It's the most simple, unassuming, innocent-looking verb: to be. Yet it
is jam-packed with more different meanings, forms, and uses than any
other English word. As he reveals be's multiple incarnations, David
Crystal takes us to the heart of our flexible and changing language. He
tells the intriguing story in 26 chapters, each linked to a particular
usage. We meet circumstantial be ("how are you?"), numerical be
("two and two is four"), quotative be ("so I was like, 'wow'"), and
ludic be ("oh no he isn't!"), and a whole swarm of other meanings.
Bringing the ideas to life are a host of examples from sources as varied
as Beowulf, Jane Austen, pantomime, Hamlet (of course), and Star
Wars, with cartoons from Ed McLachlan and Punch peppered throughout.
Full of fascinating nuggets of information, it is a book to delight any
lover of words and language.