Published by Longmans Green & Co. Ltd, 1959
Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom
Condition: Good. 1959. New Impression. 237 pages. No dust jacket. Paper covered boards. Clean pages with mild tanning and foxing throughout. Tightly bound with faint thumb-marking throughout. Blacked out inscription to front pastedown. Boards have mild edgewear with corner crushing and notable marking and mottling to boards. Heavy tanning to spine, which has mild crushing to ends. Boards are mildly warped. Notable foxing. Moderate water stains to boards.
Published by Longmans Green & Co, 1955
Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom
Condition: Good. 1955. New impression. 182 pages. No dust jacket. Green cloth covered boards. Pages with some foxing and tanning, particularly to endpapers and textblock edges. Binding remains firm. Boards have mild shelf wear with light rubbing and corner bumping. Some moderate sunning and tanning. Book has slight forward lean.
Published by Longman, 1951
Seller: Crappy Old Books, Barry, United Kingdom
Hardback. Condition: Good. The King?s English for Commercial Students ? Book One (1951) by A. R. Moon and G. F. Golding. Longman. No ISBN (because in 1951 numbers were being saved for more important things, like ration books and train timetables). Condition: Good. Sold by Crappy Old Books , proudly peddling grammatical discipline to the modern age. This is not a book that wants you to ?find your voice.? This is a book that wants your voice to sit up straight, remove its hat indoors, and stop saying ?like? every twelve seconds. It is a brisk, tidy little volume from a Britain where letters were written with purpose, memos were typed with intent, and the phrase ?commercial student? meant you were training to become the sort of person who could run an office without emotional collapse. ?The King?s English? is a title that arrives already wearing a waistcoat. In 1951, the King in question was George VI, the national mood was practical, and the idea that English might require reigning over was taken entirely seriously. This is English as a tool: sharpened, polished, and expected to perform. Not poetry, not self-expression, but correct sentences marching in sensible shoes toward the nearest ledger. And ?for Commercial Students? is the best bit ? because it implies that grammar is not just a matter of culture, but of commerce. Commas have consequences. Misplaced apostrophes could cost you contracts. A vague paragraph could lead to somebody ordering twelve tons of something they only needed twelve of. The subtext is clear: clarity is profit, and ambiguity is expensive. Inside you?ll find the sort of structured, no-nonsense instruction that feels both quaint and strangely reassuring. Exercises, examples, corrections, the quiet insistence that words mean things and that you should choose them carefully. It?s a book designed to produce people who could write a letter that didn?t accidentally start a war, and who could spell ?accommodation? without turning it into a philosophical crisis. There?s also something wonderfully ironic about buying this now. In the age of autocorrect, predictive text, and emails that begin ?Hiya? and end with ?Sent from my iPhone,? here is a manual from a world where punctuation was a civic virtue. It doesn?t care about your brand tone. It doesn?t care about your personality type. It cares that you can write a sentence that does what it is supposed to do. Condition: Good ? meaning it has survived the decades with the solid respectability you?d expect from a book that probably once lived in a classroom cupboard or on a clerk?s shelf. It may have been opened with purpose. It may have witnessed the nervous pencil marks of someone trying to become employable. It remains ready to train a new generation in the lost art of not sounding like a maniac in print. Ideal for collectors of vintage textbooks, lovers of mid-century British earnestness, office-history nostalgists, and anyone who secretly thrills at the idea of a world where ?correct usage? was considered a form of self-defence. So if you?d like to own a slim slice of 1950s discipline ? a book that believes language is a tool, professionalism is a posture, and English has a crown to maintain ? The King?s English for Commercial Students awaits. Crappy Old Books ? supplying the grammar, the gravitas, and the faint feeling that you ought to straighten your tie before turning the page.
Language: English
Published by Longman's Green and Co
Seller: Optimon Books, Gravesend, KENT, United Kingdom
US$ 67.79
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Good. THERE ARE NO TARIFFS OR CUSTOMS DUTIES ON BOOKS. The aim of this book is to show the application of correct English for commercial purposes. It seeks to interweave principles and practice and to that end has sought to avoid drudgery and dullness.