ENG310: Modern English Grammar
(section 1, class #76041, 3 credit hours, meeting times MW 5:20-6:35, BURR238)


Professor:
EMAIL:
Office:
Prof. Sharon Cote
cotesa@jmu.edu
Keezell 209, Ext. 8-2510
Availability: I am available during my office hours and by appointment.



Description: In this course, we will examine the structure of the English language from a modern, linguistic perspective. We will discover what it means to be a native speaker of a language and will develop a conscious understanding of particular unconscious grammatical principles and rules that shape our everyday use of English. More generally, students should come away from this course with a better awareness of what grammar rules are, of where they come from, of how they can be determined, and of the extent to which they are or are not fixed and comprehensive.


Required Text: Kaplan, Jeffrey P. (1995). English Grammar: Principles and Facts, 2nd Edition.

Recommended Text: Garner, Bryan A. ed. (1996). Garner's Modern American Usage.


Work and Grading: assignments (16%), Midterm (32%), Final (32%), Tests (20%). While attendance (except at tests/exams or as otherwise noted) is not mandatory, regular attendance is generally crucial for keeping up with the class. If you miss a class, you are responsible for the material and for checking for an assignment link and doing any assignment due the next class period. All work must be turned in on time and in class except with permission, but you may skip one "ungraded" assignment without affecting your grade. Assignments, depending on their size, will be announced at least one class period before they are due and will be posted as links at the bottom of this webpage no later than the night of that same day. (Links are named and ordered by the date they are due.) "Ungraded" assignments are graded only as an acceptable effort (full credit) or an unacceptable effort (no credit). In other words, you won't be penalized for incorrect information, although you must (of course!) make an honest attempt at all parts of the assignment to get credit. The tentative dates for tests and exams is provided in the schedule below. Any date changes due to weather or other special circumstances will be posted in this syllabus and announced in class. Please read my course policies for additional details about grading and other issues. Note: As in all your courses, your work for this course is subject to the JMU Honor Code.



Daily Schedule: (Note: This is a tentative schedule of what will be discussed in each class period.) You should have readings done before the first class date on which they will be discussed.

Date Topic Reading
8/26 "Will there be a final exam?" - An introduction to the course
8/28 "That ain't what my teacher told me..." -- Defining modern grammar Chap. 1, pp. 1-30
9/2 The sounds of English -- phonetics and phonology Chapter 2, at least through page 52
9/4 More Phonetics and Phonology Chapter 2, remainder
9/9 Concluding Phonetics and Phonology
9/11 "Antidisestablishmentarianism" -- the building blocks of words Chap. 3, pp. 72-82
9/16 Basics of Morphology (and Brief Review) Chap. 3, pp. 83-105
9/18 TEST
9/23 Morphology and an intro to word classes
9/25 A Noun is a noun is a noun -- Major Grammatical Categories Chap. 4, pp. 108-131
9/30 Majors and Nothing Major -- just critical (Other Grammatical Categories) Chap. 4, pp. 131-150
10/2 Pronouns, Prepositions, and Other Peculiar Words (determiners and particles) Chap. 4, pp. 150-161
10/7 More Minor Class Categories and Some Words that Aren't UNgrammatical but Are NON-grammatical (plus Brief Review)
10/9 MIDTERM
10/14 The 'case' for nouns -- Noun and Verb Subclasses and Features Chap. 1, p. 31; Chap. 5, pp. 163-175
10/16 Verb Forms and Auxiliaries, plus Grammatical Relations Chap. 5, pp. 175-205 & Handout to be given out based on Chapter 7
10/21 The forest and the trees -- An introduction to phrase structure Chap. 6, pp. 207-224
10/23 Phrase Structure -- Can you hum a few bars? (internal structure of NPs) Chap. 6, pp. 225-242
10/28 More NPs and a start on VPs Chap. 6, pp. 243-244
10/30 VPs and Auxs Chap. 6, pp. 245-252
11/4 More practice with Auxs, plus Coordination Chap. 6, pp. 245-252
11/6 [TEST]
11/11 Adverbial Clauses (subordinate conjunction) Chap. 6, pp. 253-255, Chap. 8, pp. 306-308
11/13 More Complex Sentences Chap. 6, pp. 255-267,
11/18 Unmarked Sentences and Amazing Transformations Chap. 8, pp. 306-326
11/20 To-infinitives and beyond (to Relative Clauses) Chap. 8, pp. 326-336; chap. 9, pp. 356-375
11/25

THANKSGIVING BREAK -- CLASS NO, TURKEY YES


11/27

THANKSGIVING BREAK -- CLASS NO, TURKEY YES


12/2 It's not all relative -- Participles and Appositives Chap. 9, pp. 377-388
12/4 Final Points and Review
12/9 (MONDAY) FINAL EXAM -- 3:30-5:30, usual classroom (Confirm all final exam date/time information on JMU exam schedule and check with me if you see a discrepancy.)

"The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." Ludwig Wittgenstein


Look here for homework assignments:



Linguistics Resources Writing Resources Oxford English Dictionary Send email to Prof. Cote
ENG310, fall 2013, © JMU