No area causes more persistent difficulty. Swedish i can mean in, into, at, on, of depending on context. A Swedish-perspective grammar does not list prepositions alphabetically; it lists them by Swedish false cognates. Example:
In English, noun phrases can be formed using articles (the, a, an), adjectives, and nouns:
"The tigers are dangerous animals." (Incorrect generic usage)
: Explaining the "be + -ing" form, which does not exist as a dedicated tense in Swedish. π Why Itβs Effective
This grammar is unique in its approach, as it not only provides detailed explanations of English grammar but also takes into account the specific challenges and needs of Swedish speakers. The authors have carefully considered the linguistic background and common language learning difficulties of Swedish students, making this grammar an invaluable resource for both learners and instructors.
| Chapter | Focus | Most useful for Swedish speakers | |---------|-------|--------------------------------| | 1β2 | Basic concepts & sentence elements | Clause elements (S, V, O, C, A) β different from Swedish analysis | | 3β4 | Verbs & tenses | Present perfect vs. preterite; progressive aspect; modal verbs | | 5β6 | Nouns & articles | Count/uncount; definite/indefinite use (Swedish den/det vs. English zero article) | | 7β8 | Pronouns & determiners | They as singular; his/her vs. Swedish sin | | 9 | Adjectives & adverbs | Comparison; position of adverbs (Swedish often places them differently) | | 10β11 | Prepositions & phrasal verbs | Major difficulty β includes lists of common preposition errors | | 12 | Word order & clause structure | ; fronting; questions | | 13β14 | Clause types & complex sentences | Relative clauses (especially which vs. who vs. that ) | | 15β16 | Text & punctuation | Comma rules (much stricter in English than Swedish) |