A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE):
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Tübingen
Francke
2010
|
Schriftenreihe: | UTB Grosse Reihe
8432 : Sprachwissenschaft, Anglistik |
Schlagwörter: | |
Links: | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018862249&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
Umfang: | XVIII, 581 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9783825284329 9783772083440 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) |c Peter Fenn |
246 | 1 | 3 | |a SAGE |
264 | 1 | |a Tübingen |b Francke |c 2010 | |
300 | |a XVIII, 581 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Foreword.................................................................. VII
Chapter 1 Introduction ֊ Elements of English.................................. 1
001 On grammar........................................................... 1
002 The character of English.............................................. 3
002/1 Who speaks English?. ............................................. 3
002/2 Where English conies from......................................... 3
002/3 Language varieties................................................. 5
002/4 Regional variants of English and standard languages.................. 8
003 Some basic concepts in language study.............................. 14
003/1 Some general fields of language...................................... 14
003/2 Basic grammatical categories. ....................................... 1?
003/3 Sentence functions ................................................ 19
003/4 Sentence types and sentence patterns ................................ 24
Chapter 2 Nouns............................................................ 27
2.1 Basic features: introduction......................................... 27
004 Main grammatical features............................................ 27
004/1 Nouns and noun phrases............................................... 27
004/2 Syntactic roles of noun phrases...................................... 28
004/3 Morphological invariance........................................... 29
004/4 Number: singular and plural....................................... 29
004/5 Countability....................................................... 30
004/6 The genitive................................................... 31
005 Main semantic features............................................. 32
005/1 Common and proper nouns.......................................... 32
005/2 Common nouns: concrete or abstract............................... 33
005/3 Common nouns: individual, mass, collective, and pair nouns........... 33
2.2 From singular to plural............................................ 34
006 Regular plural formation.......................................... 34
006/1 Regular changes in spelling and pronunciation....................... 34
006/2 Special cases...................................................... . · 34
007 Irregular plural formation....................................... 35
007/1 Vowel change....................................................... 35
007/2 Plurals in -en/-ence.............................................. 36
007/3 Singular-plurals................................................... 36
X Contents
007/4 Plural-singulars......................................................... 37
007/5 Greek and Latin plurals.................................................. 37
007/6 Modern loan-word plurals................................................. 38
008 Number, countability and meaning: details of use......................... 39
008/1 Individual nouns......................................................... 39
008/2 Mass nouns............................................................... 39
008/3 Collective nouns....................................................... 41
008/4 Pair nouns............................................................... 43
008/5 Quantifying non-count nouns.............................................. 43
008/6 Mass, collective and pair nouns with different German equivalents...... 45
008/7 Summary: common nouns with different meanings in singular and plural 45
2.3 The genitive........................................................... 46
009 The s-genitive: form and syntax.......................................... 46
009/1 Spelling................................................................. 46
009/2 Pronunciation.......................................................... 47
009/3 Syntax................................................................. 47
010 The of-genitive: form and syntax......................................... 49
010/1 As a postmodifying prepositional phrase................................ 49
010/2 As part of a premodifying expression of quantity. . ..................... 49
010/3 The double genitive ................................................... 49
011 The genitive in general use.............................................. 50
011/1 Animate nouns: s-genitive................................................ 50
011/2 Inanimate nouns: of-genitive ............................................ 51
012 Some specific uses of the genitive....................................... 52
012/1 Quantifying expressions................................................ 52
012/2 Constitutive meaning..................................................... 53
012/3 The pronoun s-genitive with localities................................. 55
012/4 Genitives with verb-related nouns........................................ 57
012/5 Beyond the genitive: the collocational nature of prepositional of with
verb-related nouns ..................................................... 58
012/6 The compound noun in genitive meaning................................... 58
013 Summary: s-genitive and of-genitive in contrast .............. 58
013/1 The s-genitive in general use; exceptions.............................. 58
013/2 The of-genitive in general use; exceptions........................... 59
2.4 Noun forms............................................................ 59
014 Common suffixes.......................................................... 60
014/1 Describing a stale, condition or characteristic.......................... 60
014/2 Describing an action or state, or the result of one...................... 60
014/3 Describing a person/thing carrying out an action, or affected by one... 60
Contents XI
014/4 Describing fields of study, belief, professional activity or behaviour. . .
