TheoreTical english grammar
as a Branch of linguisTics
1. on the history of english grammars
Until the 17
th
century the term “grammar” in English was applied
only to the study of Latin. Latin grammar was the only grammar
learned in schools (grammar schools). Until the end of the 16
th
century
there were no grammars of English. One of the most popular Latin
grammars was written in English by William Lily. It was published in
the first half of the 16
th
century and went through many editions. This
book was very important for English grammar as it set a standard for
the arrangement of material. Latin grammatical paradigms with their
English equivalents made possible the presentation of English forms in
a similar way, using the same terminology as in Latin grammar. Lily’s
“Latin Grammar” may be considered as the precursor of the earliest
English grammars. The first English grammar was written by William
Bullokar (“Bref Grammar for English”, 1585). There were 5 cases of
nouns in Bullokar’s grammar (cf. 6 cases in Latin). However, even early
grammarians noticed some typical features which made the structure of
English different from that of Latin.
Generally speaking, the history of English grammars may be
divided into two periods. The first is the age of prescientific grammar
beginning with the end of the 16
th
century and lasting till about 1900.
It includes two types of grammars which succeeded each other. The
first type of grammars in the history of English grammar is represented
by early prenormative grammars of English (the first among them is
W. Bullokar’s “Bref Grammar for English”).
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By the middle of the 18
th
century, when many of the grammatical
phenomena of English had been described and the English language
norms established, the prenormative grammars gave way to a new kind
of grammar, a prescriptive (normative) grammar. It stated strict rules
of grammatical usage and set up a certain standard of correctness to
be followed by learners. One of the most influential grammars of that
period was R. Lowth’s “Short Introduction to English Grammar”, first
published in 1762 in London. On the other side of the Atlantic, in New
York, Lindley Murray wrote a very successful work, “English Grammar
Adapted to the Different Classes of Learners”. It was first published
in 1795 and later underwent 50 editions in its original form and more
than 120 – in an abridged version. Some of the 19
th
-century normative
grammars were reprinted in the 20
th
century. For example, W. Lennie’s
“Principles of English Grammar” underwent numerous editions, the
99
th
edition being published in 1905; or, else, J. C. Nesfield’s grammar
(“English Grammar Past and Present”, 1898) underwent twenty five
editions in different variants and was still on sale in the 1960s.
Grammars of the second type (prescriptive, or normative grammars)
written by modern authors are usually referred to as practical grammars
of English.
By the end of the 19
th
century, when the system of grammar known
in modern linguistics as traditional had been established, there appeared
a new type of grammar (the third on the list), the scientific grammar.
In contrast with prescriptive grammars, the classical scientific grammar
was both descriptive and explanatory. H. Sweet’s grammar book
appeared in the last decade of the 19
th
century (H. Sweet, “A New
English Grammar, Logical and Historical”. Part I. Oxford, 1892; Part II.
Oxford, 1898). The title of the book speaks for itself, so it is common
practice nowadays to take the date of 1900 as the dividing line between
the two periods in the history of English grammars and the beginning of
the age of the scientific grammar. Classical scientific grammar accepted
the traditional grammatical system of prescriptive grammars. During
the first half of the 20
th
century, an intensive development of scientific
English grammar took place, with great contributions to it being made
by O. Jespersen (“The Philosophy of Grammar”, 1924; “Essentials of
English Grammar”, 1933; “A Modern English Grammar on Historical
9
Principles”, 7 vols, 1914–1949), E. Kruisinga (“A Handbook of Present-
Day English”, 1909), H. Poutsma (“A Grammar of Late Modern
English”, 5 vols, 1904–1929), C. T. Onions (“An Advanced English
Syntax”, 1904), G. O. Curme (“A Grammar of the English Language”,
1931) and some other scholars.
In the 1950s a new trend in linguistic studies came to the fore,
the structural grammar (the forth on the list). It was very popular
with grammarians for about 40 years and took different directions
in its development which are known as Descriptive Linguistics,
Transformational Grammar, Generative Grammar, Generative
Semantics. The main ideas of structural approach to language were
advanced by Ferdinand de Saussure (“Cours de linguistique generale”,
1922) and Leonard Bloomfield (“Language”, 1933). Those ideas were
accepted and further developed by H. Whitehall (“Structural Essentials
of English”, 1956), Z. S. Harris (“Methods in Structural Linguistics”,
1961), Ch. C. Fries (“The Structure of English”, 1963), H. A. Gleason
(“Linguistics and English Grammar”, 1965), E. Bach (“An Introduction
to Transformation Grammars”, 1964), N. Chomsky (“Syntactic
Structures”, 1957; “Language and Mind”, 1968), and a great number
of other linguists.
When comparing the two periods in the history of English grammars,
one can see that during the first period (the 17
th
— 19
th
centuries)
there was only one kind of grammar in use at a time, whereas in the
20
th
century there were several types of grammatical descriptions used
and developed in parallel. The coexistence and a certain interaction of
different types of grammars is a typical feature of the second period
(the scientific one). Among modern trends we cannot but mention
the communicative grammar (the fifth on the list), which has been
gaining popularity since the 1980s. In grammar books of this type the
grammatical structures are systematically related to meanings, uses,
and situations of communication.
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