Grammar

The Basis of Language

Art of Grammar I

Foundations

In the Foundations course, we will focus our study upon the fundamentals of grammar, principles of vocabulary, and the art of diagramming.  These three elements, comprised within this course, will teach us to see language in a clear and reflective manner, disentangling us from the contemporary confusions and bad habits which pervade our communication-saturated environment.  Grasping the principles behind linguistic structure through our analytical study will greatly improve our reading and prepare us for both Logic I and Rhetoric I, which courses, in turn, will better prepare us for Grammar II.

re-think Language

See grammar and the nature of language use in a different and more-human light.

Improve your Reading

Become a more insightful reader of complex texts by gaining habits of analysis and insight.

Course Details

View a standard syllabus, including description, expectations, and schedule.

Buy the Book

Though available as a free PDF, one may also purchase our textbook Linguistic Signification.

Art of Grammar II

Composition

Retrieving our insights concerning the nature of language itself, discovered in the Foundations course, Composition will attend to the principles of composition; practice the composition of sentences, paragraphs, and essays as well as the art of revising our compositions (which drafting and revising will occupy much of our attention), and finish by undertaking an inquiry into style.  The intention of the Composition course is to instill in students the habits whereby they can become better writers, and, reflexively, improved in their understanding of the principles of language as well.

Structured Thinking

Discover how to structure your thought better through habits of writing.

Truth through writing

Improve your capacity for expressing the truth in the written word by practice and feedback.

Course Details

View a standard syllabus, including description, expectations, and schedule.

Buy the Book

Though available as a free PDF, one may also purchase our textbook Linguistic Signification.

Excerpt from Linguistic Signification

“Fundamentals of Grammar”

There are two ways to view the function of English words in communication: first, 1) we can consider the parts as wholes on their own, and thus call individual words by generic classifying names, such as when we say that “smart” is an adjective, or “book” is a noun.  Second, 2) we can consider the parts as belonging to some whole greater not only than the parts, but greater even than the aggregate of the parts, in which case the whole is the principle determining factor in what part of speech we say that a word is.  For instance, when we say, “The man was astonishingly tall”, we have an adverb, “astonishingly,” modifying an adjective, “tall”, which adjective is in turn functioning as a subject complement, and so our adverb is functioning not as an adverb, but as an adjective.  The word “astonishingly” does not modify “was”, for it was not his “being” which was “astonishing”, but his tallness.  Naturally, we need first that set of categorizations in order to understand, second, the varieties of use; but a study of those categorizations alone will not suffice for understanding how language use really occurs.

Identifying the precise nature of each part, both in itself and as part of the whole, can be a difficult task.  We must note that the functions of each part, considered as a whole, depend upon each part’s relation to the others, and from those relations the whole is constituted or brought into existence.  Yet, as we will see, considered from the perspective of another relation (the relation from the end or purpose of any given linguistic construction), the whole antecedes any and all of the parts.

Likely, this endeavor of carefully analyzing our language will cause occasional if not frequent frustration: it seems, for the most part, that we are capable of making ourselves understood without all this byzantine complexity.  Is it not the purpose of communication primarily practical, primarily ordered at “getting results”?  Why should we bother with tangling up our minds, then?  Quite simply: unless we can understand why and how words signify, we are reliant upon others to tell us why and how we ought to use those words.  Such reliance ill-fits an intelligent human being.  Therefore, if we believe ourselves intelligent—by which I do not mean intelligent relative to other human beings, but rather possessing any intelligence at all—we should therefore be liberated from such dependency.


Beyond the University

Beyond the University exists because the modern university, even where it succeeds, has become inadequate to the true tasks of education.  Education is not the transmission of information or preparation for employment, but the formation of good intellectual habits.  These aims no longer fit comfortably within institutions ordered primarily toward efficiency, expansion, and measurable outcomes.  The Lyceum Institute was founded to provide a genuinely different institutional form—one ordered toward education as an integral part of life rather than as a credentialing process.

The Lyceum cultivates enduring intellectual habits of inquiry, order, and memory through rigorous seminars, focused studies of the Trivium, classical languages, guided reading, and sustained inquisitive conversation.  By supporting the Lyceum Institute, you help sustain an independent public institution devoted to education ordered toward truth, continuity, and long-term intellectual formation.  Your gift ensures that this alternative remains available—not only for today’s students, but for generations to come.

This year (2026), we are seeking to raise $48,000

Join us in bringing new life to education!

Donors who give $4,000+ will receive a special gift.

Support Our Campaign