EBOOK

Founding Grammars

How Early America's War Over Words Shaped Today's Language

Rosemarie Ostler
(0)
Pages
320
Year
2015
Language
English

About

Who decided not to split infinitives? With whom should we take issue if in fact, we wish to boldly write what no grammarian hath writ before? In Founding Grammars, Rosemarie Ostler delves into the roots of our grammar obsession to answer these questions and many more. Standard grammar and accurate spelling are widely considered hallmarks of a good education, but their exact definitions are much more contentious - capable of inciting a full-blown grammar war at the splice of a comma, battles readily visible in the media and online in the comments of blogs and chat rooms. With an accessible and enthusiastic journalistic approach, Ostler considers these grammatical shibboleths, tracing current debates back to America's earliest days, an era when most families owned only two books - the Bible and a grammar primer. Along the way, she investigates colorful historical characters on both sides of the grammar debate in her efforts to unmask the origins of contemporary speech. Linguistic founding fathers like Noah Webster, Tory expatriate Lindley Murray, and post-Civil War literary critic Richard Grant White, all play a featured role in creating the rules we've come to use, and occasionally discard, throughout the years. Founding Grammars is for curious readers who want to know where grammar rules have come from, where they've been, and where they might go next.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"In the late nineteenth century there were people who would have given you grief at a dinner party for using barbarous and illegitimate words such as JEOPARDIZE, PRACTITIONER and GUBERNATORIAL. If you wonder why, Rosemarie Ostler's book tells you, while showing that grammar-pusses have been with us for centuries now while English has kept on keeping on."
John McWhorter, author of Tower of Babel, Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue, and What Languag
"Ostler brings the 'war of grammar' up to the present. Lively and revealing discussion of a battle that seems likely to continue as long as English is spoken."
Kirkus Reviews
"Founding Grammars is a fanfare for the common word, a welcome reminder that American English is a language of the people, by the people, and for the people. Noah Webster would approve."
Patricia T. O'Conner, author of Woe Is I and coauthor of Origins of the Specious

Artists