
583
thoroughly characteristic of modern politics, at least on the Unionist side, eminent breaker of Parliaments should be dined at the Ritz and presented with a cigar-box for a trophy. Westm. Oaz., No. 5179, 16. "The Servant in the House", at the Adelphi. II. Lond. News, No. 3680, 6306. Mme Sarah Bernhardt produces at the Adelphi the Hamlet, in which she
is
that this
appeared here
last night.
Times.
,
did not wait long to try to put in practice the lessons he had learned at the St. James's. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI 303a.
II.
He
In the
names
of hotels the
He
is staying in London at the Hotel Metropole. Times. farewell dinner was given by Dr. Carl Peters on Monday at the hotel Cecil. lb.
The
This
great
is
fire
at the
hotel Windsor,
New
York.
Graph.
rarely done in the names of other buildings: Castle Lowestein taken by stratagem. Motley, Rise, III, Ch. V, 445a (Compare: On the western verge of the isle of Bommel stood the castle of Lowestein.
lb.).
it
Near
2)
(sc.
Apeldoorn)
article
is
summer
Harmsworth
The
definite streets,
Cycl.
is
almost regularly dropped before the names of i. e. proper names containing such nouns as circus, crescent, cross, field(s), garden(s), park, square, street, terrace; e. g.: Oxford Street, Queen's Street; Finsbury Circus; Charing Cross, Soho Fields; Covent Garden; Hyde Park ; Russell Square King's Square, etc. But: the Thames embankment. * We had a i. temporary lodging in Covent Garden. Dick., Cop., Ch. LV, 391a. The Emperor was in Buckingham Palace Gardens by eight the next morning. Graph, (with which compare: The weather cleared up and showed the Marlborough House grounds to advantage. lb.) He crossed Fleet Street from Clifford's Inn to Middle Temple Lane. Kath. Cecil Thurnston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XII, 131. ** The I, Captain ... gave a dinner at the Kildare Street. Thack., Pend.
squares, parks, etc.,
,
,
ii.
Note
I. Compounds of road mostly drop the article when a street is meant, and retain it when denoting a track for travel forming a communication between one city, town, or place and another, * i. They crossed from the Angel into St. John's Road. Dick. 01. Twist,
,
Ch.
VIII, 83.
Its (sc.
London Railway) city terminus is at the MonuHackney Road in tube. Harmsworth Encycl.,
500 vehicles per hour pass the junction of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road. lb., 26a. Sussex- Gardens itself is apparently a subsidiary highway, and the traffic in that direction from Edgeware-Road toBayswater, passes three quite unimporWestm. Gaz. No. 6317, 8c. tant crossings. ** That the book furnished a hint for which the time was ripe, was seen by the success of the movement which had for its result the People's Palace in the Mile-end road. Times. I picked it (sc. my pink toque) up in the Edgware Road. Agn. & Eg. Castle
Some
Diamond
lb.
cut Paste,
the
II,
Ch.
II,
119.
The den
Road.
of
occult one
eastern of the
Tottenham Court
584
Going
into a
CHAPTER XXXI,
large
30.
No. 6311, 3c. her daughter's bedroom. Westm. Gaz. The Marble Arch was reached; there, still oblivious of his surroundings, he had crossed to the Edgeware Road, passing through it to the labyrinth of
shabby
ii.
streets
that
lie
behind Paddington.
John
Chilcote, M.
Panting and crying, but never stopping, (I) faced about for Greenwich, which I had understood was on the Dover Road. Dick., Cop., Ch. XXII, 90a. I doubt if I should have had any (sc. notion of going back), though there had been a Swiss snow-storm in the Kent Road. lb., Ch. XIII, 90a.
II.
of
the
definite
article in the
names
As
cessions, between
suburban mothers and daughters, their envy is reserved for the proHyde Park Corner and Marble Arch later in the day. Westm. Gaz., No. 5607, 8d. (The Marble Arch would be a reference to the monument as in: (He moved) rapidly till the Marble Arch was reached. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. HI, 26.)
for the
,
3)
Usage
a)
is
divided
in
geographical
definite article,
some as
regularly rejecting
article are especially such as contain any of the following nouns: basin, channel, district, pass, peninsula, range,
basin.
Into
two
parts.
channel.
King's
The Severn
turns
out a
it
reaches the
John
Hal.,
Ch.
II,
district.
pass.
II.
The cattle of the Calgary district. Times. Describing his visit to the Khyber Pass, Mr. Fisher writes Lond. News, No. 3875, 141a.
Singapore, a British settlement
off
[etc.].
peninsula.
the
Malay Peninsula.
range.
reef.
river.
draped
in
snow.
Times.
came One summer morning in the year 1756 ... the Young Rachel up the Avon river on her happy return from her annual voyage to the Potomac. Thack., Virg., Ch. I, 4. Mrs. It is the Severn River, though at this distance you cannot perceive it.
. . .
Craik,
oh
Ch.
II,
18.
The Peace river flows nearly due east for a couple of hundred miles. Times. Thus also: And the fog rose out of the Oxus stream. Matth. Arnold
2.
the death of
many
a sailor.
The Nile
I.
Valley.
Times.
Except for some newly coined names, such as Peace-river, the noun river is now mostly dispensed with: the Severn, the Rhine,
the
II.
Note
Thames,
etc.
article
is
THE ARTICLE.
585
regularly in English names of towns, such as Newcastle-on-Tyne , Stratford-on-Avon ; German names of towns retaining the article: Frankfort-on-the-Main Frankfort-on-the-Oder (Cassell's Cone. Cyc I.). The article is not, of course, suppressed in such collocations as London on the Thames, Liverpool on the Mersey, the name of the river not forming part of the proper name.
,
English.
Ill,
Franz, Shak,
169.
his chariot but appear, Have you not made an universal That Tiber trembled underneath her banks? Jul. Cass. I, 1, 46. Bring us not over Jordan. Bible, Numbers, XXXII 5. E'er since a truant boy pass'd the bounds To enjoy a ramble on the banks of Thames. Cowper Task, 115. Peace waits us on the shores of Acheron. Byron, Childe Har. II, vu. I little thought, when first thy rein 1 slack'd upon the banks of Seine [etc.].
|
1 ,
Scott
Lady,
ix
12.
,
under the
tall
spire
which
rises
by Avon.
beyond Trent was, down to the eighteenth century, barbarism. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. Ill, 249. Through the black Tartar tents he pass'd which stood Clustering like bee-hives on the low flat strand Of Oxus. Matth. Arnold Sohraband Rustum, 14.
large part of the country
in a state of
|
|
There was already river pollution dyes and dirt floated down from mills and Teviot, below Hawick, was a vulgar Styx; and below Galashiels, Tweed was little better. But from Teviot Stone to Hawick, the water was clearer than amber; so was Ettrick, almost till it joins Tweed; so was Yarrow; so was Ail; and they were not over-fished. II. Lond. News, No. 3618 882a.
:
tows.
When, what is often done, the proper name is placed after the nown river, it has not, of course, the article: the river Danube. While on the subject, it may be observed that anciently appositional of was
III.
placed between the class-noun and the proper name: the river of Thames.
Murray,
He had
a
s.
v. of, 23.
Thus
tedious
Henry Esmond,
And
/S)
down
the river
of Rhine.
Thack.,
then, behold, beneath him was the long green garden of Egypt and the Heroes, I, iv, 70. shining stream of Nile. Ch. Kingsley,
The
Those which
following nouns: bay, bill, city, cliff, harbour, haven, head, hill, island, mountain, plain, sea, sound, strait(s), town. bay. This district stretches from Hudson's Bay to the Great Lakes. Time s.
England at the present moment is directing a very keen, Delagoa Bay. Id. Portland Bill (also the Bill of Portland), i) bill.
city.
cliff.
critical
eye upon
Kansas
City at the
right
mouth
white
of the
Kansas
river.
To
the
the
curve of Ramsgate
i)
looks
down on
the
Green,
harbour.
haven. head.
Foels.
in
Plymouth harbour.
of the sea.
Green.
Milford Haven,
arm
Harms w. Encyc.
ft.
Beachy Head
Id.
i)
Koch, Wis.
Gram.,
263.
586
island.
CHAPTER XXXI,
You
will see
30.
The
Khalifa
was
last
mountain.
plain.
We
Drake's Island. Marryat. 1 ) Baha, three days west of Abbah Island. Times. stumbled down Penmaenmaur Mountain. e s t m. G a z.
heard of
at
The road
Mac, Hist,
II,
Ch. V, 170
Straits).
strait(s).
The
British
India
,
line
s. v.
Harmsworth Encycl.
sea.
to
the
sea-base.
Times.
The Prince
sound.
Friday.
Hindustan
now
in
of Wales, who is serving as a midshipman in the battleship Plymouth Sound, paid a visit to Devonport Dockyard last
Times,
4)
The article is now practically regularly suppressed before geographical names in which any of the nouns cape, fort, lake (loch, lough), mo(u)nt,
port precede the proper name. cape. From Cape Comorin to the Himalayas. fort. Fort St. George had risen on a barren
lake.
Mac.
spot.
Id.,
Clive.
/.
Lake Leman lies by Chillon's walls. Byron, Pris. of Chil., VI, The rapids between Lakes Lindemann and Bennett. Graph.
loch.
rolled.
Scott,
Lady,
I,
xiv,
11.
lough.
the
dragoons.
mount.
mont.
its
behold the
finest
timber
in existence.
Id.
There are places in which Mont Blanc might be sunk without showing peak above water. Huxl., Col. Es. VIII, I, 12.
,
port.
Note
Such
is
Mount
is
An
eruption of Vesuvius.
Times.
it
every year.
Lytton, Last
IV, lxxiv.
Days
of
Pomp., Motto.
Byron, Childe Har.,
...
Observe
And
all
they
knew
were come
to
Caucasus,
mountains.
s. v.
Ch. Kingsley,
,
The Heroes,
II,
iv, 152.
Kazbek volcanic mountain in the Caucasus. Harmsworth Kazbek. Trans-Caucasia lies between the Caucasus on the north and Turkey-in-Asia and Persia on the south. Cas. Cone. Cycl., s. v. Trans- Caucasia.
Compare:
Encycl.,
II.
of
mountains
in
are never preceded by mount, and stand without the article. 'T were long to tell. .. When rose Benledi's ridge in air. Scott. %)
includes
all
the
Welsh mountains,
the highest of
which
English
2
,
article
,
before mount.
Ill,
162.
Cjes.
About
2, 164.
am
Bunyan
263.
(160).
i)
lb.,
261.
THE ARTICLE.
The following
In other
587
and were
IV.
air
in
nation.
is a Late Modern English instance: ways... he (sc. Blake) was also a forerunner; striking into the light high up on the mount Parnassus new fountains of song, which the future to become rivers of fresh emotion, thought, and imagiStopford A. Brooke, Stud, in Poetry, Ch. I, 2.
German names
of mountains usually
have the
definite article:
us.
The Breithorn,
the
Glandegg and
no place
for
lb.
Thus
i.
ii.
also in the foreign names instanced in the following quotations: Of course there is not that sort of excitement in store for us as we make for the Monte Rosa at Zermatt. Westm. Gaz., No. 6311,3a. The inn (is) as remarkable in some respects as its neighbour at Nant Borant, on the other side of the Col de Bonhomme. lb.
.
iii.
of the Sierra
Nevada shone
in
like silver.
Wash.
Irv. J)
head, ness or point never promontories ending stand with the article: Beachy Head, Fife Ness, Corsill Point, etc.
V.
of
Names
5)
The
definite article is regularly retained before the names of ships, or other means of locomotion. i. Over the little mantel-shelf was a picture of the Sarah Jane lugger. Dick.,
.
ii.
following the Rodney cutter arrived with the sad England. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXXIV, 788. The Photton frigate on which Moore had procured a passage, left Spithead on Sept. 25th. Stephen Gwenn., Thom. Moore, Ch. II, 29. The Boston frigate took him to New York. lb. Under pretence of going to read a Greek play with Smirke, this young reprobate set off so as to be in time for the Competitor down coach. Dick., Pend., I, Ch. VI, 67.
news
in
Note
I.
is
the Osborne
the Mauretania. The owner of the Young Rachel Franks. Thack., Virg., Ch. I,
II.
3.
When, what
the
,
is
class-noun,
often done, the proper name is placed after the former loses the definite article: the ship Good
.
. .
Fortune (Ten.
Enoch Arden,
came from
Times
IN
DETAIL.
The
normally used: before a) adjectives partially converted into nouns, which denote either a class of persons or a quality in a generalizing way
definite article is
(Ch.
i.
XXIX, 1415;
The blind
21).
Autob.,
Annie Besant,
ii.
** The Dutch are slow to move, but when moved are moved effectually. Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 51. The beautiful can never die. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Ch. II, 66.
i)
Foels.-Koch,
Wis. Gram.,
261.
588
CHAPTER XXXI,
31.
Note I. Also when an adjective denotes a single person in a generalizing way after such verbs as to commit, to do and to play, the definite article is regularly used. (Ch. XXIX, 16.)
He had always
Ch. XIV, 125.
II.
Dick.,
Pickw.
of a
denoting an abstraction a pure noun is used instead converted adjective, the article is regularly absent (Ch.XXIX, 22, Obs. II, /?). See, however, 35. Then the inspiring love of novelty and adventure came rushing in full Wash. Irv., Do If Heyl. (St of. Handl., I, 124). tide through his bosom.
in
When
partially
b) before
spoken
i.
singular nouns denoting persons, animals or things of in a generalizing way. We often had the traveller ox stranger visit us. Goldsm., Vic, Ch. I, (236). Those who see the Englishman only in town, are apt to form an unfavourable opinion of his character. Wash. Irv. I)
The fox, whose
of
II,
ii.
life
is, in
human
Ill,
being,
many counties, held almost as sacred as that was considered as a mere nuisance. Mac, Hist.,
Ch.
307.
The
iii.
God made the country and man made the town. Cowper. 2) What comes by the wind goes by the water. Ch. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. I, 23. Mrs. Alex., A Life It was war to the knife between Marjory and myself. Interest, I, Ch. IV, 76.
Remarkable exceptions are man, whether denoting the human species or the male human species, and woman. The absence of the article may be due to the fact that these nouns, when used in a generalizing way, assume more or less the character
of indefinite pronouns.
i.
(57.)
* Universal world,
is at
History of what man has accomplished in the bottom the History of the Great. Carlyle, Hero Worship, 10. Man everywhere is the born enemy of lies. lb., 4. Of all living creatures none are created so unequal in strength, size, courage, skill, in anything: as man. Walt. Besant, St. Kath.
History,
the
,
II,
Ch.
I,
1.
**
Man's love
is
,
of
man's
life
a
I
,
thing apart,
cxciv.
'Tis
woman's whole
existence.
ii.
Byron
Don Juan,
Woman forgives but too readily, Captain. Thack., Van Fair, I, Ch. XXIII, 237, Play is not so fatal as woman. Id., Newc. I. Ch. XXVIII, 308. Of all this and much more, the rosy landlady of the Blue Dragon took an accurate note and observation as only woman can take of woman. Dick Chuz., Ch. Ill, 156. Ay, though he loved her from his soul with such a self-denying love as
,
,
,
woman seldom
Woman's
love
III,
wins.
is
lb.,
Ch.
XXXI,
251a.
a
Ill,
many
a storm.
Lytton,
Rienzi,
Ch.
Who
loves wine, loves woman. Ten., Beck., Prol., (6946). Fear not the face of man, but look not on the face of woman. Ch. Kinosley, 5a. Hyp., Ch.
1 , i
i)
Foels.-Koch,
Wis. Gram.,
267.
*)
Webst.
THE ARTICLE.
589
Note
with
*
Sometimes the article is used, mostly when syntactically connected I. another noun which has the generalizing article, or a plural without
the article.
i.
Every age produces those links between the man and the baboon. Macaulay. J ) French man of letters has just published a most curious and valuable work on Mad Dogs, whiclt demonstrates the continuity, not only of madness in the
Dog, but of folly in the Man. Newspaper. ) f ** The woman looms much larger in the world of books than the man, and she reads more sociological works than the other sex. Fortn. Rev., 1912, 164.2)
1
ii.
It is almost impossible to realise the prejudices which existed in Crimean times against giving either authority or responsibility to women in what was regarded as the man's sphere. e s t m. G a z. , No. 6377, 1 la.
II.
In
is
father of the
You can
woman
quoted by
19) as exceptions, the reference is rather to a quality than to a person understood in a generalizing way. (Ch. XXIX, 22, Obs. II, a.) "The childhood," said Milton, "shows the man, as morning shows the day. Emerson, Domestic Life (Eliz. Jane Irv., Lit. Read., 111,238. (In this quotation the
article before morning, which is at variance with the meaning conveyed and with accepted usage, improves the rhythm.)
III.
In the following quotation the definite article is, apparently, used for sake of the metre. It may have been dropped for the same reason before men in the preceding line. Your beauty is no beauty to him now; A common chance know right well it For I know men: nor will ye win him back, For the man's love, pall'd once gone, never returns. Ten., G e r. and En., 3303.
the
IV. Classifying adjuncts sometimes cause the definite article established, but continuative adjuncts have no such effect.
i.
to be re-
The idea of the Universal Man did not exist in Pope's time. Stopford Brooke, Theol. in the Eng. Poets, Ch. I, 17. The gentle art of doing nothing appears to be one of those which education has e s t m. G a z. taken from the modern man. No. 4967 5a. Strange strange are the ways of the modern woman. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes,
Jane Oglander,
Of course, there are other instances (sc. of the way in which over-elaborated societies end up with^iheir tails in their mouths; in a posture not merely twisted have already glanced. There was the primitive man, but inverted), at which
I
whom we
No. 3801
,
left
offering
sacrifice
to
the gods.
Chesterton
(II.
Lond. News,
2716.)
How wisely has the modern Confessor adapted himself to the modern Man. Francis Thompson Health and Holiness, 19. ** The nobler conceptions of human life ... are necessarily totally incomprehensible to primitive man. Times, No. 1826, 10496. So far, no trace of Neanderthal man has been discovered in England. Id., No. 1832, 1096. Mr. Munro was well advised in selecting prehistoric man as the subject of the At hen. No. 4433, 419a. first course of the Munro Lectures. Man, especially English man, is so very afraid of doing a new thing. Westm. Gaz., No. 6299. 4c.
,
,
i)
2)
168-9.
XLVI,
336.
590
ii.
Much may be
she reads.
V.
tive -f
If
The article cannot be dispensed with before the combination adjecman, when man is used as a prop-word. (Ch. XXIX, 146.) there is a man in the world needs the love and sympathy of a wife, it is the
man.
T.
in Ireland,
P.' s Weekly, No. 478, 4a. which has a reputation for witty sons, the Cork to be supreme for his wit. Id., No. 496, 5776.
literary
Even
man
is
held
VI.
In
the
to
seems
article
:
following quotation the suppression, due to the measure, be rather that of the possessive pronoun than the definite
Do what you can for fellow-man. Ch. Mackay There's Work for all to do, VII. The definite article is regularly placed before man and woman in the collocations to play the man or woman. (Ch. XXIX, 16, Note III.) told him he had better play the man a little more. Ch. Kinosley, Westw.
,
I.
Ho!, Ch.
There
will
XVIII, 137o.
be
fearful
man
VIII.
to-day.
lb.,
Ch.
XX,
153a.
The use of the definite article before man in the Authorised Version, Gen. II, 15, 16, 18 and, perhaps, more places, may be due to some specializing element, such as (the man) which I (he) have
(had) created, being understood.
And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone. Bible, Gen., II, 18. (Compare: God created man in his own image, lb., I, 4.)
IX.
it It
seems as plausible
definite
generalizing
that in some of the above quotations assume the absence of the indefinite as of the article, the function of the one being sometimes
This will practically the same as that of the other (7, c, Note II). also become apparent from a comparison of a midge and man in the
following quotation:
%
is
to Fate.
J.
D. Beres-
32.
The
in
nouns
a generalizing sense.
these, especially such as express a class, of society, never reject it any more than their valents. For illustration see also Ch. XXVI, 9.
of section
a)
Some
a sect or a
Dutch equi-
aristocracy.
XI, 206.
Who
bar.
The dinner
The
to be given
to
M. Berryer. Times.
church.
death of dean Stanley is a loss to the Church. Lit. World. Dr. Maclagan has done good serviee in the Church. Westm. Gaz.
clergy were often unpopular. clergy. The new Protestant * Hist., Ch. Vli, III, 378.
Green, Short
THE ARTICLE.
The publican has thrown
have not remained
at
591
scale and the clergy certainly No. 5219, 2a.
,
same
,
home.
Westm. Gaz.
commonalty.
Allen,
He may look
That Friend
very well on the outside, but I detect at once in unwashed, the mob, the commonalty. Grant
in
of Sylvia's.
is
community.
Community
as in 1910.
The omnibus
favour with
all
classes
,
of
to
Bain,
H.
E.
Gr.
60,
the
democracy.
gentry. Thack.,
herd.
Westm. Gaz.,
their
own
Ill,
horses or drove,
50.
in their
own
coaches.
Barry Lyndon,
Hypatia,
is
Ch.
The herd has been eating and drinking and marrying as usual.
Ch.
II,
Ch-
Kinosley,
laity.
lb.
That
hesitate to describe
medical manifesto of real importance addressed equally to the medical profession and the laity. Westm. Gaz., No. 5231 106. The appeal ... is as much to the medical man as to the laity. lb.
as
mass.
movement
of the mass.
Lytton,
Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 52. mob. Is the mob more bold, more constant? lb., I, Ch. VIII, multitude. To me, all great regenerations seem to have been
few, and
tacitly
52.
the
work of the
lb., I,
nobility, people, priesthood. In Gaul were two orders, the nobility and the priesthood, while the people, says Caesar, were all slaves. Motley, Rise, Hist. Intr., 4b.
peasantry.
people.
Bain
H. E.
r.
how much
Autobiography,
priesthood.
331.
Annie Besant,
public. Do you suppose that the public reads with a view to G. Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XLVI, 343.
own
conversion.
rabble.
The rabble
call
him
lord.
Haml.
I
IV, 5, 101.
town. The town has asserted that Goldsmith Good-nat. man, IV.
,
man
of merit.
world.
critics.
Fielding,
Tom
b)
Jones,
V, Ch.
I,
63.
But the
before
many
,
definite article is suppressed, contrary to the Dutch practice, other nouns of a similar collective sense, such as Christen-
dom (=
syllable syllable == the male sex) maturity, posterity, royalty, society, womankind; and also before the names of abstractions and of religious philosophical and artistical
= the
human
first
manism.
The suppression
of the article
is,
592
meaning
also
to
in
CHAPTER XXXI,
32.
of these words, which, indeed, pervades their altered application a more or less degree (34), partly also, perhaps, to their having a certain extent the character of indefinite pronouns. (57.) The first of
the following quotations aptly illustrates their different treatment, as compared with that observed with the collective nouns mentioned higher up. For illustration see also Ch. XXVI, 9.
barbarism, philosophy. The struggle is not even between philosophy and barbarism. The struggle is one between the aristocracy and the mob. Ch. Kingsley,
Hypatia,
Ch.
II,
8a.
Catholicism, Protestantism. We often hear it said that the world is constantly becoming more and more enlightened, and that this enlightenment must be favourable to Protestantism, and unfavourable to Catholicism. Mac, Es. Popes, (5426).
,
Jerusalem,
licism
,
after all,
is
Times.
of childhood
childhood.
of children).
The two
II.
real
interests
Lond. News.
and
creative.
Childhood
is
poetic
T. P.'s
Weekly,
,
Christendom.
Christendom.
He would Lytton R
,
rather
i
e n z
Ch. VIII
52.
lb., II,
The
eyes of
all
Christendom
will
be directed
hither.
Ch.
Ill,
84.
Christianity.
humanity.
Thus
with
His mode of
life
has very
much resembled
I
specimens of humanity
whom
that of Tom Jones, Roderick Random, hold in peculiar and especial detestation. Sarah
Grand, The Heav. Twins, I, 109. The difficulty to keep so poor a specimen of humanity as Richard Boyce in his place. Mrs. Ward, Marcel la, I, 194. humankind. Her separation from her parent had reconciled her to all humankind. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XLVI, 3536. Her brother and her nephew represented to her the flower of humankind. Mrs. Ward,
Ma
c e
159.
Compare:
Scott,
Islam.
One
lingering
sympathy
of
mind
Still
bound him
to the
mortal kind.
Lady,
III,
VB,
16.
The Caliph
attack by a Christian
a Jehad
in
of Islam is said to be considering whether in response to this Power upon the Moslem Empire in Africa, he ought to proclaim in defence of endangered Islam. Stead, Letter to the (quoted
Times
Weekly Times,
English
its
manhood.
on
manhood
manners.
i.
Westm. Gaz.
first
mankind,
quality
Lytton,
Caxtons,
Should
Ch. II, 59. Honour is the foundation of all improvement in mankind. lb., 60. Only queens should rule mankind. Ch. Kinqsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVI, 130a.
ii.
all
despair
themselves.
The
infinite
That have revolted wives, the tenth of mankind 1,2,99. simplicity and silliness of mankind and womankind at
|
Would hang
large.
Winter's Tale,
Ch. IX,
67. i)
Trol
Lady Anna,
1
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
593
Compare:
Castle,
You
don't
know human
and
maturity.
mortality.
sufferings to
nature, male human nature! Aon. & Eo. H, Ch. I, 114. howls with pain, while maturity suffers and smiles
at the futility of
howling. T. P. 's Weekly, No. 469, 569a. Pasteur and Lister have done so much by their genius to alleviate the
,
which mortality is heir. Westm. Gaz. No. 6329, 116. Christianity. Do not fancy that the battle is merely between Paganism and Christianity. Ch. Kjngsley, Hyp., Ch. II, 8a. posterity. Posterity has not yet confirmed honest Hogarth's opinion about his talents for the sublime. Thackeray.
Paganism
See under Catholicism. To-day's issue of the Nuova Anthologia contains an article upon the progress of Romanism in England. Times. Royalty. Royalty in most countries is fond of the stage but merely as a spectator II. L o n d. News. Society must deal with the unemployed, or society, i. This one thing is clear Annie Besant, Autobiog. 319. the unemployed will deal with Society. If you choose to associate with the scum of society, you may do as you like.
Protestantism.
Romanism.
il.
of Sylvia's. improvement in the productive powers of labour, and the order according to which its produce is naturally distributed among the different ranks and conditions of men in the society, make the subject of the first book of this 2. Inquiry. Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations, Intro d. What have been the effects of those debts upon the real wealth, the annual produce of the land and labour of the society? lb., 4.
,
That Friend
this
womankind.
to
She was
Mrs.
at
any
,
womankind.
Ward
Marce
194.
youth. What follies will not youth perpetrate! ThacL, Pend., I, Ch. XVIII, 187. But he was young and youth is curious. Ch. Kingsley, Hyp., Ch. I, 16. Note I. Continuative adjectives do not cause the article to be used before the above nouns, but restrictive adjectives may. no dog cares two wags most fortunately for erring humanity i. Fortunately Westm. Gaz., No. 4967, 66. of his tail about your moral character. The inestimable benefits conferred upon suffering humanity by Lord Lister, lb., No. 6329, 11a. * He had been at the ii. Treasury, and for a month or two at the Admiralty,
Ch. II, 15. No. 6329, 7a. It II. seems difficult to account for the regular use of the generalizing definite article before Papacy, a noun which is, apparently, of a similar collective meaning as the other names of ecclesiastical systems. The Republic of Venice was modern when compared with the Papacy, and the Republic The Papacy remains, not in decay, of Venice is gone and the Papacy remains. not a mere antique, but full of life and youthful vigour. Mac, Popes, (542a). Dr. Windhorst's task as the Champion of the Papacy was anything but an easy
astonishing official mankind by his diligence. ** The Christian idea of the New Mankind.
Trol.,
Framl. Pars.,
,
Westm. Gaz.
one.
Graph.
Byzantium lost, the Papacy won. WilliamBarry, The Papacy, Prol., 16. The Papacy fell into unspeakable degradation. lb., 18. III. Creation seems to take the definite article, when the reference is to living beings, and to throw it off, when it has the wider sense of all things created. When not used in a collective sense, but denoting the beginning of the world, it seems to take the article regularly: creation standing for
All that
II.
38
594
i. I
Tom
saying to the most beautiful part of the Jones, XV, Ch. II, 986.
fine girl is
VII.
life
worth
all
Goldsm., Vicar,
Ch.
My
that
part
the
creation
Stoops,
(His
(180).
horse was) sweating and terrified, as if experiencing that agony of fear with which the presence of a supernatural being is supposed to agitate the brute creation. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. XXII, 227. He is fond of hearing stories how the mightiest of the brute creation may be deceived by the wiles employed against them. Deiohton, Note to
Jul. Caes., II, I, 203-7. The landlady ... had already given vent to an indignant inquiry whether Mr. Wardle considered himself a lord of the creation. Dick., Pickw.. Ch. X, 85. The Lords of the Creation are ripe for reform. Westm. Gaz., No. 5277, Ab.
ii.
No change, no degradation, no perversion of humanity, in any grade, through all the mysteries of wonderful creation, has monsters half so
and dread. Dick., Christm. Car5. ni, 84. Acknowledged history is but a grain of sand on the shore
horrible
.
of creation.
Good Words.
While there
is another town left in creation, I'll never trouble you again, Tergou. Ch. Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. XI, 60. But ever and anon his childish prattle recurred to what impressed his imagination even more deeply than the wonders of creation. Hardy, Tess, I, Ch. IV, 35.
Hi.
in
and
sixth
which the writer of Genesis records the proceedings days of the Creation. Huxley, Col. Es., VIII, i, 35-
c)
Collective nouns of the second kind, i. e. such as denote conceptions without limits (Ch. XXVI, 7), like material and abstract nouns (34)
,
33. Before
plural
or things in a generalizing
a)
nouns when denoting a class of persons, animals way, the definite article is mostly used.
it
Thus we
And Jesus
have
find
normally
in the
following quotations:
said unto them, The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay" his head. Bible.
ladies.
Matth., VIII, 20. Then you're no friend to the The fact is, that the cigar is
Pref.,
(204). in that
Goldsm.,
She Stoops,
Thack.
I
,
II,
(194).
Fitzboodle,
From indulging
have gained
among
the
happy one. The men dislike him, the women despise him, and he dislikes and despises himself. Jeromc, Idle Thoughts,
While man
is very little higher than the beasts, he is also very little lower than the angels. Malet, Mrs. Lorimer, 209. *) Sir Robert Peel's apostrophe iothe Conservatives was reproduced by Mr. Balfour In his speech at the Primrose League demonstration at Hatfield. Graph.
i)
218.
THE ARTICLE.
595
If only the ladies could all have their own way in this world, and never be thwarted, then were the Milennium near at hand. lb. lb. It is necessary that the nationalists shall be absolutely independent. The Extremists ask for nothing less than the establishment of complete Ministerial responsibility, while the Moderates are willing to be content with some
in
future
be responsible
to the Reichstag.
Westm. Gaz.
Note
The
I.
When what
is
meant
is
way,
stranger who would form a correct opinion of the English character, must sojourn in villages and hamlets; he must visit castles, villas, farmhouses cot1 tages [etc.]. Wash. Irving. )
,
to singulars
article
ii.
Days elapsed before any one understood what had happened. Boys showed us the way.
* Islands are pieces of land surrounded by water. ** Lions are beasts of, prey,
iii.
iv.
We
want men
indefinite article, as a weak any, is sometimes practically equivalent to the generalizing definite article (7, c, Note II), plurals without the article are sometimes used in, apparently, the same
But
in like
manner as the
definite article.
in their country-seats.
When
The
leaves
fall
Lytton,
task
What
before
will he do with
Liberals
is
and Free
of
it?,
one
Q a z.
between the generalizing (or
generalizing)
immortal.
of
II.
The
difference
(or
indefinite) singular
the
indefinite
plural
is
clearly
following quotations:
Men
III.
die, but
Man
write
is
Most thinkers
and speak
of
men.
Symons. 2 )
Sometimes the use or absence of the article Thus in: Men are God's trees, and women are God's flowers;
metre.
is
conditioned by the
the
And when
Gascon
\
wine mounts
all
to
my
head,
the fairer.
Ten. ,
statelier,
Are
Sometimes the absence of the article may be due to the noun assuming more or less the vagueness of an indefinite pronoun. (57). Liberals therefore are beginning to ask with much insistence what future is there either for the Government or for the party, if no means can be found of removing the obstruction of the Peers. Westm. Gaz. (= Dutch Van 1 iberale zijde begint men te vragen enz.)
IV.
If
the
learn
English tongue should ever die out, future generations would have to English as a dead language in order that they might read Milton. lb.,
(=Dutch...zou
i)
enz.)
Foels.
2)
267. Koch Wis. Gram., Wendt, Synt. des heut. Eng., 169.
,
596
b)
CHAPTER XXXI,
33.
Regular
is the suppression of the definite article before plurals used in a generalizing sense after a superlative, when the notion of comparison with other specimens of the class is obscured, i. e. when little more
is
Thus English
the
easiest
language; English is modern languages English The misses Osborne had had
by the adjective. of languages English is a very easy the easiest of the modern languages Of the
is
Van
Fair,
I,
Ch. XII, 114. That very evening Amelia wrote him the tenderest of long letters. lb., Ch. XIII, 133. The best of women (I have heard my grandmother say) are hypocrites. lb., I, Ch. XVII, 179.
Dare any soul on earth breathe a word against the sweetest, the purest, the tenderest, the most, angelical of young women! lb., I, Ch. XVII, 188. They vilipended the poor innocent girl as the basest and most artful of
vixens.
lb., I,
is
Riding
the
most healthy of
G. Eliot,
Mid.,
I,
Ch.
II,
12.
and his frankness he made the best of crimps. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVI, 131a. Few of us realize how recently the chinges have begun, which have made London the healthiest instead of the unhealthiest of cities. Graph. Even the healthiest of persons is liable to stomachic derangement sometimes. Westm. Gaz., No. 6029, 13c.
With
his
jests
He (sc
among the shyest of birds. lb., 13a. with the following quotations, in which the use of the above Compare the article has the effect of imparting to the superlative its ordinary
the hawfinch) is
meaning
occasionally
by obtaining an appearance
,
at
one or
commonest of the minor theatres. Dick., Pickw. Ch. Ill, 24. The Last of the Barons. Lytton name of a nove. The Last of the Mohicans. Fenimoore Cooper, name of a novel. Man is the shortest-lived of the beasts. II. L o n d. News, No. 3831 428a. The Nation, best and brightest of the Weeklies. (For the absence of the article before the superlative see 20, e. Thus also in: Professor Reinhardt, most popular of theatrical directors, was responsible for the staging. II. Lond. News,
,
,
Note
I.
The
article
distinct notion of
is sometimes suppressed also when there comparison with other specimens of the class.
is
is
to
be conscious of none.
cities.
Carlyle,
Hero Wor-
ship,
II.
II
43.
is
Rotterdam
the
Lit.
World.
singular abstract
noun instead
Both
Times,
(=
in
excellent health.)
Westm. Gaz.,
No. 6389,
16.
Sometimes a noun expressing a high degree of excellence, takes the place of the superlative. Such a noun may be preceded by the indefinite article, and the preposition of may be replaced by among.
i.
The prince of charioteers. Sher., Riv. 1,1. Archibald Forbes, the prince of war correspondents. No. 4971 6136.
,
,
T.
P. 's
Weekly,
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
I
597
know
his greatness.
lived
with
a king of
men and
III,
did not
Zanowill,
157.
She
A prince of dreamers. F. A. Steele, name of a' novel, (sc. Ladx Mary Wortley Montagu) was a queen among women.
T. P.'s
Weekly.
A singular noun identical with the plural sometimes has the value IV. the greatest of sins. of a superlative: the sin of sins Acquiescence in things as they are is the sin of sins. Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 1386. (That is) the gift of gifts. II. L o n d. News, No. 3844, 945a. with this A Whig of the Whigs, he (sc. Lord John Russell) proved No. 262, 162a (= a Whig to the typical of a period which [etc.].
Compare
Bookman,
backbone.)
Here mention may also be made of such a collocation as in his heart of hearts (= in his inmost heart), in which the article is suppressed on the same principle.
many fond parents have in my heart of hearts a favourite child. And name is David. Copperfield. Dick., Cop., Pref. The fact is that the Germans in their hearts of hearts know perfectly well that
Like
his
I
attack
of success.
Rev.
Partially
of
persons in a
generalizing way, never lose the article. Master Jeremy fell into the error of supposing that we clods and yokels were the simplest of the simple. Blackm. Lorna Doone, Ch. XXXVIII 228.
, ,
34.
The
and
a)
definite article
is
names
of materials,
when spoken
article is
in this case is variable. Although, as a rule, the dispensed with, it is not infrequently met with. Thus the article would (or might) be used in translating the following sentences: i. Money makes the mare to go. Pro v. Money exercises an undue influence in the world. H.J. Byron, Our
Boys,
Besides
is
1, (19).
its
ii.
as the working substance in engines, steam employed for heating. Harmsworth Encyclop. In Scotland gas is governed by the Sale of Gas Act lb., s. v. gas, (121c). Health is above wealth. Pro v.
also
largely
is
commonest use
Art
'Tis
long,
is
life is short.
Id. Id.
Time
file
that
safest
in
matrimony
begin with a
little
aversion.
is
Sher.,
Riv.
Tradition.
Carlyle,
,
Hero Worship,
Charity begins at Ch. XXVII 227a.
,
23.
home
justice
begins next-door.
Dick.
h u
z.
Self-preservation is the first law of nature. Id., 01. Twist, Ch. X, 24a. will I desert So long as nature supports me, never, never, Mr. the post of duty. Thack., Fair, I, Ch. XIX, 201.
Clump,
Van
Nature, in all its operations, impresses man with the idea of an invisible Power. Lytton, Caxtons, III, Ch. II, 52. Marriage is the best state for man in general. Rev. E. J. Hardy, to be happy though married, Ch. II 26.
How
598
CHAPTER XXXI,
Fame and reward
affection.
lb.,
34.
are powerful incentives, but they bear no comparison to Ch. Ill, 34. Charity covers a multitude of sins. Lit. World. Note. Indefinite or vague specializing bears some resemblance to
generalization, and, therefore, has the same effect. On all grounds opinion had better be left to ripen before positive steps are No. 6359, la. taken on either side. Westm. Gaz. Opinion has fortunately moved forward somewhat. lb., No. 6365, 2a. His career owes nothing whatever to influence or to circumstances apart from
,
lb., 2b.
b)
The
1)
above nouns.
sentences in which what is considered true at all times, is applied to a special case. Necessity excused stratagem. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XXXVII, 267.
in
2)
when
abstraction
the ideas they express are personified. Personification of an is essentially only a modified form of generalizing an
It is often even difficult to tell how far generalizing has passed into personification. Thus some of the quotations given above might with a fair show of justice be cited as instances of
abstraction.
personification. The uncertainty is also shown by the variability of the pronouns used in referring to abstractions. (Ch. XXVI, 38, b.) The clearest form of personification is that in which a quality is
as
when we speak
The names
of
proper names, and also as such would reject the article. Abundance. It is a time when Want is keenly felt and Abundance Dick., Christm. Car. 5, I, 14.
