
William O'Grady
Author of Contemporary Linguistics: An Introduction
About the Author
Works by William O'Grady
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- O'Grady, William Delaney
- Birthdate
- 1952
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Canada
- Associated Place (for map)
- Canada
Members
Reviews
This is an excellent introductory textbook, both well-written and covering a wide range of topics appropriate for an introductory linguistics course-- more than can probably be covered in a survey course, in fact. I've also had experience with Ohio State's Language Files intro textbook, and I found this book both explanatorily and stylistically better, with better practice exercises as well. Finally, the existence of a Canadian edition of this textbook is a wonderful thing, given the market show more generally trends either American or British, and Canadian English of course is neither. show less
This is the introductory text I recommend for anyone interested in linguistics but unsure of what linguistics actually is. The book ranges from the broad explanation of the field down to specific explanations of what the sub-fields consist of, treating traditional linguistic sub-fields equally with some of the newer sub-fields that have gained popularity in recent decades. The text, while introductory in nature, is nonetheless dense, but don't be turned off by that.
If you're reading this show more independently just to satisfy curiosity, read the introductory chapters, skim the chapters on classical linguistics (unless that's really your thing) and move on the exciting stuff. I find that most of my classmates are first interested in linguistics when they encounter such topics as psycholinguistics, computational linguistics, and language preservation. Once you've got a taste for what you can do with the tools you have as a linguist, go back to the classical linguistics (syntax, semantics, phonology, phonetics, etc.) and read it more thoroughly. You may find some context helps make these particular tools suddenly more enticing. show less
If you're reading this show more independently just to satisfy curiosity, read the introductory chapters, skim the chapters on classical linguistics (unless that's really your thing) and move on the exciting stuff. I find that most of my classmates are first interested in linguistics when they encounter such topics as psycholinguistics, computational linguistics, and language preservation. Once you've got a taste for what you can do with the tools you have as a linguist, go back to the classical linguistics (syntax, semantics, phonology, phonetics, etc.) and read it more thoroughly. You may find some context helps make these particular tools suddenly more enticing. show less
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 16
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 800
- Popularity
- #31,871
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 54











