Grammatical and Lexical Variance in EnglishLongman, 1995 - 220 páginas This volume addresses the two extremes of grammatical and lexical variance. One is at the societal end of linguistic experience and the other concerns the more technical matter of the detailed specific and individual realisations of variation. |
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Página 53
... rejected it , and the EFL profession was so affronted by what they saw ( again rightly ) as its gimmickry , its perfunctoriness , and its sheer ignorance of ELT realities that ( far from rightly ) more than Basic itself was rejected ...
... rejected it , and the EFL profession was so affronted by what they saw ( again rightly ) as its gimmickry , its perfunctoriness , and its sheer ignorance of ELT realities that ( far from rightly ) more than Basic itself was rejected ...
Página 64
... rejected . First , it has not maintained its value by constant revision and updating . True , in the nine editions ... reject is that the work retains its appeal and its authority because it was far ahead of its time and therefore ...
... rejected . First , it has not maintained its value by constant revision and updating . True , in the nine editions ... reject is that the work retains its appeal and its authority because it was far ahead of its time and therefore ...
Página 185
... rejected . Though this correctly indicates the feature of ' unpleasantness ' of mutter , it gives us no further indication of the polarity we might have expected between these two verbs , with murmur positively marked ' pleasant ...
... rejected . Though this correctly indicates the feature of ' unpleasantness ' of mutter , it gives us no further indication of the polarity we might have expected between these two verbs , with murmur positively marked ' pleasant ...
Contenido
the global context | 1 |
Variance and the concept of good usage | 10 |
Language varieties and standard language | 21 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
acrolectal adverbial American English aspectual basilect battery became become British English Chapter Chicano English choice complement context contrast corpus countries course distinction durative durative aspect econocultural elicitation English language environment especially evaluation example expression fact Figure finite clauses forced-choice genitive ginnen grammatical hesitation hypothesis implied Indian English indicate infinitive instances institutionalised interest involved Jespersen Kachru language leap less linguistic meandered meaning modality munched murderer native negative Newspeak Nigeria Nineteen eighty-five non-finite clauses non-finite verb non-native noun phrase object of-genitive operation Orwell pairs perhaps polarisation present preterit Prol pronoun prosodic reaction realised rejected relation reluctant responses role s-genitive seems semantic Singapore smell South Asian English speakers Standard English statistically significant stroll subjects suggest Table teachers teaching tendency tense test sentences tion to-infinitive types usage variation varieties of English verb wander words