Art.
rejoices.
a jealous mistress. Storm, Eng. Phil., 352. Chance afforded him an opportunity of making the acquaintance of this class of society. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXX, 317. Death. Death alone parted them. Academy.
is
Art
Chance.
have
it,
the
Westward
Ho!,
Fortune. Fortune favours the bold. P r o v. Cursed as I am with more imperfections than my fellow-creatures, kind Fortune sent a heaven-gifted cherub to my aid. Sheridan, Riv., V, 1,(272). afraid of Fortune! Why Fortune has done her worst: I defy her to do worse than she has done! Walt. Besant, St. Kath., Ch. VIII.
I
History.
History,
we
believe,
will
do
justice
to
it
(sc. this
Parliament).
Westm. Gaz.,
Love.
Love
flies
Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind. Mids.,
out of the window,
1,
224.
v.
in at the door.
Pro
Mercy. Mercy
VI, 8.
Misfortune. It seemed as if Misfortune was never tired of worrying motion that unwieldy exile. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXXII, 351.
into
Nature.
Id.,
Nature meant very gently by women, when she made that tea-plant. I, Ch. XXXII, 347. Omnipotence. Bright retorted that it was an affliction which not even Omnipotence could inflict on the noble lord. Truth, No. 472, 650c.
Pend.,
THE ARTICLE.
Omniscience.
599
in his
little
He only
learned that
the
human way,
Dick.,
Ch. X,
Providence. Vic.
we
to ourselves.
Goldsm.,
Rumour.
Ch.
II,
Rumour
called
her a
Spaniard.
G. Meredith,
Lord Orm.,
39.
subsequently more to say. lb. that, when on the night of the big row contiguity produced physical conflict, the Colonel was in it. At least, so Rumour says. Westm. Gaz., No. 4943, 5a. Rumour has run wild during the present week. lb., No. 5237, lb.
Rumour had
So
it
came about
Time. Time heals many a sore. P r o v. Time will show. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XVI, 133a. Time and tide wait for no man, saith the adage.
35.
lb.,
Ch. X, 80a.
Both before material nouns and abstract nouns the generalizing met with.
Sometimes the use
metre or rhythm proper balance.
of
i.
of the article
(9,
may be due
to the requirements
g.)
or to
How many
times shall Caesar bleed in sport, That now on Pompey's No worthier than the dust. Jul. Cass., Ill, 1, 116. A feeling of sadness and longing That is not akin to pain, And resembles sorrow only As the mist resembles rain. Longfellow, The
1
ii.
iii.
Day is Done, III. (Note the absence of the article before rain, although used in the same grammatical meaning as mist.) She is as pure as is the ice. Ouida, Moths, III, 264.1) Only, a little ice where the fire should glow, only a cold look, where to be happy though the love should burn. Rev. E. J. Hardy
,How
married, Ch. 10, 104. i) But this would hardly account for the use of the article in: Pray, gentlemen, let me have one honest man in my company, for the novelty's sake. Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer, V, 5, (339).
It
is
evident that
it
would be impossible M c Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. nor the Great Western was the of steam propulsion. lb., Ch. I,
auxiliary,
to reckon
13.
(Compare:
first
means
13.)
When
everything else
is
falls
will
endure because
it
it
cannot die
Rid. Hag.,
while there
any
life,
is
true love,
for
is
immortal.
Jess, am not
1 I
86. 2)
mind to venture my life Hist. In trod., 39a. She had remained pure as the snow.
of a
Motley, Rise,
El.
Glyn,
Eng.
the following quotation, given by Wendt (Synt. des heut. 172), the use of the definite article, indeed, makes for
article
would seem
to
be more appro-
i)
24.
2)
lb.,
X,
218.
600
Admirers
CHAPTER XXXI,
35.
of the strenuous life must acclaim Professor Wright, completed his great English Dialect Dictionary. Periodical.
who
has just
b)
The
article
is
rather
common
before the
names
of certain diseases,
such as bronchitis , fever, gout, indigestion, rheumatism, whooping-cough and the compounds of ache. This practice, however, is now regarded as more or less vulgar. Wyld, The Growth of English, Ch. V, 65. Before most names of diseases, especially when scientific names, the article is practically never used. Such, among many others, are cholera, consumption, pleurisy, phthisis, diphtheria, paralysis, neuralgia, etc. Before others we mostly find the indefinite article. (41, a.) The definite It may here be article is practically regular before plague and pest. observed that the article is exceedingly common before plural names of diseases. See the illustrative quotations given in Ch. XXV, 19, c.
ache.
to spend the day with Miss Sheridan, who was ill with the Miss Linley (G. G. S., Life of Sheridan, 28). I am sure you have the head-ache. Jane Austen Mansfield Park.Ch. VII, 74. I am very much afraid she caught the head-ache there. lb., 76. Miss Pritchard had the head-ache. Thack., Virg., Ch. LXXX, 848. He came because I had the tooth-ache. lb., Ch. LXXXIV, 895. She laboured under severe head-ache. Mrs. Gask., Life of Charl.
i.
I
was
tooth-ache.
Bronte,
416.
,
Ch. Bronte fever, i. The latter caught the typhus fever. Jane Eyre, Ch. Ill, 25. Colonel Washington has had the fever very smartly. Thack. Virg., Ch. XII, 122. Miss Birch died of the scarlet fever. Id., Van Fair, I, Ch. I, 3. His Excellency, Colonel Rawdon Crawley died of yellow fever. Thack., ii. Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXXII, 372. Having gone to bed ill with fever [etc.]. Id., Pend. II, Ch. XVI, 163. Percie had died of fever. Story of Rob Roy, 45. Fever and a bad head-ache have prevented me from writing to my adorable friend. Truth, No. 470 595c.
, , ,
gout.
ii.
Master thought another fit of the gout was coming to make him a visit. Sher., Riv., I, 1, (213). Gout is the chief disease from which rheumatism has to be distinguished. Roberts, Handbk. Med. 3, I, 231. i)
i. i.
measles,
buried?
ii.
Don't you remember dying of the measles and coming here to be Miss Braddon, My First Happy Christmas (Stof.
,
tell
me
that
have
Chesterton
(I
I.
Lond. News,
plague,
i.
exclusively
During the 19th century the plague in Europe was confined almost to Turkey and S. Russia. Harmsworth Encyclop. s. v.
ii.
plague, (382c). From June 1890 to January 1900 the plague prevailed in Oporto in Portugal. lb. At length it seems as if plague was being got over. Westm. Gaz. No. 6299, 2a.
shall
rheumatism,
I
If i. this frolic should lay me up with a fit of the rheumatism, have a blessed time of it with dame van Winkle. Wash. Irv.,
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
601
On wet Sundays,
or whenever he had a touch of rheumatism, he used to read the three first chapters of Genesis. G.Eliot, Bede, Ch. XVIII, 161. It was evident from the way he moved, that every one of his poor old joints was stiff with rheumatism. e s t m. G a z. No. 5201 9a.
Adam
in the
small-pox. Thack.
Van. Fair,
few quotations containing names of diseases which never take the generalizing definite article, must suffice.
died of cholera. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. XIII, 181. She died from inflammation of the lungs. (?), Mad. Leroux, Ch. I. Thousands of people had perished of starvation. York Powell Life of C h. Gordon, (Gunth.. Leerb. 135). She possessed a husband whom she had left ill with malaria at Florence. Kath. Cecil Thurston J o h n Chi cote, M. P., Ch. VII, 82.
He
c)
The generalizing
definite
article
is
also
more or
less
common
before
chase, which has it practically regularly, except for certain expressions, such as to hold chase, to give chase, to be (hold) in chase. Sometimes the use or absence of the article is determined by the measure.
i.
The gentleman
All the
fierce
is
I,
gaiety of his nature broke out in the chivalrous adventures of his youth, ... in his defiant ride over the ground which Geoffry Martel claimed from him, a ride with hawk on fist, as though war and the chase were one.
Green, Short Hist., Ch. II, 4, 75. (Note the different practice before war and chase.) The Normans made the chase and war the only noble occupations. Sug-
gestive Lessons,
ii.
IV, 90.
,
Held me in chase. Coriol. I, 6, 19. And now the two canoes in chase divide. Byron, The Island, III, Since long ago that men in Calydon Held chase. W. Morris,
Spies of the Volsces
| |
x.
The
XXI.
day
to
Frithiof.
Edna Lyall, A
collocation
to
Hardy
see the
Norseman,
light,
light
28.
article
in
the
come
into
the
world, to
be
Usage seems
i.
divided in the collocation to bring to (the) light. The article be regularly suppressed in to come to light. * will probably never see the light. Motley, Many documents from his hand
is
to
Rise,
This
the
pages of an
Ned
exultingly, as he brought
two
young owls to the light. Sweet, * Everybody wished to bring to Sci. Relig., 185. i)
**
some
of the treasures.
Max Muller,
light.
They
will stick at
To
crop out
= ro
Times.
come
Webst., Diet.
The fraud came to light. Graph. death, which regularly has the article in the collocation to the death with to in a temporal meaning. See also Franz, Shak. Gram. 2, 262; Ellinger, Eng. Stud., XXXI; id., Verm. Beit., 26.
!)
Murray.
602
I
I
CHAPTER XXXI,
it
35.
will battle
to the death,
at last.
Dick.,
Letters.
).
Ten., Coming of Arthur, 133. Lestrange... vowed to wage war, not only to the death, but the mock saints and martyrs. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. HI, 386.
trust thee to the death.
They swore a
Westw. Ho!,
obey
their
officers
to
the death.
Ch. Kinqsley
Here is seemingly a quarrel to the death, Punch. Shere Khan knew that Mother Wolf would fight
to
the
death.
Rudy.
Kipling,
Jungle Book.
They would
Philips ,
resent an
insult
96.
to
themselves or
one of
Mrs. Bouverie,
2c.
to follow
him
to the death.
Westm.
Thus
Note.
it
When
to
is
not used.
is
absent in:
,
He was frozen to death starved to death frightened to death. He bored himself to death. He drank himself to death. These terms have been done to death. He was put to death. Sheridan wounded to death was removed to the White Hart
. .
Hotel.
(T.
P.'s
Weekly,
am
Othello,
II,
3, 157.
r.
Leave me to-night: I am weary to the death. Ten., G e Tho' he... ...were himself nigh wounded to the death.
|
and
En., 358.
lb., 918.
article regularly, or almost regularly, in certain applications or collocations, dropping it as regularly in others. Law has the article:
a)
when denoting
recognized by
for every
the
a
body
of
community
to pass that the law, which was intended man's preservation, should be any man's ruin. Swift, GuI., IV, Ch. V. Laws grind the poor, and rich men rule the law. Goldsmith, Trav. 386. Ignorant of the law, the law seemed to him, as it ever does to the ignorant and
,
the friendless, [etc.]. Lytton, "If the law supposes that", said
120.
is a ass a idiot. Ch. LI, 481. Combination is an instinct which, as the law cannot eradicate it, it is sound policy on the part of the law to recognize. Escott, England, Ch. X 156. In that year the principle was asserted that the law owed its duties of protection to women as well as children. lb., Ch. X, 138. The law forbids, allows. Fowler, Concise Oxf. Diet.
Dick.,
01.
Twist,
To
lay
down
the law.
lb.
Observe especially to break (infringe, transgress) the law, as in: Neither will it be necessary for you to break the law in an attempt to deprive us
forcibly of the use of property.
Mr. Pankhurst
pending.
Times, No. 1831 83a. (gave) an undertaking not to break the law while her Westm. Gaz., No. 6165, 2c.
,
. . .
trial is
Note
Your
I.
The
late
husband's estate
following quotations may exhibit exceptional practice: will be seized upon by law. Dick., Chuz., Ch. LIV, 419a.
i)
VI, 24.
THE ARTICLE.
The
II.
603
Ch.
is
Escott,
article
England,
is
X,
151.
(civil,
that
when
law, the
against
sense
Ch.
I,
meant.
The Papacy,
/?)in the sense of binding injunctions in general, especially in the phrase to give the law to (=to impose one's will upon). Mr. Brady gave the law at Castle Brady. Thack. Barry Lyndon, Ch. I. (Occasionally without the article: In literature she gave law to the world. Mac,
,
Hist.,
j')
Ill,
Ch.
I,
397.)
when denoting
Newman
I
,
science: He
1
consults
men
learned
in the law.
J.
H.
Par. Serm.
have studied the law. Punch. (Occasionally without the article: These chapters were rewritten under the immediate eye of W. H., who studied law 35 years ago. Mark Twain , Pud. Wilson, 5.) Note. The article is absent in the combinations student-at-law , student of
law, professor of law: Simple questions and answers for the use of students- at-law. Punch. 8) in the sense of judicial remedy, especially in the phrases to take (to have) the law of a person, to take the law into one's own hands, to have the law in one's own hands. There's a hackney-coachman downstairs, vowing he'll have the law of you.
Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. VI, 60. I'll take the law of yer for assault an'
battery.
Mrs.
Ward,
Marc,
I,
152.
Lynch, who in the sense of the legal profession. Bred to the law. Fowler, Concise Oxf. Diet.
be derived from a Virginia farmer named thus took the law into his own hands. Webst., Diet., s. v. lynch-law.
is
said
to
Law
a) in the sense of controlling influence of The Reign of Law. Escott, England, Ch. X, 156,
of Terror.)
the law.
(Com p a re
the Reign
/?)
Law ... is at each stage the organised public opinion of the country. Westm. Gaz., No. 6323, lc. n the sense of law-courts as providing judicial remedy, especially in the phrase to go to law. Go to law upon the spot and retain me. Dick., Our Mut. Friend, I,
i
Ch.
y)
Ill
29.
in the
son-in-law.
sense, but
is
Note.
may
due
be
common
peace, which almost regularly has the article when it stands for the King's peace (= the general peace and order of the realm, as provided for by
law).
Murray.
Thus
in:
a) the collocations to
keep (preserve) the peace, to break (disturb) the peace, and allied combinations, such as preservation (breach, disturbance) of
the peace.
!)
Murray.
604
i.
We
Keep
Sir
to
lay a
Ch. LV, 570. keep the peace. Thacic, Virg. heavy hand on the pair of you. Hal. Sutcl.,
,
Ch.
II
45.
satisfied of his
own
ability to
will
la.
that, in spite of all these hitherings and thitherings, eventually be settled without disturbing the
served.
to cause the peace to be kept and preNo. 3775 342. The Man who defies the law is he who provokes others to a breach of the peace. Times, No. 1831, 91c. The Constabulary had received instructions ... to disperse by force assemblies from which a disturbance of the peace might be apprehended. 177. II. Lond. News, No. 3351 will
do
the best of
my power
II.
Lon
d.
News,
ii.
Times.
,
warning that peace must be kept during the bye-election. II. Lond. No. 3851 177. The venerable Ruler, whose wisdom has helped so much to preserve peace. lb., No. 3879, 276. His services in the difficult work of keeping peace on the Indian frontier it would be hard to overrate. Westm. Gaz., No. 6246, 2a.
News,
P) in the Peace.
i.
collocation Justice
Court
is
I
In
counties the
,
ii.
Our
. . .
Nat.
I,
Anna
Amelia,
,
You
talked
if
Goldsmith,
She Stoops,
111,(205).
Note.
peace.
y.
in
the
be sworn
magistrate), the commissio'h of the peace (=the authority given under the Great Seal empowering certain persons to act as Justices of the Peace in a specified district), precept of the peace, sessions
of the peace.
I
am sworn of
England
the peace.
Merry Wives,
II,
3, 54.
Peace) was first conferred by an act of 1360, and the commission of the peace in counties became a permanent institution from about that time. Harmsworth Encyclop.
In
this title (sc. that of Justice of the
N e t e.
make
in
In
(to
combinations peace rejects the article. Thus conclude, to bring, to bring about, to secure) peace.
other
to disturb
in to
Westm. Gaz.,
The Powers ... have at least secured peace among themselves, even not made peace in the Balkans. Id., No. 6341 2a.
,
they have
36.
The
generalizing article
is
also suppressed:
a) before
some
.
of
the
names of localities, institutions and establishwords mentioned in 15, a. For illustration see
THE ARTICLE.
church. Churcfi begins at two. G. Eliot, Adam Bede,Ch. XVIII, Church is good for the publican. Froude, Oceana, Ch. II, 40. Lytton Life of college. College he seems to have disliked.
,
605
159.
Lord
is home, be it ever so homely. Pro v. will fetch in open market between two thousand market. A silver fox skin and two thousand five hundred dollars. II. Lond. News, No. 3877, 211
. . .
prison.
Our
friend
seems
to think that
prison
is
a hospital.
John Galsworthy,
prison is. lb., IV, (101). Prison for lads should be the last, and not the first, resort. 1897, 30 Aug., 5/1.
Daily News,
,
Ch.
Bronte
I
Jane Eyre,
knew what
'Would you
school was.
like
to
go
to
school"?"
Again
reflected:
scarcely
lb., 24.
John Chilcote,
M.
Compare:
to
who
Westm. Gaz.
b)
before the names of meals. (15, b.) I allowed half an hour for this meal and an hour for dinner.
Goldsmith,
Vicar, Ch.
I
IV,
Dinner
c)
anybody. Dick., Pickw. , Ch. IX, 73. generally the most substantial meal we take in the course of the day.
before the
reference
retained
names
is
of certain of the
to
a natural
not suppressed,
after
when
distinctly a period is
is
always
prepositions in and during. Nor ever dropped before afternoon and forenoon. (15, c.)
the
Ev'n silent night proclaims
apparently,
I,
102.
Evening must u?her night, night urge the morrow. Shelley, Adonais, XXI. Night is generally my time for walking. Dick., The Old Cur. Shop,
Ch.
I,
la.
d)
frequently
before
the
names
of
seasons.
The
article
seems
to
be
especially common after the prepositions in and during, which help to express a period. (15, d.) i. Winter is long and harsh; summer is brief and burning. Froude, Oceana, Ch. XX, 331. All the gardeners could not keep the impress of autumn's destroying hand from the grounds about the Court. Miss Braddon, Lady Audley's Secret, I, Ch. XIV, 152. In summer the heat of the sun is tempered by the fresh keen air of the mountain. lb., Ch. IX, 129. * In the summer I often leave home ii. early in the morning, and roam about fields and lanes all day. Dick., The Old Cur. Shop, Ch. I, la. There were glass houses to protect the delicate plants in the winter. Froude,
Oceana,
Times.
It
The remarkable
is
Leerb.,
76.
The
young.
in the 13a.
606
/
live
in
summer, and
Laurie's
a remarkable instance of divided usage: is sheltered from the bitter east winds by the belt of wood, and in summer pleasantly over-shaded by the overhanging trees. L. Malet, Mrs. L o r i m e r, 42. 2 )
is
In
the
Note. When the name of the season is followed by a (continuative) adnominal clause, the article is indispensable. In the winter, which he spends in Melbourne, this highland home of his is
sometimes swathed
e)
in snow. Froude, Oceana, Ch. IX, 129. almost regularly before the names of months, days and festivals. (15, e.) i. The inhabitants most religiously eat pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, hotcross buns on good Friday, and roast goose at Michaelmas; they send love-letters on Valentine's Day, burn the Pope on the fifth of November, and kiss all the girls under the mistletoe at Christmas. Wash. Irv., S k e t c h - B k. XXV, 243. The engines do not observe Sunday, not being human. Froude, Oceana,
,
Ch.
ii.
II,
40.
|
Does not divide such impress of shipwrights, whose sore task the Sunday from the week? Haml. I, 1, 76. (The use of the article is, apparently, due to the metre.) The gallery being shut up on the] Wednesday. Eliot's Life II, 182. 3 )
Why
Note. The article seems to be regularly To keep (break) the Sabbath. Murray.
travelling
She called upon him categorically to state whether he did not think that on the Sabbath was an abomination and a desecration. Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. V, 37.
difficulty
is
37.
The
of deciding
in
our
minds
What
is
Thus
right
stake?
Do you
think
Achilles,
or
my
Sher., Riv.,
Ill, 4.
He had no doubt as
to
Mrs. Oliphant,
I,
175.2)
Of special
interest
a) to draw, paint, or take, etc. from (the) life; studies, or copies, etc. a a 1 s t. , X, 217. from (the) life ; true to (the) life. Compare Ten Brug. * "What is the A cook... with a beautiful muraena (taken i. design?"... from the life), on a spit at a distance. Lytton, Last Days of Pomp., I, Ch. II, 16a. He had been all the morning at Carrel's studio drawing from the life.
,
Du Maurier, Trilby,
Men and women must
He copied from
H. E.
the
6.
three
or four years in a
lb.,
London
art-school,
the
life.
103.
life. Id., Soc. Pict. Sat., 18. only glaring and obvious peculiarities. Bain,
r.
s.
v.
from.
i)
Schulze, Beit,
19.
brauches,
2)
zur Feststellung des mod. eng. SprachgeTen Bruo., Taalst., VI, 26. 23. lb., X, 219. 3)
THE ARTICLE.
\
607
study from the life. Dick., Crick., I, 24. will put you in my first novel, a little idealised perhaps, but true to the life. Beatrice Harraden The Fowler, I Ch. XIII 68. * Taken ii. from the life. II. L o n d. N e w s. ** Studies from life at the Zoo. Id. *** The characters were overdrawn and untrue to life. W. J.Locke, Glory of Clem. Wing, Ch. II 17. Note. Compare with the above: studies, tic. from nature, invariably without
***
I
, , , ,
**
the article.
b)
to speak, say, or tell (the) truth, there in the dark. Wash. Irv.,
i.
To
tell
Do If
Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
Thack.,
I,
151).
,
Newc.
I,
Ch. XXIV, 272. To say the truth, she certainly was not (sc. an angel). Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. To speak the truth , you are my child. Ten. , Lady Clare, VI.
II,
10.
ii.
To
say
truth,
ma'am,
'tis
very
vulgar to
print.
Sher.,
School for
I gazetteer, to say truth, and am writing a poem on the campaign. Thack., Henry Esmond, II, Ch. XI, 245. No matter what the verses were, and, to say truth, Mr. Esmond found some of them more than indifferent. lb., II, Ch. XI, 245. She was a mild and patient creature, if her face spoke truth. Dick., C h r s t m. C a r. *, IV, 97. Speak truth and shame the devil, that's my motto. Lytton Night and
i
,
Morn.,
I
125.
tell you truth, sir. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIV, 114a. To speak truth if I thought I had a chance to better myself where going, I would go with a good will. Stevenson, Kidnapped, 10.
,
was
Note. The article seems to be regularly absent in the absolute infinitive clauses to say truth, truth to say, truth to tell; and to
be as
truth.
regularly
used
24.
in
the
tell
you the
tell
one true,
ii.
have seen him but little, nor, truth to say, esteem him much. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. VIII, 53. Truth to tell, good looks are the exception, not the rule, in Naples. Edna Lyall Knight Errant, Ch. 1 8. To tell you the truth, he had some forty stout countrymen of his with him. Ch. Kinosley, Hypatia, Ch. II, lb.
,
,
iii.
You say
true.
III,
3, (241). V,
1
,
Mary,
(636a).
c)
etc.
i.
b e y , Ch. 1 2. having. Dick. , D o Any recipe for catching such a son-in-law Ch. XVIII, 157a.
,
was worth
Chuz.,
ii.
was not worth the along that the prize I had set my heart on Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXXI, 354. Life might perhaps be worth the living. Rider Hag., Jess, Ch. IV, 33. A cheaper and smaller edition might be worth the issuing. Acad. The secret was hardly worth the telling. Whiteino. x ) He means to give you some present worth having. Dick. , Chuz., XXIV, 204a. Domestic felicity, like everything else worth having, must be worked for.
I
knew
all
winning.
Rev. E.
J.
Hardy
How
to be
328.
Ch.
I,
12.
i)
Konrad Meier,
E. S.,
XXXI,
608
38.
The
as
chief
feature
compared with Dutch, is its frequent employment before the names of actions, qualities or states, to denote that a special
or
variety
of
instance
is
,
meant.
276.
(Ch.
XXV,
in
24, a.)
Compare
also
While
quite
common, when
in
or
instance
in
specified
by an adnominal clause,
English
,
rare
when
there
is
no such
als wij
That is a self-sacrifice such as we seldom meet with. That is a self-sacrifice which com-
Hij heeft
for music.
Dat
is
jammer.
pity.
the
say,
are
highly variable and arbitrary indefinite article before abstract nouns; that is to some nouns now take now lose it, but also there
seem
that, from no cause lying in the nature of their signification, be excepted from the prevailing tendency. Some of these latter are included in the following illustrations for comparison. It is hardly necessary to say that the subject here raised is one of almost illimited extent, and that, therefore, only a few of the most remarkable points can be touched upon.
many
39.
Two
may be
article
a) the
use
is
of
the
indefinite
which
In colloquial
an action
bite.
I,
may be converted
language, indeed, almost any verb-stem expressing into a substantive and used with
Tom
told her.
G. Eliot, Mill,
..
that he
Ch. V, 32.
dislike.
loses
is
Christm. Car. 5,
with
life.
in,
78.
(See
escape.
Buchanan,
That
M.
P.,
e r
Night,
in
fix.
I'm
fix.
Kath.
Cec. Thurston,
are
to
John Chilcote,
Ch. X, 118.
laugh.
"How
kind you
all
me!
All,"
A man Chilcote, M.
Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IV, 27. must have a laugh sometimes. Kath. Cecil Thurston,
P.,
John
Ch.
X,
137.
say. As to the concerts for schools, the education committee has a say in the matter T. P.' s Weekly, No. 484, 210c. The husband should have a say in the matter. Westm. Gaz., No. 6299, 3ft.
THE ARTICLE.
shoot.
609
just
The gentlemen
return
from a shoot
little
before
dinner.
Westm. G a z.
The
Graph.,
scene of a tiger shoot is vividly shown in these pictures. No. 2269, 846. Compare: (He) has been good enough to invite me to Bareacres for the
Indian
pheasant shooting.
talk.
I,
Thack., Pen d., I, Ch. II, 23. There was a talk of his marrying Miss Hunkle.
23.
Thack.,
Pend.
Ch.
II,
wait.
There was a
X,
ye
118.
wait.
John Chilcote,
M.
P., Ch.
Sit
warm.
b) the
is
down
before
fire,
5,
my
dear,
bless you.
Dick.,
Christm. Car
HI, 57.
use of the indefinite article before gerunds, which also extended to practically any verb. A few instances must
suffice.
This was a delightful hearing. Dick., Cop., Ch. XXIV, 178a. om aan te hooren.) That's a bad hearing. lb., Ch. IV, 22a. Sulivan could scarcely obtain a hearing. Mac, Clive, (529a). The Society is certainly to be commended for bringing a festival novelty to a hearing as quickly as possible. Athen., No. 3135, 719c 1 ) Compare: That is good hearing for those of us who [etc.J. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 105a. (This seems to be the ordinary construction: the use of the article as in the two first quotations given above is infrequent.)
hearing. (= Dutch
verrukkelijk
knocking.
II,
A knocking
at the
Dick.,
Christm. Car. 5,
52.
Compare:
Night,
liking.
arrival
in
door.
Ch.
27.
Tom
I
D o m. S t o r. , Mrs. Craik to take a liking for her very soon. Ch. IV, 241. He had taken a liking to Mrs. Aikman's new nurse. Dor. Ger., The E t e r n. Worn., Ch. XVII. (I) have a liking for him, for precise statement, etc. Fowler, Cone. Oxf. Diet. (Note the variety of the prepositions with which liking is construed.) Compare: Liking for Great Britain was not too common in the United States in the years from 1865 to 1898. Times, No. 1818, 8816. (This looks like a highly unusual construction.)
began
,
Lady Bellaston had more than once seen Sophia town, and had conceived a very great liking to Jones, XV, Ch. II, 986.
Fielding,
I,
misgiving.
good purpose.
Ch.
I,
7a.
measure.
982d.
(Ch.
XXV,
sitting.
dismal
was
for
all
parties.
Thack.,
Pend.,
II,
wetting.
It
seemed
doubtful
whether
we
should
escape a wetting.
Times,
i)
H.
Poutsma
English.
II.
39
610
40. Before
CHAPTER XXXI,
other
abstract
the
40.
frequent,
when
article
is
especially
a) the non-prepositional object or the subject of a passive sentence. In this case this noun often enters into a fixed combination with
(a) particular verb(s), frequently to feel, to
have and
to take.
b) part of a prepositional expression , denoting either an adverbial relation or a state, or representing a prepositional object. For instances see also under in, of and with in 67, and under
without
c) the the
in 68.
subject use of
of
an
active
sentence.
article
in
the
indefinite
there is (was).
d) the
nominal
adjunct.
In the following illustrations these functions are distinguished by the letters a), b), c) and d) respectively, others being marked by e). In all of them a modifying adjective furthers the use of the article.
Some
article
instances
before
have been included of the use of the nouns .that have assumed a more or less
indefinite
distinctly
concrete meaning.
a collocation is given without comment, it may in general be understood to hardly allow of the alternative practice, but the available evidence has often been far too scanty to justify any reliable
If
conclusion.
come again, I will demand from you a strict account. account, a) When Scott A b b o t Ch. IL, 24. He kept an exact account of his salary. Mac. C i v e (533a). He felt as if he must now render up an account to Sir Michael of the fate of that woman. Miss Braddon, Lady Audley's Secret, II, Ch, XIII, 239. Note. Thus also to give, yield or render an account and to ask an i account. But to take account. She was absorbed in the direct, immediate experience, without any energy left for taking account of it and reasoning about it. G. Eliot, Mill, VI,
1
,
Ch. VI, 373. b) i. If he condones the act of the Lords in refusing supplies, he transfers the power from himself to an authority which he cannot call to an account. Westm. Qaz. No. 1207, 16. ii. The only check on his tyranny was the fear of being called to account by a distant and careless government. Mac, Hist II, Ch. V, 200. Note. The use of the article in the above collocation would appear to be rare. This applies also to to turn to account and to hold to account. These are advantages which will turn to real account. Mrs. Gask., Life of Ch. Bronte, 157. No working-man shall be held to account for any of the proceedings which are held guiltless in Carson. Westm. Gaz. No. 6383, lb.
, , ,
acquaintance,
ance through
made an acquaintMrs. Fundy's macaw. Thack., A Little Dinner at Ti m m ins's, Ch. I. The latter would have liked to make a further acquaintance. Id., Pend., I, Ch. XXXII, 346.
a)
i.
They
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
611
the conversation.
Id.,
I
at the
mess by opening
with the farmers. Lytton, Caxtons, XII, Ch. I, 307. make acquaintance with the neighbours. lb., IV, Ch. IV. 96. Note I. The article seems to be usually -absent. Thus, most probably, also after to renew, but here it is rather the definite than the indefinite article that is disIt
made acquaintance
was
his intention to
their old
comrades
there.
Thack., Pend.,
Ch. XVII,
174.
On the analogy of to form an alliance , a friendship etc. the article may be expected before acquaintance after to form. This is not> however, the regular practice He formed acquaintance with the son of a scene-painter. Lit. World.
III.
In to strike
up an acquaintance (Fowlfr,
Concise Oxford
Diet.,
s.
v.
strike) the article cannot, apparently, be dispensed with. IV. Instead of the above constructions we mostly find that with a genitive or its
my
V ery glad to
society.
make your acquaintance. Dick., N c h. Nickl. Ch. V, 24. Chance offered him an opportunity of making the acquaintance of this class of
r
Thack.,
also:
s. v.
Observe
Murray,
to
form an acquaintance
,
with.
acquaintance.
ambition, b) It is only to inspire you with a proper ambition. Lytton Lady of Lyons, I, 1. antipathy, a) Those were books to which he had taken an antipathy. Ch. Kingsley,
Alton Locke,
Ch. VI,
67.
She had an antipathy to doing anything useful. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, I, 17. Note. Compare sympathy. appearance.- a) (He only procured) a trifle occasionally by borrowing it of some old companion, or by obtaining an appearance at one or other of the commonest of the minor theatres. Dick., Pickw. Ch. Ill, 24. All men must put in a personal appearance at the Last Assize. Spurgeon,
,
(Christ. Herald, 1883, 24 Oct., 235/1). i) And you've got to put in an appearance for party reasons? Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P. Ch. XII, 136. to put in an appearance. Note, Thus also to make an appearance Fowler, Concise O x f. Diet., s. v. put. appetite, a) Nothing like dissecting, to give one an appetite. Dick., Pickw.,
,
Ch.
apparently, with great regularity. Similarly in to have an appetite. Observe, however the absence of the article in the following quotation Men must have appetite before they will eat. Buckle, Civil is., XI, 629. *) b) He began to eat with an appetite. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. I, 4a.
:
aptitude,
Lit.
a)
World.
The
a)
alternative practice
Note.
facility
may be
quite as usual.
Compare aptness,
capacity,
and faculty.
Irv.,
aptness,
Wash.
Note.
facility
The
may be
quite as usual.
Compare
aptitude, capacity,
to another.
Sheridan
School
for Scand.,
*)
IV, 3, (412).
Murray.
612
audience
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
a) i. He had a right to demand an audience of his sovereign. J u n. Lett. XLI, 2161). She hastened to seek an audience with her protector. Lytton. 2 ) Mr. Balfour had an audience of the king at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday. Times, No. 1819, 893d.
Parsonage, where ... he was to give audience to the III, Ch. VI, 224. 'a formal interview granted by a superior to an inferior' (Murray), audience mostly stands with the article in the above combinations. In the more abstract sense of 'the action of hearing, attention to what is spoken' (Murray),
ii.
The Bishop
retired to the
Scenes,
it
#
,
Then follow me and give me audience. Jul. Cae s. III, 2, 2. These teachers easily found attentive audience. Mac, Hist., I, 406. ) b) i. They came for an audience of the Queen. Graph. Zara's manner was that of a sovereign graciously receiving foreigners in a private audiencel El. Glyn, The Reason why, Ch. XII, 103. Lord Rosebery was received in audience by the Emperor Francis Joseph at ii
!
\ Times, No. 1821, 938a. Bismarck) certainly did ask to be received by her (sc. the Empress FreNo. 6347, 8d. derick) in audience. Westm. Gaz Note. Except for the collocation to receive in audience, the article seems to be
Schonbrunn on Saturday.
He
(sc.
usually employed.
aversion,
a)
Make
Conoreve,
II,
Love for
145.
Love,
II,
2, (233).
Tom
awe.
is
had an aversion
a)
looking
at
him.
G. Eliot,
Mill,
Ch.
Ill,
He
enough
by the breadth of my nail than any of his court, to strike an awe into beholders. Swift, Gul. Trav. , I.
is taller
which alone
practice
to
may be
as
common.
Wcstw. Ho!,
Lytton, Rienzi,
in
IV, Ch.
II,
164.
blaze, b)
a blaze.
.
(609a).
From
the
proceeded the spark which set the whole Baoot, My Italian Year, Ch. II, 20.
breath, a) i. The gentleman drew a long breath. Dick., Chuz., Ch. XXXIX, 310a. She stopped to fetch a deep breath. Dor. Ger. E t. Worn., Ch. III. She drew another breath very audibly. lb. There he paused and drew a long breath. Kath. Cecil Thurston John Chi cote, M. P. Ch. XII, 132.
,
, I ,
ii.
Even
the
inhabitants
of
New Amsterdam
Wash.
Irvinq,
Knickerb.,
157. ')
Then spoke King Arthur drawing thicker breath. Ten., Morte d'Arthur, 148. Note. The construction without the article is only used when repeated action is in question. Thus also when a possessive pronoun takes its place, as in: A simple child, That lightly draws its breath. Wordsworth, We are seven.
|
buzz, b) In a little time the whole town was in a buzz with tales about the Haunted House. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof. Handl., 1,114).
,
capacity, a)
He manifested an unsuspected capacity for adapting himself 'genius loci'. Rev. of Rev., No. 179, 228a. He had found a new capacity within himself. 'Kath. Cecil Thurston
i.
,
to the
o h n
Chilcote, M.
J
P., Ch.
XXV,
285.
Murray.
2)
Sattler,
Anglia,
III.
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
613
He appears to have shown extraordinary capacity for acclimatising himself to the American atmosphere. Rev. of Rev., No. 189, 228a. Note. The two constructions may be of equal frequency. c) With each yielding on her part had come new capacity for yielding. Mrs. Ward,
Ill,
may be
equally
common.
of
life
Shake
off
Temp.,
II,
301.
Have a care, Joe; that girl is setting her cap at you. Thack., Van. Fair I, Ch. 11,24. Have a care of him! Id., Sam. Titm., Ch. IX, 107. Note. To keep a. care is now obsolete. The article is in regular use in combination with to have, and is as regularly absent in combination with to take, as in: Take care of the pence and the pounds wil take care of themselves. P r o v. shall take care how let you choose for me another time. Thack., Van. Fair,
I I
I,
a) If a man never utters his thoughts, I should think they might stand a chance of escaping controversy. Sher., R v. IV, 3, (266). Note. Thus practically with any verb forming a rational combination with chance. c) i. I think there is a (good, fair, etc) chance of success. ii. There is good chance that we shall hear the hounds. Ten., Mar. of Ger.
chance,
182.
(The absence
of the article is
due
to the
measure.)
certainty, b) I know for a certainty what he did to bring the arm of the law upon him. Besant, The World went very well then, 11,283.!) Mistakes of detail must of a certainty occur in a story which covers so vast a field. Alice S. Green, Introd. to Green, Short Hist, 16. d) And that they (sc. the venereal diseases) will be eventually stamped out is a
.
. .
certainty.
E
a)
n g.
Rev., No.
last
58, 245.
in Oxford.
change,
b)
ii.
i.
The
very
Escott,
England,
This
. . .
Ch. VII,
of
is
He
sick
change.
Ten.,
Walking
to the
Westm.
Gaz.,
c)
Note. The suppression of the article is exceptional. A complete change had come on my whole life. Dick., Cop.,
the need of a
change arises, then does a change come. Eng. Rev., No. 58, 283. chill, a) He (sc. Bacon) caught a chill, which ended in his death on 9th April 1626. John W. Cousin, Short Biog. Diet, of Eng. Lit., s. v. Bacon, 19. You may give a baby a chill which will kill it, ... without giving it fresh air at all.
Flor. Nightingale,
When
Nursing,
i
1
91. 2 )
,
a chill fell upon him. Kath. Cecil c) As he passed through the familiar entrance cot e, M. P., Ch. XXIII, 260. Thurston, John Ch claim, a) He had a claim indefeasible in justice to the succession. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. XIII, 184. He has a claim upon my gratitude. Roorda, Dutch and Eng. Compared, 18. Note. The use of the article after to have seems to be as regular as its absence
is after to lay.
Francis
of
i.
Harmsworth Enc,
at the
s. v.
Savoy.
cold,
a)
The
old
man caught
a cold
County-Sessions.
Addison, Spect.,
No. 517.2)
i)
Ten Brug.
Taa
t.
222.
2)
Murray.
614
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
of some little disorder. Eliza Heywood, Betsy Thoughtless, IV, 287. i) Scrooge had a cold in his head. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, I, 21. Her servant had a bad cold. W.J.Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing,
Ch.
I
II,
17.
a fresh cold.
evening
Id.,
Sweet
Dick.,
N. E.
G
,
r.
2033.
ii.
You
air
Pickw.
01.
Twist,
A woman of your years will catch cold in such abominable weather. Thack. Van. Fair, 1, Ch. IV, 29. Note. In combination with to have the article seems to be regularly used; with
to catch, to get
and to take usage is variable, except when there is an adnominal as in to catch, get or take a severe cold, when the article appears to be indispensable. See also Sweet, N. E. G r. , 2047.
modifier,
comparison,
a) It may be doubted whether any equal portion of the life of Hannibal, Caesar or of Napoleon, will bear a comparison with that short period. Mac,
Fred.,
I,
ii.
