Descriptive and Prescriptive Grammar
Descriptive and Prescriptive Grammar
Prescriptive Grammar
By: Eve Loraine A.Trinidad
BSED-English
Eng. 108
What is Grammar?
• A you probably already know, prescriptive grammar usually refers to artificial rules imposed
on a language community.
• These rules come in all shapes and sizes, but generally they come in a few major varieties.
• Sometimes these rules are archaic rules leftover from earlier in the history of the language.
• These rules have been abandoned by most in the language community, but persist in use by a
select few.
• For example, the proper use of “who”:
• *Who did you arrest?
• Whom did you arrest?
• Many will claim that only the sentence in (2) is grammatically correct.
• This belief derives from an older version of English in which the nominative and accusative
cases (subject and object respectively) were more important.
• Today these cases only persist in pronouns, and even there they are slowly dying off.
Prescriptive Grammar
• I’ll also list a few more examples of descriptive grammar rules in action.
Note that I am not saying these constructions are right/wrong for all
dialects of English, just my dialect of English (General American):
• *I looked for hospital.
• I looked for a/the hospital.
• English typically requires a determiner/article before a common noun.
• *Me went to the beach.I
• went to the beach.
• As I mentioned earlier, case is still active for pronouns.
Descriptive Grammar