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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... rules, and, if he is not particularly interested in phonetics, to skip Chapters II-VI until he has finished the rest of the book. I may be allowed here to repeat what I wrote in 1909 in the first volume of my bigger Grammar: "It has ...
... rules, and, if he is not particularly interested in phonetics, to skip Chapters II-VI until he has finished the rest of the book. I may be allowed here to repeat what I wrote in 1909 in the first volume of my bigger Grammar: "It has ...
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... rules which must be obeyed if one wants to speak and write the language correctly—rules which as often as not seem quite arbitrary. Of greater value, however, than this prescriptive grammar is a purely descriptive grammar which, instead ...
... rules which must be obeyed if one wants to speak and write the language correctly—rules which as often as not seem quite arbitrary. Of greater value, however, than this prescriptive grammar is a purely descriptive grammar which, instead ...
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... rule. Our grammar must therefore be historical to a certain extent. Finally, grammar may be appreciative, examining whether the rules obtained from the language in question are in every way clear (unambiguous, logical), expressive and ...
... rule. Our grammar must therefore be historical to a certain extent. Finally, grammar may be appreciative, examining whether the rules obtained from the language in question are in every way clear (unambiguous, logical), expressive and ...
Seite
... rule , sound changes do not affect the same sound wherever it is found , but only under certain phonetic conditions in one particular position ( initial , medial , or final ) , in stressed syllables or in unstressed syllables , etc. A ...
... rule , sound changes do not affect the same sound wherever it is found , but only under certain phonetic conditions in one particular position ( initial , medial , or final ) , in stressed syllables or in unstressed syllables , etc. A ...
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... rule . 4.91 . We have further alternations between two ( or even three ) forms of the same word , according as it is pronounced with or ( more frequently ) without sentence- stress . First , a series of pronouns : We , me , he , she ...
... rule . 4.91 . We have further alternations between two ( or even three ) forms of the same word , according as it is pronounced with or ( more frequently ) without sentence- stress . First , a series of pronouns : We , me , he , she ...
Inhalt
SPELLING | |
THE THREE RANKS | |
JUNCTION AND NEXUS | |
NUMBERconcluded | |
DEGREE | |
TENSE | |
TENSEcontinued | |
WILL AND SHALL | |
WOULD AND SHOULD | |
MOOD | |
DEPENDENT NEXUS | |
SENTENCESTRUCTURE | |
RELATIONS OF VERB TO SUBJECT AND OBJECT | |
PASSIVE | |
CASE | |
PERSON | |
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS | |
PRONOUNS OF TOTALITY | |
NUMBER | |
THE GERUND | |
THE INFINITIVE | |
CLAUSES AS PRIMARIES | |
CLAUSES AS SECONDARIES | |
CLAUSES AS TERTIARIES | |
INDEX | |
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adjectives adjunct adverbs auxiliary CHAPTER chiefly colloquial combinations comparative compounds conjunction connexion consonant construction corresponding definite denote Dickens diphthongs distinction English examples expanded tenses expressions felt fool French frequent future genitive gerund grammatical hence idea implies indefinite article indicated indirect object infinitive interrogative interrogative word intransitive Jane Austen kind lady language look main sentence married mass-words meaning mentioned natural negative never nexus nexus-substantives Note object originally participle passive perfect phonetic phrases pluperfect plural possessive pronoun possible predicative prepositional group present tense preterit primary pronunciation question refers relative clause relative pronoun secondary seen sense set phrases Shelley Similarly singular sometimes sound speak speaker speech spelling spoken stress subjunctive substantive superlative syllable tendency tertiary thing third person thou transitive verbs verb voiceless volition vowel word-order words writing