Straightforward English
Clay Lane is inspired by textbooks on English language and literature written by Yorkshire schoolmaster NL Clay, and used in schools and homes across England from the 1920s to the 1960s. It is ideal for those who prefer traditional methods and content.
Clay believed in ‘straightforward English’, in no-nonsense speaking and writing that is clear and correct, and is the result of serious reflection, not just a desire to build a following. Freedom and democracy, he warned, would be mere catchwords without it. See Straightforward English.
Read short passages of good, straightforward English, from Shakespeare and the Bible to Defoe, Austen, Dickens and Kipling.
Broaden your knowledge of history, ideas and literature as you read.
Solve brainteasers in oral and written composition, like those Clay gave to his Grammar School pupils.
Ask for help with your English if you feel you need it.
“The course should train pupils to observe, learn more of the world they live in, think clearly, use the imagination and to speak clearly.”
NL Clay, Think and Speak (1929)
Featured Music
Sir Arthur Sullivan: Overture to ‘Marmion’
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Featured Post
From The Character of the Conqueror
Among other things is not to be forgotten the good peace that he made in this land; so that a man who was of any account might go over his realm, with his bosom full of gold, unhurt. Nor durst any manslay another man, had he done ever so great evil to the other.
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Featured Exercise
Verb and Noun Find in Think and Speak
Many words can serve as noun or verb depending on context: see if you can prove this with the examples below. Nouns go well with words such as the/a, or his/her; verbs go well after I/you/he etc..
1 Coach. 2 Combine. 3 Pot. 4 Copy. 5 Tax. 6 Hurt. 7 Bar. 8 Point. 9 Contact.
Variations: 1.if possible, use your noun in the plural, e.g. cat → cats. 2.use your verb in a past form, e.g. go → went. 3.use your noun in a sentence with one of these words: any, enough, fewer, less, no, some.