Noah Webster |
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Page 35
... popular education and pop- ular sovereignty . He began to see it , and was influenced by it ; but his work was mightier than he then knew , for he had not been educated in a free republic . How simple and slight a change in meth- ods of ...
... popular education and pop- ular sovereignty . He began to see it , and was influenced by it ; but his work was mightier than he then knew , for he had not been educated in a free republic . How simple and slight a change in meth- ods of ...
Page 44
... popular instinct , that it was a recommendation to him when a phrase was condemned by the grammarians , while in common use by the people . For example he says in a Letter to the Governors , In- structors , and Trustees of the ...
... popular instinct , that it was a recommendation to him when a phrase was condemned by the grammarians , while in common use by the people . For example he says in a Letter to the Governors , In- structors , and Trustees of the ...
Page 48
... addresses in America have from the beginning been affected by the necessity which a regard for ancient models . laid upon them of fitting the facts of our Rev- olutionary War to oratorical periods , and how far popular 48 NOAH WEBSTER .
... addresses in America have from the beginning been affected by the necessity which a regard for ancient models . laid upon them of fitting the facts of our Rev- olutionary War to oratorical periods , and how far popular 48 NOAH WEBSTER .
Page 49
Horace Elisha Scudder. olutionary War to oratorical periods , and how far popular conceptions of the begin- ning of our national life have been formed . by the " pieces " which young Americans have been called upon to speak . The Ro- man ...
Horace Elisha Scudder. olutionary War to oratorical periods , and how far popular conceptions of the begin- ning of our national life have been formed . by the " pieces " which young Americans have been called upon to speak . The Ro- man ...
Page 70
... popularity of the speller rendered it liable to piracy , especially in the ruder parts of the country , and as late as 1835 Mr. Web- ster writes to his son , established as a bookseller in Louisville : " I would suggest whether it would ...
... popularity of the speller rendered it liable to piracy , especially in the ruder parts of the country , and as late as 1835 Mr. Web- ster writes to his son , established as a bookseller in Louisville : " I would suggest whether it would ...
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Amer Ameri American authors Bayard Taylor Belknap Bible Boston changes character committee common Congress Connecticut copyright laws Crown 8vo Diamond Edition Dictionary editor England English Language errors Essays George Ticknor give grammar guage Hartford Hartford Convention Hartford wits Henry Cabot Lodge Household Edition ical ican illus Illustrated improvement interest ject Joel Barlow John John Trumbull Johnson labor learning legislature letter lexicography Library Edition lish literary literature magazine ment Mifflin and Company's mind nation ness never Noah Webster opinion orthography pamphlet papers Poems political popular Portrait practice principles pronunciation propriety published reader Red-Line Edition reform respect revision says sense sion Sketches Small 4to sound spelling Spelling-Book ster ster's thought tion town uniformity United usage venture vols Webster's Dictionary words writes wrote Yale College young
Popular passages
Page 2 - OILMAN, Thomas Jefferson. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. Daniel Webster. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. Albert Gallatin. By JOHN AUSTIN STEVENS. James Madison.
Page 205 - As an independent nation our honor requires us to have a system of our own, in language as well as government. Great Britain, whose children we are, and whose language we speak, should no longer be our standard ; for the taste of her writers is already corrupted, and her language on the decline.
Page 46 - AN AMERICAN SELECTION of Lessons in reading and speaking, calculated to improve the Minds and refine the Taste of Youth. And also to instruct them in the Geography, History, and Politics of the United States. To which is prefixed Rules in Elocution, and Directions for expressing the principal Passions of the Mind.
Page 8 - A Passionate Pilgrim and other Tales, I2mo, $2.00; Transatlantic Sketches, I2mo, $2.00; Roderick Hudson, I2mo, $2.00; The American, I2mo, $2.00; Watch and Ward, i8mo, $1.25; The Europeans, I2mo, $1.50; Confidence, I2mo, $1.50; The Portrait of a Lady, I2mo, $2.00.
Page 8 - Henry James, Jr. A Passionate Pilgrim and other Tales, I2mo, $2.00; Transatlantic Sketches, I2mo, $2.00 ; Roderick Hudson, I2mo, $2.00 ; The American...
Page 16 - John Woolman's Journal, Introduction by Whittier, $1.50, Child Life in Poetry, selected by Whittier, Illustrated, I2mo...
Page 195 - ... pronunciation to a certainty; and while it would assist foreigners and our own children in acquiring the language, it would render the pronunciation uniform in different parts of the country and almost prevent the possibility of changes. 2. A substitution of a character that has a certain definite sound / for one that is more vague and indeterminate.
Page 16 - White. Every-Day English, I2mo, $2.00; Words and their Uses, I2mo, $2.00; England Without and Within, I2mo, $2.00; The Fate of Mansfield Humphreys, l6mo, $1.25; Studies in Shakespeare, I2mo, $1.75.
Page 6 - Correspondence, cr. 8vo, $2.00. John Fiske. Myths and Mythmakers, I2mo, $2.00; Outlines of Cosmic Philosophy, 2 vols. 8vo, $6.00 ; The Unseen World, and other Essays, I2mo, $2.00 ; Excursions of an Evolutionist, I2mo, $2.00; The Destiny of Man, i6mo, $1.00; The Idea of God, i6mo, $1.00; Darwinism, and Other Essays, New Edition, enlarged, I2mo, $2.00.
Page 105 - our learning is superficial in a shameful degree, . . . our colleges are disgracefully destitute of books and philosophical apparatus, . . . and I am ashamed to own that scarcely a branch of science can be fully investigated in America for want of books, especially original works.