The Joy Of English

100 Illuminating Conversations
about the English Language
Jesse's Books

The Joy Of English:
100 grammar and
English usage tips

Skunk, the third in the Transpontine series, takes off straight after the previous volume. It begins in 1632 and sees the Puritans outpaced by the profit-seeking Massachusetts Bay Company colonies and by men and women who came not to pray but to profit – from England, Sweden, Finland, Holland and France.

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THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN ENGLISH

The first serious investigation into what Sisu is and its origins

It focuses on the language and history of Early New England, featuring more about the Puritans, Winthrop, William Bradford and the increasing number of new English colonies in places like Connecticut, Rhode Island as well as more by the French, Dutch and the Swedes.

This was also the period in which the first printing press arrived in North America and Harvard College was founded. Equally, by mid-century there would be more than 300 enslaved Africans on the books and the number of indentured servants – many snatched from the streets of England and transported to Virginia – would be in the many thousands.

"... researched a lot and he quotes so many sources, drops so many interesting facts, ideas, historical bits and pieces. That was awesome!!"

Katrin
User on Goodreads

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Jonathon Black
CEO at Black Dunes Design
A HISTORY OF AMERICAN ENGLISH

Gets to the heart of where most
English-speakers go wrong.

On the language front, a new generation of new American words were coined, including buffalo, skunk, homestead, plantation, cranberry, boss and not to mention the term American language is used in the 1640s for the first time.

Chapters

  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • A short grammar
  • 01 - very
  • 02 - a historic versus an historic
  • 03 - I before E except after C
  • 04 - who versus whom
  • 05 - less versus fewer
  • 06 - redundancies and tautologies
  • 07 - the truth about split infinitives
  • 08 - compare with versus compare to
  • 09 - different from versus different to
  • 10 - while versus whilst and among versus amongst
  • 11 - faction and decimate
  • 12 - intend to versus intent on
  • 13 - a model sentence structure
  • 14 - active versus passive
  • 15 - that (the omission of)
  • 16 - in order to versus to
  • 17 - adviser versus advisor
  • 18 - lose versus loose
  • 19 - its versus it's
  • 20 - contractions
  • 21 - multiples
  • 22 - advice versus advise
  • 23 - as versus because
  • 24 - since versus because
  • 25 - due to versus because
  • 26 - reason versus reason why
  • 27 - in contrast to versus by contrast
  • 28 - should have versus should of
  • 29 - were versus was
  • 30 - that versus which
  • 31 - every day versus everyday
  • 32 - over versus more than
  • 33 - male and female versus men's and women's
  • 34 - data and media
  • 35 - full stops
  • 36 - euros
  • 37 - stray capitals
  • 38 - further versus farther
  • 39 - quote, unquote
  • 40 - the serial comma
  • 41 - that versus who and whose
  • 42 - fill in a form and tick a box
  • 43 - -ly + hyphen
  • 44 - hyphen (-) versus en rule (--)
  • 45 - don't use double double spaces
  • 46 - you and I ... (we)
  • 47 - ... you and me (us)
  • 48 - repetition
  • 49 - man or woman versus chair
  • 50 - co-operate
  • 51 - years' minutes' months
  • 52 - mid-
  • 53 - up to date versus up-to-date
  • 54 - full time versus full-time
  • 55 - learned versus learnt
  • 56 - led versus lead
  • 57 - focus and centre
  • 58 - per cent
  • 59 - round versus around
  • 60 - proved versus proven
  • 61 - presently versus currently
  • 62 - myriad
  • 63 - well versus well-
  • 64 - commonly misspelt words
  • 65 - historic versus historical
  • 66 - meet with up to
  • 67 - And ... But ...
  • 68 - onto versus on to and into versus
  • 69 - neither ... nor versus either ... or
  • 70 - imply versus infer
  • 71 - American spellings
  • 72 - italics
  • 73 - millions, billions and trillions
  • 74 - e-mail
  • 75 - writing in time
  • 76 - comprise, consist, constitute, composed of
  • 77 - program versus programme
  • 78 - play down
  • 79 - outside (of) and inside (of)
  • 80 - Nine exceptional numbers
  • 81 - 30-year-old person
  • 82 - per cent versus percentage points
  • 83 - ranges
  • 84 - year versus annual and annum
  • 85 - that fact that
  • 86 - Look an exclamation mark!
  • 87 - -ise versus -ize
  • 88 - first, second, third and last
  • 89 - provided versus providing
  • 90 - tailor made suits
  • 91 - 7000, 10,000 and 1 million
  • 92 - special effects do not not affect me
  • 93 - criteria versus criterion
  • 94 - substitute
  • 95 - forwards versus backwards
  • 96 - -ll spelling versus -l- spelling in British English
  • 97 - practice versus practise
  • 98 - try to versus tray and
  • 99 - British Isles
  • 100 - spell check and proof
  • Bibliography

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Books by Jesse

My first book was a book on English grammar and usage, published through Hachette. This was followed up by books combining history and etymology. So far I have published 11 books. History and great stories are the common denominators.

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