Up and Down the Bizarre Byways of a Fascinating Language

Auteur: Todd, Richard Watson
Editeur: Nicholas Brealey Publishing
Publication: 2007
ISBN: 978-1-85788-387-9
e-ISBN: 978-1-85788-491-3
 
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- If we say one mouse and two mice, why don't we say one house and two hice?
- How did rhinoceros come to have four possible plurals? And (silly) nine different meanings?
- Would you talk about an 'ambush of tigers' or a 'shrewdness of apes?' How about an 'absence of waiters?'
- What do 'zenzizenzizenzic' and 'tatterdemalion' mean?

English is the world language - it is used in 115 countries, and around 70 percent of webpages are in English. But English is also complex and unpredictable. Its massive range and wealth of quirks make it fascinating and surprising to native speakers and newcomers alike. Richard Watson Todd's Much Ado About English: Up and Down the Bizarre Byways of a Fascinating Language takes readers on an entertaining journey through the peculiarities, illogicalities and sheer charm of the English language, wandering down the language's idiosyncratic and surprising byways.

Richard Watson Todd considers everything from erratic spelling to unexpected uses, where words have come from and how they have changed, and the myriad ways we use this flexible tongue. From onomatopeia to cliches, politically correct language to Cockney rhyming slang, metaphors and oxymorons, here is a light-hearted and engaging view of a mother tongue.
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