(690a).
compassion,
Ch. VIII,
a)
17.
i.
Fielding, Jos.
An dr.,
,
Have compassion on
I,
whom
104.1)
Note.
The
article is regularly
and the obsolete to take compassion (up)on. further instances have been found.
Of
for
to
contempt,
a)
Summers-Howson.
Barry Pain,
in the
Culminating Point.
courage, a)
ii.
The words
of the stout
hearts of those
who
heard him.
Motley, Rise,
Ch.
II,
5766.
assistance
Wherever Father John appeared, help entered in the efficacious form of pecuniary cheering words that infused courage and psychic vitality. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 132a.
,
. .
Oftentimes John had to travel thousands of miles to bring relief in misfortune or lb. inspire courage to endure it. Note. Apparently it is the adjective which causes the indefinite article to be used. Accordingly only to take {to pluck up, to lose) courage.
All
things
are
at a deadlock.
Edna Lyall,
Hardy Norse m.
Hist.
a)
i.
He
at
last
suffered a
total
defeat.
Elphinstone,
Ind.,
vital
108.1)
that
In
House
question.
ii.
the
Mr.
the
to suffer defeat. T. P.' s No. 467 , 495c. Note. Murray has to suffer (sustain) a defeat, evidently the ordinary construction. It should be observed that for to suffer or sustain (a) defeat the Dutch has de
Navy
Weekly,
nederlaag
delay,
c)
lijden.
Thack.,
Pend.
I,
Ch.
I,
14.
delight, a)
ii.
He seems
Ch.
to take
I,
a great delight
in giving
me
pain.
Oscar Wilde,
,
Dorian Gray,
You
21.
Jane Austen,
Ch.
I,
9.
!)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
Note.
615
The article is, apparently, mostly suppressed. Murray mentions only to take or have delight, although he gives two quotations, dated respectively 1300 and 1569, with to have a delight.
departure, a) "Me!" said Joseph, meditating an instant departure.
Thack., Van.
Fair,
1,
difference, a) * Dress does make a difference, David. Sher., Riv. III, A. "As if that could have made any difference", cried she, in superb scorn. "Ah, but it did make a difference I" Agn. & Eo. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, III,
Ch. VII, 239.
**
We
Jerome
The Master
of Mrs. Chil-
vers,
b)
(44).
Here was the toss of the head, here the pout, the flash of the eye, but with a Agn. & Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, II, Ch. VI, 183. This is politics with a difference. Westm. Gaz. No. 5173, 9a. (= Dutch
difference.
,
has
never occurred
to
him
demonstration. Mac, Sou they, (996). d) It wasn't a difference in your face. Kath. Cecil Thurston, M. P., Ch. X, 116.
difficulty, a)
i.
John Chilcote,
Roorda,
He seemed
to
have a difficulty
in
18.
answering
this question.
A difficulty may sometimes be felt in Geog., IV, 232. They may find difficulty in meeting
training.
understanding
how
[etc.].
Geikie,
Phys.
No. 1825, 10256. There was great difficulty in deciding about the title. Westm. Gaz., No. 6358, 126. Note. The article seems to be ordinarily used. b) In difficulty a silent tongue and a cool head are usually man's best weapons. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XV, 164.
Times,
He spoke with
difficulty.
lb.,
Ch.
XXXI,
335.
In dire difficulty he laboured on. lb. Note. The construction with the article
may be
as
d)
The
children,
Murray,
disadvantage, b) Our men will be at a disadvantage. Times, No. 1825, 1031a. disgust, a) It had given him a disgust to his business. Jane Austen, Pride and Prej., Ch V, 21. Men have a disgust for what offends their sensibilities. Webst., s. v. aversion.
dislike, a)
i.
He conceived a
29.
G.
Eliot,
Mid.,
IV,
Ch.
dislike to the Pomeranian. Edna Lyall, Don., I, 78. had been banished, because he had taken a strong dislike to it. Anstey, Fal.
Id.,
ii.
He
felt dislike a v e r 1 e y.
Scott,
Note.
The
article is,
a disposition
in
China
terms.
Westm.
Note.
Compare
(disinclination.
doubt, a) The old Sexton expressed a doubt as to Shakespeare having been born in her house. Wash. Irving, Sketch-Bk. XXVI, 262. She had had a great doubt and terror lest Arthur should not know her. Thack., Pent., II, Ch. XV, 154. A delay implies a doubt. lb., I, Ch. I, 14.
,
616
ecstasy, 6)
ii.
i.
CHAPTER XXXI,
Meg was
Ali
40.
"Why
11,
it's
in an ecstasy. Dick., Chimes', I, 17. Baba!" Scrooge exclaimed in ecstasy. Dick., Christ m. Car. 5,
39.
Note.
The
article
seems
to be ordinarily used.
was
made a profound effect. Times, No. 1823, 9746. embarrassment, a) My request is so out of the usual Eng. Rev., 1912, Aug., 3.
emergency,
b)
i.
that
feel
an embarrassment.
as could be had.
On nots Eng.,
Keep these
Ch.
ii.
Perhaps as unique a design for "raising the wind" in an emergency Tit-bits, 1895, 2 Nov., 746. an emergency he would even undertake to measure land. Smiles, HugueII
,
22.
(sc.
El.
Glyn,
them
Ill,
23.
for
win
to
Ch. Kinosley,
in these
Wes
their friendship,
t
w.
Ho!,
Note.
in
The
article
seems
or on an emergency we also find in case of emergency, said by Johnson and Murray to be used catachrestically.
in
Ham
Peggotty
in
had been
for
some days
Dick.,
in
messenger
case of emergency.
Frederic
(681a).
Cop., Ch.
I,
56.
enmity,
a)
had succeeded
for
producing a
G. G.
'
bitter
Mac. Fred.,
esteem, a)
between
I
really
had an esteem
It
Mr. R.
S.,
Life of Sheridan,
to say that
it
exaggeration, d)
flight
i.
was
,
a choice
or premature breakdown.
Weekly,
him
No. 471
617c.
Christians might take an example from example, a) Fair Maid, Ch. XXIX, 309.
ii.
Scott,
Take example by your lady. Farquhar, Const. Couple, 1,2, Take example by this man. Ten., Queen Mary, IV, 3, (6306).
in the
(58).
Note. Apparently
however,
the article is mostly absent. Regular is the use of the article, phrases to give {leave, set) an example. Compare also pattern.
in
it's
Christm. Car. 5,
Note. The
II,
43.
article may be common enough, compare: ecstasy, heat, rapture, transport. expense. 6) i. At a heavy expense procured the rods. Marryat, Olla Podrida. ii. Not so long ago a scientific study of air, water, matter and ether would have
I
been impossible save at great expense. o t e. The omission of the article seems
6)
T.
to
P.
'
Weekly,
No. 471
6226.
be the exception.
to
extent.
a certain extent.
Jerome,
Idle
Swift,
Thoughts,
facility,
Note.
The
alternative
construction
may be
equally
common: compare
aptitude,
aptness, capacity, faculty. faculty, a) I can hardly find any trace of my father in myself, except an inborn 56. faculty for drawing. Huxl., Autobiogr. In his boyhood he had a wonderful faculty for making friends. Rev. of Rev., CXCIII, 84a. Compare: One talent, however, displayed itself. The faculty of drawing he
,
Huxl.,
1,6.
THE ARTICLE.
fall, a)
617
of
Bohn's Handb.
many
Pro
v.
(= Dutch
all
h o og-
val.)
variants and variations;
of
them with
the article.
Pride must have a fall. G. Eliot, d VIII, Ch. LXXIV, 553. Pride was sure to have a fall. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XV, 122a. Pride cometh before a fall. Walt. Besant, World went very well
i ,
The
then,
II,
226.
fancy, a) If she were to take a fancy to anybody in the house, she would soon settle. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. I, 9. Sandy Mackay had a great fancy for political caricatures. Ch. Kingsley, Alton Locke. Ch. VI, 67. I don't happen to have a fancy for sitting down on my own little packet of thorns. Dor. Ger., Etern. Worn., Ch. XVII.
farewell,
a)
i.
Scott,
Ch. VIII, 78. Ch. XX 203. Harry ran up to bid these ladies a farewell. Thack. V i r g. He bade a warm farewell to Torpenhow at the station. Rudy. Kipl., The Light that failed, Ch. HI, 30. I am going to bid a long farewell to England. Mrs. Alex., A Life Int., I, Ch. VI, 74. ii. The guests then bade farewell to the travellers. Times, No. 1820, 924a. Note. The article is regularly used when there is a modifying adjective; otherwise
, , ,
Abbot,
it
seems
to
be
rare.
footing, a) They (sc. the Amazons) gained a firm footing in Greek song and story through Arctinus of Miletus. Nettleship, Diet. C a s. A n t q. s. v. Amazons, b) It is difficult to see how the money can be found for maintaining the 300.000- on a war footing. Westm. Gaz. No. 6317, lb.
1 i , ,
This poor man for whom I know you professed a friendship. Goldsm., Vic, Ch. XXXI. 1 ) (Another edition has professed friendship.) Miss Sedley had a friendship for Miss Sharp. Thack., Van Fair, I, Ch. II, 15. frenzy, b) i. Jack knows that the least demur puts me in a frenzy directly. Sher.,
friendship,
a)
.
. .
Riv.,
ii.
I,
2, (222).
Mac,
Note.
374.2) In neither of the two above combinations does the alternative construction
in
a fume.
Roorda,
18.
Do If
Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
II,
I,
114).
all
funk, b) With
xi, 183.2)
my
heroism,
was
in
Transmigr.,
encounter the miserable Dr. Blandling in what is called. .. a blue funk. Sat 1861, 23 Nov.. 534.2) Note. Slang, but very common. gratitude, a) Her thrift won a general gratitude. Green, Short Hist. , Ch. VII,
We
Rev.,
p. 3, 374.
Note.
grief.
Paul
guard.
!)
3)
The article is probably often dispensed with. Mrs. Tursey's information had suggested to Kelver, I, Ch. I, 136.
6)
me a
fresh grief.
to
Jerome
The
prisoner
Ringwood.
Mac
MStzn., Eng. Gram. 2, III, 193. Foels 279. Koch, Wis. Gram.,
Murray.
618
guess,
b)
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
Wes
Is
ii.
m.
i.
This was a manuscript containing, at a guess, some 5,000 words. a z. No. 6065, 9a.
,
halt, a)
it
They called a halt. Ch. Kinosley, Here let us make a halt. Murray.
not time to call a halt?
halt.
(38).
.
Westw. Ho!,
Times,
.would be
Jerome,
The Master
of
stretched in front of the escape is designed to bring to a halt young or excitable horses. II. Lond. No. 3687, 880. Seeing them come to a halt above the island. Kane, Arct. Ex pi., II, XV, 154. *)
The cord
News,
to
at Scutari.
Westm. Gaz.,
Not one of them would have gone out of his way to do it a harm. harm, a) Galsworthy, The Black Godmother (E n g. Rev., Feb. 1912,445). ii. One would think you had received harm from the poor boy. Scott, Abbot,
.
. .
Ch.
Ill,
27.
^He had done no man harm all his days. W.J. Locke, Glory of Clem., 'Wing, Ch. Ill, 36. This theory has done incalculable harm. E n g. Rev., No. 57, 128. Note. The use of the article seems to be uncommon. Compare wrong.
. . .
hatred,
b) His heart
the
whole
British race.
M c Carthy,
*)
Short
Note. Probably the article is often dispensed with. d) Her most vital trait was a hatred of conventionality.
heat,
b)
,
Bookman,
all London takes holiday, a holiday upon Epsom Downs, that a great number of the personages to whom we have been introduced in the course of this history, were assembled to see
Walking about in a heat. Sher., Riv. IV, 2, (264). a) i. It chanced at that great English festival, at which
the Derby.
Thack.,
Pend.,
II,
They might have a holiday in the evening. G. Eliot, Mill, II, Ch. V, 160. In November he took a holiday. Mrs. Alex., For his Sake, II, Ch. IV, 78.
ii.
Lucy
shall
To
b)
i.
feast
East Lynne,
s.
III,
275.
v.
feast, 1,
b.
To make holiday. Id., s. v. holiday, 2, c. He had come home on a holiday. I ii. suppose she was on holiday. Hall Caine, Christian, I, 276. There is also a difference between the time that you go to sleep, when you are at work or when you are on holiday. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 5256. Note. In its primary meaning holiday is, of course, a noun denoting a defined
:
conception. But it is often applied in an undefined sense, approximately that of vacation or leisure. Also in this application it may stand with the indefinite article see the second quotation. For further particulars compare also Ch. XXV, 20.
horror, a) Mr. Boniface had a horror of the modern craze for rushing into all sorts of philantropic undertakings. Edna Lyall, Hardy Nors. Ch. XIX, 173. Mrs. Shaw seems to think that an Early Christian would haye felt a profound horror about drawing a sword. Chesterton (II. Lond. News, No. 3884, 464c).
,
huff. 6)
He
b)
9.
left
the
room
in
a huff.
humour,
II,
When
18. Roorda, Dutch and Eng. Com p., good humour. Thack., Pend.,
Ch.
I,
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
619
hurry, b) He could not remain passive, when all the world was in a hurry. Wash. Irv., Sketch. Bk., Spectre Bride g., 155. The brandy was too good to leave in a hurry. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXX, 267. ill-will, b) With an ill-will Scrooge dismounted from his stool. Dick., Christm.
Car.
5,
|,
17.
is
Note.
The expression
I
importance.
W. Collins,
No Name,
226.
(dis)inclination. a) Do not you feel a great inclination to seize such an opportuCh. X, 55. nity? Jane Austen, Pride and Prej. She was obliged to assume a disinclination for seeing it. lb., Ch. XLII1, 238. Note. For further instances see also Ch. XIX, 53, c, page 692.
,
indignation, b) i. "I will try", said Arthur, in a great indignation. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXVII, 203. ii. Scott, Abbot, Ch. II, 25. Lily was about to reply in great indignation. Note. Usage may be equally divided. influence, a) i. These family gatherings exerted a considerable direct influence
ii.
Times,
to exercise
Mac
I
Addison,
(7386).
adviser,
and as such
had
Con. Doyle,
To
I
exert influence upon. Murray, s. v. influence, v, 1 and 2. had great influence over Wilderspin. Th. Watts Dunton, A y w n Ch. XVI 458. They wield incalculable influence. E n g. Rev., No. 57.
influence
= to
have
1
always
,
Note.
phrases.
Apparently usage
is
equally
divided
as
to
injustice, a) insight, a) i.
You are doing Magdalen an injustice. W. Collins, No Name, 226. He had gained an insight into all sorts of affairs at home and abroad.
G. Eliot
Romola, Proem,
of
4.
My
knowledge
literature,
art, religion
and philosophy
'
has given me an insight into the progress of humanity. No. 469, 579a.
ii.
T.
it
P.
Weekly,
It
is
evident
its
that
the
into
mechanism.
more Sweet,
familiar a
Sounds
of
is
to gain insight
Note.
phrases,
Murray has
none
is.
five
instances
the
article
being used
it
in these or similar
of the article
being absent.
in
Hence
seems
safe to
assume
that the
omission
interest,
infrequent.
i.
I
a)
have an interest
being the
first to
Goldsm.,
Vicar,
You have felt an interest in her. Dick., Little Dorrit, Ch. VIII, 41a. Miss Dartle took a great interest in all our proceedings. Id., Cop., Ch.XXIV, 178a. Where the Canadian Pacific has an interest, it usually makes things hum. 1 1.
Lond. News,
(This)
ii.
No. 3815, Sup. XI. has lent an interest to the subject of the value
of
racehorses.
lb.,
3877, 222a. Maiden aunts are apt to take great interest in affairs of this nature.
Wash.
Irv.,
SketchThe
5277,
Bk.
Spectre Bridegr.
wild
things
of
155.
delightful
4c.
observing the
Wes
11.
who
takes interest in
t
m.
G a z.
No.
A sermon
Lond. News,
620
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
Apparently these phrases appear mostly with the article. Compare also: Lord Lyons, the public servant, is, after all, the person in whom the public takes concern. Athen. No. 4487, 445a.
,
Note.
journey, b)
intend to go on a journey.
18.
I
He
is
on a journey.
Roorda,
Dutch
and Engl.
In a
Com p.,
my
few days,
darling,
Buchanan,
Ch.
20.
Thus also before other nouns of a similar meaning. She had gone, as on a pilgrimage, to the house at Brixton. Eng. Rev., No. 59, 199. knack, a) I really have a knack for doing those things. Mrs. Ward, Sir George
Tres., Ch.
Ill,
21.
c.
knowledge.
leave, a)
i.
See 8,
Van. Fair, I, Ch. XIII, 133. ii. When she took leave of me the night before starting. Mrs.CARLYLE, Lett., Ill, 236. ) Note. The article is used only when there is a modifying adjective. It may, however, be observed that, when there is no such adjective, leave is not infrequently
1
leave.
Lytton,
Rienzi,
loose,
II,
Ch.
I, 8.
I
lesson, a) Yesterday
a.
i.
had a
lesson in Gothic.
He gave me a
lesson in Gothic.
She resolved
I,
amorous
inclinations.
Fielding, Jos.
Andrews,
Ch. IV,
He gave a loose to guilty pleasure. Smollett, Rod. Rand., Ch. XXII, 150. They have given a sudden loose to passions they could no longer control. Dick., Barn.. Rudge, Ch. II, 9b. The little boy gave a loose to his innocent tongue. Thack., Virg., Ch.
. . .
XLIII, 445.
They give a
Ch. XXI, 216.
loose
to
their feelings
on proper occasions.
Id.
Id.,
Van. Fair,
Ch.
I,
I,
to her imagination.
Barry Lyndon,
Trol.
26.
ladies should not give loose to their affections. Ch. XLI, 399.
Young
,Framl. Pars.,
You spoke of girls giving loose to their affections. lb., 400. Note. This phrase, which, curiously enough, is not illustrated in Murray, appears mostly with the article. Compare also: Young ladies should not give play to their affections. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. XLI, 400.
I
could
not
my
inclination.
Ch. Bronte,
Wut he,
ring Heights,
loss,
b)
i.
The
priest
was almost at a
II,
loss
what
to say.
Buchanan
Tha
h
i
Winter Night,
Ch.
15.
1-
He felt suddenly and strangely at a loss. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John C cote, M. P., Ch. XVII, 183. ** The advertisement was withdrawn at a dead loss. Dick., Cop., Ch. I,
ii.
2a.
To sell anything at a loss. (Compare profit.) am at loss for Words. Rich., Pam. II, 129.
I
,
Note.
The phrase without the article is now obsolete. mastery, a) He had acquired a singular mastery over every kind Besant The World went very well then, Ch. 1,4.
,
of disease.
Walt.
*)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
measure,
and
6)
i.
621
decision of causes was, in a great measure, left to the equity sense of the judges. Hume, Es. XIII, Of Eloquence, 102. Their order was now in a great measure suppressed. Scott, Abbot, Ch. Ill, 41. Nature had bestowed on him, in a large measure, the talents of a captain.
The
common
. . .
Mac, Fred.,
ii.
(6626).
Southey brings to the task two faculties which were never, we believe, vouchsafed in measure so copious to any human being, the faculty of believing without a reason, and the faculty of hating without a provocation. lb., (986.) (Observe also the use of the article before reason and before provocation.) His work had been in large measure successful. Westm. Gaz. No. 6111, 116. Her (sc. Holland's) fortunes ... are in small measure dictated by her own initiative. lb.
Mr.
,
Note.
(s. v.
In the
Westm. Gaz.
Murray
measure, 14, 6), however, mentions only in a great or large measure. Compare also in a measure (= in a certain measure). (8, 6, 1.)
a mercy he did not bring us over a black daughter-in-law. Thack., Ch. IV, 30. a mercy he didn't shake his arm off. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, V, 109.
It
mercy, d)
It
is
Van. Fair,
is
I,
mind.
to tell lies.
Congreve,
II,
2. (237).
Hast thou
IV,
I,
Farquhar,
Recruiting Officer,
(304).
mind to escape? Dick., Advent, of a Galley Slave. had a good mind to ask an old man, in wire spectacles, who was breaking stones upon the road, to lend me his hammer for a little while. Dick., Cop., Ch. XXXVI, 259a. She had almost a mind to be civil to old Bows. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XII, 128. I have a mind to break Mr. Sady's t,sc. bones). Id., Virg., Ch. XI, 116. Silas Marner could cure folk's rheumatism if he had a mind. G. Eliot, Sil.
Francois, have you a
I
Mam.,
Note.
Oh.
I,
3.
The phrase
i.
is
adjective as
good or great.
Ch. Kingsley,
je.)
common
me,
or
shall
do you a mischief.
(= Dutch
of ik
But
Note. The phrase is to be rare. c) You must be on your guard, my poor boys you must learn your lessons, and not anger your tutor. A mischief will come, know it will. Thack., Virg., Ch. V, 50. mock, a) could never forgive her for making a mock of me. Crockett, Raiders, 21.1) Fools make a mock at sin. Pro v. Fools who made a mock at sin. Rev. of Rev.. CLXXXIX, 2516. ii. She made mock of Lucy's personal vanity. Mrs. Ward, Da v. Grieve, III, 225. He frankly made mock of the whole affair (sc. the Peace Conference). Rev. of Rev., CCX, 577a. Note. To make (a) mock at, according to Murray, is now obsolete. To make a
I
shall
s.
II,
1,
237.
i.
given without the variant with no article by Murray, but seems to be than the latter. d) Besides it were a mock Apt to be rendered, for some one to say, "Break up When Caesar's wife shall meet with better dreams." the senate till another time,
mock of
less
is
common
Jul. Cass., II, 2, 96. Robin Hood changes clothes with the palmer (who at first thinks the proposal a mock). Child, Ballads, III, 178/1.1) Note. In this combination mockery is more usual. See below.
.
. .
Murray.
622
mockery, d) There's a
CHAPTER XXXI,
great lord
40.
Wes
m.
G a z.
mood,
John
bad mood.
,
Pend. I, Ch. Ill, 42. moonlight, c) There was a moonlight. Thack need, a) He thought there were always ways and means of getting those high characters furnished, when people had a need for them. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col.,
,
Note. The construction used in the above quotation appears to be an unusual one, Murray not so much as mentioning it. Of to have need of, which seems to
be ordinarily used instead, there is, apparently, no variant with the article. b) Sir William of Deloraine, good at need. Scott, Lay, I, xxn. She (sc. the country) is in urgent need of officers. Buchanan,
That Winter
Wash.
Night, A friend
noise,
Irv.,
Ch.
in
I,
16. is
need
a friend indeed.
Pro
I,
v.
a)
How
Dolf Heyl.
Handl.,
117).
Often used figuratively, as in:# Such persons as have made a noise in the world. Addison. ') There was a noise as if some person were moving inside. c)
Note.
Dick.,
Old Cur.
Shop,
Ch.
i.
I,
3a.
felt
oath, a)
ii.
I
They
could have
Rob. Hood (Gruno Sen, 150). made oath it was you saw on horseback this morning.
Thack.,
Virg., Ch. XXX VI, 373. The councillors having made oath to denounce any one of their number who should violate the pledge [etc.]. Motley, Rise. made oath to her soul she would rescue him. G. Meredith Evan Rose
. . .
Harrington,
Note.
with
to
To
all
article,
when used
in
make, and
when used
in
combination with
to take.
connection In to take
an oath
I
could take
my
Dick.,
Domb.,
objection, a) i. (He) had an objection to dramatic entertainments. Thack., Pend., Ch. VI, 69. Ladies as a rule have an insuperable objection to showing their necks. Rid. Had.,
this arrangement the publishers made objection. Introd. to 1001 Gems of Eng. Poetry. Note. Observe the use of the article before objection when combined with to have, and its absence when combined with to take and to make. occasion, a) i. He seldom lost an occasion of wounding his feelings. Dick., Cop.,
Ch. XIV, 138. Mr. Mahaffy has taken objection to the breadth of meaning word 'motive'. Dk. Argyll, Reign Law, 426, Note. l )
To
ii.
once had occasion to go there. G. Eliot, Adam Bede, I, Ch. VIII, 74. As we had occasion to note in our last issue [etc.]. II. Lond. News, No. 3879,292. Note. As a rule the article seems to be used after fo lose and to be dispensed with after to give. After to have it seems to be regularly absent, c) There would be an occasion for humour, if it were not an opportunity for indignation. Beatr. Harradkn, Ships, I, Ch. IX, 35.
I
Ch. VII, 47b. mistake which had given occasion to a burst of merriment. bler, No. Hl.i)
Johnson
Ram'
*)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
Note.
For other combinations see 63
a)
i.
623
opportunity,
Dick.,
shall take
an early opportunity
25.
of mentioning
it
to the Board.
01.
i
Twist,
1
Ch.
II
that
,
John C h
Lilian
M.
P.
Ch.
XXXIV,
368.
the woman to lose an opportunity, whether the space at her long or short. lb., Ch. XXVIII, 306. The problem of the play (sc. Much Ado about Nothing) is not to show that the two scoffers are in love with each other,... but to find an opportunity which will force them to admit their love. A then., No. 4477, 165c.
was not
command was
ii.
We must give them opportunity to speak together. Scott, Abbot, Ch. X, 97. Lawrence had not opportunity to show in actual result the greatness of spirit that was in him. M c Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XIII, 16. It was not until half an hour after the votes had been taken that Loder ... found opportunity to look for Eve. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chi cote M. P.,
1
,
Ch.
I
XXV,
282.
desire to express my thanks to my kinsman, Lord Coleridge, for opportunity with the original MSS kindly afforded me of collating the text of the fragments E. H. Coleridge, Pref. to the of S. T. Col.
. . .
Poens
combinations the article is not usually absent. For further instances comparison with the construction with the definite article see 73. c\ When law and opportunity favoured. G. Eliot, Mill, III, Ch. VII, 230. When opportunity offers. G. Merkihth, O r d. of Rich. Fev., Ch. XXXIV, 305.
In these
Note.
and
for a
If
opportunity serves.
Times.
,
option, a) The tastes and interests of Frederic would have led him if he had been allowed an option, to side with the house of Bourbon. Mac, Fred., (6876). order, b) i. * Her talents and accomplishments are of a high order. Thack., Van.
Fair, I, Ch. II, 15. He has by an Order in Council, been promoted to the rank of an Admiral of the
Fleet.
ii.
Times,
1898, 761rf.
The promotion
of
in Council, is a peculiarly
would be made by Order Council for delegating the exercise of certain of the executive functions of the Crown during his Majesty's absence. Times, No. 1819, 900c. Note. The article seems to be ordinarily absent before Order in Council.
in
lb. significant recognition of his services to the Navy. told the House that provision The Prime Minister
The old man proceeded at a measured pace. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. Handl., I, 122). 66. walked on at a slow pace. Dick. Old C u r. S h o p Ch. man walked at a sharp pace. Th. Watts Dunton, Ay win, II, Ch. VI, 90. Note. Compare run step and trot. Wa'h. Irv., Dolf Heyl. All the inhabitants turned out in a panic. panic, b) (Stof., Handl., I, 102).
pace,
b)
i.
ii.
in a panic on this question, it is highly probable [etc.]. No. 6359, 2a. Caesar's soldiers were seized with panic. Proude, Caesar, XXII, 382. t) The sound filled her with panic. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote,
If
the
Government yielded
,
Westm. Gaz.
M.
For one or two days Calcutta was a prey to mere panic. .M c Carthv, Short Hist., Ch. XIII, 177. Note. The article seems to stand after in and to be dispensed with after other
prepositions.
Murray.
624
c)
If
CHAPTER XXXI,
he ever showed a
itself
little
40.
have
by
impatience, it was only where panic would too openly c counsels of wholesale cruelty. Carthy, Short
178.
317.
c pardon, a) He received a pardon at once. M Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. XXII, (Pardon to be understood in the sense of remission of the legal consequences of crime Dutch k w t s c h e d n g v a n s t r a f.) Note. From what evidence there is in Murray, it may be concluded that the article
,
ij
is
rarely absent. a)
i.
part,
It
is
to take
a part, have
also unquestionable that the transactions in which he now began left a stain on his moral character. Mac, Clive, (515a).
in giving effect to a very important political reform in Egypt. II. Lond. News, No. 3876, 187a. He has played an active part in the saving of a hundred lives from shipwreck.
Punch,
1896, 111.
.
.
that it will not take a part in the Panama ExhibitionGermany has decided Westm. Gaz. No. 6311, 26. ** It was well known that she had deeply regretted some violent acts in which her husband had borne a part. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 206. In these conferences Rumbold had borne a part from which [etc.]. lb., II,
. ,
Ch. V, 98.
ii.
He had borne a part in the movement. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. XXII, 814. * On the morrow commenced that long quarrel... in which all the most eminent
statesmen
and orators
of
the
(612a).
Irish people.
given up a successful career to take part would be the great national uprising of the "Short Hist., Ch. XXII, 316.
The
1
May
25.
Times.
consciousness can leave the body, take part in events going on Annie Besant, Autobiography, 26. The tragedy in which they bore part cost many an agony of tears. lb., 27. Note. Murray has to take part, always without the article (His definition of to partake, however, is to take a part in), and to bear a part, always with the article, and this most probably represents the ordinary practice. Only the article is rarely dispensed with in the first combination, when part is accompanied by an adjective: to take an active (leading, etc.) part. See, however, the quotation from Macaulay. passion, b) At which words she flew into a violent passion. Field., Jos. An dr.,
at a distance.
know
**
I,
I
Ch. VIII,
19.
know you
If
he ever flagged
II,
1.
would
fly
into a passion.
Wash.
Irv.,
Do If
To
book,
I,
109).
Police might take pattern by Berlin. Punch. book ro take pattern from him. Murray, s.
v.
Note.
pause,
6)
Compare
a)
to take (an) example. Here Master Wingate made a pause. Scott, Abbot, Ch. IV, 44. could you do so, Rebecca?" at last she said, after a pause. Thack.,
I,
Ch.
II, 9.
Here there was a pause. Id., Ch. II, 22. After he spoke there was a prolonged pause. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chllcote, M. P., Ch. XXVI, 292. There was a fresh pause. lb., Ch. XXXI, 339. perspiration, b) The waiter is in a cold perspiration and well-nigh desperate. G o w-W o r m Tales, II A 13. James Payn
, , 1
, ,
THE ARTICLE.
pinch, 6) Each of them could at a pinch stand
in the
i
625
shoes of the other. Emerson,
shall
to
a pinch, we
always give
in.
Rev.
call
it
Note.
It is a pity you can't come. a pity that such talents should lie idle. Formerly, and archaically in Present English
'
without the
article.
Franz,
Shak. Gr.2, 276, Anm.; Murray, s. v. pity; Uhrstrom, Stud, on the Lang, of Sam. Richardson, 41. That were pity. Merch. of Ven., 11,2,209.
'T/s great pity he's so extravagant. Sher., T/s pity her temper is something particular. 'T/s pity learned virgins ever Juan, I, xxn.
IV, 2, (407).
wed
Don
Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XXIII, 293. With persons of no sort of education. Byron,
|
a pleasure. lb., I, cxxxm. That were pity. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. And pity that would be. Id., Herew. Ch. II, 246.
pleasure, a)
II,
i. They seemed to take a pleasure in indulging that forenoon in a luxury of slovenliness. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XIV, 160. I took a pleasure in extracting the young fellow's secrets from him. Thack., II, Ch. Ill, 26.
Newc,
ii.
He had a strange pleasure in venturing his person. Mrs. Fursey took a pleasure in the phrases. Jerome,
(He) takes pleasure
He must pass
.
.
the
in rearing and collecting birds. Webst., s. v. bird-fancier. night in an abominable tight mail-coach, instead of taking of the most agreeable and select society in England. Thack.,
No
Liberal certainly can take pleasure in the fact that an increase in the Navy has been found necessary for national security. Westm. Gaz., No. 4931, 2a. I had great pleasure in hearing Mr. Brough, in a magnificent speech, declare a dividend of six per cent. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 84. He found that everything could yield him pleasure. Dick. Christ m. Car.
,
,
V,
108.
He contrived to deliver himself in uncompromising terms which gave sincere pleasure to Radicals. Westm. Gaz., No. 6353, 16. Note. Murray has to take pleasure and to take a pleasure, and gives two illuBut there can be little doubt that in this strative quotations, both with the article. and similar combinations the article is mostly absent, even when there is a
modifying adjective.
pride, a)
i.
I
in
my rooms
after his
approval of them.
Dick.,
Cop.,
ii.
She took great pride in her descent from them. Thack., Van Fair, Their dialect is uncouth, but they take pride in it. Escott, Ch. VI, 80.
Ch.
II,
11.
England,
quotation
only to take a pride, but in his only bearing on the subject, pride stands without the article.
illustrative
He was always buying things and selling them at a profit. Besant, Bell of St. Paul's, I, 71. Note. Compare loss. Ch. Bronte, Jane Eyre, propensity, a) He had a propensity for saving.
Ch. IV, 28.
protest, a) The British Ambassador has lodged a protest with the Porte against the
H.
English.
II.
40
626
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
to the
Black Sea.
Times.
quarrel, a) It was clear that the Emperor was resolved to have a quarrel. Short Hist., Ch. XXIV, 372.
M c Carthy
Note.
Thus
c)
to pick
question,
four Georges,
I,
34.
Andrews,
and
rapture, b)
ii.
Toby took
!
the shortest possible sniff at the edge of the basket, "Why, it's hot." Dick., Chimes^, I, 16.
You're
perfect
III,
Agn.
&
Eg.
Castle
it
a m.
cut
Paste,
Ch.
liked
255.
(sc. the
Whether he
with rapture.
Eng.
Rev., No.
58, 191.
of the
Who
Note.
can look without rapture on the beautiful proportions Usage may be equally divided. Compare ecstasy.
i.
horse?
lb., 261.
reason, a)
Ch. XIII,
ii.
I
for
dethroning him.
I
Mc
183.
Curate
I
hope
that
was being
of use at Roost.
Paget
I
reason to do afterwards.
Sir Henry's benevolence more than Ht. Martineau, Brooke Farm, Ch. V, 62. *)
.
saw
Mac, War. Hast., (607a). have a regard for Miss Richland. Goldsm., Good-nat. man, II. regard, a) have conceived a great regard for Jinkins. Dick., Chuz., Ch. IX, 696. I had a regard for Mr. Eustace Meeson. Rid. Hag., Mr. Meeson's Wilis, Ch. XXI 223. For the head-master, Dr. Drury, he conceived a strong regard. Tozer, In trod, to Byron's Childe Har. b) In the death of Laertes we are warned against suffering our passions perfidiously
I I
,
Note.. Usage may be equally divided. c) There is reason to believe that [etc.].
to
lead
honour.
us to seek a secret revenge without a regard to either justice or our Westm. Gaz., No. 6353, la.
own
Note. This seems to be an exceptional use of the article: it is not recorded by Murray (s. v. regard 8, b). Compare respect. c) A regard for truth forbids us to do more than claim the merit of their (sc. of these
adventures) judicious Ch. IV, 30.
arrangement
and impartial
arrangement.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
Mc
ii.
reluctance, a) He felt a reluctance to ask the support of the Newcastle family. Carthy, Short Hist., Ch. X, 129.
to dining in
repugnance, a) i. She had an extraordinary repugnance Dick., Little Dorr t, Ch. V, 28a.
i
company.
Scott felt considerable repugnance to acting in any such matter with Whigs and Radicals. Lockh., Life of Sir Walt. Scott, Ch. VI, 572. Note. The ordinary practice most probably is to use the article in these combinations.
Mc
Carthy,
Short
Hist.,
resemblance, a)
blance to
In some respects he (sc. Edmund Gosse) bears a curious resemAndrew Lang. Bookman No. 261, 112a.
1
!)
Murray,
s. v.
reason, 86.
THE ARTICLE.
627
resistance, a) It was the bounden duty of the Opposition to offer a determined and continuous resistance to this proposal. Times. Methuen reports that the party defeated on 5 April , made a good resistance for
four hours.
lb. lb.
The Spaniards opposed a stubborn resistance. The rebels offered a stout resistance. lb., No.
(dis)respect.
a)
i.
I
1819, 899d.
have a particular respect for three or four high-backed clawfooted chairs. Wash. Irving, S k e t c h - B k. XXV 243. He had a high respect for native sagacity. Dick., Cop., Ch. IV, 28b. She thought Mr. Riley would have a respect for her now. G. Eliot, Mill, I,
, ,
Ch.
Ill,
11.
so constituted that it can pay a respect to religious conviction. No. 6347, 16. ii. Have respect to mine honour. Jul. Caes., Ill, 2, 15. He was incapable of supposing that she meant intentional disrespect to him. Scott, Abbot, Ch. Ill, 37. Note. The use of the article appears to be practically regular. In the quotation from Shakespeare its absence may be due to the demands of the metre. Compare regard.
nature
is
Human
Westm. Gaz.,
revenge, a) i. She felt quite sure that he had offended some of his examiners, who had taken a mean revenge on him. Thack. Pend., I, Ch. XXI, 216. ii. Taking revenge too deep for a transient wrong. Ten., Maud, I, III.
,
Note.
The
I,
article
is,
when
Mr. Pendennis
. . .
Thack. ,
Pend.
risk.
Ch.
II,
24.
a~> He lost all he had in the world and... run a narrow risk of being hanged. Scott (Lockhardt, Life of Sir W. Scott, I, I, 3A) Whatever accommodation he can have, which infers not a risk of discovery,... it is our duty to afford him. Scott, Mon., Ch. XVI, 194.
The indefinite article varies with the definite. No instances of either article being absent have been found. Why am I to run the risk of scarlet fever being brought into the house. F.E.Paget,
Note.
Pageant,
c)
38. i)
There was risk that the lawful owner might have parted company therewith Scott, Mon., Ch. XVIII, 205. (sc. that chain). There would be great risk of a lamentable change in the character of our public men. Mac, Hist., Ill, I, 310. i) d) Suppose the likeness should leak out? It's a risk. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. VI, 69. run. b) She came back at a run to meet him. Westm. Gaz., No. 4983 2c. Note. Compare pace, step, and trot. scale, b) There is nothing so troublesome as a hero on a small scale. Wash. Irv.
,
Dolf Heyl
(Stof.,
Handl.,
I,
110).
sensation, a) His little expeditions to his lands were attended with a bustle and parade that created a sensation throughout the neighbourhood. Wash. Irv., Dolf
Heyl.
His
b)
c)
M c Carthy,
Lowell,
Hist,
of
Our Own
Times,
Ser.
I,
xliv,
The gentleman
of
a sensation.
Among my Books,
Dick.
,
Rousseau,
i.
was
perceptible in the
body
of the court.
k w.
Some shook
Murray.
were a shame to call her back again. Two Gentlem., I, 2, 51. their heads; and thought it a shame that the Doctor should put
628
Dolf to
ii.
CHAPTER XXXI,
pass
the
40.
Wash.
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.
Scott, Mon,,
**
Men
thought
shame
to dwell at
we to suffer it. Id., I van hoe, Ch. XL, 416. form so noble. Id., Abbot, Ch. Ill, 28. such a time under the shadow of a house.
IV, xvm, 187. !) construction without the article survives only as a literary archaism. Conversely there never is an article in other phrases, such as to have shame (poetic), or upon oneself) , to put to shame. to take shame (to unto * I take shame to say, that [etc.]. Scott, Kenilw., Ch. XV, 176. You ought to take shamel Arnold Bennett, Hilda Lessways, I, Ch. II, n, 21. ** No young woman of this year has come near her: those of the past seasons she has distanced, and utterly put to shame. Thack., II, Ch. Ill, 26.
