<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: Working Your way backwards Review: I have been using this as the text in my grammar class at Stephen F. Austin State University and I find it very helpful. It is a wonderful place to start for anyone wanting to be a better writer. If you can find the workbook that goes along with it I suggest using it. My only complaint is the sequence of the chapeters. I would start with the last section and then work my forward.
Rating: Summary: A highly in-depth English grammar Review: I own the second edition of this book. Simply put, if you are comfortable with the interpolation of linguistic concepts and transformational-generative grammar with traditional English grammar, then this is definitely the book for you. If, however, you either disdain the relegation of traditional grammatical terminology in favor of the transformational type, or simply feel that the two grammars should be kept separate, then I fear that you will find this book confusing, at best, or downright irritating.
Rating: Summary: Good Book, Good Grammar, Happy Tummy Review: I'm a fiction writer. And there are four books within reach of my writing desk. The most recent addition has been Martha Kolln's Understanding English Grammar. This bad boy has it all, folks. If you're like me, you get tripped up on lie and lay like the rest of us, and those kinds of words (and the rules underlying them) are at the very heart of what UEG sets out to clarify. I think I first went to Kolln's masterpiece for help with prepositions. I don't know who first introduced prepositions into the English language, man, but I'd like beat him with a wet dish rag!As Kolln says on page 320: "Prepositions are among the most difficult words in the language for foreign speakers to master." I'd take this a step further; I'd say they're the most difficult words for _English_ speakers to master. A couple of examples she lists: Be sure to fill out the form carefully. Be sure to fill in the form carefully. He wasn't fired. He didn't get fired. Can _you_ spot the correct usage above? Well, if it gives you pause then Understanding English Grammar may be the book for you. It is a model of grammatical clarity and a wonderful reference book to turn to in times of grammatical doubt:~) Other books I keep close by my writing desk include: "The Merriam-Webster Dictionary of Synonyms and Antonyms," Richard Lanham's "A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms," and The Holy Bible. If cleanliness is next to Godliness, grammatical perfection is like Zen awareness. You know it's possible to attain, but achieving it is another matter altogether. Kolln's book can help -- with the grammar, that is. Yours, Stacey
Rating: Summary: A (very rare) compendium of English structural grammar Review: It turns out that this handbook makes a huge success of introducing the structural work on English syntax. This compendious guide will never prove to be a disppointment to those who see the value of structuralism.
<< 1 >>
|