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        Displaying 4,891 digitized works
    
  1. 1401

    Exercises on etymology :for use in schools, and for private instruction

  2. 1402

    Exercises on French sounds,.

  3. 1403

    Exercises on words.Designed as a course of practice on the rudiments of grammar and rhetoric.

  4. 1404

    The exhibition speaker containing farce dialogue and tableaux with exercises for declamation in prose and verse. :Also, a treatise on oratory and elocutions, hints on dramatic characters

  5. 1405

    Exotics: or, English words derived from Latin roots.Ten lectures.

  6. 1406

    The expeditious instructoror, reading, writing and arithmetick made plain and easy. (containing much more in Quantity, and a far greater Variety of Instructions, than any Book of the Kind or Price; and expressed in so easy and familiar a Manner, that Persons of the lowest Capacity may learn, without a Master.) Among many other useful Particulars, are contain'd I. A succinct English Grammar. II. Of Words that are nearly alike in Sound, but are different in Sense and Spelling. III. The Names of the Gods and Goddesses of the Heathens; and of the Muses, Graces, &c. IV. A very particular Account of Stops and Marks: With Directions for their Use, in a Manner entirely New. V. Directions for placing the Accent and Emphasis. VI. Directions for chusing and hardening Quills; for making and mending Pens; and for making and preserving Inks. Vii. Directions for making an Ink for marking Linnen, which will never wash out. Viii. Directions for Writing; by which a Person, though entirely ignorant of that Art, may write a good Hand in twenty-four Hours, without the Assistance of a Master. IX. Directions for those who would write elegantly. X. Directions for Figure-Hand, &c. and a new and easy Short-Hand. XI. A very particular Explanation of Abbreviations in Writing. XII. How to superscribe and begin Letters to Persons to Distinction. XIII. How to make several Sorts of Sealing-Wax and Wafers; and how to take the Impression of any Leaf, for Needle-Work, or Colouring. XIV. Forms of Receipts and Notes, for transacting of Business. XV. Of Arithmetick; and an easy Method of learning it. XVI. Directions to Painters, Stone-Cutters, &c. for painting or cutting Words and Sentences; and how they should spell, and place them with Propriety. XVII. A Collection of Epitaphs, for the Use of Stone-Cutters, &c. Illustrated with a variety of alphabets and copies, in various hands, on copper plates; with Ornaments for the Tops and Bottoms of Pages. Engrav'd from the Writings and Designs of the most Eminent School Masters. The whole is calculated for the use of painters, engravers, stone-cutters, and all Others that would learn expeditiously to Read, Write or cast Accompts.

  7. 1407

    Experimental Studies of Rhythm and TimeThe Psychological review.

  8. 1408

    Experiments in Metre: Poems, Chiefly LyricalStudies in language and literature.

  9. 1409

    Experiments in Time Relations of Poetic Metres.University of Toronto studies.

  10. 1410

    Explanatory notes and remarks on Milton's Paradise lostBy J. Richardson, father and son. With the life of the author, and a discourse on the poem. By J. R. Sen.

  11. 1411

    Exposition of the grammatical structure of the English language :being an attempt to furnish an improved method of teaching grammar : (abridged by the author) : for the use of schools

  12. 1412

    Exposition of the grammatical structure of the English language :being an attempt to furnish an improved method of teaching grammar. For the use of schools and colleges

  13. 1413

    Expository writing,

  14. 1414

    Expression in PoetryTwo lectures introductory to the study of poetry,

  15. 1415

    Expression in speech and writing,

  16. 1416

    Expressive English

  17. 1417

    The Expressive Power of English SoundsAtlantic monthly

  18. 1418

    Extemporary speech in antiquity ...

  19. 1419

    Extent and causes of retardation in the Readings (Pa.) public schools in December, 1910;a statistical study,

  20. 1420

    Extracts from the album, at Streatham: or, Ministerial amusements.To which are added, the bulse, a pindaric ode: and jekyll, an eclogue.

  21. 1421

    Facial speech reading and articulation teaching

  22. 1422

    Faith and doubt in the century's poets

  23. 1423

    The Fallacy of Free VerseThe Yale review.

  24. 1424

    Famous poems explained;helps to reading with the understanding, with biographical notes of the authors represented,

  25. 1425

    Father Van's progressive dictionary for versification.

  26. 1426

    The faults of speech :a self-corrector and teachers' manual

  27. 1427

    Feminine Rimes in The Faerie QueeneThe Journal of English and Germanic philology.

  28. 1428

    Fenno's science of speech;

  29. 1429

    A Few Dont's by an ImagistePoetry.

  30. 1430

    A few remarks on the pronunciation of Latin,

  31. 1431

    Figurative language in ballad and epic.

  32. 1432

    The final reliques of Father Prout (The Rev. Francis Mahony)

  33. 1433

    The fingal of Ossian,an ancient epic poem in six books. Translated from the original Galic language, by Mr. James Macpherson; and new rendered into heroic verse, by Ewen Cameron.

  34. 1434

    The first and second books of paradise lost.The author John Milton. Printed from the first and second editions collated. The original system of orthography restored; the punctuation corrected and extended. With the various readings: and notes; chiefly rhythmical. By Capel Lofft.

  35. 1435

    First book in composition applying the principles of grammar to the art of composing:also, giving full directions for punctuation; especially designed for the use of southern schools,

  36. 1436

    First book in composition for the use of schools :on an entirely new plan

  37. 1437

    A first book in English for high schools,

  38. 1438

    First book in English grammar

  39. 1439

    A first book in writing English,

  40. 1440

    A first book of composition for high schools,

  41. 1441

    The first book of English grammar;prepared as a text-bok for public schools, and for the primary classes of high schools and academies.

  42. 1442

    The first book of etymology :designed to promote precision in the use, and facilitate the acquisition of a knowledge of the English language : for beginners

  43. 1443

    The first book of etymology:designed to promote precision in the use, and facilitate the acquisition of a knowledge of the English language. For beginners. On the basis of "The first book of etymology,

  44. 1444

    A first book of poetics,for colleges and advanced schools,

  45. 1445

    First impressions :essays on poetry, criticism, and prosody.

  46. 1446

    First lessons in composition

  47. 1447

    First lessons in composition.

  48. 1448

    First lessons in English grammar

  49. 1449

    First lessons in English grammar

  50. 1450

    First lessons in English,

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