INTERJECTIONS.
Definition.
334. Interjections are
exclamations used to express emotion, and are not parts of speech in the same
sense as the words we have discussed; that is, entering into the structure of a
sentence.
Some of these are imitative
sounds; as, tut! buzz! etc.
Humph! attempts to express a
contemptuous nasal utterance that no letters of our language can really spell.
Not all exclamatory words are
interjections.
Other interjections are oh! ah!
alas! pshaw! hurrah! etc. But it is to be remembered that almost any word may
be used as an exclamation, but it still retains its identity as noun, pronoun,
verb, etc.: for example, "Books! lighthouses built on the sea of time
[noun];" "Halt! the dust-brown ranks stood fast [verb],"
"Up! for shame! [adverb]," "Impossible! it cannot be
[adjective]."
PART II.
ANALYSIS OF SENTENCES.
CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO FORM.
What analysis is..
335. All
discourse is made up of sentences: consequently the sentence is the unit with
which we must begin. And in order to get a clear and practical idea of the
structure of sentences, it is necessary to become expert in analysis; that is,
in separating them into their component parts.
A general idea
of analysis was needed in our study of the parts of speech,—in determining
case, subject and predicate, clauses introduced by conjunctions, etc.
Value of analysis.
A more
thorough and accurate acquaintance with the subject is necessary for two
reasons,—not only for a correct understanding of the principles of syntax, but
for the study of punctuation and other topics treated in rhetoric.
Definition.
336.A sentence
is the expression of a thought in words.
Kinds of sentences as to form.
According to the way in which a
thought is put before a listener or reader, sentences may be of three kinds:—
(1)
Declarative, which puts the thought in the form of a declaration or assertion.
This is the most common one.
(2)
Interrogative, which puts the thought in a question.
(3)
Imperative, which expresses command, entreaty, or request.
Any one of
these may be put in the form of an exclamation, but the sentence would still be
declarative, interrogative, or imperative; hence, according to form, there are
only the three kinds of sentences already named.
Examples of
these three kinds are, declarative, "Old year, you must not die!"
interrogative, "Hath he not always treasures, always friends?"
imperative, "Come to the bridal chamber, Death!"
CLASSIFICATION
ACCORDING TO NUMBER OF STATEMENTS.
SIMPLE SENTENCES.
Division according to number of
statements.
338.But the
division of sentences most necessary to analysis is the division, not according
to the form in which a thought is put, but according to how many statements
there are.
The one we shall consider first
is the simple sentence.
Definition.
339.A simple
sentence is one which contains a single statement, question, or command: for
example, "The quality of mercy is not strained;" "What wouldst
thou do, old man?" "Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar."
340.Every sentence must contain
two parts,—a subject and a predicate.
Definition: Predicate.
The predicate
of a sentence is a verb or verb phrase which says something about the subject.
In order to
get a correct definition of the subject, let us examine two specimen
sentences:—
1. But now all is to be changed.
2. A rare old plant is the ivy
green.
In the first sentence we find the
subject by placing the word what before the predicate,—What is to be changed?
Answer, all. Consequently, we say all is the subject of the sentence.
But if we try
this with the second sentence, we have some trouble,—What is the ivy green?
Answer, a rare old plant. But we cannot help seeing that an assertion is made,
not of a rare old plant, but about the ivy green; and the real subject is the
latter. Sentences are frequently in this inverted order, especially in poetry;
and our definition must be the following, to suit all cases:—
Subject.
The subject is
that which answers the question who or what placed before the predicate, and
which at the same time names that of which the predicate says something.
The subject in
interrogative and imperative simple sentences.
341.In the interrogative
sentence, the subject is frequently after the verb. Either the verb is the
first word of the sentence, or an interrogative pronoun, adjective, or adverb
that asks about the subject. In analyzing such sentences, always reduce them to
the order of a statement. Thus,—
(1) "When should this
scientific education be commenced?"
(2) "This scientific
education should be commenced when?"
(3) "What wouldst thou have
a good great man obtain?"
(4) "Thou wouldst have a
good great man obtain what?"
In the imperative sentence, the
subject (you, thou, or ye) is in most cases omitted, and is to be supplied; as,
"[You] behold her single in the field."
Exercise.
Name the
subject and the predicate in each of the following sentences:—
1.The shadow of the dome of
pleasure
Floated midway on the waves.
2. Hence originated their
contempt for terrestrial distinctions.
3. Nowhere else on the Mount of
Olives is there a view like this.
4. In the sands of Africa and
Arabia the camel is a sacred and precious gift.
5. The last of all the Bards was
he.
6. Slavery they can have
anywhere.
7. Listen, on the other hand, to
an ignorant man.
8. What must have been the
emotions of the Spaniards!
9. Such was not the effect
produced on the sanguine spirit of the general.
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