An Introduction to the Grammar of English: Syntactic Arguments and Socio-historical BackgroundJohn Benjamins Publishing, 2002 - 200 pages This Introduction provides a lively and clearly written textbook. It introduces basic concepts of grammar in a format which inspires the reader to use linguistic arguments. The style of the book is engaging and examples from poetry, jokes, and puns illustrate grammatical concepts.The focus is on syntactic analysis and evidence. However, special topic sections contribute sociolinguistic and historical reasons behind prescriptive rules such as the bans on split infinitives, dangling participles, and preposition stranding.The book is structured for a semester-long course. It provides exercises, keys to those exercises, and sample exams. It also includes a comprehensive glossary and suggestions for further reading. |
Table des matières
Introduction | 1 |
Categories | 11 |
Phrases | 31 |
Review Chapters 13 | 59 |
Functions in the sentence | 61 |
More functions of prepositions and particles | 79 |
The structure of the Verb Group in the VP | 97 |
Review Chapters 46 | 113 |
Embedded and coordinated | 119 |
Nonfinite clauses | 135 |
Review of Chapters 7 and 8 | 147 |
Clauses as parts of NPs and AdjPs | 167 |
Special sentences | 181 |
Review Chapters 911 | 189 |
Further reading | 195 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
An Introduction to the Grammar of English: Syntactic Arguments and Socio ... Elly van Gelderen Affichage d'extraits - 2002 |
An Introduction to the Grammar of English: Syntactic Arguments and Socio ... Elly van Gelderen Aucun aperçu disponible - 2002 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
action added adjective Adjp adverb AdvP agreement ambiguity auxiliary become called chap Chapter complement complex connected consider constructions contain coordinated determiner direct object discussed Draw elements embedded English examples Exercises express finite function give given grammatical head hence indicate indirect infinitive inside instance intransitive Keys kinds knowledge language lexical verb linguistic look meaning mentioned modal modifier move namely negative nice non-finite clauses Note noticed noun NP VP occur optional passive past participle person phrasal phrases position possible preceded prepositional prescriptive present problem pronoun questions reason refer relative clauses replaced restrictive rules Section seen sentence shown shows similar sister sometimes speakers special topic story structure subject predicate Table tense transitive tree typically unicorn University Verb Group VP NP walk writing