<h2 name="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3>REQUIREMENTS OF SPEECH</h3>
<h4>Vocabulary—Parts of Speech—Requisites</h4></center>
<p>It is very easy to learn how to speak and write correctly, as
for all purposes of ordinary conversation and communication, only
about 2,000 different words are required. The mastery of just
twenty hundred words, the knowing where to place them, will make us
not masters of the English language, but masters of correct
speaking and writing. Small number, you will say, compared with
what is in the dictionary! But nobody ever uses all the words in
the dictionary or could use them did he live to be the age of
Methuselah, and there is no necessity for using them.</p>
<p>There are upwards of 200,000 words in the recent editions of the
large dictionaries, but the one-hundredth part of this number will
suffice for all your wants. Of course you may think not, and you
may not be content to call things by their common names; you may be
ambitious to show superiority over others and display your learning
or, rather, your pedantry and lack of learning. For instance, you
may not want to call a spade a spade. You may prefer to call it a
spatulous device for abrading the surface of the soil. Better,
however, to stick to the old familiar, simple name that your
grandfather called it. It has stood the test of time, and old
friends are always good friends.</p>
<p>To use a big word or a foreign word when a small one and a
familiar one will answer the same purpose, is a sign of ignorance.
Great scholars and writers and polite speakers use simple
words.</p>
<p>To go back to the number necessary for all purposes of
conversation correspondence and writing, 2,000, we find that a
great many people who pass in society as being polished, refined
and educated use less, for they know less. The greatest scholar
alive hasn't more than four thousand different words at his
command, and he never has occasion to use half the number.</p>
<p>In the works of Shakespeare, the most wonderful genius the world
has ever known, there is the enormous number of 15,000 different
words, but almost 10,000 of them are obsolete or meaningless
today.</p>
<p>Every person of intelligence should be able to use his mother
tongue correctly. It only requires a little pains, a little care, a
little study to enable one to do so, and the recompense is
great.</p>
<p>Consider the contrast between the well-bred, polite man who
knows how to choose and use his words correctly and the underbred,
vulgar boor, whose language grates upon the ear and jars the
sensitiveness of the finer feelings. The blunders of the latter,
his infringement of all the canons of grammar, his absurdities and
monstrosities of language, make his very presence a pain, and one
is glad to escape from his company.</p>
<p>The proper grammatical formation of the English language, so
that one may acquit himself as a correct conversationalist in the
best society or be able to write and express his thoughts and ideas
upon paper in the right manner, may be acquired in a few
lessons.</p>
<p>It is the purpose of this book, as briefly and concisely as
possible, to direct the reader along a straight course, pointing
out the mistakes he must avoid and giving him such assistance as
will enable him to reach the goal of a correct knowledge of the
English language. It is not a Grammar in any sense, but a guide, a
silent signal-post pointing the way in the right direction.</p>
<h3>THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN A NUTSHELL</h3>
<p>All the words in the English language are divided into nine
great classes. These classes are called the Parts of Speech. They
are Article, Noun, Adjective, Pronoun, Verb, Adverb, Preposition,
Conjunction and Interjection. Of these, the Noun is the most
important, as all the others are more or less dependent upon it. A
Noun signifies the name of any person, place or thing, in fact,
anything of which we can have either thought or idea. There are two
kinds of Nouns, Proper and Common. Common Nouns are names which
belong in common to a race or class, as <i>man</i>, <i>city</i>.
Proper Nouns distinguish individual members of a race or class as
<i>John</i>, <i>Philadelphia</i>. In the former case <i>man</i> is
a name which belongs in common to the whole race of mankind, and
<i>city</i> is also a name which is common to all large centres of
population, but <i>John</i> signifies a particular individual of
the race, while <i>Philadelphia</i> denotes a particular one from
among the cities of the world.</p>
<p>Nouns are varied by Person, Number, Gender, and Case. Person is
that relation existing between the speaker, those addressed and the
subject under consideration, whether by discourse or
correspondence. The Persons are <i>First</i>, <i>Second</i> and
<i>Third</i> and they represent respectively the speaker, the
person addressed and the person or thing mentioned or under
consideration.</p>
<p><i>Number</i> is the distinction of one from more than one.
