The Monthly Anthology, and Boston Review, Volume 6, Issues 2-4Samuel Cooper Thacher, David Phineas Adams, William Emerson Munroe and Francis, 1809 |
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Page 80
... mode of spelling peculiar to himself , exhibited a multitude of rules for pronouncing the letters , accompanied with a copious collection of examples . As a treatise of the elementary principles of the language , his work is highly ...
... mode of spelling peculiar to himself , exhibited a multitude of rules for pronouncing the letters , accompanied with a copious collection of examples . As a treatise of the elementary principles of the language , his work is highly ...
Page 81
... mode , although , in my opinion , the most effectual that can be devised , to bring either a native or a foreigner to a just articulation and true pronunciation of English , has been complained of as too formidable in the commencement ...
... mode , although , in my opinion , the most effectual that can be devised , to bring either a native or a foreigner to a just articulation and true pronunciation of English , has been complained of as too formidable in the commencement ...
Page 82
... mode of spelling , " and exhibited examples of its ope- ration in a correspondence entered into expressly for that purpose . Taking the Italick alphabet for his ground work , the Dr. began by expunging every useless letter , and then ...
... mode of spelling , " and exhibited examples of its ope- ration in a correspondence entered into expressly for that purpose . Taking the Italick alphabet for his ground work , the Dr. began by expunging every useless letter , and then ...
Page 89
... modes of travelling ; in the diligence or publick stage , more slow , inconvenient and dis- agreeable than any thing which you can possibly imagine ; or en hoste , that is to say , with posthorses , furnished by a postmaster ap- pointed ...
... modes of travelling ; in the diligence or publick stage , more slow , inconvenient and dis- agreeable than any thing which you can possibly imagine ; or en hoste , that is to say , with posthorses , furnished by a postmaster ap- pointed ...
Page 94
... mode of travelling , and with the characters of the different persons with whom we must have necessarily some intercourse in our journies . You will thus be better able to follow us in our tour , and to enter into our feelings and ...
... mode of travelling , and with the characters of the different persons with whom we must have necessarily some intercourse in our journies . You will thus be better able to follow us in our tour , and to enter into our feelings and ...
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