Pages: 592 (Paperback) ISBN: 0141015934 Pub: Penguin Books Ltd Pub date: 2005-05-05 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 6431
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Reader Reviews:A wonderful book (0/0 people found this helpful)I have come late to English having only just scraped a pass at O level 35 years ago. I was sitting on a plane and saw someone on the seat opposite the aisle reading this book. From the little I could see it looked interesting and at the end of the flight when he stopped reading, I fortunately glimpsed the cover as he put it away. I was then straight onto Amazon and located it.
Excellent Read (0/0 people found this helpful)Another excellent book by the Language Expert, David Crystal. This was on the recommended reading list for a module of my English degree course, and found it both a fascinating and useful read. Would recommend to anyone studying Linguistics or for anyone who has a general interest in the English Language. Interesting read! (22/31 people found this helpful)This book is really helping me with my A2 English Language module on the development and change of language. It is really factual but easy to read - I am remembering and learning so much through reading the book! If you are interested in our language then no doubt you'll treasure it forever! Masterpiece (72/76 people found this helpful)David Crystal is quite probably the best authority there is on the English language past and present, and in "The Stories of English" he has visibly excelled himself. From "Beowulf" and the earliest documents in Old English right up to the specific features of text-messaging, and looking beyond to the twenty-first-century English-speaking world of his grandchildren, here is an impeccably researched history of the language. Superb (52/55 people found this helpful)In this authoritative history of the English language, David Crystal tells two different stories: one is about the development of standard English, and the other is about all its fascinating variant forms (dialects, slangs, the sociolects of particular groups - e.g. Internet users and hobbits!). The value of this is that so-called non-standard forms of English aren't demonized, as they have been in many other histories of the language. Yet at the same time Crystal explains why there are virtues in a standard version of English. This is a well-written book, covering a huge amount of material in pleasingly manageable chunks, with some great asides and interludes (Father Ted, anybody?). It beats the competition hands down. Similar ProductsThe Social Art: Language and Its Uses The English Language: A Guided Tour of the Language The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language The Fight for English: How Language Pundits Ate, Shot, and Left Words Words Words CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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