HE NATURE OF VE
t in all languages, is, that they are t
and also into Regular, Irregular, and Defective. T
"I love Wilhelmina Stubbs." Here, I am the agent; that is, the lover;
hing; and therefore implies an object acted upon, and an agent by which
action nor passion, but a stat
ous, M
inal
and Defective, we shall hav
o or to depart; to "bone," to "prig," that is to say, to steal; to "collar," which means to seize, an expression probably derived from the mode of prehension, or rather apprehension character
"calculate," I "reckon," I "realise," I "guess,
s instead of helps) are those, by the help of which we are chiefly enabled to conjugate our verbs in English. T
r, makes let-test and letteth. The phrase, "This House to Let," generally used instead of "to be l
which the writer of every book has, or ought to have in view, to get a reader who is wide awake, and to keep him so:-the latter of which, when Number, Person, Mood, and Tense are to be trea
OF NUMBER
Singular and the Plural: a
there are thr
LAR.
son I lov
Thou lovest
on He love
the following Lines, by a Young Lady, (now no more,)
y! fatal n
page with
to love' I le
h! teach me
OF MOODS AN
rtain variation which it undergoes, showing the manner
cative, the Imperative, the Potential
s a thing: as, "He teaches, he is taught or it a
ld age the
gives you the
rope support
se it is
s, entreats, or permits: as, "Vanish
or obligation: as, "A waiter may be honest. Yuu may stand upon
and is preceded by a conjunction, expressed or understood, and accompanie
hould serve you right:" that is
out limitation, and without any distinction of number
because it participates in the properties both of a verb and of
ub he addressed
ted a stave,
and the Compound Perfect: as, "I felt nervous at the thought of popping
estion is, that the report
IV. OF T
visions, namely, the Present, the Imperfect, the Perfect
hour-glass; but the youthful reader must bear in mind,
inal
ts an action or event occurring at the present t
ich, like a mutton chop, may be either thoroughly done, or no
ttle boy some fi
me-Lork! she mad
the Honorable Gentleman
tand on trifles. However, we are not going to commit ourselves, like some folks, nor to get comm
e present time. That, however, which the Perfect Tense represents as done, is completely, or, as we say of a
ainted with aquatic phraseology, that "pulling up" young ladies, or others, is a very different thing from "pulling up" an omnibus conductor or a cabman. What an equivocal language is o
s, as past previously to some other point of time also past; a
inal
at home to-morrow; and when I find it perfectly convenient, I shall pay him." The Second Future intimates that the action will be comp
en the means of killi
ious moral reflections to the thinking mind.
rable to splendid, but contingent futurity; i.
ivation of aliment;-a new way of putting an old proverb
TION OF THE AUXILIARY
uld be considered, we feel ourselves in an awkward dilemma. The omission of the conjugations is a serious omission-which, of course, is objectionable in a comic work-and the insertion of them would be equally serious, and therefore quite as improper. What shall we do? We wi
ngster I had n
jilted I shou
m me all ye lads
of Grammar occu
we recommend him to substitute for "to love," some word less harrowing to a sensitive mind: as, "to fleece, to tax," verbs which excite disagreeable emotions only in a sordid one; and which also, by association of ideas, conduct us to useful reflections on Political Economy. We advise all whom it may concern, however, to pay the
orrow?" asked Mon
replied Mons
m, Thou lovest to roam on the crested foam, He loves to roam on the crested foam, We love to roam on t
ful when a peculiar emphasis is requir
ll
rick worth
ou, t
e, who wanted to know what his name might
inal
e have to say about the conju
ONJUGATION OF REG
t tense of the indicative mood, and their perfect participle,
PERFECT. PE
reckoned.
I realise
tion by youth, as it tends to put ideas into their heads which they would otherwise never have thought of; and it is moreover our opinion, that several of our most gifted poets may, with reason, have attributed
inal
iss Cupid, and he must
SS
ed by the addition of d, or ed to the verb: as, from the verb "To bless," i
more than the repetition of that of the auxil
exander did the Gordian knot) instead of con
II. IRREG
rfect tense and the perfect participle are
MPERFECT.
I blew
tempestuous weather, proper enough; but I am blowed, it will at once b
s of some persons, divers of them become doubly irregular in the formation of
RFECT. PERF.
wur
bust b
RFECT. PERF.
ee Pa
I. OF DEFEC
have fi
s have si
folks Who are blind,
ve, or rum verbs, which are used onl
ee Pag