A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language is a descriptive grammar of English written by Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, and Jan Svartvik. It was first published by Longman in 1985.
Author | Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, & Jan Svartvik |
---|---|
Subject | Comprehensive descriptive grammar of the English language |
Publisher | Longman |
Publication date | 1985 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 1779 |
ISBN | 9780582517349 |
In 1991, it was called "The greatest of contemporary grammars, because it is the most thorough and detailed we have," and "It is a grammar that transcends national boundaries."[1]
The book relies on elicitation experiments as well as three corpora: a corpus from the Survey of English Usage, the Lancaster-Oslo-Bergen Corpus (UK English), and the Brown Corpus (US English).[2]
In 1988, Rodney Huddleston published a very critical review.[3] He wrote:
[T]here are some respects in which it is seriously flawed and disappointing. A number of quite basic categories and concepts do not seem to have been thought through with sufficient care; this results in a remarkable amount of unclarity and inconsistency in the analysis, and in the organization of the grammar.[3]