Lecture5 PETRONELA-ELENA NISTOR LMA EN-GE
Lecture5 PETRONELA-ELENA NISTOR LMA EN-GE
Lecture5 PETRONELA-ELENA NISTOR LMA EN-GE
I. Meaning in context
In talking or writing are crucial two aspects: the context in which it is said and what the
speaker wants people to understand;
Speakers and writers have to be able to operate with more than just words and grammar;
they have to be able to string utterances together;
Our ability to function properly in conversation or writing, in other words, depends not
only on reacting to the context in which we are using the language, but also on the
relationship between words and ideas in longer texts.
V. Hypothetical meaning
When we talk about something that is not real, but that might be the case, we are talking
hypothetically.
Real=possible/likely;
Hypothetical= unlikely/impossible
English has many ways of expressing hypothetical meaning:
Modal verbs( e.g.: It might rain);
Conditional sentences.
These three conditional forms are often called first, second and third conditionals.
REAL HYPOTHETICAL
Talking about the present If you pay online, you get a If I had a dog, I’d take it for
discount. walks.
You get a discount if you pay I’d take a dog for walks if 1
online had one.
Talking about the future If you work hard, you’ll pass the If I won the lottery, I’d travel
exam. round the world.
You’ll pass the exam if you If I were you I’d get a new
work hard. jacket.
Talking about the past If it was very warm, we ate If I’d know about the rail
outside. strike, I would have come by
We ate outside if it was very car.
warm. I would have come by car if
I’d known about the rail
strike.
VI. Words together
collocations,
lexical chunks
idiom.
1. COLLOCATIONS- If any two words occur together more often than just by chance, we
often call them collocations.
e.g. fast asleep
2. LEXICAL CHUNKS-strings of words which behave almost as one unit.
Fixed(which means you can’t change any of the words, e.g. over the moon, out of the
blue)
Semi-fixed(which means you can change some of the words, e.g. nice to see you/good to
see you/great to see you, etc.)
3. IDIOM -lexical phrase where the meaning of the whole phrase may not be
comprehensible even if we know the meaning of each individual word (e.g. ‘full of
beans’ = energetic, ‘as plain as the nose on your face’ = obvious).
Coherence
A text is coherent when it has some internal logic(the readers should be able to
perceive the writer’s purpose and follow their line of thought).
Conventional discourse
The conversational convention(face-to-face conversation) requires that only one
person speak at any one time.
Conventional skills:
knowing how to keep your turn;
knowing how to signal that someone else can take their turn;
knowing how to show that you are listening.
Speaking:
Contractions (e.g. ‘it is’ contracted to ‘it’s’, ‘I have’ contracted to ‘I’ve’ );
Ellipsis (we might well shorten ‘It’s warm in here’ to ‘Warm in here’ or even
‘Warm’ )
changing their tone of voice;
giving added emphasis;
whispering and shouting or speaking faster or slower;
use gestures.
Writing:
Punctuation marks;
full grammatical sentences;
content words (words that carry meaning like ‘flower’, ‘car’, ‘hot’, ‘sun’,
‘feel’)
2) Register
Register refers to both the topic we are speaking about and the tone (for example
formal or informal) that we wish to adopt.