How to Speak and Write Correctly | Page 4

Joseph Devlin
the various classes of words and the changes they undergo.
Syntax treats of the connection and arrangement of words in sentences.
Prosody treats of the manner of speaking and reading and the different kinds of verse.
The three first mentioned concern us most.
LETTERS
A letter is a mark or character used to represent an articulate sound. Letters are divided
into vowels and consonants. A vowel is a letter which makes a distinct sound by itself.
Consonants cannot be sounded without the aid of vowels. The vowels are a, e, i, o, u, and
sometimes w and y when they do not begin a word or syllable.
SYLLABLES AND WORDS
A syllable is a distinct sound produced by a single effort of [Transcriber's note: 1-2 words
illegible] shall, pig, dog. In every syllable there must be at least one vowel.
A word consists of one syllable or a combination of syllables.

Many rules are given for the dividing of words into syllables, but the best is to follow as
closely as possible the divisions made by the organs of speech in properly pronouncing
them.
THE PARTS OF SPEECH
ARTICLE
An Article is a word placed before a noun to show whether the noun is used in a
particular or general sense.
There are two articles, a or an and the. A or an is called the indefinite article because it
does not point put any particular person or thing but indicates the noun in its widest sense;
thus, a man means any man whatsoever of the species or race.
The is called the definite article because it points out some particular person or thing; thus,
the man means some particular individual.
NOUN
A noun is the name of any person, place or thing as John, London, book. Nouns are
proper and common.
Proper nouns are names applied to particular persons or places.
Common nouns are names applied to a whole kind or species.
Nouns are inflected by number, gender and case.
Number is that inflection of the noun by which we indicate whether it represents one or
more than one.
Gender is that inflection by which we signify whether the noun is the name of a male, a
female, of an inanimate object or something which has no distinction of sex.
Case is that inflection of the noun which denotes the state of the person, place or thing
represented, as the subject of an affirmation or question, the owner or possessor of
something mentioned, or the object of an action or of a relation.
Thus in the example, "John tore the leaves of Sarah's book," the distinction between book
which represents only one object and leaves which represent two or more objects of the
same kind is called _Number_; the distinction of sex between John, a male, and Sarah, a
female, and book and leaves, things which are inanimate and neither male nor female, is
called _Gender_; and the distinction of state between John, the person who tore the book,
and the subject of the affirmation, Mary, the owner of the book, leaves the objects torn,
and book the object related to leaves, as the whole of which they were a part, is called
Case.

ADJECTIVE
An adjective is a word which qualifies a noun, that is, shows or points out some
distinguishing mark or feature of the noun; as, A black dog.
Adjectives have three forms called degrees of comparison, the positive, the comparative
and the superlative.
The positive is the simple form of the adjective without expressing increase or diminution
of the original quality: nice.
The comparative is that form of the adjective which expresses increase or diminution of
the quality: nicer.
The superlative is that form which expresses the greatest increase or diminution of the
quality: nicest.
or An adjective is in the positive form when it does not express comparison; as, "A rich
man."
An adjective is in the comparative form when it expresses comparison between two or
between one and a number taken collectively, as, "John is richer than James"; "he is
richer than all the men in Boston."
An adjective is in the superlative form when it expresses a comparison between one and a
number of individuals taken separately; as, "John is the richest man in Boston."
Adjectives expressive of properties or circumstances which cannot be increased have
only the positive form; as, A circular road; the chief end; an extreme measure.
Adjectives are compared in two ways, either by adding er to the positive to form the
comparative and est to the positive to form the superlative, or by prefixing more to the
positive for the comparative and most to the positive for the superlative; as, handsome,
handsomer, handsomest or handsome, more handsome, most handsome.
Adjectives of two or more syllables are generally compared by
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