With more than a thousand new entries and more than 2,300 word-frequency ratios, the magisterial fourth edition of this book-now renamed Garner's Modern English Usage (GMEU)-reflects usage lexicography at its finest. Garner explains the nuances of grammar and vocabulary with thoroughness, finesse, and wit. He discourages whatever is slovenly, pretentious, or pedantic. GMEU is the liveliest and most compulsively readable reference work for writers of our time. It delights while providing instruction on skillful, persuasive, and vivid writing. Garner liberates English from two extremes: both from the hidebound "purists" who mistakenly believe that split infinitives and sentence-ending prepositions are malfeasances and from the linguistic relativists who believe that whatever people say or write must necessarily be accepted. The judgments here are backed up not just by a lifetime of study but also by an empirical grounding in the largest linguistic corpus ever available. In this fourth edition, Garner has made extensive use of corpus linguistics to include ratios of standard terms as compared against variants in modern print sources. No other resource provides as comprehensive, reliable, and empirical a guide to current English usage. For all concerned with writing and editing, GMEU will prove invaluable as a desk reference. Garner illustrates with actual examples, cited with chapter and verse, all the linguistic blunders that modern writers and speakers are prone to, whether in word choice, syntax, phrasing, punctuation, or pronunciation. No matter how knowledgeable you may already be, you're sure to learn from every single page of this book.
Many of these functional shifts lead to a compactness that Americans like: “We Americans will not use the more elaborate form when the simpler, more direct one is absolutely unambiguous and does the work without a hitch.
Wayne Curtis, “In Hot Water,” Atlantic, Dec. 2006, at 155. But the distinction between immaterial and material things is hard to sustain in actual usage and leads to idle hairsplitting. Today the word frequently and naturally applies to ...
The first spelling , he needed to be ” ( Forbes ) . which is more common , is preferred beDoubt whether is used primarily in cause it retains the name of the main affirmative statements ( again , though , ingredient ( though on this ...
Harlow, Essex, UK: Pearson Education, 1999. Brown, Goold. The Grammar of English Grammars. 10th ed. New York: William Wood, 1851. Chalker, Sylvia, and Edmund S. C. Weiner. The Oxford Dictionary of English Grammar.
The word derives from the Latin understood in a derogatory sense ; those who do verb inchoare “ to hitch with ; to begin . ” Yet , betend to use a phrase such as ethical wall . cause it was misunderstood as being a negative In conflict ...
In every age, writers and editors need guidance through the thickets of English usage. Although some language issues are perennial (infer vs. imply), many others spring anew from the well...
... xiv, xv Rogers, James, 165 Rogers, James Steven, 696 Rogers, John M., 38–39 Rohter, Larry, 267 Rolcik, Karen Ann, 660 Romerdahl, Elena, 712 Roney, Paul Hitch, 768 Roper, R.S. Donnison, 155 Rose, Amanda M., 455 Rose, David, 793 Rose, ...
Hughes, Geoffrey, 735 Hughes, Lyman, 320 Hughes, Lynn N., 57, 59, 98, 359 Hughes,Ted, 736 Hugo,Victor, 362 Hull, Helen, ... The” (WF Buckley), 519 I I Can See Km Naked (I-lofi), 738 I desire to purchase, 91 idiom, 525 I'd like to buy, ...
Plagiarism, fury, and scandal plagued the coveted territory. Taming the Tongue tells the colorful story of these books and the characters who wrote them." --Back cover.
In response, Hull presented two specialists in posttraumatic stress disorder, Dr. Chester B. Scrignar and Dr. Marco Mariotto. Dr. Scrignar has published many articles and two books dealing with anxiety disorders, including posttraumatic ...