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Enables students to understand their assumptions and beliefs about the language they use every day
In Navigating English Grammar, Anne Lobeck and Kristin Denham offer an engaging introduction to the linguistic study of the structure of English. Teaching basic grammatical analysis through inquiry rather than memorization, this popular textbook encourages students to use their intuitive knowledge of language to make their own discoveries about the grammatical categories add principles of the grammar of English.
The book strikes a balance between basic descriptive grammar and syntactic theory, introducing students not only to the structure of English, but also in some cases to why English has the structure it does. Along the way, students discover how English has changed over time, and how it varies from speech community to speech community. Student-friendly chapters contain numerous examples drawn from different varieties of American English, which illustrate how English grammar is a dynamic system: perceptions of one variety as 'better' or 'more correct' than another, and notions of 'standard' and 'non-standard' English are socially constructed rather than based on linguistic fact.
This edition is fully updated with new examples, new text excerpts from a diverse range of written genres and authors, and completely revised chapters and exercises. The book also includes an entirely new final capstone chapter designed to encourage students to apply what they have learned with more challenging practice exercises.
Navigating English Grammar: A Guide to Analyzing Real Language, Second Edition is an excellent textbook for undergraduate courses in English grammar, English linguistics, and language education.
ANNE LOBECK and KRISTIN DENHAM are Professors of Linguistics at Western Washington University, where they teach courses on syntax, English grammar, and linguistics and education, and where they both enjoy making linguistic knowledge accessible and relevant for everyone. In addition to numerous publications on integrating linguistics in education, Lobeck and Denham have also co-edited Linguistics at School: Language Awareness in Primary and Secondary Education (2010) and co-authored Why Study Linguistics (2019) and Linguistics for Everyone (2013).
Dedication v
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xvii
1 What is Grammar and How Do We Study It? 1
Introduction 1
What is English? Language Change and Variation 3
What is Grammar? 5
Prescriptive grammar 5
Descriptive grammar 9
The Components of Grammar 10
Syntax 11
Morphology 13
Derivational affixation 14
Inflectional affixation 14
Analytic and synthetic languages 15
Word formation rules 16
Semantics 16
Phonetics and phonology 19
Summary 20
Exercises 21
2 Nouns 25
Introduction 25
Semantic Distinctions Among Nouns 26
Abstract and concrete 26
Common and proper 27
Count and mass 28
Collective nouns 30
Generic nouns 31
Noun Morphology 32
Inflectional affixation 33
Plurals 33
Possessives 34
Derivational affixation 36
Other ways we form nouns 37
Summary 38
Exercises 38
3 Noun Phrases 43
Introduction 43
Categories that Precede Nouns 44
Determiners 44
Noun phrases without determiners 47
Numerals 48
Quantifiers 49
Order of D, NUM, and Q 51
Partitive, Measure, and Collective Noun Phrases 53
Possessive Noun Phrases 54
NP or N: Pronoun substitution 55
Modifiers of Nouns 57
Adjectives that modify nouns 57
Nouns that modify nouns 59
Verbs that modify nouns 61
Summary 63
Exercises 63
4 Verbs 67
Introduction 67
Main Verbs 68
Main Verb Morphology 69
Derivational affixation and other ways we form verbs 69
Inflectional affixation 70
Infinitives 70
Present tense 73
Past tense 75
What about future tense? 77
Present and past participles 78
Suppletion 79
Summary 80
Exercises 81
5 Verb Phrases 85
Introduction 85
Auxiliary Verbs 86
Auxiliary have 86
Auxiliary be 87
Main verb have 87
Main verb be 88
Modals 89
Semi- modals 91
Verb Strings with Auxiliaries and Modals 91
Aspect 92
Progressive aspect 93
Perfect aspect 94
Habitual aspect 96
Passive Voice and the Passive Verb String 97
Summary 99
Exercises 99
6 The Clause 103
Introduction 103
The Independent Clause 104
The subject position 105
Subjects of passive sentences 106
Pleonastic subjects 106
The complement position 110
The Tense position 113
Subject-auxiliary inversion 114
Tag question formation 115
Negation 116
Diagramming Verb Strings 118
Do Insertion 120
Main verb be raising 122
Summary 123
Exercises 124
7 Adjectives 129
Introduction 129
Adjective Semantics 130
Adjective Morphology 132
Derivational affixation and other ways we form adjectives 132
Participial adjectives 133
Inflectional affixation: comparative and superlative adjectives 134
Adjective Syntax 135
Modifiers of adjectives 136
The degree word test for adjective phrases 137
Adjective phrase positions 139
Adjective phrases as prenominal and postnominal modifiers of nouns 139
Adjective phrases as subjective complements 141
