Chapter 1
Grappling with Grammar
IN THIS CHAPTER
Identifying features of accepted Australian English Understanding the main word classes: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, verbals, determiners, prepositions and conjunctions Good communication and good grammar go hand in hand. The very point of using language is to express and exchange ideas in a way that conveys them clearly, with as few misunderstandings as possible. Sure, an occasional âOh, you know what I meanâ is not going to stop the world from turning or upset your friends and family, but if you need to impress somebody, you need your communication to be accurate. If you want your job application to shine, your presentation to captivate or your documents to be precise, using good grammar will help you to achieve these things.
Of course, you probably already have pretty good grammar. Most people learn the basics of language use as if by osmosis, picking it up without necessarily understanding the rules. After all, youâre likely to have been talking almost all of your life and have probably forgotten when and how you first learned to read and write. But the fact that you have this book in your hands means that you have decided that learning better grammar is a valuable strategy. Yay you! This book will help you become a better communicator.
In this chapter, we look closely at what constitutes proper grammar and consider what makes Australian English unique. We also take a trip back in time to revisit probably the first thing you were taught about grammar as we consider the very basic unit of communication: the word.
Grasping Grammar: Good and Proper
Rightly or wrongly, your audience or readers judge you by the words you use and the way you string them together. Listen to the speech of the people in movies. An uneducated character sounds different from someone with five diplomas on the wall. The dialogue reflects reality: educated people follow certain rules when they speak and write. In fact, people who use language according to formal grammar rules are said to be speaking properly. If you want to present yourself as an educated person, you have to follow those rules too.
Actually, several different types of grammar exist, including historical (how language has changed through the centuries) and comparative (comparing languages). Vintage grammar-geeks and gurus loved to complicate things. But donât worry; we love to keep things simple. In this book, we use the best bits of the two easiest, most familiar ways of presenting the rules of grammar to come up with whatâs proper.
Descriptive grammar gives names to things â the parts of speech, or word groups, and parts of a sentence. When you learn descriptive grammar, you understand what every word is (its part of speech) and what every word does (its function in the sentence). Learning some grammar terms has a couple of important advantages â to be clear about why a particular word or phrase is correct or incorrect, and to be able to understand the explanations and advice given by your computerâs grammar checker or in a dictionary or style guide.
Functional grammar tells you how words behave when theyâre doing their jobs properly. It guides you to the right expression â the one that fits what youâre trying to say â by ensuring that the sentence is put together correctly. When youâre agonising over whether to say I or me, youâre solving a problem of functional grammar. Most of the grammar we use in this book is functional grammar.
So hereâs the formula for better grammar: a little descriptive grammar plus a lot of functional grammar. Better grammar equals better self-expression. And better self-expression equals improved self-confidence. And with improved self-confidence, anything is possible. The news is all good!
Using Aussie English
In the Middle Ages, grammar meant the study of Latin, because Latin was the language of choice for educated people. In fact, knowing Latin grammar was so closely associated with being an educated person that the word grammar was also used to refer to any kind of learning. Thatâs why grammar schools were called grammar schools; they were places of learning â and not just learning about how Latin and English work.
These days, grammar is the study of language â specifically, how words are put together to create meaning. Through time, grammar has also come to mean a set of standards that you have to follow in order to speak and write correctly. No doubt in your career as a student, you discovered that different teachers have different pet hates â English teachers included. The emphasis placed on the importance of certain points of grammar differs from classroom to classroom. Donât worry; weâre consistent.
The accepted way that English is spoken is called usage, and this includes both standard and non-standard usage. Standard usage is the one that is regarded as proper. It consists of the commonly accepted correct patterns of speech and writing that mark an educated person in our society. You can find standard usage in government documents, in formal newspapers and magazines, and in textbooks. Non-standard usage includes slang and just plain bad grammar. Itâs common in everyday conversations, but should be avoided in formal situations.
Furthermore, the way the rules and patterns of grammar are applied varies in different English-speaking countries. Standard Australian English isnât the same as either standard American English or standard British English. Certainly, we choose different standard spellings for the same word (such as âise endings in Australia versus âize endings in America) or different words for the same thing (for example, a sidewalk in America is a pavement in England and a footpath in Australia). More than this, the way we use certain punctuation marks varies, and sometimes we even put words in a different order to express the same meaning.
Examples of non-standard Australian English include using verse as a verb meaning âto compete againstâ (Our team is versing yours next week) and choosing youse as a plural form of you (Youse can all come too). Using non-standard Australian English isnât likely to get you that promotion you wanted. (But using plain English, where you keep your language clear, might â for more on this, see Chapter 10.)
So how do we decide what is standard Australian English? We refer to authorities. We use Australian dictionaries and Australian style guides. We follow the advice provided by the Australian National Dictionary Centre at the Australian National University, and scour the bulletins on English in Australia published by the Department of Linguistics at Macquarie University. Relax. In this book, all the research has been done for you. Thatâs a promise.
Having a Quick Squiz at Aussie Words
Today, just as your average Australian dunny is indoors, your average Australian neighbour is not a bush cocky. Uniquely Australian language is alive and well and living in the suburbs. (All italicised terms in this section are defined in the list at the end of the section.)
Naturally, the earliest examples of true blue Australian language come from the convict days. Early Australian vocabulary was borrowed from various forms of British English. The crims sent here by Her Maj were not well educated, and spoke a kind of street language that set them apart from the wealthy and privileged. Lagging on your mates has always been un-Australian, and dobbing continues to be a social crime in classrooms today â only big-noting or being a wowser are worse. Australiaâs convict heritage has even been blamed for the all-too-prevalent tall poppy syndrome that characterises the culture.
Australians took other words that we claim as Australian English from the languages of our indigenous peoples. Letâs face it, what would anyone whoâd never been within cooee of one before call a wallaby or a wobbegong? And in households all over the nation, high-tech equipment regularly goes bung.
Making fun of others and being irreverent has always been a feature of Australian language. Bananabenders and Sandgropers argue about who has the best beaches. We affectionately refer to each other as dags or ratbags. Even our first female prime minister is regularly referred to as a ranga.
Even our pollies themselves help keep Australian English healthy. John Howard gave us economic rationalism when he was prime minister. And where else in the wor...