Laugh your way through language with a comic guide to grammar.
This edition of The Comic English Grammar playfully explains English usage, phrases, and punctuation through humorous examples and witty commentary. It invites readers to see how words travel from everyday speech to amusing expressions, while teaching how sentences are built—without getting dull or dry.
Two short framing paragraphs offer a clear scope: a lighthearted look at how language works, why certain phrases stuck, and how humor can illuminate grammar basics. It blends practical explanations with playful myth-busting about common expressions, making the subject approachable for curious readers.
- Discover how everyday phrases originated and why some expressions feel funny.
- Explore the parts of speech, sentence types, and punctuation with entertaining examples.
- Learn through short, readable sections that mix etymology, syntax, and prosody.
Ideal for readers who enjoy linguistics with a wink, classroom-friendly but not overly academic, this edition fits anyone curious about how the English language ticked into modern humor.Ideal for readers of witty language guides and fans of light grammar learning.
John Leech (1817-1864) was a well regarded English caricaturist, whose works often appeared in Punch and the London News. An accomplished lithographer and engraver, Leech's illustrations illuminated the original edition of Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol.