McGuffey's Newly Revised Eclectic Fourth Reader: Containing Elegant Extracts in Prose and Poetry : with Rules for Reading, and Exercises in Articulation, Defining, EtcClark, Austin & Smith, 1890 - 336 pages |
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Page 3
... requiring a more vigorous exercise of thought The mind of the pupil is presumed to have expanded , as he advanced through the preceding numbers of the " Series . " In this book , there- N fore , he is to expect that higher claims will ...
... requiring a more vigorous exercise of thought The mind of the pupil is presumed to have expanded , as he advanced through the preceding numbers of the " Series . " In this book , there- N fore , he is to expect that higher claims will ...
Page 8
... requiring attention , is ARTICULATION . And here , it is taken for granted , that the reader is able to pronounce each word at sight , so that there may be no hesitating or repeating ; that he has been taught to read with a proper ...
... requiring attention , is ARTICULATION . And here , it is taken for granted , that the reader is able to pronounce each word at sight , so that there may be no hesitating or repeating ; that he has been taught to read with a proper ...
Page 9
... are omitted , in the first instance , merely because they are difficult , and require care and attention for their utterance , although , after a while , it becomes a matter of habit . The only remedy is , to. ARTICULATION . 9.
... are omitted , in the first instance , merely because they are difficult , and require care and attention for their utterance , although , after a while , it becomes a matter of habit . The only remedy is , to. ARTICULATION . 9.
Page 15
... requires attention to be able to close a sentence gracefully . The ear , however , is the best guide on this point . Parts of a sentence often make complete sense in themselves , and in this case , unless qualified or restrained by the ...
... requires attention to be able to close a sentence gracefully . The ear , however , is the best guide on this point . Parts of a sentence often make complete sense in themselves , and in this case , unless qualified or restrained by the ...
Page 16
... require the rising inflection on the concluding word . See exception to Rule II . Remark . As a sentence generally ends with the falling inflection , harmony and variety of sound seem to require , that the last but one should be the ...
... require the rising inflection on the concluding word . See exception to Rule II . Remark . As a sentence generally ends with the falling inflection , harmony and variety of sound seem to require , that the last but one should be the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abishai Absalom Ahimaaz ARTICULATE distinctly Babylon beautiful birds boat bosom called cesura character child children of men circumflex clouds commenced dark dear death deep ducats earth emphasis emphatic eternity examples exercise Explain the inflections eyes falling inflection father fault fear feel genius give hand happy hast hath head heard heart heaven hour human inflections marked Joab judge kind king laws lesson light live look Lord Lord Byron mind mother nature never nouns o'er object paragraph Parse passed pause Pinneo's Analytical Grammar poetry poor praise PRONOUNCE Correctly pupil QUESTIONS QUESTIONS.-What reader Repeat rising inflection Rule Rule II sentence shalt ship Shylock Socrates soul sound spirit stanza syllable teacher Tell thee thing thou thought thousand thousand guineas tion tone unto utterance verbs voice waves William Reed wind words young