A Treatise On English PunctuationРипол Классик, 1899 - History With an Appendix, Containing Rules On the Use of Capitals, a List of Abbreviations, Hints On the Preparation of Proof-Reading, Specimen of Proof-Sheet, Etc. |
Contents
1 | |
23 | |
26 | |
lwo Words of the same Part of Speech connected by | 37 |
Words or Phrases in Contrast | 45 |
Belative Pronouns and Relative Clauses | 57 |
Adjectival Participial and Absolute Phrases | 69 |
Phrases at the End of Sentences or Clauses | 78 |
Headings Subheads Phrases in Titlepages c | 147 |
Names Titles and other Words abbreviated | 148 |
Introductory Observations | 154 |
Expressions in the Form of Questions | 165 |
BECT III THE DASH | 174 |
The Echo or Words repeated Rhetorically | 182 |
Ellipsis of the Adverb Namely 8m | 191 |
Parenthetical Phrases and Clauses | 197 |
One Clause depending on Another | 89 |
Phrases and Clauses in the same Construction | 98 |
Clauses having a Verb understood | 104 |
Numeral Figures and Words | 112 |
A Series of Expressions having a Common Dependence | 120 |
THE COLON | 129 |
Quotations Remarks c formally Introduced | 141 |
The Genitive or Possessive Case | 204 |
Prefixes in Derivative Words | 219 |
MARKS OF QUOTATION | 228 |
MISCELLANEOUS MARKS | 235 |
Page | 241 |
The Pen and the Press by John Critchley Prince | 247 |
APPENDIX | 257 |
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Common terms and phrases
according adverb appear beauty beginning called capitals character clause closely colon comma common composition compound conjunction connected consists construction dash distinguished earth employed example excellence EXERCISE expression feeling first following sentences genius give given grammatical hand happiness heart heaven human importance indicate inserted kind knowledge language less letters light live mark meaning mind mode moral nature never nominative noun object occur omitted ORAL passage period person philosopher phrases placed portion preceding present principles printed proper punctuation quotation reason reference regard relation relative Remark respect rhetorical Rule semicolon sense sentence separated society sometimes soul speaking spirit term things thou thought tion true truth universe usually verb virtue voice words writers written