55 examples of murr in sentences

Mood, &c. More and most, in ambiguous construction, ("Some people MORE than them," MURR.,) how parsed in comparisons of adjectives and adverbs.

by direct address; is no positive index of the vocative O, &c., MURR., erron.

"Active verbs govern the obj. case," MURR., defect of this brief assertion; its uselessness as a RULE for "the syntax of verbs.

Ought, principal verb, and not auxiliary, as called by MURR.

Participial noun and participle, the distinction between, ill preserved by MURR.

following, strictures on MURR., LENN., and BULL.

with, to what equivalent, each requires its appropriate FORM, questionable uses of, admitted by MURR.

on; his views, how accord with those of MURR.

("The characters MADE USE OF," MURR.,): not to be used for the pret., nor confounded with the pres.: what care necessary in the employment of; when to be distinguished from the preterits of their verbs.

Personification, defined, MURR.

., respecting the formation of MURR.

text cited in illustration the special adaptation of; example of misuse by MURR., remarked on HARR., on the purpose for which almost all prepositions were orig. formed, and on the nature of their relations; his views controverted by BROWN, Prepositions and their governed objects, the true determination of; examples of joint objects, and of joint antecedents, wrong views of MURR.

on "prepositions becoming adverbs," criticised MURR.

in the same construc.; erron. remark of PRIESTL., MURR., et al., concerning the latter Preposition, the separating of, from its noun, false doctrine of LOWTH, MURR., et al., concerning Prepositions, prop, choice of do., with respect to the allowable uses of as adapted in meaning to two objects, or to more Preposition, ellips.

in the same construc.; erron. remark of PRIESTL., MURR., et al., concerning the latter Preposition, the separating of, from its noun, false doctrine of LOWTH, MURR., et al., concerning Prepositions, prop, choice of do., with respect to the allowable uses of as adapted in meaning to two objects, or to more Preposition, ellips.

to BROWN as regulated by emphasis, MURR. Quant.

of long and short, e. g., FISHER; so SHERID., WALK., MURR., et al. CHAND.

of those of MURR., shown, the true nature of; how may be used; to what is applicable; the explanations of, by the copyists of MURR., criticised, whether not applicable to two objects, when employed, what construc.

of those of MURR., shown, the true nature of; how may be used; to what is applicable; the explanations of, by the copyists of MURR., criticised, whether not applicable to two objects, when employed, what construc.

or other small particle Terminations, of words, separated in syllabicat. of verbs, numb. of different, in each tense of the Eng. verb; DR. A. MURR.

TO, &c.; he shows that the doctrine originated not with himself TO and the verb, what FISHER (anno 1800) taught respecting; what, LOWTH, and what, absurdly, MURR., his copyist To, as governing infin., traced from the Sax.

verse, the stress in nature of the single-rhymed; error of MURR.

Underlining words, in preparing manuscripts, to denote Italics &c. Understood, words said, in technical phrase, to be, what such, (Lat., subaudita) Ungrammatical language by which grammar itself is professedly taught, sample from MURR.; from PINNEO;

MURR, on the distribution of NIX.

to MURR., WEBST., et.

55 examples of  murr  in sentences