Holder

Cited as Holder. — 21 quotations

Appulse

In all consonants there is an appulse of the organs.

Aspirate

But yet they are not aspirate, i. e., with such an aspiration as h.

Brace

The laxness of the tympanum, when it has lost its brace or tension.

Change

Four bells admit twenty-four changes in ringing.

Character

It were much to be wished that there were throughout the world but one sort of character for each letter to express it to the eye.

Copy

Let him first learn to write, after a copy, all the letters.

Critical

It is submitted to the judgment of more critical ears to direct and determine what is graceful and what is not.

Discontinue

They modify and discriminate the voice, without appearing to discontinue it.

Fall

The vernal equinox, which at the Nicene Council fell on the 21st of March, falls now [1694] about ten days sooner.

Footing

In ascent, every step gained is a footing and help to the next.

Formal

Of [the sounds represented by] letters, the material part is breath and voice; the formal is constituted by the motion and figure of the organs of speech.

Interchange

The interchanges of light and darkness.

Intervention

Sound is shut out by the intervention of that lax membrane.

Intromit

Glass in the window intromits light, without cold.

Listen

When we have occasion to listen, and give a more particular attention to some sound, the tympanum is drawn to a more than ordinary tension.

Monition

We have no visible monition of . . . other periods, such as we have of the day by successive light and darkness.

Speech

There is none comparable to the variety of instructive expressions by speech, wherewith man alone is endowed for the communication of his thoughts.

Ternary

Some in ternaries, some in pairs, and some single.

Undulate

Breath vocalized, that is, vibrated and undulated.

Vibrate

Breath vocalized, that is, vibrated or undulated, may . . . impress a swift, tremulous motion.

Vocalize

It is one thing to give an impulse to breath alone, another thing to vocalize that breath.