Questions tagged [late-modern-english]

For questions about English from the Late Modern English period (1700-1900).

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2 votes
4 answers
136 views

Meaning of "so to"

The following is from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley; do you know what the "so to" means? It seems to mean "so as to" or "in order to", but I am not even sure if it is a ...
-1 votes
1 answer
39 views

detail or detailing

In the following extract from Frankenstein, which of the two possibilities do you think makes more sense? and although I loved him with a mixture of affection and reverence that knew no bounds, yet I ...
0 votes
0 answers
37 views

those higher virtues of which, rendered without, one verily may sag

The following sentence is from Lincoln in the Bardo, an experimental novel published in 2017. As an imitation of 19th-century English, is it crafted properly? I did always try, in all my aspects, to ...
1 vote
1 answer
66 views

behind or ahead?

The following is an extract from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. I'm wondering whether the word "behind" is equal to "ahead" in 21st-century English in this context. Justine died; ...
1 vote
2 answers
451 views

yet with how many things are we upon the brink of becoming acquainted

The following is from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. I'm wondering whether the boldfaced part is likely to have been "would we be": Whence, I often asked myself, did the principle of life ...
-1 votes
1 answer
127 views

returned to my old habits

The following is an extract from Frankenstein. What does the "habits" in "returned to my old habits" mean? It does not seem to refer to habits like drinking, staying up late, etc. ...
1 vote
2 answers
384 views

Greece had not been enslaved

The following is an extract from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. Is the "had not been" correct? Should it have been "would not have been"? "A human being in perfection ought ...
0 votes
2 answers
62 views

become as well acquainted . . . as depended on

The following is an extract from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. I'd like to know whether the use of "as well . . . as" is natural in current English and what it means here. When I had ...
0 votes
3 answers
90 views

Does "were carried" have a passive structure, or is "carried" simply an adjective in this text?

At Hit the rolling Assyrian plain had come to an end, and the invading army had entered upon the low alluvium of Babylonia, a region of great fertility, intersected by numerous canals, which in some ...
2 votes
1 answer
33 views

The meaning of “but knew it”

The full phrase is: There was not one in all that assemblage but knew it. This is from a book first published in 1906 My instinct is that it means “everyone in the assemblage knew”.