The Structure of the English Sentence

Cover The Structure of the English Sentence
The Structure of the English Sentence
Kimball, Lillian Gertrude
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For every bucket of water that ye bring to us, that we may pour it into the tank, which is the Market, behold ! we will give you a penny. — Bellamy. • 15. A ruined man staggers down to ruin because there was not wisdom enough in him. — Carlyle.
16. Be clean, for the strength of the hunter is known by the gloss of his hide. — Kipling.
17. He only meant to walk up and down her street, so that she might see him from the window, and know that this splendid thing was he. — Barrie.
18. If we wore pri
...nts, instead of summer silks, it was because we preferred a washing material. — Mrs, Gaskell.
78 THE ADVERBIAL CLAUSE OF CONDITION CHAPTER XV THE ADVERBIAL CLAUSE OF CONDITION Function. — We are seldom able to make unqualified statements, because few facts are universally true. On the contrary, we must carefully hedge in our statements by certain restrictions, and a useful means for doing this is the adverbial clause of condition. For instance, " The knight ever came to the rescue of a woman in danger or distress," is a sweeping statement, and would instantly be disputed unless we add the conditional clause, "' pro- > vided she was a lady/' Such a clause is often so important that writers place it at the beginning of the sentence as if they wished to guard against contradiction or misunderstanding, by put- ting their readers at once into the proper attitude for comprehending their principal statement.


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