Freeman,
Norm. Conq.
Note. The
Newc,
,
share, a) It is certain that he was never charged with having borne a share in the worst abuses which then prevailed. Mac, War. H a s t. (5996). Note. Thus also to have and to take a share. The indefinite article is sometimes
replaced by a possessive pronoun.
shift,
Murray,
I
s.
v.
share,
3.
a)
i.
could
make a
shift to
do without
it
(sc.
ii.
honour). Sher., Riv., IV, I, (256). He could make a shift to express himself intelligibly enough to King Louis. Ch. XXXVII 468. Scott, Quent. Durw. By my other labours I can make shift to eat and drink and have good clothes. Goldsmith (R. Ashe Kino, 01. Gol dsm., Ch. XI, 123). I could make shift to chalk a little bit. Dick., Domb., Ch. II, 16.
,
,
Note. The absence of the article seems to be the exception. show, a) made a show of arranging my papers. Jerome, Novel Notes. In his eagerness to catch a sight of the unknown he flared his feeble sight, a) Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., candle so suddenly, that it went out. Handl.. I, 121). Plato, I, 193.2) caught a sight of him over their heads. Jowett ii. The trainbands had caught sight of his well-known face. Mac, Hist., I, 580. ^) She sent up a shriek as soon as she caught sight of it. John Oxenham, GreatI i.
,
II,
19.
Note.
get a
in
Murray
of,
(s. v.
catch,
(=
to
and
is
to catch sight
of
(=
s.
to
come
sight,
abruptly
II,
view
There
of the
Murray,
,
v.
4,
c.
Compare
silence, c)
i. There was a silence. Ch. Kinosley H e r e w. There was a silence. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John C h
,
M.
P.,
Ch. XI,
Ii.
167; lb., Ch. XVII, 178; etc. There was a long silence lb. Ch. XXX'V, 365. Again a painful silence filled the room. lb., Ch. XXXIII, 353. During the first few moments of the drive there was silence.
119; lb., Ch.
XV,
lb.,
lb.,
etc.
for a
few minutes.
Wil.
J.
Locke,
The Glory
,
of Clem.
Wing,
Note.
home.
*)
adjective.
After there is usage seems to be equally divided After a preposition there is no article In
:
when
there
is
no modifying
grim
Arn. Bennett,
Hilda Lessways,
9.
2
)
I,
Ch.
Ill,
1,25.
Murray,
s. v.
shame,
Murray,
s. v.
catch, 46.
THE ARTICLE.
sin.
it
629
me, and said
that
d)
was a
sin.
Congreve,
'Tis pity though, in this sublime world, that a pleasure. Byron, Juan, I, cxxxm. 'Twould be a sin and a shame, if we let her
Don
go
dirty
now
she's
ill.
Mrs. Gask.,
Mary Barton,
skill, a)
II,
ii.
i.
He had a wonderful
.
Mac, Hist.,
,
Ch. V, 95.
. .
This author
had good
skill in the
Corn,
Note.
spirit,
I,
122.
a)
into Joseph.
Fielding, Jos.
Andrews,
spite, a)
He seemed
a)
I
to
dinner
my
head;.
at
Timmins's,
stand,
Sigtryp
.
suddenly
made a
(153).
stand, lest
it
should
fall
on
made a stand against the Cornish. Ch. Kingsley, Herew., Ch. V, 386. The Turks are unable to make a stand at this point. Westm. Gaz., No. 6071, lb. b) Now was Christian somewhat at a stand. Bunyan, Pilg. Prog., (152). The business of the Exchange was at a stand. Mac, Hist., fl, Ch. V, 335.
It
is
must come
standstill,
certain that there is a point at which sympathy with drivers to a stand. Gaz., No. 6377, 2c.
who
pass signals
Westm.
is
b)
Everything
at a standstill.
Edna Lyall
Hardy Norse m.
Ch. X, 85.
The
(This)
The
negotiations
la.
beween
Gaz., No. 6353, lc. No. 6347, lb. the two Powers have been brought to a standstill.
lb.,
Westm.
lb.
No. 4937,
stir, a)
i.
ii.
report created a great stir. Times. Hardie tried to make a stir on behalf of the natives of India. R e v. No. 58 287. There are two annual events which produce great stir and sensation in Britain. Wash. Irv. S k e t c h - B k. XXV 249.
The
Mr.
Keir
,
En
g.
Little
Note.
In the last quotation the absence coupling of the two nouns together.
of
the
article
is
Times.
sympathy.
Dick.,
Barn.
Rudge,
Ch.
9b.
My knowledge of Greek language and literature, art, religion and philosophy, has given me ... a sympathy with their (sc. humanity's) sorrows and aspirations T. P.'s Weekly, No. 469, 575a. (See also the last quotation under stand and
compare antipathy.)
talent,
a)
He had a natural
Wash.
Irv.,
Dolf
Dick.,
Heyl.
She
(Stof., Handl., I, 142). had a rare and surprising talent for getting the baby into difficulties.
I,
Crick.,
12.
first
Kath.
Cec Thurston,
M.
XXXI,
339.
Note.
It
may be assumed
630
CHAPTER XXXI,
40.
Roorda,
Dutch
and
into
thirst,
b)
i.
amusement
a
ii.
thirst for
knowledge.
distinctly
t.
Scott,
.
.
Wav.
Ch.
Ill,
31a.
It
may be
,
traced
657. i)
money
Mac.
V,
Note.
trade, a) She drove a brisk trade in lollipop. G. Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. I, 72. He stuck to his business and drove a thriving trade. Black, Adv. Phaeton
VI, 81. train, b) Everything Ch. VII, 67.
trial,
II,
was soon
in
a fair
train.
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park,
,
a)
i.
intend to
make a
Sher.,
trial of
3, (386).
He has
ii. I
strongly
I.
recommended me
to
make a
Bus. Let.
Writer,
had a
the
letter from her telling me that I could take three orphan girls of hers to coast during the holidays, and then make trial of a situation with her as a teacher. G. Eliot, Mill, VI, Ch. IX, 405. The temper of the man moves him to conceal for the present the reason which
make trial of Enid's love and submission Ten.'s Mar. of Ger., 761.
indefinite
article
if
to his desires.
Note. The construction with the Compare also: Well, well, make
is
the
trial
you please.
. .
.
School for
Scand.,
trot, b) full trot.
Ill,
1, (388).
You may
Sher.,
see
her on a
little
squat pony
II,
2, (380).
He went away
Ch. V, 49.
woods.
Buchanan,
He
put
his
,
horse
22.
to
a brisk
trot.
Rob R o y
Note.
turn,
Compare pace
I
,
a) Mr. Eugenius
Maunder had a
district
Payn
,
w -W o r m
Tales,
uproar.
40.
6)
All
,
the
30.
was
in
an uproar.
I've
Buchanan
it.
That Winter
Jane
Night,
use.
a)
Ch. HI
i.
Eyre, To find
ii.
Give me back nine pounds, Jane, Ch. XXI, 274. a use for banana-skins. Fowler
,
a use for
Ch. Bronte,
of his wealth.
Wash.
of
Irv.,
152).
their advantage.
John Chilcote, M.
He made use Oxf. Diet,
value,
a)
It
of a quibble.
not surprising then that such talents should win the affections of a education was taught to value an appearance in herself and, consequently, to set a value upon it in another. Goldsm., Vic, Ch. VII, (272). Friends on whose opinions I set a high value. Tozer, Intr. to Childe Har., 49. Some fathers set too great a value on books. H. J. Byron Our Boys.
is girl
who by
')
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
vengeance,
ii.
631
a) i. An English army came to their assistance to take a terrible c Carthy Short H s t. Ch. XIII 186. vengeance upon Cawnpore He threatened vengeance on any one who should depreciate his property. Wash.
,
Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof. Hand., I, 114). "My attachment to your person, sir" said Mr. Tupman... "is great very but upon that person must take summary vengeance. Dick., Pickw., great Ch. XV, 130.
,
(They were) drinking freely at the expense of the peasantry and vowing dire vengeance against the enemy. Buchanan, That Winter Night, Ch. V, 45. Note. The use of the article seems to be rather the exception than the rule.
venture, b)
A quack
is
prescribes at a venture.
assisting his wife to
Goldsmith
(Rich.
Goldsm
51).
show
welcome,
a)
I,
cordial welcome.
Poe.
Gold-bug.
4.
(Nauta,
Stories,
Note. The
welcome,
All
in
article is regularly
Story
Rob Roy,
welcome and
to
make
which however, welcome is not felt as a pure noun. who cared to come were made welcome. M. S. Francis, The
Manor Farm,
Ch.
XII.
"Now, then!" roared Amyas, "Fire, and with a will !" Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XX, 1516. If had a chance to better myself, I would go with a good will. Stevenson,
will, b)
I
Kidnapped,
10.
The Pension Officers have all worked with a will. Westm. G a z. wind, c) There had been a wind all day. Dick., Cop., Ch. LV, 392a. witness, a) i. The list of additions to the Department of Manuscripts in the
British
bears a witness to the growing scarcity and rise in price of fine manuscripts by the very small number of them it contains. A t h e n. , No. 4448 91a. ii. (The shadows beneath his eyes) bore witness to the sleepless night spent in pacing Chilcote's vast and lonely room. Kath. Cecil Thurston , John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XXVI, 289. Note. The construction with the article is the exception. c) There is witness to a regular and periodical migration. Westm. Gaz., No. 6329, 4c. d) That any child should be branded as illegitimate is, in itself, witness to the inadequacy of our moral code. E n g. Rev., No. 58, 282.
Museum
during the
five
years
190610
wrong,
ii.
i. Who does this, does a wrong. Dick., Chimess III, 72. She was scrupulous in her devotions, good to the poor, never knowingly did anybody a wrong. Thack. V r g. Ch. IV, 34. I find I have done you a wrong. lb., Ch. XI, 116. You have done us wrong. Dick., Chimes 3, HI, 73.
,
Note
I.
The use
is
common.
It
is
useful to
com-
phenomenon
referred
to,
and
in
in
which not a single but a repeated which, consequently, there is no occasion for
in
some
Scott, Abbot.,
25.
I If sustained wrong from those you loved and favoured, was I to disturb your place with idle tale-bearings and eternal complaints? lb., Ch. V, 59. II. The article does not appear to be ever used, when the word is not used in the meaning of injustice, as in the above sentences. I have done wrong in loving this poor orphan lad more than other of his class.
Scott,
Abbot,
Ch. IV,
49.
632
He meant
zest, a)
to
32.
She tasted a condiment which gave it Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XIV, 176. Note. Usage may be equally divided.
ii.
(sc.
the
heavy
festal
mass)
zest.
41.
The
1)
indefinite article
is
also usual:
a) before the
names
ache and compounds of ache. For instances of the indefinite article being absent or being replaced by the definite article
see 35,
* b.
into better humour either, by the reflection that he had taken it into his head, early in the evening, to think he had got an ache there, and so stopped at home. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXXVI, 336. ** They awoke with a headache. Jane Austen Mansfield Park,
,
(The same writer repeatedly has the headache.) One day, Amelia had a headache. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. IV, 26. The mildest form of hysteria often ends in laughter and tears together, and is followed by a headache and a sleep. Harmsworth Enc,
Ch. IX, 90.
s. v.
Hysteria.
2)
fever.
Compare 35, b. But Simon's wife's mother lay sick of a fever. Bible, Mark, I, 30. Master Ribstone coming home for the Christmas holidays from Eton , over-ate himself and had a fever. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 16. The lady ... caught cold, took a fever, and died after a very brief illness. Ch. Bronte Villette, Ch. XXII 237. To watch with a man in a fever. Webst. , s. v. watch. Astrupp had caught a fever in Florenee. Kath. Cecil Thurston J o h n Chilcote, M. P. XXII, 237.
,
,
3)
those illustrated in the following quotations: dropsy. There he found himself ill at ease, and no doubt, but in time would have died of a dropsy. Eliz. Montagu, Letters (Westm. Gaz., No. 5201, 5c).
quinsy.
in
Why
like a frog
a quinsyl
I,
Sher.,
Riv.,
IV, 2, (261).
all
rheumatism.
Pend.,
Note.
In this
felt
connection
it
may be observed
is
sometimes
the article.
shown by
discarding
Lond. News,
Every one recognizes (these) as the symptoms of sore throat. lb. Compare: This fact should made every one careful never to neglect a sore throat. lb.
b)
before time and distance, when preceded by short or long, or adjectives of like import. * In a little time the whole town was in a buzz with tales about the i.
Haunted House.
Wash.
Irv.,
Do If
Heyl.
(Stof.,
Handl.,
I,
114).
THE ARTICLE.
633
The last wolf that has roamed our island had been slain in Scotland a short time before the close of the reign of Charles the Second. Mac, Hist., 1, Ch. Ill, 307. In Kensal Rise there have been two particularly atrocious murders committed within a short time. (= korten tijd na elkaar.) ** At a safe distance from the scene of the action. Willock, Voy. , 305. Neiss...is only at a short distance from the Austrian frontier. Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. VI, 95.
Times
ii.
* Short
time had
,
to be.
Lytton
Rienzi,
154.
Discovering before very long time that he had little taste or genius for the pursuing of the exact sciences [etc.]. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVIII, 182.
**
The watchman
of
,
. .
withdrew himself
,
to
good
distance.
the
Blackmore
part
,
Lorna Doone,
Much
in
i.
Ch. XXXVII
224.
,
courage
c)
least
lb.
,
better
of
Ch. XXXVIII
233.
salutations and imprecations. Compare 24. A pleasant journey A good morning to you! Congreve, Love for Love, A merry Christmas and a happy new year Dick. C h r
*
!
I
some
I,
(205).
m.
C a r. 5,
HI, 71.
Miss Sharp, I wish you a good morning. Thack., Van. Fair, I, 7. Ch. 1 I wish you a good day. Id., Pend., II, Ch. XII, 130. A murrain on your tongue! Max Pemberton, I crown thee king, Ch. I, 15. A mischief upon my bad manners and my pride, if the words I used
,
meant
II,
ii.
to
Deiohton,
Note
to Mids.
2, 54.
,
Good morning (afternoon evening, night) ! Mercy on me! Sher., School for Scand., 11,2,(381). They wished each other Merry Christmas in their can of grog.
Dick.,
Christm.
Car.5,
III, 75.
He heard them give each other Merry Christmas. Long life to him! lb., Ill, 71. d)
in
titles
of
books,
essays,
poems,
etc.
before
the
names which
An elegy on the Dead of Mad Dog. Goldsm. Vicar. A primer of spoken English. Sweet. A new English Grammar. Id. A History of English Literature. Shaw. Our National Institutions A short sketch for schools. Anna Buckland.
, ,
42. Practice
is
abstract nouns
the
ff.)
the
not, apparently, any principle by which the use or omission article in this position is conditioned, beyond, perBefore some nouijs, such as that of rhythm or euphony.
indefinite
is,
Compare
Verm.
Gram. 2
634
i.
CHAPTER XXXI,
42.
The storm continued with such fury, that the seamen themselves acknowledged known a worse. Defoe, Rob. Crusoe, 10. To me it was not easy to sleep after a day of such excitement. Ch. Bronte, Villette, Ch. XIV, 190.
they had never
All
of
that [etc.].
It is ladies. Id., Virg., Ch. XXXI, 317. Such sudden and violent revenge would not have been thought strange in Scotland. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 146. I felt such delight at the prospect of the day before me that I forgot all my
,
which ornaments set off this young fellow's figure Thack., Pend., I, Ch. 111,41. a shame to speak with such levity about the character of
to
such advantage
scruples.
Sweet
Old Chapel.
!
What! me spend
a month's meal and meat and fire on such vanity as that Ch. Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth, Ch. I, 7. Mr. Roosevelt is not to see the Pope. That is such bad business for the Vatican that the decision to say "No" almost extorts admiration. e s t m. G a z. No. 5277 2a. To such extravagance does the political temper of the Protectionist lead! lb., No. 5386, lc. There was nothing in his long and- splendid range of parts, which brought him out to such advantage. T. P. 's Weekly, No. 474, 713c.
**
Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of all Dick. C h r s t m. C a r.5, III 67. Lady Clavering was in such a good humour that Sir Francis even benefited by it. Thack., Pen d., II, Ch. XXXVIII, 390. Gracious God, who was he, weak and friendless creature, that such a love
,
birds.
should be poured out upon him? Id., Henry Esmond, II, Ch. VI, 203. is no sin in such a love as mine now. lb., 204. The aforesaid Martin, whom Arthur had taken such a fancy for, was one of those unfortunates [etc.]. Hughes, Brown, II, Ch. Ill, 237.
There
Tom
ii.
What
Little
what compassion
in her
repressed tears!
Dick.,
in the stealthy eye! What hardened resolve in the full and firm lips! What sardonic contempt for all things in the intricate lines about the mouth Lytton, Night and Morning, 321. How the mother looks into the doctor's eyes! What thanks if there is light there; what grief and pain, if he casts them down and dares not say "hope" Thack.
What
native acuteness
nostril
155.
with
off the
dusty road.
Sweet
Old Chapel.
At the mention of it (sc. the Old Chapel) we jumped up and said "What a place and what weather!" lb. What taste! what perfection! Aon. & Eo. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, II,
!
Henry
in
VI,
down
such a spot!
C, V, 12. Lytton,
Lady
of
Lyons,
III,
1.
What a change between to-day and yesterday! Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. VIII, 75. What a lifel Mrs. Craik, Dom. Stor., I, Ch. IV, 24. What a happiness Dick., C h u z. Ch. XXXIII 216a. G. Eliot What a happiness it would be to set the pattern about here Mid.,
!
Ch.
Ill
-20.
Note.
THE ARTICLE.
I
635
What
II.
Ch. XIII
131.
For the use of the indefinite article before a plural preceded by a numeral, or by what or such see Ch. XXVI, 17.
SUPPRESSION OF THE ARTICLE BEFORE NOUNS IN CERTAIN GRAMMATICAL FUNCTIONS IN WHICH THEIR MEANING IS MODIFIED.
43. In
certain functions common nouns assume to a certain extent the character of proper names, and, consequently reject the article more or less regularly.
This
a)
is
the case:
when they
Is this true,
Compare Sweet, N.
I,
E. Gr.,
2056.
widow?
1, (163a).
That's your
I
own
fault, mistress.
2, (164a).
beg, captain, you'll be seated. Sheridan, Rivals, III, 3. "Yes, Lady," said the boy. Scott, Abbot, Ch. Ill, 27. I do know the reason, Prince. Max Pemb., Doctor Xavier, VI, 29a. You cannot regret as he regrets, Highness. lb. Here is your rose, pet, and I only hope it is the shade you wanted. Westm. Gaz., No. 6311, 3c. It ought to take your headache away, darling, it is so lovely. lb. I have something to say to you, child. Punch, No. 3759, 88a. Don't buy clothes for me, woman. lb.
Note.
vocative.
Shakespeare sometimes had the definite article before a 2 261. Occasional Compare Franz, Shak. Gram.
instances
may occur
!
The Gods
it
smites
me
have.
Ant.
and Cleop.
171.
The
last
of
all the
Romans,
Sleep thou
fated mother
b)
sleep thou!
Jul. Caes., V, 3, 99. the son of an orphan Scott, Abbot, Ch. VIII, 83.
ill-
when they are used as appositions of the third kind. (Ch. IV, 12 The precious stone beryl is unique among minerals. Daily Mail.
when they stand
Obs. IV.)
1)
ff.)
c)
(Ch. IV, 4,
In this position
some
with
practice being due to the fact that the preposition of may also be understood as denoting a relation of possession. The following illustrations must be accepted for what they are
the
variable
worth. The absence of illustration of one or the other practice must not be understood to mean that it is non-existent.
business. He carried on the business of a vintner. Stof., Handl., Ill, 57. her in capacity. No doubt, they (sc. the stories) were interesting to i 1 1 2. Ch. V, 50. r. e e s. her capacity of a novelist. Rid. Haggard character, i. He never really appeared but in one character, that of a
,
philosopher.
ii.
H.Rogers, Ess.,
,
I,
Ch.
VIII, 335. i)
character of postulant for the Chancellorship of the Exchequer in the Tariff Reform Administration, promises us a tax of 2 s. per quarter on corn and flour. Westm. Gaz.
Mr.
Wyndham
in the
i)
Murray.
636
CHAPTER XXXI,
43.
commission. The King gave him the commission of a lieutenant colonel in the British Army. Mac, C ve, (5116). W. Besant, Master craft. He did not despise the craft of boat-builder.
1 i
Craftsman,
degree,
i.
I,
118.
I
think would marry under the degree of a Gentlewoman ? Heywood, Fortune by Land, I, II, l ) ii. The degree of Doctor of Science was conferred on Lord Lister. Times, dignity, i. He could well support the dignity of a governor. Clarendon, Hist. of the Great Reb., 1/603. ii. He (sc. Holcroft) rose... to the dignity of actor. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent.,
Do you
Ch.
I,
38.
|
name.
I
The grand
old
name of gentleman.
Ten.,
M e-m o r
We
I
CXI.
disgrace on the
name of philosopher. Mac, Fred., (691a). how low an estimate Cranmer had formed of the
I,
Ch.
I,
74.
,
must play the part of a father here. Dick., Chuz. He acted something like the part of a deserter. Freeman
Ill,
Nor m an Eng.,
,
ii.
He was resolved to act the part of a man of honour. Miss Linley (G. G. S. Life of Sheridan, 27). He made it clear,... that we had not played the part of mischief-maker imputed
to us
I
shall
by irresponsible critics. Times, No. 1820, 923a. have to play the part of seducer. Victoria Cross,
Six Chapt. of
Man's
A
Life,
133.
Times.
Tristram would not have tempted him alone. position. El. Glyn, THe Reason Why, Ch. XXXII, 302. He holds the office of Laureate. Bookman, No. 263, 2a.
position
The
of uncle
to
profession, i. A residential College especially equipped for preparing the sons of gentlemen for the profession of an engineer. Times, No. 181 J, 9026. ii. Mr. Pendennis exercised the profession of apothecary and surgeon. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 15. An insignificant little person who suffered from the profession of music-teacher. Barry Pain Culminating Point. M. Steinheil was one of those worthy and timid mediocrities who had adopted the profession of painter. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 493, 4816.
,
quality.
Fanny never made her appearance in the quality of nurse at his chambers Thack., Pend., II, Ch. XV, 156. rank. i. He has been promoted to the rank of an Admiral of the Fleet. Times. He obtained the rank of a lieutenant. II. Lond. News.
anymore.
Commoner
applied to
ii.
One of the common people, a member of the commonalty (Now below the rank of a peer). Murray, s. v. commoner, 2. To prefer an officer to the rank of general. Webst. A commisioned military officer below the rank of captain. lb. The sovereign was pleased to advance Colonel Sir Michael O'Dowd to the rank of Major General. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXXII, 362.
all
title.
The title of king was not revived. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. I, 132. The King had taken to himself the title of Defender of the Faith. Hal. Sutcl., Pam the Fiddler, Ch. II, 24.
')
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
trade,
ii.
i- He learned the trade of a HI, dyer. Stof., Handl. The two ushers at Tom's school were only driving their poor
,
637
7.
living
as they could.
Hughes,
Tom Brown,
trade of
I,
Returning to England, Cromwell continued to amass wealth by adding the trade of scrivener, something between that of a banker and attorney, to his other occupations. Green, Short. Hist., Ch. VI, VI, 332.
(Note
Note
They
II,
II.
I.
The
all
definite
article
is
in the
same
position.
cultivate
I,
trades
Lytton, RIenzi,
Ch.
78.
The
station, a time.
the post
indefinite article is, of course, impossible in referring to a rank, post, etc. that can be held by only one person at
this
At the end of
of Captain
month Captain A. D. Ricardo will vacate, on time limit, of Chatham Dockyard, and go on half-pay. Truth,
Regular is the suppression of the definite article, when specializing is followed by a plural Houn, as in the House of Lords, the House of Commons, the Chamber of Deputies, the Book of Proverbs.
of
44.
When
noun
is
used predicatively,
i.
e.
more or
rejects
less to
an
The
definite
result
is
that
it
sometimes
the
article,
whether
the case are applicable to only one person or thing, or to one out As the following discussions will show, there is of a number. a marked difference between English and Dutch practice only so
far as the indefinite article is concerned.
16;
Ch.
Compare also Ch. XXIII, 277; XXIV, 36; and see Franz, Shak. Gram. 2
,
39.
The definite
cative
article is frequently
or
specified
The child is father of the man. Wordsworth. The boy is father of the man. Thack., Four Georges, IV, 93. The wish is father to the thought. P r o v. was nursery-governess in a family where Mr. Copperfield used to visit. Dick. Cop., Ch. II 5a. You are heir to great estates. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1436. Wilkins was now member for a mining constituency. Mrs. Ward, Marcella, II, 237. Boldwood was tenant of what was called Little Weatherbury Farm. Tw. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XVIII 136. A speech delivered by my right hon. friend who is now Home Secretary.
I
,
Times,
No. 1819, 893c. During all this time he was leader No. 495, 546c.
T. P.
'
Weekly,
638
That
(sc.
CHAPTER XXXI,
Cecil Thurston,
45.
Kath.
He
is ...
chief of
9.
,
No. 6011,
Ac.
Note.
Thus
also
value of a
the office.
superlative,
superlative or, the adjective having the or an ordinal numeral is part of the name of
Lord Derby again became Prime Minister. Green, Short Hist., Epilogue, 843. was best man at the wedding. El. Glyn, The Reason why, Ch. XXI, 194. It was reported that my right hon. friend, then First Lord of the Admiralty, had in a public speech, used language attacking German policy. Times,
I
1819, 893c.
in 1887.
Westm. Gaz., No. 6377, lb. as predicative adnominal adjunct, was this little child who commonly acted as introduce him to Mrs. Osborne. Thack., Van.
Fair, I Ch. XXXV 392. Mr. Whittington served Sheriff of London and was three times Lord Mayor.
We s
m.
of the second kind: Rebecca was now engaged as governess. Thack. Van. Fair, Ch. VII 67. The directors appointed Clive governor of Fort St. David. Mac, Clive, (5116) The nation everywhere acknowledged him master. Motley Rise, V ,
,
, ,
The
gates and bridges of the State should be under the control of whomsoever should be elected Chief Magistrate. Lytton R i e n z II Ch. VI , in. For by thy state And presence I might guess thee chief of those [etc.]. Ten.,
, i
,
Lane, and
s. v.
El.,
. .
182.
.
He was appointed
Milton.
He was declared heir presumptive to the Danish With the preceding quotations compare:
i.
throne.
Times.
,
Purpose
is but the slave to memory. H a 1. III 2 200. Matilda, though of the royal Saxon blood, was not the heir to the monarchy. Scott, Ivan hoe, Ch. XLII, 448.
,
ii.
will
have
My young
(696a).
Ten. ,
Beck., Prol.,
The following quotations show variable practice: he was monarch of the My father had the sole charge (sc. of the lighter) was the heir apparent. Marryat, deck; my mother of course was queen, and was heir apparent. have said that Jac. Faithf. Ch. I, 3a. (Compare:
I , I
lb., 4a.)
now and lord. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. II, 30. hear the Conservative spokesman lay this stress upon the need of making the labourer master of his own house, but whether it is necessary for that purpose to make him the owner is quite another question.
He was
the chief
,
We
are
glad to
Westm. Gaz.,
Mrs. Brooks
all
,
the the
mind.
lady who was the householder at the Herons and owner handsome furniture, was not a person of an unusually curious turn Hardy T e s s Ch. LVI 595.
the
,
,
of
of
As
head
,
of the English
Church, he
,
(sc. the
Sovereign)
summons and
7.
dis-
solves
Convocation.
Anna Buckland
,
Our
Nat. Inst.,
(Compare:
lb., 69.)
The King
is
THE ARTICLE.
b) Suppression of the article
it
639
is
stands
office
after
the rule before such a noun, when a proper name, the relation or
of the article changes the grammatical function of such a noun, converting it from an apposition into an undeveloped clause. Compare Ch. IV, 3, Obs. I; Ch. XXI, 3.
The suppression
i.
He
Mar.
ii.
Crawf., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. I, 7. elder was Mrs. Benjamin Slayback, wife of the well-known member of Congress. lb., 8. Edward Russell the brother of Lord Russell. Green, i)
The
dignity or office:
,
i.
Edward
the
Confessor, King of England. Scott Tales. 1 ) Mr. White, Minister of Finance, said at a banquet given in his honour Times, No. 1819, 9046. [etc.]. The Ministers were accompanied by Prince Louis of Battenberg, First Sea Lord; Vice Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, Second Sea Lord. II. Lond. News, No. 3886 543.
,
ii.
Denewulf, the bishop of Winchester. Green. Malger the Archbishop of Rouen lb.
,
the Physician
to the
Emperor
of Austria.
h e n.
No. 4437,
Note
I. When the relation, or the dignity, office or trade is not specified, the article is not, as a rule, dispensed with, i. Thoff (vulgar for though) Jack Gauge, the exciseman, has ta'en to his carrots, there's little Dick, the farrier, swears he'll never forsake his bob. Sher., Riv., I, 1, (215). It was not to Richardson, the author, that Goldsmith applied for work, but to Richardson, the printer. R.Ashe Kino, 01. Goldsm. , Ch. VI, 70.
. . .
ii.
Molly housemaid stealing to the terrace-gardens in I cull a wistful posy. should like to see Betty kitchenmaid cutting off a thick lock of her chestnut ringlets, which she proposed to exchange for a woolly token from young Gumbo's pate. Tack., Virg., Ch. XX, 199. Robin postman took the proffered tea, put his dripping hat on the ground and thanked Jemima cook. Trol. , Framl. Pars., Ch. V, 40.
I
should
like
to see
the grey
dawning
to
II.
To compare Symons poet with Watts-Dunton chalk and cheese. Periodical. 3 ) Also when the noun denotes to doer of a
is better
poet
is like
comparing
the
specified action
known
in
Dutch history
Duke
of Albemarle. 2 )
46.
The indefinite
:
article is
practice a) generally before predicative nouns denoting either a of kinship or a social relation.
i)
relation
Foels
Koch, Wis.
392.
3)
Gram.,
258.
2)
Day En g.,
of P res.
40
CHAPTER XXXI,
The
relational
to,
46.
meaning
while
of
the noun
is
preposition
relational
the
placing of
the
noun would normally entail the use of the pleonastic genitive (Ch. XXIV, 33), with, of course, an altered meaning: He is son to my neighbour corresponds to He is a son of my neighbour's.
i.
Mrs. Gask.
21.
He
ii.
is
of his and son of a merchant in that town. Ch. XVI, 131a. cousin to the Loftus boys. Mrs. Wood, Or v. Col., Ch. II, 23.
school-fellow
Westw. Ho!,
'tis Clincher,
who was
apprentice to
I,
my
uncle Smuggler.
Farquhar,
The
Constant Couple,
It
1, (53).
(sc.)
the
funeral
had been
that of a
apprentice to a famous
German
doctor.
boy of Dolf's years, who had been Wash. Irv. Dolf Heyl. (Stof.
,
Handl.,
I,
105).
Note
Sir
I.
We
find the
same
undeveloped clauses.
Dudley North
,
younger brother of
Colonel
F.
W. Rhodes,
to
the
Prince.
Romeo and
Juliet.
Romeo, son
II.
Montague.
lb.
Geoffrey, son of
Ten.
Beck et.
such a relational noun is accompanied by a classifying modifier, it resumes its full character of a noun, and, consequently,
requires the indefinite article.
When
to you.
b) sometimes before predicative nouns denoting a quality. Man, "said the Ghost", if man you be in heart, not adamant. Dick., Chris tm.
Car.5, III, 70. She gazed at me, as if she really did not know whether I were child ox fiend. Ch. Bronte J a n e E y r e, Ch. IV, 27. Let the boy go with us, lest he prove traitor. Lytton, Rienzl, Ch. I, 13. Is Emile Grenat still anglomane? G. Meredith, Lord O rm on t, Ch. IV, 77.
,
You
Ch.
II
are
,
woman
said
through
Coralie,
and through.
"you're
Mrs. Alex.,
II,
38.
"Fraulein,"
as
&
Eo.
Diam. cut Paste, II, Ch. IX, 222. Compare with the above the following quotations, which
Castle,
exhibit the
said the Doctor; "you are a manl" Dick., Cop., Ch. XXXVI, 2596. He determined to marry her, while he was still a hobbledehoy. Trol., Thack., Ch. IV, 110.
Glow-Worm Tales, II, D, 58. fool. James Payn behoved him (sc Edward VII) to be a king, he was a king; but always he was a man with a man's heart. Lord Rosebery Speech.
The man's a
,
When
it
Note
I.
When nouns
in
this
function
make up a
effect.
series of
(69.)
two or
more, the
article is often
THE ARTICLE.
In this
641
Mason, E n g. Gram. 34, 15, n. nouns are modified by an adverb of degree, which, indeed, converts them, to all intents and purposes, into pure adjecbusiness he was both knave and fool.
II.
When
such
c.)
to
buy a stock
that cost
me five-and-twenty shillings.
'Thack.,
Ch. V, 49. She is more child than woman. G. Eliot, Scenes, II, Ch. VIII, 131. (She is more a child than a woman She is rather a child than a woman.) She was thoroughly master of French. Annie Besant A u t o b i g. , 22.
t
,
Sam. T
m.
English practice almost regularly has the article before nouns denoting a quality which constitute undeveloped clauses (Ch. XXI), not only if the headword is a noun, but also if it is a pronoun. In the latter case Dutch regularly rejects it.
III.
i.
Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the Prince. Rom. & J u 1. (Observe that the varied practice illustrated by this quotation depends on the different character of the nouns in question.) * It would ill become me a sinful and secular man, to complain of a bed as hard as a board. Scott, Monastery, Ch. XVI, 184. God have mercy upon me, a sinner. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch.
,
ii.
XXXIII, 2476.
an aged and a lonely man. Ch. Reade, It is never I, Ch. XV, 172. He was thinking... of the kind, wise words she had spoken to him, an ignorant fellow. Beatr. Harraden, Ships, I, Ch. XIII, 69. ** Gracious God who was he weak and friendless creature that such a love should be poured out upon him? Thack., Henry Esmond, II,
Have
pity
on me,
Sir,
such a sentence as the following we have not, of course, to deal with an undeveloped clause, but with a vocative:
, ,
c)
For what a prodigious quantity of future crime and wickedness are you unhappy I, Ch. II, 27. boy, laying the seed! Thack., Pend. mostly before master and mistress in the sense of proficient.
ii.
Scott, Wav., Ch. Ill, 30a. Jack of all trades is master of none. P r o v. She was mistress of Danish, German, English and French. Times, He's a master of languages. Farquhar, The Beaux' Stratagem
III,
2, (394).
He is a good scholar, as well as a consummate many languages. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXIV, 246.
soldier,
and a master
of
Note. I. Also when accompanied by an intensive adjective, master and mistress occasionally stand without the article, He spent two-and-twenty years in Egypt and returned perfect master of all
i.
science.
Lewes H
,
t.
A mode
Ch.
ii.
of warfare in
42.
wa
past mistress.
Mrs.
Ward, Marc,
I,
I,
11.
His daughter was a perfect master or music. Fielding, Jones, IV, Ch. V, 49a. There was the weight a man's sayings carry, when he is a real master of one thing. Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud., I, Ch. VIII, 188. I found him to be a thorough master of the Basque language and people. Alg. West, Some Remin. of Mr. Gladst. (Ninet. Cent., No. 395, 83).
Tom
H. Poutsma,
A Grammar of
II.
41
642
II.
in the
sense of a person
who
the article
to
He
{enemy) and friend d) occasionally a towards another person or a disposition person's denoting The ordinary practice is, however, to use the article, thing. even when to follows. Troilus and Cres., IV, 4, 72. i. And I'll grow friend to danger. it sounds generous You are foe to the Orsini yet you plead for him
,
ii.
Lytton, Rienzi, *You should have known "You thought me Friend!" he said FoeT Mar. Corelli, Sorrows of Sat an, II, Ch. XL, 259. Not that I am an enemy to love. Sheridan, Duenna, I, 1, (310). He was a friend to me. Ten., The Death of the Old year,
indefinite article is
:
friend to your order than a foe to your IV, Ch. II, 159. (Note the varied practice.)
me
III.
47.
The
Dutch
practice
a) before predicative nouns denoting a state. 1. The predicative nou n as nomin al part of the predicate: She will be a mother soon. Thack., Van Fair, I, Ch. XXXV, 390. She is a widow. Trol., Thack., Ch. V, 130. I am an orphan. Lytton, Rienzi, IV, Ch. I, 151. The Emperor surrendered his sword, and was a captive in the hands of his enemies. McCarthy, Short Hist., Ch. XXIV, 372. When he became a millionaire, of course, that course of conduct became
impossible.
Tales, II, C, 39. James Payn, For several years she remains a widow. Lit. World. She was a wife herself. Aon. & Eo. Castle, Diam. cut Ch. XI, 229.
Glow-Worm
Paste,
II,
2.
I
a bachelor. Much Ado, 1,1, 248. I have heard him say he would die a bachelor for your sake. Goldsmith, Vic, Ch. XXXI, 1, (467). Sooner than thou shouldst abandon the noble cause to which I have devoted thee, would I see thee lie a corpse at my feet. Scott, Abbot, Ch. IX, 89. He comes home now, where he lives a godless old recluse. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXIX, 310. I shall live and die an old bachelor. lb., I, Ch. II, 23. He expected to come back a prince at least. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. V, 41a. Note. The following quotations show variable practice:
will live
as
bankrupt,
II.
Times. i. He was adjudicated a bankrupt. be adjudicated a\bankrupt. Cas. Cone. Cycl. The debtor had been adjudicated bankrupt. Times.
To
i.
s. v.
insolvent.
party,
ii.
We
Dick.,
history.
Christm.
to
He was... party
some
I,
Mac, Hist.,
murders recorded
our
THE ARTICLE.
643
* Her father is a prisoner. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 126a. prisoner, i. ** Requesting him to keep Rob Roy a prisoner. Black's Sir W. Scott's
32.
The
ii.
prisoner. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 1256. Boers have taken possession of the telegraph off ice making the operator
,
made a
a prisoner. Times, * The daughter of a Turkish bashaw fell in love with me too, when I was Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer, prisoner among the Infidels.
HI, 2, (294).
in
the
Tower.
Thack.,
Henry Esm.
**
Water spread
itself
it
wheresoever
prisoner.
it
listed
Cristm. Car. s, M, 74. He was held prisoner. Story of Rob Roy, 29. He had been made prisoner. James Payn, Glow-Worn Tales, II, B, 24 2060. They made him prisoner. Sweet N. E. G r. To witness as to be a witness of. Annand., Cone. Diet, witness, have been witness to many mortifications he (sc. Goldsmith) has suffered ii.
for the frost that held
Dick.,
i.
in
Goldsmith,
Each practice
I
illustrated in:
might have been made a knight by many, after the French fashion, many ayear agone. I might have been knight, when I slew the white bear. Ch. Kinosley, Here ward, Ch. XX, 89a.
b)
position, station,
person at a time.
1.
etc.
trade, profession, dignity, office, that may be held by more than one
as
at the university.
a teacher in a school
in
Derbyshire. Mrs.
o r cL He was only a captain in the Austrian army. Lit. He had continuously been a Minister of the Crown or Leader of the Opposition in the House of Commons. Times, No. 1819, 8930". 2. The predicative noun as predicative adnominal adjunct: The King dubbed his son a knight. Webst, s. v. knight. They appointed him a member of Council at Madras. Mac, War. Hast., (600a).