There are two numbers, singular and plural; the singular denotes
one, the plural two or more. The plural is generally formed from
the singular by the addition of <i>s</i> or <i>es</i>.</p>
<p><i>Gender</i> has the same relation to nouns that sex has to
individuals, but while there are only two sexes, there are four
genders, viz., masculine, feminine, neuter and common. The
masculine gender denotes all those of the male kind, the feminine
gender all those of the female kind, the neuter gender denotes
inanimate things or whatever is without life, and common gender is
applied to animate beings, the sex of which for the time being is
indeterminable, such as fish, mouse, bird, etc. Sometimes things
which are without life as we conceive it and which, properly
speaking, belong to the neuter gender, are, by a figure of speech
called Personification, changed into either the masculine or
feminine gender, as, for instance, we say of the sun, <i>He</i> is
rising; of the moon, <i>She</i> is setting.</p>
<p><i>Case</i> is the relation one noun bears to another or to a
verb or to a preposition. There are three cases, the
<i>Nominative</i>, the <i>Possessive</i> and the <i>Objective</i>.
The nominative is the subject of which we are speaking or the agent
which directs the action of the verb; the possessive case denotes
possession, while the objective indicates the person or thing which
is affected by the action of the verb.</p>
<p>An <i>Article</i> is a word placed before a noun to show whether
the latter is used in a particular or general sense. There are but
two articles, <i>a</i> or <i>an</i> and <i>the</i>.</p>
<p>An <i>Adjective</i> is a word which qualifies a noun, that is,
which shows some distinguishing mark or characteristic belonging to
the noun.</p>
<h3>DEFINITIONS</h3>
<p>A <i>Pronoun</i> is a word used for or instead of a noun to keep
us from repeating the same noun too often. Pronouns, like nouns,
have case, number, gender and person. There are three kinds of
pronouns, <i>personal</i>, <i>relative</i> and
<i>adjective</i>.</p>
<p>A <i>verb</i> is a word which signifies action or the doing of
something. A verb is inflected by tense and mood and by number and
person, though the latter two belong strictly to the subject of the
verb.</p>
<p>An <i>adverb</i> is a word which modifies a verb, an adjective
and sometimes another adverb.</p>
<p>A <i>preposition</i> serves to connect words and to show the
relation between the objects which the words express.</p>
<p>A <i>conjunction</i> is a word which joins words, phrases,
clauses and sentences together.</p>
<p>An <i>interjection</i> is a word which expresses surprise or
some sudden emotion of the mind.</p>
<h3>THREE ESSENTIALS</h3>
<p>The three essentials of the English language are: <i>Purity</i>,
<i>Perspicuity</i> and <i>Precision</i>.</p>
<p>By <i>Purity</i> is signified the use of good English. It
precludes the use of all slang words, vulgar phrases, obsolete
terms, foreign idioms, ambiguous expressions or any ungrammatical
language whatsoever. Neither does it sanction the use of any newly
coined word until such word is adopted by the best writers and
speakers.</p>
<p><i>Perspicuity</i> demands the clearest expression of thought
conveyed in unequivocal language, so that there may be no
misunderstanding whatever of the thought or idea the speaker or
writer wishes to convey. All ambiguous words, words of double
meaning and words that might possibly be construed in a sense
different from that intended, are strictly forbidden. Perspicuity
requires a style at once clear and comprehensive and entirely free
from pomp and pedantry and affectation or any straining after
effect.</p>
<p><i>Precision</i> requires concise and exact expression, free
from redundancy and tautology, a style terse and clear and simple
enough to enable the hearer or reader to comprehend immediately the
meaning of the speaker or writer. It forbids, on the one hand, all
long and involved sentences, and, on the other, those that are too
short and abrupt. Its object is to strike the golden mean in such a
way as to rivet the attention of the hearer or reader on the words
uttered or written.</p>
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