014/5 Suffixes with mixed reference....................................
015 Prefixes........................................................
015/1 Opposites........................................................
015/2 Describing place, order, size and rank...........................
015/3 Describing self and others.......................................
015/4 Referring to number and quantity.................................
015/5 Meaning badly/wrongly ..........................................
016 Compound nouns..................................................
016/1 Two separate nouns...............................................
016/2 The hyphen question......................................
016/3 Two nouns as one..........................................
016/4 Singular in the first element....................................
016/5 Other types of compound noun ....................................
016/6 Pronunciation: stress............................................
016/7 Plural forms.............................................
017 Compound nouns: summary and points of difficulty .........
017/1 Type and spelling.........................................
017/2 Pronunciation: stress................ ...........................
018 Some other processes of noun formation .........................
018/1 Old forms into new. . ...........................................
018/2 Old words, new meanings....................................
018/3 New words, new meanings..........................................
Chapter 3 Pronouns, Determiners and Quantifiers........................
3.1 Pronouns........................................................
019 Main grammatical features.......................................
020 Pronoun types...................................................
020/1 Personal pronouns................. ......................... ....
020/2 Possessives........................................... ..........
020/3 Reflexive pronouns: self and others..
020/4 Reflexive pronouns: further points of usage
020/5 Pronoun table (summary)
020/6 Reflexives, possessives and personal pronouns: summary of important
points and common difficulties
020/7 Other pronoun types.
3.2 Determiners.................
021 Main grammatical and semantic features .............
022 Determiner types ...............................................
022/1 The indefinite article...........................................
61
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XII Contents
022/2 The definite article................................................... 5
022/3 The zero article.......................................................... ^
022/4 The definite article with names.......................................... 95
022/5 The definite article in other borderline uses.......................... 98
022/6 Demonstrative determiners. ............................................
3.3 Quantifiers............................................................. 108
023 Main grammatical and semantic features.................................. 108
024 Distributives........................................................... 109
024/1 all..................................................................... 109
024/2 both.................................................................... 114
024/3 every................................................................... 116
024/4 each.................................................................... 117
024/5 either.................................................................. 119
024/6 Negative distributives: not + either/neither/nor....................... 121
024/7 Other negative distributives............................................ 125
025 Indefinite quantifiers.................................................. 131
025/1 some.................................................................. 132
025/2 any................................................................... 133
025/3 much/many/a lot of...................................................... 138
025/4 little/few/a little/a few/several....................................... 139
025/5 more/most, less/least, fewer/fewest..................................... 140
Chapter 4 Adjectives............................................................ 141
026 Basic features.......................................................... 141
027 The syntax of adjectives................................................ 142
027/1 Position and function................................................. 142
027/2 The adjective phrase.................................................. 142
028 Adjective meaning and adjective grammar................................. 143
028/1 Common semantic categories.............................................. 143
028/2 Some special sub-types.................................................. 144
028/3 Adjective position: attributive only.................................... 145
028/4 Adjective position: predicative only.................................... 146
028/5 Clause reduction........................................................ 147
028/6 Attributive postmodification............... ........................... . · ■ 148
028/7 Attributive premodification............................................. 149
028/8 Gradable and non-gradable adjectives.................................. 151
028/9 Proper adjectives..................................................... 151
029 Adjective forms......................................................... 151
029/1 Affixes................................................................. 152
029/2 Other words in adjective functions ..................................... 154
Contents XIII
029/3 Compound adjectives................................................. 157
030 Aspects of usage ................................................... 159