1
86.
Dupleix had not been bred a soldier. Id., Clive, (509a). He had been elected a member of several fashionable clubs.
Mrs.
Ward*
Marc,
Note
I.
I,
94.
Weekly,
Instances of the alternative practice are by no means infrequent. l.The predicative noun as n om n a, part of th e predicate: If I were Minister, I would not allow such latitude to any man in office.
i 1
Trevelyan,
Mac,
227.
He
rendered an inestimable service to philology by laying the foundation of Greek studies in the University of Cambridge, where he was professor. Shaw, 6. Hist. Eng. Lit., Ch. Ill, Educated at Cambridge, he became fellow of Trinity of College in 1822. Webb, Intr. toMJc's Lays. He (sc Holcroft) rose from being stable-boy at Newmarket, .. .to quasi-literary positions as schoolmaster and clerk, and then to the dignity 0/ actor. Saintsb., Ninet. Cent., Ch. I, 38.
...
2.
as predicative
adnominal adjunct,
narrow seas.
Cla-
a)
of the first kind: They sent him admiral rendon Hist, of Great Reb. ,1, 379.
into the
644
Mrs.
Wood, Or v. Col.,
Ch. IV,
90.
the second kind: They call him captain, but anybody is captain. Hardy, Return of the Native, 1,311. if we merely call him novelist. Cuming Walters, We do him injustice Phases of Dick., 19. Mr. Satyendra Sinha, who is appointed legal member of Council, is a lawyer
^) of
of high repute
II.
and great
practice.
Wes
m.
G a z.
No. 4961
2a.
is
quite usual, when the noun used in a pregnant meaning, i.e. approaches to a quality-expressing
The suppression
(46, b.)
of the article
may be
word.
To
In
call
of
the term.
Garnett,
H.
Age
of
Dryden,
of
117.
much
his
later
to
be
artist.
Walker,
in: I. Antipholis now lost all patience and her a sorceress, he denied that he had ever promised her a chain.
Lamb.,
Tales, Com. of
became
Er.
221.
On
ii.
this Antipholis
quite frantic,
lb.,
122.
a queen I sometimes wish that I were queen Blyth, The King and Isabel, 74.
my own
right.
James
to be regular before such nouns when they by way of undeveloped nominal clause after a proper name. (Ch. IV, 4, Obs. I; Ch. XXI, 3.) It was at Newark that Byron, under the superintendence of Mr. Ridge, bookseller and publisher, first appeared as a poet. Lytton, Life of Lord Byron, 15a, The fact that sovereign may be understood as an adjective explains IV. the absence of the article in:
HI.
stand
I were sovereign would rule that no woman should inherit a fortune of five thousand pounds. Holme Lee, Beautiful Miss Barrington, I, 43. !) (Compare: No one disputes the fact that the electorate is politically sovereign. N i n e t. Cent., No. 395.)
If
more than
am
war on
Times.
Sometimes it is the measure which causes the article to be thrown out. And jealous Oberon would have the child Knight of his train. Mids., II, 1, 25.
V.
|
48. a)
Usage
is
also divided
4647,
when
preceded by the conjunction as. The article seems to be indispensable when as has a temporal or a
causative connotation.
is
1.
(Ch. VI, 7,
b.)
common, when as is followed by two or more nouns. The indefinite article after as with a temporal or cauespecially
S.,
i)
Ellinoer, E.
XXXI,
153.
THE ARTICLE.
sative connotation: Asa
boy, as
645
fast thy faith
amongst heretics. Scott, Abbot, Ch. VIII, 78. Jos went to court as a loyal subject of his sovereign.
Ch. XXV, 277. As a bachelor
...
Van Fair,
Ch.
II, 23.
II,
am.
Id.,
Pend.,
You remember,
As a
full of
play he
was as a baby?
,
Mrs. Gask.
for literary
Mary Barton,
man
an Indian patriot,
assume even
in
imagination.
CCXXVII, 4234. your Compare. To me you owe everything support while a child. Scott, Abbot, Ch. IX, 89.
v.,
2.
Rev. of Re
life
when an infant
your
The indefinite article used after as without any temporal or causative connotation: Indeed they say the senators to-morrow Mean
|
a politician. lb. I remained an inmate of 3. The indefinite article absent after as: its (sc. the school's) walls, after its regeneration, for eight years: six as pupil, and two as teacher. Ch. BrontE, Jane Eyre, Ch. X, 98. a chair, pen, paper, and ink, he can commence If a man can command a table, his trade as literary man. Trol. Thack., Ch. 1 10. She took a situation as teacher in a school near Halifax. Miss Flora Masson, The
, ,
1,3, 86. Jul. Caes. At our next annual meeting, I attended in my capacity Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 84. She did her part as a hostess wich much kindness and We think of him rather as a great journalist than as a Sir P. M. Warmington was greater as a lawyer than as
to establish Caesar as
,
a king.
as a shareholder.
grace.
Thack.,
Times.
politician.
Westm. Gaz.
Brontes,
Emily was despatched home, and Anne came as pupil in her place. The gentle Anne made out her two years at Roehead, and Charlotte remained there as teacher,
with a salary,
till
early in 1838.
lb., 39.
W.
L.
Phelps, Es.
life
on Modern
II.
News,
The
as prisoner.
in
Lon
d.
VII.
briefest reference to
Wagnerian drama".
was necessary
an "essay on
The following quotations exhibit divided usage: On the 29th of July 1835 Charlotte went as teacher to Miss W.'s, Emily accompanied Life of Ch. Bronte, 101. her as a pupil. Mrs. Gask.
,
Neither as
indeed, be expected to entertain very cordial feelings towards Russia. Times. (Possibly it is the definite article which is dropped before queen.) When the time came to separate, one of the four went to Oxford as an assistant in the library, and became a University lecturer, and another went to London to be clerk in a bank, and rose to be manager. Hall Caine, Prodigal Son, I,
Ch. II, 17. Neilson had re-established himself in Iceland first as factor for a firm in Copenhagen, and afterwards as a merchant on his own responsibility. lb. Even as painter of As a philosopher ... he (sc. Shakespeare) was not great. character he is greatly overpraised. Westm. Gaz., No. 6353, 7a.
.
.
Sometimes the absence of the article may have been furthered by the accumulation of two or more nouns in the same grammatical function. (69.) She had thought and prayed there as girl and woman. Mrs. Ward, Rob. Elsm.,
I,
172.
646
CHAPTER XXXI,
48.
Perhaps there had been too much tendency in the speeches made during the e s t m. G a z. week to honour Milton as reformer rather than poet. He (sc. Poincare) has also won fame as orator and as writer. 11. L o n d. News, No. 3849, Sup. I. Compare: Myrddia was famous as both a bard and a magician. W. L.
Jones,
King Arthur,
112.
b) After the preposition for, used as a variant of as (Ch. VI, 16), the indefinite article is all but regularly used:
i.
be able to pass for a Jew? Sher., The School the plague shall for Scand., Ill, , (389). The dogs, too, not one of which he recognized for an old acquaintance barked at him. Wash. Irv., Rip van Winkle. He went for a soldier. Dick. Bleak House, Ch. VII 52.
How
ii.
Arthur Pendennis chose to watch Miss Bell dance her first quadrille with Mr. Pynsent for a partner. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXVI, 272. He will be sold for a slave. Ch. Kingsley, Hypatia, Ch. XIII, 686. Why does your Master pass only for ensign? Sher., Rivals, I, 1, (213).
article
in
sham is understood in the meaning of to pass for: Now, if he had shammed general. Sher., Rivals, I, 1, (213). Note. The indefinite article appears to be practically indispensable before the name of a thing, whether preceded by as or its equivalent for.
i.
An
ii.
old red-brick mansion, used as a school, was in its place. Dick., Cop., Ch. XXXIV, 259a. I treasured U as a keepsake. lb., Ch. V, 336. I shall esteem it as a favour, my lord, if Colonel Esmond will give away the bride. Thack., Henry Esmond, III, Ch. IV, 355. This served him as a place of prayer. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXV, 187a. I hold it as a rule that nine men out of ten are unfortunate in their first attachment. Miss Brad., Captain Thomas. It was Napoleon who laid it down as a maxim that soldiers had often accomplished most, when their case seemed almost desperate. Times, No. 1819,897a. * A plank was laid over the brook to serve for a bridge. Robin Hood
(GliNTH.,
Handb.).
i
Willy has given his fiancee such a beautiful ring for a Christmas present. Mrs. Alex., For h s Sake, II, Ch. Ill, 49.
**
three
shrieks.
Thack.,
Virg.
Ch. XXXVIII
398.
ii.
those districts in which the Danes had settled, are which English grammar became simplified most rapidly. Bradley, The Making of Eng., Ch. II, 32. For thirty years or so we have taken it as a matter of course that the great e s t m. should chastise us as robbers and outcasts. London dailies
precisely
those
in
iii.
iv.
No. 6359. 7a. As a matter of fact, however, the scene itself was as powerful as it was Rid. Hag., Mees. Will, Ch. Ill, 32. pathetic. As a matter of fact, every form of irregular union exists to-day, but shameEng. Rev., No. 58, 282. fully and hidden. As a rule, I felt much more inclined to weep than to laugh. Westm. Gaz., No. 4967, 12c.
,
Gaz.
THE ARTICLE.
As a
rule
647
to the
faith as himself.
who belonged
same
political
49.
Usage mostly
article
rejects
the the
does
not
,
appear so
rarely
is
as
is
often
believed.
It
is
indispensable * You bid me turn a traitor. i. I'll turn a knave. Farquhar, The Constant Couple, Didn't you make him turn a sailor? Douglas Jerrold,
when
noun
2, (57).
Black Ey'd
Lytton,
Susan,
Rienzi,
**
I
I,
2.
taken up
my
Ch.
II,
160.
ii.
turned a good fellow. G. Eliot* Sil. Marner, Ch. XI, 92. ado, I, 1, 195. hope you have no intent to turn husband. Here comes another of the tribe: a third cannot be matched, unless the III 1 e r c h. of V e n. 181. devil himself turn jew. Gibbon, when a lad at Oxford, turned Catholic. Mac, Boswell's Life
I
Much
, ,
of Johns.,
I
(1686).
I
little
H
50.
Ch. Kinosley,
by an adnominal
to the suppression of before a predicative noun that is followed clause with the relative that or an adverbial
clause with the conjunction as, which contains the copula to be.
(Ch. XXXIX, 4.) i. These little infirmities would not have prevented him, honest faithful man
was, from being a shining G. Eliot, Scenes, I, Ch. II, 21. I have encouraged him too much
that he
'
light in the
have been
Ch. Kings-
ii.
o f Rich. F e v. Ch. XLIV, 438. who, printer's boy as he had been, was a wonderful shrewd person. Thack., Virg., Ch. IX, 83. Ah, grovel in the dust! crouch crouch wild beast as thou art! Lytton,
,
,
Mr. Franklin
Rienzi,
51. Abstract
I,
Ch.
II,
69.
nouns take the indefinite article after to make, or a verb of like import, when they are followed by an adnominal gerund- or infinitive-clause. Compare also Ch. XIX, 39; 49, Obs. V.
boast. Brough made especially a boast of drinking beer. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 75. feint. He made a feint of putting on the one glove which he usually carried in his hand. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXXI, 276. merit. He made a merit of having given the place to his cousin. Thack., Sam. Titm., Ch. VII, 85. plan. He laid down a plan of restoring his falling fortune. Goldsm., Vic. He usually made it a point to choose his walk in a different direction. point, Scott, Fair Maid, Ch. XXIX, 306. I made a point to act the fine gentleman completely. Thack., Barry Lyndon,
i.
Ch.
Ill,
48.
648
ii.
Many educated
Eng.,
,
4.
practice. Any country which makes a practice of balancing deficits by borrowing must come to grief sooner or later, Graph. pretext. Godfrey made it a pretext for taking up the word again. G. Eliot,
II.
Marn.,
I
make it a rule never to sleep out of my own bed. J. Payn, Glow-Worm Tales, I, N, 244. show. I made a show of arranging my papers on my desk. Jerome Novel
rule.
,
Notes.
52.
Dutch
occurs both as an adjective and a noun a tendency of dealing with it in the former function in and in the latter function in English. This mostly appears
,
by such a word standing without the indefinite article in Dutch, Thus Hij is Protestant =^ He is a with it in English.
:
Protestant.
Hij
53.
werd Protestant =
is
and compare
A common noun
as
preceding a proper name (or a noun understood proper name), which stands in apposition to it, is apt to give up its character as a head-word and become in its turn the adjunct-word to the proper name, with the result that it loses some of its substantival nature and rejects the definite article, This change takes place, in the or the possessive pronoun. main, in the same cases in Dutch as in English. In the details
a
there are, however, some differences which are of some interest. 90; Matzn., Eng. (Ch. IV, 4.) See also Sweet, N. E. Gr.
Gram. 2
a)
Ill,
Verm. Beitr.,
both
in
27.
The suppression
*ular,
noun preceding the proper name denotes some family or social In this case it is more plausible to assume the omission relationship.
of the possessive pronoun than the article. Lilias had rightly read her mistress's temper, who, wise and good as she was, was yet a daughter of grandame Eve. Scott, Abbot, Ch. IV, 46.
The
reminded him that friend Sampson was going to bells of St. Paul's preach his sermon. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXXVI, 381. Wherever Father John appeared, help entered in the efficacious form of
. . .
pecuniary assistance.
7326.
Note.
speaker or writer, nor the subject of the narrative, the article cannot be dispensed with. Goldsmith had dealings both with the uncle Newbery and the nephew Newbery.
the
When
not the
Thus
also
when
the
the proper
name and
to
Neither could
Newbery nephew,
common noun are transposed. whom both The Traveller and The
the
all
Vicar of Wakefield were sold, be truthfully called "the friend of R. Ashe Kino, 01. Goldsmith, Ch. XV, 168.
mankind".
THE ARTICLE.
b)
649
The suppression is almost regular, in English as well as in Dutch, when the common noun preceding the proper name denotes a
profession
practice
is
German proper names with von and French proper names with d e. Compare Schulze, Beitr. zur
civil, military
or ecclesiastical.
This
des
is
When
sister
Livy
of his cider-press for nothing. Goldsm. , Vicar. Lawyer Clipparse found his patron involved in a deep study. Ch. II, 28b.
Scott, Wav.,
He was
glad to ransom himself by making over most of the remaining half (sc of his property) to Speaker Lenthal. Mac, War. Hast., (596a). Shepherd Matthew watched his master. Hal. Sutcl. ,Pam the Fiddler
Ch. VI
90.
The
sacraments were administered to nurse Pecha. Times. Professor Osbert Chadwick delivered an address. lb. The retiring Lord Mayor, Alderman Sir H. D.Davis, entertained at luncheon the Aldermen. lb. President Mac Kingley directs that the Americans shall assume the government of Puertorico on October 18. lb. Ex-President Porfirio Diaz... will doubtless have been deeply interested in recent events. II. Lond. News, No. 3858, 418c. Senator Quay and his son have been committed for trial. lb. Chancellor von Biilow is struggling in advance with the problem which will preoccupy Mr. Lloyd George as soon as Parliament meets. Rev. of Rev.,
last
Guard Richardson. e s t m. G a z. No. 6171 ** Major Dobbin had joined the ...th regiment Fair, II, Ch. XXXII, 362.
, , , ,
2a.
at
Chatham.
Thack.,
Van.
Marshal Tiptoff had died. lb. II Ch. XXXII 362. Admiral Sir John Arbuthnot Fisher, K. C. G., was formerly a Lord of the Admiralty and Controller of the Navy. Graph. Captain the Hon. Charles Bigham. II. Lond. News, No. 1812, 718. Lieutenants Walton and Sword. Times. Generals Buller and Warren. Morning Leader.
***
From this decision Archbishop Longley dissented. Graph. e s t m. G a z. , Archbishop Clark reckons that fifty men will be needed. No. 4937, 3a. In the next year he gave a casting vote in favour of Bishop Wilberforce's motion. Graph. The Headmasters' Conference was opened last Thursday under the presidency of Prebendary Moss. Times.
Ii.
He will open the merchant Abuda's chest. Stevenson, Walking Tours (Peacock Select Essays, 537). The nurse Pecha was still alive on Wednesday afternoon. Times. ** The Huguenots had become a formidable party under the guidance of the Admiral Coligni. Green, Short Hist., Ch. VII, 4, 382.
*
,
XXII, 283.
The correspondence
troubles.
Westm.
attests the
urgency of these
****
and
liberal.
Scott,
Quent. Durw.,
650
He had engaged
Eustatius.
Id.
,
a furious and
is
acrimonious
Ch. X, 95.
contest
with
the
Abbot
Abbot
Ch. 1 , no more.
,
1 1
Ib.
Note. Thus
54.
When
in
the
common noun
is
is
title,
usage
is
divided.
a) Regular
one that is only used a proper name, and when only one person is referred to: Mr. Johnson, Mrs. Johnson, Miss Johnson, Master Johnson, Sir Walter Scott, Childe Harold, Dan Chaucer. Note I. When more persons than one are referred to, the ordinary practice seems to be that the article is used, when the persons bear
the suppression
the
title is
when
connection
with
same name, and that it is suppressed, when the names differ. See also Ch. XXV, 17. wondered more than ever what George could i. The Misses Osborne see in poor little Amelia. Thack., Van Fair, I, Ch. XII, 117. John Barton was not far wrong in his idea that the Messrs. Carson would
the
. . .
not be over-grieved for the consequences of the fire in their mill. Mrs. Barton, Ch. VI, 52. (In the same page Messrs. Carson.) Gask.,
Mary
to thank
you
for
Life of Ch. Bronte, 228. Messrs. Dodson and Fogg intreated the plaintiff to compose Dick., Pickw., Ch. XXXIV, 307. The two gentlemen were Messrs. Frederic and fames. Thack. P e
,
n d.
had not the least idea but that his company was Pendennis and Bows. lb., II, Ch. XI, 123. th regiment, in which Messrs Dobbin and Osborne The Colonel of the had companies, was an old general. Id., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXIV, 251. With Misses P. and W. the tender passion is out of the question. lb.,
perfectly
welcome
to Messrs.
I,
Ch. XII,
119.
his side.
Newc.
I,
Mr. is often placed before the names of certain followed by a proper name, as in:
With
this beautiful peroration,
Stareleigh
woke
.
up.
Dick.,
Pickw.,
lb.
Mr. Serjeant Buzfuz sat down and Mr. Justice Ch. XXXIV, 311. (Compare Sergeant
, ,
Buzfuz
z b)
i
309.
Thus we
1 1
Chairman (= Dutch
Mijnheer de Voor-
r).
Usage is variable and divided before titles of sovereigns and noblemen, which may also be used by themselves, the general tendency being to use the definite article before the unfamiliar and foreign titles, and also, though less markedly, in dignified style.
The
found:
before
regularly,
or
practically regularly,
Caliph
Grand Prince, Infante, Infanta, Khedive, Landgrave, Landgravine, Palatine, Rhinegrave, Signor, Signora, Sultan, Sultana. mostly before Archduke, Archduchess, Baroness, Czar (Tsar),
Czarina
(=
THE ARTICLE.
often
rarely
651
sometimes
Note
I.
before Countess, Emperor, Empress, Marquis, Princess; before Lady, Lord; before Count,
Titles
Dame, Duke, Earl, King, Queen, Viscount. preceding French names beginning with de, mostly stand with the article; while it is mostly suppressed before titles preceding German names with von. Pure foreign titles such as Monsieur, Herr, Senor, Don (Dom), mostly have no article, any more than they have in the original languages, barring occasional exceptions.
of the common use of the article before princess almost regularly suppressed before Prince, may be due to the fact that Princess is a comparatively modern title, which did not come into use until the 18th century, lady being used before that time. Thus in Mac, Hist., Ill, Ch. VIII, the daughters of James II are called the lady Anne and the lady Mary. This may also be the reason why many Englishmen (perhaps the majority) pronounce the word with the stress on the second syllable; except* when there are no rhythmical or metrical reasons for doing otherwise.
II.
while
is
Lord and Lady regularly have the article in directions.of letters, where, III. as a rule, they are more formally preceded by distinctive epithets, such as Honourable, Right Honourable etc. In other positions the article seems to be used before Lady especially, when the fact that the title is one by Also when followed by the name birth, not by marriage, is insisted on. of a dignity which a lady holds on the strength of her husband's office, the word regularly stands with the article: the Lady Mayoress. Lord also mostly has the article, when followed by an appellative denoting an office.
,
IV. The placing of a defining word before Prince as in Crown Prince , Hereditary Prince, seems to be of no influence as to the use of the article, when the two words form a kind of unit. V. Titles which occasionally throw off the article in ordinary conversation or newspaper announcements, such as Czar, Emperor, Empress, Princess,
regularly
keep
it
in
the
language of
history.
Thus only
is
the
Emperor
Charles V, the Empress Maria Theresa. VI. Sometimes the use or absence of the article measure. See the quotations under king.
VII.
conditioned by the
For details see also Matzn., Eng. Gram. 2 Ill, 156; 0. Schulze, Eng. Stud., XXII; XLIII, 138; Ten Bruqgencate, Taalstudie, VI; X; Ellinger, Verm. Beitr., 28. Archduke, i. Francis Ferdinand of Austria ... was born at Graz, and is the son of
the Archduke Charles Louis.
It
H a r m s w. E n c y c
in 1605
1. ,
s.
v.
(sc. the
picture)
was purchased
d.
No. 3777, 415. ii. Emperor Francis Joseph is now at the manoeuvres in Bohemia, accompanied by the Heir Presumptive Archduke Francis Ferdinand. Graph. Baron, i. The Baron Hardinge of Penshursi belongs to a famous family of proconsuls.
ii.
News,
Id.,
It
is
just
me
[etc.].
Rev. of
the unalterable determination of his Government to preserve open door. Westm. Gaz. No. 4919, 2a. Baroness, i. Who was the baroness? The Baroness Bernstein, the young ladies' aunt. Thack., Virg., Ch. II, 12.
652
CHAPTER XXXI,
54.
Under such circumstances met Warren Hastings and the Baroness Imhoff. Mac, War. Hast., (601a). The Historical Romances of the Baroness Orczy are very suitable as Christmas
gifts.
li.
Westm. G a z.,
in
No. 5185,
in
la.
lb.
,
the Corner
by Baroness Orczy.
giving the
titles
No. 4961
Advert.
compo-
of literary or musical
at
Baroness Bertha von Suttner, n6e Countess Kinsky, was born June 9, 1843. Graph., No. 2271, 946a.
Prague... on
(He) was at present in this country trying to negotiate with the Begum Clavering the sale of the Nawaub's celebrated nose-ring diamond. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXXVII, 392.
Begum.
Calif.
Consul. Long
The Khalif Omar. Wash. Irv. i) live the Consul Rienzil Lytton, Rienzi,
i.
II,
Count,
i.
I
Find
me
the
II, 2, 33. could not avoid repeating the famous story of Count Abensberg. Vicar, Ch. I. Of all these airships the most successful is that of Count Zeppelin.
Much ado,
Rev. of
whom
left the Countess Hameline of Croye to the charge of those she herself selected as counsellors and advisers, the Countess Isabelle had been ere now the bride of William de la Marck. Scott, Quent. Durw. , Ch. XXIII, 303. had married a brutal husband. T. P. s Weekly, The Countess Hatzfeldt
'
. .
ii.
No. 466, 4506. Tell the Conntess Shulski I wish to speak to her. El Glyn ,The Reason why, Ch. I, 8. Countess Shulski clasped her hands, lb., Ch. II, 14. (In this novel usage is about equally divided.)
.
Czar.
i.
Princess
to
II.
Lond. News.
He became a He received
ii.
great favourite of the Tsar Nicholas. Times. a warning as to the precariousness of his own position from the
III.
Tsar Alexander
lb.
Czar Alexander III has cast much gloom over Court circles. Graph. Although Czar Nicholas had succeeded to his brother with sentiments somewhat more pacific, the question was further complicated by a French army in the
The death
of
Peloponnesus. A c a d e m y. 2) Tsar Ferdinand of Bulgaria recently sent a conciliatory telegram to the King of Roumania. II. Lond. News, No. 3875, 1426.
thus
Scott,
of
Abbot,
Fortune,
105.
Happy
but
are
they
Id.,
who
are
not
Dame
II.
[etc.].
Mo n.,
Ch.
XXXVI
Dame
Fashion than
in her
at present.
Lond.
Dame Nature
work
of animal development.
of the
Doge Marino
Faliero
is
events in the annals of the most singular government, city, and people of
modern
Byron,
i)
Foels.-Koch,
Ten Bruo., T aa
s t.,
X.
THE ARTICLE.
Dom. A
653
Times,
Donna,
life.
ii.
monarchical regime under King Manoel or Dorn Miguel would be preferred. No. 1824, 1006d.
his lady quarrelPd.
Byron,
|
Don Juan,
I,
xxm.
Don
Byron,
Don Juan,
I,
xxvi.
|
But that which Donna Inez most desired, ...Was, that his breeding should be lb., I, xxxix. strictly moral. (Throughout the poem the use of the article is dependent on the measure.)
Duchess. "This set belonged to George II", said the General, "he gave it to the Duchess Lavinia on her marriage. Baring-Gould, II, 213.1) Duke. i. The Duke Charles is now at Peronne. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XVI, 221. He assumed the lofty title of the Duke Werner. Lytton, Rienzi, I, Ch. II, 20.
ii.
Duke Henry is four years older than his bride-elect. Graph. Prince Christian was the sixth child of Duke Frederick William of HolsteinSondersburg-GIucksburg. Times. i. This was the approach of the Earl Douglas. Ch. XXXIII, 353.
those present were Earl Spencer.
is
Earl.
Scott, Fair
Maid,
ii.
Among
Times,
loss
to
The sudden death of Earl Percy Westm. Gaz., No. 5195, 2b.
Earl Grey has been the moving No. 3875, 129a.
spirit
of
the
Lond. News,
mass round
their
Emir.
his
Lond. News.
Graph.
The Emperor Charles had an exalted opinion of his capacity for the Emperor, field. Motley, Rise, VI, Ch. VII, 8996. The Emperor Francis Joseph received the King Alexander of Servia on Monday
morning.
ii.
Times,
is
now
at the
manoeuvres.
Graph.
Emperor William
Germany.
i.
Empress, Empress
I
Graph.
of the
refer to the
murder
Empress Elizabeth
Times,
ii.
returned to Windsor from Osborne at the end of last week, accompanied by Empress Frederick. Graph.
The -Queen
Grand Duke.
throne,
The Grand Duke Peter, her nephew, who now ascended the Russian
was
[etc.].
Mac, Fred.,
(699a).
Behind the Czar walked the Grand Duke Serge. II. Lond. News. Grand Duchess. In the mourning coaches that followed sat the Empress, the Grand Duchess Alexandra Feodorowna. II. Lond. News. The King of the Hellenes was married to the Grand Duchess Olga. lb. Heer. i. In (this) valuable kind of lore the Heer Antonie seemed deeply versed.
When
ii.
Wash. Irving, Dolf Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 134). he had washed it down by two or three draughts from
lb.,
the
Heer Antonie's
bottle.
133.
In the
tion,
midst of his
lb., 133.
joviality,
i)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.,
28.
2)
654
CHAPTER XXXI,
54.
Infanta. The Infanta Eulalia has addressed to the Impartial ... a letter, in which she declares her unaltered affection for Spain and the King and the Queen Mother. Times, No. 1824, 1006d. Before the King Cophetua. Ten., King. i. Bare-footed came the beggar-maid
j
Beggar-maid.
Francis Joseph received the King Alexander of Servia on Monday morning. Times. Last month, full of years and full of honours, the old King Christian of Denmark passed away. Rev. of Rev., CXCIV, 1206. ii. Between them King George and the Emperor Nicholas are rulers of nearly half the world. G r a p h. No. 2171 949. Landgrave. Prince Christian was the sixth child of Duke Frederick William of
, ,
The Emperor
Holstein-Sonderburg-Gliicksburg, and Princess Caroline, daughter of the Landgrave Charles of Hesse-Cassel. Times. She was the third daughter of the Landgrave William of Hesse-Cassel. lb. * Looking up he beheld his aunt, the Lady Rockerville and two of her Lady. i. daughters, of whom the one who spoke was Harry's betrothed, the Lady Ann. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. II, 28. The Queen of Hungary was a worthy descendant of the Lady Mary of Burgundy. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. II, 786. When he was gone, the Lady Godiva bowed her head into her lap. Ch. Kinosley, Herew., Ch. I, \\b. The Lady Laura is my cousin and if I choose to give her brevet rank who shall hinder me. II. L o n d. News. That is the Lady Grace Eveleigh (a duke's daughter). And remember, she is not Lady Grace, but the Lady Grace. A knight's wife is a Lady, you know.
,
,
all
Cornh. Mag.
ii.
Royal Highness was welcomed on arrival at Liverpool by the Lady Mayoress (Lady Derby), and Lady Victoria Stanley presented the Princess with a handsome bouquet. Times, No. 1823 977d*. Miss Braddon, Lady Audley's Lady Audley pursed up her rosy lips. S e c r e t , I Ch. XVI 186.
, , ,
Lord.
i.
P.,
to the
Lord Lilburne.
Lytton,
,
Night
Here-
and Morn.,
He
is
too
fond of
I,
my poor
of
the
Lord Hereward.
Ch. Kinosley
ward, **
the
Ch.
116.
ii.
Of the new nobles the most conspicuous were the Lord Treasurer Rochester, Lord Keeper Guildford, the Lord Chief Justice Jeffreys the Lord Godolphin and the Lord Churchill. Mac, Hist, i) * Lord Crewe said that a reduction of the British Army fn India was contemplated. Times, No. 1819, 901a. * Lord Keeper Guildford stole some hours from the business of their courts to write on hydrostatics. Mac, Hf st. I, Ch. Ill, 401. Note. The following quotation exhibits varied practice, for which there is no
,
.
. .
that the Lord James was coming this road at the head of a round body of cavalry. And, accordingly, Lord James did so far reckon upon him, that he sent this man Warden... to my master's protection. Scott, Mon.,
Maharajah.
. .
the
Maharajah Nuncomar.
Mac
War. Hast.,
i.
,
(603a).
Ito
Marquis,
The Marquis
to
Portsmouth
[etc.].
Rev. of Rev.,
CXC
375a.
Foels.
Koch
Wis. Gram.,
256.
THE ARTICLE.
655
ii.
Ito. Harmsworth Encycl. ,s. v. Ho. Japan offered Russia her alliance through Marquis ho.
i.
The Convention was signed in the palace of the Marquis Marialva. Morris , Note to Byron's Childe Har. I, xxv, 2. A few days ago Count Etienne Tisza met the Marquis George Pallavicini and fought his third duel this year. II. Lond. News, No. 3880 337a. The constitution under which Japan is now governed, is the work of the Marquis
, , .
. . ,
Rev. of Rev.
his
CXC, 375a.
whole
Pope.
When
the
undiscovered non-Christian world between Spain and Portugal, he awarded India to the latter power. A. Lyall, The Rise of the British Dominion
ii.
in India, 8. Foremost among them in zeal and devotion was Gian Pietro Caraffa, afterwards Pope Paul the Fourth. Mac. Popes, (5496). About this time there came to the Wittenberg district the Dominican monk Tetzel, selling pardons and releases from Purgatory, in accordance with the indulgence issued by Pope Leo X. H a r m s w. E n c y c I. s. v. Luther.
, ,
Prince,
of his attendants as would be dangerous sent dead drunk on shore; the secured; and so you have the Prince Oroonoko. Thom. South., Oroonoko, I, 2, (165a). The Academic Committee of the Royal Society of Literature has received from
i.
as
many rest we
Princesse Edmond de Polignac the offer of a sum of money for the foundation of a prize for literature to be awarded by the Academic Committee In memory of her husband, the Prince Edmond de Polignac. Times, No. 1814,803c. ** The imperial couple lost their only son, the Crown Prince Rudolph, in a very sad manner a few years ago. II. Lond. News.
the
The
ii.
last
two days spent alone by Mary Vetsera and the Crown Prince Rudolph.
Graph., No.
2267. 740a. * Prince Christian was the sixth child of ** On the death of Prince
Hereditary
Alfred, the
Graph.
Princess, i. Those are the sons of the Princess Pocahontas. Thack., VI rg. , Ch. VII, 70. The Princess Alexandra was provided with an English nurse. Graph. The Princess Alexandra is by two distinct lines of descent the great-great-great
granddaughter of George II. Times. Prince Waldemar is married to the Princess Marie
ii.
d' Orleans.
II.
Lond. News.
Princess Dagmar was married to the Tsar Alexander III. Id. Princess Marie is most affable and engaging. Graph. Note. The following quotation exhibits varied practice for which there is no apparent reason The Queen and the Princess Beatrice were present on Saturday at the Confirmation of the Hereditary Grand Duke of Hesse at Darmstadt. Her Majesty also attended the christening of the infant child of Princess Louis of Battenberg, and was one of the
,
:
Ed., 1885, May 1, l. 1 ) Queen, i. This ground belongs to him no more than it does to me, but to the Queen Elizabeth. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho! Ch. XXI, 162a. Hitherto the Queen Alexandra has been regarded more or less as an ornamental asset of the Empire. Rev. of Rev., CXC1I 583. ii. Queen Alexandra ... drove to Marlborough House. Times. No. 1819, 900c. Senor. The Infanta Eulalia has telegraphed to Senor Canalejas, the Spanish presponsors.
,
Times, Weekly
mier, as follows.
Times,
S.
i)
O. Schulze,
E, XXII,
257.
656
Sheik.
think
the
if
the Sheik-ul-Islam
was
portrayed by Mr.
London Pavilion?
Times.
Signor.
ii.
my
Lytton
e n z
IV,
Ch.
II
160.
Times,
Tom
ii.
signora. Having written his letter to Mrs. Bold, he proceeded to call upon the Signora Neroni. Trol. B a r c h. T o w. Ch. XXVII 225. He went to his villa in the Dordogne, where the Signora Stella Ballerina awaited him. Westm. Gaz., No. 5382, 2c. Squire. She created so much confusion in the congregation, that if Squire Allworthy had not silenced it, it would have interrupted the service. Fielding,
,
, ,
Jones,
i.
Sultan,
IV, Ch. X, 556. 300.000000 Mahomedans reverence in him, the Sultan Abdul Hamid,
their Khalif.
Times,
|
|
That slew the Sophy, and a Persian prince That won Merch. II, 1, 26. Solyman, [etc.]. Mohammed V... became Sultan of Turkey after the deposition of his elder brother, Sultan Abdul Hamid II. II. Lond. News, No. 3834, Sup. VIII. Negotations were carried on by Dr. Herzl with Sultan Abdul Hamid. Westm. Gaz., No. 6329, 8c.
By
this scimitar,
Among those present were Viscount Chelsea. Times. Morley explained to the House of Lords the large scheme of representative government which we are about to concede to India. Westm.
Viscount.
Viscount
Gaz.
It
must be owned
a large admixture Graph. Madame the Stael had fallen out with the Viscount de Choiseul.
that the 'Vieux Souvenirs' of the Prince dejoinville contain 1 of small beer. )
ii.
Titbits. 1 ) week it was announced that the Comte de Paris was lying seriously ill at Stowe House. Graph, Baron de Courcel is well acquainted with English affairs and statesmen.
Last
Graph.
field,
friend of
my
brother's.
Baroness Blooms-
ii.
The Baron Von KoUdwethout of Grogzwig in Germany, was as likely a young baron as you would wish to see. Dick. N c h. N c k 1. 34a. Two more volumes contain the essays, speeches and memoirs of Count
,
*)
When
adjectives
title,
the definite article is used nations mentioned in the preceding , under the same conditions as before proper names standing by themselves. (28.)
i.
Take from me the same horse that was given him by the good Bishop Jewel. Goldsm. Vic, Ch. Ill (247). If my servants have too little wages, or any husband too much wife: let them repair to the noble Serjeant Kite. Farquhar The Recruiting
,
,
Officer,
I,
1, (251).
Four of he London hospitals have come the will of the late Professor Hughes.
Schulze,
in for a
!)
Eng. Stud.,
XII.
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
657
"Now you
us!" cries
have no more money to play with, you can come and play with fond Lady Fanny. Thack., Virg., Ch. LVI, 578.
56.
When
the common noun does not belong to any of the groups mentioned above in 53 54, the definite article is regularly used, both in Dutch and in English. child. Miss Clairmont had known Byron in London, and their acquaintance now ripened into an intimacy the fruit of which was the child Allegra. Symonds, Shelley, Ch. IV, 88.
hero.
Honour and
the
gratitude
above
all
the
Numbers,
XII, 3.
woman. As
laid claim to
be her mother, he
I
Th.
Note.
i.
is variable.
Surely that's better than the careless manner in which the widow Ochre caulks her wrinkles. Sher., School for Scandal, 11,2,(379). Now in this matter the widow Bold was scandalously ill-treated by her relatives.
ii.
Trol., Barch. Tow., Ch. XIV, 112. The Widow Blackacre, beyond comparison Wycherley's best comic character, is the Countess in Racine's 'Plaideurs'. Mac, Com. Dram., (5786). He (sc. Uncle Toby) is celebrated for his love passages with the widow Wadman. Webst., s. v. Uncle Toby. Enter Captain Driver, teased and pulled about by widow Lacket. Thom.
Southern,
Oroonoko,
207.
I,
2, (1636).
,
Two
little
boys had stolen some apples from Farmer Benson's orchard, and Mrs. Gask. eggs had been missed off Widow Hayward's stall.
The
generalizing or specializing definite article is dispensed with before certain plural nouns of a more or less vague meaning,
(9,6,2;
This applies especially to: 13; 14; 31,6.) a) the colloquial chaps fellows and persons,
,
and
to the literary
men
b) affairs, matters and things. Also the collective noun people, which in every respect is dealt with as a plural, is an instance of the same practice. In colloquial language people is often replaced by folk(s). See Ch. XXVI, 10. The above nouns occur chiefly as subjects, less frequently as objects, and most of them very rarely, or not at all, in other grammatical functions. Affairs, however, is mostly found after a
preposition.
Titm.,
Chaps don't dine at the West-End for nothing. Thack., Sam. Ch. IV, 46. fellows. Fellows will understand that I don't care to have you come out on a troop-ship. Sarah Grand , The Heavenly Twins, I, 145. folks. Folks don't use to meet for amusement with fire-arms. Sher.,
a)
chaps.
men.
my
thane,
is
as a
May
,
read strange
matters.
Macb.
I,
5, 63.
I,
H.
Men at some time are masters of their fates. Jul. Caes. Poutsma A Grammar of Late Modern English. II.
,
2, 139.
42
658
"Tis not
the
for
CHAPTER XXXI,
me
to state
57.
"but
how
eagle
was
killed
with
these doubts arise," said Douglas an arrow fledged from his own wing".
men
say
Scott, Fair
Maid,
Men said that he was proud. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. I, 6a. Men have asked themselves, much more insistently than heretofore, why,
governing principle has had
,
the self-
magical effect in South Africa, and, in a previous generation, in Canada, we should not try what it may do for Great Britain and No. 5454, 16. Ireland. Westm. Gaz. ** Honours and wealth change men's natures. Scott, Quent. Durw. Ch. XII, 172. All this did not alter the settled conviction on men's minds. Trol. Framl. Pars. Ch. XXXVII 358.
this
,
* I don't know whether there are ghosts or not, but people say they've seen people. them. Mar. Crawf. , K a t h. Laud., I Ch. X 186. People always recognize the ghost instantly, if it's that of a person they've known,
,
,
Ch. X, 187. People can be divorced for incompatibility of temper. lb., Ch. XII, 223. ** Have you been mentioning that to people? W. Pett Ridge, (Westm. Gaz., No. 4983, 3c).
lb.,
New Scheme
persons, (unusual.)
