The English of Shakespeare: Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius Caesar |
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Another form which was unquestionably part of the regular phraseology and grammar of his day is what is sometimes described as the conjunction of a plural nominative with a singular verb , but is really only a peculiar mode of ...
Another form which was unquestionably part of the regular phraseology and grammar of his day is what is sometimes described as the conjunction of a plural nominative with a singular verb , but is really only a peculiar mode of ...
Страница 39
... and may , and shall , and might , and are , all verbs , though certainly not emphatic , will yet any of them allow the voice to rest upon it with a considerably stronger pressure than such lightest and slightest of " winged words ...
... and may , and shall , and might , and are , all verbs , though certainly not emphatic , will yet any of them allow the voice to rest upon it with a considerably stronger pressure than such lightest and slightest of " winged words ...
Страница 63
The history and explanation of this now disused construction may be best collected from a valuable paper by Dr Guest “ On English Verbs , Substantive and Auxiliary , " read before the Philological Society , 13th March , 1846 , and ...
The history and explanation of this now disused construction may be best collected from a valuable paper by Dr Guest “ On English Verbs , Substantive and Auxiliary , " read before the Philological Society , 13th March , 1846 , and ...
Страница 64
The ancient syntax is still retained in all cases with the auxiliary verbs , as they are called , shall , will , can , may , do , and also with must and let , and oftener than not with bid , dare , hear , make , see , and perhaps some ...
The ancient syntax is still retained in all cases with the auxiliary verbs , as they are called , shall , will , can , may , do , and also with must and let , and oftener than not with bid , dare , hear , make , see , and perhaps some ...
Страница 65
Other verbs that are found in Shakespeare sometimes construed in the same manner are endure , forbid , intend , vouchsafe ; as , “ The treason that ... The verb to owe , it may further be observed , is etymologically the same with own .
Other verbs that are found in Shakespeare sometimes construed in the same manner are endure , forbid , intend , vouchsafe ; as , “ The treason that ... The verb to owe , it may further be observed , is etymologically the same with own .
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according annotator answer Antony appear authority bear believe better blood Brutus Cæsar called Casca Cassius Collier common commonly correction death doth doubt edition editors English Enter evidently expression fall fear Folio French German give given hand hath head hear heart Henry hold honour instance Julius Cæsar kind King language Latin least live look lord lost Lucius manner March Mark matter meaning merely mind natural nearly never night noble observed occurs old copies once original passage perhaps person Play present printed probably pronounced reading reason regard remarkable Roman Rome scene Second seems sense Shakespeare signifying slight sometimes speak speech spirit stage direction stand strong supposed syllable taken tell thee thing Third thou thought tion true verb verse word writers