Thursday, July 21, 2011

ON A PRELIMINARY NOTE

It is important to remember that prepositions are merely additions to the case-meaning, it will be well to introduce them at this point (Family Reunion). Prepositions are adverbs which have become attached to (i) verbs, (ii) certain cases of nouns. My origin desire of sweet food seizes his heart round about. The next step is seen in the figure known as Tmesis. And he himself put on the shining bronze! Tmesis is a misnomer, for in early Greek it is not the separation but the combination that is significant. We can detect the survival of Sia as an adverb meaning thoroughly! Further evidence of the adverbial origin of prepositions is found in such words as . . . 

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