| Humphrey Prideaux - Bible - 1839 - 594 pages
...called a vtrtendo, because the writer, when he is got to the end of one line, turns back his hand, and begins the next, and so doth the reader also his eye,...one line to the beginning of the next. Vide Menagii Observationes in Diogenis Laertii, lib. 4. n. 24. Jerome also, in bis preface before his Latin version... | |
| Humphrey Prideaux - Bible - 1845 - 460 pages
...a vertcndo, because the writer, when he in got to ths end of one line, íiírлs back his hand, and begins the next, and so doth the reader also his eye. from the end of one line to the lieeinning of the next. Vide Menagii Observatione« in Пт^oшs Lnertii, lib. 4. N. -24. Jerome also,... | |
| John Best Davidson - 1846 - 152 pages
...compound words, like ill-deserving and son-in-law. It is likewise employed when part of a word is carried from the end of one line to the beginning of the next. 503. The apostrophe ' denotes a contraction, as in don't — do not. It often supplies the place of... | |
| Arthur Hugh Clough - English literature - 1848 - 68 pages
...lines, so called, are almost the rule ; and a word will often require to be transposed by the voice from the end of one line to the beginning of the next. MY LONG-VACATION PUPILS WILL I HOPE ALLOW ME TO INSCRIBE THIS TRIFLE TO THEM, AND WILL NOT, I TRUST,... | |
| Commerce - 1849 - 710 pages
...called, are almost the rule ; " and a word," he adds, " will often require to be transposed by the voice, from the end of one line to the beginning of the next" We trust the worthy publisher will hereafter send us something that we can understand — something... | |
| American Oriental Society - Oriental philology - 1862 - 716 pages
...Longfellow's Song of Hiawatha, in respect to the measure, the absence of rlymc, the repetition of words from the end of one line to the beginning of the next, and of whole lines in a question and its answer, a promise and the story of its fulfillment, and the... | |
| Humphrey Prideaux - 1858 - 604 pages
...called a vcrtendo, because the writer, when lie is pot to the end of one line, turns back his hand, and begins the next, and so doth the reader also his eye...one line to the beginning of the next. Vide Menagii Observationcs in Diogcnis Laertii, lib. 4, n. 24. Jerome also, in his preface before his Latin version... | |
| Education - 1928 - 684 pages
...recognition. (c) Wide span of recognition. (d) Regular progress of perception. (e) Accurate return sweeps from the end of one line to the beginning of the next. 6. Freedom from lip movement and incipient articulation in silent reading. An attempt was made to secure... | |
| Bible - 1882 - 550 pages
...another scribe. Sometimes a punctuation mark, especially in the case of the quadruple dot, is transferred from the end of one line to the beginning of the next. In the Acts and Epistles, quotations from the Old Testament are frequently marked by a short oblique... | |
| Samuel Waddington - Poets, English - 1883 - 358 pages
...lines, so called, are almost the rule ; and a word will often require to be transposed by the voice from the end of one line to the beginning of the next.' Such was the brief preface to the poem as it originally appeared in 1848, but it must not be forgotten... | |
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