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» British English for American Readers
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British English for American Readers
A Dictionary of the Language, Customs, and Places of British Life and Literature
(Click to Enlarge)
David Grote
Book Code:
GBW/
ISBN:
0-313-27851-2
ISBN-13:
978-0-313-27851-8
DOI:
DOI:10.1336/0313278512
728 pages
Greenwood Press
Publication:
8/30/1992
List Price:
$159.95
(
UK Sterling Price: £90.00
)
Availability:
Print on demand
Media Type:
Hardcover
Trim Size:
6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Literature
»
English Literature
Anthropology
»
Linguistics
Multicultural Studies
»
European Studies
Awards:
Choice
Outstanding Academic Book, 1993
Reviews:
Here is a book to answer questions about British terms.
British English for American Readers
has entries in one alphabet for words in these categories: titles, ranks, and honors; widely used words not part of the typical American vocabulary; words used differently in America and Britain; customs, terminology, and activities of daily life not shared by Americans; governmental organizations; political and legal customs and methods; communities and places often used in literary works; foods and common commercial products; common animals and plants not found in the same form in America; and social practices that differ from modern American practice. The entry
Battersea
tells a good deal about this area near the Thames;
tea
and
cheese
describe the many varieties of each and the customs associated with these foods;
BBC
gives a short history of this famous organization. Author Grote, a magazine editor, points out that he is not British and therefore knows which British terms need explanation.
British English
places emphasis on place-names, especially in London. Terms from other parts of the British Empire, especially India, are included. An asterisk in the text of an entry indicates a word that has its own entry. Seven appendixes explain more mysteries of British life, including money and values, reigns and historic dates, class structure, calendar of holidays and festivals, military ranks, and honors and initials.
British English, A to Zed,
by Norman Schur (Facts On File, 1989), covers much the same ground as
British English for American Readers,
but each book has many unique terms and features. The title under review has unusually broad coverage, including elements found in guidebooks, almanacs, gazetteers, and history and sociology books. On the other hand,
A to Zed
has a list of automotive terms, cricket terms, and information on British punctuation and style. It includes occasional quotations by way of illustrating word meanings. A smaller library owning
A to Zed
could bypass purchase of
British English,
but libraries could certainly use both books. Eminently browsable,
British English
provides the type of pleasure found by dipping into
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable or Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia,
where one learns something for the pure fun of it.
British English
is appropriate for all public libraries and for libraries in educational institutions from high school through graduate school.
—Booklist
A work will serve students of British literature, television, and film well and delight Anglophiles in general. Strongly recommended for circulating and reference collection in all academic and public libraries.
—Choice
"For Americans facing British culture in books, on TV, or in media, this dictionary really fills a void. What is
bubble and squeek
? How do you
roger
? Who is a
Yob
? . . . This dictionary answers questions like these and more that our American dictionaries of the English language don't. It's also great fun to read for no reason at all. Recommended for most collections."
—
Library Journal
. . . It should also be of interest to linguists and students of comparative literature as it is a reminder of the considerable divergence between British and American English.
—ALR
Provides definitions and explanations of those words, phrases, slang terms, titles, events, and localities that American readers of British fiction and viewers of British movies and television programs have wondered about.
—Nineteenth-Century Literature
Description:
How does a vicar differ from a rector? Is a marquis a lord? Where are the Home Counties? Is someone who is "dead chuffed" happy or angry? Americans reading British literature, come upon such unfamiliar terms and generally have to rely on contextual clues. For the legions of readers of Dickens and Trollope, of Agatha Christie, John LeCarré, and P.D. James, of Muriel Spark and Iris Murdoch, of Noel Coward and Tom Stoppard--to name a few--as well as viewers of British film and television imports, this helpful and entertaining guide defines the kinds of things that British authors thought needed no explanation.
Part dictionary, part guidebook, part almanac, part gazetter, part history, part sociology, this lexicon has no specialty, for it deals with British culture in general. David Grote's guiding principle was to select terminology with the potential to confuse readers who know only American English. Consequently, the volume is organized as a dictionary, with entries for concepts, items, and names that might create confusion. Entries are arranged alphabetically, from ten basic categories: (1) titles, ranks, and honours; (2) widely used words not part of the typical American vocabulary; (3) words used differently in America and Britain; (4) customs, terminology, and activities of daily life not shared by Americans; (5) governmental organizations; (6) political and legal customs and methods; (7) communities, and places often used in literary works; (8) foods and common commercial products; (9) common animals and plants not found in the same form in America; and (10) basic social practices that differ considerably from modern American practice. Ideally kept on hand for ready referral when immersed in fictional Britain, this dictionary will make for many enjoyable hours of random or systematic browsing. A true "companion" to British literature, its concern is not authors and literary history, but the slang, bureaucracy, stereotypes of places, food and products used in daily life, social organization, and hundreds of such homespun items.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
British English for American Readers
Appendixes: Money and Values
Reigns and Historic Dates
Class Structure
Calendar of Holidays and Festivals
Military Ranks
Honours and Initials
Selected Bibliography
LC Card Number:
91-45575
LCC Class:
PE1704
Dewey Class:
423
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