<Ul> <Li> Grammatical case </Li> <Li> Grammatical conjugation </Li> <Li> Grammatical mood </Li> <Li> Grammatical aspect </Li> <Li> Grammatical voice </Li> <Li> Grammatical number </Li> <Li> Grammatical person </Li> <Li> Periphrasis </Li> <Li> Adjectives </Li> <Li> Adverbs </Li> <Li> English articles </Li> <Li> Definiteness </Li> <Li> Specificity </Li> <Li> Clauses (in English) </Li> <Li> Predicate (grammar) </Li> <Li> Copula (linguistics) </Li> <Li> Argument (linguistics) </Li> <Li> Adjunct (grammar) </Li> <Li> Collocation (in English) </Li> <Li> Negation </Li> <Li> Double negatives </Li> <Li> Intensive word form </Li> <Li> Modifier </Li> <Li> Expletive </Li> <Li> Intensifier </Li> <Li> Augmentative </Li> <Li> Diminutive (in Australian English) </Li> <Li> Interrogative word </Li> <Li> Interrogative </Li> <Li> Frequentative </Li> <Li> Causative </Li> <Li> Complementizer </Li> <Li> Demonstrative </Li> <Li> Determiners </Li> <Li> Determiner </Li> <Li> English prefix </Li> <Li> Prefix </Li> <Li> Suffix </Li> <Li> Compounds </Li> <Li> Portmanteau </Li> <Li> Conditionals </Li> <Li> Conjunctions </Li> <Li> English phonology </Li> <Li> Vowel length </Li> <Li> Great Vowel Shift </Li> <Li> English honorifics </Li> <Li> Style (manner of address) </Li> <Li> Gender </Li> <Li> Idiom (in English) </Li> <Li> Interjections </Li> <Li> Inversion </Li> <Li> Nouns </Li> <Li> Noun class </Li> <Li> Pronouns </Li> <Li> Phrases </Li> <Li> Plurals </Li> <Li> Possessives </Li> <Li> Prepositions </Li> <Li> Hypocorism </Li> <Li> Abbreviations </Li> <Li> Acronyms </Li> <Li> Comma </Li> <Li> Hyphen </Li> <Li> English orthography </Li> <Li> Verbs <Ul> <Li> Auxiliaries, contractions </Li> <Li> Irregular verbs </Li> <Li> Modal verbs <Ul> <Li> deduction </Li> <Li> habits and past facts </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Passive voice </Li> <Li> Phrasal verbs </Li> <Li> Subjunctive </Li> <Li> Verb usage </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Grammar disputes </Li> </Ul> <Li> Clauses (in English) </Li> <Li> Predicate (grammar) </Li> <Li> Copula (linguistics) </Li>

Where does the term left high and dry come from