Grammar 5 - Uppsala University (original) (raw)
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Palacký University Olomouc. ISBN 978-80-244-5128-2. , 2017
Abstract: a textbook used for a postgraduate (M.A.) course. It provides Syllabi for the Lectures, Examples and Exercises. It is the first part of the four volume (four semester) English Grammar course which consists of a) English Morphology - undergraduate b) English Morphosyntax - undergraduate c) English Syntax 1 - undergraduate d) English Syntax 2 - postgraduate
Anglia, 2018
A Critical Account of English Syntax offers 17 chapters that come for the most part in alphabetical order, followed by notes (281-290), a surprisingly short bibliography (291-293) and an index (294-296). 1 Keith Brown and Jim Miller's book is ambitious as regards all the aspects that it intends to cover as well as all the things that the book does not want to be: it is neither a teaching grammar, nor a reference grammar, nor a corpus grammar, nor does it cover the scope of CGEL (1985) or CamG (2002) or even of Huddleston and Pullum (2005) (1 f.). The book is "a discursive and descriptive account of several major areas of English syntax, of the role of syntactic constructions in text and of the interaction between textual imperatives and the use of old or new structures with a new set of lexical items" (2). It takes into consideration that there is a vast number of varieties of English in the world, and "that spoken and written language are equally worthy of attention" (4) though at "the centre of each topic is standard written British English" (7). Data was collected via intuition, observation and digital corpora (readers interested in more detail may refer to 7 f.). The intended audience of A Critical Account of English Syntax is huge: senior, undergraduate or postgraduate students taking degrees in English Language and Linguistics, lecturers and scholars of linguistics, teachers in primary or secondary schools and teachers of English as