The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.
makes mine, thine, hers, ours, yours, and theirs to be “compounds.” (6.) Churchill adopts the plan of “personal, relative, and adjective pronouns;” and then destroys it by a valid argument. (7.) Comly, Wilcox, Wells, and Perley, have these three classes; “personal, relative, and interrogative:”  and this division is right. (8.) Sanborn makes the following bull:  “The general divisions of pronouns are into personal, relative, interrogative, and several sub-divisions.”—­Analytical Gram., p. 91. (9.) Jaudon has these three kinds; “personal, relative, and distributive.” (10.) Robbins, these; “simple, conjunctive, and interrogative.” (11.) Lindley Murray, in his early editions, had these four; “personal, possessive, relative, and adjective.” (12.) Bucke has these; “personal, relative, interrogative, and adjective.” (13.) Ingersoll, these; “personal, adjective, relative, and interrogative.” (14.) Buchanan; “personal, demonstrative, relative, and interrogative.” (15.) Coar; “personal, possessive or pronominal adjectives, demonstrative, and relative.” (16.) Bicknell; “personal, possessive, relative, and demonstrative.” (17.) Cobbett; “personal, relative, demonstrative, and indefinite.” (18) M’Culloch; “personal, possessive, relative, and reciprocal.” (19.) Staniford has five; “personal, relative, interrogative, definitive, and distributive.” (20.) Alexander, six; “personal, relative, demonstrative, interrogative, definitive, and adjective.” (21.) Cooper, in 1828, had five; “personal, relative, possessive, definite, and indefinite.” (22.) Cooper, in 1831, six; “personal, relative, definite, indefinite, possessive, and possessive pronominal adjectives.” (23.) Dr. Crombie says:  “Pronouns may be divided into Substantive, and Adjective; Personal, and Impersonal; Relative, and Interrogative.” (24.) Alden has seven sorts; “personal, possessive, relative, interrogative, distributive, demonstrative, and indefinite.” (25.) R. C. Smith has many kinds, and treats them so badly that nobody can count them.  In respect to definitions, too, most of these writers are shamefully inaccurate, or deficient.  Hence the filling up of their classes is often as bad as the arrangement.  For instance, four and twenty of them will have interrogative pronouns to be relatives; but who that knows what a relative pronoun is, can coincide with them in opinion?  Dr. Crombie thinks, “that interrogatives are strictly relatives;” and yet divides the two classes with his own hand!

MODIFICATIONS.

Pronouns have the same modifications as nouns; namely, Persons, Numbers, Genders, and Cases.  Definitions universally applicable have already been given of all these things; it is therefore unnecessary to define them again in this place.

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The Grammar of English Grammars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.