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Robert Malcolm Ward Dixon

    January 25, 1939
    Are some languages better than others?
    Catherine the Great
    Magnificent But Not War
    Titan Screwed
    The Fix
    Changing Valency
    • 2024

      From free healthcare for all in the twentieth century to no care at all for numerous UK citizens in the twenty-first, due to the foundering National Health Service (NHS)! The author was latterly employed in London. This is thus a brief history of healthcare in Britain in recent years.

      A Life in Medicine
    • 2023

      Struggling with God

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      A fresh, hopeful and scriptural companion for both those struggling with mental illness and their supporters, carers, and the church community who like Jesus, seek to come alongside all with the practical and spiritual hope of a God who journeys with us in our suffering.

      Struggling with God
    • 2023

      World in Union is the story of the Rugby World Cup - its greatest games and biggest controversies - told via its fifteen most important and dramatic matches. Foreword by Sean Fitzpatrick

      World in Union
    • 2022

      An incisive discussion of the development of this class of investor, how they have become legitimate actors in global financial markets, and their role as providers of capital and in economic development at home and abroad.

      Sovereign Wealth Funds
    • 2022

      The heartwarming and lyrical middle-grade story of Ailsa, a young girl who's spending the summer with her aunt and uncle on a remote island when she discovers a cave and in it a billow maiden who has lost her sea-skin and needs her help.

      The Billow Maiden
    • 2021

      The Fix: How the First Champions League Was Won and Why We All Lost is an engrossing examination of the 1992/93 UEFA Champions League - from humble beginnings on a Faroese hillside to its ultimate conclusion in a French courtroom. The Fix considers the economic and political forces that created the Champions League and what was sacrificed for it.

      The Fix
    • 2021

      English Prepositions

      • 416 pages
      • 15 hours of reading

      This book provides an integrated account of the main prepositions of English, outlining their various forms and illustrating contrastive senses. It is written in a clear and accessible style, and will be of interest to to students and scholars of the English language, including instructors of English as a second language.

      English Prepositions
    • 2018

      The Unmasking of English Dictionaries

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      This book describes the historical development of modern dictionaries that treat each word in isolation, and puts forward a new approach to lexicography which contrasts the meanings and functions of words. Written in an easy and accessible style, it will spark lively debate within the fields of lexicography and English linguistics.

      The Unmasking of English Dictionaries
    • 2016

      Titan Screwed

      • 278 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      "To level up to the pedestal of World Championship Wrestling and end the ratings disparity of the Monday Night Wars, Vince McMahon knew he had to reinvent his business come the dawn of 1997. But the question was, how? The time-tested ethos of World Wrestling Federation programming and booking was about to be cast to the wind, trampled beneath the sudden embrace of excessive violence, adult themes, and the fostering of internal conflicts to be served up to a gawking audience. Through those conflicts, McMahon had to make extremely bold decisions in regards to the population at the top of his roster. One particular controversy would forever change the perception of the World Wrestling Federation, with shockingly positive implications. The perceived 'second-place' promotion suddenly came roaring back, ironically looking to draw blood after previously disallowing it. Through McMahon's glaring eyes, 1997 was the year that the 'good guys' broke all the rules to regain the edge."--Page [4] of cover.

      Titan Screwed
    • 2016

      Are some languages better than others?

      • 208 pages
      • 8 hours of reading
      3.8(30)Add rating

      This book sets out to answer a question that many linguists have been hesitant to are some languages better than others? Can we say, for instance, that because German has three genders and French only two, German is a better language in this respect? Jarawara, spoken in the Amazonian jungle, has two ways of showing one for a part (e.g. 'Father's foot') and the other for something which is owned and can be given away or sold (e.g. 'Father's knife'); is it thus a better language, in this respect, than English, which marks all possession in the same way?R. M. W. Dixon begins by outlining what he feels are the essential components of any language, such as the ability to pose questions, command actions, and provide statements. He then discusses desirable features including gender agreement, tenses, and articles, before concluding with his view of what the ideal language would look like - and an explanation of why it does not and probably never will exist. Written in the author's usual accessible and engaging style, and full of personal anecdotes and unusual linguistic phenomena, the book will be of interest to all general language enthusiasts as well as to a linguistics student audience, and particularly to anyone with an interest in linguistic typology.

      Are some languages better than others?