: Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade
: Grammars, Grammarians and Grammar-Writing in Eighteenth-Century England
: De Gruyter Mouton
: 9783110199185
: Topics in English Linguistics [TiEL]ISSN
: 1
: CHF 203.70
:
: Englische Sprachwissenschaft / Literaturwissenschaft
: English
: 369
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

The bookfocusses on eighteenth-century English grammarians (male and female) and their work, and it deals in the fullest possible detail with their qualifications, their motivations, the context in which they wrote, their approaches to grammar, their pedagogical interests, the reception of their work, both in London and in the provinces, their readership, the marketing policies of their publishers, and their publication history.



Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Leiden University, The Netherlands.

Frontmatter1
Table of contents7
Grammars, grammarians and grammar writing: An introduction11
Background: Introduction27
The eighteenth-century grammarians as language experts31
Grammar writers in eighteenth-century Britain: A community of practice or a discourse community?47
Eighteenth-century grammars and book catalogues67
Reception and the market for grammars: Introduction89
Bellum Grammaticale (1712) – A battle of books and a battle for the market91
The 1760s: Grammars, grammarians and the booksellers111
Mid-century grammars and their reception in the Monthly Review and the Critical Review135
The grammarians: Introduction155
Ann Fisher’s A New Grammar, or was it Daniel Fisher’s work?159
Joseph Priestley’s two Rudiments of English Grammar: 1761 and 1768187
Eighteenth-century teacher-grammarians and the education of “proper” women201
“Borrowing a few passages”: Lady Ellenor Fenn and her use of sources233
The grammars: Introduction257
Preposition stranding in the eighteenth century: Something to talk about261
Foolish, foolisher, foolishest: Eighteenth-century English grammars and the comparison of adjectives and adverbs289
On normative grammarians and the double marking of degree299
Backmatter321