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Pedantry, in the common acceptation of the word, means an absurd ostentation of learning, and stiffness of phraseology, proceeding from a misguided knowledge of books and a total ignorance of men.
Henry Mackenzie
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Henry Mackenzie
Age: 85 †
Born: 1745
Born: August 26
Died: 1831
Died: January 14
Novelist
Poet
Writer
Edinburgh
Scotland
Books
Pedantry
Word
Ostentation
Knowledge
Proceeding
Common
Misguided
Means
Absurd
Book
Total
Acceptation
Mean
Ignorance
Phraseology
Men
Learning
Stiffness
More quotes by Henry Mackenzie
People do not care to give alms without some security for their money and a wooden leg or a withered arm is a sort of draft upon heaven for those who choose to have their money placed to account there.
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What signifies sadness, sir a man grows lean on it.
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There are two distinct sorts of what we call bashfulness this, the awkwardness of a booby, which a few steps into the world will convert into the pertness of a coxcomb that, a consciousness, which the most delicate feelings produce, and the most extensive knowledge cannot always remove.
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Mankind in the gross is a gaping monster, that loves to be deceived and has seldom been disappointed.
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