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Teaching English Second Language


particula
ESL Grammar Han
o Advanced Students of English as a Second Language 

Inc., 1
As the title indicates
into short 
(typically a page an
arranged 
from simple to complex, and the author suggests that, whereas advanced students can use the book as a 
ference grammar in
d work through the chapters in order. Careful attention is 
aid to defining and llu
An uncountable
 
 
rammars and grammar exercise books 
 
"s
d ate." If your understanding of such terms is shaky, consult the short glo
chapter, or look them up in a good dictionary. 
L
rammar (ED 133)
L
Ltd., 1988 
A
ry usab
with nu
b
dvance
nts, bu
E
lear and matter of fact, and are couched in ordinary language with a mi
v
le combinations ("bring up," "call off," etc.). The 
words with
r grammatical characteristics and functions, e.g., "would," "see," etc. 
dbook for Intermediate t
Allan Kent Dar
Prentice-Hall,
982 
, a grammar written specifically for the student. Grammar points are organized
d a half) chapters, with very clear explanations and examples. The points are
re
, termediate students shoul
p
i
strating terms. For example: 
noun describes something that we cannot count: "Give me liberty or give me death." 
(Patrick Henry) 
his would be a nic c
vel of English used in the grammar explanations 
ally is accessible
quizzes for each chapter in a parallel volume, ESL 
rammar Quiz Boo  f
 Communicative G a
eoffrey Leech and a
p Ltd
sed o
fers to the autho
e.g., their 
efinition of mass n
Mass nouns (sometimes called "non-count" nouns) typically refer to substances, whether liquid or solid: 
oil, water, butter
T
e lassroom reference book, since the le
re
to intermediate students. There are 
G
k, rom the same publishers. 
A
r mmar of English
G
J n Svartvik 
Longman Grou
A grammar ba
., 1975. 
Grammar of Contemporary English, described below. The "communicative" in the title 
'
ammar from the point of view of meaning, 
re
rs attempt to look at English gr
e uncountable nouns in the Dart handbook described above): 
d
ouns (the same thing as th
, wood, leather, iron, rock, glass, etc. Mass nouns are always singular: it makes no sense 
to "count" the qu n
ot naturally divisible into separate objects. 
s you can see? th l
plex, and so the grammar is beyond the 
ach of students with less than an advanced command of English. English speakers who already know 
uite useful. 
 G
Ra
Svartvik
Lo
a tity of a mass substance which is n
A
e anguage of the explanations can get very com
re
what the example sentences mean will find it q
A
rammar of Contemporary English 
rey Leech, and Jan 
ndolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoff
ngman Group Ltd., 1972. 


A very dense, very comprehensive grammar, certainly the most exhaustive grammar published recently, and 
one found on the shelves of people serious about English grammar. It describes the standard English 
spoken by educated people around the world, and deals in detail with the differences between British and 
American writing and usage. The terminology and depth render it inaccessible to all but teachers with 
considerable grammatical background, and the most advanced (and grammar-happy) students, e.g., the 
xplanation of mass (uncountable) nouns: 
ass nouns do not have a plural. It is, however, more accurate to say that they are 
invariable and lack number contrast: 
ouns. Count nouns, which can be counted, (one pig, two pigs, several pigs
e
We have noted that m
Music is/ *Musics are my favorite hobby. 
As the term "mass" implies, the notion of countability (of "one" as opposed to "more than one") does not 
apply to mass n
...) show the 
speaker as able to distinguish these items as separable entities. Mass nouns, on the other hand, are 
seen as continuous entities (much pork, *one pork, *few pork...) and show the speaker as regarding 
s or concepts as having no natural bounds. They are subject to division only by means of 
certain "gradability expressions." 
rammar Work 1 - 4: English Exercises in Context
for the 
al beginner, 2 for the high beginner, 3 for the intermediate, and 4 a review of the points covered in the first 
ises are correlated with numbered sections in 
rammar Guide from the same publisher, and can be used out of sequence if desired. 
Gr
rthur A. Burrows 
nsive additional written exercises, including "challenge" 
xercises at the end of some chapters. The exercises in a lesson range from easy to difficult, so that the 
he Grammar Handbook Part One.
rises. A feature of 
e book is the inclusion of blank worksheets, which the student is to fill with material presented and/or 
hese are textbooks teaching the grammar of English. Each grammar point is explained via diagrams or 
these substance

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