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《基本ESL语法--中高级》(MCGRAW-HILL’S ESSENTIAL Grammar A Handbook for Intermediate and Advanced ESL Students)(MARK LESTER, PH.D.)插图版[PDF]

王朝资源·作者佚名  2010-06-09
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中文名: 基本ESL语法--中高级

原名: MCGRAW-HILL’S ESSENTIAL Grammar A Handbook for Intermediate and Advanced ESL Students

作者: MARK LESTER, PH.D.

资源格式: PDF

版本: 插图版

出版社: McGraw-Hill

书号: 0-07-164234-X

发行时间: 2008年

地区: 美国

语言: 英文

简介:

Introduction

This book is for nonnative speakers of English who have already attained

extensive fl uency in classroom English. It is designed to help you move

to the next level of functioning comfortably in a fully English-speaking

environment. For example, your job may take you to an English-speaking

country, or your duties may require you to interact extensively with native

English speakers in person, on the telephone, or on the Internet.

Even though the book includes many topics covered in other ESL books,

it is not a textbook. It is an advanced-level reference work designed to give

you instant access to detailed information about specifi c topics that you

need to know and apply now. Each section of the book is a self-contained

module. Unlike with a textbook, you do not need to start on page 1. Just

use the table of contents or the index to locate the topic you need, and then

go right to it.

The most important feature of this book is the immense amount of

information about English grammar in general and about four specifi c

areas of English grammar that are most likely to cause diffi culties:

• Areas of unusual grammatical complexity. Nonnative speakers fi nd

certain areas of grammar especially diffi cult to master. The reason is simple:

the grammatical mechanisms involved are indeed quite complicated.

Unless you fully understand how these mechanisms work, you will never

master the areas they govern. This book explains these mechanisms in

much greater detail than most ESL textbooks attempt to do.

• Areas of unusual irregularity. Many grammatical options are controlled

by particular words, often verbs. This book is full of lists that tell the reader

which words control which specifi c grammatical structures. For example,

it is impossible to predict in general whether a particular verb will permit

a gerund, an infi nitive, or both as an object. The only way you can tell is to

look at the lists provided to see which construction is allowable. No other

book (outside specialized linguistic reference works) provides such extensive

listings of idiosyncratic, word-controlled grammatical structures.

• Areas in which native speakers routinely use special forms in conversational

English. If your only use of English is as a formal, written language

(as is the case for many nonnative speakers), and you don’t foresee

any need to ever talk to a native speaker of English under fi fty years old,

then this area is not a concern for you.

For everybody else, however, this may well be the most diffi cult of the

four areas. Unless you have had extensive direct contact with native speakers

of English in informal situations, you simply have not had the opportunity

to acquire this type of English. It is not just a matter of contractions

and rapid speech (though these will cause you plenty of problems); there

are also well-established, predictable shifts in grammar that take place in

casual conversation. Here’s an illustration:

In formal English, the standard passive is formed with the helping verb

be. For example:

We were interrupted.

In informal conversational English, most native speakers actually use the

helping verb get instead of be. For example:

We got interrupted.

One of the key features of this book is the discussion of this kind of grammatical

substitution wherever it is signifi cant. (This occurs surprisingly

often.)

• Areas in which both native and nonnative speakers often make mistakes.

As you become more like a native speaker, you are bound to start

making the same mistakes that native speakers do. For example, like native

speakers, you will have problems distinguishing between restrictive and

nonrestrictive adjective clauses in more complicated sentences. You will

also have problems knowing when and how to use direct and indirect quotation.

This book has extensive treatments of these predictable problem

areas, far beyond what you would ever encounter in an ESL textbook (and

most books for native speakers, for that matter).

This book is divided into three parts: Noun Phrases, Verb Phrases, and

Sentences.

Part I, Noun Phrases: Noun phrases (nouns together with all their

modifi ers) are one of the fundamental building blocks of English. Noun

phrases function as the subjects of sentences, the objects or complements

of verbs, and the objects of prepositions. Part I addresses the various components

that make up noun phrases. The fi rst four chapters describe nouns

and noun modifi ers. The remaining three chapters discuss grammatical

entities other than nouns that can also function as noun phrases. They are

pronouns, gerund and infi nitive phrases, and noun clauses.

Part II, Verb Phrases: Part II is devoted to verb phrases, the second of

the two fundamental building blocks of English. Verb phrases are verbs

together with all of the verbs’ complements (structures required by particular

verbs) and optional modifi ers. The fi rst three chapters deal specifi

cally with verb forms and verb tenses. The next three chapters deal

with verb complements: nouns, adjectives, adverbs, and other grammatical

structures that are required by particular verbs and predicate adjectives to

form complete sentences. The fi nal two chapters deal with optional adverb

modifi ers of verbs.

Part III, Sentences: In this section we will examine three topics that

affect entire sentences. These topics have been picked for two reasons:

they are a major part of English grammar, but even more important, they

pose certain diffi culties for nonnative speakers. Chapter 16 explores conjunctions:

ways in which words, phrases, and entire independent clauses

(sentences) are joined together. Chapter 17 focuses on how questions are

formed. We conclude with a study of the passive in Chapter 18.

Note: Throughout the text, X signifi es ungrammatical, ? signifi es questionable,

X? signifi es borderline ungrammatical, and // signifi es the

sound of a letter.

 
 
 
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