Do no
let
persons on
this
a tuft-hunter, or a toad-hunter. Trol., Persons are requested not to sit upon the pier.
was
6)
affairs.
Such was
the
state of affairs,
bridge. Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. VI, 54. But a great and sudden turn in affairs was at hand. Mac, Clive, (5276). The inhabitants of the village, while discussing the position of affairs had suddenly
,
been
startled
t
,
That Winter
.
gh
Ch.
45.
, .
.
we will provide matters. * Should matters become yet more distracted here for your safe-conduct to Germany. Scott, Quent. Durw., Ch. XVIII 243. Matters are not so bad as that. Reade It is never too late to mend,
,
I,
Ch.
It
I,
18.
**
is
difficult
to
believe
that
Mr.
result
of
the
them
Asquith and his colleagues can feel that the in pushing matters to extremes. Westm.
Gaz., No. 5219, 16c. * After a while things. States issued an address.
c Carthv, Short Hist., Ch. XXX, 314. Things jarred between them frequently. Mrs. Ward, Marc, III, 102. Things are coming to a pretty pass. H. J. Byron Our Boys. I have seen a pretty while how things are going on here. Reade, It is never too late to mend, I, Ch. 18. ** We looked at things through a telescope. Dick., Cop., Ch. II, 126. We have no desire to exaggerate the dangers inseparable from such a state of things.
,
Times.
Mr. Roosevelt No. 5406, 16.
is making things hum in American politics. Westm. Gaz., (= Dutch: brengt leven in de brouwerij.)
to
go about and do
things.
g.
Rev., No.
58, 199.
Note.
The same usage is often extended to other nouns, following among, perhaps, many others (1214):
especially the
a) ministers. From questions recently put to Ministers in Parliament. Times. Mr. Redmond feels for instance that an honest pledge on the part of Ministers to dedicate this Parliament to the House of Lords question is not sufficient for him. Westm. Gaz., No. 5231, lc. (Thus, probably, the invariable practice in this paper.)
members. Members were really astonished at this who has the reputation of being extremely reticent.
THE ARTICLE.
parties.
* Parties in the
659
much
as they were in the last
House
Chamber.
Graph.
,
** Either the Irish question must be settled by a deal between parties, or the Government must take vigorous measures. Westm. Gaz. No. 6383, \c. politicians. Congress will not meet till December, and politicians are still making
holiday.
Graph.
in the
voters. Voters went early to the polls, and hurried away to make holiday fine weather. Graph.
interest is the frequent noble lords, as in: tears with those of noble lords opposite in regard to the Lord Crewe, Speech. brevity of the time given to that House for discussion. The amount of discussion which that measure had received both in and out of
Note.
Of particular
their
Parliament, enabled noble lords opposite to decide to throw the Bill out. lb. Fortunately, although noble lords sometimes say very nearly winged words to each other, human emotions and passions seem to be much more under restraint in the Upper than in the Lower House. Westm. Gaz., No. 5107, 4a.
b)
appearances.
Appearances are
at least
against you.
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw.
Ch. XIX, 1466. My only chance of success depends on A Life Interest, I, Ch. IV, 72.
Ho!,
my keeping up appearances.
Mrs. Alexander,
circumstances. You will have me back again, should circumstances permit Hardy, Far from the madding Crowd, Ch. LI, 416. The work is being pushed forward as quickly as circumstances permit. Times.
His career owes nothing whatever to influence or to circumstances, apart from his Westm. Gaz., No. 6365 ,26. How could circumstances be so cruel to her? El. Glyn, The Reason why, Ch. XXXV, 322. Compare: The Greek and Turkish negotiations are supposed to be going on as smoothly as the circumstances permit. Westm. Gaz., No. 6365, lc. This will lead public opinion to consider the one and only form of relief which the circumstances permit. lb., 2a.
brilliant ability.
and passive, Adrian waited the progress of events. Silent, therefore, Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. Ill, 88. times. Times grew worse and worse with Rip van Winkle, as years of matrimony S k e t c h - B k. V, 36. rolled on. Wash. Irv. Times have indeed changed since the days when the decrees of the Medes and Persians altered not nor were changed. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIII, 512a.
events.
,
,
Sometimes the suppression may have been furthered by the nouns standing in juxtaposition in the same grammatical function. The afternoon studies proceeded as on other afternoons, but neither masters nor O r v. Col., Ch. Ill 42. boys felt at ease. Mrs. Wood Neither things nor scholars had shaken down into their routine. lb. 1 15. III. Even the presence of a specializing adjunct does not always cause the article to be used before these nouns. (12.) a) persons. Cape politics had been so disagreeable a subject that persons in Froude authority at the Colonial Office dismissed them from their minds.
II.
,
the Opposition saw, or thought they saw, a reflection Kath. Cecil exaggerated unconcern on the Ministerial benches. Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. I, 2. b) circumstances. With the aid of a few cartloads of sand, and a little imagination
in
the
they
the best of circumstances in their back garden. Punch. If their action were criticized, it would, he felt sure, be remembered that No. 1820, 9196. the circumstances had presented considerable difficulties.
make
Compare.
Times,
660
Thereafter
it
was no place
58. Certain
them
in the circumstances.
nouns are apt to assume the character of indefinite numerals, and, consequently, to reject the indefinite article. This applies especially to:
abundance. number.
families.
According to
Murray
'less correctly'
used
in reference to
of bread for themselves and their Amelia. 1 ) Fielding Providence had enriched him with abundance of poor relations. Wash. Irv.
, ,
Sketch-Bk.
galore.
154.
Now commonly
Compare
trade.
21.i)
Anthological volumes galore fill the present writer's shelves. T. P.'s Weekly, No. 492, 139c. legion, in allusion to Bible, Mark, V, 9: My name is legion: for we
is
legion.
Times.
quatrain)
the
(sc.
the
name
name
is
legion.
Tom Hood
Father John
and
their
is
legion
the age of
e a d.
92.
The
not yet over. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 133a. number of student-clubs is legion. Gunth. A
,
New
Eng. R
Note When
This legion is even used as a conjoint indefinite numeral. pouring o'er his legion slaves on Greece, The eastern despot bridged the Hellespont. Southey, Joan of Arc, X, 443. i) The poor curate's wife with the legion family clothed from the odds and ends of her rich sister's cast-offs. C.James, Rom. Rigmarole, 148. i) II. The following application of legion appears to be infrequent: In Austria, where the lecturer is as legion, nine times out of ten, be the subject what it may, he will drag in a reference to, or a digression on, England. Westm. Gaz., No. 6153, 4b.
I.
|
multitude.
In this application, apparently, rare. The suppression of the article may be due to rhythmical reasons. In multitude of counsellors there is safety. Bible, Proverbs, XXIV, 6.
number.
Modern
English.
,
Gram. 3
be
e
1
Instances are rare, and seem to be entirely wanting in Late Franz, Shak. Gram. 2 277; Abbot, Shak. 84. Compare the Dutch tal, as in tal van voor,
d e
n.
Belike
of his people.
Twelfth Night,
III,
3, 29.
Nor is this present Age void of number of Authors, who have on Architecture. Gerbier Counsel. 1 ). made part of the journey from Carlow to Naas with part.
written
more
I a well-armed gentleman from Kilkenny. Thack., Barry Lyndon, Ch. Ill, 50. Part of the service was intoned, part read, part sung. Mrs. Wood, Orville
College,
tricating
Ch.
I,
15.
a moderate fortune, part of which he expended from pecuniary difficulties and redeeming the family
in ex-
estate.
Mac, Clive,
J
)
(5106).
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
Note
(Ch.
I.
661
Part, as
179, 6,
XL,
in
these
quotations,
Thus
in the
is practically equivalent to some. two following quotations the two words are
used in precisely the same connections: I wish to spend some of the year in London. Mrs. Ward, Ma reel la, III, 244. lb. It would only be for part of the year. II. Part may even stand in the place of the conjoint some: Meanwhile Pam had gone part way down the side of the cloister. Baroness von HuTTEN,What became of Pam, Ch. IX, 64. III. Sometimes some part is used in practically the same meaning as either part or some. The Chase of Chaldicotes is to vanish from the earth's surface. Some part of it however, is the private property of Mr. Sowerby. Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. Ill, 19. The suppression of the article seems to be regular in the adverbial expression IV. in part Observe in whole as the opposite of in part. partly. If the charge is proved either in whole or in part, we imagine the French public will show itself less sentimental in these matters than ourselves. e s t m. Gaz., No. 6377, 2c.
,
V. Also the collocations great part, large part, and, according to Murray, most part, sometimes have the character of indefinite numerals, and, consequently, may dispense with the indefinite article. The omission seems to be regular in the adverbial phrases in great {large) part. Compare for a large (great) part. * Great i. part of her (sc. England's) wealth is hidden underground. Gunth., Leerb., I.
We
**
were at Oxford great part of last week. Whewell, Life (1881), 512. *) The country (sc. Russia) is still semi-Asiatic in great part. A then, No. 4482,2716. They are in large part a stage army. Westm. Gaz., No. 6005, 16. The year has been a bad one, but that is in large part due to the fact that in many trades increases in wages were long overdue. lb., 6377, No. 2c.
ii.
Gashleigh had lived a great part of her life in Devonshire. Thack. little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. II, (315). The floods which have laid a large part of Paris under water, have driven thousands of persons from their homes. Westm. Gaz., No. 5219 2a. These are the conditions in which a large part of the rural population live. lb., No. 6359, 16. ** He had played with secular politics for a large part of his life. lb., No. 6413, 2a. Compare: During a great portion of the day, Mark found himself riding by the
* Mrs.
V.
Trol., Framl. Pars., Ch. IV, 35. part is understood to indicate a distinctly detached portion, the indefinite article is used; but, as a comparison of the two following groups of quotations shows, the distinction between a part and part is often arbitrary, i. Lambert was obliged to tell a part of what he knew about Harry Warrington. Thack., Virg., Ch. XXVIII, 291. William by a feint of flight drew a part of the English force from their post of 4, 80. vantage. Green, Short H ist., Ch. II, Fragment as it (sc. Berwick) was, it was always viewed legally as representing the realm of which it had once formed a part. lb., Ch. IV, 6, 216. The South of Britain became a part of the Roman empire. George Craik,
side of Mrs. Proudie.
When
Man. of E
Dr.
n g.
i t. ,
3.
Morris has already made the discrimination of the Middle English dialects a part of historical grammar teaching. Sweet, N. E. Gr., Pref. 10. Explaining the etymology of grammatical terms ... is really no more a part of grammar than the etymology of such a word as 'oxygen' is a part of chemistry.
lb., 7.
is not a part of primary and necessary morality that a man. II. Lond. News, No. 3875, 128c.
It
J
it
is
always wrong to
hit
Murray.
662
CHAPTER XXXI,
58.
to give of herself to
man. E n
g.
Rev.,
Often, as part of his commercial training, a Liverpool youth will pass some years in a foreign land. Escott, England, Ch. VI, 85. I find it easier to imagine all that ugly past than you do, because I myself have
been part of it. W.Morris, News from No where, Ch. XXVIII, 211. They (sc. these ten volumes) form part of St. Martin's Illustrated Library. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 190a. The Empire of which his country now forms part. Times. They had played one of those tricks on the Opposition that have become part
of their regular Parliamentary
weapons.
Id.,
He conceives the Irish question as part of a big British Parliamentary problem. Westm. Gaz., No. 6371, \b. VI. Sometimes we find the definite article absent before greater part. She knew by heart All Calderon and greater part of Lope. Byron, Don Juan, I, xi.
|
After
my
life
in
poor working-class
district,
am now
plenty.
article
i.
American writers.
Murray.
Mr. Gunter, of Berkeley Square, supplied the ices, supper and footmen, though of the latter Brough kept a plenty. Thack S a m. T i t m. Ch. V, 50. If her ladyship had six (sc. children), I've a plenty for them all. lb., Ch.XIII, 172. A plenty of smoke was delivered from the council of three. Id., Newc. I, Ch. XXVI, 290. Remember to let it have a plenty of gravel in the bottom of its cage. Longfellow, Ka van a gh, 71.1) Note I. Plenty is in no way to be distinguished from an indefinite numeral, when it throws off the preposition of. The practice seems to be quite usual in certain dialects. Thus in Modern Scotch: There were plenty folk ready to help. I know of
ii.
,
, ,
plenty places to go to. Murray. He'd plenty other childer. Mrs. Gask.,
Mary Barton,
flaring heart
Out
II.
My
gave plenty
Masefield,
This also applies to plenty when used predicatively. In this case it is even found occasionally in the comparative and superlative. i. If reasons were as plenty as blackberries. Henry IV, A, II, 2, 265. And what may lawns, cypresses, and ribands fetch, where gold is so plenty? Scott, Kenilw., Ch. I, 16. They (sc. factory girls) can earn so much, when work is plenty. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. I, 7.
ii.
Wherever kicks and cuffs are plentiest. Le Fanu, T. O' Bri en, 84. i) Poets would be plentier. Lowell, S tu dy nd., 22. >) III. Of plenty used as an adverb of degree, no further instance than the following has been found: I'm seventeen, plenty old enough. Baroness von Hutten, Pam. III, Ch. V, 134.
ruck.
to
be
rare.
No
instances are
given
in
Th' carriages went bowling along toward her house, some w' dressed-up gentlemen like circus folk In 'em, and ruck o* ladies in others. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton,
Ch. IX, 94.
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
store.
663
Instances of suppression of the article are frequent enough in Shakespeare, even when an adjective or such precedes. Late instances seem to be rare. Franz, Shak. Gram. 2 277.
,
,
do nothing doubt you have store of thieves. Cymb. I, 4, 107. Oct. You may do your will, But he's, (sc. Lepidus) a tried and valiant soldier. Ant. So is my ;horse, Octavius; and for that, do appoint him store of
I
| |
provender.
Jul.
C ae
s.
IV,
30.
See also
1,
Taming
Com.
Vizard,
I,
of the
r.
,
Shrew.
1, 34.
111,2,785;
Two Gentlemen,
I,
108;
I
of E
III,
Prithee,
till
can't
you recommend a
can find
my own? You
1, (51).
Farquhar,
The Constant
Couple,
There were plenty of thistles, which indicates dry land; and store of fern, which is said to indicate deep land. Scott, Pirate, Ch. IV, 45. To make the miracle the more, Of these feathers there is always store. Southey, Pilgr. to Compostella, VII, 267. i) With store of rich apparel, Ah, dear, he took me from a goodly house, sumptuous fare. Ten., Mar. of Ger., 709. Note. Scott also has store after the noun modified, as in: And broadswords, bows and arrows store. Lady, I, xxvn. The race of yore, Who danced our infancy upon their knee, And told our marvelling boyhood legends store [etc.]. lb., Ill, i.
|
indefinite article in the following quotations: Of language he had more than ordinary share. Dixon, Life of Wil. Penn,
I,
33.2)
air
The
they
are,
am
told,
Life in
New Zealand,
bright-green parroquets flitting about, very mischievous taking large tithe of the fruit. Lady Barker, Station
51.2).
59. 2{alf almost regularly loses the (in)definite article, not only when it assumes the character of an adverb of quantity or degree, as in half
sum, half the men (Ch. V, r6, Obs. VII), but also when it partakes of the nature of an absolute indefinite numeral, as in half of the sum,
the
(Compare much of
the
preposition of, which is mostly dropped when a noun follows, is never suppressed before a personal pronoun, and rarely before a substantival demonstrative pronoun. Thus regularly half of us (you or them) not *half us (you or them) half of this (these that or those) Before a substantival clause rarely half this (these, that or those).
The
is regularly omitted, when the relative what is thrown off, rarely dispensed with, when the relative is retained. In the collocation at half price, half has the same meaning as in half the sum, notwithstanding the absence of the definite article before
(Ch.
XV) of
it
while
is
price,
and may
therefore
Half is a substantival indefinite numeral in such expressions as too Dutch veel te bij de hand knowing (clever, wild, etc.) by half (knap, wild, enz.). Half is also found preceded by the definite or indefinite article and followed by of, in which case it may be further modified by an adjective, as in the (a) half of the estate which fell to his share, the
i)
Murray
s. v.
more, A,
1, g.
-)
Ellinoer,
Verm. Beitr.
38.
664
latter
CHAPTER XXXI,
59.
which so far as the half of the last century. In this construction concerned, is quite common, it denotes a detached portion of whatever is referred to; and is, of course, a pure noun. This holds true also when one as the alternative of other precedes, and of follows, as in One half of the men were seriously ill, the other could not be prevailed upon to do any extra work. It is but rarely and, apparently, only to meet
, ,
definite article is
article (or
requirements of the metre that we find half preceded by the definite some other modifier), while of is suppressed. Compare also Ch. V, 1516, and see Ellinger, Verm. Beitr., 17;
the
MaTZN., Eng.
\)
Gram. 2
Ill,
180.
a)
half not preceded by either article and not followed by of, before a noun or the substitute of a noun: The silver rims won't
The
above half the money. Goldsmith, Vicar. blow is half the battle. Id., She Stoops to Conquer, I, I believe she owns Riv. I, 1. half the stocks. Sher. I traversed half the town in search of it. lb., I, 2. How could he spare half ten thousand pounds? Jane Austen, Pride
sell for
first
, ,
(181).
and
298.
Then
all
drew round
the hearth in
a circle, meaning half a one. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, m, 69. I never gave more than six guineas for a shawl in all my life. And Cornelia East Lynne, I, 39. never more than half six. Mrs. Wood And yet she held him on delayingly Trying his truth and his long-suffer,
|
ance,
/ff)
A before
half-another year had slipt away. Ten., Enoch Arden, 468. II. L o n d. News, reprint of the 'Encyclopaedia Britannica' at half price.
|
Till
do was accomplished.
is false.
his Sake,
y)
II,
Ch.
II, 34.
Westrn. Gaz.
No. 5083,
16c.
before
in
more than half what the South African war cost Great
Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXIX,
2)
a)
half not preceded by either article, but followed by of, before a noun: Regan advised him to go home again with Goneril and live with her peaceably, dismissing half of his attendants. Lamb, Tales,
Lear,
157.
at the street
The black cook spent half of the day Heyl. (Stof., Handl., I, 114).
With
For
that fortress
pump.
Wash.
Irv.
Do
to the Austrians.
Mac,
Ten.,
Fred.,
the
right
and
half
to
the
left
were seen.
usage in: If she should ever wed, she was sure the lord to she gave her hand, would want half her love, half of her care and duty.
148.
Lamb, Tales,
"I drink your health with cheerfulness, Mrs. Mann;" and he swallowed half of it. Dick, 01. Twist, Ch. II, 25. Half of you will be dead this time next year. Rudy. Kipl., The Light that failed, Ch. XI, 155.
before
personal pronoun:
y)
before
became
Ch.
sick before
had
18.
eaten half of
had bought.
De Quincey, Conf.,
II, 32.
said. Thack.,
S a m.
m., Ch.
II,
THE ARTICLE.
3)
665
half preceded by the definite. article, but not followed by of: And the half my men are sick. Ten., Revenge, I, vi.
And
half
then will
my
I Endow you with broad land and territory Even realm beyond the seas. Id., Lane, and El., 953.
.
to the
4)
half
preceded by other modifiers than either article, but not followed by of: She did not understand one-half the compliments which he paid. Thack., Van. Fair, II, Ch. XXVIII, 305.
It
is
all
impossible to muster one-half the nominal strength of the Unionists of shades. Rev. of Rev., CXCVI 3416.
,
5)
half preceded by either the definite or the indefinite article, and followed by of, a) before a noun. She had not forgot the half of the kingdom which he
had endowed her with.
(He)
(!)
Lamb.,
Tales, Lear,
i.
I
157.
left
before
personal pronoun:
,
ii.
he has had from your governor but this I can say make F. B. a happy man. Thack., Newc, I, Ch. I have asked about men in my company, and found under the flags were driven thither on account of Henry E s m o n d, III, Ch. V, 36.
a
will turn Christian.
the half
of
it
would
XXV,
that
284.
woman.
y)
before
I
<5)
before
of what
demonstrative pronoun: If the half of this Ch. Kingsley, Hereward, Ch. XIV, 60a. substantive clause wi th what: You have got
Thack., Virg., Ch. LV, 568.
the half
I have.
6)
half preceded by another modifier than either article and followed by of: One half of the men were seriously
Murray.
ill.
7)
half
in the
it
other's
economy
half.
in
,
selling
(sc.
Sher.
He is too moral by half, lb., IV, 3, (418). Bob was always too knowing by half. Thack. S a m. T t m. Ch. II 12. Note. On the analogy of half-an-hour, quarter-of-an-hour sometimes loses
,
Quarter-of-an-hour later the bell rang. Jerome, Paul Kelver, I, Ch. Ill, 26a. Inject it (sc. the serum) three times a day, quarter-of-an-hour before meals. Bern. Shaw, The Doctor's Dilemma, 1,24.
60.
Also double rejects the definite article, when its grammatical function changed to that of an adverb of degree or a substantival indefinite pronoun. The preposition of is thrown out before nouns, but mostly retained before substantival pronouns. (Ch. V, 16, Obs. VIII). See
is
also
i.
ii.
, HI, 180. double the money. Goldsmith, Vicar. Instead of having double the strength of our opponent, it is doubtful if we No. 4967 lb. e s t m. Q a z. shall hay,e even the equivalent strength. The majority which Mr. Asquith can claim is 275 and no more, and we shall not ask him to act, as if it were double that number. lb., No. 5237, 16. His (sc. a railway porter's) fees from the public ... are equivalent to doctor's fees in the second-class passengers, and double doctor's fees in the case of first. Bern. Shaw, The Doctor's Dilemma, Pref., 26. * She enclosed double of what I had asked. De Quincey, Confessions Ch. II 13.
Gram. 2
sell for
666
** In every instance
have
paid
for
the
You
have
paid
me
lie
speak
truth.
unfortunately
for Scand.,
V, 3, (435).
61.
Many other nouns discard the article owing to a change of meaning. The discussion of the numerous cases that might be mentioned here, falls outside the scope of this book, belonging rather to the department of lexicography, A few instances must suffice. Compare 15, a; 36, a; 62; and also Ch. XXV, 27.
ballet.
It
was suggested
in
in
this
too
much
(Compare:
3875, 135a).
evidence at Drury Lane. II. Lond. News, No. 3875, 134a. This has revived the taste for the ballet in England. lb., No.
Mr. Bonar Law also pays high compliment to the sincerity and courage of the Nationalists. Westm. Gaz., No. 6371, 3c. head. i. (He did not care) to what extent property was destroyed, or the pursuits of life suspended, so that he did but make head against the enemy.
compliment.
ii.
of the original war with Turkey appears to have caused a deplorable loss of head among (the statesmen). Westm. Gaz.. No. 6288, lc. The man had heart as well as head. II. Lond. News, No. 3884, 462c. leaf. Three or four sycamore trees, which were in full leaf,... served to relieve the dark appearance of the mansion. Scott, Abbot, Ch. IX, 92.
outline.
All
these
things
Ill,
are
248.
made
.
. .
clear
to
us in broad outline.
Hudson
Alfred
Russel Wallace
Westm. Gaz.,
the door,
II,
tongue.
G. Eliot,
Chubby was
Scenes,
It
I,
Ch.
25.
Note.
tribute.
Thus
is
Fowler,
Concise Oxf.
Diet.
impossible to withhold respectful tribute to his extraordinary skill Westm. Gaz., No. 4977, lb. in turning events to his own advantage. Compare: We are unwilling to conclude this notice of Professor Skeat's last piece of work without paying a tribute to the great services rendered by him
to the study of English.
Sedgefield (Mod. Lang. Rev., VIII, m, 295). The resistance gave way. Green. *) king's way. Note. Thus also to make way (for others), to make way (= to make progress)word. * He had himself carried word of the catastrophe to the firm's lawyers the previous day. John Oxenham, A Simple Beguile r. ** He had left word with little Jack that he was going a long walk. Mrs. Craik,
John
***
Hal., Ch. XV, 143. Maria and Sylvia sent down word by the maid that they were tired that morning. James Payn .That Friend of Sylvia's. **** He went on wrote you word. Jane Austen, Pride and Tuesday, as Prej., Ch. XLVII, 279.
I
"
I
Foels.-Koch
Wis. Gram.,
274.
THE ARTICLE.
THE ARTICLE SUPPRESSED FOR THE SAKE OF BREVITY.
62.
667
omitted where
strictly speaking, they are required by the sense. The suppression is mostly due to motives of economy, which urge speakers and writers to sacrifice all words of minor significance, but may also arise from the necessities of rhythm or metre or oratorical In many cases it may be a survival of the practice polish. (9, d; 15.) in the earlier stages of the language. (Sweet, N. E. Gr., 2061.)
to question whether it is the definite or indefinite understood. In not a few cases also there is no reason to prevent us from assuming the omission of a weak possessive pronoun. The reader is, therefore, cautioned to consult also Ch. XXXIII, where the supposed omission of the latter is discussed. In many cases the suppression causes the noun to appear in a modified meaning, or, contrariwise, the modified meaning causes the suppression
is
open
is
of the article.
63.
The suppression
the
of the definite article is chiefly met with, when noun stands without any individualizing adjunct, and is:
object.,
or
the
subject
of
passive
of
a prepositional
word-group.
either position the noun often forms a kind of unit with a preceding verb, e. g.: to balance accounts, to take into account. (9,d.) Of the innumerable cases which offer themselves for discussion, we
present only a few, which seem of particular interest. Some the instances of suppression mentioned in 15 might also find a 2 Compare also Matzn., Eng. Gram. Ill, 213; place in this
can
of
Ellinger,
especially
for
,
instances
267.
in
Shakespeare
C on
ci
se Oxf. Diet.
Currency,
**
the
of internal trade.
Westm.
into account
The Sultan has to take into account the fact that [etc.]. Times. Those individuals may almost be left out of account. lb. Note. Macaulay has to take into the account and to leave out of
the
account, probably regularly, instead of to take into account and to leave out of account, the phrases given by Murray, s. v. account, 14. We must take into the account the liberty of discussion. Mac. S o u t h e y,
,
(1186).
(Thus passim in this essay.) Nor did any landowner take them (sc
in estimating the value of his property.
the veins of copper) into the account Id., Hist., I, Ch, III, 311.
lb., Ill,
These transactions
alarm, a)
i.
..
must not be
,
left
Ch.
VIII, 132.'
taking alarm at once acceded to his desire to stay at home. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. Ill, 32. Voltaire's sensitive vanity began to take alarm. Mac. Fred., (6796).
timid soul
,
,
The
668
ii.
CHAPTER XXXI,
of
63.
take alarm.
the
clergy
were quick
take alarm.
to
Green, Short
Febr. 1912, 486; be the ordinary
if
H
I
IV, 309.
it
in
my
heart to
Eng. Rev.,
this
Note
I.
to take the
alarm, and
seems
to
to
expression.
and
seems
be rarely,
ever, dis-
pensed with.
He flung the sentinel over the ramparts, just as he Dick. .Adventures of a Galley-Slav e.
Ryder instantly gave the alarm. Con. Doyle
lb.
,
was going
to give the
alarm.
Sherl. Holm.,
Blue Carb.
You
II.
rifled the
Very rarely the indefinite article is used after these verbs. She... ran to Coggan's, the nearest house, and raised an alarm. Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ch. XXXII, 245. anchor, a) * They're heaving anchorl Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. XXVIII, 278. Going on board they hove anchor. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Hoi, Ch. XVI, 1326. ** He immediately weighed anchor for Deal. Westm. Gaz., No. 5036, 4b. Last Saturday the steamship Medina, having on board their Majesties,., weighed anchor at Portsmouth. Times, No. 1820, 922d. Note. Thus also regularly to cast anchor and to drop anchor, but to slip the anchor (= to let the anchor go by letting the cable slip), the ship drags her anchor.
Murray.
b)
A
s.
* A little In Mem., CHI 20. shallop lay At anchor in the flood. Ten. w. Enc. ship rides at anchor, when it is secured at its moorings. v. anchor.
|
Harms
**
To
anchor
= to
cast anchor, to
to to to
come to anchor. Murray. an anchor, as in: come to an anchor. Defoe Rob. Crusoe, 8. an anchor off the town. Three Pretty Maids.
, ,
arms, a) Bavaria took up arms. Mac. Fred., (6686). Note. Murray, s. v. arm 4, 5 and 6 has: to carry arms (= to wage war), to take up arms, to bear arms (=to serve as a soldier) to lay down arms; to order arms, to port arms to present arms , to shoulder arms to trail arms ; to slope arms and s. v. change 9 to change arms. * All the country and Europe were in arms. b) Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. XXVIII, 297.
, ,
**
fierce
Virago
cries.
Pope,
Rape, V
37.
Scott,
Abbot,
in het
Ch.
II,
The whole
force stood to
arms
half
Times. (=
Dutch
stond
The
geweer).
II.
infantry stood to
in Seville Cathedral.
arms on Lon
the occasion of
d.
News.
Note. Thus also to rise in arms, to be up in arms, under arms, to appeal to arms, a passage of (or at) arms, an assault of (or at) arms; man of arms, later man-at-arms, (one practised in war, a warrior), man-in-arms (armed man); but: Stand to your arms! (i. e. in order of battle, with arms presented). bank, b) Such men as Mills and Hodson offer help to a drowning man only when he has struggled to bank. R. Ashe Kinq, 01. Goldsmith, Ch. VIII, 90. battle, a) Edward resolved to give battle. Green. -) Note. Murray, s. v. battle 11, has to have keep, make smite strike battle
. .
.
bid (obs.), offer, refuse accept take (arch.), battle ; to join battle ; also, to do battle, (=to fight); to give battle (=to attack, engage). b) Far liefer had I gird his harness on him, And ride with him to battle and stand
(all
obs.)
to
by.
i)
Ten.,
M ar,
of Ger.,
94.
,
Ten Bruo.
Taa
t.
X.
-')
Foels.
Koch
Wis. Gram.,
279.
THE ARTICLE.
The
Liberals
will
669
Rev.
go
forth
to
of Rev.
block, b)
block.
ii.
i. But the Max. Pemb.,
woman answered that so fine a head should crown thee King, Ch. IV, 45.
I
.
never come to
to the block.
It was by bills of attainder Green, Short Hist., Ch. The King's uncle, the Earl
were brought
brought
actually
to the block.
lb.,
Ch. IV,
4, 215.
Note. The omission appears to be rare. blush, b) At first blush it may seem not
Bern. Shaw,
only necessary, but even indecent, to discuss such a proposition as the elevation of cruelty to the rank of a human right.
Pref.
Note.
at, on, etc. {the) first blush of his quotations is the article absent. b)
Murray has
(=
In
none
to keep watch and ward on board till noon. Ch. Kingsley, Ch. XVII, 1336. Note. Thus also within board, without board, over board (rarely over the board); but by the board. The phrase above board (often hyphened) in the sense of openily) also regularly without the article.
board,
He volunteered
Westw. Ho!,
book,
a)
Johnson
first
book,., the
will repeat to me to-morrow morning before breakfast, without chapter of the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Ephesians. Dick.,
107.
s.
v.
(=
in set
phrase) to
(=
is
to bring to account).
devils to boot.
Note.
as proud and vindictive as a hundred Douglases and a hundred Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. XXI, 221. To the boot, and into the boot, according to Murray (s. v. boot, l,b),
are Scotticisms.
of marrying your only daughter to a beggarly Jacobite bankrupt, the inveterate enemy of your family to the boot. Scott, Bride of Lam., Ch. XXI, 220.
do not believe we have touched bottom; believe the reduction will a) goon. Pall Mall Gaz., 1886, 22 April, 11/2. He (sc. Goldsmith) must indeed have touched bottom at Peckham, if Paternoster Row was an improvement upon it. Rich. Ashe King, 01. Goldsm., Ch. VI, 74. b) At bottom the character was severe and stern. Truth, No. 472, 6506. The world is good at bottom. Times, No. 1832, Hid. Note. With at bottom (= in reality, as distinguished from superficial appearances) compare to be at the bottom of (=to be the real author or source of), as in: The
bottom,
Jesuits
were at the bottom of the scheme. Mac, Hist., I, 387.1) For at bottom Murray gives at the bottom as a variant, but instances of the latter appear to be rare. bulk, b) Such knowledge can be obtained only by personal inquiry, directed not to men in bulk, but to the individuals who make up the mass. Times, No. 1822, 9636.
Note.
Thus
also
to
sell
in
i
bulk
(=
in
large
quantities,
as
it
is in
the hold).
Flugel has by the bulk (= m Ganzen, im Durchschnitt, durchgangig, in Bausch und Bogen). Compare also in the lump in the mass. channel, b) The flood was making strongly up channel. Blackmore. The Maid of Sker, I, 16.2) character, b) * But, Moses! would not you have him run out a little against the should think? Sher. School for annuity bill? That would be in character,
,
c a n d.
III
(390).
2
Murray.
Ellinger
Verm. B
a g e
36.
670
She can do
**
It
CHAPTER XXXI,
justice to
it
63.
(sc. the
Ode
to
an Expiring Frog),
sir.
She
will repeat
it,
in character, sir,
is
Dick., Pickw., Ch. XV, 129. always self-ignorance that leads a man to act out of character.
1, IV, 41.i)
to-morrow morning.
G.
Mason,
Self- K no wl.,
II,
gone upon
circuit.
Thack.,
Pend.,
the
chaps
I
,
at
Ch. Ill 33. He set out for a long aimless ride across country. II, Ch. I, 15.
Pend.,
Mrs. Alex.,
250
for
contempt of court.
II.
still at daggers drawn with his rich uncle? R. B. Brough, XXIV, 257.1) Note. The phrase at daggers drawn seems to have been evolved from (at) daggers (or daggers') drawing, an expression which appears to have gone out of use. Murray. A quarrel in a tavern where all were at daggers drawing. Swift, Drapier's
daggers,
b)
Was Marston
Marston Lynch,
Let.,
VII. i)
At daggers' points is an infrequent variant of at daggers drawn. Five minutes hence we may be at daggers' points. Dick., Little
Dorrit,
Ch.
XXX,
397a.
date, b) There is preserved at the back of a Lincoln corporation minute-book, under date of the sixth of Queen Elizabeth, a list of stage properties. Athen., No. 4477, 1666.
day.
b) Halbert
first sacrifice
The
I,
was only awakened by the dawn of day. Scott, Mon., Ch. XX, 232. was offered at the very peep of day. J. Parker, A post. Life,
118.1)
The
will vastly vary according to the time of day. Gunth., (Compare: By the clock we tell the time of the day. lb. 32.) Though waited at every hour of day and far into the night, no light footstep came to meet me. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. XXXVI, 216.
classes of
passengers
Leerboek,
I
74.
Note. The
ear. a)
. . .
article
is
a point of time.
He even went the length of offering to pitch his broad-brimmed hat and many-buttoned soutane into the bag ... if only she would give ear to him. John Oxenham,
Great-heart Gillian,
of sober
II,
Ch.
Ill,
23.
Some men
Wil.
b)
*
Dixon, Life of
1.
Penn,
He must
sound by
To
**
He had played
6)
i.
Compare: To
earth.
until they
from ear. El. Glyn, The down sounds from hearing. Sweet, Prim. Phon., 59. * They must infallibly have all gone rolling over and over together, reached the confines of earth. Dick., Pickw., Ch. XIV, 119.
write
The
But to return to the things and thoughts of earth. Lytton, Rienzi, II, Ch. HI, 88. rulers of earth were fain to swim with the stream. Ch. Kinosley, Hyp., Pref. ** Nothing on earth can give me a moment's uneasiness. Sher., Riv. II, i, (227). Dare any soul on earth breathe a word against the most angelical of women? Thack., Van. Fair, Ch. XVIII, 188. Now, why on earth should you be glad? Punch. Better than aught else on earth. Rid. Hag., The Brethren, Ch. II, 20. *** When the storm-time comes, the lower growths grimp close to earth and go unscathed, and the graceful palm may be laid low. John Oxenham, Great-
heart Gillian,
i)
Murray.
2)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitrage,
38.
THE ARTICLE.
ii.
671
of
all
was
the end
Men.
**
I
Rudy. Kipl.,
Wee
Bad
Willie Winkie.
love my Brethren,
cousin here better than aught else upon the earth. Rid. Hag., Ch. II, 20.
,
The
was not wanted in heaven or upon the earth. Jerome Paul Kelver, Ch. 14a. The suppression of the article would appear to be the rule after, (up)on, regular in the emotional on earth in negative and interrogative sentences. (Ch. XLI, Also after to the dropping may be practically regular. When, 10, Obs. Ill and IV.)
I
I,
Note.
however, no relation of place is expressed, as after of, the omission is less usual. Compare 17. Observe that there is no analogous suppression of the article before globe and world, which are often used in practically the same meaning.
edge,
b)
Note.
He Thus
Westm.
Gaz., No.
6029, 9c.
* Pay that hardly keeps him elbow(s). b) Ch. XXXVIII, 281. ** Bessie had seen him out at elbows before.
at elbows.
G. Eliot,
Mid.,
63.
IV,
Id.,
Bessie Costrel,
No. 2271
the
,
end.
ends,
b) a)
Each trunk
is
made
to
stand on end.
Graph.,
964.
Many
economy which
to practise to
make ends
meet.
T. P.'s
is
Note.
tation.
Weekly,
Graph.
.
.
.
Westm. Gaz.,
Note.
tioned
The
in
construction
It
without the
hardly
is
article (or possessive pronoun) is not mennecessary to say that the possessive pronoun is
b) Against {beyond, contrary to) expectation the man turned up at the right moment. fashion, b) i. * In true English fashion they won their markets at the point of the sword. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XVIII, 135a. ** To be in or out of fashion. To bring, come or grow into fashion. To go out of fashion. Murray, s. v. fashion, 11. The St. Mildred race used to be so much more in fashion. Miss Yonqe H e i r of Rede, I, Ch. I, 8. * Lord ii. Mayor's Day was observed on Wednesday in London in the traditional
,
fashion.
Times.
the
shells
They opened
by
fire,
instead
of
leaving
them
to
decay gradually
after the Arabian fashion. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 97a. ** He dressed usually in the Spanish fashion. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. II, 766. Note. To all appearance fashion stands with or without the article in the sense of manner, and to dispense with it in the sense of vogue (= Dutch z w a n g). When
denoting a mode or style of dress, furniture, speech, etc., as in the phrases to the article seems tO' be used regularly. it is the fashion lead or set the fashion Compare Murray, s. v. fashion, 11 and 10. favour, b) He was out of favour at Court. Athen. No. 4477, 165c.
,
,
Note.
flank,
the
Thus
also to be in favour.
to
in flank.
attempt their original plan of landing to the westward of Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1426.
flight.
To take flight. Murray, s. v. flight, 2. me here. Rarely with the article: My juvenal takes the flight, and leaves on., Ch. XXVII, 288. Scott; Both phrases, that with and without the article, are uncommon, the ordinary expression being ro take to flight.
Note.
672
CHAPTER XXXI,
63.
b) Thisbe, arriving first, perceived a lioness, which had just torn to pieces an ox, and , therefore took to flight. Deiohton, Note to Mi ds., I, 2, 12.
