Difference between revisions of ".Mzk2.ODUxNg"

From Georgian Papers Programme Transcription Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "deletion A /deletion Substantives are of two Sorts;")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
[[deletion]] A [[/deletion]] Substantives are of two Sorts;
+
[[deletion]] A [[/deletion]] Substantives are of two Sorts;  
 +
Proper and Common Names;
 +
Proper Names are such as are appropriate
 +
to individuals; as the the names of persons
 +
and places, such are Thomas, London.
 +
 
 +
Common Names stand for kinds, of
 +
containing many Sorts, or Sorts containing
 +
many Individuals, as Animal, Man,
 +
which are applied also to Individuals
 +
by adding to them articles as we have
 +
shown before.
 +
 
 +
Proper Names admit neither of
 +
Articles nor of the Plural Number
 +
unless by a figurative expression, as
 +
when conveys in the idea of a Great Conqueror
 +
one may with [[underline]] elegance say [[/underline]]
 +
an Alexander, or the Alexander of the age
 +
or the Thames, that is the River Thames,
 +
 
 +
In English, the Substantive singular
 +
is made Plural for the most part by adding
 +
to it an s; or es, where necessary for the
 +
Pronounciation; as King, King's, fox, foxes
 +
leaf, leaves, in which last and many
 +
others the f is changed into a v, to ease
 +
the pronounciation, and soften the
 +
sound.

Revision as of 17:42, 12 May 2018

deletion A /deletion Substantives are of two Sorts; Proper and Common Names; Proper Names are such as are appropriate to individuals; as the the names of persons and places, such are Thomas, London.

Common Names stand for kinds, of containing many Sorts, or Sorts containing many Individuals, as Animal, Man, which are applied also to Individuals by adding to them articles as we have shown before.

Proper Names admit neither of Articles nor of the Plural Number unless by a figurative expression, as when conveys in the idea of a Great Conqueror one may with underline elegance say /underline an Alexander, or the Alexander of the age or the Thames, that is the River Thames,

In English, the Substantive singular is made Plural for the most part by adding to it an s; or es, where necessary for the Pronounciation; as King, King's, fox, foxes leaf, leaves, in which last and many others the f is changed into a v, to ease the pronounciation, and soften the sound.