A Introduction to English Grammar
Buku ini diterbitkan pertama kali tahun 1998 oleh Longman, Pearson Education. Buku ini buku edisi ke 2 terbit tahun 2002.
Judul: A Introduction to English Grammar
Oleh: Sidney Greenbaum and Gerald Nelson
Penerbit: Longman, Pearson Education
Tahun: 2002
Jumlah Halaman: 324 hal.
Penulis:
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Lingkup Pembahasan:
Bagian I memberikan deskripsi garis besar tata bahasa Inggris. Bagian II menerapkan informasi gramatikal dari Bagian I, memberikan bimbingan siswa pada memecahkan masalah penggunaan, meningkatkan gaya tulisan mereka, dan tanda baca.
Selain membuat beberapa revisi minor, dan meng-update kutipan, buku ini hampir semua materi yang muncul dalam edisi pertama. Buku ini telah menambahkan bab baru berjudul bahasa Inggris di Gunakan, yang berkaitan dengan fitur gramatikal berbagai register linguistik, termasuk percakapan, komentar olahraga, dan email. Sebagian besar ekstrak ini diambil dari komponen British Internasional Corpus of English (ICE-GB), yang disusun di Survey of English Usage, University College London. Bagian yang disebut Analisis Sastra, yang muncul dalam edisi pertama, telah dimasukkan tidak berubah ke bab yang baru, di bawah judul Bahasa Sastra. Dalam Lampiran ejaan, buku ini telah menyatukan beberapa homofon yang paling umum dan menyusahkan.
Daftar Isi:
Preface to the Second Edition xi
Acknowledgements xii
1. Rules and variation 1
1.1 What is grammar? 1
1.2 Grammar and other aspects of language 1
1.3 Grammars of English 2
1.4 National varieties 2
1.5 Standard and non-standard English 3
1.6 Variation according to use 4
1.7 Descriptive rules and prescriptive rules 5
1.8 Why study grammar? 5
Exercises 6
Part I: The Grammar
2. The sentence 13
2.1 What is a sentence? 13
2.2 Irregular sentences and non-sentences 14
2.3 Simple and multiple sentences 15
2.4 Sentence types 16
2.5 Positive and negative sentences 17
2.6 Active and passive sentences 17
Exercises 18
3. The parts of the simple sentence 20
3.1 Structure, form, function 20
3.2 Subject, predicate, verb 21
3.3 Operator 22
3.4 Do, Be, Have 23
3.5 Subject and verb 23
3.6 Subject 25
3.7 Transitive verbs and direct object 26
3.8 Linking verbs and subject complement 27
3.9 Intransitive verbs and adverbials 28
3.10 Adverbial complement 29
3.11 Direct object and indirect object 30
3.12 Direct object and object complement 31
3.13 The basic sentence structures 32
3.14 The meanings of the sentence elements 34
Exercises 37
4. The structures of phrases 46
4.1 Phrase types 46
The noun phrase
4.2 The structure of the noun phrase 47
4.3 Determiners 48
4.4 Modifiers 48
4.5 Relative clauses 49
4.6 Appositive clauses 50
4.7 Apposition 50
4.8 Coordination 51
4.9 Noun phrase complexity 52
4.10 Functions of noun phrases 53
The verb phrase
4.11 The structure of the verb phrase 53
4.12 Main verbs 54
4.13 Tense, person, and number 55
4.14 Aspect 56
4.15 Voice 57
4.16 Expressing future time 59
4.17 The sequence of auxiliaries 59
4.18 Finite and non-finite verb phrases 61
4.19 Mood 62
4.20 Multi-word verbs 64
The adjective phrase
4.21 The structure of the adjective phrase 67
4.22 Functions of adjective phrases 68
The adverb phrase
4.23 The structure of the adverb phrase 69
4.24 Functions of adverb phrases 69
The prepositional phrase
4.25 The structure of the prepositional phrase 70
4.26 Functions of prepositional phrases 71
Exercises 72
5. Word classes 86
5.1 Open and closed classes 86
5.2 Word classes and word uses 87
Nouns
5.3 Noun suffixes 88
5.4 Noun classes 88
5.5 Number 90
5.6 Gender 90
5.7 Case 90
5.8 Dependent and independent genitives 91
Main Verbs
5.9 Verb suffixes 92
