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James Elphinston

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Name
  
James Elphinston


James Elphinston httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
October 8, 1809, Hammersmith, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Inglish Orthoggraphy, Epittomized: 1790

James Elphinston (December 6, 1721 – October 8, 1809) was a well noted 18th-century Scottish educator, orthographer, phonologist and linguistics expert.

James Elphinston 25 September 1750 Samuel Johnson to James Elphinston The

Life

James Elphinston James Elphinston Wikipedia la enciclopedia libre

Elphinston was a good friend of Samuel Johnson as stated in Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (1904, Oxford edition), Chapter IV [1750], and tutor of Alexander James Dallas

"Mr. James Elphinston, who has since published various works, and who was ever esteemed by Johnson as a worthy man, happened to be in Scotland while the Rambler was coming out in single papers at London. With a laudable zeal at once for the improvement of his countrymen, and the reputation of his friend, he suggested and took the charge of an edition of those Essays at Edinburgh, which followed progressively the London publication."

Thirty-six of Elphinston's translations of mottoes appear in Johnson's Rambler as part of a revised, corrected edition in July 1752 (and subsequently). Johnson's affection for Elphinston is evident from a letter from early 1752 where he wrote, "I beg of You to write soon, and to write often, and to write long letters, which I hope in time to repay you, but you must be a patient Creditor."

In 1792 Elphinston moved to live in Elstree, and finally to Hammersmith in 1806, where he died in 1809. Robert Charles Dallas was Elphinston's biographer in the 1809 edition of Gentleman's Magazine no. 79.

References

James Elphinston Wikipedia


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