Essentials of English GrammarRoutledge, 24.05.2013 - 800 Seiten This book was first published in 1933, Essentials of English Grammar is a valuable contribution to the field of English Language and Linguistics. |
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... mention Dr E. R. Edwards, who read nearly the whole of the manuscript; Professors C. A. Bodelsen and G. E. K. Braunholtz, Miss Isabel Fry, Dr G. E. Fuhrken, and Miss J. Young, Ph.D., who all of them read a greater or lesser number of ...
... mention Dr E. R. Edwards, who read nearly the whole of the manuscript; Professors C. A. Bodelsen and G. E. K. Braunholtz, Miss Isabel Fry, Dr G. E. Fuhrken, and Miss J. Young, Ph.D., who all of them read a greater or lesser number of ...
Seite 13
... mentioned.-—Infinitival nexus as object.—As object of result. —After a preposition.—For, with this construction.—~Subject and infinitive itself subject—Split subject.—Passive.-—-Forconstruction.—There.—Fina.l remarks—Place of adverbs—To ...
... mentioned.-—Infinitival nexus as object.—As object of result. —After a preposition.—For, with this construction.—~Subject and infinitive itself subject—Split subject.—Passive.-—-Forconstruction.—There.—Fina.l remarks—Place of adverbs—To ...
Seite 27
... mentioned diphthongs [9] tends to disappear completely, thus in hard, hart [ha'd, ha't], ward, wart [wo'd, wo't]. 2.82. Finally, we have syllables without a vowel; the consonant which then is the top of the syllable is termed syllabic ...
... mentioned diphthongs [9] tends to disappear completely, thus in hard, hart [ha'd, ha't], ward, wart [wo'd, wo't]. 2.82. Finally, we have syllables without a vowel; the consonant which then is the top of the syllable is termed syllabic ...
Seite 30
... mentioned as have taken place in the full daylight of history, i.e. since the English began to write down their own language. No attempt has been made to present the phenomena in a strictly chronological order. It will be seen in ...
... mentioned as have taken place in the full daylight of history, i.e. since the English began to write down their own language. No attempt has been made to present the phenomena in a strictly chronological order. It will be seen in ...
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Inhalt
15 | |
22 | |
29 | |
39 | |
CHAPTER V EVOLUTION OF THE SOUNDSYSTEMconcluded | 50 |
CHAPTER VI SPELLING | 61 |
CHAPTER VII PAGE WORDCLASSES | 66 |
CHAPTER VIII THE THREE RANKS | 78 |
CHAPTER XX NUMBER | 197 |
CHAPTER XXI NUMBERconcluded | 206 |
CHAPTER XXII DEGREE | 219 |
CHAPTER XXIII TENSE | 230 |
CHAPTER XXIV TENSEcontinued | 252 |
CHAPTER XXV WILL AND SHALL | 271 |
CHAPTER XXVI WOULD AND SHOULD | 282 |
CHAPTER XXVII PAGE MOOD | 293 |
CHAPTER IX JUNCTION AND NEXUS | 91 |
CHAPTER X SENTENCESTRUCTURE | 97 |
CHAPTER XI RELATIONS OF VERB TO SUBJECT AND OBJECT | 107 |
CHAPTER XII PASSIVE | 120 |
CHAPTER XIII PAGE PREDICATIVES | 124 |
CHAPTER XIV CASE | 132 |
CHAPTER XV PERSON | 147 |
CHAPTER XVI DEFINITE PRONOUNS | 152 |
CHAPTER XVII INDEFINITE PRONOUNS | 174 |
CHAPTER XVIII PAGE PRONOUNS OF TOTALITY | 184 |
CHAPTER XIX GENDER | 188 |
CHAPTER XXVIII AFFIRMATION NEGATION QUESTION | 296 |
CHAPTER XXIX DEPENDENT NEXUS | 309 |
CHAPTER XXX NEXUSSUBSTANTIVES | 316 |
CHAPTER XXXI THE GERUND | 320 |
CHAPTER XXXII THE INFINITIVE | 329 |
CHAPTER XXXIII CLAUSES AS PRIMARIES | 349 |
CHAPTER XXXIV CLAUSES AS SECONDARIES | 357 |
CHAPTER XXXV CLAUSES AS TERTIARIES | 369 |
CHAPTER XXXVI RETROSPECT | 374 |
INDEX | 379 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives adjunct adverbs auxiliary CHAPTER chiefly colloquial combinations comparative compounds conjunction connexion consonant construction corresponding definite denote Dickens difficult diphthongs distinction English examples expanded tenses express felt fight final finally find first five French frequent future genitive gerund grammatical hence idea implies indefinite article indicate indirect object influence interrogative Jane Austen kind lady language live look main sentence married mass-words meaning mentioned names natural negative never nexus nexus-substantives Note object one’s originally participle passive phonetic phrases pluperfect plural possible predicative preposition present tense preterit primary pronouns pronunciation question reference relative clause relative pronoun secondary seen sense set phrases Similarly singular sometimes sound speak speaker speech spelling spoken stantive stress subjunctive substantive superlative syllable tendency tertiary thing third person thou transitive verbs verb voiceless volition vowel word-order words writing