5.10 Regular and irregular verbs 92
5.11 Classes of irregular verbs 93
Adjectives
5.12 Adjective suffixes 95
5.13 Adjective classes 95
5.14 Gradability and comparison 96
Adverbs
5.15 Adverb suffixes 98
5.16 Gradability and comparison 98
Pronouns
5.17 Pronoun classes 98
5.18 Personal pronouns 100
5.19 Possessives 101
5.20 Reflexive pronouns 102
5.21 Demonstrative pronouns 102
5.22 Reciprocal pronouns 103
5.23 Interrogative pronouns 103
5.24 Relative pronouns 104
5.25 Indefinite pronouns and numerals 104
Determiners
5.26 Classes of determiners 106
5.27 Central determiners 106
5.28 The articles and reference 107
5.29 Pre-determiners 109
5.30 Post-determiners 109
Auxiliaries
5.31 Classes of auxiliaries 110
5.32 Meanings of the modals 111
5.33 Conjunctions 111
5.34 Prepositions 112
Exercises 113
6. Sentences and clauses 121
6.1 Sentence types 121
6.2 Questions 121
6.3 Imperatives 123
6.4 Exclamatives 123
6.5 Speech acts 124
6.6 Compound sentences 125
6.7 Complex sentences 125
6.8 Non-finite and verbless clauses 126
6.9 Functions of subordinate clauses 127
6.10 Sentence complexity 129
6.11 There-structures 130
6.12 Cleft sentences 131
6.13 Anticipatory it 131
Exercises 132
Part II: The Applications
7. Usage problems 141
Subject-verb agreement
7.1 The general rules 141
7.2 And 142
7.3 Or, nor 143
7.4 With 144
7.5 Collective nouns 144
7.6 Indefinite pronouns 145
7.7 Quantity phrases 146
7.8 Singular nouns ending in -s 147
7.9 Who, which, that 147
7.10 What 148
7.11 There is, There are 149
7.12 Citations and titles 149
Case
7.13 Subject complement 149
7.14 Coordinated phrases 149
7.15 After as and than 150
7.16 After but 150
7.17 After let 151
7.18 Who, whom 151
7.19 Case with -ing clauses 152
Auxiliaries and verbs
7.20 Problems with auxiliaries 153
7.21 Lie, lay 153
7.22 Present tense 153
7.23 Past and -ed participle 154
7.24 Past and past subjunctive 154
7.25 Multiple negation 155
Adjectives and adverbs
7.26 Confusion between adjectives and adverbs 156
7.27 Comparison 157
7.28 Only 158
7.29 Dangling modifiers 158
Exercises 159
8. Style 168
8.1 Style in writing 168
Emphasis
8.2 End-focus 168
8.3 Front-focus 169
8.4 There-structures and cleft sentences 169
8.5 Parenthetic expressions 170
Clarity
8.6 End-weight 170
8.7 Misplaced expressions 171
8.8 Abstract nouns 173
8.9 Modifiers in noun phrases 174
8.10 Subordination 174
8.11 Parallelism 175
8.12 Repeated sounds 176
8.13 Pronoun reference 177
Consistency
8.14 Pronoun agreement 178
8.15 Tense consistency 178
Exercises 179
9. Punctuation 183
9.1 Punctuation rules 183
9.2 Sentence fragments and fragmentary sentences 184
9.3 Run-on sentences and comma splices 186
9.4 Coordinated main clauses 188
9.5 Direct speech 189
9.6 Citations 192
9.7 Questions 193
9.8 Restrictive and non-restrictive relative clauses 194
9.9 Restrictive and non-restrictive apposition 195
9.10 Adverbial clauses 196
9.11 Vocatives and interjections 198
9.12 Avoidance of misunderstanding 199
9.13 Genitives of nouns 199
9.14 Genitives of pronouns 200
Exercises 201
10. English in use 208
10.1 Register variation 208
10.2 Conversational English 208
10.3 Unscripted monologue 217
10.4 Sports commentaries 219
10.5 Email English 223
10.6 The language of literature 227
10.6.1 Foregrounding 230
10.6.2 Ambiguity 233
Exercises 238
Appendix: Spelling 246
A.1 Spelling, pronunciation, and meaning 246
A.2 Spelling variants 248
A.3 Spelling rules for short and long vowel sounds 248
A.4 Suffixes 250
A.5 Prefixes 255
A.6 Other aids to spelling 256
A.7 Homophones: Words pronounced similarly 257
Exercises 263
Glossary 267
Further reading 295
Index 297
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