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Making Sense: The Glamorous Story of English Grammar Main [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 204x138x29 mm, kaal: 428 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jan-2017
  • Kirjastus: Profile Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781256012
  • ISBN-13: 9781781256015
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 204x138x29 mm, kaal: 428 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jan-2017
  • Kirjastus: Profile Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781256012
  • ISBN-13: 9781781256015
Teised raamatud teemal:
David Crystal explains grammar's rules and irregularities, shows how to navigate its snares and pitfalls, and explores its history and varieties. He gives practical guidance on how grammar may be used for different purposes and in different settings. He provides a series of insights into the stages by which children acquire grammar and shows how this can be used to guide its early instruction. He casts a mordant eye on what learned people have said about English grammar over the centuries and what they continue to say now. People have always been uneasy about points of grammar and worried that what they say may not always be what they mean. Grammar is complex but, Professor Crystal shows, it need not be daunting: the more we understand it, he argues, the more sense we shall make.

Making Sense is as entertaining as it is instructive. David Crystal unites investigations of its nature, variations, history, learning, and teaching with a host of practical advice. Like its three companion volumes it will appeal to everyone interested in the English language and how to use it.

Arvustused

A surprisingly entertaining historical and scholarly tour ... masterly ... one could not have a more genial guide -- Peter Sokolowski * New York Times Book Review * Refreshing and briskly written ... Crystal shows that grammar is not nearly as tedious as it can seem. * Sunday Times * Previous praise for David Crystal:

Crystal's book is full of distractions and delights. * Daily Express * If the history of language is a sort of labyrinth, David Crystal is an excellent guide * The Age, Australia * Delicious revelations ... Crystal does an excellent job, not just of tracing the etymology of a word, but of relating it to social history, painting a picture of our times through words * Independent on Sunday * An engaging account of the history and structure of our language. Crystal is a prolific author with a talent for describing the sometimes arcane and obscure recesses of grammatical history in a fresh and accessible way. -- Rose Wild * Times *

Muu info

The world's best-known authority on the English language reveals the secrets and subtleties of its grammar
Preface ix
Introduction xiii
Not knowing grammar: a student's tale xiii
Not knowing grammar: a child's tale xvi
1 First steps in grammar
1(9)
Interlude: The first grammarians
7(3)
2 Second steps: the big picture
10(9)
3 Second steps: the small picture
19(4)
4 Third steps: combining big and small
23(6)
5 Inside the words
29(12)
Interlude: The first English grammarian
38(3)
6 Talking about mouses
41(10)
Interlude: Leam by heart
49(2)
7 What sentences do
51(7)
Interlude: The first modern English grammarian
56(2)
8 Sentence building
58(9)
Interlude: Grammatically precocious
66(1)
9 Story time
67(8)
10 Connecting
75(7)
Interlude: Did the teddy bear chase the elephant?
80(2)
11 Talking about grammar
82(8)
Interlude: Victorian playfulness
88(2)
12 Up with which we will not put
90(12)
Interlude: A shocking faux pas
99(3)
13 Clarity and weight
102(7)
Interlude: Redistributing weight
107(2)
14 Clarity and order
109(8)
15 Grammar and meaning
117(9)
Interlude: Real and unreal ambiguity
124(2)
16 Grammar and effect
126(7)
17 Structure and use together
133(8)
Interlude: Define dog
139(2)
18 A sense of style
141(9)
19 Grammar on the job
150(9)
20 Explanations
159(7)
21 Grammatical change -- now
166(8)
Interlude: Pluralsy
172(2)
22 Grammatical change -- then
174(13)
Interlude: Thou vs you
185(2)
23 Into living memory (almost)
187(7)
24 Going transatlantic
194(9)
Interlude: Another pretty little Americanism
202(1)
25 Going global
203(7)
Interlude: A good good example
209(1)
26 Grammar online
210(8)
27 Back from the grave
218(6)
28 Why the delay?
224(12)
Interlude: Do as I say -- government level
234(2)
29 A top ten for the future
236(3)
Epilogue 239(2)
An appendix on teaching and testing 241(22)
References and further reading 263(5)
Illustration credits 268(1)
Index 269
David Crystal is Honorary Professor of Linguistics at the University of Wales, Bangor. His many books range from clinical linguistics to the liturgy and Shakespeare. He is the author of The Story of English in 100 Words, Spell It Out: The Singular History of English Spelling, Making a Point: The Pernickety History of English Punctuation, and Making Sense:The Glamorous story of English Grammar all published by Profile. His Stories of English is a Penguin Classic.