,
to
last the
Dick.
Ch
m.
Car.
5,
ffl,
67.
I
kept guard at intervals over Hector's room. Mrs. Craik, A Hero, 93. guard, a) ** The two young Cratchits, mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into their mouths, lest they should shriek for goose. Dick., Chri stm. Car. 5,
III,
67.
Let an intelligent policeman be told off to mount guard. *** Her one after another relieved
Punch,
Thack.,
dependants
.
.
guard.
Henry Esmond,
b)
Ch. IV, 32. has The Kaiser drawn public attention to the misgivings and apprehensions which prevail in military circles in Germany as to dangers against which they need to be on guard. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX, 97b.
I,
.
.
Note.
be,
ordinary practice is to place the possessive pronoun before guard: to The lie (up)on one's guard; to put or set a person on his guard. possessive pronoun is regular in off one's guard.
The
stand or
*
He had promised to be at hand in case anything was needed. Edna Ch. XXXVIII, 375. Lyall, The hour was at hand to which Campion had been looking forward so impatiently. Anstey, A Fallen Idol, Ch. VI, 86. The man with whom the Colonial Office deals at first hand. Spectator. The custom of adopting Latin words at second hand. Bradley, The Making of Eng., Ch. Ill, 93. ** He was brought up by hand. Dick., 01. Twist, Ch. II, 22. *** By this time he had himself pretty well in hand. Edna Lyall, A Knight Errant, Ch. XXIX 272. This will be done with much greater ease, if the matter is taken in hand at an early
hand,
b)
A Knight Errant,
stage.
T i'm e s.
106.
Orders
****
Whiteley. will only be executed to the amount of cash in hand. What have you on hand just now? Con. Doyle, Sherl. Holm., I, ***** He was executed out of hand. Huxley, Lect. and Es. 1136, N. The Turkish troops have got completely out of hand. Rev. of Rev. ****** The first that comes to hand. Goldsmith, Good-nat. man, III. The latest news to hand is [etc.]. D a y T e
,
i
1.
must be on horse before cock-crow. Scott, Mon., Ch. XXXIV, 369. hounds. 6) He had lived, all his life, a country gentleman,... riding to hounds and shooting all things that were to be shot in their season. W.J. Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing, Ch. Ill, 44. house, a) Lady Ethelrida Montfichet had kept house for her father. El. Glyn
horse. 6)
I
to stay in the house, as in sickness. Note. Compare to keep the house key. b) The excitement of the departure puts him in key for that of the arrival. Stephenson, Walking Tours. eaf. 6) The French Renaissance put forth their finest flowers, before the Elizabethan era was well in leaf. Sidney Lee The French Renaissance in England,
,
I,
Ch.
I, 6.
|
length. 6)
o'er.
* While stretched at length upon the floor, Again I fought each combat Scott, M a r m., Ill, n t r. vm. "* She now took the occasion of a momentary amelioration in Arthur's disease to write to him at length. Lytton, Night and Morn., 479. *** At length she spoke, "O Enoch! you are wise". Ten., En. Ard. 210.
I
,
THE ARTICLE.
673
Note. For at length in the first application modern practice mostly has at one's full length. For at length in the third application Early Modern English also had at the length: At the length truth will out. Merch. of Ven., II, 2, 72.
* What he b) proposes carries out his promises in letter and in spirit. m. G a z. Sir Robert Peel's apostrophe to the Conservatives was reproduced in spirit if not in letter by Mr. Balfour in his speech at the Primrose League demonstration at
letter,
t
Wes
Hatfield.
Graph.
Wilson's pledge
.
** Pres.
. .
will
,
in
the
letter
but
only
in
the letter.
16c).
s. v. letter,
5;
The phrase
in the letter
Note also:
to
the
letter,
as in:
to the letter.
Lytton,
Rienzi.
II,
Phaeton,
In
Scotland
used
to
394.1)
The suit is more likely to be bought ready-made than 'made to measure'. Mayhew, Lond. Lab., 1,476 2. i) mode, b) At any rate card-playing is out of mode. Thack. V r g. Ch. XXIV, 253Note. Thus also in mode. According to Murray (s. v. mode, 10), the definite article may be used in these phrases, which are now obsolete. night, b) Wo buys flowers at this time of night? Galsworthy, The Pigeon, I, (10). Note. What has been said of day also applies m. m. to night. occasion, a) He took occasion to inquire about the portrait that hung against the wall. Wash. Irv., Dolf H ey (Stof., H a n d 1,144). He had taken occasion to express his opinion of Lady Bracknell in the most unequivocal terms. Norris, My Friend Jim, Ch. XVIII, 109. Who knew the seasons when to take Occasion by the hand. Ten., To the Queen. Compare: She now took the occasion of a momentary amelioration in Arthur's disease to write to him at length. Lytton, Night and Morn., 479.
,
***
1.
On
returning to the inn, Dr. Riccabocca took the occasion to learn from the Novel, I, Ch. IX, 33. innkeeper... such particulars as he could collect. Id., I seized the occasion of a promenade. Thack. H e n r y E s m. III Ch. XIII 445. Compare: 40 and 73, and see also Ch. XIX, 49, Obs. VI.
My
opposition, b) When that gentleman was in opposition. Thack., Van. Fair, Ch. X, 97. Lord Loughborough ... was now in opposition. Mac, War. Hast., (651a). They are in opposition and not in office. Westm. Gaz.
,
I,
The Prime
order, b) Mr. Blotton (of Aldgate) rose to order. Dick., Pickw. Ch. I, 3. Minister of Great Britain called Europe to order; and Europe recognized the voice of authority. Sat. Rev. Note. Thus also: The speaker (or motion, etc.) is not in order or out of order.
Murray.
570. a. To take part Against Olympius. Chapman , Iliad, There wanted not those who were willing to acquire the favour of the lady of Avenel by Abbot, taking part with the youth whom she protected. Scott
part.
Ch.
Ill,
39.
Mac.
Addison,
(772a).
Murray.
H.
II.
43
674
Note.
to
CHAPTER XXXI,
63.
Murray also has to take the part of, practically in the same meaning as take part with. Thus also with a possessive pronoun: he took my (your, his,
b) The Commons House of Parliament has many Rev. of Rev., CXCVIH 5666.
,
etc.) part.
pickle, Peers.
after
apparently, regularly in this saying. Compare, however: It was only good word of glad tidings had been said, that the rod was taken out of the pickle. Mrs. Lynn Linton, Rebel of Family, H,vn. J ) pike, a) She saw the boy attempt, with a !ong stick, to mimic the motions of the warder, as he alternately shouldered, or ported, or sloped pike. Scott, Abbot,
Note. Thus,
the last
Ch.
Ill,
27.
In the later
possession, a)
of Dacia.
empire they
(sc. the
Deiohton,
Note
to 'As
you like
111,3,9.'
Note.
post,
Thus
b) A letter from Lady Florence to her sister had arrived by first post two days before the event. Aon. & Eg. Castle, Diam. cut Paste, III, Ch. I, 232. Note. This seems to be an exceptional case, although the article is regularly absent, when no ordinal numeral precedes. b) The Cape Colony, as we ought to know, but in practice we always was originally a Dutch colony. Froude, Oceana, Ch. Ill, 42. Note. Thus also regularly in to put in (or into) practice, to reduce to practice;
practice,
forget,
press, b)
to the
used instead. The definite article regularly stands in other combinations analogous above, such as to bring (put, commit, send, submit) to the press; to carry (see) through the press; to come (to pass, undergo) the press; to correct the press
the printing, or the errors in
(=
composing
.
. .
the type).
. .
Murray,
s. v.
press, 13,
e.
had given proof of how far his Chaucer proof, a) Long before this date genius preceded his age by several examples of composition in prose. George Craik,
.
Man. of Eng.
question,
Lit.
**
It
.
Lit.,
184.
is
b)
Every crow
swan
to
this
writer,
when
Liszt is in question
World.-)
.
tive
was not till comparatively a late period that the general accuracy of his narrawas brought into question. Scott ,Pref. to 'The Bridal of Trier.
m
I
n'.
shall
Heyden and
his
I.,
com134).
Wash.
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.
,
(Stof.,
Hand
,
I,
Note.
into
Thus
also
to
come
question
article
is
seems
never
to
into question (Murray s. v. question 1 d). be uncommon: Instead of to call into question
To bring
we mostly
Murray,
s.
v. call,
18.
The
of the question.
Observe
(371a).
dropped in out of the question, as in: Inviting him was out Thack., A Little Dinner at Timmins's, Ch. (306). also: He could not lawfully be put to the question. Mac, Bacon,
I ,
(=
a)
*
tortured.)
rein,
II,
rein.
Mrs. Alex.
W. Morris,
News from
XI.
)
Nowh.ere.
,
Murray.
-')
X.
THE ARTICLE.
** 'And
yet',
675
No. XXI.
i)
Note.
is to
Murray has to give {the) rein(s) to. Apparently the ordinary construction give the reins to. The article and the plural form of rein seem to be regularly used in other phrases analogous to the above. * Bulstrode holds the reins and drives him. G. Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XLVI, 334.
**
No man
ever more
Opie, Lect.
***
on Art,
He could afford to let the reins loose at times. **** Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman took up
No. 1819, 894a. ***** To give
jt
Mrs. Craik
the
A Hero,
office.
24.
reins
of
Times,
that
degree 0I prominence
II
,
is to
82. i)
Observe
the cabinet.
also
They gave a
Times.
attempt at rescue.
are
rescue, b) He had undoubtedly been concerned Short Hist., Ch. XXII, 317. Note. Compare the phrase to the rescue as the rescue Byron, Mar. Fal., IV, u, (3766).
: ! I
M c Carthy,
ho
!
in
The Genoese
40.
come
to
See also
rest,
6)
There
III,
the
17.
rest.
Bible, Job,
Our suspicions can now be set at rest. Mrs. Wood, East Lynne, Set your mind at rest. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch, VIII.
** Alarbus goes to rest
,
|
and we survive To tremble under Titus' threatening looks. Tit. A d r. 1,1, 133. Four years ago the mortal remains of Francis Thompson were laid to rest. T. P.' s Weekly, No. 472, 652a. Note. At rest has no variants with a modifier before rest; but for to go to rest and to be laid to rest we frequently find, respectively: to go to one's (long) rest and to be laid to one's (long) rest: Long ere they were within sight of land, Lucy Passmore was gone to her rest. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XXVII, 2096.
The
old
warrior
to his
I
was
laid
to
his
long rest
in the
Times.
He went
risk,
long rest
at
Rev. of Rev.
a)
scarcely
know what
10.
more
I
rational
had; but they ran risk of being hardly that child's mind must have been. Ch. Bronte,
Villette, Ch.
thought she ran risk of incurring such a careless, impatient repulse. lb., Ch. 111,31. Note. The suppression of the article seems unusual and is not recorded by Murray who gives to run the risk and to run a risk.
,
saddle. 6)
Ch. I, ** He
8.
* Kit
Pam
the Fiddler.
gathered the reins into his hand, and got to saddle. lb., 16. Get up to saddle. lb., Ch. VI, 76. Note. Murray does not mention these combinations and the dropping of the article or possessive pronoun may be rather the exception than the rule. Observe also the figurative phrases in the saddle, to get into the saddle, to cast out of
,
saddle.
Murray, s. v. saddle, 2. He who hath achieved nobility by his own deeds, must ever be Scott, Abbot, Ch. Ill, 30. Wash. Irv., Dolf sail, a) There was a vessel ready to make sail.
in the saddle.
Hey
sa/7.
I.
(Stof.,
123).
also
to
etc.'*
Murray,
sa/7, 2.
676
CHAPTER XXXI,
63.
sea. 6) He is quite at sea, he does not know what else to do. G. Eliot, Mid., IV, Ch. XL, 299. War at sea is analogous to war on land. Westm. Gaz. No. 6288, 116. Although fairly well acquainted with "Hamlet", I found myself constantly at sea.
,
lb.,
**
off,
sailing
away beyond
Dick.
the
,
sea.
Ch. BrontE,
Villette,
***
He made his way by sea to Naples. Commanders who by sea or land upheld
Cop,
Ch. L , 3556.
honour
of the country.
Times.
more than four
****
On
sea
number
of possible communications.
little
Westm. Gaz.,
months on the
*****
No. 6288,
116.
sea.
Mac.
War. Hast.,
Ch. Kinosley,
Westw. Ho!,
Titbits.
r
Ch. XVII
1336.
sea or seas; on or upon the sea; over (the) sea to put (put off, put out, stand out) to sea. Compare: over the sea, as in: He could look out over the sea. (John Oxenham, Great-heart Gillian, Ch. XII, 81), with: By the help of canvas wings ... [he] proposes to fly oversea from Dover to Calais (H. Brooke, Fool of Qual. IV, 2'), and with: Now living oversea in a quiet farmstead (Daily C h r o n.). J ) The article does not seem to be thrown out after out of: The outside light striking on her eyes, made them like green stars looking up out of the sea. John Oxenham, Great- He art Gillian, Ch. XI, 76.
A liner like the New York puts to Note. Murray has beyond (the)
You have passed sentence upon and marked with disgrace your officer Hunter, Note to 'Jul. Cass., IV, 3, 2'. ** She sat on the bench, (sc. Lady Anne Berkeley) opened the Commission, impannelled the jury and when the verdict was given pronounced sentence.
,
,
1.
Lond. News,
Note.
(upon).
1895
786a.
Thus, according to Flugel (s. v. sentence) also to give or pass sentence Compare also: St. Ogg's passes Judgment. G. Eliot, Mill., VIII, Ch. II.
to shut
,
up shop. Fowler Concise Oxf. Diet. sense of to cease to do business we also find to shut up the shop: He shut up the shop altogether. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 16. And what will you do with yourself when you've shut up the shop? W. J. Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing, Ch. Ill, 44.
shop, a)
Note.
In
the
shore, b) * Built upon a dismal reef of sunken rocks, some league or so from shore, ... there stood a solitary lighthouse. Dick. C h ri s t m. Car."', Ill, 75.
,
more on shore. *** Heaven help him!" quoth Lars Porsena, "And bring him safe to shore. Lays, Hor., LX11I. Then the watching boat trailed home to shore. Westm. Gaz., No. 6023,
are once
|
we
Mac,
36.
Payable at (or after) sight. sight. 6) He liked to create the impression that he could read any classical author at sight.
Barry Pain,
,
The Culminating
,
Point.
have believed at first sight that he was nine years older. Mar. Crawf. Kath. Laud. I, Ch. I, 8. (Note the difference with at sight.) The National Convention has agreed upon a scheme which at first sight seems bold and original. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVI1I 513a.
,
No one would
')
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
**
***
677
,
We
A
walk by
a
faith
not by sight.
Bible, Cor., B
V,
7.
To know
****
man by
in sight.
Jerome, Idle
Thoughts,
Wing,
Ch.
VI, 73.
to
48.
They ought
Ill,
be
shot on sight.
W.
J.
Locke,
The Glory
of
Clem
***** Out of sight out of mind. Prov. ****** Though lost to sight, to memory dear.
Till the bird
Prov.
to her Ch. XXVII, 2096. Note I. At the sight and at the first sight do not lose the article, when they have distinctly the value of an adverbial clause of time, as in: She pointed to the old goat whose legs were hobbled, and so evidently cursed her, Great-heart Gillian, that both girls laughed out at the sight. John Oxenham
rest.
was lost to sight in the clouds. Titbits. ******* Long ere they were within sight of land, Lucy Passmore was gone
Ch. Kinqsley,
Westw. Ho!,
Ch. II, 15. (=when they saw this.) His timidity struck me at the first sight.
Goldsmith,
She Stoops,
111,(197).
(= when
sight
II.
i.
I first
saw him.)
: .
Observe,
of,
II
,
as
however, the absence of the article in the prepositional expression at in Sir Roderick Reddened at sight of Malcolm Graeme. Scott,
. .
|
Lady,
xxvii. in:
is their
At first sight is equivalent to the idioms illustrated Nor, strange as it may appear at a first glance, understand. Good Words. (Stof., L e es b., I,
It
contentment hard to
74).
ii.
iii.
appears at the first blush that [etc.]. Lytton, Caxtons, XII, Ch. VII, 328. present antagonists appeared at the first glance more evenly matched than the last. lb., Ill, Ch. II, 137.
The
silence, a)
**
i.
"Could you
Ch.
lick three
1 ,
men?"
Morgan
Joseph Vance,
2.
ii.
The playwright (requires) us to suppose that a man would keep silence .... about facts which could only distress temporarily a dead person's family. 1 1. L o n d. News, No. 3879, 274c. Hardy Far from the Madding Crowd, Gabriel broke the silence. Ch. VIII, 67. the Fiddler, It was the Queen who broke the silence. Hal. Sutcl.,
,
Pam
Note.
Murray has
the alternative
Still
practice,
must thy
i.
Jane Eyre,
281.
is
disturbed in spirit.
Thack.,
Newc,
I,
Ch.
XXV,
ii.
No. 1820, 919o. the party were united in spirit. am standing in the spirit at your elbow. Dick., Chris tm. Car. Dick had turned northward across the park, but he was walking in the spirit on Rudy. Kipl., the mud-flats with Maisie. Light t h a t f a i 1 e d, Ch. V, 61.
felt that
I
He
Times,
The
spirit and in the spirit are used as opposites of in the flesh and in (the) letter, the latter being, apparently the more frequent, except when used in conjunction with either of the last-mentioned phrases. See also under letter.
Note.
Both
in
Thack.
Va
Fa
I ,
Ch, VI
54
spur, a)
i.
to
few
to his horse ,... fairly broke his way into the middle of the phalanx. Scott, Q u e n t. Durw., Ch. XXXVII, 461. ** Black's Sir Walter Scott's Read., Setting spurs to his horse.
The Abbot,
48.
678
CHAPTER XXXI,
63.
*** Foker striking spurs into his pony, cantered away down Rotten Row. Thack., Pend., II, Ch. II, 28. **** Carver Doone thrust spurs into his flagging horse. Blackmore, Lorna Doone, Ch. LXXIV, 507.
.
.
ii.
He put the spurs to his horse. Hall Caine, Deemster, Ch. Note. The construction with the article seems to be unusual.
stable,
b)
VI, 52.
He put
Hal. Sutcl.,
Pam
the Fiddler,
rule.
suppression
is
command
of the sea.
Westm.
The suppression of the article is practically regular. In the following quotation it is inserted for the sake of the metre: Is not to stir without great argument, But greatly to find Rightly to be great quarrel in a straw, When honour's at the stake. I., IV, 4, 56.
Note.
Ham
street, b)
Note.
tale,
Working the steam down street as well as The absence of the definite article in
he.
this
Hughes,
Tom Brown,
in
26. 1 ).
combination appears to be
very rare. b)
,
The
All
Mac.
Hist., XXII
were
tiptoe
to
be received by tale
expectation
to
payment
of taxes.
tiptoe, b)
Europe was on
with
see
how
,
Philip
would
avenge himself.
Motley Rise.
,
He followed his cousin on tiptoe. Hughes, Tom Brown at Oxf. Ch. XXXII. -) Note. Flugel (s. v. tiptoe) has to be on tiptoe in expectation, to be a tiptoe with expectation, and to be on the tiptoe of expectation. The House is now waiting on the tiptoe of expectation for the Budget. Westm. Gaz., No. 4967 4c.
,
Compare
Nursing,
Mrs. Berry
top.
b)
also
38.
-')
Do
room
not
tiptoe.
Flor.
Nightingale
left
the
tiptoe.
G.Meredith, O
and
flat
r d.
246.
at top.
Wash.
Sketch-Bk.
Leg.
of
Sleepy Hollow,
No
*
I
Note.
trial, b)
have him on trial. Mrs. Alex., For his sake, I, Ch. XV, 243. ** He was determined to put their mettle to trial. Smol. , Rod. Rand., Ch. II, 14. Note. Thus also, according to Flugel: the hour of trial, by way of trial. Compare also: His fortitude was not put to the proof. Steph. Gwenn Thorn. Moore, Ch. I, 12. It is .. becoming more common at our public schools for a newly appointed assistant
,
to
come
at first
upon probation.
in view.
Times.
view.
view, b)
**
Graph.
Ch.
1 ,
Directly
5.
When any
The
national object is in view. Times. Government has also in view a system of Labour Exchanges.
Westm.
,
Gaz.,
No. 5107, 2a. *** They passed the Headland and were lost to view. lb. No. 6023 3a. Note. Flugel (s. v. view) also has at first view, to take from view , in full view open to inspection. of the assembly, to keep in view. Fowler mentions on v/eiv Life of C h. water, b) * It has kept my head above water. Mrs. Gask.
,
Bron
** Sir
306.
No. 383
garden,
')
Roger and the Spectator go by water to Vauxhall Gardens. Spectator had promised to go with him on the water to Spring(Compare:
I
lb.)
Ellinger
Verm. Beit r.
36.
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
*** He
like
felt
679
air,
fish
he would
for
swim about
1911,
4c.
in
it
Numb,
(Note
,
the
different practice observed in into the air and in water). **** He took the horses to water. Wash. Irv., Sketch-Bk.
XXXII
346.
i
window,
Ch. XXIII
,
b)
Thack.
a n.
Fa
237.
to be due to an excessive desire of brevity, and except in the phrase to turn the house out of window (= Dutch net huis op stelten zetten). Compare: I threw out of the window everything he possessed. James Payn , G 1 o w.-W o r m Tales, II, D, 55. She looked out from the window. Dick., Christm. Car. 5, IV, 96.
is
Note.
not usual
work. H; promptly sets his solicitor to work. Westm. Gaz. Note. Thus also at work. In the following quotation the use of
to the distinctly specialized James set himself energetically
111.
the article
is
due
to the work.
Mac, Hist.,
at this
year,
year.
good deal
of fog
W. Black
time of
66.
The grass is wonderfully green for this time of year. Gunth. Note. The suppression of the article seems to be confined to
this or that (the) time
e e r b.
the collocation
64.
Some groups
has fallen out
a)
tive
,
of
ttie
definite article
or
partially
,
converted
at
dark,
at full
in
at
in
large,
the positive of an adjeca noun; e.g.: after dark; at present, at random; for good; in
into
in general, in little, in particular, in short, in special; of late, of old; on high etc. For illustration see Ch. XXIX, 11; 12, c; 22, Obs. VII and VIII.
common,
full,
future,
b)
Such as are made up of the preposition at + superlative of an adjective partially converted into a noun; e. g. at best, at earliest,
:
at farthest (or furthest), at fewest, at first, at last, at latest, at least, at longest, at most, at widest, at worst, etc. Most of these are
found with the article, the two constructions sometimes expressing different shades of meaning. Jespersen (Mod. E n g. Gram., 6,36) ascribes the loss of the article in these combinations
also
to phonetic decay: at representing Middle English atte English at fie. For a discussion see Ch. XXX, 38. Such as are made up of a preposition -f superlative 4- noun. suppression seems to be rather the exception than the rule.
Old
c)
The
Com-
E n g. Gram.-, 111,205; and especially 9. Beitr., 37 and Dubislaw, Beitr., Their friendship dated from earliest youth. Motley, Rise, I, Ch. II, 776. Here was nerve that was truly wonderful, restoring calm and confidence in an assembly where men's nerves were at highest tension. Westm. Gaz.,
pare 20, e and see Matzn.,
Ellinger,
Verm.
a noticeable fact that, after a full-dress debate, been stretched to the highest pitch the benches next day are scantily attended. lb., 46.) The realisation of this ambition has received the careful attention of inventors
(Compare:
It
is
when
everybody's
nerves
have
earliest times.
30a.
680
From
earliest
,
clothed
people.
Graph.,
9626.
it
Sometimes
appears
article.
is
to
be
it
Thus
the
definite
a) in
many
and
to,
sometimes
till y
1)
such
i.
as
denote a period:
, ,
From morn to noon from noon to dewy eve. Bain H. E. G r. He was tippling and tipsy from morning till night. Thack., Pen
II
,
d.,
Ch. XXXVIII
II,
404.
Thirty
masses consumed
Ch. VI, 109.
filled
the
till
morn.
Lytton
Rienzi,
Westw. Ho!,
ii.
1
Ch. Kingsley,
Ch.
His eye had been on the work from commencement to close. Bronte, Vi 1 e tte, Ch. XIX, 247.
iii.
He stayed from first to last. Times. (Sometimes with the article r His work from the first to the last lay chiefly among the Submerged Tenth. Rev. of Rev., CCXXX 232a.)
,
2)
such as denote a space or distance I'll undertake to read you the whole from beginning
:
i.
to end.
Sher.
Critic, He made
the
(450). a bet of a
,
1 ,
bowl
of
punch
:
Daily
from beginning
article
1
whole
of
News.
play,
ii.
from
did not see a fault in any part of the Sher. , Critic, I, 1, (450).
just
The Northwest
1
100 miles.
first
Times,
will
iii.
My
aim
be to clean
cellar.
iv.
Ch. Bronte
Jane
to
v.
is Royal from flagstaff to floor. II. Lond. News, No. 1812, 712. Frank trembled from head to foot. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1456. He trembled from head to foot. T. P. s Weekly, Christ m.
The Academy
'
Numb.,
vi.
After
from
Ch.
start
to finish.
vii.
viii.
Lond. News,
stall.
Thack.,
Pend.
I,
II,
20.
s. v.
From
pillar,
pillar
11.
to
post (originally
from post
to
pillar) ^Murray,
Thus
Note.
in
also: To
to
live
from hand
to
lived
from hand
12.
The above expressions bear a close resemblence to those which the two nouns standing after from and to (till) are identical,
such as:
)
P)
from week's end to week's end. (Ch. XXIX, 24, d). He was sent from school to school. Mac, Clive,
(4986).
THE ARTICLE.
The
tale
is
681
to end an ingenious invention. 1. R. Ashe Kino , Ch. V, 53. In these, however, there is rather an ellipsis of one... another (or the other) than of the definite article. (Ch. XL, 155-6.)
from end
Goldsmith,
b)
in
many
two nouns, only the second of which is preceded by a preposition. Most of them have the value of a nominative absolute. (Ch. V,
10, b, 2.)
i.
Doolan's paper was lying on the table cheek-by-jowl with Hoolan's paper. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXX, 325.
ii.
The Nationalists sat cheek- by-jowl with the Tories. Westm. Gaz., No. 4943, 5a. Mr. Gladstone was working hand in glove with a Russian lady against the
Government
of his
own
country."
278a.
ili-
heard
that
me.
Titbits,
1895,
9 Nov., 92c.
iv.
v.
There sat a reporter pencil in hand to take down his words. Murray s. v. hand, 29. He must die some day sword in hand. Ch. Kinosley, Westw. Ho!,
Ch. XIX, 147*.
expressions, when the two nouns are identical, to shoulder, etc., it is more plausible to assume the ellipsis of one ... another or (the other). See Ch. XL, 155-6. 11. An adverb sometimes takes the place of preposition noun. The Boers won hands down. Rev. of Rev., CCVII 2326. The straddling bowman lost his left foothold and went over head downwards. Chesterton The Free Man (T. P. s Christ m. Numb, for 191 1, 4c.)
Note.
in
Also
in
these
as
arm
in
arm, shoulder
'
c)
in many adverbial expressions containing two nouns the first preceded by various prepositions, the second by of as the substitute of a genitive.
In
many
meaning
of the
words
is
dimmed, so
value to prepositions. Such are on account of, in advance of, in aid of, in behalf of, on behalf of, in case of, in company of, in consequence of, in consideration of, in contravention of, under cover of, in default of, in defence of, in defiance of, in despite of, by dint of, in favour of, by force of, for (from) lack of, in lieu of, by
that they approach
means
in
of,
(up)on pain
at
in
quest of,
right
of,
of,
the
rate of,
of, etc.
in
search
point of, in praise of, in pursuance of, by reason of, in regard of, in respect of, of, in spite of, in time of, by (or in) virtue of,
of, in
for want
In
by way
component
(the)
some, hardly differing from the above, the individual meaning of the parts is more sensibly preserved, so that they more or less regularly retain the article before the first noun. This is the case with: on
charge of, at the cost of, in (the) course of, at (or by) the desire of, for the of, in (the) event of; with the exception of, in (the) face of, on the face of, by (the) favour of, in (the) front of, at the hand(s) of, by (the) help
ends
of,
in the middle of, in the midst of, in the name of, (up)on {the) occasion of, at ("or by) the order(s) of, (up)on the part of, in (the) place of, to the point of, in (the) presence of, (up)on (or under) (the) pretence of, in (the) room of, for (the) sake of, on the score of, with a, show of, by the side of, at (the) sight of, in (the) stead of, on the
strength
of,
on the subject
of,
on (the) top
of, at the
682
top
of,
CHAPTER XXXI,
at the
65.
urgency
of,
on the view
of,
by (the)
way'^of, etc.
The discussion
the
above
to
lists,
than
the
of the word-groups belonging to one and the other of belongs rather to the chapter dealing with prepositions present. For numerous Ulustratiofls see also Ellinger,
31.
Verm.
d)
in
Beitr.,
adverbial expressions containing two (or more) nouns connected by and, which denote things often thought of together or as a whole, or which express two aspects of one and the same thing, or which are put together for the sake of -assimilation or assonance or both.
many
1)
These mostly express a preposition. circumstances, generally of an intensive import. we may also assume In many of the combinations illustrated below a possessive pronoun to be understood. bag and baggage. Here's Klaas Klimmer come in, bag and baggage, from the farm. Wash. Irv., Dolf Heyl. (Stof., H a n d 1., I, 113). (Compare, however: Come, shepherd, let us make an honourable retreat; though not with bag and baggage, yet with scrip and scrlppage. As you like it, HI,
Such as do not contain any
of relation
attendant
2, 170.)
body and bones. See Ch. V, body and soul. (Ch. V, 10,
marck.
T. P. s
'
10, b,
1.
Week
,
b):
2b.
hammer
as ever.
at it,
hammer and
Barry Pain
Miss Slater.
we
shall be at
it,
hammer and
Westm-
hand and foot. See Ch. V, 10, b, 1. head and shoulder. See Ch. V, 10, b, 1. heart and soul. (Ch. V, 10, b, 1): Carlo Emmanuelle
heart and soul, into the national movement towards Italian Year, Ch. II, 23.
liberty.
III...
threw himself,
Rich.
Bagot,
My
hip and thigh. The Saxons would have been smitten, hip and Besant, London, 1,30.
thigh.
Walt.
See Ch. V,
10, b,
1.
lock, stock and barrel. He repudiated Protection and Food taxes, lock, stock and barrel. Rev. of Rev., No. CXCVI, 3416.
neck and crop. See Ch. V, 10, b, 1. root and branch. See Ch. V, 10, b,
tooth and
great
nail.
1.
As they had
violence
at
it
to their
own
z.,
fasted since the middle of the day, they did no inclinations in falling on it (sc the supper), tooth
and
I
Ch. XLII1, 3336. Id., Cop., Ch. XLII. The whole profession in Middlemarch have set themselves, tooth and the Hospital. G. Eliot, V, Mid., Ch. XLIV, 325.
nail.
go
Dick., tooth
Ch
and
nail.
nail, against
Note.
I.
Sometimes we
I
find
two or more
fell,
of these intensive
combi-
nations accumulated together. To the good cause devote thee, flesh and Scott, Abbot, Ch. X, 94.
THE ARTICLE.
Note.
There
I
683
is
nected by or, as in know, That whatsoever Only this heart or limb. Ten. M a r. of G e
|
evil
r.
,
happen
472.
to
me,
seem
to suffer nothing,
HI.
When
the
two nouns
assume the
2)
ellipsis to
are identical, as in neck and neck, we may be that of one... the other (Ch. XL, 155-6.)
such as have a preposition before the first noun, that before the second being mostly suppressed as being, identical with the preceding.
body and
soul.
The
reaction
has
been trying
to
body and
G.
soul.
T. P. s
'
Weekly, No. 478, 3b. (Also soul and body), see below.) brow and crown. He coloured over brow and crown. B e d e Ch. 3.
,
Eliot
Adam
Church and State. "Only Scotchmen need apply" seems to be written up over most of the highest offices alike in Church and State. Rev. of Rev., CCXXIII, 517a.
finger and thumb. (This) can be done mechanically by separating the with finger and thumb. Sweet The Sounds of Eng. ,31.
,
lips
fire
not long
since
ravaged
te
sword.
Ch.
II,
20.
(= Dutch
flood and field. The holiday season is in full swing and has so far been marked by more than its usual crop of accidents by flood and field. Times. head and ears. He's over head and ears in debt. Thack., Van Fair, I,
Ch. XI, 106.
Ch. Kingsley,
Westw.
1466.
Having put under lock and key the greater number of his own
is
man
can-be.
Westm.
round
Within twenty-four hours they might be the world with the German Empire.
friar
at
Rev.
CCXXVIII, 5056.
soul and body. The soul and body. Wash.
was famous
for
his
skill
administering to both
(Also
Irv.
of
preposition
between
is, of
course, out of
actor and manager. There was always a certain sympathy between actor and manager, which there can never be between actor and syndicate. T. P. s
'
The
interaction between
apprehended
sea.
(for
comprehended
it
Francis Thompson
Here we are between devil and deep sea. Westm. Gaz., No. 6288, lb. (The suppression of the article is rare, no instances being given by Murray.) that strong fellow feeling between officers and Hence officers and men.
devil
and deep
men.
Ch. Kingsley,
stern.
I
Westw. Ho!,
would serve
the
stem and
stem and
man
stern.
Smol.,
Rod. Rand.,
Ch. VI,
(Compare:
In art instant
684
a
to stern.
Ij.
Also or sometimes figures in such combinations, me! for aught that could ever read
I
|
The course
s.
1, 133.
III.
Or
varies
with and
in the
position being mostly repeated before the second noun. Do come, by hook or by crook. G. Eliot, Life, I, 112.') In old days men managed, by hook or crook, to publish Scandals of the Court or Horrible Revelations of High Life. II. Lond. News, No. 3684, A, 741. By hook and by crook he managed to raise the necessary funds. John Oxenham, Great-heart Gillian, Ch. XVI, 119.
66. a)
The definite article is mostly dropped before headings in books, essays and other writings. Preface, Prologue, Proem, Introduction, Advertisement, Epilogue, Bioi.
graphical Sketch, State of England in 1685 (Macaulay), History of England before the Restoration (id.), Fall of the Melbourne Ministry (M c Carthy), Fall of the Great Administration (id.), Rise of Municipal Power (Motley), Insurrection at Ghent (id.), Declaration of War by England (id.), Assault upon the City (id.), Extravagance of the Aristo-
Commander
(id.),
Enemy
active (Times),
The
(id.),
Life
Indian Mutiny
Lord Byron (Lytton>, The Afghan War(M r CARTHY), The (id.), The Conspiracy Bill (id.), The Civil War in America The Congress of Berlin (id.).
of
Note.
b)
Almost regularly
is
The end.
67.
The indefinite
be dropped
distinction
article in the
sense of a
weak some
is
apt to
between concrete and abstract nouns is here disregarded. Before the latter there is often, strictly speaking, no need for the indefinite article, so that the term suppression is sometimes out
of place.
The
by,
regularly when followed by the name of a means of transmission, conveyance or mode of locomotion, etc., as in: to send (dispatch, forward, etc.), to receive obtain, get etc.), to travel (go, come, etc.) by coach {steamer, omnibus, etc.); to learn (tell, etc.) by letter. She came from the station by 'bus. T. P. 's Weekly, C h r s t m. Numb.
practically
i
for
his letter
Reason w h y,
')
it
by express
[etc.).
El.
Glyn,
The
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
Note.
In
these
collocations
we may
also
suppression of the definite article, whether specializing or generalizing, or even of a possessive or demonstrative pronoun.
in,
especially
before
such
nouns as fashion,
style,
etc.,
otherwise
only by
way
of exception.
Mr. Southey brings to the task two faculties which were never, we believe, vouchsafed in measure so copious to any human being, (Mac, Sou they, 986.) In quite remarkable fashion Willie's wish came to be realized. E n g. Rev., No. 59, 443. The Kaiser has in very characteristic fashion drawn public attention to the misgivings and apprehensions which prevail in military circles in Germany.
. .
.
in
The Glory
He
is
the external form of marine plants is modified characteristic fashion. e s t m. G a z. No. 6371 17a. Show me a man who has never done that which he ought not to have done, and you will show me an angel masquerading in moral vesture. W.J.Locke,
of
Clem. Wing,
She
is in
Ch.
Ill
40.
in
frock coat.
Mrs. Barry
Pain,
(37).
The Reason got through the rejoicings in fine style. El. Glyn Ch. XXXVIII, 356. They never allowed their own minds to be seen in undress. R. Ashe Kino OI. Goldsmith, Ch. XXV, ;186. (Thus almost regularly. But Dickens, Little Dorr it, Ch. IX, 476 has: She was in an undress. Compare also: an officer in undress uniform. Dick., Pickw. Ch. II, 16.)
They had
why,
Observe especially the following collocations with the article, the Dutch equivalents of which mostly stand without it: So he came in for the following speech, delivered in a loud bold voice. Ch.
Note.
Kinosley,
Westw. Ho!,Ch
him
in
,
I,
2a.
a low but resolute voice that Doctor James Brown had offered her marriage. Mrs. Gask. C ran ford. Compare: If the Doctor... had said in awful voice, "Boy, take down your Thack., Van. Fair, I, Ch. II, 9. pant * *
She
told
of, a) often
i.
when preceded by kind (sort), manner or type: He was anxious to know what kind of room it was. Dick.
man
I
m.
Car.,
wanted
,
at all.
Bertha Moore,
was.
Which
R.
is it?
,
One has
01.
**
I
man Goldsmith
Ashe King
Goldsmith,
I I
In trod.
18.
Sometimes resigned myself to endeavouring to recall what sort of boy bit Mr. Murdstone. used to be, before Dick., Cop., Ch. V, 36. He has been speculating as to what sort of place Rugby is. Hughes, Tom
Brown.
He is Life
VIII,
make
friends.
Mrs. Alexander, A
Int.
I,
Ch.
III.
61.
Gustavus Adolphus
119.
is
a very
Thoughts,
i
Note
*
the
common
calamity
to
idiom
that sort
Dutch
zoo
s).
As you like
The
show
which had fallen on Argyle had this advantage, that it what manner of man he was. Mac. Hist., HI ,
. . .
,
That
will
suffice
to indicate the
Rev. of Rev.,
CCXXX,
133a.
686
CHAPTER XXXI,
.
67.
**** Yet another refrain from seeking any outlet for mere type of man only know how to describe as "a finer sexual physical desires from what fastidiousness." Eng. Rev., No. 58, 272. Had he been an ordinary type of official, he might well have delayed the
.
.
of
,
telegraphy and
telephony in
this
country.
Westm. G a z.
2c.
i
What kind of a place is this Bath? Sheridan, R v. I, 2. is some kind of a joke. El. Glyn, The Reason why, Ch. I, 6. What kind of a nature could his wife have, to be so absolutely mute, and unresponsive? lb., Ch. XX, 181. ** And the wound was healed in a sort of a way. Mrs. Craik, The
,
It
Laurel Bush, II, 49. What sort of a man is he? Oh, a very good Buch, 26. (Note the varied practice.)
sort of fellow.
Sweet, El em.
They did not know what sort of a little fellow had come among them. Miss Burn., Little Lord, Ch. IV, 61. What a very odd sort of a man Jerome, Paul Kelver, Ch. II, 22b.
