Jose Carillo's Forum

READINGS IN LANGUAGE

This new section features links to interesting, instructive, or thought-provoking readings about the English language. The selections could be anywhere from light and humorous to serious and scholarly, and they range widely from the reading, writing, listening, and speaking disciplines to the teaching and learning of English.

“English, that greatest and most flamboyant of thieves”

In “Is Your English Up to Scratch,” his omnibus review of six English-usage books both new and previously published, PhillyNews.com staff writer Howard Shapiro talks with fascination about his discovery of the reasons and logic of the idiosyncrasies of the ever-changing tongue that’s the English language. The titles he reviewed were the following:

After reading all six books, he marvels at the fact that there’s often an explanation to the many perplexing stuff one finds in the language. He rhapsodizes: “English, that greatest and most flamboyant of thieves, often leaves clear tracks in its pilferage, and they swirl in mazes of strange idea associations and pronunciation shifts back through the centuries and directly to the tongues of the original owners. (Tongue is an example: from the French langue. Before that, the Latin lingua. Before that from dinghu of Indo-European languages. Dinghu? Don't ask. We'll never get to the books.)”

Woe Is I From the Horse's Mouth

Particularly impressed by the new third edition of  O’Conner’s Woe Is I, the author of whom he unabashedly describes as “extraordinary” and “among American English’s smartest grammarians,” Shapiro says he emerged from his readings with the realization “that common sense has everything to do with the way we use English, no matter how the language is supposed to work.”

Read Howard Shapiro’s “Is Your English Up to Scratch” in PhillyNews.com now!

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