Basic English Grammar For Dummies - US, US Edition (For Dummies (Language & Literature))
A**N
Great book, refreshing grammar rules I had forgotten about
I bought this book to help me with my day to day writing, as my Grammar was holding me back more than I'd have liked. It is excellent for this purpose and now covered in reading marks.Definitely worth investing in, I can only warmly recommend it
O**N
Good book
Bought for a relative, it's a good book.
I**S
One Star
I am extremely sorry that I purchased this book. Too expensive for what it offers.
M**K
Great Book!
Everyrhing about this book was good.
U**Y
Give š š š š š
Wonderful example & explain by Geraldine woods ,I can't explain everything
J**.
Great book to improve your english.
I'm a non-native speaker and the book is really helping me out with the grammar.The author is very competent.
D**A
The Best Book on Basic English Grammar
13 August 2021BASIC ENGLISH GRAMMARby Geraldine Woods. Reviewed by C J Singh (Berkeley, California).The Best Book on Grammar BasicsI admire Geraldine Woods' books for her lucid expository prose laced with many witty examples.As a long-time volunteer teacher of ESL to immigrants, I found using Basic English Grammar by Geraldine Woods as the textbook more effective than several others I had used in my teaching. My anonymous surveys showed students were pleased with the friendly tone and clarity of explanations.Hereās a sample from the opening chapter titled āGetting a Grip on Grammar: Lots of people groan when they hear the word grammar. They think that grammar is just a long list of picky rules. Who cares if you say āhad goneā or āwentā? ā¦. Yet proper language does matter. Rightly or wrongly, many people judge your intelligence and ability based on the way you speak and write. Better jobs and higher grades often go to those who follow the rulesā (page 7).In the next chapter, āExcellent grammar usually gives you an advantage in life. When you speak with friends, though, perfectly proper sentences may sound snobbyā (page 23). Right. Outside the classroom setting, in conversations I refrain from correcting peopleās grammar.Assuring words from Woods, āI use conversational English in this book. As I write, I imagine that I am speaking with you, the reader. I pretend that I know you and that we are spending some free time together.ā She sustains this friendly tone throughout the 364-page book while teaching the Rules of Standard English taught in standard college handbooks.The book includes numerous Quick Quizzes with correct answers immediately below the quiz. The book would be even more useful if all the answers were printed at the end of each chapter as in Woodsā English Grammar WORKBOOK, Third Edition, companion to her English Grammar, Third Edition.(After completing the Basics book, the reader would likely find the two books as excellent intermediate books. Doing all the exercises in the WORKBOOK will be rewarding. The suggestion I give to my students is not to write in the WORKBOOK; instead make notes in a separate composition books and repeat the exercises as needed.)13 people found this amazon-review helpful.English Grammar, Third Editionby Geraldine Woods.Reviewed by C J Singh (Berkeley, California)May 11, 2017.Lucid Expository Prose with Witty Usage ExamplesAs a long-time volunteer teacher of college-writing skills to ESL migrants and immigrants, I found using English Grammar by Geraldine Woods as the textbook more effective than several others I had used in my teaching. The great draw of the book is Woods' wonderful sense of humor in presenting examples of usage. Moreover, for migrants and immigrants to understand and appreciate the humor of their newly adopted country in North America is a faster track toward integration. The new edition (THIRD, 2017) presents many humorous examples. Here are two brief examples from the new edition about omission/inclusion of apostrophes.āTaking a walk recently, I noticed an odd sign: GRANDMAS PUNCH. Interesting, I thought. Grandmas punch whom? Their grandchildren? Surely not! People who refuse to look at one more photo of the adorable tykes? Possibly. I soon realized that the sign was in front of a bar. Ah, I thought. Grandmaās punch ā a drink made from a family recipeā (page 168). Recalling this humorous example will bring to active memory the specific underlying grammar rule more likely than the bare rule itself.Professional copyeditors have observed that misuse of itās/its is among the most frequent errors in manuscripts submitted to them. Woods writes: āItās an its problem. Iām not talking about how a poison-ivy rash feels. Iām talking about a possessive pronoun ('its') and a contraction ('itās'). 'Its' shows possession: The computer has exploded, and its screen is now decorating the ceiling. Itās means it is: Itās raining cats and dogs, but I donāt see any alligators. So itās nice to know that grammar has its own rules. By the way, one of those rules is that no possessive pronoun ever has an apostrophe. Ever. Never. Never ever. Remember: If 'it' owns something, dump the apostropheā (pages 336-337).The paragraph above opens with an easy-to-remember sentence that illustrates inclusion as well as omission of apostrophe, presents two more examples in the middle, and closes with another easy-to-remember sentence that illustrates inclusion as well as omission of apostrophe.The numerous witty examples in this 400-page book earn it five shiny stars. Its companion Workbook edition 2 is equally good. I look forward to the publication of its (NOT itās) companion Workbook's third edition.13 people found this review helpful.
é**ļ¼”
fun and simple
Perhaps too simple to learn anything new, but this allowed me to get a little review on what I learned back in elementary school.Having problem with grammars sometimes, I thought of reading this before teaching my own kids about grammars. Dummies gave me a good start since my brain doesn't die on me after a page or two like other dictionary-like grammar books. Fun to read.
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