accidence - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about accidence Printer Friendly
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accidence

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accidence

Corruption of ‘accidents’, signifying the properties and qualities of the parts of speech, such as gender, number, and case. Originally the word meant a small book containing these, but it is now used to express that part of grammar which deals with inflections.


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My father had the contempt of familiarity with it, having himself written a very brief sketch of our accidence, and he seems to have let me plunge into the sea of Spanish verbs and adverbs, nouns and pronouns, and all the rest, when as yet I could not confidently call them by name, with the serene belief that if I did not swim I would still somehow get ashore without sinking.
Moreover, he had written a Latin Accidence, which was used in schools more than half a century after his death; so that the good old man, even in his grave, was still the cause of trouble and stripes to idle schoolboys.
She had worked even at the Latin accidence, fondly hoping that she might be capable of instructing him in that language.
 
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