The story of be: a verb's-eye view of the English language

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Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Publication Date:
[2017]
Language:
English

Description

It's the most simple, unassuming, innocent-looking verb: 'to be'. Yet it is jam-packed with more different meanings, forms, and uses than any other English word. As he reveals be's multiple incarnations, David Crystal takes us to the heart of our flexible and changing language. He tells the intriguing story in 26 chapters, each linked to a particular usage. We meet circumstantial 'be' ('how are you?'), numerical 'be' ('two and two is four'), quotative 'be' ('so I was like, "wow"'), and ludic 'be' ('oh no he isn't!'), and a whole swarm of other meanings. Bringing the ideas to life are a host of examples from sources as varied as 'Beowulf', Jane Austen, pantomime, 'Hamlet' (of course), and 'Star Wars', with cartoons from Ed McLachlan and Punch peppered throughout. Full of fascinating nuggets of information, it is a book to delight any lover of words and language

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ISBN:
9780198791096

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Grouping Information

Grouped Work ID177d27c8-17db-ced6-9c0c-a05a34cd0a23
Grouping Titlestory of be a verbs eye view of the english language
Grouping Authordavid crystal
Grouping Categorybook
Grouping LanguageEnglish (eng)
Last Grouping Update2025-04-01 22:10:00PM
Last Indexed2025-04-01 22:35:01PM

Solr Fields

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author
Crystal, David, 1941-
author_display
Crystal, David
display_description
It's the most simple, unassuming, innocent-looking verb: 'to be'. Yet it is jam-packed with more different meanings, forms, and uses than any other English word. As he reveals be's multiple incarnations, David Crystal takes us to the heart of our flexible and changing language. He tells the intriguing story in 26 chapters, each linked to a particular usage. We meet circumstantial 'be' ('how are you?'), numerical 'be' ('two and two is four'), quotative 'be' ('so I was like, "wow"'), and ludic 'be' ('oh no he isn't!'), and a whole swarm of other meanings. Bringing the ideas to life are a host of examples from sources as varied as 'Beowulf', Jane Austen, pantomime, 'Hamlet' (of course), and 'Star Wars', with cartoons from Ed McLachlan and Punch peppered throughout. Full of fascinating nuggets of information, it is a book to delight any lover of words and language
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Books
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Book
id
177d27c8-17db-ced6-9c0c-a05a34cd0a23
isbn
9780198791096
itype_eh
ADULT BOOK
last_indexed
2025-04-02T04:35:01.991Z
lexile_score
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literary_form
Non Fiction
literary_form_full
Non Fiction
primary_isbn
9780198791096
publishDate
2017
publisher
Oxford University Press
recordtype
grouped_work
subject_facet
Be (The English word)
English language -- Syntax
English language -- Verb
title_display
The story of be : a verb's-eye view of the English language
title_full
The story of be : a verb's-eye view of the English language / David Crystal
title_short
The story of be
title_sub
a verb's-eye view of the English language
topic_facet
Be (The English word)
English language
Syntax
Verb

Solr Details Tables

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ils:.b25243767.i5897037xEast Lyme Public Adult Non-Fiction425.6 Crystal1falsefalseOn Shelfelan

record_details

Bib IdFormatFormat CategoryEditionLanguagePublisherPublication DatePhysical DescriptionAbridged
ils:.b25243767BookBooksEnglishOxford University Press[2017]xii, 191 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm

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