Other subjective complements: NP and PP 142
Direct objects versus subjective complements 143
The seem test for adjective phrases 144
Summary 146
Exercises 146
8 Adverbs 151
Introduction 151
Adverb Semantics 152
Adverb Morphology 153
Derivational affixation and other ways we form adverbs 153
Flat adverbs 154
Inflectional affixation 155
Adverb Syntax 155
Modifiers of adverbs 155
Adverb phrase positions 158
Adverb phrases as modifiers in AP, NP, and PP 159
Adverb phrases as complements 161
More on Modifiers 161
Summary 162
Exercises 162
9 Prepositions and Particles 167
Introduction 167
Preposition Semantics 168
Preposition Morphology 170
Preposition Syntax 171
Complements of prepositions 171
Objects of prepositions 171
Other complements of prepositions 172
Modifiers of prepositions 173
Prepositional phrases as modifiers and complements 174
PP modifiers of nouns 174
PP modifiers of verbs and clauses 175
PPs as complements 176
Indirect object complements 178
Particles 182
Particle semantics 182
Particle syntax 183
Summary 186
Exercises 187
10 Coordination and Subordination 191
Introduction 191
Coordination 192
Subordination 195
Clauses and sentences 196
Subordinate Clause Types 198
Tensed clause complements 200
Bare infinitival clause complements 203
To- infinitive clause complements 206
Participial clause complements 208
Wh- clause complements 209
Summary 210
Exercises 211
11 More on Modification 219
Introduction 219
Clauses that Modify Nouns: Relative Clauses 220
Restrictive relative clauses 220
Tensed, reduced, and infinitival relative clauses 223
Nonrestrictive relative clauses 226
Headless relative clauses 227
Appositive NPs 228
Movable Modifiers 229
Movable AdvP modifiers 229
Movable PP modifiers 229
Movable NP modifiers 230
Movable AP modifiers 230
Movable VP modifiers 231
Movable CL modifiers 231
Summary 232
Exercises 233
12 Navigating and Analyzing: Review 239
Introduction 240
Syntactic Categories 240
Complementation 241
Complements of verbs 242
NP complements of verbs 242
AP complements of verbs 243
AdvP complements of verbs 243
PP complements of verbs 243
VP complements of verbs 243
Clause complements of verbs 244
Complements of adjectives 244
Complements of prepositions 244
Complements of nouns 245
Modification 245
Modifiers of nouns 246
Modifiers of adjectives 246
Modifiers of adverbs 247
Modifiers of prepositions 247
Modifiers of verbs 247
Modifiers of clauses: Movable modifiers 247
Subordination 248
Coordination 250
Summary 250
Practice and Review 251
References 255
Index 257
When you think of studying English grammar, what comes to your mind? Mad Libs? Learning parts of speech and punctuation? Diagramming sentences? Does the study of grammar interest you, or do you find it tedious and boring? Why do you study grammar? Because you have to? Because you want to?
There are as many different reasons to study grammar as there are ways to study it. We know, for example, that we need to study the grammar of another language in order to learn to speak or sign it. But what about the grammar of a language you already speak? Is there any reason to study that? You're probably familiar with the idea that we study English grammar to learn how to speak and write it "correctly." But can we learn anything else from studying the grammar of a language? In fact, the study of this dynamic system can be quite revealing and useful and provides insights into how language, your own and others', whether spoken or signed, actually works.
As you progress through this book, you will discover the grammatical rules of English that users already know, though they may not be aware of them. We approach the study of language and grammar through inquiry; you will discover, by analyzing your own and others' linguistic systems, the grammatical categories and principles of language. You will also find that the idea that some version of grammar is more "correct" than another has no basis in linguistic fact and that all language varieties are equally valid grammatical systems worthy of study. The approach we take here therefore encourages you to challenge and question social perceptions of language (as "good" or "bad," "lazy" or "sloppy"), perceptions that are often based on stereotypes about speakers, rather than on any deficiency in the language they use.
This book is not designed to teach you how to become a better writer, nor is it designed to teach you how to speak English "correctly." The goal of this book is to provide you with tools to analyze the language you use every day, in a variety of registers, genres, and styles, discovering the categories and concepts that underlie users' unconscious knowledge of language. With an understanding of how language actually works, and a concise vocabulary to talk about it, you will be equipped to make more informed decisions and choices about grammar and usage and to tease out linguistic fact from linguistic fiction. You will be able to navigate the study of grammar in all its diverse incarnations.
