
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
For Who the Bell Tolls
About this book
For Who the Bell Tolls is a book that explains the grammar that people really need to know, such as the fact that an apostrophe is the difference between a company that knows its s*** and a company that knows it's s***, or the importance of capital letters to avoid ambiguity in such sentences as 'I helped my Uncle Jack off his horse.'
David Marsh's lifelong mission has been to create order out of chaos. For four decades, he has worked for newspapers, from the
Sun to the
Financial Times, from local weeklies that sold a few thousand copies to the
Guardian, with its global readership of nine million, turning the sow's ear of rough-and-ready reportage into a passable imitation of a silk purse.
The chaos might be sloppy syntax, a disregard for grammar or a fundamental misunderstanding of what grammar is. It could be an adherence to 'rules' that have no real basis and get in the way of fluent, unambiguous communication at the expense of ones that are actually useful. Clear, honest use of English has many enemies: politicians, business and marketing people, local authority and civil service jargonauts, rail companies, estate agents, academics . . . and some journalists. This is the book to help defeat them.
'A splendid and, more importantly, sane book on English grammar.' Mark Forsyth, author of
The Etymologicon
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Landing Page
- Title Page
- Dedication
- CONTENTS
- INTRODUCTION: Ballad of a Refuse Disposal Officer
- CHAPTER 1: The Wages of Syntax
- CHAPTER 2: The Rules Do Not Apply
- CHAPTER 3: Whom Do You Love?
- CHAPTER 4: Pin the Apostrophe on the Word
- CHAPTER 5: Too Marvellous for Words
- CHAPTER 6: Words Are Stupid, Words Are Fun
- CHAPTER 7: Pretentious, Moi?
- CHAPTER 8: Attack of the Jargonauts
- CHAPTER 9: Political Incorrectness Gone Mad
- CHAPTER 10: I Fed the Newts Today, Oh Boy
- CHAPTER 11: All Your Base Are Belong to Us
- CHAPTER 12: Let Your Yeah Be Yeah
- BIBLIOGRAPHY: My Top 20
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- INDEX
- @guardian style
- About the Author
- Copyright