Randolph Quirk [and others] ; index by David Crystal.
New York :
Longman,
1985.
x, 1779 pages ;
26 cm
Includes bibliographical references (pages 1641-1664) and index.
Pronunciation table -- Abbreviations and symbols -- The English language -- A survey of English grammar -- Verbs and auxiliaries -- The semantics of the verb phrase -- Nouns and determiners -- Pronouns and numerals -- Adjectives and adverbs -- The semantics and grammar of adverbials -- Prepositions and prepositional phrases -- The simple sentence -- Sentence types and discourse functions -- Pro-forms and ellipsis -- Coordination -- The complex sentence -- Syntactic and semantic functions of subordinate clauses -- Complementation of verbs and adjectives -- The noun phrase -- Theme, focus, and information processing -- From sentence to text -- Appendixes. Word-formation -- Stress, rhythm, and intonation -- Punctuation.
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From the time when we started collaborating as a team in the 1960s, we envisaged not a grammar but a series of grammars. In 1972, there appeared the first volume in this series, A Grammar of Contemporary English (GCE). This was followed soon afterwards by two shorter works, A Communicative Grammar of English (CGE) and A University Grammar of English (UGE), published in the United States with the title A Concise Grammar of Contemporary English. With A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, we attempt something much more ambitious: a culmination of our joint work, which results in a grammar that is considerably larger and richer than GCE and hence superordinate to it. Yet, as with our other volumes since GCE, it is also a grammar that incorporates our own further research on grammatical structure as well as the research of scholars worldwide who have contributed to the description of English and to developments in linguistic theory. - Preface.