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Gi/Ain'hìs EaglzgUrGrammat. LAM-.yet bium' @tía (Fulham, .that (lill we retain the fame errors and incongruities in writing which сидишь fáiihůl'â tmlght'msï .v ‚ И: fiJ-:ri Ишим Íl ’— l1 io tÄ“."i_j`‘§f.'~lkann 't ‚ ‘ » ‹ - г.‘ gt. :di ora. 1:‘.Ё cimiionl; uuu u1 enfllf‘liwill'ii vf" f ‘l Rr'. :lr/r '1_/1 ï'mlrioitrnq fr, Í.' bnr. ,t‘a‘swst ‹. i'i-„B ;.Í i _.'

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Letters to orthe languages andteůabllfhed according Rules oftbathagvefbgen Artg but thatatonceainvented all, ‘eirceh раз: 653, which we know nothing ГО Ссшйр as, that ity was non ma' e by human _Art u on Experience) have been шт tal-Sen up

that flrll, and дай‘!

way of Imitation, or elfe, `in along кайф’

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have, upon (счета!

emergencies, admitted var-ioustand crgßtal alterations; by rwhich means

they muli needs be liable to manifqkd defeéts and imperfeéìions, that in a Language atlquçefinvented‘and tothe ruler tо atArt mi ht be ealily avoided. VNor could this` aenordì otherwi e be,v becaufe very rt

by which Language íhould be regulated, viz. Grammar, is of rmuch la
 * fr invention the» Langage: Муфты, beingëadîpted‘towhat was al-l

ready inbeing, rathegthen the Rule of making ire. Though the Hebrew Tongue, bç‘the mqů ancient ,

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et Rabbi Índab “gm-„ddp

Ching of .Fezin .#rigwholived A. D. 1040,; was the fir that reduced it t? Grßmfïiafef to the Art of Grammar.

And though there were both Greek and Latin щ" “ "l" 4"

Grammarians much more ancient; yet were there none in either,­tilla

long time after thofe Languages flourilhed: whichisthe true reafonof .

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