INTRODUCTION
The main purpose of this
work is to provide a practical handbook of grammar for readers and
writers of expository prose,language written for explanation and read
for understanding.The information provided here may or may not apply
to other forms of written communication or to the spoken language. We
are not trying to cover the structure of all uses of the English
language, and we do not promise to encompass every instance in the
language area specified. Basically, we hope that our analysis will
perform two functions:
1. Help the reader
receive with clarity, if at all possible, the communication intended
by the writer.
2. Provide a basis,
depending on purpose, for achieving efficiency in this reading
process.
In our society, language
and the automobile have at least one interesting similarity. Use of
the automobile as a vehicle of transportation does not require too
great a knowledge of the mechanisms involved. Move this lever.
Depress that pedal. Two hands on the steering wheel, please. And off
you go.
Driving in traffic under
varying conditions is an additional matter, of course, but here
again, with a certain amount of practice, the necessary skill can be
developed without the faintest notion of the operating
mechanisms.
Language, as a vehicle
of communication, seems to be used in similar fashion. The child
somehow learns to make the sounds he has heard made or those he has
made himself and was encouraged to repeat.He also eventually learns
the contexts in which these sounds are appropriately made and, like
the beginning driver, becomes a user of this vehicle without any
knowledge of what makes it work. Even when the child progresses to
the use of language in symbolic form, in writing and reading, he is
still able to perform more or less adequately without an
understanding of the mechanisms and principles involved.
It must be obvious that
knowledge of the "how" and "why" in almost any endeavor could lead to
greater control and, possibly, appreciation of that activity. Driver
awareness of the precision timing which sends explosive force to
wheels which move the vehicle with the power of herds of horses must
add to the efficiency and joy of driving. In the event of
malfunction, one can at least be somewhat knowledgeable about the
repairs required and their cost.
The reading of
expository prose is also an activity in which understanding of
mechanisms can result in greater control and appreciation. And here
we may add one further note to the automobile analogy. Efficient
reading can never occur in the "automatic" mode. It must always be a
"stick shift" operation, with the reader constantly aware of the
"reading gear" most appropriate for the reading purpose at hand and
the written terrain being traversed. Understanding language structure
can make for smoothness both in the shifting of gears and the
efficiency of their use.
This text, drawing from
the various current grammar "systems", hopes to provide a foundation
for such understanding in a manner simple enough for almost anyone to
comprehend. The view of written language sought here is not the
ultimate of an electron microscope, but rather the clarity of a
contact lens.
Students with exposure
to any system of grammar, traditional or otherwise, will have little
difficulty with our presentation providing they accept the
definitions exactly as stipulated in this text.
If there is any novelty
in this presentation, it is to be found in the diagraming system used
for illustration. One very important function of a diagram is to
illustrate and clarify the relationship between parts of a whole. We
believe that our "word nests" perform this function with far greater
efficiency than the traditional "fishhooks".