Page:The Comic English Grammar.djvu/118

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
114
THE COMIC ENGLISH GRAMMAR.

SECTION III.

OF EMPHASIS.

Emphasis is the distinguishing of some word or words in a sentence, on which we wish to lay particular stress, by a stronger and fuller sound, and sometimes by a particular tone of the voice.

A few illustrations of the importance of emphasis will be, perhaps, both agreeable and useful. When a young lady says to a young gentlemen, "You are a nice fellow; you are!"—she means one thing.

When a young gentleman, addressing one of his own sex, remarks, "You're a nice fellow; you are;"—he means another thing.

"Your friend is a gentlemen," pronounced without any particular emphasis, is the simple assertion of a fact.

"Your friend is a gentleman," with the emphasis on the words "friend" and "gentleman," conveys an insinuation besides.

So simple a question as "Do you like pine-apple rum?" is susceptible of as many meanings as there are words in it; according to the position of the emphasis.

"Do you like pine-apple rum?" is as much as to say, "Do you, though, really like pine-apple rum?"

"Do you like pine-apple rum?" is tantamount to, "Can it be that a young gentleman (or lady) like you, can like pine-apple rum?"

"Do you like pine-apple rum?" means, "Is it possible that instead of disliking, you are fond of pine-apple rum?"