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"Avail of," "behave," and "trouble" require a reflexive pronoun after them. "Avail of" without the pronoun flourishes in legal society, "behave" in domestic life. "Trouble" is more common in Great Britain than in America.

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Chapter V.

OF VERBS

Vulgarisms. Some blunders in the use of verbs are, or should be, confined to the illiterate.

I.

I should be delighted to go to the World's Fair.

II.

I should admire to go to the World's Fair.

Admire in this sense is sometimes heard in the United States, but is not in good use.

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Clothes are "hung" on the line; men are "hanged" on the gallows.

I.

II.

I'll teach a man the river.

I'll learn a man the river.

"Teach," says Mark Twain, "is not in the river [the Mississippi] vocabulary."

I.

He would n't let me go.

At the gate I alighted from my horse.

I shall lend you one hundred dollars only.

Detectives, after months of searching, found out that the daughter and her husband were in Jane County.

The old man pleaded so hard that I let him off.

She showed me the road to town.

Darcy had been used to having every attention shown him.

It snowed yesterday. They passed through the old rickety gate which swung at the entrance of the place.

It is said privately that the road will declare a dividend.

You looked as if you had taken root there.

If it had been a hard case, would have gone.

I

As the storm was increasing, I lay down in the corner and fell asleep.

As Gulliver could not see his way, he lay down and fell into a heavy sleep.

II.

He would n't leave me go.

At the gate I lit from my horse.

I shall loan you only one hundred dollars.

Detectives, after months of searching, located the daughter and her husband in Jane County.

The old man plead so hard that I let him off.

She shew me the road to town.

Darcy had been used to having every attention showed him. It snew yesterday.

They passed through the old rickety gate which swang at the entrance of the place.

It is talked privately that the road will declare a dividend. You looked as if you had took root there.

If it had been a hard case, I would have went.

As the storm was increasing, I lied down in the corner and fell asleep.

As Gulliver could not see his way, he laid down and fell into a heavy sleep.

I.

I recalled all the times I had lain awake.

Orlando laid Adam down carefully, and told him that he would soon return with food.

Scott often gives us a picture of some old ruined abbey, lying cold and deserted in the moonlight.

II.

I recalled all the times I had laid awake.

Orlando lay Adam down carefully, and told him that he would soon return with food.

Scott often gives us a picture of some old ruined abbey, laying cold and deserted in the moonlight.

"There let him lay" deforms Byron's magnificent apostrophe to the ocean in "Childe Harold."

I.

If you had a strong fire, and your steam were inclined to rise, what should you do?

How values have risen on

Boylston Street!

II.

If you had a strong fire, and your steam was inclined to raise, what would you do?

How values have raised on Boylston Street!

The distinction between "raise" and "rise" is well brought out by Goldsmith in "The Deserted Village,"

"More skilled to raise the wretched than to rise."

I.

Papa seated her in a big chair.
She sat down before the fire.
Why don't you sit still?

You aren't so fleshy as you

used to be, are you?

As it doesn't suit you to call,

send me ten dollars.

II.

Papa sat her in a big chair.
She set down before the fire.
Why don't you set still?
You ain't so fleshy as you used
to be, be you ?

As it don't suit you to call, send me ten dollars.

It may seem needless to record a vulgarism so gross as ain't; but the expression is sometimes on the lips of boys and girls who ought to know better, of men and women who have had a good education, and even of teachers in their

unguarded moments. Don't for "does n't" is still more

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The better class of those who say ain't or he don't have no patience with those who say had n't ought; but even this vulgarism is not confined to the illiterate.

I.

You were well then, were n't

you?

II.

You was well then, was n't you?

"You was," which is now a badge of vulgarity, was once good English. Horace Walpole, for instance, writes, "How infinitely good you was to poor Mrs. Goldsworthy!" and again : "Sir,' said the king, 'was it not when you was opposing me?'" 1

Avoid VULGARISMS.

May or Can."Can" is often used in place of "may," and "may" sometimes in place of "can."

I.

May I give you a slice of beef? If an author's ideas are original, he may safely fail in all other respects.

II.

Can I give you a slice of beef? If an author's ideas are original he can safely fail in all other requirements.

"Can" signifies that a thing is possible; "may," that it is permitted. The distinction is well brought out in the following quotations: the first from a recent English novel, the second from an American newspaper :

1 Other examples from various authors (from Henry More, 1651, to Dugald Stewart, 1819) are given by Mr. Fitzedward Hall (in "The Nation," March 10, 1892).

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