![]() While some authors would make linguistics as dull as people think it will be, Bryson interrupts more dense linguistic discussions with funny anecdotes and examples. With chapters on how humans are able to speak, how dictionaries came to be, and how swearing has evolved, this book will make you laugh and teach you quite a bit about linguistics.īryson is really the perfect author to tackle this subject. If that’s you, Bryson’s book serves as a much more readable, much funnier history of the English language.īryson’s book examines how English came to be the global language that it is today from its pretty insignificant roots (Germanic, at first, with heavy influences from every other language it came into contact with). Well, maybe you’ve never ever wanted to take a linguistics course. I’d been hoping to learn more about English. To give you a little backstory, when I was in college at Auburn, the English department offered a course entitled “History of the English Language.” To most people that sounds incredibly boring, but by the time I graduated, I was sincerely disappointed that they never offered the course while I was there. ![]() Well, I’m back with another of his books to share, and this one was right up my alley as an English teacher. I’ve written about Bryson on the blog before–I reviewed his One Summer and his two books on British travel, as well as mentioning his hilarious book A Walk in the Woods this past summer. ![]() One of the last books I read in 2016 was The Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson. ![]()
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