ta muallif kitobidan iqtiboslar  The Grammar of English Grammars

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grammar, logic, rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music.
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"Who to the life an exact piece would make, Must not from others' work a copy take."—Cowley
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Speech results from the joint exercise of the best and noblest faculties of human nature, from our rational understanding and our social affection
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and sanguinary spirit, in their day, was so universal."—M'Ilvaine's Evid., p. 398.
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they are altogether too late; and serve merely to mortify the speaker or writer, by reminding him of some deficiency or inaccuracy which there may then be no chance to
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5. By the adding of ly or ish
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you plead so much for it? why do ye preach it up?"--Barclay's
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ill I send upon you famine, an
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1. Language, in the proper sense of the term, is peculiar to man; so that, without a miraculous assumption of human powers, none but human beings can make words the vehicle of thought. An imitation of some of the articulate sounds employed in speech, may be exhibited by parrots, and sometimes by domesticated ravens, and we know that almost all brute animals have their peculiar natural voices, by which they indicate their feelings, whether pleasing or painful. But language is an attribute of reason, and differs essentially not only from all brute voices, but even from all the chattering, jabbering, and babbling of our own species, in which there is not an intelligible meaning, with division of thought, and distinction of words.
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Grammarians are the guardians, not the authors, of language.
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