030/1 Adjectives as nouns................................................. 159
030/2 Some special cases.................................................. 163
030/3 Adjectival complements.............................................. 164
031 Comparison........................................................ 166
031/1 Types of comparison............................................... 166
031/2 Forming the comparative and superlative........................... 167
031/3 Use of comparative and superlative.................................. 170
031/4 Equative comparison............................................... 171
031/5 Deficit and surplus comparatives compared .......................... 171
031/6 Comparative constructions and their syntax......................... 173
031/7 Superlatives................................................... 179
031/8 Non-adjective comparison.......................................... 180
031/9 Summary of different comparative types and structures ............... 186
Chapter ii Adverbs..................................................... 188
032 Basic features................................................. 188
033 Adverb meaning..................................................... 189
033/1 Semantic types................................................... 190
033/2 The adverb phrase and its functions................................. 193
033/3 Adverb position: general............................................ 196
033/4 Adverb position according to meaning................................ 197
033/5 Position of other adverbials...................................... 205
033/6 Usage: some special cases........................................... 209
034 Adverb forms........................................................ 214
034/1 Derived adverbs..................................................... 214
034/2 Non-derived adverbs and other special groups........................ 215
034/3 Comparison of adverbs............................................... 218
Chapter 6 Prepositions.............................................. 221
035 Basic features................................................. 221
036 Individual prepositions and mmc meanings .................... 222
036/1 Prepositions of place and direction 222
036/2 Prepositions of time................................................ 237
036/3 Prepositions of mixed reference 243
Chapter 7 Conjunctions.................................................. 246
037 Basic features..................................................... 246
038 Individual conjunctions and their meanings 247
038/1 Conjunctions expressing cause (reason).............................. 247
XIV Contents
038/2 Conjunctions expressing time relations.............................. 248
038/3 Conjunctions expressing conditions.................................. 251
038/4 Conjunctions expressing addition.................................... 254
038/5 Contrast and contradiction with subordinating conjunctions.......... 258
038/6 Mixed conjunctions.................................................. 259
039 Conjunction clauses and sentence syntax............................. 264
039/1 Clauses as adverbials............................................... 265
039/2 Clauses as subjects, objects and complements........................ 266
039/3 Adverbs as subordinators instead of conjunctions.................... 267
039/4 Further subordination............................................... 268
039/5 Clause reduction to indicate function............................. 269
039/6 Clauses as parts of phrases......................................... 269
039/7 Comma rules......................................................... 272
Chapter 8 Verbs: Basic Features, Syntax and Forms......................... 273
040 Basic features.................................................... 273
040/1 The verb phrase..................................................... 273
040/2 Verb morphology................................................... 274
041 Syntax: the verb in the sentence . ................................. 285
041/1 The verb and its complementation.................................... 285
041/2 The verb and basic sentence operations.............................. 287
041/3 Verbal action types (modes of occurrence)........................... 298
042 Forms of verbs...................................................... 300
042/1 Verb formation...................................................... 300
042/2 Particle verbs...................................................... 301
042/3 Formation of non-finite verbs...................................... 307
042/4 Forming progressive and perfect..................................... 309
042/5 Forming the passive................................................. 309
Chapter 9 Verbs: The Present and Past Tenses.............................. 311
043 Overview ......................................................... 311
044 The primary non-perfect tenses and their aspects.................... 312
044/1 The general meaning of the aspects.................................. 312
044/2 The present tense and its aspects................................... 318
044/3 The past tense: introduction...................................... 327
044/4 The past tense: forms............................................. 327
044/5 The past tense: main interplay of aspects........................... 334
044/6 The past tense: further points on aspect usage...................... 336
Chapter 10 Verbs: The Perfect Tenses........................................ 340
045 Introduction........................................................ 340
Contents XV
046 The present perfect................................................. 341
046/1 Time orientation and general meaning................................ 341
