
- •1.Geographical position of the usa
- •3.Canadian culture;traditions,customs and public holidays.
- •5.Subjunctive Mood
- •6.The grammatical categories of Noun
- •8.The classification of sentences according to their structure
- •9.The classification of sentences according of the purpose of the communication
- •11.Classification of synonyms
- •12.Classification of homonyms
- •13.The productive ways of coining new words in Eng.
- •14.The translation equivalents and types of context.
- •15.The translation transformations and their types
- •16.The unit of translation
- •17.The translation of equivalent lacking units
- •18.The groups of stylistically marked vocabulary
- •24.The Norman Conquest and its impact on the lang.Situation
- •30.The modification of English vowels and consonants
- •1.Compare teacher’s profession with others. Advantages/disadvantages. Why do you want to be a teacher?
- •6.Why sports are so popular in our country. Your attitude.
- •7.Express your preferences of travelling(as a tourist)
- •8.Which place of interest have you visited or want to in uk?London?Why?
- •9. Which place of interest have you visited or want to in Ukraine?London?why?
- •14.Review of the film you have seen lately.
- •Clean Air
- •Clean Water
- •Clean Land
- •19.Compare the system of secondary education in gb and Ukraine.
- •23.Freedom of press.
- •25.Specific holidays in Ukraine.Gb, the usa?
- •26.Most famous people in Ukraine.Their achievements.
- •1.Jk rowling
- •30.What would you do to prevent children of having bad habits?
11.Classification of synonyms
A synonym – is a word of similar or identical meaning to one or more words in the same language. They’re no two absolutely identical words because connotations, ways of usage, frequency of an occurrence are different.
Classification: 1. Total synonyms can replace each other in any given context, without the slightest alteration in denotative or emotional meaning and connotations (e.g. noun and substantive, functional affix, flection and inflection); is a rare occasion. Ex.: бегемот – гиппопотам. 2.Ideographic synonyms. They bear the same idea but not identical in their referential content. Ex.: To happen – to occur – to befall – to chance; Look – appearance – complexion – countenance. 3. Dialectical synonyms. pertaining to different variant of language from dialectal stratification point of view; Ex.: lift – elevator; Queue – line; autumn – fall. 4. Contextual synonyms. Context can emphasize some certain semantic trades & suppress other semantic trades; words with different meaning can become synonyms in a certain context. Ex.: tasteless – dull; Active – curious; Curious – responsive. Synonyms can reflect social conventions. Ex.: clever, bright, brainy, intelligent. 5. Stylistic synonyms. Belong to different styles: child; Infant; Kid; neutral; elevated; colloquial. It refers to situations when writers or speakers bring together several words with one & the same meaning to add more conviction, to description more vivid. Ex.: Safe & sound; Lord & master; First & foremost; Safe & secure; Stress & strain; By force & violence. 6. cognitive synonyms – s. which differ in respect of the varieties of discourse in which they appear; -7. contextual/context-dependent synonyms – similar in meaning only under some specific distributional conditions, when the difference between the meanings of two words is contextually neutralized: e.g. buy and get. - 8. referential synonyms – a vague term, concerns coreferential expressions, when one denotatum can be defined differently from different points of view and in different aspects: e.g. names Walter Scott and the author of 'Ivanhoe' are coreferential because they refer to one and the same denotatum – Sir Walter Scott; - 9. terminological synonyms – two existing terms for one denotatum: e.g. borrowing and loan-word; concept and notion (the difference between them is not discriminated by some linguists);
12.Classification of homonyms
Homonyms are words which are identical in sound and spelling, or, at least, in one of these aspects, but different in their meaning. The subdivision of homonyms into:homonyms proper – words same in sound and in spelling. 1.fit – perfectly fitting clothes. 2. fit – nervous spasm.homophones -the same in sound, different in spelling.1. been 2.bean homographs -the sane in spelling, different in sound 1.to lead – go before, show the way 2. lead – a heavy rather soft metal.Sources of Homonyms:Phonetic changes which words- undergo in the course of their historical development. Night and knight,Borrowing. A borrowed word may, in the final stage of its phonetic adaptation, duplicate in form either a native word or another borrowing. rite, n. – to write, v.-right, adj. the second and third words are of native origin whereas rite is a Latin borrowing (< Lat. ritus).Conversion – comb, n.- to comb, v., pale, adj.- to pale, v., to make, v,- make, n. Homonyms of this type, which are the same in sound and spelling but refer to different categories of parts of speech, are called lexico-grammatical homonyms.Shortening. E.g. fan, n. in the sense of “an enthusiastic admirer of some kind of sport or of an actor, singer, etc.” is a shortening produced from fanatic.Words made by sound-imitation) can also form pairs of homonyms with other words: e, g. bang, n. (“a loud, sudden, explosive noise”) – bang, n. (“a fringe of hair combed over . the forehead”).