ABSTRACT

Describing Prescriptivism provides a topical and thought-provoking analysis of linguistic prescriptivism in British and American English, from a historical as well as present-day perspective. Focusing on usage guides and usage problems, the book takes a three-fold approach to present an in-depth analysis of the topic, featuring:

  • a detailed study of the advice provided in usage guides over the years;

  • an authoritative comparison of this advice with actual usage as recorded in British and American corpora, including the HUGE (Hyper Usage Guide of English) database – developed specifically to enable this line of study – as well as more mainstream corpora such as COCA, COHA and the BNC;

  • a close analysis of the attitudes to particular usage problems among the general public, based on surveys distributed online through the "Bridging the Unbridgeable" research project’s blog.*

With extensive case studies to illustrate and support claims throughout, this comprehensive study is key reading for students and researchers of prescriptivism, the history of English and sociolinguistics.

 

*Found at https://bridgingtheunbridgeable.com/

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|17 pages

The origin of the usage guide

chapter 3|31 pages

The usage guide – and the HUGE database

chapter 4|36 pages

The writers and the publishers

chapter 5|44 pages

Usage problems

pet linguistic peeves

chapter 6|32 pages

The language of prescriptivism

chapter 7|29 pages

Public awareness of prescriptivism

chapter 8|10 pages

The end of prescriptivism?