046/2 Time orientation, adverbials, and tense............................. 342
046/3 Time-span perfects: the continuative................................ 343
046/4 Time-span perfects: the experiential ............................... 348
046/5 Non-time-span perfects: the resultative............................. 352
046/6 The present perfect: concluding points and summary.................. 360
047 The past perfect.................................................... 364
047/1 Time orientation and general meaning................................ 364
047/2 The past perfect as present-perfect-in-the-past..................... 364
047/3 The past perfect as past-tense-in-the-past (= pre-past use) ........ 366
047/4 Some further points of note . ................................. 368
Chapter 11 Verbs: Future and Conditional Meaning,
indirect Speech, the Passive. ...... 371
11.1 Future meaning .................................................. 371
048 Introduction..................................................... 371
049 The forms of future reference................................. 372
049/1 The modal future: will........................................... 372
049/2 The modal future: to be going to . ............................. 377
049/3 The modal future: shall............................................. 379
049/4 The non-modal future: arrangements................................ 380
049/5 Past and perfect meanings with future reference .................... 382
049/6 The basics of future meaning ֊ overview............................. 385
11.2 Conditional meaning................................................. 386
050 Introduction........................................................ 386
051 Conditional meaning and conditional forms ......................... 387
051/1 Concrete points on form............................................. 387
051/2 Conditional sentences with speculative meaning..................... 388
051/3 Conditional sentences with non-speculative modal meaning ........... 395
051/4 False conditionals ................................................ 398
051/5 Speculative conditions: other types and variants ..................... 401
11.3 Indirect (reported) speech.......... 405
052 Introduction: direct and mdii’o : ; se a֊1-:.:. 405
053 The forms of indirect speech........................................ 406
053/1 Tense regulation in indirect speech. .............................. 40/
053/2 Other changes in indirect speech ................................. 410
053/3 Reporting verbs in indirect speech............................... 413
053/4 Questions in indirect speech .................................... 416
053/5 Commands in indirect speech........................................ 420
XVI Contents
11.4 The passive voice....................................................... 422
054 Introduction: active and passive voice.................................. 422
055 Forming and using the passive........................................... 423
055/1 Basic features of active-passive conversion............................. 423
055/2 Transitive verb types and their relation to the passive................. 425
055/3 Further points on the passive........................................... 426
Chapter 12 Verbs: Modal Verbs................................................... 430
056 Modal verbs: types and forms............................................ 430
056/1 Primary modals.......................................................... 430
056/2 Secondary modals........................................................ 432
057 Modal meanings ......................................................... 433
057/1 Ability/capability...................................................... 433
057/2 Speculation ............................................................ 437
057/3 Permission. . .......................................................... 442
057/4 Directives............................................................ 445
057/5 Other modal usage................................................-....... 456
Chapter 13 Verbs: Non-finite Verbs.............................................. 459
058 Basic features.......................................................... 459
13.1 The infinitive.......................................................... 459
059 Forms................................................................... 459
060 Infinitive constructions................................................ 460
060/1 The infinitive after verbs.............................................. 461
060/2 The infinitive after verbs: some special cases.......................... 462
060/3 The infinitive after adjectives......................................... 463
060/4 Infinitive clauses as shortened relative clauses........................ 467
060/5 Infinitive clauses as appositive postmodifications...................... 472
060/6 Infinitives of purpose.................................................. 472
060/7 Infinitives in indirect questions and indirect commands................. 473
060/8 Consecutive infinitives............................................... 475
060/9 The perfect, progressive and passive forms of the infinitive............ 479
060/10 Syntax: sentence functions in and around the infinitive ................. 481
13.2 The gerund.............................................................. · 487
061 Form, syntax, general meaning.......................................... 487
061/1 The subject of a gerund................................................. 488
061/2 The gerund clause as subject.......................................... 489
061/3 Tense, aspect and passive with the gerund............................... 489
062 Gerund constructions.................................................. 491
Contents XVII
