Make us homepage
Add to Favorites
FAIL (the browser should render some flash content, not this).

Main page » Tag Lederer

Sort by: date | rating | most visited | comments | alphabetically


Crazy English: The Ultimate Joy Ride Through Our Language
0
 
 

Crazy English: The Ultimate Joy Ride Through Our LanguageCrazy English: The Ultimate Joy Ride Through Our Language

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. 

 

http://englishtips.org/1150792048-crazy_english_by_richard_lederer.html



Dear User! Your publication has been rejected as it seems to be a duplicate of another publication that already exists on Englishtips. Please make sure you always check BEFORE submitting your publication. If you only have an alternative link for an existing publication, please add it using the special field for alternative links in that publication.
Thank you!


 
  More..
Tags: language, Lederer, feast, banquet, metaphors, Crazy, Language, Through
Crazy English by Richard Lederer
410
 
 
Crazy English by Richard Lederer
Crazy English by Richard Lederer
Fun with English language.  Lederer books are the best the popular linguistics can offer.
A journalist, teacher at St. Paul's School in Concord, N.H., and public-radio commentator, Lederer ( Anguished English ; Get Thee to a Punnery ) again adroitly mixes instruction with hilarity by showing that English, though the richest and most widely used of all the world's languages, is "crazy." The text is a dazzling collection of anagrams, alliterations, idioms, illogical spelling rules (bough, ghost, honor, rhyme) and larky oxymora (Chaucer's classic "hateful good," today's "military intelligence," "postal service") . Verses, quizzes and anecdotes accompany Lederer's essays on "the antics of semantics," greatly expanding the pleasure of what he correctly claims is "the ultimate joy ride through our language." Doubleday Book Club and Literary Guild alternates; author tour.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


 
  More..
Tags: English, Lederer, Crazy, Richard, accompany