Noah Webster |
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Page 63
... object . Some members of the committee were op- posed to the measure ; but at length , on the first of February , 1828 , the committee reported a bill consisting of three sections only , extending the term of copyrights from fourteen to ...
... object . Some members of the committee were op- posed to the measure ; but at length , on the first of February , 1828 , the committee reported a bill consisting of three sections only , extending the term of copyrights from fourteen to ...
Page 66
... object . Accord- ingly I took lodgings at the seat of govern- ment , where I passed nine or ten weeks ; and during this time read a lecture in the Hall of the Representatives , which was well attended , and , as my friends informed me ...
... object . Accord- ingly I took lodgings at the seat of govern- ment , where I passed nine or ten weeks ; and during this time read a lecture in the Hall of the Representatives , which was well attended , and , as my friends informed me ...
Page 67
... object , and in my long attendance in Washington , I expended nearly a year of time . Of my expenses in money I have no account , but it is a satisfaction to me that a liberal stat- ute for securing to authors the fruit of their labor ...
... object , and in my long attendance in Washington , I expended nearly a year of time . Of my expenses in money I have no account , but it is a satisfaction to me that a liberal stat- ute for securing to authors the fruit of their labor ...
Page 103
... object of the ' Echo . ' The important political changes which soon after occurred , not only in Europe , but in America , produced a corresponding change in the republic of letters ; and some of the principal gazettes of this country ...
... object of the ' Echo . ' The important political changes which soon after occurred , not only in Europe , but in America , produced a corresponding change in the republic of letters ; and some of the principal gazettes of this country ...
Page 104
... objects of satire , those tenets , as ab- surd in politics as pernicious in morals , the visionary scheme of equality , and the bale- ful doctrine that sanctions the pursuit of a good end by the most flagitious means . " Webster's ...
... objects of satire , those tenets , as ab- surd in politics as pernicious in morals , the visionary scheme of equality , and the bale- ful doctrine that sanctions the pursuit of a good end by the most flagitious means . " Webster's ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amer Ameri analogy authors Belknap Bible bill Boston called changes character committee common confidence Congress Connecticut Constitution edition editor England English language eral errors favor foreign gentlemen give grammar Grammatical Institute guage Hartford Hartford Convention Hartford wits ical ican improvement interest Jay's Treaty ject Joel Barlow John Trumbull Johnson labor learning legislature letter lexicography lish literary literature lived magazine manner ment mind nation ness never Noah Webster object opinion orthography pamphlet papers person political practice preface present principles printed pronunciation propriety published purpose reader reform respect revision rules Sam Adams says scarcely scholars sense sion sound spelling Spelling-Book ster ster's thought Timothy Pickering tion town uniformity United usage venture Webster's Dictionary words writes wrote Yale College young
Popular passages
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 97 - Webster has returned and brought with him a very pretty wife. I wish him success, but I doubt in the present decay of business in our profession, whether his profits will enable him to keep up the style he sets out with. I fear he will breakfast upon Institutes, dine upon Dissertations, and go to bed supperless.
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.
Page 199 - Besides this, a national language is a band of national union. Every engine should be employed to render the people of this country national; to call their attachments home to their own country; and to inspire them with the pride of national character. However they may boast of independence, and the freedom of their government, yet their opinions are not sufficiently independent; an astonishing respect for the arts and literature of their parent country, and a blind imitation of its manners, are...
Page 21 - I endeavored to get farther knowledge upon the subject. I would gladly have prepared for it by learning the language I should have to use there, but there was no one in Boston who could teach me. " At Jamaica Plains there was a Dr. Brosius, a native of Strasburg, who gave instruction in mathematics. He was willing to do what he could for me in German, but he warned me that his pronunciation was very bad, as was that of all Alsace, which had become a part of France. Nor was it possible to get books....
Page 47 - Begin with the infant in his cradle : let the first word he lisps be Washington." In strict accordance with this patriotic sentiment, the compiler gives a series of lessons which would not be inappropriate to any girl or boy who in infancy had performed the feat of lisping the easy-going name which Mirabeau himself probably had some struggle to achieve.
Page 37 - As for those boys and girls that mind not their books, and love not church and school, but play with such as tell tales, tell lies, curse, swear, and steal, they will come to some bad end, and must be whipt till they mend their ways.
Page 202 - Every engine should be employed to render the people of this country national; to call their attachments home to their own country; and to inspire them with the pride of national character. . . . Let us then seize the present moment, and establish a national language as well as a national government.
Page 175 - Substitute modern forms of speech for the following archaisms, viz. "who" or "that" for "which" when used of persons; "are "for "be" in the present indicative; "know" "knew" for "wot" "wist;" "drag" or "drag away
Page 206 - We have therefore the fairest opportunity of establishing a national language, and of giving it uniformity and perspicuity, in North America, that ever presented itself to mankind. Now is the time to begin the plan. The minds of the Americans are roused by the events of a revolution; the necessity of organizing the political body and of forming constitutions...