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An Outline of English Speech-craft

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Год написания книги
2017
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Bred.

Crept.

Dealt.

Fed.

Fled.

Left.

Lost.

Slept.

Sped.

Spilt.

Swept.

Wept.

One-sounded root time-words are mostly endingless in their mark-word shape: —

WORDS OF SPEECH-CRAFT, AND OTHERS, ENGLISHED

WITH SOME NOTES

Ablative (fromness case). The case of the source of the time-taking.

Abnormal. Unshapely, queer of shape, odd.

Abrade. To forfray, forfret. For for- see For- (#For) hereafter.

Absist. Forbear.

Absorb. Forsoak.

Absolute.Checkless, freed or loosened from checks.

Absolve. To forfree-en, forloosen.

Abstract (in speech-craft). Unmatterly, not of matterly form.

Accelerate. To onquicken, quicken.

Accent. Word-strain, a strain of the voice, higher or lower, on a breath-sound.

Accessary. A bykeeper, deedmate.

Accidence. The forshapenings of words for case, tale, time, mood, or person.

Accusative (case). End-case, the case of a thing which is the end or aim of a time-taking.

Acephalous. Headless.

Acoustics. Sound-lore, hearing-lore.

Active. Sprack (Wessex), doingsome, doughty.

Active (time-taking). One that can reach from the time-taker to another thing; as, ‘to strike.’ John can strike another thing.

Acute. Sharp or high in sound.

Adjective. Thing-markword, mark-word.

Adulation. Flaundering, glavering.

Adverb. An under-markword.

Adversative. Thwartsome.

Aerology. Air-lore.

Aeronaut. Airfarer.

Affirmation. Foraying, or a foryeaing, not a fornaying; as, ‘Yes, he is.’

Agglutinate. To upcleam, to cleam up.

Aggregate. The main, whole.

Allative (case). A name given by some writers to that of a thing at which the time-taking is aimed (the aim case).

Alienate. To unfrienden.

Allegory. A forlikening.

Alliteration. Mate-pennings (i. e. Breath-pennings).

Alone.All-án, all-one: – ‘Nen manniska buta God al ena.γράψον’ – W. Friesic. ‘No man, but God all-one (alone.)’

Altercation. A brangle, brangling, brawling.

Ambiguous. Twy-sided, twy-meaning: – ‘Alfred was struck as he was walking with a stout stick.’ Struck or walking with a stick? (twy-sided.) ‘Those shoes were made before the man that made them.’ Before in time, or before not behind?

Amicable. Friendly: – ‘We have lived in amicable relations’ (friendly, in friendliness).
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