The present paper explains what Russell’s method of logical analysis is and how it works in the context of logical atomism, pointing out the objectives and precepts that he considers when he analyzes propositions. After exploring the general development of analysis in his work, I examine two examples of propositional analysis: that of relational propositions and that of propositions which contain descriptions. In both cases, I have noted that Russell seeks to break with a logic which was restricted to the subject-predicate form, once he thought it was the origin of a defective grammar and, thus, also of many of the traditional metaphysical problems. In this sense, assuming that there may be a wide variety of forms, he says that the objectiv...