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Celebrating Your Feline Friend
Celebrating Your Best Friend
Master verbalist Richard Lederer, America's "Wizard of Idiom" (Denver Post), presents a love letter to the most glorious of human achievements... Welcome to Richard Lederer's beguiling celebration of language -- of our ability to utter, write, and receive words. No purists need stop here. Mr. Lederer is no linguistic sheriff organizing posses to hunt down and string up language offenders. Instead, join him "In Praise of English," and discover why the tongue described in Shakespeare's day as "of small reatch" has become the most widely spoken language in history:
He also points out the pitfalls and pratfalls of English. If a man mans a station, what does a woman do? In the "The Department of Redundancy Department," "Is English Prejudiced?" and other essays, Richard Lederer urges us not to abandon that which makes us human: the capacity to distinguish, discriminate, compare, and evaluate.
Dieser Buchtitel ist Teil des Digitalisierungsprojekts Springer Book Archives mit Publikationen, die seit den Anfangen des Verlags von 1842 erschienen sind. Der Verlag stellt mit diesem Archiv Quellen fur die historische wie auch die disziplingeschichtliche Forschung zur Verfugung, die jeweils im historischen Kontext betrachtet werden mussen. Dieser Titel erschien in der Zeit vor 1945 und wird daher in seiner zeittypischen politisch-ideologischen Ausrichtung vom Verlag nicht beworben.
You don't need to memorize vocabulary words anymore Learn to DISCOVER them with Discover It The Ultimate Vocabulary Builder. For example, take what you already know (after utilizing the lessons in the book) and apply that to the unknown word. For instance, you might already know, or could easily figure out that fugitive, refugee, and centrifugal all pertain to "fleeing." So if nidifugous is the word to be defined on a college entrance examination, undoubtedly one of the multiple choice items will have to do with fleeing, escaping, running away from, etc. Though you may not know the exact meaning of nidifugous, you will get the correct answer on the examination. If you encounter the word in a text, contextual clues will help you understand the word. Career resource for teachers of all levels, including home educators. Discover It The Ultimate Vocabulary Builder has been adopted by the Idaho State Department of Education for high school. It has been translated into Braille, talking books, and enlarged print according to specifications of NIMAC. A video is in the making. Discover It The Ultimate Vocabulary Builder has been adopted by the Idaho State Department of Education for high school. It has been translated into Braille, talking books, and enlarged print according to specifications of NIMAC. A video is in the making.
Are you confounded by commas, addled by apostrophes, or queasy
about quotation marks? Do you believe a bracket is just a support
for a wall shelf, a dash is something you make for the bathroom,
and a colon and semicolon are large and small intestines? If so,
language humorists Richard Lederer and John Shore (with the
sprightly aid of illustrator Jim McLean), have written the perfect
book to help make your written words perfectly precise and
punctuationally profound.
After a multi-decade career of stimulating readers to appreciate
and laugh at the glories and oddities of our English language,
beloved language maven Richard Lederer has collected his very best
and most popular pieces in "Word Wizard." In this career-capping
anthology the reader will find essays that enlighten, inspire, and
tickle the funny bone.
Have some fun with your native tongue!
For years Richard Lederer has entertained fans of the English
language with his keen insights, commonsense advice, and witty
patter. Now Lederer and Richard Dowis take readers on another
journey through our most "wiggy" of languages. How many times have
we all heard the word "viable" used in company meetings? The
authors show us how "viable" was at one time extracted from medical
books, where it is actually defined as "capable of living," and
placed into our consumer marketplace. Then there is confusion
between "lay" and "lie," which the authors clear up once and for
all. These and dozens fo delightful examples make this book pure
pleasure for language buffs, writers, and teachers.
In what other language, asks Lederer, do people drive on a parkway and park in a driveway, and your nose can run and your feet can smell? In CRAZY ENGLISH, Lederer frolics through the logic-boggling byways of our language, discovering the names for phobias you didn't know you could have, the longest words in our dictionaries, and the shortest sentence containing every letter in the alphabet. You'll take a bird's-eye view of our beastly language, feast on a banquet of mushrooming food metaphors, and meet the self-reflecting Doctor Rotcod, destined to speak only in palindromes.
Bestselling author Richard Lederer has done it again with this collection of language gems, presented in his signature style - uncut, unpolished, and one hundred percent genuine. Fractured English is the only place you'll encounter this student's complaint: "I pass all my testes. My grade should be hirer", or this headache of a headline: "Legislators Tax Brains to Cut Deficit". Revel in the delightful anarchy of words run amok, but caveat emptor: "Richard Lederer's books are good medicine, except for the incontinent", writes an ardent admirer. Venture from the Mouths of Babes to Classified Classics, Poli-Tickle Speeches, Science Friction, Blessed Bloopers, and more.
From Simon & Schuster, The Write Way is the S.P.E.L.L. (Society for the Preservation of English Language and Literature) guide to real-life writing. Anyone who's tackled tricky grammar, slippery syntax, pesky punctuation, or sneaky jargon knows that good writing is never easy. In this ingenious guide, enjoy the wit of two English language mavens as they entertain while answering all our perplexing questions.
Learn the origins of popular phrases in the English language through this exciting book of games perfect for language lovers. Do you know the connection between the expression A HARROWING EXPERIENCE and agriculture, between BY AND LARGE and sailing, between GET YOUR GOAT and horses, or between STEAL YOUR THUNDER and show business? You probably have heard the comparisons HAPPY AS A CLAM, SMART AS A WHIP, PLEASED AS PUNCH, DEAD AS A DOORNAIL-but have you ever wondered why a clam should be happy, a whip smart, punch pleased, and a doornail dead? Through the fifty games included in The Play of Words you'll discover the answers to these questions as well as hundreds of other semantic delights that repose in our marvelous English language.
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