In this second edition, we have made significant changes to the way in which we approach language "data," the language examples used to illustrate grammatical terms and concepts. Rather than marginalizing variation in English to boxed sections in the text, we integrate examples of this variation throughout and show how this variation informs the description of English as an ever-changing linguistic system. We label the varieties of English we draw from (and acknowledge that there are many others not represented here) in an effort to recognize the communities who use them and to decenter the so-called "mainstream" varieties of English that are typically taken as the norm in discussions of grammatical structure. For this same reason, we focus on spoken rather than written English. That said, we acknowledge that we are two senior, white, tenured university professors, writing a college textbook in an edited written English that reproduces many of the norms we strive to decenter. We realize our approach here is only a first step in making the study of English, and the way we write and teach about it, more inclusive.
Other changes to the second edition include a References section at the end of the book (rather than citing references chapter by chapter). Almost all the exercises at the end of each chapter are revised, and each chapter includes new and updated text excerpts by a diverse set of authors in each practice section. We have also significantly revised the boxed material in each chapter to address related topics of interest. Boxes no longer focus exclusively on language variation and change, as examples of both make up the examples discussed throughout the text. As in the first edition, each chapter includes a summary with important terms in bold. Throughout, we introduce basic phrase structure rules and tree diagrams to provide accessible graphic representations of language structure.
Grammatical categories and concepts cannot be taught in isolation - nouns without adjectives or verbs without clauses - and each chapter (despite their simple titles) introduces concepts that we build on in subsequent chapters. We therefore recommend that chapters be studied in order. We provide chapter overviews below, where we also highlight changes and revisions in this second edition.
Note: We approach the grammar of English descriptively here, with an eye toward not just description but explanation. We therefore strike a balance between basic syntactic structure and syntactic theory, introducing the reader not just to the structure of English but also to why English has the structure it does. Some of the theoretical concepts we introduce (in accessible and useful ways) include movement, ellipsis, proform substitution, and null (unpronounced) heads and phrases, among others. We believe this is one of the strengths of this book, as it underscores the approach to grammatical analysis through inquiry rather than memorization, and it provides accessible insights into the study of language beyond basic sentence analysis. Readers are then prepared to pursue further study of grammar more deeply if they wish to.
Chapter 1: This chapter provides an overview of the primarily descriptive approach to grammar we take in this book, using tools of scientific inquiry to learn about how language works. We also discuss prescriptivism (rules of grammar prescribed by language authorities) and Standard Language Ideology in some depth, including the origins of these perspectives on language and their relevance to the study of grammar today. Rather than taking a binary approach to description versus prescription, we show that we learn from both, about grammatical structure, language change and variation, and the origins of the language attitudes that still shape how we judge and value language(s) and users of those languages today.
Chapters 2-5: These chapters investigate the basic semantics, morphology, and syntax of English noun phrases and verb phrases and include discussion of examples from a range of varieties of English to illustrate grammatical concepts, including (but not limited to) variation in inflectional morphology. Both Chapters 4 and 5 on verbs and verb phrases, respectively, are substantially revised to highlight variation in English verb morphology and in the tense and aspect system, including verb strings with null auxiliaries, and variation in subject-verb agreement.
Chapter 6: This chapter is significantly revised and streamlined to focus more on the structure of the independent clause rather than on theoretical aspects of the English verb string (as in the first edition). We focus on grammatical functions of subjects, complements (in this chapter, direct objects), and predicates and on basic evidence for the Tense position (subject-auxiliary inversion, tag question formation and negation). The chapter provides students with the tools to diagram independent clauses, including those with the complex verb strings discussed in Chapter 5, and prepares students to move on to complementation, subordination, and coordination in subsequent chapters.
Chapters 7-9: These chapters are each updated with new examples and exercises and introduce students to the basic semantics, morphology, and syntax of adjective phrases, adverb phrases, and prepositional phrases (and particles) and how these phrases function as modifiers and complements. These chapters introduce a range of different complements, including subjective complements, objects of prepositions, and indirect objects. We also show how the theoretical concept of syntactic movement (Passive, Indirect Object Movement, Particle Shift) can be used as a tool to distinguish among different complements.
Chapter 10: This chapter is significantly revised to focus first on coordination and then on subordination, acquainting students with the structure of more complex clauses. The section on different types of subordinate clause complements, complementizers, and PRO subjects of infinitival clauses is revised to be more accessible.
Chapter 11: This chapter is the most significantly revised of all the chapters in the book, and it now connects more seamlessly with Chapter 10. From the discussion of subordinate clause complements in Chapter 10, we move on in this chapter to explore subordinate clause modifiers, namely restrictive and nonrestrictive relative clauses. From there, we investigate a range of other nonrestrictive modifiers, what we call "movable modifiers."
Chapter 12: This completely new chapter provides an overview of the book, pulling together concepts, terms, and tools introduced in earlier chapters. We briefly review syntactic categories and...
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