(by Ting & Tiffany)
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Transcript (by Ting & Tiffany)
Ch5. Describing language
—Vocabulary
科目:英語教材教法
任課老師:邱淑娟
第二組組員:
高雅婷 494010845
游家鳳 697750221
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Meaning in context
Language
functions
-what does the speaker want people
to understand ?
(eg) It’s warm in here.
Requesting?
Comment ?
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The elements of language
Grammar
-The elements go in the right order.
(eg) It’s warm in here. *It here in warm is.
Vocabulary
-words which were chosen on purpose
antonym v.s. synonym
(eg) hot/cold v.s. hot/warm
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Pronunciation
-the way the sentence is spoken
(eg) It’s warm in here. It’s warm in here?
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Forms and meanings
One form, many meanings
-The present continuous verb form can
refer to both the present and the future.
(eg) I’m not listening. v.s. I’m seeing him
tomorrow.
One meaning, many forms
(eg) I’ll see you tomorrow.
I’m going to see you tomorrow.
I’m seeing you tomorrow.
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Words together
Collocations
-Any two words occur together more often than
just by chance.
(eg) heavy rain, heavy traffic
Lexical chunks
-They’re strings of word which behave almost as
one unit.
(eg) nice to see you/ good to see you
Idiom
-It’s a lexical phrase where the meaning of the
whole phrase may not be comprehensible even
if we know the meaning of each individual word.
(eg) full of bean
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Parts of speech
1. Noun (Noun phrase)
2. Pronoun
3. Determiner
4. Adjective
5. Verb
6. Adverb
7. Preposition
8. Conjunction
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1.Noun (Noun phrase)
Countable v.s. Uncountable
(eg) coins v.s. money
Plural nouns, singular verbs
(eg) news, darts
Collective nouns
(eg) family, team
Compound nouns
(eg) cherry tree, walking stick
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2.Pronoun
Personal pronouns
e.g. I, she, we, they, me, him, her, them
Reflexive pronouns
e.g. myself, yourself, ourselves
Possessive pronouns
e.g. mine, yours, his
Relative pronouns
e.g. who, where, which, that
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3. Determiner
Determiner
-It’s used in front of nouns to indicate
whether you are referring to something
specific or something of a particular type.
(eg) the, a/an, my, this
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Definite article
- We use “the” when we think that the
listener knows what particular thing/person
we are talking about.
Indefinite article
-“a/an” is used to refer a particular
thing/person when the listener doesn’t
know.
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4. Adjective
Comparative form v.s. Superlative form
(eg) bigger v.s. biggest
Adjective sequence
-size-color-origin-material-purpose-noun
(eg) the small purple German silk evening
gown
Adjective and preposition
-Many adjective are followed by specific
prepositions.
(eg) interested in, happy about
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Adjectives as nouns
-We can use some adjectives as if they ere
nouns.
(eg) the poor
Adjective or adverb
-Some words can be both adjectives and
adverbs, depending on whether they
modify nouns or verbs.
(eg) I had a late lunch. v.s. He arrived late.
(adjective)
(adverb)
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Parts of speech (p.64)
5.
Verb (The verb phrase)
6.
Adverbs (adverbial phrase)
7.
Prepositions (prepositional phrase)
8.
Conjunctions
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5. Verb
—a word(or group of words) which is
used in describing an action,
experience or state.
(1) Auxiliary verbs
(eg.)should,would,could,might,must
(2) Main verbs
(eg.)write,watch,believe,have
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(3) Phrasal Verbs
Type1:intransitive
(eg)The airplane took off.
(eg)The train drove away.
Type2:transitive
and inseparable
(eg)go on a diet
(eg)Will you look after the children?
(eg)I’m going to see about a new car.
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(3) Phrasal Verbs
Type3:transitive
and separable
(eg)He gave back the present.
He gave the present back.
(eg)We’re going to work out the problem.
We’re going to work the problem out.
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(3) Phrasal Verbs
Type4:
transitive,2+particles,inseparable
(eg)We’ve run out of papers.
(eg)He‘s broken up with his girlfriend.
(eg)I’m trying to cut down on my
chocolate intake.
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6. Adverbs (adverbial phrase)
—a word(or group of words) that describes
or adds to the meaning of a verb, adjective,
another adverb or a whole sentence.
Adverb
position
—Adverb don’t usually come between a
verb and its object.
(eg)(X)I have usually sandwiches for lunch.
(O) I usually have sandwiches for
lunch.
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6. Adverbs (adverbial phrase)
Adverbs
of degree
Comparative
and superlative adverbs
(eg)loud → louder →loudest
hard → harder →hardest
(eg)quickly → more quickly → most quickly
(eg)well → better → best
badly → worse → worst
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Joining words
—Prepositions and Conjunctions are
concerned with how words,phrases or
sentences are connected.
(1) Prepositions
—Prepositions express a time relationship
between two events,or a spatial relationship
between two things or people.
(eg)He left before I got there.
(eg)I saw him at the cinema.
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Joining words
(2)
Conjunctions
—Conjunctions join two clauses. We only
use one conjunction for two clauses.
(eg)Nicky said good night and walked
out of the house with a heavy heart.
(eg)I can sing but I can’t play the guitar.
(eg)I am a teacher because I like
working with people.
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★ Score
Group1:
Group2:
Group3:
Group4:
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Vocabulary teaching skills
Visual learners
-see words repetitively
(eg) flashcards, word puzzles, picture
drawing
Auditory learners
-hear words repetitively
(eg) read aloud, tape
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Kinesthetic learners
-writing words repetitively
(eg) make their own puzzles
Showing lexical relations
-synonym, antonym
(eg) synonym : cold = chilly
antonym : cold hot
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Roots
—prefix
(eg) co- : with, together △collaborate, collect
—suffix
(eg)-ity :a condition △personality, nationality
Others
(eg) songs, video, story, game( word cross,
word search, cross words, vocabulary
match, charade, cloze)
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Word cross game
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Word search
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Web link
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zy8JvCr9_Eg
(teaching tips)
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbcXDvhzWk&feature=related (drawing)
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrBpCpyBk4U&
feature=related (charade)
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHuEX_qOZug
(This is a what?)
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Thanks for your listening!
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