1st Edition

Grammatical and Lexical Variance in English

By Randolph Quirk Copyright 1995
    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    Written by one of Britain's most distinguished linguists, this book is concerned with the phenomenon of variance in English grammar and vocabulary across regional, social, stylistic and temporal space.

    Foreword

    1. Variance in English: the global context
    2. Variance and the concept of good usage
    3. Language varieties and standard language
    4. Language spread and language variation
    5. Linguistic variance: nature and art
    6. Orwell and language engineering
    7. Exploring the English genitive: a tribute to Jespersen
    8. A case study of multiple meaning
    9. Non-finite clauses in Chaucer
    10. On having a look in a corpus
    11. The Survey of English Usage and adverbial realisations
    12. Grammatical data by elicitation
    13. A problem of modality
    14. Acceptability experiments in spoken English
    15. A tough object to trace
    16. Activating latent contrasts
    17. Contrasts in lexical semantics
    18. Aspect and variant inflexion
    19. Taking a deep smell: sex and a single verb

    References
    Index

    Biography

    Quirk, Randolph