Analysing Sentences is an accessible and student-friendly introduction to the practical analysis of English sentence structure. The book covers key concepts such as constituency, category and functions, and uses tree diagrams throughout to help the reader visualise the structure of sentences. The fifth edition of this best-selling textbook has been thoroughly updated and revised to feature new material, new example sentences and a more reader-friendly layout. The final chapter sets the analysis in its theoretical context and includes an introduction to constituency in X-bar syntax. The book is also supported by an updated companion website featuring extra exercises for students and a complete set of answers for instructors for the online activities and exercises in the book. Accessible and clear, this book is the perfect textbook for readers coming to this topic for the first time. Featuring many in-text and end-of-chapter exercises, it is suitable for self-directed study as well as for use as core reading on introductory syntax courses.
FUCK YEAAAAAHHHH, this brings back memories...and shivers, and that feeling you get when you see that little girl from "Ring" crawling out of the well.
Mr. Burton-Roberts, I don't know if you ever come across this comment, but: Thank You. Second term into descriptive grammar, I've been thru many text books, but this one? I found it very friendly and non-judgemental. Everything was neatly described, I haven't felt intimidated by syntax at any point while reading the chapters. Thank You.
P.S. If I ever lose my speech, 'Old Sam sunbathed beside a stream' will be the sentence I WON'T forget.
With everything this book explained, you could google the terms and find easier explanations for it. I just found the explanations too complicated, and they could have been simplified much more. I could not have relied on this book alone to learn everything that is in it. I rely on my professors to help me understand everything.
Overall, it was somewhat helpful. It felt like the author went out of his way to gloss over the important terminology and explanations, and stalled with the unimportant, easy terms, writing about them in an unclear manner that's not concise enough.
Read this for the syntax portion of my second term of university English. Very pedagogical and well-structured, imo. Didn't read ch 11 I'll admit but hey, how much could one chapter bring the assessment down?
For a linguist, he has the most awful prose style. Example sentences are meant to show he has a 'wacky' sense of humour, but just show him to be an academic cut off from real world concepts like pragmatics, language change and humour. Plus he spends pages explaining the obvious in great detail with over-emphasis on what's wrong and why, while glossing over important concepts or else writing about them in an impenetrable fashion. Even worse, he changes the rules from one edition to the next, so woe betide a student with a second hand copy. The problem with syntactic analysis (unless another author explains it better than Burton-Roberts) is that syntax is like Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle: you can pin down the state of the English language RIGHT NOW or make observations about how we got here and where we will go, but it's impossible to make rules about sentence structure that apply universally to the past, present and future of English.
à little bit disappointed by the plot twist i must admit… no kidding but why is there that much mistakes in the book plz can you correct them and make a new editions it would really help