!
to
compare a kind of gentleman and a gentle"The former expresses approach to the type,
-the latter emphasizes the non-typical position of the individual. Hence, a kind of may be used as a saving Murray, s. v. kind, 14, c. qualification, as in a kind of knave".
II.
Here mention
shot
at
may
also
as illustrated in:
He was
Monte Carlo
of
sorts.
El.
Glyn
The Reason
,
why, Ch. XXIV, 243. About this phrase a correspondent writes in the Westm. G a z. No. 6353, 4a: "Then came the plague of the expression of sorts, from
"which we are not yet free. He became an errand-boy of sorts. I lately "read He had a religion of sorts, He was a Tory of sorts, and so on "for ever and everywhere. Now what conceivable advantage has of "sorts over a sort of? If say a sort of Tory, that is intelligible, "for the class contains varieties; but a Tory of sorts should mean "only one who should combine various varieties of opinion which "are always found separate." A week later another correspondent writes: "Again an errand-boy of sorts is different horn a sort of errandI
is a sort of errand-boy. The obliging youth sixpence for taking a note to a friend, and who tears the note up and spends the money, is an errand-boy of sorts."
messenger
give
frequently when used in a description of the physical, mental, moral or social circumstances of a person, animal or thing.
i.
These refugees were in general men of fiery temper and weak judgment. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 94. Wild animals of large size were then far more numerous than at present.
lb., I,
Ch.
Ill,
307.
,
He was of good birth. Thack. P e n d. Ch. II 18. At first he had seemed to her like a being from another world and of superior make. John Oxenham Great-heart Gillian, Ch. VIII, 60. In works of art he was represented as a young and handsome man of strong sinewy frame. Nettleship, Diet. CI as. A n t q., s. v. Ares. Kireef was a man of great stature. Rev. of Rev., CCXXXI 277a.
,
THE ARTICLE.
687
He was a man of unnatural stature. Times, No. 1818, 8816. The whole service was conducted by one of them a man of rather Caucasian features, but of dark brown tint. Westm. Gaz. No. 4967, 13a. He was of good family. Wil. J. Locke, The Glory of Clem. Wing,
,
Ch.
I,
II.
He was a man of wide culture. lb., Ch. II, 34. The room was of medium size. Kath. Cecil Thurston ,John Chilcote
M.
ii.
P.
Ch. XXI
224.
,
,
present
of an undaunted temper. Scott Abbot, Ch. II 19. demeanour was of a graver and more determined character.
naturally
at the
Ch. V,
56.
failed.
His hair was of a healthy brown colour. Harry Webb was a boy of a timid and gentle disposition. Sweet, Old Chapel, with, a) sometimes when part of an adverbial adjunct of instrumentality or
,
candle; in which effort, not being Dick., Christm. Car.% I, 9. Thack., Pend. I, Ch. Ill, 32.
at
my gown
durt not -refuse- to -go where Miss Jenkyns asked. Mrs. Gask
youth entered Mr. Notley's front garden with firm step. T. P.'s No. 489 365a. A country house with ample garden was the proprietor's passion
, , ,
Weekly,
!
Dixon
Life of Wil. Penn, II, 137. i) The pairs of young men and maidens who
in
flaunted their foolish happiness places of public resort, she regarded with misanthropic eye. W. J.Locke,
The Glory
ii.
of Clem. Wing, Ch. II, 14. Roland Graeme entered the apartment with a loftier mien and somewhat a higher colour than his wont. Scott, Abbot, Ch. V, 56. They paced through several winding passages and waste apartments with a very slow step. lb., Ch. X, 96. Rip had but one question more to ask, but he put it with a faltering voice.
Wash. Irv. Sketch-Bk. ,Rip van She set to work every morning at her
,
Winkle.
daily business with a
82.
dogged persis-
tence.
Mrs. Craik
With a passionate fidelity she remembered all Robert Roy's goodness. lb., 99. Every sentence was uttered with an obvious sincerity and feeling. Times, No. 1823. 9746. El. Glyn, The Reason will give you a charming wife with a fortune. why, Ch. I, 6.
I
Observe
suffering at
Not as some do with angry grief or futile resistance, but with a quick patience, so complete that only a very quick eye would have found out that she was
all.
Mrs. Craik,
52.
,
b)
mental or moral
qualities of a person, animal or thing, i. He was a tall, powerfully-built man of forty-five, withered military carriage, and a face still preserving much of the freshness of youth. Buchanan T h a t
,
Winter Night,
In
Ch.
2.
works
,
of art Achilles
physique, A n t i q.
ii.
and hair
s.
bristling v. Achilles.
,
He was
head.
collected
quiet
I
,
little
gentleman
18.
a bald
Thack.,
Pen
d.,
Ch.
39.
II,
!)
Ellinger,
Verm. Beitr.,
688
CHAPTER XXXI
,
6768.
of forty, with
plexion.
Ephraim Quixtus, Ph. D. was a tall gaunt man W. J. Locke The Glory of Clem.
,
,
a sallow comII
,
ng
Ch.
22.
His companion is a well-wrapped clergyman of medium height and stoutish build, with a pleasant, rosy face. Galsworthy The Pigeon,!, (2). Her face... is decided and sincere, with deep-set eyes, and a capable well-
shaped forehead.
lb.
is common enough in enumerations. (69.) As he stands there with beating heart and kindling eye, ... he is a symbol of brave young England. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. I, 5a.
Note.
The suppression
68. Of particular interest is the suppression of the indefinite article in the sense of a weak any.
Thus
it
is
wanting:
a) frequently
in sentences with sentence-modifying ever or ever that suggest some such phrase as Was there ever a man that, etc. or There never was a man that, etc. (31 b.) The noun before which the article is omitted, is mostly found in the function of the subject, occasionally in that of the object. Sometimes both the subject and the object drop the article. The idiom here referred to is also met with in French, as in: Jamais ecrivain ne peignit
,
and
in
Dutch, as
in:
Nooit
these
utterances,
Germanic
sentence.
i.
article seems to give an emotional colouring possibly also it is occasioned, at least in the languages, by a desire to give a rhythmical flow to the
the
a pupil as
mine?
?
Farquhar,
Field.
,
The Beaux'
r.
,
Stratagem,
Did
ever
mortal
3, (383). hear of a
man's virtue
I
Jos. A n d
am?
Sher.
1, (391).
Did ever woman since the creation of the world, interrupt a man with such a silly question? Sterne, Tristram Shandy, I. have seen him, within an hour of eternity, sleeping as sweetly as ever man did. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 133. If ever poet were a master of phrasing, he was so. A. C. Bradley, Com. on Ten. In Memoriam, Ch. VI 75.
I
,
ii.
bower As e'er held houri in that heathenish heaven Described by Mahomet. Byron, Don Juan, I, civ. * Children. Queen Eliz. Was never widow had so dear a loss Were never orphans had so dear a loss Duch. Was never mother had so dear a loss! Rich. Ill, u, 2, 78. And ne'er did Grecian chisel trace A nymph, a Naiad, or a Grace Of finer form or lovelier face! Scott, Lady, I, xvm. Never man had a more unsentimental mother than mine. Ch. Bronte
Julia
**
sate
within
|
as
pretty
Ch. XX 264. , Locke maintained such steady silence and composure as forced the tools of power to own with vexation that never man was so complete a master of his tongue and of his passions. Mac, Hist., II, Ch. V, 115. Lane, and Never yet Was noble man but made ignoble talk. Ten.
1 1
El., 1081. Girl never breathed to rival such a rose; a r y, III 3 such a bud. Id. Q u e e n
,
'
that equall'd
THE ARTICLE.
On
689
his (sc. Wellington's) death it (sc. the nation) tried to give him such a public funeral as hero never had. McCarthy, Short H i st. , Ch. X, 126. Never had heart felt more heavy, never had existence felt more unbearable than Donovan's. Edna Lyall, I, 86.
,
Donovan,
The King,
consideration of Whittington's merit, said, "Never had prince such a subject"; which being told to Whittington at the table, he replied, "Never had subject such a king." Andrew Lang, BJl u e Fairy Book. ** Since I could distinguish betwixt a benefit and an injury, I never found man that knew how to love himself. Oth., I, 3, 315. *** Faint heart never won fair lady. P r o v.
in
Note.
i.
believe
Trol.,
ii.
she regards him with as true a love as ever a girl Framl. Pars., Ch. XLI, 401.
for
a man.
idolized by his children than was Lyman No. 483, 163a. Never was a man more exquisitely sensitive to snubs, slights and insults than Goldsmith. R. Ashe King 01. Goldsmith, Ch. II 20. ** On a fairer face thine eye never rested. Scott, Abbot, Ch. X, 94.
Never
Beecher.
T. P.'s
Weekly,
,
II. Conversely the omission is sometimes extended to sentences of a similar import not containing either ever or never. When did Knight of Provence avoid his foe, or forsake his love? Lytton, Rienzi, III, Ch. II, 130. When was age so crammed with menace? Ten., Locksley Hall, sixty
years
Fully
after.
it.
Hungerford,
Molly Bawn,
III.
152.1)
The
indefinite
article
is
is
different
not driven out by ever or never, when the from that of the above quotations.
his
Never was an Englishman more at home than when he took his ease in Macaulay. Never was there a better chance for you. Roorda, Dutch and Eng. Com p., ** A better man Rome never lost. Lytton, Rienzi, V, Ch. Ill, 207.
20.
IV. Here mention may also be made of ever (e'er) a(n) in the sense of strong any (at all), and of never (ne'er) (a)n, the corresponding negative, the former now only archaic or vulgar, though the latter is in good
colloquial
use.
Murray,
,
s.
v.
ever,
8;
ne'er a; never,
I,
3; Franz,
III, 4.
Shak. Gram. 2
i.
272.
in the country.
woods van hoe, Ch. XL, frequents them. Scott, Fra Moreale seems as much a bugbear to you
the
I
And I'd foot it with e'er a captain He knows every path and alley in
Sheridan, Riv.
who
ii.
as to e'er a mother in Rome. Lytton, Rienzi, Ch. I, 149. Have we ne'er a poulterer among us ? Farquhar The Recruiting Officer, V, 4, (338). ne'er a Sir Lucius Then by the Mass sir I would do no such thing & Trigger should make me fight. Sheridan, Riv., IV, 1. Now my Lady differs therein from my Lord who loves never a bone in
,
, !
.
Scott, Abbot, Ch. IV, 44. And never a saint took pity on My soul in agony. Coleridge, Anc.Ma r., IV, m. Never a day passed, but that cruel words were spoken between them. Graph.
his skin.
|
i)
Dubislav,
,
Beitrage,8.
English.
II.
H.
44
690
b)
CHAPTER XXXI,
sometimes
in
68.
clauses which form the second member of such as are introduced by either than or as, and are more or less like those with ever mentioned under a). Indeed, this adverb may occasionally be met with in them. The idiom seems to have been more common J in Early Modern English than it is now. 2 267; Ellinger, Verm. Compare also Franz, Sha'k. Gram. adverbial
comparisons,
i.e.
Beitr., 40;
i.
id.
Mids.,
1, 783.
Though home
Ch.
ii.
is a name, a word, it is a strong one; stronger than magician ever spoke, or spirit answered to, in strongest conjuration. Dick., Chuz.,
XXXV,
gives
278.
He
I
not only a
desire.
Thack.,
slept at
Ill,
Men's Wives,
49.
Barry Lyndon,
Ch.
He led her to an old-fashioned house, almost as small as house could be. Mrs. Gask., Mary Barton, Ch. XXXI, 293. They came into that wild Black Sea, and saw it stretching out before them, without a shore, as far as eye could see. Ch. Kingsley, The Heroes,
II,
iv,
149.
He
c)
was
as
near
perfection
II,
as
mortal
man
could
be.
Andrew Lang,
Tennyson,
Sometimes
in
Ch.
11.
adnominal clauses modifying either a noun preceded by or some such word(-group) as all, anything, nothing, no 4- noun. The suppression is especially frequent before the noun mortal or before the adjective mortal 4 noun. See d). i. He is thus attempting the greatest task to which poet or philosopher can
superlative,
devote himself. Stephen, Pope, 161. x ) There was the chance of being blown up in some of the many experiments which Martin was always trying, with the most wondrous results that mortal Brown, II, Ch. Ill, 237. boy ever heard of. Hughes, * All that servant ought to be. Sher. Knowles, Hunch., II, 3. 2 ) Mc. Potts is doing all that mortal man can do. Hungerford, Molly
Tom
ii.
Bawn,
**
***
it'
I
I,
278.1)refer
to
man
can conceive.
Hodgson, Errors,
8, 74.
of age or experience to
may
*
when he
shall
become such
which mortal to be
in
pleased by the sight of happy youth. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XVII, 173. Sometimes before the noun mortal or the adjective mortal + noun, d)
c).
Nowhere
of Rev.
is
in
Rev.
ii.
Their forms were invisible to mortal eye. Mac, Hist., I, Ch. I, 5. It was long indeed since an English sovereign had knelt to mortal man. III , Ch. VIII 97.
,
lb.,
e)
Sometimes
i.
after the preposition without. Here you see an honest young soldier, who is willing to take her without fortune. Goldsmith, Vic, Ch. XXXI, (470). He inherited ... her health without flaw. Ch. Bronte, Vi ett e, Ch. I, 2.
1
')
Dubislaw,
BeitrSge,
8.
-')
MStzn., Eng.
Gram. 2
111,163.
THE ARTICLE.
The
691
polite pupil was scarcely gone, when, unceremoniously, without tap in burst a second intruder. lb., Ch. XXI, 295.
is booty without end. Ch. Kingsley, Westw. Ho!, Ch. XIX, 1446. (Probably regularly in this combination from association with the liturgical expression: world without end, amen.) A month which was, without exception the most miserable I have ever spent
There
Jerome, Idle
Tho ugh
s, VI, 73.
Modern
Italy, although a monarchy, is without doubt, the most genuinely democratic of the great countries of Europe. Rich. Bagot, Italian Year, Ch. II, 20. e s t m. G a z. , My feelings have been outraged times without number. No. 6383 4c. So we were told times without number. Rev. of Rev., CCXXVIH 520a.
My
ii.
(Probably regularly in this combination.) Sunday passed off without incident in San Sebastian. Westm. Gaz. , No. 5382, 16. The autumn hues of some of the fruit-trees are almost without rival. lb. , No. 6065, 2c. The rest (sc. of the Tory newspapers) without exception found it (sc. Lloyd George's campaign) perilously exciting. lb., No. 6365, lb. The Lansburg incident in the House last week is not without precedent. T. P. 's Weekly, No. 504, 36. see a vacant seat ... and a crutch without an owner. Dick., Christm.
,
Car. 5,
His
in, 70.
,
when without a pause it came on through the colour changed though heavy door. lb. I, 22. A novel without a hero. Thack., Van Fair. When we are struck at without a reason, we should strike back very hard. Ch. Bronte, Jane Ey re, Ch. VI, 64. Without a military education of any sort Clive led an army like an expe,
rienced officer.
Mac, Clive,
(5086).
There without a doubt, diplomacy will step in. Eng. Rev., 1912, Nov., 623. He does nothing without a reason. Marj. Bowen I will maintain, I, Ch. X, 116. Note I. The same variable practice may be observed after beyond, when used in the sense of without. prove beyond doubt that a considerable period of time (These) passages must have elapsed at Cyprus between the landing of Othello, and Desdemona's In trod, to 'Othello', 13. death. Deighton With it came the desire ... to know beyond question whether her smiling unconcern meant malice or entertainment. Kath. Cecil Thurston, John Chilcote, M. P., Ch. XXVIII, 309. was cancelled beyond a doubt, because of Goldsmith's ii. The appointment incompetence. R. Ashe King, 01. Goldsmith, Ch. VII, 87. The loyalty of the people is beyond a question. Marj. Bowen, I will
,
i.
maintain,
II.
I,
following quotations the indefinite article could not as being equivalent to the numeral one (8, a, 2): with, dispensed England was left without an ally save Spain. Green, Short Hist., Ch.
In
the
be
VII,
6, 216. English prison. lb., Ch. IV, Balliol found himself at last without an adherent.
HI.
It
is
in
sion
is
quite usual.
692
Note
II).
Thus,
for
example,
in:
fair lady. P r o v. They saw it (sc. the Black Sea) stretching out before them, without a shore, as far as eye could see. Ch. Kingsley, The Heroes, II, IV, 149. He is thus attempting the greatest "task to which poet or philosopher can devote
won
himself.
Stephen,
Pope,
161.1)
Mac, Hist.,
I,
Ch.
I,
5.
ambiguous, the sense varying according as the indefinite article or the generalizing definite article is supposed
V.
is
Sometimes a sentence
to be understood.
called
upon
to
make a
greater sacrifice?
Thack.
69.
As
to
in
suppressed
the
Dutch, both the definite and the indefinite article are often in enumerations, generally to give an emotional colouring
discourse.
Sometimes
it
is
doubtful
whether
it
is
the
generalizing definite or the indefinite article that has fallen out. (7). Many instances have already be given incidentally in the preceding pages of this chapter, and also in Ch. XXIX, 25; 26, a.
We
It was delightful to hear ... the impracticable feats they were to perform during their six weeks' emancipation from the abhorred thraldom of book, S k e t c h - B k. XX , 187. birch and pedagogue. Wash. Irv. Pen smoked and joked with guard and fellow-passengers and people along
,
,
Thack., Pend., I, Ch. XXVIII, 297. having to make its way through the forest will be subject to endless attacks in front, in rear, in flank. Id., Virg., Ch. LI, 528. She sincerely loved and respected the former schoolmistress, to whom she was now become companion and friend. Mrs. Gask. Life of Charl.
the familiar road.
This slender
line
Bronte,
Then
102.
stout
Drama
The
ii.
light
mother and thin daughter took their leave. G. Moore, A in Muslin, 111. which came from her, was like the light of sun, moon, and stars
Books
37a.
That he should really have expected so high-minded a lady to look with favour upon one who is a compound of fool, prodigal, and coward, is Intro d. to 'Twelfth Night/ 15. hardly to be supposed. Deighton Whether as man, as orator or as statesman, Mr. Bright will be long and deeply lamented by the whole of the Anglo-Saxon race. Graph. That he (sc. Leonardo da Vinci) was painter, architect, and sculptor was But he was nothing unusual in the age of Raphael and Michelangelo. musician, engineer, mechanic and a profound and exact investigator into
,
Times,
Some
forty
others
were injured
in
II.
Lon
d.
News,
J)
Dubislaw,
Be
it
rage,
8.
THE ARTICLE.
693
traditional. Many have Also the following deserve attention: chapter and verse. People say what they like to say, not what they have chapter and verse for. G. Eliot Mid., V Ch. XLIX 359. He was fifty-five, if he was a day. Miss Tabitha could have given you, chapter and verse for it in a second. John Oxenham The Simple Beguiler (Swaen, Selection, 11,138). Heaven and earth. There are more things in Heaven and earth, Horatio,
I.
Note
than are dreamt of in your philosophy. H a hold to my judge ... to the King of Heaven
I
He would move Heaven and earth to Bill, 24. time and tide. Time and tide wait
ferret
and
no man.
Pro
v.
all
see Mr. Beauclerk very often both in town and country. (R. Ashe King, 01. Goldsmith, Ch. XX, 227). booksellers and newsmen in town and country. Athen., No. 4421.
I
is
made
for
(Ch.
XXV,
What
South Africa, Liberal and Unionist will m. G a z. No. 5173 5b. The huge many-coloured morning clouds went to and fro in the shapes of dragon or of cherub. Chesterton The Free Man (T. P.'s Christ m.
yet have to
do
Wes
,
Numb,
His
and beast
is
well-known.
W.
L.
Phelps, E
s.
on
Mod. Nov.,
70.
Ch.
II
53.
in epigrammatic language, especially when two or more nouns, whatever grammatical function, express a kind of antithesis, the article, whether definite or indefinite, is frequently dispensed with. Some of the epigrammatic sayings here following have the nature of proverbs. In not a few the omission of the article makes
Also
in
for rhythm,
i.
Ch.
strong,
mind
is
stronger.
Ch. Kinosley,
Hereward,
We
can no longer set body against spirit and let them come to grips after the light-hearted fashion of our ancestors. Francis Thompson Health and
,
Holiness,
Barry,
30.
,
as
West.
William
The Papacy,
ii.
Zara, freed at last from eye of friend or maid, collapsed on to the white The Reason why, El. Glyn bearskin in front of the fire again. Ch. XXXII 302. You will never lose fair lady for faint heart! Scott, Quent. Durw. Ch. XXXI 405. A sinful heart makes feeble hand. P r o v.
,
Use
1
Id. is second nature. forbid you to put pen to paper. Thack., Van. Fair, III, Ch. V, 54. For manners are not idle, but the fruit Of loyal nature, and of noble mind. Ten., Guin., 333. It seems that when Turk meets Italian there is no tug-of-war but only a
|
worse kind
Foels.
of peace.
i)
Koch, Wis.
Gram.,
267.
694
71. Finally
we
full
But
you.
Some
care.
II I, 58. Jul. Cjes. (Ordinary practice s. v. promise.) with an angry wafture of your hand (You) gave sign for me to leave lb. II 1 247. (Ordinary practice has to make a sign.) beauties yet no precepts can declare, For there's a happiness as well as
, ,
1,742. (Note the varied practice.) Yet pass we that; the war and chase Give little choice of resting place. Scott, Lady, I, xvi. (In ordinary prose war stands without, chase with the article.) When late I left Caerleon our great Queen ... Made promise, that whatever bride I brought, Herself would clothe her like the sun in Heaven. Ten.,
s.
r
i
Pope, E
on C
t.
Mar. of Ger.,
1
783.
(See above.)
|
doubted whether daughter's tenderness, Be moulded by your wishes for her weal.
let
itself.
may be expected, often with equal propriety, with the frequent result that there is some vacillation in the choice, and that another article is used, or preferred, in Dutch than in English.
There
in
is
73. a)
English, notwithstanding the fact that the noun is accompanied by a specializing adjunct, or that such an adjunct can be supplied from the context.
are
intended
to
definite article,
are added for comparison and to show the irregularity and arbitrariness of usage. It may not be superfluous to caution the reader that absence of illustration of either practice must not be considered as evidence that it is non-existent, rare or even
infrequent.
charge.
day.
11 d.
per
Times.
i.
chance,
He stands a chance
II,
of rushing
Rienzi,
Ch.
II,
83.
would go with a If I had a chance to better myself where I am going, goodwill. Stev. Kidnapped, 10. If you have a chance of founding a home for yourself, do not throw il Dor. Gerard, Etern. Woman, Ch. XI. lightly aside. The War-Office saw a chance to do a little cheese-paring at their expense.
,
Times.
All
the
more
openings.
ii.
Wes
intelligent
t
m.
G a z.
of securing
good
Did you ever hear of anyone who would not escape from prison, if he had the chance? Mar. Crawf., Tale of a Lonely Parish, Ch.
XIII, 102.
THE ARTICLE.
I'll
695
Ch. Reade, The Ch. XX, 81. Give them the chance of settling everything themselves. El. Glyn, The Reason why, Ch. XII, 111. He felt glad he had not given her the chance to snub him again. lb., Ch.XX, 181.
hit
if
condition.
And
for
the
am
in
a condition
to
Congreve,
conviction.
Love
She
,
for Love,
felt
,
1, (201).
Wash. Wash.
,
Irv.,
Sk
c h i.
B k.
I
XXX
desire,
I
had a desire
,
see
the
old
Irv.
Sketch-Bk., XXVI
DoVrit,
I
264.
have had a great desire to know something more about Ch. VIII, 41a.
Dick.
Little
had a new pride in my room after his approval of them, and burned with a desire to develop their utmost resources. Id., Cop., Ch. XXIV, 1786. He expressed a desire to slumber. W.J.Locke, Glory of Clem.
ii.
Wing,
most
He had rowed
distant
the skiff in
which he
the
left
the castle
of
desire
66.
notice of the
inhabitants.
Scott,
Abbot,
Ch. VII,
example, i. To give (leave, set) an example. Murray, s. v. example, 6. That was to set an example. R. Ashe Kino, 01. Goldsm. Ch. XIII, 32. ii. Walk on your toes, whispered my mother, setting the example as she led the Ch. Ill, 26a. way up the stairs. Jerome, Paul Kelver, Note. Murray does not illustrate any of the above locutions. Nor does he mention to set (etc.) the example. Compare also 40.
,
I ,
faculty.
See
40.
fashion, i. It has even become a fashion to go over to Ireland. Acad. It is a fashion at present to ascribe the great popularity of 'In Memoriam' entirely to the 'teaching' contained in it. A. C. Bradley, Comment, on Tennyson's In Mem., Ch. IV, 36.
ii.
It
De Morgan
gift,
was then very much the fashion E s. P r o b a b. P r e f. 63 and 67. Compare also 8, o,
,
... to
i)
a)
,
If
had a gift
tell
chap,
at
I'd
office
mighty
quick
can
i.
you.
An Englishman's Home,
of
(15).
habit,
jumping
conclusions.
Mrs. Craik,
John
Rev. of Rev.,
lighted.
habit of smoking,
when
the fire is
first
Murray,
v.
habit, 9, a.
habit of laughing at anything which is said just as they leave I, Ch. VI, 115.
habit of resisting importunate solicitation.
He was
I,
little
in
Mac.
Hist.,
176.1)
Note.
hope.
i.
For further
a.
The judge
up.
all
paternally expressed
a hope
that the
make it He had
Roorda,
the
time
hope
Edna Lyall,
Don.,
J)
II, 20.
Murray.
696
ii.
CHAPTER XXXI,
73.
Whatever dangers I went upon, it was with the hope of making myself more worthy of your esteem. Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer, II, 2, (268). In the hope that no soldier would venture to outrage a lady,... she placed herself before the trunk.
Mac, Fred.,
(588a).
that
he
would soon be
perfectly
recovered.
Daily Chronicle.
I
will
have, therefore, in conclusion to express the hope that our educational authorities be cautious in introducing phonetics and appointing teachers of it. Sweet,
Sounds
idea.
I
of Eng., Pref.
always had an idea that you were at least seven feet high. Thack., Van. Fair, 1, Ch. IV, 31. Mrs. Paradyne has an idea that the boys are shunning him. Mrs. Wood, Orville College, Ch. VI, 89.
Compare
Murray,
knack.
train.
notion.
I
impression.
s.
it
before.
v.
impression
Hares and rabbits have a foolish knack of running butt into an advancing
Titbits.
notion. Some persons have consequently taken up a notion that she was from the Mac. first an overrated writer. d'Arblay, (7306). She has a notion that a widow should not marry within seven years of her husband's death. Hardy, Far from the Madding C ro wd, Ch. LII, 426.
.Madame
Compare
opinion.
turnkey,
idea.
Witnessing these things, the collegians would express an opinion that the a bachelor, had been cut out by nature for a family man. Dick., Little Dorr it, Ch. VII, 356.
who was
i.
opportunity,
was
afraid
he would
never give
...
me an
opportunity.
Sher.
R
I
v.
2.
before
now,
but
Dick.,
Ch.
403.
We
that
had an opportunity of introducing N. N. to P. P. P u n c h. are a free people, and we should never neglect an opportunity for impressing fact on those who may be inclined to doubt it. An Englishman's
I, (13).
1
Home,
ii.
took the opportunity of reading to him the first canto. Scott, Intr. to 'the Lady of the Lake'. This was the opportunity to put his new-born resolution to the test. Id., Abbot,
One day
Ch.
I
VIII, 73.
ought to give her the opportunity. Dick., Cop., Ch. LV, 391a. What could be better for us than that they should give us the opportunity of saying that they are wrecking the national interest for the sake of sticking to office? Westm. Gaz., No. 5277, 4a. Note. For collocations without either article and for further illustration see 40.
. .
castle.
32.
ii.
are in a position to state [etc.]. Times. a position to carry out her assurances, there must be some form of government. lb., No. 1823, 983a. The Tory Party was in the position of a business-house trading under cover of a protective tariff. Westm. Gaz., No. 6359, 7a.
in
We
THE ARTICLE.
pretence. She made a pretence II, Ch. X, 183.
I
697
Mar. Crawf., Kath. Laud.,
the
of
making
settlement
he required.
Note.
mentions
For further
propensity. The inhabitants appeared to trifles they were not in want of, into the road. Dick., Cop., Ch. XXVII, 199a. question, i. It is a question, whether N. had much to complain of. James
and Ch. XIX, 49, Obs. IV. Murray any illustrative quotations. have a propensity to throw any little
Payn,
It
Glow-Worm
now a
,
Tales,
i)
is
even
question,
if
whether
we had
,
not
better entrust
it
to him.
Roorda It was a
Ch.
ii.
15.
Thack., Pend.,
I,
II,
28.
That
is
Times,
model
father.
worm
James Payn,
GlowFar
resolution.
to
have no
,
bailiff at all.
Hardy,
v. right.
87.
to arrest a criminal.
Webst.
s.
up a
poster.
Westm. Gaz.,
it
how
Englishman's Home,
ii.
I
(24).
I
had no need to enlarge upon it, if LV, 391a. Those who pay the piper have the right
Ch.
right.
Dick.,
Cop.,
Times.
Eng. Rev.,
The
iii.
demand an
explanation.
21.
d.
scale.
You have right to say it. Scott, Abbot, Ch. II, The remuneration will be on a scale of 1 s. 6
Lit.
are
in
Acad, and
situation.
We
I
a situation
to
offer
more than
Thack., view. i.
ii.
Sam. Titm.,
composed
it
Ch. VI, 69. actually with a horror of the stage, and with a view to
He
left
it impracticable. Byron, Let. to Mr. the university without taking a degree with the view of
Murray,
becoming an
artist.
Note.
way.
i.
Trol., Thack., Ch. I, 28. For illustration see also Ch. XIX, 62, b. His mother began to be greatly perplexed
.
.
how
to put
him
in
I,
a way
104).
The youngster
ii.
Wash. seemed
Irv.
Dolf Heyl.
fair
(Stof.,
Handl.,
in
a
lb.,
way
to
fulfil
116.
concessionaire is on the way to become a bogy in Belgium. Gaz., No. 6377, 2c. wish. i. I expressed to Wordsworth a wish that his poems were printed in the order of their composition. Acad.') Sir James expressed a wish to you again in the morning. Agn. & Eg. Cattle,
The
foreign
Westm.
'
II,
Ch.
I,
115.
ii.
we should come
to
an amicable understanding
Times.
,
i)
X.
698
b)
is
of
some
ii.
Half a million workers have been affected by these troubles and have lost on an average fourteen days each. Westm. Gaz., No. 6377, 2c. And when he (sc. Mr. Pickwick) was knocked down (which happened upon the average every third round), it was the most invigorating sight [etc.].
Dick.,
Pickw.,
Ch.
XXX,
271.
The agricultural labourer ... is stil on the average badly paid. Westm. Gaz., No. 6423, lb. The wind blows southwest on the average for 103 days. lb. 13c. Note. Murray also has at an average, which does not, apparently, occur very frequently. Of (up)on the average no mention is made by either Murray
. . . ,
or Flugel
the phrase
however, seems
little
to
be
common
change.
No. 57,
We
129.
must grow a
...
more
terrestrial
En
g.
Rev.,
,
end.
* Its
splendour
was
all
at an end.
Wash.
Do If
Heyl. (Stof.
the
action
of
my
life
were at an end.
Dick.,
Cop., Ch.
Whereupon this colloquy came to an end. Thack., Pend., I, Ch. II, 29. These two cities (sc. New York and San Francisco) cannot cease to grow till mankind pass off the globe and come to an end. Froude Oceana,
.
.
With
to the
end
in the same The Boers will resist to the end. The Free-Staters do finish,
i.
seems to be regularly used in the above phrases. as used in the following quotation, compare to a {the) finish meaning; see below.
indefinite article
,
Times.
not
seem
at
all
Daily Chron.
The Government
the
ii.
war
in
a finish.
Daily News,
at the finish.
This time
Punch.
W.
S.
Note. Compare with this the sporting term to be in The old squire was determined to be in at the finish.
Hayward,
Love
living.
against World,
living. T. P.'s
13. i)
She was compelled to appear before public audiences for a Weekly, No. 474, 714a.
sacrifice.
The country would fall a sacrifice to the hostile ambition of the Spanish monarchy. Sher., Crit. , III, I. victim. Her husband had fallen a victim to his zeal for the public safety.
Wash.
to
Irv.,
Dolf Heyl.
Compare:
a
young
3.
(Stop., Hand!., I, 102). Shortly after this he became the victim of a passionate attachment Personal Hist, of John Arthur C. Downer, lady.
The
Keats,
74.
In
definite article
is
preferred, although
to be at least equally appropriate, exception. It is the exception to see a man without knife and pistol. Westm. Gaz., No. 5335, 2c. (See also under rule.)
the indefinite
J)
Murray.
THE ARTICLE.
What
I,
699
about here! G. Eliot, Mid.,
rule rather than the
it
would be
rule.
ii.
No. 3775, 3266. His supposition that usually both the publisher and author share a loss on the ordinary novel is, we fear, more in the nature of an exception than a A t h e n. No. 4479 200c. rule.
exception.
,
Lond. News,
shoulder,
i.
Showing
s.
Cobh. Brew.
Diet, of
Phrase
and Fable,
v.
ii.
Casaubon has devilish good reasons ... for turning the cold shoulder on a young fellow whose bringing-up he paid for. G. Eliot, Mid., V, Ch. XLVI, 341. He was therefore not willing to give them a cold shoulder. Trol. B a r c h.
,
Tow..
Ch.
XXXV,
316.
4 line
701
before disorderly.
410
5
15
change elder born into elder-born. eldest born eldest-born. bottom, change Ch. XXXI, 34, a into Ch. XXXI,
,
31, a; 34,
a.
428 436 437 437 443 494 508 528 559 607 650
26 5 6 22
14
1
top, change grouds into grounds, top, 38, / into 40. bottom, change Ch. XXXI, 19 into Ch. 19 into 20.
XXXI,
20.
19, a.
12
24
14
change periphrastieal into periphrastical. top, change Frequent into Interesting, bottom, place c) before Before, top, change indefinite into definite, bottom, strike out to say truth. top, change Ch. XXV, 17 into Ch. XXV, 10 and 17.
Page 6, line 4 from bottom. The use of wool instead of woollen, as in a wool hat, cap, jacket, etc. is not rare, but in these combinations the word has a different meaning from woollen: a wool cap, etc. being a
cap, etc.
made
of knitted wool.
Lead, instead of leaden, seems to become more and more the ordinary word in the trade. See also Murray, s. v. lead, 10. It is probably the only word, when the reference is to strips or sheets of lead used for roofing or other building purposes; e. g. a lead flat, a lead roof.
:
Murray,
Page 33,
of
s. v.
lead,
7.
c. So far as Early Modern English is concerned, the suppression the genitival 5 after nouns ending in a sibilant may in many cases be considered as a survival of Middle English practice. Compare
Page
in 16, a, which in ordinary prose are frequently placed in the genitive, include boat, ship, vessel, Thus in the Times, No. 1842, \d: etc., and proper names of ships. the Titanic' s passengers, the Carmania's decks, the Carmania's captain. For quotations with boat, ship, vessel, etc. see under 16,rf).
Page 71,6.
Add: Note. In such a sentence as But we beg pardon of our a r. Hast., 6096) readers for arguing a point so clear (Mac. E s. , of is not a genitive equivalent, but part of a prepositional object. Page 97, line 20 from top. Like all and both, also half may belong to
,
Thack.
e n d.
I ,
Ch.
107.
Page
mostly between is and felt. Like the noun firm (Ch. XXVI, 9) genitives denoting a firm are occasionally construed as
100,
Obs.
II.
Insert
singulars. Selfridge's admits that Ready-for Service clothes have had a shocking reputation
in the past.
Westm. Gaz. No. 6147, lb. For what is here said about the th subI, line 821. In Old English p became voiced between voiced sounds, stitute: 474) about the year 700. according to Bulbring (Elementarbuch,
,
702
bapa, espe,
rriup, peep, beep (Modern English oath, cloth, mouth, path, bath). In Middle English the singular of these words ends in voiceless p, the plural in 6es, i. e. in voiced 6 es, while, moreover, the short vowel in papas and
1200).
Hence the
rule in
Modern English:
end of a plural is voiced, if preceded by a long vowel. If the half-long vowel of the singular is pronounced in the plural as well (new formations), th and s are voiceless. Thus in laths, truths, youths, whereas, if the vowel is lenghtened in these words, th and s are voiced. In growths and heaths the vowel seems to be half-long with most, if not all, speakers, so that th and s are breathed. The rule stated above also accounts for the fact that in such plurals as deaths, months, healths, where the vowel is short, and in others like births, fourths, hearths, in which it is halt-long, th and s are
voiceless.
Pag. 122.
i.
I
Note II. Add: Swine, both as a singular and a plural, is also used as an opprobrious designation of a man. was just bringing back your little lad for the second time, when meets the swine coming out of this window in his Sunday togs and topper. Zanowill,
I
I,
(60).
you
are.
Bern. Shaw,
Getting Married,
ii.
1,(207).
I
|
cannot catch what Father These beastly swine make such a grunting here, Bourne is saying. Ten., Queen Mary, 1,3,(5826).
prima donnas Page 125, c, line 28 from top. Add: prima donna prime donne. Page 130. Note I. Add: Moslem (or Muslim) has in the plural Moslims (or Muslims) and Moslemin, while some writers employ the singular form as a plural or collective. The plural moslemins is a vulgarism.
For illustration see Murray.
Pag. 232,
Sigtryg
works. Add: Earthwork is also used in the singular. threw up an earthwork and made a stand against the Cornish. Kinosley, H e r e w. , Ch. V, 386.
s.v. s.v. nut.
Ch.
Pag. 237,
Add: the
zijn
van genot
Coralie
lady.
colloquial to be nuts to (= Dutch een bron voor, een kolfje naar de hand zijn van).
had a tit-bit of information that she knew would be nuts to the old Aon. & Eo. Castle, Diamond cut Paste, II. Ch. II, 111.
c.
Page 266,
It
Change
It
is,
number
hardly
etc. into It
may be preceded by
to
appeared comfortable
parent that she should have so many Westm. Gaz. , No. 6276, 136.
in referring
Page 328, line 19 from top. The use of the neuter pronouns to grown-up persons is not vulgar, as is here stated,
but rather
expresses contempt. "Oh! the poor angry darling, there!" she laughed spitefully, "and was it jealous! Well, it shan't be teased. But what a clever husband to know all about his wife! He should be put in a glass case in a museum. El. Glyn, The Reason Why, Ch. XXV, 232. (Note the change trom it to he.)
703
s. v. Providence. Also the feminine pronouns are occasionally used to refer to Providence.
Providence had given us the British Oak, the finest building material for building ships; why should we fly in her face by actually suggesting not only the sacrifice of our oak forests, but the substitution of a material which would not even float. Eng. Rev., No. 61, 116.
Page 343,
b).
is
young
of animals:
a mother hedgehog and five In turning over the grass in search of a ball No. 6276, 136. youngsters were discovered. Westm. Gaz. Her five youngsters, about the size of small rats, were snuggling on one side
,
,
of her.
ib.
line 7
is
from bottom
a hope
,
insert:
c)
i.
There
that
Panama
There
Exhibition.
Westm. Gaz.,
i
Note.
may
,
still
participate in the
2c.
IV, 97.
Compare
73.
University of California
FACILITY
from which
it
was borrowed.
APR
9 7002
FFB
5 2002
05
M>
AA
%
1 LIBRARY FACILITY
MmSmmmm
"
'