Word: grammars
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Phobias, which he hammers upon any day in the week, include dry-sweeping of sidewalks, invisible house-numbers, bad grammar and punctuation. Sharing Colyumist Adams' passion for poker are his brother members in the Thanatopsis Literary & Inside-Straight Club...
...Close-Hauled" is a maiden venture in the field of letters. As such, perhaps it should receive more gentle treatment than a similar work by one of the American pot-holding gentry. There are present many surprising word arrangements, many sprawling sentences, even a few errors in grammar that are apparent to an undergraduate, but then, as the publishers say in a foreword, the manuscript of the book was left unaltered for fear of spoiling the elemental vigor of it all. But if this is damning with faint praise, we'll go further any say that "Close Hauled", granting excuses...
Correct Latin though scholarly Subscriber Andrae's version is, the version actually used by Cato, and accurately quoted by TIME, is also correct Latin. Let Subscriber Andrae consult his Allen & Greenough's, or any other standard Latin grammar, anent the gerundive construction...
...faithful comptroller who stigmatized an act of Parliament as "unfortunate" is no supercilious lordling but plain Tom Henderson, a labor M. P. with only a grammar school education who has been the Scottish labor parliamentary whip since 1925. "Tom" is not to be confused with "Uncle Arthur" Henderson, potent foreign secretary...
...lady used to appear regularly and translate the Latin inscription for the benefit of the curious. She always left some token of her esteem, apparently a smaller one each year, until the last, occurring about five years ago, was a single rose. The children of the neighboring Harvard Grammar School obey instructions and occasionally file to the spot, to leave some slight offering, gaze in awe at the name which they vaguely remember having heard in some other connection, and quietly depart...