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The Oxford Companion to the English Language |
List Price: $75.00
Your Price: $75.00 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: The perfect bathroom book for English-language junkies. Review: "Companion" well describes this book. People who love English
for its own sake can flip open any page and start reading, and
soon find themselves cross-referencing through the whole volume
(and learning a lot). Not as essential as a dictionary or
style guide, but a way to broaden your understanding of
this marvellous, terrifying language and its relatives. For
true language junkies, this is not for the bookshelf, but
for the bathroom, to read in bits at leisure.
Rating: Summary: "Spanish Verbs On The Go!" Review: I like this book. It's probably the only Spanish book that I found
that's so small that I can put it in the back of my pocket and take
it everywhere I go. But you will need a good Spanish course to go
along with it. I am doing the Learning Spanish Like Crazy digital
course and the live teleseminars. Speaking one-on-one with the
Spanish instructor at the LSLC live teleseminars helps alot
pronouncing the words that I am learing in 1001 Most Useful Spanish
Words. You can also get a Spanish speaking friend to check your
pronounciation.
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Rating: Summary: An enyclopedia of English Review: People who love English already have a few books about advanced English usage, such as Fowler, and various style guides. I love Fowler; browsing its pages is a delight. The Oxford Companion (concise ed) is different. It's much more objective, and more encylopedic. There are entries on many important linguistic terms and concepts, excellent definitions of all the grammatical terms you'll come across (what does "dative" mean?), accurate surveys of areas like what is a dialect and what isn't, and the major threads of the academic debate are presented. Every letter of the alphabet is given its history. Curious about Scouse? About the impact of Samuel Johnson and his dictionary? What is the state of opinion about the Sapir-Whorfian Hypothesis? Estuary English? Regional dialects of North America? I can't believe I haven't had this book on my shelf since the moment it was published, and I'm busy making a list of people to give it to. This a breakthrough contribution to books about English.
Rating: Summary: The Oxford Companion to the English Language Review: There are many things I would like to know about the English Language, but too few of them are here. For example the history of English is disposed of in three pages. I should have liked to have seen 30 or so. To be sure there are other historical entries, though insufficient cross referencing. The chronology following the above entry is largely of English history rather than of language history. In place of these things are pages of information one could do without; trivia relating to broadcasting or editions of dictionaries. A topical index would have been nice. Every true philologist will nonetheless want this work.
Rating: Summary: Everything you need to know about literary terminology Review: This book is one of the better purchases I have ever made. Every time I need a detail about the English language, literary devices and terminology, or grammatical usage, this book always has a couple of paragraphs to explain what I need to know -- and usually a handful of cross references to related topics. All with the usual careful and thorough treatment you expect from Oxford. Every library should have a copy of this book.
Rating: Summary: Everything you need to know about literary terminology Review: This book is one of the better purchases I have ever made. Every time I need a detail about the English language, literary devices and terminology, or grammatical usage, this book always has a couple of paragraphs to explain what I need to know -- and usually a handful of cross references to related topics. All with the usual careful and thorough treatment you expect from Oxford. Every library should have a copy of this book.
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