Doing Grammar is a practical and lively guide to discovering how the English language works. Author Max Morenberg uses modern linguistic theories to build upon traditional frameworks and provide accessible explanations about the composition of sentences, illustrating them at every step with diagrams and other visual models.
In this fourth edition, Doing Grammar retains its unique voice, clarity, and organization, but also demonstrates the author's commitment to a renewed and streamlined focus on the critical skills necessary for writing effective sentences. Featuring updated examples, Morenberg once again makes a seemingly dry subject come alive.
New to this Edition * A streamlined approach maintains the straightforward, easy-to-read narrative while also focusing on key skills * A glossary of terms and expanded table of contents for easy reference * A new printed Instructor's Resource Manual-free to adopters. Prepared by Charles MacQuarrie at California State University, Bakersfield, it features an Answer Key to those in-text exercises not answered at the back of the book, additional activities and test questions, teaching tips, sample syllabi, and a guide to developing syllabi
Distinctive Features * Innovative tree diagrams explicate the process of grammatical analysis and guide students through taking apart, labeling, and understanding the various elements of sentences * Engaging real-world examples and anecdotes illustrate the important elements of clear writing * Extremely effective exercises provide practice in chapter concepts * An Answer Key at the back of the book offers students answers to selected exercises
Invaluable for students in undergraduate grammar courses, this compact guide is also essential for all readers seeking to discover how the English language works.
Absolutely essential for first year college students, and yes, ignore that voice in the back of your head ("I already know this stuff," quoth the ego). You should read this book. It's the only grammar book you'll ever need to read, then you can let your ego out.
Morenberg builds on each foundation in each chapter, and as he progresses through the chapters, he slowly gives you more complex information, bit by bit, building, but only after laying the foundation on top of less complex terms and structures. Morenberg literally makes grammar easy because he doesn't plunge right into the jargon and platitudes ("write clearly," "don't use passives" (what if someone doesn't know what a passive is? How can that person avoid it?). He avoids that approach, and EXPLAINS everything you will need to know before you can jump into those platitudinous books on writing.
If you are uncomfortable with grammatical terms, jargon, and the like, seriously read this book. You'll feel like a god after. Then move on; because if you think you "know it all" already, you probably don't.
I was tormented by this for almost a whole semester... honestly, without regular lectures, it's almost impossible to understand just from jumping into it blindly. But... the subject might just bore me so much that it's impossible for me to pay attention.
Morenberg gets major points for writing a book about grammar that you don't need a doctorate in syntax to understand. He starts with verbs and slowly builds up to complex clausal transformations. The writing is clear and concise, the important ideas clearly set out. Morenberg's example sentances also provide no end of humor with their absurd non-sequiters. After reading it, I started listening much more carefully to how people put sentences together when they speak, to the point where I started to alienate people with my intense, linguistically-tinged stares. A good book for the beginner, or for anyone who feels like humiliating themselves when they realize that they don't actually know what a di-transitive verb is.
Five stars as a reference tool, almost (but nothing is totally) self-contained and self-correcting. A three star though for even English-teachers-in-training in their 3rd, junior college year (1st year one reviewer wrote--no way: that's for basic paragraph and expository essays, 2nd year is for fallacy theory and short argumentative essays, both with MINOR sentence correcting from your prof), as it's info overload for that. Max should make a shorter, non-reference version for 300-400 level college courses. So that's a strong 4 average, far better than most grammar textbooks and 1-sheets available.
Not a very big fan of this book. Read it for a class and even with the help of a professional grammarian some of the concepts, practices, and ideas aren’t given enough insight to make the applicable to life.
This book focuses more on upside down tree diagrams of sentences than Kellogg´s fishbone diagramming which has been taught and widely used in middle and high schools since the end of 19th century.
Excellent book on English grammar. A text book to accompany my morphology course, I learned so much about language structure, word order, sentence type, etc. This book is well worth owning.
This was a textbook required for my class, but as far as grammar goes I think Morenberg did as well as he could with making it interesting. Some topics were confusing, but it is English grammar, but he did go through and explain things pretty well so after a few practice attempts in the exercises at the ends of the chapter it was pretty to wrap your head around. The only thing I do wish is that there had been more example diagrams in the chapters.