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  • Book
  • © 2013

English for Academic Research: Grammar, Usage and Style

Authors:

  • Includes hundreds of real-life examples
  • Ideal study-guide for universities and research institutes
  • Great tool for improving English language skills
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: English for Academic Research (EAR)

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Table of contents (29 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xvi
  2. Genitive: the possessive form of nouns

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 11-17
  3. Indefinite article: a / an

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 19-24
  4. Definite article: the

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 25-27
  5. Zero article: no article

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 29-34
  6. Relative pronouns: that, which, who, whose

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 43-48
  7. Tenses: present, past, future

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 49-58
  8. Conditional forms: zero, first, second, third

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 59-63
  9. Word order: nouns and verbs

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 147-158
  10. Word order: adverbs

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 159-163
  11. Word order: adjectives and past participles

    • Adrian Wallwork
    Pages 165-168

About this book

This guide is based on a study of referees' reports and letters from journal editors on the reasons why papers written by non-native researchers are rejected due to problems with English usage, style and grammar. It draws on English-related errors from around 5000 papers written by non-native authors, 500 abstracts by PhD students, and over 1000 hours of teaching researchers how to write and present research papers.  

English for Academic Research: Usage, Style, and Grammar covers those areas of English usage that typically cause researchers difficulty: articles (a/an, the), uncountable nouns, tenses (e.g., simple present, simple past, present perfect), modal verbs, active vs. passive form, relative clauses, infinitive vs. -ing form, the genitive, noun strings, link words (e.g., moreover, in addition), quantifiers (e.g., each vs. every), word order, prepositions, acronyms, abbreviations, numbers and measurements, punctuation, and spelling. Due to its focus on the specific errors that repeatedly appear in papers written by non-native authors, this manual is an ideal study guide for use in universities and research institutes.

  The book is cross-referenced with the following titles:

• English for Academic Research: Grammar Exercises

• English for Academic Research: Vocabulary Exercises

• English for Academic Research: Writing Exercises

• English for Writing Research Papers  

Adrian Wallwork is the author of more than 30 English Language Teaching (ELT) and English for Academic Purposes (EAP) textbooks. He has trained several thousand PhD students and researchers from 40 countries to prepare and give presentations. Since 1984 he has been revising research manuscripts through his own proofreading and editing service.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Pisa, Italy

    Adrian Wallwork

About the author

Adrian Wallwork is the author of more than 30 English Language Teaching (ELT) and English for Academic Purposes (EAP) textbooks. He has trained several thousand PhD students and researchers from 40 countries to prepare and give presentations. Since 1984 he has been revising research manuscripts through his own proofreading and editing service.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 19.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access