062/1 The gerund after verbs................................................. 492
062/2 Catenatives: gerund or infinitive according to meaning.............. 494
062/3 Catenatives: gerund or infinitive according to grammar................ 497
062/4 Catenatives: gerund or infinitive with little or no difference........ 498
062/5 The gerund after prepositions.......................................... 499
062/6 The gerund in noun compounds.......................................... 501
062/7 The action nominal.................................................... 501
13.3 The participles........................................................ 503
063 Form, syntax, general meaning.......................................... 503
063/1 Uses and functions of participles: an introduction..................... 504
063/2 The syntax of the participle clause................................... 505
063/3 Tense, aspect and passive with participles............................. 506
064 The participles in use................................................ 507
064/1 The present participle at sentence level.............................. 50 /
064/2 The present participle at phrase level..................................515
064/3 The present participle: some borderline cases, 519
064/4 The perfect participle. ......................................... 522
064/5 The past participle: introduction................................ 524
064/6 The past participle at sentence level .............................. 52,4
064/7 The past participle at phrase level.................................. 529
Chapter 14 Phrase and Clause at Complex Level............................... 532
14.1 The complex phrase..................................................... 532
065 Introduction........................................................... 532
066 Postmodification in the noun phrase.................................... 532
066/1 The relative clause.................................................... 534
066/2 The relative clause: other phenomena................................ 540
066/3 Other types of relative postmodification.............................. 542
066/4 Appositive postmodification........................................... 548
066/5 Genitive postmodification.............................................. , , 551
066/6 Multiple postmodification.................... ....................... . 553
067 Complex adjective and pmposrier- H. pr-wses 557
067/1 The complex adjective phrase. .................................. . 557
067/2 The complex prepositional phrase....................................... 561
14.2 Aspects of the complex sentence........................................ 562
068 Forms and functions 562
068/1 Clauses as subject (S)................................................ 562
068/2 Clauses as direct object (Od)........................................... · 563
068/3 Clauses as subject complement (Cs)................................. 565
068/4 Clauses as object complement (Co) .................................... 565
XVIII Contents
068/5 Clauses as adverbials (A)............................................ 567
068/6 Examples of sentence analysis........................................ 572
068/7 Analysing special clause and sentence types.......................... 574
Exercises to SAGE..........................................utb-mehr-wissen.de
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Fenn, Peter |
author_GND | (DE-588)112381824X |
author_facet | Fenn, Peter |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Fenn, Peter |
author_variant | p f pf |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035968188 |
classification_rvk | HD 220 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)633242644 (DE-599)BVBBV035968188 |
dewey-full | 428.2431 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 428 - Standard English usage |
dewey-raw | 428.2431 |
dewey-search | 428.2431 |
dewey-sort | 3428.2431 |
dewey-tens | 420 - English & Old English (Anglo-Saxon) |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV035968188 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-20T14:04:12Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783825284329 9783772083440 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-018862249 |
oclc_num | 633242644 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-20 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-703 DE-384 DE-824 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-188 DE-634 DE-1050 DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-20 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-703 DE-384 DE-824 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-188 DE-634 DE-1050 DE-739 |
physical | XVIII, 581 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2010 |
publishDateSearch | 2010 |
publishDateSort | 2010 |
publisher | Francke |
record_format | marc |
series2 | UTB Grosse Reihe |
spellingShingle | Fenn, Peter A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4021806-5 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) |
title_alt | SAGE |
title_auth | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) |
title_exact_search | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) |
title_full | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) Peter Fenn |
title_fullStr | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) Peter Fenn |
title_full_unstemmed | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) Peter Fenn |
title_short | A student's advanced grammar of English (SAGE) |
title_sort | a student s advanced grammar of english sage |
topic | Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Englisch Grammatik Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018862249&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT fennpeter astudentsadvancedgrammarofenglishsage AT fennpeter sage |