introduce a book for grammar
I am studying grammar and I am curious to know if there exist any book that have lots of exercise that identify every word role (adverb, adjective, auxiliary verb, noun and ...). even having something like that can be a big help to me to assess my self and learn new stuff.
Thanks in advance
grammar books
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I am studying grammar and I am curious to know if there exist any book that have lots of exercise that identify every word role (adverb, adjective, auxiliary verb, noun and ...). even having something like that can be a big help to me to assess my self and learn new stuff.
Thanks in advance
grammar books
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joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday
add a comment |
I am studying grammar and I am curious to know if there exist any book that have lots of exercise that identify every word role (adverb, adjective, auxiliary verb, noun and ...). even having something like that can be a big help to me to assess my self and learn new stuff.
Thanks in advance
grammar books
New contributor
joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I am studying grammar and I am curious to know if there exist any book that have lots of exercise that identify every word role (adverb, adjective, auxiliary verb, noun and ...). even having something like that can be a big help to me to assess my self and learn new stuff.
Thanks in advance
grammar books
grammar books
New contributor
joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
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joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
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joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
joe gates is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
1
This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday
add a comment |
1
This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday
1
1
This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday
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This is not an answer, but I have been doing this sort of thing with Karen Elizabeth Gordon's The Well Tempered Sentence -- but it catalogs all of the punctuation marks, and goes forward that way. Perhaps you might find that useful? It's a good investment at $8 and a lot of fun to read.
– sas08
yesterday
A great reference (although not a complete reference manual) is a book called 'Have You Eaten Grandma?' by Gyles Brandreth. The missing comma between Eaten and Grandma is a clue to it's reference to grammar. 'Have you eaten Grandma?', vs. 'Have you eaten, Grandma?'.
– GoodJuJu
yesterday